1195 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
QingShan Zhang
92dda50db6 [NFC] Add the getSizeInBytes() interface for MachineConstantPoolValue
Current implementation assumes that, each MachineConstantPoolValue takes
up sizeof(MachineConstantPoolValue::Ty) bytes. For PowerPC, we want to
lump all the constants with the same type as one MachineConstantPoolValue
to save the cost that calculate the TOC entry for each const. So, we need
to extend the MachineConstantPoolValue that break this assumption.

Reviewed By: RKSimon

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89108
2021-01-05 03:22:45 +00:00
Fangrui Song
c7c5340c75 Refactor how -fno-semantic-interposition sets dso_local on default visibility external linkage definitions
The idea is that the CC1 default for ELF should set dso_local on default
visibility external linkage definitions in the default -mrelocation-model pic
mode (-fpic/-fPIC) to match COFF/Mach-O and make output IR similar.

The refactoring is made available by 2820a2ca3a0e69c3f301845420e0067ffff2251b.

Currently only x86 supports local aliases. We move the decision to the driver.
There are three CC1 states:

* -fsemantic-interposition: make some linkages interposable and make default visibility external linkage definitions dso_preemptable.
* (default): selected if the target supports .Lfoo$local: make default visibility external linkage definitions dso_local
* -fhalf-no-semantic-interposition: if neither option is set or the target does not support .Lfoo$local: like -fno-semantic-interposition but local aliases are not used. So references can be interposed if not optimized out.

Add -fhalf-no-semantic-interposition to a few tests using the half-based semantic interposition behavior.
2020-12-31 13:59:45 -08:00
Fangrui Song
a33c20ac72 [AsmPrinter] Replace a reachable report_fatal_error with MCContext::reportError 2020-12-20 23:45:49 -08:00
Hongtao Yu
85e4f6f241 [CSSPGO] Pseudo probe encoding and emission.
This change implements pseudo probe encoding and emission for CSSPGO. Please see RFC here for more context: https://groups.google.com/g/llvm-dev/c/1p1rdYbL93s

Pseudo probes are in the form of intrinsic calls on IR/MIR but they do not turn into any machine instructions. Instead they are emitted into the binary as a piece of data in standalone sections.  The probe-specific sections are not needed to be loaded into memory at execution time, thus they do not incur a runtime overhead. 

**ELF object emission**

The binary data to emit are organized as two ELF sections, i.e, the `.pseudo_probe_desc` section and the `.pseudo_probe` section. The `.pseudo_probe_desc` section stores a function descriptor for each function and the `.pseudo_probe` section stores the actual probes, each fo which corresponds to an IR basic block or an IR function callsite. A function descriptor is stored as a module-level metadata during the compilation and is serialized into the object file during object emission.

Both the probe descriptors and pseudo probes can be emitted into a separate ELF section per function to leverage the linker for deduplication.  A `.pseudo_probe` section shares the same COMDAT group with the function code so that when the function is dead, the probes are dead and disposed too. On the contrary, a `.pseudo_probe_desc` section has its own COMDAT group. This is because even if a function is dead, its probes may be inlined into other functions and its descriptor is still needed by the profile generation tool.

The format of `.pseudo_probe_desc` section looks like:

```
.section   .pseudo_probe_desc,"",@progbits
.quad   6309742469962978389  // Func GUID
.quad   4294967295           // Func Hash
.byte   9                    // Length of func name
.ascii  "_Z5funcAi"          // Func name
.quad   7102633082150537521
.quad   138828622701
.byte   12
.ascii  "_Z8funcLeafi"
.quad   446061515086924981
.quad   4294967295
.byte   9
.ascii  "_Z5funcBi"
.quad   -2016976694713209516
.quad   72617220756
.byte   7
.ascii  "_Z3fibi"
```

For each `.pseudoprobe` section, the encoded binary data consists of a single function record corresponding to an outlined function (i.e, a function with a code entry in the `.text` section). A function record has the following format :

```
FUNCTION BODY (one for each outlined function present in the text section)
    GUID (uint64)
        GUID of the function
    NPROBES (ULEB128)
        Number of probes originating from this function.
    NUM_INLINED_FUNCTIONS (ULEB128)
        Number of callees inlined into this function, aka number of
        first-level inlinees
    PROBE RECORDS
        A list of NPROBES entries. Each entry contains:
          INDEX (ULEB128)
          TYPE (uint4)
            0 - block probe, 1 - indirect call, 2 - direct call
          ATTRIBUTE (uint3)
            reserved
          ADDRESS_TYPE (uint1)
            0 - code address, 1 - address delta
          CODE_ADDRESS (uint64 or ULEB128)
            code address or address delta, depending on ADDRESS_TYPE
    INLINED FUNCTION RECORDS
        A list of NUM_INLINED_FUNCTIONS entries describing each of the inlined
        callees.  Each record contains:
          INLINE SITE
            GUID of the inlinee (uint64)
            ID of the callsite probe (ULEB128)
          FUNCTION BODY
            A FUNCTION BODY entry describing the inlined function.
```

To support building a context-sensitive profile, probes from inlinees are grouped by their inline contexts. An inline context is logically a call path through which a callee function lands in a caller function. The probe emitter builds an inline tree based on the debug metadata for each outlined function in the form of a trie tree. A tree root is the outlined function. Each tree edge stands for a callsite where inlining happens. Pseudo probes originating from an inlinee function are stored in a tree node and the tree path starting from the root all the way down to the tree node is the inline context of the probes. The emission happens on the whole tree top-down recursively. Probes of a tree node will be emitted altogether with their direct parent edge. Since a pseudo probe corresponds to a real code address, for size savings, the address is encoded as a delta from the previous probe except for the first probe. Variant-sized integer encoding, aka LEB128, is used for address delta and probe index.

