Missed the resetting base address selections when going from a base
address version to zero base address for non-base-addressed entries.
llvm-svn: 309529
(from comments in the test)
Group ranges in a range list that apply to the same section and use a base
address selection entry to reduce the number of relocations to one reloc per
section per range list. DWARF5 debug_rnglist will be more efficient than this
in terms of relocations, but it's still better than one reloc per entry in a
range list.
This is an object/executable size tradeoff - shrinking objects, but growing
the linked executable. In one large binary tested, total object size (not just
debug info) shrank by 16%, entirely relocation entries. Linked executable
grew by 4%. This was with compressed debug info in the objects, uncompressed
in the linked executable. Without compression in the objects, the win would be
smaller (the growth of debug_ranges itself would be more significant).
llvm-svn: 309526
This can come up in ThinLTO & wastes space & makes degenerate IR.
As per the added FIXME, ultimately, local imported entities should hang
off the function and that way the imported entity list on the CU can be
tested for emptiness like all the other CU lists.
(function-attached local imported entities are probably also the best
path forward for fixing how imported entities are handled both in
cross-module use (currently, while ThinLTO preserves the imported
entities, they would not get used at the imported inlined location -
only in the abstract origin that appears in the partial CU created by
the import (which isn't emitted under Fission due to cross-CU
limitations there)) and to reduce the number of points where imported
entities are emitted (they're currently emitted into every inlined
instance, concrete instance, and abstract origin - they should only go
in teh abstract origin if there is one, otherwise in the concrete
instance - but this requires lots of delayed handling and wiring up,
same as abstract variables & subprograms))
llvm-svn: 309354
Local imported entities at the top level of a subprogram were being
handled differently from those in nested scopes - that different
handling would cause pseudo concrete out-of-line definitions to be
created (but without any of their attributes, nor an abstract_origin) in
the case where there was no real concrete definition.
These local imported entities also only appeared in the concrete
definition where those imported entities in nested scopes appear in all
cases (abstract, concrete, and inlined). This change at least makes top
level case handle the same as the others - though there's a FIXME to
improve this to /only/ emit them into the abstract origin (though this
requires more plumbing - like the abstract subprogram and variable
handling that must defer population until the end of the unit to
discover if there is an abstract origin, or only a standalone concrete
definition).
llvm-svn: 309237
This is a better fix than r308708 for the problem introduced in
r304020. It restores the skeleton CU testcases modified by that commit
to their original form and most importantly ensures that
frontend-generated skeleton CUs (such as used to point to Clang
modules) come after the regular CUs. This broke for DICompileUnit
nodes that don't have any immediate children because they are now
constructed lazily instead of the order in which they are listed in
!llvm.dbg.cu. After this commit we still don't guarantee that order,
but we do guarantee that empty skeletons come last.
Shipping versions of LLDB are very sensitive to the ordering of
CUs. I'll track a fix for LLDB to be more permissive separately.
This fixes a test failure in the LLDB testsuite.
rdar://problem/33357252
llvm-svn: 309154
The instruction it falls over on is an IMPLICT_DEF that also happens
to be the only instruction in its lexical scope. That LexicalScope has
never been created because its range is empty. This patch skips over
all meta-instructions instead of just DBG_VALUEs.
Thanks to David Blaikie for providing a testcase!
llvm-svn: 305853
For the following motivating example
bool c();
void f();
bool start() {
bool result = c();
if (!c()) {
result = false;
goto exit;
}
f();
result = true;
exit:
return result;
}
we would previously generate a single DW_AT_const_value(1) because
only the DBG_VALUE in the second-to-last basic block survived
codegen. This patch improves the heuristic used to determine when a
DBG_VALUE is available at the beginning of its variable's enclosing
lexical scope:
- Stop giving singular constants blanket permission to take over the
entire scope. There is still a special case for constants in the
function prologue that we also miight want to retire later.
- Use the lexical scope information to determine available-at-entry
instead of proximity to the function prologue.
After this patch we generate a location list with a more accurate
narrower availability for the constant true value. As a pleasant side
effect, we also generate inline locations instead of location lists
where a loacation covers the entire range of the enclosing lexical
scope.
Measured on compiling llc with four targets this doesn't have an
effect on compile time and reduces the size of the debug info for llc
by ~600K.
rdar://problem/30286912
llvm-svn: 305599
Summary:
This patch is part of 3 patches that together form a single patch, but must be introduced in stages in order not to break things.
The way that LLVM interprets DW_OP_plus in DIExpression nodes is basically that of the DW_OP_plus_uconst operator since LLVM expects an unsigned constant operand. This unnecessarily restricts the DW_OP_plus operator, preventing it from being used to describe the evaluation of runtime values on the expression stack. These patches try to align the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus with that of the DWARF definition, which pops two elements off the expression stack, performs the operation and pushes the result back on the stack.
This is done in three stages:
• The first patch (LLVM) adds support for DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The second patch (Clang) contains changes all its uses from DW_OP_plus to DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The third patch (LLVM) changes the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus to be in line with its DWARF meaning. This patch includes the bitcode upgrade from legacy DIExpressions.
