When dumping multiple pieces of information (e.g. --all-headers),
there is sometimes no separator between two pieces.
This patch uses the "\nheader:\n" style, which generally improves
compatibility with GNU objdump.
Note: objdump -t/-T does not add a newline before "SYMBOL TABLE:" and "DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:".
We add a newline to be consistent with other information.
`objdump -d` prints two empty lines before the first 'Disassembly of section'.
We print just one with this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101796
Reapply 7368624 after revert and fix
Looking at other tools using tablegen for help output, general options
like --help are not separated from other options. This change removes
the "Generic Options" option group so the options are listed together.
the macho specific option group is left unaffected.
The test help.test was modified to reflect this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101652
Looking at other tools using tablegen for help output, general options
like --help are not separated from other options. This change removes
the "Generic Options" option group so the options are listed together.
the macho specific option group is left unaffected.
The test help.test was modified to reflect this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101652
Previously printing R_386_RELATIVE relocations would trigger
`error: can't read an entry at 0x40: it goes past the end of the section (0x40)`
I found this while writing a test case for LLD (D100490).
This also includes some minor cleanup in the elf-dynamic-relcos.test
llvm-objdump test based on the newly added test.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100489
1. Add an accessor function to MCSymbolizer to retrieve addresses
referenced by a symbolizable operand, but not resolved to a symbol.
That way, the caller can synthesize labels at those addresses and
then retry disassembling the section.
2. Implement that in AMDGPU -- a failed symbol lookup results in the
address being added to a vector returned by the new function.
3. Use that in llvm-objdump when using MCSymbolizer (which only happens
on AMDGPU) and SymbolizeOperands is on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101145
Change-Id: I19087c3bbfece64bad5a56ee88bcc9110d83989e
This implements an LLVM tool that's flag- and output-compatible
with macOS's `otool` -- except for bugs, but from testing with both
`otool` and `xcrun otool-classic`, llvm-otool matches vanilla
otool's behavior very well already. It's not 100% perfect, but
it's a very solid start.
This uses the same approach as llvm-objcopy: llvm-objdump uses
a different OptTable when it's invoked as llvm-otool. This
is possible thanks to D100433.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100583
This is similar to D83530, but for llvm-objdump.
The motivation is the desire to add an `llvm-otool` symlink to
llvm-objdump that behaves like macOS's `otool`, using the same
technique the at llvm-objcopy uses to behave like `strip` (etc).
This change for the most part preserves behavior. In some cases,
it increases compatibility with GNU objdump a bit. For example,
the long options now require two dashes, and the long options
taking arguments for the most part now require a `=` in front
of the value. Exceptions are flags where tests passed the
value separately, for these the separate form is kept as
an alias to the = form.
The one-letter short form args are now joined or separate
and long longer accept a =, which also matches GNU objdump.
cl::opt<>s in libraries now have to be explicitly plumbed
through. This patch does that for --x86-asm-syntax=, but
there's hope that we can remove that again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100433
Clang spends a decent amount of time in the LineOffsetMapping::get(...)
function. This function used to be vectorized (through SSE2) then the
optimization got dropped because the sequential version was on-par performance
wise.
This provides an optimization of the sequential version that works on a word at
a time, using (documented) bithacks to provide a portable vectorization.
When preprocessing the sqlite amalgamation, this yields a sweet 3% speedup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99409
The option `--prefix-strip` is only used when `--prefix` is not empty.
It removes N initial directories from absolute paths before adding the
prefix.
This matches GNU's objdump behavior.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96679
llvm-objdump only uses one MCInstrAnalysis object, so if ARM and Thumb
code is mixed in one object, or if an object is disassembled without
explicitly setting the triple to match the ISA used, then branch and
call targets will be printed incorrectly.
This could be fixed by creating two MCInstrAnalysis objects in
llvm-objdump, like we currently do for SubtargetInfo. However, I don't
think there's any reason we need two separate sub-classes of
MCInstrAnalysis, so instead these can be merged into one, and the ISA
determined by checking the opcode of the instruction.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97766
ST_Data is used to model BFD `BFD_OBJECT`.
A STT_TLS symbol does not have the `BFD_OBJECT` flag in BFD.
This makes sense because a STT_TLS symbol is like in a different address space,
normal data/object properties do not apply on them.
With this change, a STT_TLS symbol will not be displayed as 'O'.
This new behavior matches objdump.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96735
Merging directories and files may produce different results on different
platforms.
Merging "./Inputs" and "source-interleave-x86_64.c" will use different
separators in POSIX and Windows.
Dedicated tests are needed for dealing with removing trailing separators
for POSIX (consider only '/') and Windows (consider '/' and '\').
Fixes D85024.
Fixes PR46368.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95513
Warnings have been added for three cases (PR41905): (1) missing debug info, (2)
the source file cannot be found, (3) the debug info points at a line beyond the
end of the file.
(1) is probably less useful. This was brought up once on
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/141264.html and two
internal users mentioned it to me that it was annoying. (I personally
find the warning confusing, too.)