**Assembling**

Pseudo probes can be printed as assembly directives alternatively. This allows for good assembly code readability and also provides a view of how optimizations and pseudo probes affect each other, especially helpful for diff time assembly analysis.

A pseudo probe directive has the following operands in order: function GUID, probe index, probe type, probe attributes and inline context. The directive is generated by the compiler and can be parsed by the assembler to form an encoded `.pseudoprobe` section in the object file.

A example assembly looks like:

```
foo2: # @foo2
# %bb.0: # %bb0
pushq %rax
testl %edi, %edi
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 1 0 0
je .LBB1_1
# %bb.2: # %bb2
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 6 2 0
callq foo
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 3 0 0
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 4 0 0
popq %rax
retq
.LBB1_1: # %bb1
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 5 1 0
callq *%rsi
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 2 0 0
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 4 0 0
popq %rax
retq
# -- End function
.section .pseudo_probe_desc,"",@progbits
.quad 6699318081062747564
.quad 72617220756
.byte 3
.ascii "foo"
.quad 837061429793323041
.quad 281547593931412
.byte 4
.ascii "foo2"
```

With inlining turned on, the assembly may look different around %bb2 with an inlined probe:

```
# %bb.2:                                # %bb2
.pseudoprobe    837061429793323041 3 0
.pseudoprobe    6699318081062747564 1 0 @ 837061429793323041:6
.pseudoprobe    837061429793323041 4 0
popq    %rax
retq
```

**Disassembling**

We have a disassembling tool (llvm-profgen) that can display disassembly alongside with pseudo probes. So far it only supports ELF executable file.

An example disassembly looks like:

```
00000000002011a0 <foo2>:
  2011a0: 50                    push   rax
  2011a1: 85 ff                 test   edi,edi
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 1  Type: Block
  2011a3: 74 02                 je     2011a7 <foo2+0x7>
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 3  Type: Block
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 4  Type: Block
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo   Index: 1  Type: Block  Inlined: @ foo2:6
  2011a5: 58                    pop    rax
  2011a6: c3                    ret
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 2  Type: Block
  2011a7: bf 01 00 00 00        mov    edi,0x1
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 5  Type: IndirectCall
  2011ac: ff d6                 call   rsi
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 4  Type: Block
  2011ae: 58                    pop    rax
  2011af: c3                    ret
```

Reviewed By: wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91878
2020-12-10 17:29:28 -08:00
Mitch Phillips
7c847657fe Revert "[CSSPGO] Pseudo probe encoding and emission."
This reverts commit b035513c06d1cba2bae8f3e88798334e877523e1.

Reason: Broke the ASan buildbots:
  http://lab.llvm.org:8011/#/builders/5/builds/2269
2020-12-10 15:53:39 -08:00
Hongtao Yu
91873af129 [CSSPGO] Pseudo probe encoding and emission.
This change implements pseudo probe encoding and emission for CSSPGO. Please see RFC here for more context: https://groups.google.com/g/llvm-dev/c/1p1rdYbL93s

Pseudo probes are in the form of intrinsic calls on IR/MIR but they do not turn into any machine instructions. Instead they are emitted into the binary as a piece of data in standalone sections.  The probe-specific sections are not needed to be loaded into memory at execution time, thus they do not incur a runtime overhead. 

**ELF object emission**

The binary data to emit are organized as two ELF sections, i.e, the `.pseudo_probe_desc` section and the `.pseudo_probe` section. The `.pseudo_probe_desc` section stores a function descriptor for each function and the `.pseudo_probe` section stores the actual probes, each fo which corresponds to an IR basic block or an IR function callsite. A function descriptor is stored as a module-level metadata during the compilation and is serialized into the object file during object emission.

Both the probe descriptors and pseudo probes can be emitted into a separate ELF section per function to leverage the linker for deduplication.  A `.pseudo_probe` section shares the same COMDAT group with the function code so that when the function is dead, the probes are dead and disposed too. On the contrary, a `.pseudo_probe_desc` section has its own COMDAT group. This is because even if a function is dead, its probes may be inlined into other functions and its descriptor is still needed by the profile generation tool.