Patch by Sander de Smalen.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, javed.absar, aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33894
llvm-svn: 305386
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
This is really a workaround for ThinLTO in particular - since it can
import partial CUs that may end up looking very similar/the same as
the same partial import in another ThinLTO compile.
An alternative fix would be to change the DICompileUnit metadata to
include a "primary file" or the like - and when importing for ThinLTO
set the primary file to the name of the DICompileUnit that is being
imported into. This involves changing the schema and would reduce the
excessive uniqueness in the hash that this change creates - allowing
diagnosing of more duplicate CUs than will be caught with this change.
But duplicate CUs can still be caught in non-ThinLTO builds & are mostly
a nuisance rather than a particularly deliberate/effective tool for
finding broken code. (arguably the hash could always include the dwo
file and nothing in fission would break, I think..)
Reapply of r304119 after adding a triple to the test and moving it
to the X86 directory.
llvm-svn: 304130
When the only use of a CU is for a subprogram that's only emitted into
the using CU (to avoid cross-CU references in DWO files), avoid creating
that CU at all.
Reapply of r304111 after adding a triple to the test and moving it
to the X86 directory.
llvm-svn: 304129
This is really a workaround for ThinLTO in particular - since it can
import partial CUs that may end up looking very similar/the same as
the same partial import in another ThinLTO compile.
An alternative fix would be to change the DICompileUnit metadata to
include a "primary file" or the like - and when importing for ThinLTO
set the primary file to the name of the DICompileUnit that is being
imported into. This involves changing the schema and would reduce the
excessive uniqueness in the hash that this change creates - allowing
diagnosing of more duplicate CUs than will be caught with this change.
But duplicate CUs can still be caught in non-ThinLTO builds & are mostly
a nuisance rather than a particularly deliberate/effective tool for
finding broken code. (arguably the hash could always include the dwo
file and nothing in fission would break, I think..)
llvm-svn: 304119
When the only use of a CU is for a subprogram that's only emitted into
the using CU (to avoid cross-CU references in DWO files), avoid creating
that CU at all.
llvm-svn: 304111
Consistent with GCC and addresses a shortcoming with ThinLTO where many
imported CUs may end up being empty (because the functions imported from
them either ended up not being used (and were then discarded, since
they're imported as available_externally) or optimized away entirely).
Test cases previously testing empty CUs (either intentionally, or
because they didn't need anything more complicated) had a trivial 'int'
or similar basic type added to their retained types list.
This is a first order approximation - a deeper implementation could do
things like:
1) Be more lazy about construction of the CU - for example if two CUs
containing a single identical retained type are linked together, with
this change one of the two CUs will be produced but empty (since a
duplicate type won't be produced).
2) Go further and invert all the CU links the same way the subprogram
link is inverted - keep named CU lists of retained types, macros, etc,
and have those link back to the CU. Then if they're emitted, the CU is
emitted, but never otherwise - this would allow the metadata itself to
be dropped earlier too, though it seems unlikely that's an important
optimization as there shouldn't be many CUs relative to the number of
other entities.
llvm-svn: 304020
This produced 'strange' DWARF anyway - the CU would have no ranges (or
at least not a range including the inlined code) nor any subprogram or
inlined_subroutine - yet the line table would have entries for these
instructions.
(this actually becomes more relevant with changes coming after this,
where a CU without any contents will be omitted entirely - so there
would be no line table to put this on anyway)
llvm-svn: 304004
Previously this code was defensive to the situation in which the debug
info scopes would lead to a different subprogram from the subprogram in
the CU's subprogram list (this could've happened with linkonce
functions, etc as per the comment being removed). Since the CU<>SP link
reversal this is no longer possible.
llvm-svn: 303933
Turns out gold doesn't use the DW_AT_GNU_pubnames to decide whether to
parse the rest of the DIEs when building gdb-index. This causes gold to
trip over LLVM's output when there are DW_FORM_ref_addr present.
Gold does use the presence of a debug_gnu_pub{names,types} entry for the
CU to skip parsing the debug_info portion, so make sure that's included
even when empty (technically, when empty there couldn't be any ref_addr
anyway - it only came up when gmlt didn't produce any (even non-empty)
pubnames - but given what that reveals about gold's implementation, this
seems like a good thing to do for consistency).
llvm-svn: 303894
MachineInstructions that don't generate any code (such as
IMPLICIT_DEFs) should not generate any debug info either.
Fixes PR33107.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33107
This reapplies r303566 without any modifications. The stage2 build
failures persisted even after reverting this patch, and looking back
through history, it looks like these tests are flaky.
llvm-svn: 303575
MachineInstructions that don't generate any code (such as
IMPLICIT_DEFs) should not generate any debug info either.
Fixes PR33107.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33107
llvm-svn: 303566
Turns out that the Fission/Split DWARF package format (DWP) is currently
insufficient to handle cross-CU (ref_addr) references. So for now,
duplicate any debug info needed in these situations:
* inlined_subroutine's abstract_origin
* inlined variable's abstract_origin
* types
Keep the ref_addr behavior in general, including in the split DWARF
inline debug info that can be emitted into the object files for online
symbolication.
