Commit Graph

3458 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Blaikie
f6a561c4d6 DebugInfo: Use clang's preferred names for integer types
This reverts c7f16ab3e3 / r109694 - which
suggested this was done to improve consistency with the gdb test suite.
Possible that at the time GCC did not canonicalize integer types, and so
matching types was important for cross-compiler validity, or that it was
only a case of over-constrained test cases that printed out/tested the
exact names of integer types.

In any case neither issue seems to exist today based on my limited
testing - both gdb and lldb canonicalize integer types (in a way that
happens to match Clang's preferred naming, incidentally) and so never
print the original text name produced in the DWARF by GCC or Clang.

This canonicalization appears to be in `integer_types_same_name_p` for
GDB and in `TypeSystemClang::GetBasicTypeEnumeration` for lldb.

(I tested this with one translation unit defining 3 variables - `long`,
`long (*)()`, and `int (*)()`, and another translation unit that had
main, and a function that took `long (*)()` as a parameter - then
compiled them with mismatched compilers (either GCC+Clang, or
Clang+(Clang with this patch applied)) and no matter the combination,
despite the debug info for one CU naming the type "long int" and the
other naming it "long", both debuggers printed out the name as "long"
and were able to correctly perform overload resolution and pass the
`long int (*)()` variable to the `long (*)()` function parameter)

Did find one hiccup, identified by the lldb test suite - that CodeView
was relying on these names to map them to builtin types in that format.
So added some handling for that in LLVM. (these could be split out into
separate patches, but seems small enough to not warrant it - will do
that if there ends up needing any reverti/revisiting)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110455
2021-10-06 16:02:34 -07:00
Jeremy Morse
e265644b32 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Track all of DBG_PHIs operands
An important part of the instruction referencing solution is that we
identify all the registers that values move between before we then compute
an SSA-like function from the machine code, and from the variable
intrinsics. DBG_PHIs weren't causing all the subregisters of their operands
to be tracked; this patch forces that to happen.

The practical implications were that not enough space is allocated for
storing values when analysing the function -- asan will crash on the
attached test case with an unpatched compiler. Non-asan llc's will produce
a DBG_VALUE $noreg, where it should be $dil.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109064
2021-10-05 14:01:26 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
e2b838dd91 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Accept landingpad block arguments
This patch makes instruction-referencing accepts an additional scenario
where values can be read from physical registers at the start of blocks. As
far as I was aware, this only happened:
 * With arguments in the entry block,
 * With constant physical registers,

To which this patch adds a third case:
 * With exception-handling landing-pad blocks

In the attached test: the operand of the dbg.value traces back to the
"landingpad" instruction, which becomes some copies from physregs. Right
now, that's deemed unacceptable, and the assertion fires. The fix is to
just accept this scenario; this is a case where the value in question is
defined by a register and a position, not by an instruction that defines
it. Reading it with a DBG_PHI is the correct behaviour, there isn't a
non-copy instruction that we can refer to.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109005
2021-10-04 23:03:02 +01:00
Brock Wyma
bafd8b1add [CodeView] Recognize Fortran95 as Fortran instead of MASM
Map Fortran95 sources to Fortran so the CodeView language is not emitted as
MASM.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110330
2021-09-30 09:27:05 -04:00
“bhkumarn”
62eeacce17 [DebugInfo] Emit DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item
This patch emits DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item for fortran
namelist variables. DICompositeType is extended to support this fortran
feature.

Reviewed By: aprantl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108553
2021-09-28 14:40:58 +05:30
David Blaikie
5cb210862b DebugInfo: Use the signedness of the underlying enum when encoding enum non-type-template-parameters
This improves the accuracy of the debug info and improves round tripping
through -gsimple-template-names.
2021-09-24 17:02:55 -07:00
David Blaikie
5bfe5207ef llvm-dwarfdump: Pretty print names qualified/with scopes 2021-09-19 16:36:01 -07:00
Alok Kumar Sharma
a5b72abc9e [DebugInfo] Enhance DIImportedEntity to accept children entities
New field `elements` is added to '!DIImportedEntity', representing
list of aliased entities.
This is needed to dump optimized debugging information where all names
in a module are imported, but a few names are imported with overriding
aliases.