The format of `.pseudo_probe_desc` section looks like:

```
.section   .pseudo_probe_desc,"",@progbits
.quad   6309742469962978389  // Func GUID
.quad   4294967295           // Func Hash
.byte   9                    // Length of func name
.ascii  "_Z5funcAi"          // Func name
.quad   7102633082150537521
.quad   138828622701
.byte   12
.ascii  "_Z8funcLeafi"
.quad   446061515086924981
.quad   4294967295
.byte   9
.ascii  "_Z5funcBi"
.quad   -2016976694713209516
.quad   72617220756
.byte   7
.ascii  "_Z3fibi"
```

For each `.pseudoprobe` section, the encoded binary data consists of a single function record corresponding to an outlined function (i.e, a function with a code entry in the `.text` section). A function record has the following format :

```
FUNCTION BODY (one for each outlined function present in the text section)
    GUID (uint64)
        GUID of the function
    NPROBES (ULEB128)
        Number of probes originating from this function.
    NUM_INLINED_FUNCTIONS (ULEB128)
        Number of callees inlined into this function, aka number of
        first-level inlinees
    PROBE RECORDS
        A list of NPROBES entries. Each entry contains:
          INDEX (ULEB128)
          TYPE (uint4)
            0 - block probe, 1 - indirect call, 2 - direct call
          ATTRIBUTE (uint3)
            reserved
          ADDRESS_TYPE (uint1)
            0 - code address, 1 - address delta
          CODE_ADDRESS (uint64 or ULEB128)
            code address or address delta, depending on ADDRESS_TYPE
    INLINED FUNCTION RECORDS
        A list of NUM_INLINED_FUNCTIONS entries describing each of the inlined
        callees.  Each record contains:
          INLINE SITE
            GUID of the inlinee (uint64)
            ID of the callsite probe (ULEB128)
          FUNCTION BODY
            A FUNCTION BODY entry describing the inlined function.
```

To support building a context-sensitive profile, probes from inlinees are grouped by their inline contexts. An inline context is logically a call path through which a callee function lands in a caller function. The probe emitter builds an inline tree based on the debug metadata for each outlined function in the form of a trie tree. A tree root is the outlined function. Each tree edge stands for a callsite where inlining happens. Pseudo probes originating from an inlinee function are stored in a tree node and the tree path starting from the root all the way down to the tree node is the inline context of the probes. The emission happens on the whole tree top-down recursively. Probes of a tree node will be emitted altogether with their direct parent edge. Since a pseudo probe corresponds to a real code address, for size savings, the address is encoded as a delta from the previous probe except for the first probe. Variant-sized integer encoding, aka LEB128, is used for address delta and probe index.

**Assembling**

Pseudo probes can be printed as assembly directives alternatively. This allows for good assembly code readability and also provides a view of how optimizations and pseudo probes affect each other, especially helpful for diff time assembly analysis.

A pseudo probe directive has the following operands in order: function GUID, probe index, probe type, probe attributes and inline context. The directive is generated by the compiler and can be parsed by the assembler to form an encoded `.pseudoprobe` section in the object file.

A example assembly looks like:

```
foo2: # @foo2
# %bb.0: # %bb0
pushq %rax
testl %edi, %edi
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 1 0 0
je .LBB1_1
# %bb.2: # %bb2
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 6 2 0
callq foo
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 3 0 0
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 4 0 0
popq %rax
retq
.LBB1_1: # %bb1
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 5 1 0
callq *%rsi
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 2 0 0
.pseudoprobe 837061429793323041 4 0 0
popq %rax
retq
# -- End function
.section .pseudo_probe_desc,"",@progbits
.quad 6699318081062747564
.quad 72617220756
.byte 3
.ascii "foo"
.quad 837061429793323041
.quad 281547593931412
.byte 4
.ascii "foo2"
```

With inlining turned on, the assembly may look different around %bb2 with an inlined probe:

```
# %bb.2:                                # %bb2
.pseudoprobe    837061429793323041 3 0
.pseudoprobe    6699318081062747564 1 0 @ 837061429793323041:6
.pseudoprobe    837061429793323041 4 0
popq    %rax
retq
```

**Disassembling**

We have a disassembling tool (llvm-profgen) that can display disassembly alongside with pseudo probes. So far it only supports ELF executable file.

An example disassembly looks like:

```
00000000002011a0 <foo2>:
  2011a0: 50                    push   rax
  2011a1: 85 ff                 test   edi,edi
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 1  Type: Block
  2011a3: 74 02                 je     2011a7 <foo2+0x7>
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 3  Type: Block
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 4  Type: Block
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo   Index: 1  Type: Block  Inlined: @ foo2:6
  2011a5: 58                    pop    rax
  2011a6: c3                    ret
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 2  Type: Block
  2011a7: bf 01 00 00 00        mov    edi,0x1
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 5  Type: IndirectCall
  2011ac: ff d6                 call   rsi
  [Probe]:  FUNC: foo2  Index: 4  Type: Block
  2011ae: 58                    pop    rax
  2011af: c3                    ret
```

Reviewed By: wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91878
2020-12-10 09:50:08 -08:00
jasonliu
60c6f78bef [XCOFF][AIX] Generate LSDA data and compact unwind section on AIX
Summary:
AIX uses the existing EH infrastructure in clang and llvm.
The major differences would be
1. AIX do not have CFI instructions.
2. AIX uses a new personality routine, named __xlcxx_personality_v1.
   It doesn't use the GCC personality rountine, because the
   interoperability is not there yet on AIX.
3. AIX do not use eh_frame sections. Instead, it would use a eh_info
section (compat unwind section) to store the information about
personality routine and LSDA data address.

