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			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			87 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
| =======================================
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| LLVM's Optional Rich Disassembly Output
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| =======================================
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| 
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| .. contents::
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|    :local:
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| 
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| Introduction
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| ============
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| 
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| LLVM's default disassembly output is raw text. To allow consumers more ability
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| to introspect the instructions' textual representation or to reformat for a more
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| user friendly display there is an optional rich disassembly output.
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| 
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| This optional output is sufficient to reference into individual portions of the
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| instruction text. This is intended for clients like disassemblers, list file
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| generators, and pretty-printers, which need more than the raw instructions and
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| the ability to print them.
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| 
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| To provide this functionality the assembly text is marked up with annotations.
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| The markup is simple enough in syntax to be robust even in the case of version
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| mismatches between consumers and producers. That is, the syntax generally does
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| not carry semantics beyond "this text has an annotation," so consumers can
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| simply ignore annotations they do not understand or do not care about.
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| 
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| After calling ``LLVMCreateDisasm()`` to create a disassembler context the
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| optional output is enable with this call:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: c
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| 
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|     LLVMSetDisasmOptions(DC, LLVMDisassembler_Option_UseMarkup);
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| 
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| Then subsequent calls to ``LLVMDisasmInstruction()`` will return output strings
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| with the marked up annotations.
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| 
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| Instruction Annotations
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| =======================
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| 
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| .. _contextual markups:
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| 
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| Contextual markups
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| ------------------
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| 
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| Annoated assembly display will supply contextual markup to help clients more
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| efficiently implement things like pretty printers. Most markup will be target
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| independent, so clients can effectively provide good display without any target
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| specific knowledge.
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| 
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| Annotated assembly goes through the normal instruction printer, but optionally
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| includes contextual tags on portions of the instruction string. An annotation
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| is any '<' '>' delimited section of text(1).
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| 
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| .. code-block:: bat
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| 
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|     annotation: '<' tag-name tag-modifier-list ':' annotated-text '>'
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|     tag-name: identifier
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|     tag-modifier-list: comma delimited identifier list
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| 
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| The tag-name is an identifier which gives the type of the annotation. For the
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| first pass, this will be very simple, with memory references, registers, and
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| immediates having the tag names "mem", "reg", and "imm", respectively.
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| 
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| The tag-modifier-list is typically additional target-specific context, such as
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| register class.
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| 
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| Clients should accept and ignore any tag-names or tag-modifiers they do not
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| understand, allowing the annotations to grow in richness without breaking older
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| clients.
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| 
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| For example, a possible annotation of an ARM load of a stack-relative location
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| might be annotated as:
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| 
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| .. code-block:: nasm
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| 
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|    ldr <reg gpr:r0>, <mem regoffset:[<reg gpr:sp>, <imm:#4>]>
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| 
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| 
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| 1: For assembly dialects in which '<' and/or '>' are legal tokens, a literal token is escaped by following immediately with a repeat of the character.  For example, a literal '<' character is output as '<<' in an annotated assembly string.
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| 
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| C API Details
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| -------------
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| 
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| The intended consumers of this information use the C API, therefore the new C
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| API function for the disassembler will be added to provide an option to produce
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| disassembled instructions with annotations, ``LLVMSetDisasmOptions()`` and the
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| ``LLVMDisassembler_Option_UseMarkup`` option (see above).
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