Keep a flag to use the old (ref_addr) behavior for testing ways of
addressing this limitation in the DWP tool (& for those not using DWP
packaging).
llvm-svn: 302858
Since Split DWARF needs to name the actual .dwo file that is generated,
it can't be known at the time the llvm::Module is produced as it may be
merged with other Modules before the object is generated and that object
may be generated with any name.
By passing the Split DWARF file name when LLVM is producing object code
the .dwo file name in the object file can match correctly.
The support for Split DWARF for implicit modules remains the same -
using metadata to store the dwo name and dwo id so that potentially
multiple skeleton CUs referring to different dwo files can be generated
from one llvm::Module.
llvm-svn: 301062
- introduced in r300522 and found via the Swift LLDB testsuite.
The fix is to set the location kind to memory whenever an FrameIndex
location is emitted.
rdar://problem/31707602
llvm-svn: 300793
- introduced in r300522 and found via the Swift LLDB testsuite.
The fix is to set the location kind to memory whenever an FrameIndex
location is emitted.
rdar://problem/31707602
llvm-svn: 300790
The DWARF specification knows 3 kinds of non-empty simple location
descriptions:
1. Register location descriptions
- describe a variable in a register
- consist of only a DW_OP_reg
2. Memory location descriptions
- describe the address of a variable
3. Implicit location descriptions
- describe the value of a variable
- end with DW_OP_stack_value & friends
The existing DwarfExpression code is pretty much ignorant of these
restrictions. This used to not matter because we only emitted very
short expressions that we happened to get right by accident. This
patch makes DwarfExpression aware of the rules defined by the DWARF
standard and now chooses the right kind of location description for
each expression being emitted.
This would have been an NFC commit (for the existing testsuite) if not
for the way that clang describes captured block variables. Based on
how the previous code in LLVM emitted locations, DW_OP_deref
operations that should have come at the end of the expression are put
at its beginning. Fixing this means changing the semantics of
DIExpression, so this patch bumps the version number of DIExpression
and implements a bitcode upgrade.
There are two major changes in this patch:
I had to fix the semantics of dbg.declare for describing function
arguments. After this patch a dbg.declare always takes the *address*
of a variable as the first argument, even if the argument is not an
alloca.
When lowering a DBG_VALUE, the decision of whether to emit a register
location description or a memory location description depends on the
MachineLocation — register machine locations may get promoted to
memory locations based on their DIExpression. (Future) optimization
passes that want to salvage implicit debug location for variables may
do so by appending a DW_OP_stack_value. For example:
DBG_VALUE, [RBP-8] --> DW_OP_fbreg -8
DBG_VALUE, RAX --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
DBG_VALUE, RAX, DIExpression(DW_OP_deref) --> DW_OP_reg0 +0
All testcases that were modified were regenerated from clang. I also
added source-based testcases for each of these to the debuginfo-tests
repository over the last week to make sure that no synchronized bugs
slip in. The debuginfo-tests compile from source and run the debugger.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32382
<rdar://problem/31205000>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31439
llvm-svn: 300522
Also add an assertion for the case that there are multiple FI
expressions with a DW_OP_LLVM_fragment; which should violate internal
constraints in DbgVariable.
llvm-svn: 298518
In doing so, clean up the MD5 interface a little. Most
existing users only care about the lower 8 bytes of an MD5,
but for some users that care about the upper and lower,
there wasn't a good interface. Furthermore, consumers
of the MD5 checksum were required to handle endianness
details on their own, so it seems reasonable to abstract
this into a nicer interface that just gives you the right
value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31105
llvm-svn: 298322
and mark the methods as protected.
Besides reducing the surface area of DwarfExpression, this is in
preparation for an upcoming bugfix in the DwarfExpression
implementation, for which it will be necessary to defer emitting
register operations until the rest of the expression is known.
NFC
llvm-svn: 298309
This reverts commit r242302. External type refs of this form were
never used by any LLVM frontend so this is effectively dead code.
(They were introduced to support clang module debug info, but in the
end we came up with a better design that doesn't use this feature at
all.)
rdar://problem/25897929
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30917
llvm-svn: 297684
This fixes PR31381, which caused an assertion and/or invalid debug info.
This affects debug variables that have multiple fragments in the MMI
side (i.e.: in the stack frame) table.
rdar://problem/30571676
llvm-svn: 295486
While looking to add support for placing singular types (types that will
only be emitted in one place (such as attached to a strong vtable or
explicit template instantiation definition)) not in type units (since
type units have overhead) I stumbled across that change causing an
increase in pubtypes.
Turns out we were missing some types from type units if they were only
referenced from other type units and not from the debug_info section.
This fixes that, following GCC's line of describing the offset of such
entities as the CU die (since there's no compile unit-relative offset
that would describe such an entity - they aren't in the CU). Also like
GCC, this change prefers to describe the type stub within the CU rather
than the "just use the CU offset" fallback where possible. This may give
the DWARF consumer some opportunity to find the extra info in the type
stub - though I'm not sure GDB does anything with this currently.
The size of the pubnames/pubtypes sections now match exactly with or
without type units enabled.
This nearly triples (+189%) the pubtypes section for a clang self-host
and grows pubnames by 0.07% (without compression). For a total of 8%
increase in debug info sections of the objects of a Split DWARF build
when using type units.
llvm-svn: 293971
LTO. Replace it with a related assertion, ensuring that abstract
variables appear only in abstract scopes.