Reviewed By: daltenty, hubert.reinterpretcast

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91455
2020-12-02 18:42:44 +00:00
Fangrui Song
3b69235500 static const char *const foo => const char foo[]
By default, a non-template variable of non-volatile const-qualified type
having namespace-scope has internal linkage, so no need for `static`.
2020-12-01 10:33:18 -08:00
Ella Ma
59b89a3124 [llvm][clang][mlir] Add checks for the return values from Target::createXXX to prevent protential null deref
All these potential null pointer dereferences are reported by my static analyzer for null smart pointer dereferences, which has a different implementation from `alpha.cplusplus.SmartPtr`.

The checked pointers in this patch are initialized by Target::createXXX functions. When the creator function pointer is not correctly set, a null pointer will be returned, or the creator function may originally return a null pointer.

Some of them may not make sense as they may be checked before entering the function, but I fixed them all in this patch. I submit this fix because 1) similar checks are found in some other places in the LLVM codebase for the same return value of the function; and, 2) some of the pointers are dereferenced before they are checked, which may definitely trigger a null pointer dereference if the return value is nullptr.

Reviewed By: tejohnson, MaskRay, jpienaar

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91410
2020-11-21 21:04:12 -08:00
Leonard Chan
c24d9d2b01 [llvm][IR] Add dso_local_equivalent Constant
The `dso_local_equivalent` constant is a wrapper for functions that represents a
value which is functionally equivalent to the global passed to this. That is, if
this accepts a function, calling this constant should have the same effects as
calling the function directly. This could be a direct reference to the function,
the `@plt` modifier on X86/AArch64, a thunk, or anything that's equivalent to the
resolved function as a call target.

When lowered, the returned address must have a constant offset at link time from
some other symbol defined within the same binary. The address of this value is
also insignificant. The name is leveraged from `dso_local` where use of a function
or variable is resolved to a symbol in the same linkage unit.

In this patch:
- Addition of `dso_local_equivalent` and handling it
- Update Constant::needsRelocation() to strip constant inbound GEPs and take
  advantage of `dso_local_equivalent` for relative references

This is useful for the [Relative VTables C++ ABI](https://reviews.llvm.org/D72959)
which makes vtables readonly. This works by replacing the dynamic relocations for
function pointers in them with static relocations that represent the offset between
the vtable and virtual functions. If a function is externally defined,
`dso_local_equivalent` can be used as a generic wrapper for the function to still
allow for this static offset calculation to be done.

See [RFC](http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144469.html) for more details.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77248
2020-11-19 10:26:17 -08:00
Florian Hahn
1bd32a39f9 [AsmPrinter] Use getMnemonic for instruction-mix remark.
This patch uses the new `getMnemonic` helper from D90039
to display mnemonics instead of the internal opcodes.

The main motivation behind using the mnemonics is that they
are more user-friendly and more directly related to the assembly
the users will be presented.

Reviewed By: paquette

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90040
2020-11-17 12:12:47 +00:00
Jameson Nash
09733a0efd Reland "[AsmPrinter] fix -disable-debug-info option"
This reverts commit 105ed27ed80dd47a9d32e72bbdd2a776a3318f38, and
removes the offending line from the tests.
2020-11-16 13:34:47 -05:00
Hans Wennborg
5404bc49f5 Revert "[AsmPrinter] fix -disable-debug-info option"
The test fails on Mac, see comment on the code review.

> This option was in a rather convoluted place, causing global parameters
> to be set in awkward and undesirable ways to try to account for it
> indirectly. Add tests for the -disable-debug-info option and ensure we
> don't print unintended markers from unintended places.
>
> Reviewed By: dstenb
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91083

This reverts commit 9606ef03f03904cec213db031b5ea6fd6052dc5d.
2020-11-13 13:46:13 +01:00
Jameson Nash
be6333792e [AsmPrinter] fix -disable-debug-info option
This option was in a rather convoluted place, causing global parameters
to be set in awkward and undesirable ways to try to account for it
indirectly. Add tests for the -disable-debug-info option and ensure we
don't print unintended markers from unintended places.

Reviewed By: dstenb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91083
2020-11-13 00:58:09 -05:00
Sander de Smalen
e0eda3654e [SVE] Return StackOffset for TargetFrameLowering::getFrameIndexReference.
To accommodate frame layouts that have both fixed and scalable objects
on the stack, describing a stack location or offset using a pointer + uint64_t
is not sufficient. For this reason, we've introduced the StackOffset class,
which models both the fixed- and scalable sized offsets.

The TargetFrameLowering::getFrameIndexReference is made to return a StackOffset,
so that this can be used in other interfaces, such as to eliminate frame indices
in PEI or to emit Debug locations for variables on the stack.

This patch is purely mechanical and doesn't change the behaviour of how
the result of this function is used for fixed-sized offsets. The patch adds
various checks to assert that the offset has no scalable component, as frame
offsets with a scalable component are not yet supported in various places.

Reviewed By: arsenm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90018
2020-11-05 11:02:18 +00:00
Jameson Nash
11a667f122 make the AsmPrinterHandler array public
This lets external consumers customize the output, similar to how
AssemblyAnnotationWriter lets the caller define callbacks when printing
IR. The array of handlers already existed, this just cleans up the code
so that it can be exposed publically.

Replaces https://reviews.llvm.org/D74158

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89613
2020-11-03 10:02:09 -05:00
Rahman Lavaee
682b6cd259 Explicitly check for entry basic block, rather than relying on MachineBasicBlock::pred_empty.
Sometimes in unoptimized code, we have dangling unreachable basic blocks with no predecessors. Basic block sections should be emitted for those as well. Without this patch, the included test fails with a fatal error in `AsmPrinter::emitBasicBlockEnd`.