Reviewed By: dblaikie

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109343
2021-09-16 10:41:55 +05:30
Luís Marques
7271de2d19 XFAIL test missing-abstract-variable.ll for RISC-V
This test fails for many architectures. Also XFAIL for RISC-V.
2021-09-13 10:39:43 +01:00
Zequan Wu
12f80c0bbd [DebugInfo] Emit DW_AT_inline under -g1/-gmlt
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109554
2021-09-09 18:59:50 -07:00
Evgeny Leviant
93b09a2a5d [LiveDebugValues] Handle spills of indirect debug values correctly
When handling register spill for indirect debug value LiveDebugValues pass doesn't add
DW_OP_deref operator which may in some cases cause debugger to return value address, instead
of value while machine register holding that address is spilled.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109142
2021-09-08 14:06:08 +03:00
Arthur Eubanks
0a0f62e8d6 [test] Cleanup legacy PM tests in llvm/test/DebugInfo 2021-09-04 15:52:43 -07:00
David Blaikie
40f1593558 DebugInfo: Correct/improve type formatting (pointers to function types especially)
This does add some extra superfluous whitespace (eg: "int *") intended
to make the Simplified Template Names work easier - this makes the
DIE-based names match more exactly the clang-generated names, so it's
easier to identify cases that don't generate matching names.

(arguably we could change clang to skip that whitespace or add some
fuzzy matching to accommodate differences in certain whitespace - but
this seemed easier and fairly low-impact)
2021-09-03 12:22:28 -07:00
Jinsong Ji
38b3d4febe [NFC][DWARF] Add triple to new TAG test file
The file is requiring x86, but using llc without triple.

This will cause problem on non-x86 platforms, as the default triple will
not be x86.

eg: On PowerPC le, it will emit warnings as:

'x86-64' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring
processor)
'+cx8' is not a recognized feature for this target (ignoring feature)
'+fxsr' is not a recognized feature for this target (ignoring feature)
'+mmx' is not a recognized feature for this target (ignoring feature)
'+sse' is not a recognized feature for this target (ignoring feature)
..

On some other platform, it may even crash -- if some of the feature are
with same name (eg: soft-float).

Add the triple as this was the intention test target.
2021-09-03 18:15:34 +00:00
Yonghong Song
89424a829f [DWARF] Support new TAG DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation
A new LLVM specific TAG DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation is added.
The name is suggested by Paul Robinson ([1]).
Currently, this tag is used to output __attribute__((btf_tag("string")))
annotations in dwarf. The following is an example for a global
variable with two btf_tag attributes:
  0x0000002a:   DW_TAG_variable
                  DW_AT_name      ("g1")
                  DW_AT_type      (0x00000052 "int")
                  DW_AT_external  (true)
                  DW_AT_decl_file ("/tmp/home/yhs/work/tests/llvm/btf_tag/t.c")
                  DW_AT_decl_line (8)
                  DW_AT_location  (DW_OP_addr 0x0)

  0x0000003f:     DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation
                    DW_AT_name    ("btf_tag")
                    DW_AT_const_value     ("tag1")

  0x00000048:     DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation
                    DW_AT_name    ("btf_tag")
                    DW_AT_const_value     ("tag2")

  0x00000051:     NULL

In the future, DW_TAG_LLVM_annotation may encode other type
of non-string const value.

 [1] https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-June/151250.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106621
2021-08-31 19:22:17 -07:00
Nemanja Ivanovic
84d4ed1761 Revert "[DebugInfo] Emit DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item"
This reverts commit 0a6fad754e.
It caused failures on a number of PowerPC bots.
2021-08-31 09:24:50 -05:00
Ellis Hoag
47b239eb5a [DIBuilder] Do not replace empty enum types
It looks like this array was missed in 4276d4a8d0

Fixed tests that expected `elements` to be empty or depeneded on the order of the empty DINode.

Reviewed By: aprantl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107024
2021-08-30 12:33:03 -07:00
Djordje Todorovic
86f5288eae [LiveDebugValues] Cleanup Transfers when removing Entry Value
If we encounter a new debug value, describing the same parameter,
we should stop tracking the parameter's Entry Value. At that point,
in some cases, the Transfer which uses the parameter's Entry Value,
is already emitted. Thanks to the RemoveRedundantDebugValues pass,
many problems with incorrect instruction order and number of DBG_VALUEs
are fixed. However, we still cannot rely on the rule that each new
debug value is set by the previous non-debug instruction in Machine
Basic Block.