Part of PR31437.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D29430
llvm-svn: 293841
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades and a change
to the Bitcode record for DIGlobalVariable, that makes upgrading the
old format unambiguous also for variables without DIExpressions.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 290153
This reverts commit 289920 (again).
I forgot to implement a Bitcode upgrade for the case where a DIGlobalVariable
has not DIExpression. Unfortunately it is not possible to safely upgrade
these variables without adding a flag to the bitcode record indicating which
version they are.
My plan of record is to roll the planned follow-up patch that adds a
unit: field to DIGlobalVariable into this patch before recomitting.
This way we only need one Bitcode upgrade for both changes (with a
version flag in the bitcode record to safely distinguish the record
formats).
Sorry for the churn!
llvm-svn: 289982
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289920
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289902
Follow-up to r289256, address a FIXME to avoid resetting the column
number. This reduced .debug_line by 2.6% in a RelWithDebInfo
self-build of clang.
llvm-svn: 289620
DWARF specifies that "line 0" really means "no appropriate source
location" in the line table. By default, use this for branch targets
and some other cases that have no specified source location, to
prevent inheriting unfortunate line numbers from physically preceding
instructions (which might be from completely unrelated source).
Updated patch allows enabling or suppressing this behavior for all
unspecified source locations.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24180
llvm-svn: 289468
LLVM's use of DW_OP_bit_piece is incorrect and a based on a
misunderstanding of the wording in the DWARF specification. The offset
argument of DW_OP_bit_piece refers to the offset into the location
that is on the top of the DWARF expression stack, and not an offset
into the source variable. This has since also been clarified in the
DWARF specification.
This patch fixes all uses of DW_OP_bit_piece to emit the correct
offset and simplifies the DwarfExpression class to semi-automaticaly
emit empty DW_OP_pieces to adjust the offset of the source variable,
thus simplifying the code using DwarfExpression.
While this is an incompatible bugfix, in practice I don't expect this
to be much of a problem since LLVM's old interpretation and the
correct interpretation of DW_OP_bit_piece differ only when there are
gaps in the fragmented locations of the described variables or if
individual fragments are smaller than a byte. LLDB at least won't
interpret locations with gaps in them because is has no way to present
undefined bits in a variable, and there is a high probability that an
old-form expression will be malformed when interpreted correctly,
because the DW_OP_bit_piece offset will be outside of the location at
the top of the stack.
As a nice side-effect, this patch enables us to use a more efficient
encoding for subregisters: In order to express a sub-register at a
non-zero offset we now use a DW_OP_bit_piece instead of shifting the
value into place manually.
This patch also adds missing test coverage for code paths that weren't
exercised before.
<rdar://problem/29335809>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27550
llvm-svn: 289266
Like DBG_VALUE, these emit nothing to the .text section, and sometimes
have no source location specified. Just ignore them.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D27492
llvm-svn: 289256
so we can stop using DW_OP_bit_piece with the wrong semantics.
The entire back story can be found here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20161114/405934.html
The gist is that in LLVM we've been misinterpreting DW_OP_bit_piece's
offset field to mean the offset into the source variable rather than
the offset into the location at the top the DWARF expression stack. In
order to be able to fix this in a subsequent patch, this patch
introduces a dedicated DW_OP_LLVM_fragment operation with the
semantics that we used to apply to DW_OP_bit_piece, which is what we
actually need while inside of LLVM. This patch is complete with a
bitcode upgrade for expressions using the old format. It does not yet
fix the DWARF backend to use DW_OP_bit_piece correctly.
Implementation note: We discussed several options for implementing
this, including reserving a dedicated field in DIExpression for the
fragment size and offset, but using an custom operator at the end of
the expression works just fine and is more efficient because we then
only pay for it when we need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27361
rdar://problem/29335809
llvm-svn: 288683
The DIEUnit class represents a compile or type unit and it owns the unit DIE as an instance variable. This allows anyone with a DIE, to get the unit DIE, and then get back to its DIEUnit without adding any new ivars to the DIE class. Why was this needed? The DIE class has an Offset that is always the CU relative DIE offset, not the "offset in debug info section" as was commented in the header file (the comment has been corrected). This is great for performance because most DIE references are compile unit relative and this means most code that accessed the DIE's offset didn't need to make it into a compile unit relative offset because it already was. When we needed to emit a DW_FORM_ref_addr though, we needed to find the absolute offset of the DIE by finding the DIE's compile/type unit. This class did have the absolute debug info/type offset and could be added to the CU relative offset to compute the absolute offset. With this change we can easily get back to a DIE's DIEUnit which will have this needed offset. Prior to this is required having a DwarfDebug and required calling:
DwarfCompileUnit *DwarfDebug::lookupUnit(const DIE *CU) const;
Now we can use the DIEUnit class to do so without needing DwarfDebug. All clients now use DIEUnit objects (the DwarfDebug stack and the DwarfLinker). A follow on patch for the DWARF generator will also take advantage of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27170
llvm-svn: 288399
VariableDbgInfo is per function data, so it makes sense to have it with
the function instead of the module.