Reviewed By: tmsriram

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89423
2020-10-26 16:15:56 -07:00
Florian Hahn
3355197eef [AsmPrinter] Add per BB instruction mix remark.
This patch adds a remarks that provides counts for each opcode per basic block.

An snippet of the generated information can be seen below.

The current implementation uses the target specific opcode for the counts. For example, on AArch64 this means we currently get 2 entries for `add` instructions if the block contains 32 and 64 bit adds. Similarly, immediate version are treated differently.

Unfortunately there seems to be no convenient way to get only the mnemonic part of the instruction as a string AFAIK. This could be improved in the future.

```
--- !Analysis
Pass:            asm-printer
Name:            InstructionMix
DebugLoc:        { File: arm64-instruction-mix-remarks.ll, Line: 30, Column: 30 }
Function:        foo
Args:
  - String:          'BasicBlock: '
  - BasicBlock:      else
  - String:          "\n"
  - String:          INST_MADDWrrr
  - String:          ': '
  - INST_MADDWrrr:   '2'
  - String:          "\n"
  - String:          INST_MOVZWi
  - String:          ': '
  - INST_MOVZWi:     '1'
```

Reviewed By: anemet, thegameg, paquette

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89892
2020-10-26 09:25:45 +00:00
David Sherwood
64f6cfdc9f [SVE][CodeGen][NFC] Replace TypeSize comparison operators with their scalar equivalents
In certain places in llvm/lib/CodeGen we were relying upon the TypeSize
comparison operators when in fact the code was only ever expecting
either scalar values or fixed width vectors. I've changed some of these
places to use the equivalent scalar operator.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88482
2020-10-19 08:30:31 +01:00
Jameson Nash
fe8adca85b Revert "make the AsmPrinterHandler array public"
I messed up one of the tests.
2020-10-16 17:22:07 -04:00
Jameson Nash
310509685d make the AsmPrinterHandler array public
This lets external consumers customize the output, similar to how
AssemblyAnnotationWriter lets the caller define callbacks when printing
IR. The array of handlers already existed, this just cleans up the code
so that it can be exposed publically.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74158
2020-10-16 16:27:31 -04:00
Rahman Lavaee
194be1c7dd Introduce and use a new section type for the bb_addr_map section.
This patch lets the bb_addr_map (renamed to __llvm_bb_addr_map) section use a special section type (SHT_LLVM_BB_ADDR_MAP) instead of SHT_PROGBITS. This would help parsers, dumpers and other tools to use the sh_type ELF field to identify this section rather than relying on string comparison on the section name.

Reviewed By: jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88199
2020-10-08 11:13:19 -07:00
Rahman Lavaee
4ab12643a1 [BasicBlockSections] Make sure that the labels for address-taken blocks are emitted after switching the seciton.
Currently, AsmPrinter code is organized in a way in which the labels of address-taken blocks are emitted in the previous section, which makes the relocation incorrect.
This patch reorganizes the code to switch to the basic block section before handling address-taken blocks.

Reviewed By: snehasish, MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88517
2020-10-07 13:22:38 -07:00
Rahman Lavaee
32c4fd8ef6 Exception support for basic block sections
This is part of the Propeller framework to do post link code layout optimizations. Please see the RFC here: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/llvm-dev/ef3mKzAdJ7U/1shV64BYBAAJ and the detailed RFC doc here: https://github.com/google/llvm-propeller/blob/plo-dev/Propeller_RFC.pdf

This patch provides exception support for basic block sections by splitting the call-site table into call-site ranges corresponding to different basic block sections. Still all landing pads must reside in the same basic block section (which is guaranteed by the the core basic block section patch D73674 (ExceptionSection) ). Each call-site table will refer to the landing pad fragment by explicitly specifying @LPstart (which is omitted in the normal non-basic-block section case). All these call-site tables will share their action and type tables.

The C++ ABI somehow assumes that no landing pads point directly to LPStart (which works in the normal case since the function begin is never a landing pad), and uses LP.offset = 0 to specify no landing pad. In the case of basic block section where one section contains all the landing pads, the landing pad offset relative to LPStart could actually be zero. Thus, we avoid zero-offset landing pads by inserting a **nop** operation as the first non-CFI instruction in the exception section.

**Background on Exception Handling in C++ ABI**
https://github.com/itanium-cxx-abi/cxx-abi/blob/master/exceptions.pdf

Compiler emits an exception table for every function. When an exception is thrown, the stack unwinding library queries the unwind table (which includes the start and end of each function) to locate the exception table for that function.

The exception table includes a call site table for the function, which is used to guide the exception handling runtime to take the appropriate action upon an exception. Each call site record in this table is structured as follows:

| CallSite                       |  -->  Position of the call site (relative to the function entry)
| CallSite length           |  -->  Length of the call site.
| Landing Pad               |  -->  Position of the landing pad (relative to the landing pad fragment’s begin label)
| Action record offset  |  -->  Position of the first action record

The call site records partition a function into different pieces and describe what action must be taken for each callsite. The callsite fields are relative to the start of the function (as captured in the unwind table).