When new parameter debug value triggers removal of Backup Entry Value
for the same parameter, do the cleanup of Transfers emitted from Backup
Entry Values. Get the Transfer Instruction which created the new debug
value and search for debug values already emitted from the to-be-deleted
Backup Entry Value and attached to the Transfer Instruction. If found,
delete the Transfer and remove "primary" Entry Value Var Loc from
OpenRanges.

This patch fixes PR47628.

Patch by Nikola Tesic.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106856
2021-08-30 14:00:41 +02:00
“bhkumarn”
0a6fad754e [DebugInfo] Emit DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item
This patch emits DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item for fortran
namelist variables. DICompositeType is extended to support this fortran
feature.

Reviewed By: aprantl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108553
2021-08-30 13:40:39 +05:30
Jeremy Morse
0116ed0069 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Don't use instr-ref for unoptimised functions
InstrRefBasedLDV is marginally slower than VarlocBasedLDV when analysing
optimised code -- however, it's much slower when analysing code compiled
-O0.

To avoid this: don't use instruction referencing for -O0 functions. In the
"pure" case of unoptimised code, this won't really harm the debugging
experience because most variables won't have been promoted off the stack,
so can't go missing. It becomes more complicated when optimised code is
inlined into functions marked optnone; however these are rare, and as -O0
doesn't run many optimisations there should be little damage to the debug
experience as a result.

I've taken the opportunity to refactor testing for instruction-referencing
into a MachineFunction method, which seems the most appropriate place to
put it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108585
2021-08-25 15:10:36 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
cc1e87bf55 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Avoid stack-slot-coloring changing codegen due to DI
Stack slot colouring adds "weight" to slots if a non-dbg-value instruction
refers to it. This, unfortunately, means that DBG_PHI instructions can have
an effect on codegen. The fix is very simple, replace isDebugValue with
isDebugInstr.

The regression test contains a scenario that reproduces this problem; I've
represented both normal-debug mode and instr-ref debug mode instructions
in comment lines prefixed with AAAAAA and BBBBBB, and un-comment them with
sed to test that the two different modes produce the same behaviour.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108627
2021-08-25 12:04:59 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
992e21eeee [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Fix over-droppage of locations in X86FloatingPoint
Over in D105657, we started dropping instruction numbers (that become
variable locations) from call instructions, as we can't correctly represent
the x87 FP stack. Unfortunately, it turns out that the "special FP
instructions" that this pass transforms includes "every call instruction"
[0]. Thus, we've ended up dropping all return values from all calls. Ouch.

This patch adds a filter: only drop instruction numbers from calls if they
return something on the FP stack. Seeing how LLVM only allows a single
return value, this should drop instruction numbers on anything that returns
a float, and nothing else.

Rather than writing a new test, I've modified the original one to have a
positive and negative case: drop instruction number on a call with an
FP-stack modification, keep it on a plain call.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108580
2021-08-24 10:24:07 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
ce8254d096 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Correctly ignore DBG_VALUE_LIST in InstrRef mode
This patch makes InstrRefBasedLDV "safe" to work with DBG_VALUE_LISTs. It
doesn't actually interpret them, but it recognises that they specify
variable locations and avoids propagating false locations, which is better
than the current state. Observe the attached tes

 * We avoid propagating DBG_VALUE_LISTs into successor blocks, as they're
   not "currently" supported,
 * We don't propagate other variable locations across DBG_VALUE_LISTs,
   because we know that the variable location is terminated by the
   DBG_VALUE_LIST.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108143
2021-08-20 14:51:02 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
c76c24e40b [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Remove a faulty assertion
This patch removes an assertion, and adds a regression test showing why the
assertion is broken.

For context, LocIdx is a key/index number for machine locations, so that we
can describe locations as a single integer and ignore whether they're on
the stack, in registers or otherwise. Back when InstrRefBasedLDV was added,
I happened to bake in a "special" zero number for various reasons, which
Vedant identified as undesirable in this review comment:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D83047#inline-765495 . I subsequently removed that
special zero number, but it looks like I didn't delete this assertion at
the time, which assumes that a zero LocIdx is invalid.