This is a necessary step to have machine module passes work properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27186
llvm-svn: 288292
The LLDB tests are now ready for this patch.
DWARF specifies that "line 0" really means "no appropriate source
location" in the line table. Use this for branch targets and some
other cases that have no specified source location, to prevent
inheriting unfortunate line numbers from physically preceding
instructions (which might be from completely unrelated source).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24180
llvm-svn: 288283
DWARF specifies that "line 0" really means "no appropriate source
location" in the line table. Use this for branch targets and some
other cases that have no specified source location, to prevent
inheriting unfortunate line numbers from physically preceding
instructions (which might be from completely unrelated source).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D24180
llvm-svn: 288212
This patch makes AsmPrinter less reliant on DwarfDebug by relying on the DWARF version in the AsmPrinter's MCStreamer's MCContext. This allows us to remove the redundant DWARF version from DwarfDebug. It also lets us change code that used to access the AsmPrinter's DwarfDebug just to get to the DWARF version by changing the DWARF version accessor on AsmPrinter so that it grabs the version from its MCStreamer's MCContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27032
llvm-svn: 287839
The previously used "names" are rather descriptions (they use multiple
words and contain spaces), use short programming language identifier
like strings for the "names" which should be used when exporting to
machine parseable formats.
Also removed a unused TimerGroup from Hexxagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25583
llvm-svn: 287369
The core of the change is supposed to be NFC, however it also fixes
what I believe was an undefined behavior when calling:
va_start(ValueArgs, Desc);
with Desc being a StringRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25342
llvm-svn: 283671
Summary: -fsample-profile needs discriminator, which will not be added if built with -g0. This patch makes sure the discriminator is added for sample-profile at -g0. A followup patch will be send out to update clang tests.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, echristo, dnovillo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25132
llvm-svn: 283565
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.
Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147
llvm-svn: 281284
This patch changes LLVM_CONSTEXPR variable declarations to const
variable declarations, since LLVM_CONSTEXPR expands to nothing if the
current compiler doesn't support constexpr. In all of the changed
cases, it looks like the code intended the variable to be const instead
of sometimes-constexpr sometimes-not.
llvm-svn: 279696
In cases where .dwo/.dwp files are guaranteed to be available, skipping
the extra online (in the .o file) inline info can save a substantial
amount of space - see the original r221306 for more details there.
llvm-svn: 279650
These attributes aren't used by other debuggers (& may be confused with
other DWARF extensions) so they just waste space (about 1.5% on .dwo
file size on a random large program I tested).
We could remove the ObjC property ones too, but I figured they were
probably more necessary when trying to understand ObjC (I could be wrong
though) & so any debugger interested in working with ObjC would use
them, perhaps? (also, there are some legacy tests in Clang that test for
them - making it one of those annoying cross-project commits and/or
cleanup to refactor those tests)
llvm-svn: 270613
This gives AsmPrinter a chance to initialize its DD field before
we call beginModule(), which is about to start using it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20413
llvm-svn: 270258
We are about to start using DIEDwarfExpression to create global variable
DIEs, which happens before we generate code for functions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20412
llvm-svn: 270257
Sorry for the lack testcase. There is one in the pr, but it depends on
std::sort and the .ll version is 110 lines, so I don't think it is
wort it.
The bug was that we were sorting after adding a terminator, and the
sorting algorithm could end up putting the terminator in the middle of
the List vector.
With that we would create a Spans map entry keyed on nullptr which would
then be added to CUs and fail in that sorting.
llvm-svn: 270165
instead of having DwarfUnit query the debugger tuning options.
Follow-up commmit to r269827.
Thanks to Paul Robinson for pointing this out!
llvm-svn: 269840
for the same subprogram.
This fixes a bug where DW_AT_abstract_origin is being emitted twice for
the same subprogram if a function is both inlined and emitted in the same
translation unit, by restoring the pre-r266446 behavior.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D20072
llvm-svn: 269103
Eliminate DITypeIdentifierMap and make DITypeRef a thin wrapper around
DIType*. It is no longer legal to refer to a DICompositeType by its
'identifier:', and DIBuilder no longer retains all types with an
'identifier:' automatically.
Aside from the bitcode upgrade, this is mainly removing logic to resolve
an MDString-based reference to an actualy DIType. The commits leading
up to this have made the implicit type map in DICompileUnit's
'retainedTypes:' field superfluous.
This does not remove DITypeRef, DIScopeRef, DINodeRef, and
DITypeRefArray, or stop using them in DI-related metadata. Although as
of this commit they aren't serving a useful purpose, there are patchces
under review to reuse them for CodeView support.
The tests in LLVM were updated with deref-typerefs.sh, which is attached
to the thread "[RFC] Lazy-loading of debug info metadata":
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-April/098318.html
llvm-svn: 267296
When we suppress linkage names, for a non-inlined subprogram the name
can still be found in the object-file symbol table, because we have
the code address of the subprogram. This is not necessarily the case
for an inlined subprogram, so we still want to emit the linkage name
in the DWARF. Put this on the abstract-origin DIE because it's common
to all inlined instances.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18706
llvm-svn: 266692
Currently each Function points to a DISubprogram and DISubprogram has a
scope field. For member functions the scope is a DICompositeType. DIScopes
point to the DICompileUnit to facilitate type uniquing.