The landing pad entry is a reference into the function and corresponds roughly to the catch block of a try/catch statement. When execution resumes at a landing pad, it receives an exception structure and a selector value corresponding to the type of the exception thrown, and executes similar to a switch-case statement. The landing pad field is relative to the beginning of the procedure fragment which includes all the landing pads (@LPStart). The C++ ABI requires all landing pads to be in the same fragment. Nonetheless, without basic block sections, @LPStart is the same as the function @Start (found in the unwind table) and can be omitted.

The action record offset is an index into the action table which includes information about which exception types are caught.

**C++ Exceptions with Basic Block Sections**
Basic block sections break the contiguity of a function fragment. Therefore, call sites must be specified relative to the beginning of the basic block section. Furthermore, the unwinding library should be able to find the corresponding callsites for each section. To do so, the .cfi_lsda directive for a section must point to the range of call-sites for that section.
This patch introduces a new **CallSiteRange** structure which specifies the range of call-sites which correspond to every section:

  `struct CallSiteRange {
    // Symbol marking the beginning of the precedure fragment.
    MCSymbol *FragmentBeginLabel = nullptr;
    // Symbol marking the end of the procedure fragment.
    MCSymbol *FragmentEndLabel = nullptr;
    // LSDA symbol for this call-site range.
    MCSymbol *ExceptionLabel = nullptr;
    // Index of the first call-site entry in the call-site table which
    // belongs to this range.
    size_t CallSiteBeginIdx = 0;
    // Index just after the last call-site entry in the call-site table which
    // belongs to this range.
    size_t CallSiteEndIdx = 0;
    // Whether this is the call-site range containing all the landing pads.
    bool IsLPRange = false;
  };`

With N basic-block-sections, the call-site table is partitioned into N call-site ranges.

Conceptually, we emit the call-site ranges for sections sequentially in the exception table as if each section has its own exception table. In the example below, two sections result in the two call site ranges (denoted by LSDA1 and LSDA2) placed next to each other. However, their call-sites will refer to records in the shared Action Table. We also emit the header fields (@LPStart and CallSite Table Length) for each call site range in order to place the call site ranges in separate LSDAs. We note that with -basic-block-sections, The CallSiteTableLength will not actually represent the length of the call site table, but rather the reference to the action table. Since the only purpose of this field is to locate the action table, correctness is guaranteed.

Finally, every call site range has one @LPStart pointer so the landing pads of each section must all reside in one section (not necessarily the same section). To make this easier, we decide to place all landing pads of the function in one section (hence the `IsLPRange` field in CallSiteRange).

|  @LPStart                   |  --->  Landing pad fragment     ( LSDA1 points here)
| CallSite Table Length | ---> Used to find the action table.
| CallSites                     |
| …                                 |
| …                                 |
| @LPStart                    |  --->  Landing pad fragment ( LSDA2 points here)
| CallSite Table Length |
| CallSites                     |
| …                                 |
| …                                 |
…
…
|      Action Table          |
|      Types Table           |

Reviewed By: MaskRay

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73739
2020-09-30 11:05:55 -07:00
Simon Atanasyan
d54308b076 [CodeGen] Do not call emitGlobalConstantLargeInt for constant requires 8 bytes to store
This is a fix for PR47630. The regression is caused by the D78011. After
this change the code starts to call the `emitGlobalConstantLargeInt` even
for constants which requires eight bytes to store.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88261
2020-09-26 08:58:46 +03:00
Stefanos Baziotis
b245c32b48 [LoopInfo] empty() -> isInnermost(), add isOutermost()
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82895
2020-09-22 23:28:51 +03:00
Fangrui Song
4dabbec93d [XRay] Change mips to use version 2 sled (PC-relative address)
Follow-up to D78590. All targets use PC-relative addresses now.

Reviewed By: atanasyan, dberris

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87977
2020-09-20 17:59:57 -07:00
Reid Kleckner
e747f6900b [COFF] Move per-global .drective emission from AsmPrinter to TLOFCOFF
This changes the order of output sections and the output assembly, but
is otherwise NFC.

It simplifies the TLOF interface by removing two COFF-only methods.
2020-09-18 14:31:01 -07:00
Igor Kudrin
a07977eed6 [DebugInfo] Add new emitting methods for values which depend on the DWARF format (3/19).
These methods are going to be used in subsequent patches.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87010
2020-09-15 11:30:10 +07:00
Igor Kudrin
51b55bd939 [DebugInfo] Fix methods of AsmPrinter to emit values corresponding to the DWARF format (1/19).
These methods are used to emit values which are 32-bit in DWARF32 and
64-bit in DWARF64. The patch fixes them so that they choose the length
automatically, depending on the DWARF format set in the Context.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87008
2020-09-15 11:29:48 +07:00
Rahman Lavaee
21e047a569 Let -basic-block-sections=labels emit basicblock metadata in a new .bb_addr_map section, instead of emitting special unary-encoded symbols.
This patch introduces the new .bb_addr_map section feature which allows us to emit the bits needed for mapping binary profiles to basic blocks into a separate section.
The format of the emitted data is represented as follows. It includes a header for every function:

|  Address of the function                      |  -> 8 bytes (pointer size)
|  Number of basic blocks in this function (>0) |  -> ULEB128

The header is followed by a BB record for every basic block. These records are ordered in the same order as MachineBasicBlocks are placed in the function. Each BB Info is structured as follows:

|  Offset of the basic block relative to function begin |  -> ULEB128
|  Binary size of the basic block                       |  -> ULEB128
|  BB metadata                                          |  -> ULEB128  [ MBB.isReturn() OR MBB.hasTailCall() << 1  OR  MBB.isEHPad() << 2 ]

The new feature will replace the existing "BB labels" functionality with -basic-block-sections=labels.
The .bb_addr_map section scrubs the specially-encoded BB symbols from the binary and makes it friendly to profilers and debuggers.
Furthermore, the new feature reduces the binary size overhead from 70% bloat to only 12%.