The attached test shows that this assertion is reachable on valid code --
on x86 $rsp always gets the LocIdx number zero, and if you transfer a
variable value into it, InstrRefBasedLDV crashes on that assertion. The
code might be a bit wild to be storing variables to $rsp like that, however
we shouldn't crash on it.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108134
2021-08-20 14:23:32 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
708cbda577 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Honour too-much-debug-info cutouts
This reapplies 54a61c94f9, its follow up in 547b712500, which were
reverted 95fe61e639. Original commit message:

VarLoc based LiveDebugValues will abandon variable location propagation if
there are too many blocks and variable assignments in the function. If it
didn't, and we had (say) 1000 blocks and 1000 variables in scope, we'd end
up with 1 million DBG_VALUEs just at the start of blocks.

Instruction-referencing LiveDebugValues should honour this limitation too
(because the same limitation applies to it). Hoist the relevant command
line options into LiveDebugValues.cpp and pass it down into the
implementation classes as an argument to ExtendRanges. I've duplicated all
the run-lines in live-debug-values-cutoffs.mir to have an
instruction-referencing flavour.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107823
2021-08-17 11:34:49 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
95fe61e639 Revert 54a61c94f9 and its follow up in 547b712500
These were part of D107823, however asan  has found something excitingly
wrong happening:

https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/5/builds/10543/steps/13/logs/stdio
2021-08-16 15:48:56 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
54a61c94f9 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Honour too-much-debug-info cutouts
VarLoc based LiveDebugValues will abandon variable location propagation if
there are too many blocks and variable assignments in the function. If it
didn't, and we had (say) 1000 blocks and 1000 variables in scope, we'd end
up with 1 million DBG_VALUEs just at the start of blocks.

Instruction-referencing LiveDebugValues should honour this limitation too
(because the same limitation applies to it). Hoist the relevant command
line options into LiveDebugValues.cpp and pass it down into the
implementation classes as an argument to ExtendRanges. I've duplicated all
the run-lines in live-debug-values-cutoffs.mir to have an
instruction-referencing flavour.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107823
2021-08-16 15:06:40 +01:00
David Blaikie
62a4c2c10e DWARFVerifier: Check section-relative references at the end of the section
This ensures that debug_types references aren't looked for in
debug_info section.

Behavior is still going to be questionable in an unlinked object file -
since cross-cu references could refer to symbols in another .debug_info
(or, in theory, .debug_types) chunk - but if a producer only uses
ref_addr to refer to things within the same .debug_info chunk in an
object file (eg: whole program optimization/LTO - producing two CUs into
a single .debug_info section in an object file - the ref_addrs there
could be resolved relative to that .debug_info chunk, not needing to
consider comdat  (DWARFv5 type units or other creatures) chunks of
.debug_info, etc)
2021-08-15 11:40:24 -07:00
Jeremy Morse
d4ce9e463d [DWARF] Revert sharing subprograms across CUs
This patch is a revert of e08f205f5c. In that patch, DW_TAG_subprograms
were permitted to be referenced across CU boundaries, to improve stack
trace construction using call site information. Unfortunately, as
documented in PR48790, the way that subprograms are "owned" by dwarf units
is sufficiently complicated that subprograms end up in unexpected units,
invalidating cross-unit references.

There's no obvious way to easily fix this, and several attempts have
failed. Revert this to ensure correct DWARF is always emitted.

Three tests change in addition to the reversion, but they're all very
light alterations.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107076
2021-08-09 12:43:43 +01:00
Paul Robinson
75aa3d520d Add a DIExpression const-folder to prevent silly expressions.
It's entirely possible (because it actually happened) for a bool
variable to end up with a 256-bit DW_AT_const_value.  This came about
when a local bool variable was initialized from a bitfield in a
32-byte struct of bitfields, and after inlining and constant
propagation, the variable did have a constant value. The sequence of
optimizations had it carrying "i256" values around, but once the
constant made it into the llvm.dbg.value, no further IR changes could
affect it.