Distinct DISubprograms (with isDefinition: true) are not part of the type
hierarchy and cannot be uniqued. This change removes the subprograms
list from DICompileUnit and instead adds a pointer to the owning compile
unit to distinct DISubprograms. This would make it easy for ThinLTO to
strip unneeded DISubprograms and their transitively referenced debug info.
Motivation
----------
Materializing DISubprograms is currently the most expensive operation when
doing a ThinLTO build of clang.
We want the DISubprogram to be stored in a separate Bitcode block (or the
same block as the function body) so we can avoid having to expensively
deserialize all DISubprograms together with the global metadata. If a
function has been inlined into another subprogram we need to store a
reference the block containing the inlined subprogram.
Attached to https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27284 is a python script
that updates LLVM IR testcases to the new format.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19034
<rdar://problem/25256815>
llvm-svn: 266446
This patch drops the debug info for all DISubprograms that are
(a) not attached to an llvm::Function and
(b) not indirectly reachable via inline scopes from any surviving Function and
(c) not reachable from a type (i.e.: member functions).
Background: I'm currently working on a patch to reverse the pointers
between DICompileUnit and DISubprogram (for more info check Duncan's RFC
on lazy-loading of debug info metadata
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-March/097419.html).
The idea is to remove the list of subprograms from DICompileUnit and
instead point to the owning compile unit from each DISubprogram.
After doing this all DISubprograms fulfilling the above criteria will be
implicitly dropped unless we go through an extra effort to preserve them.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18477
<rdar://problem/25256815>
llvm-svn: 265876
Sample-based profiling and optimization remarks currently remove
DICompileUnits from llvm.dbg.cu to suppress the emission of debug info
from them. This is somewhat of a hack and only borderline legal IR.
This patch uses the recently introduced NoDebug emission kind in
DICompileUnit to achieve the same result without breaking the Verifier.
A nice side-effect of this change is that it is now possible to combine
NoDebug and regular compile units under LTO.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18808
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265861
This patch closes a gap in the DWARF backend that caused LLVM to drop
debug info for floating point variables that were constant for part of
their scope. Floating point constants are emitted as one or more
DW_OP_constu joined via DW_OP_piece.
This fixes a regression caught by the LLDB testsuite that I introduced
in r262247 when we stopped blindly expanding the range of singular
DBG_VALUEs to span the entire scope and started to emit location lists
with accurate ranges instead.
Also deletes a now-impossible testcase (debug-loc-empty-entries).
<rdar://problem/25448338>
llvm-svn: 265760
This mostly cosmetic patch moves the DebugEmissionKind enum from DIBuilder
into DICompileUnit. DIBuilder is not the right place for this enum to live
in — a metadata consumer should not have to include DIBuilder.h.
I also added a Verifier check that checks that the emission kind of a
DICompileUnit is actually legal.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18612
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265077
When multiple DWP files are merged together and duplicate DWO IDs are
found it's currently difficult to give an actionable error message - the
DW_AT_name of the CU could be provided, but might be identical (if the
same source file is built into two different configurations), which
doesn't help the user identify the problem.
When no intermediate DWP files are generated, the path to the two DWO
files could be provided - but is lost once the DWOs are merged into a
DWP.
So, include the name of the DWO (dwo_name) in the split file so that
collissions involving a source CU from a DWP can be better diagnosed.
(improvements to llvm-dwp using this to come shortly)
llvm-svn: 264316
When a variable is described by a single DBG_VALUE instruction we can
often use a more efficient inline DW_AT_location instead of using a
location list.
This commit makes the heuristic that decides when to apply this
optimization stricter by also verifying that the DBG_VALUE is live at the
entry of the function (instead of just checking that it is valid until
the end of the function).
<rdar://problem/24611008>
llvm-svn: 262247
Rather than storing type units in a vector and emitting them at the end
of code generation, emit them immediately and destroy them, reclaiming the
memory we were using for their DIEs.
In one benchmark carried out against Chromium's 50 largest (by bitcode
file size) translation units, total peak memory consumption with type units
decreased by median 17%, or by 7% when compared against disabling type units.
Tested using check-{llvm,clang}, the GDB 7.5 test suite (with
'-fdebug-types-section') and by eyeballing llvm-dwarfdump output on those
Chromium translation units with split DWARF both disabled and enabled, and
verifying that the only changes were to addresses and abbreviation ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17118
llvm-svn: 260578
Summary:
Refactor common value, scope, and label tracking logic out of DwarfDebug
into a common base class called DebugHandlerBase.
Update an old LLVM IR test case to avoid an assertion in LexicalScopes.
Reviewers: dblaikie, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16931
llvm-svn: 260432
Summary:
In r257979, I added code to ensure that we wouldn't merge DebugLocEntries if
the pieces they describe overlap. Unfortunately, I failed to cover the case,
where there may have multiple active Expressions in the entry, in which case we
need to make sure that no two values overlap before we can perform the merge.
This fixed PR26148.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16742
llvm-svn: 259696
Changed emitting offset of macinfo entry into compiler unit DIE to use "addSectionLabel" method rather than explicitly calculating size/offset of macro entry.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16292
llvm-svn: 259358
Summary:
Later in DWARF emission we check that DebugLocEntries have
non-overlapping pieces, so we should create any such entries
by merging here.