For more information and results please refer to the RFC: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143512.html

Reviewed By: MaskRay, snehasish

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85408
2020-09-14 10:16:44 -07:00
Jeremy Morse
2dc4cad192 [DebugInstrRef][1/9] Add fields for instr-ref variable locations
Add a DBG_INSTR_REF instruction and a "debug instruction number" field to
MachineInstr. The two allow variable values to be specified by
identifying where the value is computed, rather than the register it lies
in, like so:

  %0 = fooinst, debug-instr-number 1
  [...]
  DBG_INSTR_REF 1, 0

See the original RFC for motivation:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-February/139440.html

This patch is NFCI; it only adds fields and other boiler plate.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85741
2020-09-14 10:06:52 +01:00
diggerlin
b434098ac8 [AIX][XCOFF] change the operand of branch instruction from symbol name to qualified symbol name for function declarations
SUMMARY:

1. in the patch  , remove setting storageclass in function .getXCOFFSection and construct function of class MCSectionXCOFF
there are

XCOFF::StorageMappingClass MappingClass;
XCOFF::SymbolType Type;
XCOFF::StorageClass StorageClass;
in the MCSectionXCOFF class,
these attribute only used in the XCOFFObjectWriter, (asm path do not need the StorageClass)

we need get the value of StorageClass, Type,MappingClass before we invoke the getXCOFFSection every time.

actually , we can get the StorageClass of the MCSectionXCOFF  from it's delegated symbol.

2. we also change the oprand of branch instruction from symbol name to qualify symbol name.
for example change
bl .foo
extern .foo
to
bl .foo[PR]
extern .foo[PR]

3. and if there is reference indirect call a function bar.
we also add
  extern .bar[PR]

Reviewers:  Jason liu, Xiangling Liao

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84765
2020-08-11 15:26:19 -04:00
Xiangling Liao
0a11ef2eea [AIX] Static init frontend recovery and backend support
On the frontend side, this patch recovers AIX static init implementation to
use the linkage type and function names Clang chooses for sinit related function.

On the backend side, this patch sets correct linkage and function names on aliases
created for sinit/sterm functions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84534
2020-08-10 10:10:49 -04:00
Rahman Lavaee
3a9a3691ee [Propeller]: Use a descriptive temporary symbol name for the end of the basic block.
This patch changes the functionality of AsmPrinter to name the basic block end labels as LBB_END${i}_${j}, with ${i} being the identifier for the function and ${j} being the identifier for the basic block. The new naming scheme is consistent with how basic block labels are named (.LBB${i}_{j}), and how function end symbol are named (.Lfunc_end${i}) and helps to write stronger tests for the upcoming patch for BB-Info section (as proposed in https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143512.html). The end label is used with basicblock-labels (BB-Info section in future) and basicblock-sections to compute the size of basic blocks and basic block sections, respectively. For BB sections, the section containing the entry basic block will not have a BB end label since it already gets the function end-label.
This label is cached for every basic block (CachedEndMCSymbol) like the label for the basic block (CachedMCSymbol).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83885
2020-08-05 13:17:19 -07:00
Matt Arsenault
4eb4bb060f Support addrspacecast initializers with isNoopAddrSpaceCast
Moves isNoopAddrSpaceCast to the TargetMachine. It logically belongs
with the DataLayout.
2020-07-31 10:42:43 -04:00
jasonliu
1c10a44908 [XCOFF] Enable symbol alias for AIX
Summary:
AIX assembly's .set directive is not usable for aliasing purpose.
We need to use extra-label-at-defintion strategy to generate symbol
aliasing on AIX.

Reviewed By: DiggerLin, Xiangling_L

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83252
2020-07-22 14:03:55 +00:00
Krzysztof Pszeniczny
8fd1e853a6 Call Frame Information (CFI) Handling for Basic Block Sections
This patch handles CFI with basic block sections, which unlike DebugInfo does
not support ranges. The DWARF standard explicitly requires emitting separate
CFI Frame Descriptor Entries for each contiguous fragment of a function. Thus,
the CFI information for all callee-saved registers (possibly including the
frame pointer, if necessary) have to be emitted along with redefining the
Call Frame Address (CFA), viz. where the current frame starts.

CFI directives are emitted in FDE’s in the object file with a low_pc, high_pc
specification. So, a single FDE must point to a contiguous code region unlike
debug info which has the support for ranges. This is what complicates CFI for
basic block sections.

