When the first instruction of a basic block has no location (consider a
LEA materializing the address of an alloca for a call), we want to start
the line table for the block with the first valid source location in the
block. We need to ignore DBG_VALUE instructions during this scan to get
decent line tables.
llvm-svn: 309628
If the instructions at the beginning of the block have no location,
we're better off using the location of the first instruction in the
current basic block. At the very least, that instruction post-dominates
this one, whereas if we don't emit a .cv_loc directive, we end up using
the potentially invalid location that falls through from the previous
block.
We could probably do better here by emitting some kind of ".cv_loc end"
directive that stops the line table entry of the previous .cv_loc
directive from bleeding out of its basic block. This would improve the
line table when an entire MBB has no valid location info.
llvm-svn: 306889
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
Previously, every time we wanted to serialize a field list record, we
would create a new copy of FieldListRecordBuilder, which would in turn
create a temporary instance of TypeSerializer, which itself had a
std::vector<> that was about 128K in size. So this 128K allocation was
happening every time. We can re-use the same instance over and over, we
just have to clear its internal hash table and seen records list between
each run. This saves us from the constant re-allocations.
This is worth an ~18.5% speed increase (3.75s -> 3.05s) in my tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33506
llvm-svn: 303919
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
This was originally reverted because it was a breaking a bunch
of bots and the breakage was not surfacing on Windows. After much
head-scratching this was ultimately traced back to a bug in the
lit test runner related to its pipe handling. Now that the bug
in lit is fixed, Windows correctly reports these test failures,
and as such I have finally (hopefully) fixed all of them in this
patch.
llvm-svn: 303446
This is a squash of ~5 reverts of, well, pretty much everything
I did today. Something is seriously broken with lit on Windows
right now, and as a result assertions that fire in tests are
triggering failures. I've been breaking non-Windows bots all
day which has seriously confused me because all my tests have
been passing, and after running lit with -a to view the output
even on successful runs, I find out that the tool is crashing
and yet lit is still reporting it as a success!
At this point I don't even know where to start, so rather than
leave the tree broken for who knows how long, I will get this
back to green, and then once lit is fixed on Windows, hopefully
hopefully fix the remaining set of problems for real.
llvm-svn: 303409
Right now we have multiple notions of things that represent collections of
types. Most commonly used are TypeDatabase, which is supposed to keep
mappings from TypeIndex to type name when reading a type stream, which
happens when reading PDBs. And also TypeTableBuilder, which is used to
build up a collection of types dynamically which we will later serialize
(i.e. when writing PDBs).
But often you just want to do some operation on a collection of types, and
you may want to do the same operation on any kind of collection. For
example, you might want to merge two TypeTableBuilders or you might want
to merge two type streams that you loaded from various files.
This dichotomy between reading and writing is responsible for a lot of the
existing code duplication and overlapping responsibilities in the existing
CodeView library classes. For example, after building up a
TypeTableBuilder with a bunch of type records, if we want to dump it we
have to re-invent a bunch of extra glue because our dumper takes a
TypeDatabase or a CVTypeArray, which are both incompatible with
TypeTableBuilder.
This patch introduces an abstract base class called TypeCollection which
is shared between the various type collection like things. Wherever we
previously stored a TypeDatabase& in some common class, we now store a
TypeCollection&.
The advantage of this is that all the details of how the collection are
implemented, such as lazy deserialization of partial type streams, is
completely transparent and you can just treat any collection of types the
same regardless of where it came from.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33293
llvm-svn: 303388
There is often a lot of boilerplate code required to visit a type
record or type stream. The #1 use case is that you have a sequence
of bytes that represent one or more records, and you want to
deserialize each one, switch on it, and call a callback with the
deserialized record that the user can examine. Currently this
requires at least 6 lines of code:
codeview::TypeVisitorCallbackPipeline Pipeline;
Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(Deserializer);
Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(MyCallbacks);
codeview::CVTypeVisitor Visitor(Pipeline);
consumeError(Visitor.visitTypeRecord(Record));
With this patch, it becomes one line of code:
consumeError(codeview::visitTypeRecord(Record, MyCallbacks));
This is done by having the deserialization happen internally inside
of the visitTypeRecord function. Since this is occasionally not
desirable, the function provides a 3rd parameter that can be used
to change this behavior.
Hopefully this can significantly reduce the barrier to entry
to using the visitation infrastructure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33245
llvm-svn: 303271
This function gives the wrong answer on some non-ELF platforms in some
cases. The function that does the right thing lives in Mangler.h. To try to
discourage people from using this function, give it a different name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33162
llvm-svn: 303134
Fixes inalloca parameters, which previously all pointed to the same
offset. Extend the test to use llvm-readobj so that we can test the
offset in a readable way.
llvm-svn: 302578
Most of the time we know exactly how many type records we
have in a list, and we want to use the visitor to deserialize
them into actual records in a database. Previously we were
just using push_back() every time without reserving the space
up front in the vector. This is obviously terrible from a
performance standpoint, and it's not uncommon to have PDB
files with half a million type records, where the performance
degredation was quite noticeable.
llvm-svn: 302302
Compiler emitted synthetic types may not have an associated DIFile
(translation unit). In such a case, when generating CodeView debug type
information, we would attempt to compute an absolute filepath which
would result in a segfault due to a NULL DIFile*. If there is no source
file associated with the type, elide the type index entry for the type
and record the type information. This actually results in higher
fidelity debug information than clang/C2 as of this writing.
Resolves PR32668!
llvm-svn: 302085
Previously we wrote line information and file checksum
information, but we did not write information about inlinee
lines and functions. This patch adds support for that.
llvm-svn: 301936
We have a lot of very similarly named classes related to
dealing with module debug info. This patch has NFC, it just
renames some classes to be more descriptive (albeit slightly
more to type). The mapping from old to new class names is as
follows:
Old | New
ModInfo | DbiModuleDescriptor
ModuleSubstream | ModuleDebugFragment
ModStream | ModuleDebugStream
With the corresponding Builder classes renamed accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32506
llvm-svn: 301555
DISubprogram currently has 10 pointer operands, several of which are
often nullptr. This patch reduces the amount of memory allocated by
DISubprogram by rearranging the operands such that containing type,
template params, and thrown types come last, and are only allocated
when they are non-null (or followed by non-null operands).
This patch also eliminates the entirely unused DisplayName operand.
This saves up to 4 pointer operands per DISubprogram. (I tried
measuring the effect on peak memory usage on an LTO link of an X86
llc, but the results were very noisy).
This reapplies r301498 with an attempted workaround for g++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32560
llvm-svn: 301501