Fixes PR26163.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16249
llvm-svn: 257979
Summary:
In rL242338, debugger tuning was introduced, and the tuning for FreeBSD
was set to lldb by default. However, for the foreseeable future we
still need to default to gdb tuning, since lldb is not ready for all of
FreeBSD's architectures, and some system tools (like objcopy, etc) have
not yet been adapted to cope with the lldb tuned format, which has
.apple sections.
Therefore, let FreeBSD use gdb by default for now.
Reviewers: emaste, probinson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, emaste
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15966
llvm-svn: 257103
Previously, subprograms contained a metadata reference to the function they
described. Because most clients need to get or set a subprogram for a given
function rather than the other way around, this created unneeded inefficiency.
For example, many passes needed to call the function llvm::makeSubprogramMap()
to build a mapping from functions to subprograms, and the IR linker needed to
fix up function references in a way that caused quadratic complexity in the IR
linking phase of LTO.
This change reverses the direction of the edge by storing the subprogram as
function-level metadata and removing DISubprogram's function field.
Since this is an IR change, a bitcode upgrade has been provided.
Fixes PR23367. An upgrade script for textual IR for out-of-tree clients is
attached to the PR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14265
llvm-svn: 252219
Summary:
In particular, this CL speeds up the official Chrome linking with LTO by
1.8x.
See more details in https://crbug.com/542426
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: jevinskie
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13918
llvm-svn: 251353
Mangled "linkage" names can be huge, and if the debugger (or other
tools) have no use for them, the size savings can be very impressive
(on the order of 40%).
Add one test for controlling behavior, and modify a number of tests to
either stop using linkage names, or make llc emit them (so these tests
will still run when the default triple is for PS4).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11374
llvm-svn: 244678
NFC patch for current users, but llvm-dsymutil will use the new
functionality to adapt to the input linetable.
Based on a patch by Adrian Prantl.
llvm-svn: 244318
Summary:
Emit both DWARF and CodeView if "CodeView" and "Dwarf Version" module
flags are set.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11756
llvm-svn: 244158
Remove the fake `DW_TAG_auto_variable` and `DW_TAG_arg_variable` tags,
using `DW_TAG_variable` in their place Stop exposing the `tag:` field at
all in the assembly format for `DILocalVariable`.
Most of the testcase updates were generated by the following sed script:
find test/ -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.mir" |
xargs grep -l 'DILocalVariable' |
xargs sed -i '' \
-e 's/tag: DW_TAG_arg_variable, //' \
-e 's/tag: DW_TAG_auto_variable, //'
There were only a handful of tests in `test/Assembly` that I needed to
update by hand.
(Note: a follow-up could change `DILocalVariable::DILocalVariable()` to
set the tag to `DW_TAG_formal_parameter` instead of `DW_TAG_variable`
(as appropriate), instead of having that logic magically in the backend
in `DbgVariable`. I've added a FIXME to that effect.)
llvm-svn: 243774
There is an assertion inside `DICompositeTypeBase::getElements()` that
`this` is not a `DISubroutineType`, leaving only `DICompositeType`.
Make that clear at the call sites.
llvm-svn: 243134
emit debug info, according to the preferences of the different
debuggers used on various targets.
Darwin and FreeBSD default to tuning for LLDB; PS4 defaults to tuning for
the SCE (Sony Computer Entertainment) debugger. All others default to GDB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8506
llvm-svn: 242338
This is a necessary prerequisite for bootstrapping the emission
of debug info inside modules.
- Adds a FlagExternalTypeRef to DICompositeType.
External types must have a unique identifier.
- External type references are emitted using a forward declaration
with a DW_AT_signature([DW_FORM_ref_sig8]) based on the UID.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9612
llvm-svn: 242302
Function static variables, typedefs and records (class, struct or union) declared inside
a lexical scope were associated with the function as their parent scope, rather than the
lexical scope they are defined or declared in.
This fixes PR19238
Patch by: amjad.aboud@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9758
llvm-svn: 241153
If we don't know how to represent a .debug_loc entry, skip the entry
entirely rather than emitting an empty one. Similarly, if a .debug_loc
list has no entries, don't create the list.
We still want to create the variables, just in an optimized-out form
that doesn't have a DW_AT_location.
llvm-svn: 240244
There are three types of `DbgVariable`:
- alloca variables, created based on the MMI table,
- register variables, created based on DBG_VALUE instructions, and
- optimized-out variables.
This commit reconfigures `DbgVariable` to make it easier to tell which
kind we have, and make initialization a little clearer.
For MMI/alloca variables, `FrameIndex.size()` must always equal
`Expr.size()`, and there shouldn't be an `MInsn`. For register
variables (with a `MInsn`), `FrameIndex` must be empty, and `Expr`
should have 0 or 1 element depending on whether it has a complex
expression (registers with multiple locations use `DebugLocListIndex`).
Optimized-out variables shouldn't have any of these fields.