Users specify --source to get additional information if sources happen to be
available. If sources are not available, it should be obvious as the output
will have no interleaved source lines. The warning can be especially annoying
when using llvm-objdump -S on a bunch of files.
This patch drops the warning when there is no debug info.
(If LLVMSymbolizer::symbolizeCode returns an `Error`, there will still be
an error. There is currently no test for an `Error` return value.
The only code path is probably a broken symbol table, but we probably already emit a warning
in that case)
`source-interleave-prefix.test` has an inappropriate "malformed" test - the test simply has no
.debug_* because new llc does not produce debug info when the filename is empty (invalid).
I have tried tampering the header of .debug_info/.debug_line but llvm-symbolizer does not warn.
This patch does not intend to add the missing test coverage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88715
For x86-64 the REX.w prefix takes precedence over any other size
override (i.e. 0x66). Therefore, for x86-64 when REX.w is present set
'hasOpSize' to false to ensure that any size override is ignored.
Fixes PR48901.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95682
Compact unwind entries have 8 bits for the encoding-table offset:
* offsets 0..126 reference the global commmon-encodings table, while
* offsets 127..255 reference a per-second-level-page table.
This diff teaches `llvm-objdump` to print this per-page encodings table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93265
This patch adds the ability to evaluate the state machine for CIE and FDE unwind objects and produce a UnwindTable with all UnwindRow objects needed to unwind registers. It will also dump the UnwindTable for each CIE and FDE when dumping DWARF .debug_frame or .eh_frame sections in llvm-dwarfdump or llvm-objdump. This allows users to see what the unwind rows actually look like for a given CIE or FDE instead of just seeing a list of opcodes.
This patch adds new classes: UnwindLocation, RegisterLocations, UnwindRow, and UnwindTable.
UnwindLocation is a class that describes how to unwind a register or Call Frame Address (CFA).
RegisterLocations is a class that tracks registers and their UnwindLocations. It gets populated when parsing the DWARF call frame instruction opcodes for a unwind row. The registers are mapped from their register numbers to the UnwindLocation in a map.
UnwindRow contains the result of evaluating a row of DWARF call frame instructions for the CIE, or a row from a FDE. The CIE can produce a set of initial instructions that each FDE that points to that CIE will use as the seed for the state machine when parsing FDE opcodes. A UnwindRow for a CIE will not have a valid address, whille a UnwindRow for a FDE will have a valid address.
The UnwindTable is a class that contains a sorted (by address) vector of UnwindRow objects and is the result of parsing all opcodes in a CIE, or FDE. Parsing a CIE should produce a UnwindTable with a single row. Parsing a FDE will produce a UnwindTable with one or more UnwindRow objects where all UnwindRow objects have valid addresses. The rows in the UnwindTable will be sorted from lowest Address to highest after parsing the state machine, or an error will be returned if the table isn't sorted. To parse a UnwindTable clients can use the following methods:
static Expected<UnwindTable> UnwindTable::create(const CIE *Cie);
static Expected<UnwindTable> UnwindTable::create(const FDE *Fde);
A valid table will be returned if the DWARF call frame instruction opcodes have no encoding errors. There are a few things that can go wrong during the evaluation of the state machine and these create functions will catch and return them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89845
This makes the following improvements.
For `SHT_GNU_versym`:
* yaml2obj: set `sh_link` to index of `.dynsym` section automatically.
For `SHT_GNU_verdef`:
* yaml2obj: set `sh_link` to index of `.dynstr` section automatically.
* yaml2obj: set `sh_info` field automatically.
* obj2yaml: don't dump the `Info` field when its value matches the number of version definitions.
For `SHT_GNU_verneed`:
* yaml2obj: set `sh_link` to index of `.dynstr` section automatically.
* yaml2obj: set `sh_info` field automatically.
* obj2yaml: don't dump the `Info` field when its value matches the number of version dependencies.
Also, simplifies few test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94956
Similar to D77853. Change ADRP to print the target address in hex, instead of the raw immediate.
The behavior is similar to GNU objdump but we also include `0x`.
Note: GNU objdump is not consistent whether or not to emit `0x` for different architectures. We try emitting 0x consistently for all targets.
```
GNU objdump: adrp x16, 10000000
Old llvm-objdump: adrp x16, #0
New llvm-objdump: adrp x16, 0x10000000
```
`adrp Xd, 0x...` assembles to a relocation referencing `*ABS*+0x10000` which is not intended. We need to use a linker or use yaml2obj.
The main test is `test/tools/llvm-objdump/ELF/AArch64/pcrel-address.yaml`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93241
This also teaches MachO writers/readers about the MachO cpu subtype,
beyond the minimal subtype reader support present at the moment.
This also defines a preprocessor macro to allow users to distinguish
__arm64__ from __arm64e__.
arm64e defaults to an "apple-a12" CPU, which supports v8.3a, allowing
pointer-authentication codegen.
It also currently defaults to ios14 and macos11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87095
This does the same as `--mcpu=help` but was only
documented in the user guide.
* Added a test for both options.
* Corrected the single dash in `-mcpu=help` text.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92305
Imagine we have a YAML declaration of few sections: `foo1`, `<unnamed 2>`, `foo3`, `foo4`.