Technically the llvm.dbg.value did have a DIExpression to reduce it
back down to 8 bits, but the compiler is in no way ready to emit an
oversized constant *and* a DWARF expression to manipulate it.
Depending on the circumstances, we had either just the very fat bool
value, or an expression with no starting value.

The sequence of optimizations that led to this state did seem pretty
reasonable, so the solution I came up with was to invent a DWARF
constant expression folder.  Currently it only does convert ops, but
there's no reason it couldn't do other ops if that became useful.

This broke three tests that depended on having convert ops survive
into the DWARF, so I added an operator that would abort the folder to
each of those tests.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106915
2021-08-05 06:14:40 -07:00
Alexander Yermolovich
5a865b0b1e [DWARF] Don't process .debug_info relocations for DWO Context
When we build with split dwarf in single mode the .o files that contain both "normal" debug sections and dwo sections, along with relocaiton sections for "normal" debug sections.
When we create DWARF context in DWARFObjInMemory we process relocations and store them in the map for .debug_info, etc section.
For DWO Context we also do it for non dwo dwarf sections. Which I believe is not necessary. This leads to a lot of memory being wasted. We observed 70GB extra memory being used.

I went with context sensitive approach, flag is passed in. I am not sure if it's always safe not to process relocations for regular debug sections if Obj contains .dwo sections.
If it is alternatvie might be just to scan, in constructor, sections and if there are .dwo sections not to process regular debug ones.

Reviewed By: dblaikie

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106624
2021-08-02 10:41:47 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
c5d84d2eb3 GlobalISel/AArch64: don't optimize away redundant branches at -O0
This patch prevents GlobalISel from optimizing out redundant branch
instructions when compiling without optimizations.

The motivating example is code like the following common pattern in
Swift, where users expect to be able to set a breakpoint on the early
exit:

public func f(b: Bool) {
  guard b else {
    return // I would like to set a breakpoint here.
  }
  ...
}

The patch modifies two places in GlobalISEL: The first one is in
IRTranslator.cpp where the removal of redundant branches is made
conditional on the optimization level. The second one is in
AArch64InstructionSelector.cpp where an -O0 *only* optimization is
being removed.

Disabling these optimizations increases code size at -O0 by
~8%. However, doing so improves debuggability, and debug builds are
the primary reason why developers compile without optimizations. We
thus concluded that this is the right trade-off.

rdar://79515454

This tenatively reapplies the patch without modifications, the LLDB
test that has blocked this from landing previously has since been
modified to hopefully no longer be sensitive to this change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105238
2021-07-29 16:04:22 -07:00
Alexander Yermolovich
5856632252 [DWARF] Refactor test to remove relocations for DWO
The way this test generates object file results in relocation sections for .dwo sections. This is not legal. Re-wrote it to avoid those relocation sections.

Reviewed By: dblaikie

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107012
2021-07-29 13:14:25 -07:00
Jeremy Morse
8612417e5a [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Don't break up ret-sequences on debug-info instrs
When we have a terminator sequence (i.e. a tailcall or return),
MIIsInTerminatorSequence is used to work out where the preceding ABI-setup
instructions end, i.e. the parts that were glued to the terminator
instruction. This allows LLVM to split blocks safely without having to
worry about ABI stuff.

The function only ignores DBG_VALUE instructions, meaning that the two
debug instructions I recently added can end terminator sequences early,
causing various MachineVerifier errors. This patch promotes the test for
debug instructions from "isDebugValue" to "isDebugInstr", thus avoiding any
debug-info interfering with this function.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106660
2021-07-28 15:56:00 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
7dc9d73731 [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Handle llvm.frameaddress intrinsics gracefully
When working out which instruction defines a value, the
instruction-referencing variable location code has a few special cases for
physical registers:
 * Arguments are never defined by instructions,
 * Constant physical registers always read the same value, are never def'd

This patch adds a third case for the llvm.frameaddress intrinsics: you can
read the framepointer in any block if you so choose, and use it as a
variable location, as shown in the added test.