Moreover, this separates DBG_VALUE initialization until after the
variable is created, simplifying logic in a future commit that changes
`collectVariableInfo()` to stop creating empty .debug_loc entries/lists.
llvm-svn: 240243
Different object formats represent references from dwarf in different ways.
ELF uses a relocation to the referenced point (except for .dwo) and
COFF/MachO use the offset of the referenced point inside its section.
This patch renames emitSectionOffset because
* It doesn't produce an offset on ELF.
* It changes behavior depending on how DWARF is represented, so adding
dwarf to its name is probably a good thing.
The patch also adds an option to force the use of offsets.That avoids
funny looking code like
if (!UseOffsets)
Asm->emitSectionOffset....
It was correct, but read as if the ! was inverted.
llvm-svn: 239866
Summary: I noticed an object file with `DW_OP_reg4 DW_OP_breg4 0` as a DWARF expression,
which I traced to a missing break (and `++I`) in this code snippet.
While I was at it, I also added support for a few other corner cases
along the same lines that I could think of.
Test Plan: Hand-crafted test case to exercises these cases is included.
Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10302
llvm-svn: 239380
This reverts commit r238350, effectively reapplying r238349 after fixing
(all?) the problems, all somehow related to how I was using
`AlignedArrayCharUnion<>` inside `DIEValue`:
- MSVC can only handle `sizeof()` on types, not values. Change the
assert.
- GCC doesn't know the `is_trivially_copyable` type trait. Instead of
asserting it, add destructors.
- Call placement new even when constructing POD (i.e., the pointers).
- Instead of copying the char buffer, copy the casted classes.
I've left in a couple of `static_assert`s that I think both MSVC and GCC
know how to handle. If the bots disagree with me, I'll remove them.
- Check that the constructed type is either standard layout or a
pointer. This protects against a programming error: we really want
the "small" `DIEValue`s to be small and simple, so don't
accidentally change them not to be.
- Similarly, check that the size of the buffer is no bigger than a
`uint64_t` or a pointer. (I thought checking against
`sizeof(uint64_t)` would be good enough, but Chandler suggested that
pointers might sometimes be bigger than that in the context of
sanitizers.)
I've also committed r238359 in the meantime, which introduces a
DIEValue.def to simplify dispatching between the various types (thanks
to a review comment by David Blaikie). Without that, this commit would
be almost unintelligible.
Here's the original commit message:
--
Change `DIEValue` to be stored/passed/etc. by value, instead of
reference. It's now a discriminated union, with a `Val` field storing
the actual type. The classes that used to inherit from `DIEValue` no
longer do. There are two categories of these:
- Small values fit in a single pointer and are stored by value.
- Large values require auxiliary storage, and are stored by reference.
The only non-mechanical change is to tools/dsymutil/DwarfLinker.cpp. It
was relying on `DIEInteger`s being passed around by reference, so I
replaced that assumption with a `PatchLocation` type that stores a safe
reference to where the `DIEInteger` lives instead.
This commit causes a temporary regression in memory usage, since I've
left merging `DIEAbbrevData` into `DIEValue` for a follow-up commit. I
measured an increase from 845 MB to 879 MB, around 3.9%. The follow-up
drops it lower than the starting point, and I've only recently brought
the memory this low anyway, so I'm committing these changes separately
to keep them incremental. (I also considered swapping the commits, but
the other one first would cause a lot more code churn.)
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`;
see r236629 for details.)
--
llvm-svn: 238362
This reverts commit r238349, since it caused some errors on bots:
- std::is_trivially_copyable isn't available until GCC 5.0.
- It was complaining about strict aliasing with my use of
ArrayCharUnion.
llvm-svn: 238350
Change `DIEValue` to be stored/passed/etc. by value, instead of
reference. It's now a discriminated union, with a `Val` field storing
the actual type. The classes that used to inherit from `DIEValue` no
longer do. There are two categories of these:
- Small values fit in a single pointer and are stored by value.
- Large values require auxiliary storage, and are stored by reference.
The only non-mechanical change is to tools/dsymutil/DwarfLinker.cpp. It
was relying on `DIEInteger`s being passed around by reference, so I
replaced that assumption with a `PatchLocation` type that stores a safe
reference to where the `DIEInteger` lives instead.
This commit causes a temporary regression in memory usage, since I've
left merging `DIEAbbrevData` into `DIEValue` for a follow-up commit. I
measured an increase from 845 MB to 879 MB, around 3.9%. The follow-up
drops it lower than the starting point, and I've only recently brought
the memory this low anyway, so I'm committing these changes separately
to keep them incremental. (I also considered swapping the commits, but
the other one first would cause a lot more code churn.)
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`;
see r236629 for details.)
llvm-svn: 238349
This starts merging MCSection and MCSectionData.
There are a few issues with the current split between MCSection and
MCSectionData.
* It optimizes the the not as important case. We want the production
of .o files to be really fast, but the split puts the information used
for .o emission in a separate data structure.
* The ELF/COFF/MachO hierarchy is not represented in MCSectionData,
leading to some ad-hoc ways to represent the various flags.
* It makes it harder to remember where each item is.
The attached patch starts merging the two by moving the alignment from
MCSectionData to MCSection.
Most of the patch is actually just dropping 'const', since
MCSectionData is mutable, but MCSection was not.
llvm-svn: 237936