To put them into segment we can do (1*):
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
- Section: foo4
```
or we can use (2*):
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
- Section: foo3
- Section: foo4
```
or (3*) :
```
Sections:
- Section: foo1
## "(index 2)" here is a name that we automatically created for a unnamed section.
- Section: (index 2)
- Section: foo3
- Section: foo4
```
It looks really confusing that we don't have to list all of sections.
At first I've tried to make this rule stricter and report an error when there is a gap
(i.e. when a section is included into segment, but not listed explicitly).
This did not work perfect, because such approach conflicts with unnamed sections/fills (see (3*)).
This patch drops "Sections" key and introduces 2 keys instead: `FirstSec` and `LastSec`.
Both are optional.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90458
This removes Inputs/libbogus11.a
Initially I've removed it in D90013, but had to restore it, because BB found this
test is using it.
I've updated the test to use YAMLs, added comment and one more possible error check.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90312
Currently the test uses 14 precompiled binaries. With the functionality
implemented in D89949, it is possible to remove them and use YAMLs instead.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90013
The prefix given to --prefix will be added to GNU absolute paths when
used with --source option (source interleaved with the disassembly).
This matches GNU's objdump behavior.
GNU and C++17 rules for absolute paths are different.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85024
Fixes PR46368.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85024
I recently came across a MachO with multiple sections of the same name but
different segments. We should emit the segment name alongside the section name
for MachO's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87119
AMDGPU ISA isn't backwards compatible and hence -mcpu must always be specified during disassembly.
However, the AMDGPU target CPU is stored in e_flags in the ELF object.
This patch allows targets to implement CPU string detection, and also implements it for AMDGPU by looking at e_flags.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84519
When diffing disassembly dump of two binaries, I see lots of noises from mismatched jump target addresses and global data references, which unnecessarily causes diffs on every function, making it impractical. I'm trying to symbolize the raw binary addresses to minimize the diff noise.
In this change, a local branch target is modeled as a label and the branch target operand will simply be printed as a label. Local labels are collected by a separate pre-decoding pass beforehand. A global data memory operand will be printed as a global symbol instead of the raw data address. Unfortunately, due to the way the disassembler is set up and to be less intrusive, a global symbol is always printed as the last operand of a memory access instruction. This is less than ideal but is probably acceptable from checking code quality point of view since on most targets an instruction can have at most one memory operand.
So far only the X86 disassemblers are supported.
Test Plan:
llvm-objdump -d --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr [rip + 4112] # 202182 <g>
jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>
call 0x201158 <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp 0x201169 <_start+0x10>
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
llvm-objdump -d **--symbolize-operands** --x86-asm-syntax=intel --no-show-raw-insn --no-leading-addr :
```
Disassembly of section .text:
<_start>:
push rax
mov dword ptr [rsp + 4], 0
mov dword ptr [rsp], 0
<L1>:
mov eax, dword ptr [rsp]
cmp eax, dword ptr <g>
jge <L0>
call <foo>
inc dword ptr [rsp]
jmp <L1>
<L0>:
xor eax, eax
pop rcx
ret
```
Note that the jump instructions like `jge 0x20117e <_start+0x25>` without this work is printed as a real target address and an offset from the leading symbol. With a change in the optimizer that adds/deletes an instruction, the address and offset may shift for targets placed after the instruction. This will be a problem when diffing the disassembly from two optimizers where there are unnecessary false positives due to such branch target address changes. With `--symbolize-operand`, a label is printed for a branch target instead to reduce the false positives. Similarly, the disassemble of PC-relative global variable references is also prone to instruction insertion/deletion.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84191
If the referenced symbol of a J[U]MP_SLOT is invalid (e.g. symbol index 0), llvm-objdump -d will bail out:
```
error: 'a': st_name (0x326600) is past the end of the string table of size 0x7
```
where 0x326600 is the st_name field of the first entry past the end of .symtab
Change it to a warning to continue dumping.
`X86/plt.test` uses a prebuilt executable, so I pick `ELF/AArch64/plt.test`
which has a YAML input and can be easily modified.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85623
Add support for constant MachO::CPU_SUBTYPE_ARM64_V8. This constant is
needed so as to match `llvm-libtool-darwin`'s behavior to that of
cctools' libtool when `-arch_only` flag is passed in on command line.
Reviewed by jhenderson, alexshap, smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85041
llvm-objdump currently calls report_fatal_error() when the e_phoff field is invalid.
This is tested by elf-invalid-phdr.test which has the following issues:
1) It uses a precompiled object.
2) it could be a part of invalid.test.
3) It tests the Object lib, but we have no separate test for llvm-objdump.