This rather violates one of the assumptions behind instruction referencing,
that LLVM-ir shouldn't be able to read from an arbitrary register at some
arbitrary point in the program. The solution for now is to just emit a
DBG_PHI that reads the register value: this works, but if we wanted to do
something clever with DBG_PHIs in the future then this would probably get
in the way. As it stands, this patch avoids a crash.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106659
2021-07-27 13:44:37 +01:00
Matheus Izvekov
f84c70a379 [CodeView] Saturate values bigger than supported by APInt.
This fixes an assert firing when compiling code which involves 128 bit
integrals.

This would trigger runtime checks similar to this:
```
Assertion failed: getMinSignedBits() <= 64 && "Too many bits for int64_t", file llvm/include/llvm/ADT/APInt.h, line 1646
```

To get around this, we just saturate those big values.

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105320
2021-07-26 22:15:26 +02:00
Jeremy Morse
f86694cb80 [InstrRef][AArch64][1/4] Accept constant physreg variable locations
Late in SelectionDAG we join up instruction numbers with their defining
instructions, if it couldn't be done during the main part of SelectionDAG.
One exception is function arguments, where we have to point a DBG_PHI
instruction at the incoming live register, as they don't have a defining
instruction. This patch adds another exception, for constant physregs, like
aarch64 has.

It may seem wasteful to use two instructions where we could use a single
DBG_VALUE, however the whole point of instruction referencing is to
decouple the identification of values from the specification of where
variable location ranges start.

(Part of my aarch64 work to ease adoption of  instruction referencing, as
in the meta comment on D104520)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104520
2021-07-26 15:26:15 +01:00
Esme-Yi
0d3e4d9d4d [Debug-Info][llvm-dwarfdump] Don't use DW_FORM_data4/8
to encode the constants for DW_AT_data_member_location.

Summary: In DWARF v3, DW_FORM_data4/8 in
DW_AT_data_member_location are interpreted as location
list pointers. Interpreting constants as pointers is
not expected, so we use DW_FORM_udata to encode the
constants.

Reviewed By: probinson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105687
2021-07-26 03:47:02 +00:00
Fangrui Song
2f75fda5dc [test] Avoid llvm-symbolizer/llvm-addr2line one-dash long options 2021-07-20 09:34:35 -07:00
Jeremy Morse
241f3e386c [DebugInfo][InstrRef] Fix a broken substitution method, add test coverage
This patch fixes a clearly-broken function that I absent-mindedly bodged
many months ago.

Over in D85749 I landed the substituteDebugValuesForInst, that creates
substitution records for all the def operands from one debug-labelled
instruction to the new one. Unfortunately it would crash if the two
instructions had different numbers of operands; I tried to fix this in
537f0fbe82 by adding a "max operand" parameter to the method, but then
didn't actually change the loop bound to take account of this. It passed
all the tests because.... well there wasn't any real test coverage of this
method.

This patch fixes up the loop to be bounded by the MaxOperand bound; and
adds test coverage for the x86-fixup-LEAs calls to this method, so that
it's actually tested.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105820
2021-07-20 11:45:13 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
f46321207f [InstrRef][X86] Drop debug instruction numbers from x87 instructions
Avoid a crash when using instruction referencing if x87 floating point
instructions are used. These instructions are significantly mutated when
they're rewritten from referring to registers, to referring to
floating-point-stack positions. As a result, their operands are re-ordered,
and (InstrRef) LiveDebugValues asserts when it sees a DBG_INSTR_REF
referring to a non-reg non-def register operand.

To fix this, drop the instruction numbers, and thus variable locations.
This patch adds a helper utility do do that.

Dropping the variable locations is sub-optimal, but applying DBG_VALUEs to
the $fp0 and similar registers is dropped on emission too. It seems we've
never done well at describing variables that live in x87 registers, at all.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105657
2021-07-19 15:08:27 +01:00
Jeremy Morse
231bf52119 [InstrRef][FastISel] Support emitting DBG_INSTR_REF from fast-isel
If you attach __attribute__((optnone)) to a function when using
optimisations, that function will use fast-isel instead of the usual
SelectionDAG method. This is a problem for instruction referencing,
because it means DBG_VALUEs of virtual registers will be created,
triggering some safety assertions in LiveDebugVariables. Those assertions
exist to detect exactly this scenario, where an unexpected piece of code is
generating virtual register references in instruction referencing mode.