This patch addresses issues mentioned.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83559
This adds the --debug-vars option to llvm-objdump, which prints
locations (registers/memory) of source-level variables alongside the
disassembly based on DWARF info. A vertical line is printed for each
live-range, with a label at the top giving the variable name and
location, and the position and length of the line indicating the program
counter range in which it is valid.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70720
This patch extends D58439 (`llvm/test/{yaml2obj,obj2yaml}/**/*.yaml`) and runs all
`llvm/test/**/*.yaml`
Many directories have configured `.yaml` (see the deleted lit.local.cfg
files). Yet still some don't configure .yaml and have caused stale tests:
* 8c5825befb test/llvm-readobj
* bdc3134e23 test/ExecutionEngine
Just hoist .yaml to `llvm/test/lit.cfg.py`. Also delete .cxx which is
not used. The number of tests running on my machine increases from 38304 to 38309.
The list of new tests:
```
ExecutionEngine/RuntimeDyld/X86/ELF_x86-64_none.yaml
Object/archive-error-tmp.txt
tools/llvm-ar/coff-weak.yaml
tools/llvm-readobj/ELF/verneed-flags.yaml
tools/obj2yaml/COFF/bss.s
```
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson, rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83350
Place the instruction at the 24th column (0-based indexing), matching
GNU objdump ARM/AArch64/powerpc/etc when the address is low.
This is beneficial for non-x86 targets which have short instruction
lengths.
```
// GNU objdump AArch64
0: 91001062 add x2, x3, #0x4
400078: 91001062 add x2, x3, #0x4
// llvm-objdump, with this patch
0: 62 10 00 91 add x2, x3, #4
400078: 62 10 00 91 add x2, x3, #4
// llvm-objdump, if we change to print a word instead of bytes in the future
0: 91001062 add x2, x3, #4
400078: 91001062 add x2, x3, #4
// GNU objdump Thumb
0: bf00 nop
// GNU objdump Power ISA 3.1 64-bit instruction
// 0: 00 00 10 04 plwa r3,0
// 4: 00 00 60 a4
```
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81590
SUMMARY:
when there are two symbol has the same address. llvm-objdump -D -symbol-description will select symbol based on the following rule:
1. using Label first if there is a Label symbol.
2. If there is not Label, using a symbol which has Storage Mapping class.
3. if more than one symbol has storage mapping class, put the TC0 has the low priority, for other storage mapping class , compare based on the value.
Reviewers: James Henderson ,hubert.reinterpretcast,
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78387
A CIE with the Length == 0 is a terminator:
https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_5.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/ehframechpt.html
And GNU objdump recognizes them and prints the following for such entries:
"00000000 ZERO terminator"
This patch teaches llvm-objdump to do the same. I had to update tests to use
"CHECK-NEXT" too.
(Note: it looks perhaps not right that printing is done inside the DebugInfo library,
I'd expect to see the change in the llvm-objdump's code somewhere instead,
but that is how it done atm).
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80476
I've noticed an issue with "Data.getRelocatedValue(...)" call.
it might silently ignore an error when a content is truncated.
That leads to an infinite loop in the code (e.g. llvm-readobj hangs).
After fixing the issue I've found that actually we always tried
to read past the end of a section, even when a content was valid.
It happened because the terminator CIE (a CIE with the length == 0)
was never handled. At first I've tried just to stop adding the terminator
entry (and return), but it does not seem to be correct, because tools like
llvm-objdump might want to print something for such entries
(see comments in the code and test cases).
This patch fixes issues mentioned, provides new test cases for
both llvm-readobj and lib/DebugInfo and adds FIXMEs to existent
test cases related.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80299
This change adds tests for llvm-nm, llvm-objdump and llvm-size when dumping symbol tables with invalid sh_size (sh_size % sizeof(Elf_Sym) != 0).
Reviewed By: jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77864
Fixes PR44357
For ARM ELF, regions covered by data mapping symbols `$d` are dumped as `.byte`, `.short` or `.word` but inline relocations are not printed. This patch merges its loop into the normal instruction printing loop so that inline relocations are printed.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79284
D63847 added `MCInstrAnalysis::evaluateMemoryOperandAddress()`. This patch
leverages the feature to print the target addresses for evaluable instructions.
```
-400a: movl 4080(%rip), %eax
+400a: movl 4080(%rip), %eax # 5000 <data1>
```
This patch also deletes `MIA->isCall(Inst) || MIA->isUnconditionalBranch(Inst) || MIA->isConditionalBranch(Inst)`
which is used to guard `MCInstrAnalysis::evaluateBranch()`
Reviewed By: jhenderson, skan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78776
Prior to this patch, llvm-objdump would only look in the last section
(according to the section header table order) that matched an address
for a symbol when identifying the target symbol of a call or branch
operation. If there are multiple sections with the same address, due to
some of them being empty, it did not look in those, even if the symbol
couldn't be found in the first section looked in.
This patch causes llvm-objdump to look in all sections for possible
candidate symbols. If there are multiple possible symbols, it picks one
from a non-empty section, if possible (as that is more likely to be the
"real" symbol since functions can't really be in emptiy sections),
before falling back to those in empty sections. If all else fails, it
falls back to absolute symbols as it did before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78549
Reviewed by: grimar, Higuoxing
Currently C++ symbols are demangled in the symbol table as well as in
the disassembly and relocations. This patch adds demangling of C++
symbols in targets of calls and branches making it easier to decipher
control flow in disassembly. This also matches up with GNUobjdump's
behavior
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77957
Address post-commit comment:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D77580#inline-713676
yaml2obj does not record the source filename in the output,
which may make FileCheck tests brittle sometimes.
This patch intends to fix incomplete relocation printing for
XCOFF (potentially for other targets).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77580
When two sections shared the same address, the disassembly code was
using pointer values when sorting (see the SectionRef less than
operator). Since those values aren't guaranteed to have a specific
order, this meant the disassembly code would sometimes change which
section to pick when finding symbols targeted by calls in fully linked
objects.
This change fixes the non-determinism, so that the same section is
always picked. This might have a negative impact in that now a section
without any symbol might be picked over a section with symbols, but this
will be addressed in a later commit.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45411.
Reviewed by: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77640
SUMMARY:
For the llvm-objdump -D, the symbol name is used as a label in the disassembly for the specific address (when a symbol address is equal to the virtual address in the dump).
In XCOFF, multiple symbols may have the same name, being differentiated by their storage mapping class. It is helpful to print the QualName and not just the name when forming the output label for a csect symbol. The symbol index further removes any ambiguity caused by duplicate names.
To maintain compatibility with the binutils objdump, the XCOFF-specific --symbol-description option is added to enable the enhanced format.
Reviewers: hubert.reinterpretcast, James Henderson, Jason Liu ,daltenty
Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72973
Summary:
This patch is to teach `llvm-objdump` dump dynamic symbols (`-T` and `--dynamic-syms`). Currently, this patch is not fully compatible with `gnu-objdump`, but I would like to continue working on this in next few patches. It has two issues.
1. Some symbols shouldn't be marked as global(g). (`-t/--syms` has same issue as well) (Fixed by D75659)
2. `gnu-objdump` can dump version information and *dynamically* insert before symbol name field.
`objdump -T a.out` gives:
```
DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 printf
0000000000000000 DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 __libc_start_main
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 __gmon_start__
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_registerTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 w DF *UND* 0000000000000000 GLIBC_2.2.5 __cxa_finalize
```
`llvm-objdump -T a.out` gives:
```
DYNAMIC SYMBOL TABLE:
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_deregisterTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 g DF *UND* 0000000000000000 printf
0000000000000000 g DF *UND* 0000000000000000 __libc_start_main
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 __gmon_start__
0000000000000000 w D *UND* 0000000000000000 _ITM_registerTMCloneTable
0000000000000000 w DF *UND* 0000000000000000 __cxa_finalize
```
Reviewers: jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, espindola
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Subscribers: emaste, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75756
Summary:
When we encounter an XCOFF file, reflect that in the triple information.
In addition to knowing the object file format, we know that the
associated OS is AIX.
This means that we can expect that there is no output difference in the
processing of an XCOFF32 input file between cases where the triple is
left unspecified by the user and cases where the user specifies
`--triple powerpc-ibm-aix` explicitly.
Reviewers: jhenderson, sfertile, jasonliu, daltenty
Reviewed By: jasonliu
Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, hiraditya, MaskRay, rupprecht, steven.zhang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77025
Leverage ARM ELF build attribute section to create ELF attribute section
for RISC-V. Extract the common part of parsing logic for this section
into ELFAttributeParser.[cpp|h] and ELFAttributes.[cpp|h].
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74023
Summary:
Implement several XCOFF hooks to get '-r' option working for llvm-objdump -r.
Reviewer: DiggerLin, hubert.reinterpretcast, jhenderson, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75131
```
// llvm-objdump -d output (before)
0: bl .-4
4: bl .+0
8: bl .+4
// llvm-objdump -d output (after) ; GNU objdump -d
0: bl 0xfffffffc / bl 0xfffffffffffffffc
4: bl 0x4
8: bl 0xc
```
Many Operand's are not annotated as OPERAND_PCREL.
They are not affected (e.g. `b .+67108860`). I plan to fix them in future patches.
Modified test/tools/llvm-objdump/ELF/PowerPC/branch-offset.s to test
address space wraparound for powerpc32 and powerpc64.
Reviewed By: sfertile, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76591
```
// llvm-objdump -d output (before)
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 11
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 11
// llvm-objdump -d output (after)
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 0x400010
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 0x400015
// GNU objdump -d. The lack of 0x is not ideal because the result cannot be re-assembled
400000: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 400010
400005: e8 0b 00 00 00 callq 400015
```
In llvm-objdump, we pass the address of the next MCInst. Ideally we
should just thread the address of the current address, unfortunately we
cannot call X86MCCodeEmitter::encodeInstruction (X86MCCodeEmitter
requires MCInstrInfo and MCContext) to get the length of the MCInst.
MCInstPrinter::printInst has other callers (e.g llvm-mc -filetype=asm, llvm-mca) which set Address to 0.
They leave MCInstPrinter::PrintBranchImmAsAddress as false and this change is a no-op for them.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76580
These tests passed in my Windows 10 VM, but are failing on Windows bots
with errors which look related to unicode encodings. Disable the tests
on Windows for now.