Fix this by transforming the DBG_VALUEs created by fast-isel into
half-formed DBG_INSTR_REFs, after which they get patched up in
finalizeDebugInstrRefs. The test modified adds a fast-isel mode to the
instruction referencing isel test.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105694
2021-07-16 13:56:15 +01:00
Fangrui Song
aa3df8ddcd [test] Avoid llvm-readelf/llvm-readobj one-dash long options and deprecated aliases (e.g. --file-headers) 2021-07-15 10:26:21 -07:00
Stephen Tozer
47633af9d4 Reapply "[DebugInfo] Enable variadic debug value salvaging"
Reapplied after previous build failures were fixed in 14b62f7e2.

This reverts commit 540b4a5fb3.
2021-07-15 12:54:51 +01:00
Djordje Todorovic
fa2daaeff8 [2/2][RemoveRedundantDebugValues] Add a Pass that removes redundant DBG_VALUEs
This patch adds the forward scan for finding redundant DBG_VALUEs.

This analysis aims to remove redundant DBG_VALUEs by going forward
in the basic block by considering the first DBG_VALUE as a valid
until its first (location) operand is not clobbered/modified.
For example:

(1) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
(2) <block of code that does affect $edi>
(3) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
 ...
in this case, we can remove (3).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105280
2021-07-15 00:08:31 -07:00
Wolfgang Pieb
d1116697be [ARM] Fix RELA relocations for 32bit ARM.
RELA relocations for 32 bit ARM ignored the addend. Some tools generate
them instead of REL type relocations. This fixes PR50473.

    Reviewed By: MaskRay, peter.smith

    Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105214
2021-07-14 14:27:15 -07:00
Djordje Todorovic
df686842bc [RemoveRedundantDebugValues] Add a Pass that removes redundant DBG_VALUEs
This new MIR pass removes redundant DBG_VALUEs.

After the register allocator is done, more precisely, after
the Virtual Register Rewriter, we end up having duplicated
DBG_VALUEs, since some virtual registers are being rewritten
into the same physical register as some of existing DBG_VALUEs.
Each DBG_VALUE should indicate (at least before the LiveDebugValues)
variables assignment, but it is being clobbered for function
parameters during the SelectionDAG since it generates new DBG_VALUEs
after COPY instructions, even though the parameter has no assignment.
For example, if we had a DBG_VALUE $regX as an entry debug value
representing the parameter, and a COPY and after the COPY,
DBG_VALUE $virt_reg, and after the virtregrewrite the $virt_reg gets
rewritten into $regX, we'd end up having redundant DBG_VALUE.

This breaks the definition of the DBG_VALUE since some analysis passes
might be built on top of that premise..., and this patch tries to fix
the MIR with the respect to that.

This first patch performs bacward scan, by trying to detect a sequence of
consecutive DBG_VALUEs, and to remove all DBG_VALUEs describing one
variable but the last one:

For example:

(1) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
(2) DBG_VALUE $esi, !"var2", ...
(3) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
 ...

in this case, we can remove (1).

By combining the forward scan that will be introduced in the next patch
(from this stack), by inspecting the statistics, the RemoveRedundantDebugValues
removes 15032 instructions by using gdb-7.11 as a testbed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105279
2021-07-14 04:29:42 -07:00
Stephen Tozer
810e4c3c66 [DebugInfo] Correctly update dbg.values with duplicated location ops
This patch fixes code that incorrectly handled dbg.values with duplicate
location operands, i.e. !DIArgList(i32 %a, i32 %a). The errors in
question were caused by either applying an update to dbg.value multiple
times when the update is only valid once, or by updating the
DIExpression for only the first instance of a value that appears
multiple times.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105831
2021-07-14 11:17:24 +01:00
Fangrui Song
fada2782cf [llc] Default MCUseDwarfDirectory to true
For Clang, `MCUseDwarfDirectory` is true by default for the majority cases
(-fintegrated-as or -gdwarf-5; most targets use -fintegrated-as by default).
Defaulting MCUseDwarfDirectory to true can reduce the differences between clang
and llc.

Reviewed By: #debug-info, dblaikie

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105856
2021-07-12 17:44:02 -07:00
David Blaikie
09cdcf09b5 Fix windows directory separator some more for test from b447b9dce0 2021-07-10 19:07:41 -07:00