This adds the --debug-vars option to llvm-objdump, which prints
locations (registers/memory) of source-level variables alongside the
disassembly based on DWARF info. A vertical line is printed for each
live-range, with a label at the top giving the variable name and
location, and the position and length of the line indicating the program
counter range in which it is valid.
Currently, this only works for object files, not executables or shared
libraries.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70720
`PAddr` corresponds to `p_paddr` of a program header, which is the segment's physical
address for systems in which physical addressing is relevant. `p_paddr` is often equal
to `p_vaddr`, which is the virtual address of a segment.
This patch changes the default for `PAddr` from 0 to a value of `VAddr`.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76131
GCC when configured with --enable-gnu-unique (default on glibc>=2.11)
emits STB_GNU_UNIQUE for certain objects which are otherwise emitted as
STT_OBJECT, such as an inline function's static local variable or its
guard variable, and a static data member of a template.
Clang does not implement -fgnu-unique.
Implementing it as a binding is strange and the feature itself is
considered by some as a misfeature.
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75797
Merge symbol-table-elf.test and common-symbol-elf.test, and add some
more tests (invalid st_type, STT_COMMON, STT_GNU_IFUNC, STT_HIOS, STT_LOPROC, SHN_UNDEF, SHN_ABS, SHN_COMMON, STB_GNU_UNIQUE, invalid binding, etc) to test/llvm-objdump/ELF/symbol-table.test
The naming follows test/llvm-{readobj,objcopy}/ELF .
Some discrepancy from GNU objdump:
* STT_COMMON: can be produced with `ld.bfd -r -z common`, but it almost never exists in practice
* STT_GNU_IFUNC: will be fixed by D75793
* STB_GNU_UNIQUE: will be fixed by D75797
* STT_TLS: GNU objdump does not print 'O'
* unknown binding: GNU objdump does not print 'g'. This probably does not matter.
* A reserved symbol index is displayed as *ABS* in GNU objdump. It is not clear what we should print.
Reviewed By: grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75796
The new behavior matches GNU objdump. A pair of angle brackets makes tests slightly easier.
`.foo:` is not unique and thus cannot be used in a `CHECK-LABEL:` directive.
Without `-LABEL`, the CHECK line can match the `Disassembly of section`
line and causes the next `CHECK-NEXT:` to fail.
```
Disassembly of section .foo:
0000000000001634 .foo:
```
Bdragon: <> has metalinguistic connotation. it just "feels right"
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75713
This fixes several issues. The behavior changes are:
A SHN_COMMON symbol does not have the 'g' flag.
An undefined symbol does not have 'g' or 'l' flag.
A STB_GLOBAL SymbolRef::ST_Unknown symbol has the 'g' flag.
A STB_LOCAL SymbolRef::ST_Unknown symbol has the 'l' flag.
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75659
This fixes printing long values that might reside in CIE and FDE,
including offsets, lengths, and addresses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73887
Summary:
Move the check for malformed REBASE_OPCODE_ADD_ADDR_IMM_SCALED and
BIND_OPCODE_DO_BIND_ADD_ADDR_IMM_SCALED opcodes after the immediate
has been applied to the SegmentOffset. This fixes specious errors
where SegmentOffset is pointing between two sections when trying to
correct the SegmentOffset value.
Update the regression tests to verify the proper error message.
Reviewers: pete, ab, lhames, steven_wu, jhenderson
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: hiraditya, dexonsmith, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75629
While the value of the CIE pointer field in a DWARF FDE record is
an offset to the corresponding CIE record from the beginning of
the section, for EH FDE records it is relative to the current offset.
Previously, we did not make that distinction when dumped both kinds
of FDE records and just printed the same value for the CIE pointer
field and the CIE offset; that was acceptable for DWARF FDEs but was
wrong for EH FDEs.
This patch fixes the issue by explicitly printing the offset of the
linked CIE object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74613
Summary:
GNU objdump prints the method name in disassembly output, and upon further investigation this seems to come from debug info, not the symbol table.
Some additional refactoring is necessary to make this work even when the line number is 0/the filename is unknown. The added test case includes a note for this scenario.
See http://llvm.org/PR41341 for more info.
Reviewers: dblaikie, MaskRay, jhenderson
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: ormris, jvesely, aprantl, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74507
We do not keep the actual value of the CIE ID field, because it is
predefined, and use a constant when dumping a CIE record. The issue
was that the predefined value is different for .debug_frame and
.eh_frame sections, but we always printed the one which corresponds
to .debug_frame. The patch fixes that by choosing an appropriate
constant to print.
See the following for more information about .eh_frame sections:
https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/LSB_5.0.0/LSB-Core-generic/LSB-Core-generic/ehframechpt.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73627
Summary:
GNU objdump prints the file format in lowercase, e.g. `elf64-x86-64`. llvm-objdump prints `ELF64-x86-64` right now, even though piping that into llvm-objcopy refuses that as a valid arch to use.
As an example of a problem this causes, see: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/779
Reviewers: MaskRay, jhenderson, alexshap
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: tpimh, sbc100, grimar, jvesely, nhaehnle, kerbowa, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74433
When both little-endian and big-endian are tested, or both 32-bit and 64-bit are tested, use a template like the following with `-D BITS=32 -D ENCODE=LSB`
```
--- !ELF
FileHeader:
Class: ELFCLASS[[BITS]]
Data: ELFDATA2[[ENCODE]]
Type: ET_DYN
Machine: EM_X86_64
```
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73828
Summary:
llvm-objdump -macho will no longer print "Contents of" headers when
disassembling section contents when -no-leading-headers is specified.
For historical reasons, this flag is independent of -no-leading-addr.
Reviewers: ab, pete, jhenderson
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73574
Summary:
llvm-objdump started warning when asked to disassemble a section that
isn't present in the input files, in Yuanfang Chen's change:
d16c162c94. The problem is that the
logic was restricted only to the generic llvm-objdump parser, not to the
Mach-O-specific parser used for Apple toolchain compatibility. The
solution is to log section names from the Mach-O parser.
The macho-cstring-dump.test has been updated to fail if it encounters
this new warning in the future.
Reviewers: pete, ab, lhames, jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, ychen
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73586
Disassembly of instructions can fail when llvm-objdump is not given the right set of
architecture features, for example when the source is compiled with:
clang -march=..+ext1+ext2
and disassembly is attempted with:
llvm-objdump -mattr=+ext1
This patch avoids further analysing unknown instructions (as was happening
before) when disassembly has failed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73531
To improve consistency and avoid unneeded shell feature (output
redirection).
While here, make other changes to improve consistency
--docnum 1 => --docnum=1
-docnum=x => --docnum=x
We have a bug currently: printed tag names might overlap the
value column. It happens for MIPS now.
This patch adds a logic to calculate the size of indentation on fly
to fix such issues.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72838
This adds a few more tests for dynamic section.
We only had tests for simple unknown values for 64-bits target,
in this patch I've added OS specific and processor specific tags.
Also it tests both 32 and 64-bits targets now.
It will help to fix the formatting issues we have and diagnose a possible new ones.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71896
Don't overwrite existing target-cpu attributes.
I've often found the replacement behavior annoying, and this is
inconsistent with how the fast math command line flags interact with
the function attributes.
Does not yet change target-features, since I think that should behave
as a concatenation.
This adds --strict-whitespace --match-full-lines flags to
improve the testing and reveal formatting issues we have.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71895
Summary:
llvm-objdump will commonly error out when disassembling a Mach-O binary with
stab symbols, or when printing a Mach-O symbol table that includesstab symbols.
That is because the Mach-O N_OSO symbol has been modified to include the
bottom 8-bit value of the Mach-O's cpusubtype value in the section field. In
general, one cannot blindly assume a stab symbol's section field is valid
unless one has actually consulted the specification for the specific stab.
Since objdump mostly just walks the symbol table to get mnemonics for code
disassembly it's best for objdump to just ignore stab symbols. llvm-nm will
do a more complete and correct job of displaying Mach-O symbol table contents.
Reviewers: pete, lhames, ab, thegameg, jhenderson, MaskRay
Reviewed By: thegameg, MaskRay
Subscribers: MaskRay, rupprecht, seiya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71394
We have the `elf-dynamic-tags-machine-specific.yaml` input shared
between the llvm-readobj and llvm-objdump test.
It looks strange, because tools usually does not share inputs.
Also there are following problems related:
1) `elf-dynamic-tags-machine-specific.yaml` input contains excessive YAML parts.
2) objdump's test case never test AARCH64 tags.
3) There are unknown tags in the `elf-dynamic-tags-machine-specific.yaml` and
`dynamic-tags-machine-specific.test`, though we already testing unknown tags
in `\llvm-readobj\ELF\dynamic-tags.test` and `llvm-objdump\elf-dynamic-section.test` tests.
This patch removes the shared input and refines the test cases to resolve
issues mentioned.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71602
This creates the next subfolders in the test directory:
"COFF", "ELF", "MachO", "wasm".
I've also removed platform specific prefixes, like "coff-*".
One unused binary was removed as well: `Inputs/relocs.obj.elf-mips`
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71203
Mostly this adds testing for certain aliases in more explicit ways.
There are also a few tidy-ups, and additions of missing testing, where
the feature was either not tested at all, or not tested explicitly and
sufficiently.
Reviewed by: MaskRay, rupprecht, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71116
The PT_GNU_PROPERTY is generated by a linker to describe the
.note.gnu.property section. The Linux kernel uses this program header to
locate the .note.gnu.property section.
It is described in "The Linux gABI extension"
Include support for llvm-readelf, llvm-readobj and the yaml reader and
writers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70959
SUMMARY:
implement printing out raw section data of xcoff objectfile for llvm-objdump
and option -D --disassemble-all option for llvm-objdump
Reviewers: Sean Fertile
Subscribers: rupprecht, seiyai,hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70255
Summary: Matches GNU objdump. Makes debugging easier for me as I'm working out addresses from symbol+addend, so it would be good to be calculating in a single format.
Reviewers: MaskRay, grimar, jhenderson, bd1976llvm
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: sdardis, jrtc27, atanasyan, rupprecht, seiya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69997
SUMMARY:
implement printing out raw section data of xcoff objectfile for llvm-objdump
and option -D --disassemble-all option for llvm-objdump
Reviewers: Sean Fertile
Subscribers: rupprecht, seiyai,hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70255
llvm-objdump -D this file:
int a[100000];
int main() { return 0; }
Will produce an error: "The end of the file was unexpectedly encountered".
This happens because of a check in Binary.h checkOffset. (Addr + Size > M.getBufferEnd()).
The sh_offset and sh_size fields can be ignored for SHT_NOBITS sections.
Fix the error by changing ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::getSectionContents to use
the file base for SHT_NOBITS sections.
Reviewed By: grimar, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69192
It returns just a section_iterator currently and have a report_fatal_error call inside.
This change adds a way to return errors and handle them on caller sides.
The patch also changes/improves current users and adds test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69167
llvm-svn: 375408
This patch tries to resolve problems faced in D68943
and uses some of the code written by Konrad Wilhelm Kleine
in that patch.
Previously, yaml2obj tool always created a .symtab section.
This patch changes that. With it we only create it when
have a "Symbols:" tag in the YAML document or when
we need to create it because it is used by another section(s).
obj2yaml follows the new behavior and does not print "Symbols:"
anymore when there is no symbol table.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69041
llvm-svn: 375361
This relands r374931 (reverted in r375088). It fixes 32-bit builds by using the right format string specifier for uint64_t (PRIu64) instead of `%d`.
Original description:
When listing the index in `llvm-objdump -h`, use a zero-based counter instead of the actual section index (e.g. shdr->sh_index for ELF).
While this is effectively a noop for now (except one unit test for XCOFF), the index values will change in a future patch that filters certain sections out (e.g. symbol tables). See D68669 for more context. Note: the test case in `test/tools/llvm-objdump/X86/section-index.s` already covers the case of incrementing the section index counter when sections are skipped.
Reviewers: grimar, jhenderson, espindola
Reviewed By: grimar
Subscribers: emaste, sbc100, arichardson, aheejin, arphaman, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68848
llvm-svn: 375178
This broke llvm-objdump in 32-bit builds, see e.g.
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-armv7-quick/builds/10925
> Summary:
> When listing the index in `llvm-objdump -h`, use a zero-based counter instead of the actual section index (e.g. shdr->sh_index for ELF).
>
> While this is effectively a noop for now (except one unit test for XCOFF), the index values will change in a future patch that filters certain sections out (e.g. symbol tables). See D68669 for more context. Note: the test case in `test/tools/llvm-objdump/X86/section-index.s` already covers the case of incrementing the section index counter when sections are skipped.
>
> Reviewers: grimar, jhenderson, espindola
>
> Reviewed By: grimar
>
> Subscribers: emaste, sbc100, arichardson, aheejin, arphaman, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
>
> Tags: #llvm
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68848
llvm-svn: 375088
Summary:
When listing the index in `llvm-objdump -h`, use a zero-based counter instead of the actual section index (e.g. shdr->sh_index for ELF).
While this is effectively a noop for now (except one unit test for XCOFF), the index values will change in a future patch that filters certain sections out (e.g. symbol tables). See D68669 for more context. Note: the test case in `test/tools/llvm-objdump/X86/section-index.s` already covers the case of incrementing the section index counter when sections are skipped.
Reviewers: grimar, jhenderson, espindola
Reviewed By: grimar
Subscribers: emaste, sbc100, arichardson, aheejin, arphaman, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68848
llvm-svn: 374931
Summary:
- Expand the "Name" column past 13 characters when any of the section names are longer. Current behavior is a staggard output instead of a nice table if a single name is longer.
- Only print the required number of hex chars for addresses (i.e. 8 characters for 32-bit, 16 characters for 64-bit)
- Fix trailing spaces
Reviewers: grimar, jhenderson, espindola
Reviewed By: grimar
Subscribers: emaste, sbc100, arichardson, aheejin, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68730
llvm-svn: 374795
Summary:
rL371826 rearranged some output from llvm-objdump for GNU objdump compatability, but there still seem to be some more.
I think this rearrangement is a little closer. Overview of the ordering which matches GNU objdump:
* Archive headers
* File headers
* Section headers
* Symbol table
* Dwarf debugging
* Relocations (if `--disassemble` is not used)
* Section contents
* Disassembly
Reviewers: jhenderson, justice_adams, grimar, ychen, espindola
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Subscribers: aprantl, emaste, arichardson, jrtc27, atanasyan, seiya, llvm-commits, MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68066
llvm-svn: 373671
Patch by Justice Adams!
Made llvm-objdump --all-headers output match the order of GNU objdump for compatibility reasons.
Old order of the headers output:
* file header
* section header table
* symbol table
* program header table
* dynamic section
New order of the headers output (GNU compatible):
* file header information
* program header table
* dynamic section
* section header table
* symbol table
(Relevant BugZilla Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41830)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67357
llvm-svn: 371826