Now, what happens when we start placing individual basic blocks in unique
sections:

* Basic block sections allow the linker to randomly reorder basic blocks in the
address space such that a given basic block can become non-contiguous with the
original function.
* The different basic block sections can no longer share the cfi_startproc and
cfi_endproc directives. So, each basic block section should emit this
independently.
* Each (cfi_startproc, cfi_endproc) directive will result in a new FDE that
caters to that basic block section.
* Now, this basic block section needs to duplicate the information from the
entry block to compute the CFA as it is an independent entity. It cannot refer
to the FDE of the original function and hence must duplicate all the stuff that
is needed to compute the CFA on its own.
* We are working on a de-duplication patch that can share common information in
FDEs in a CIE (Common Information Entry) and we will present this as a follow up
patch. This can significantly reduce the duplication overhead and is
particularly useful when several basic block sections are created.
* The CFI directives are emitted similarly for registers that are pushed onto
the stack, like callee saved registers in the prologue. There are cfi
directives that emit how to retrieve the value of the register at that point
when the push happened. This has to be duplicated too in a basic block that is
floated as a separate section.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79978
2020-07-14 12:54:12 -07:00
Sam Elliott
b7817d916f Revert "[RISCV] Avoid Splitting MBB in RISCVExpandPseudo"
This reverts commit 97106f9d80f6ba1bf5eafbd5a6f88d72913ec5a1.

This is based on feedback from https://reviews.llvm.org/D82988#2147105
2020-07-14 11:15:01 +01:00
Sam Elliott
06dbe0b9ab [RISCV] Avoid Splitting MBB in RISCVExpandPseudo
Since the `RISCVExpandPseudo` pass has been split from
`RISCVExpandAtomicPseudo` pass, it would be nice to run the former as
early as possible (The latter has to be run as late as possible to
ensure correctness). Running earlier means we can reschedule these pairs
as we see fit.

Running earlier in the machine pass pipeline is good, but would mean
teaching many more passes about `hasLabelMustBeEmitted`. Splitting the
basic blocks also pessimises possible optimisations because some
optimisations are MBB-local, and others are disabled if the block has
its address taken (which is notionally what `hasLabelMustBeEmitted`
means).

This patch uses a new approach of setting the pre-instruction symbol on
the AUIPC instruction to a temporary symbol and referencing that. This
avoids splitting the basic block, but allows us to reference exactly the
instruction that we need to. Notionally, this approach seems more
correct because we do actually want to address a specific instruction.

This then allows the pass to be moved much earlier in the pass pipeline,
before both scheduling and register allocation. However, to do so we
must leave the MIR in SSA form (by not redefining registers), and so use
a virtual register for the intermediate value. By using this virtual
register, this pass now has to come before register allocation.

Reviewed By: luismarques, asb

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82988
2020-07-09 13:54:13 +01:00
jasonliu
3b7308f12c [XCOFF][AIX] Give symbol an internal name when desired symbol name contains invalid character(s)
Summary:

When a desired symbol name contains invalid character that the
system assembler could not process, we need to emit .rename
directive in assembly path in order for that desired symbol name
to appear in the symbol table.

Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast, DiggerLin, daltenty, Xiangling_L

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82481
2020-07-06 15:49:15 +00:00
Krzysztof Pszeniczny
bc78f19428 This patch adds basic debug info support with basic block sections.
This patch uses ranges for debug information when a function contains basic block sections rather than using [lowpc, highpc]. This is also the first in a series of patches for debug info and does not contain the support for linker relaxation. That will be done as a follow up patch.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78851
2020-07-01 23:53:00 -07:00
Yuanfang Chen
54a5a78649 [NFC] Clean up uses of MachineModuleInfoWrapperPass 2020-07-01 09:45:05 -07:00
Guillaume Chatelet
90d9339006 [Alignment][NFC] migrate DataLayout::getPreferredAlignment
This patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82752
2020-06-29 11:24:36 +00:00
Eli Friedman
9d315e1c2b Remove GlobalValue::getAlignment().
This function is deceptive at best: it doesn't return what you'd expect.
If you have an arbitrary GlobalValue and you want to determine the
alignment of that pointer, Value::getPointerAlignment() returns the
correct value.  If you want the actual declared alignment of a function
or variable, GlobalObject::getAlignment() returns that.

This patch switches all the users of GlobalValue::getAlignment to an
appropriate alternative.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80368
2020-06-23 19:13:42 -07:00
stozer
3078d95513 [DebugInfo] Update MachineInstr to help support variadic DBG_VALUE instructions
Following on from this RFC[0] from a while back, this is the first patch towards
implementing variadic debug values.

This patch specifically adds a set of functions to MachineInstr for performing
operations specific to debug values, and replacing uses of the more general
functions where appropriate. The most prevalent of these is replacing
getOperand(0) with getDebugOperand(0) for debug-value-specific code, as the
operands corresponding to values will no longer be at index 0, but index 2 and
upwards: getDebugOperand(x) == getOperand(x+2). Similar replacements have been
added for the other operands, along with some helper functions to replace
oft-repeated code and operate on a variable number of value operands.

[0] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-February/139376.html<Paste>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81852
2020-06-22 16:01:12 +01:00
Nathan James
c24634c08d [NFC] Refactor Registry loops to range for 2020-06-19 00:40:10 +01:00
Ian Levesque
b5f0be1e22 [xray] Option to omit the function index
Summary:
Add a flag to omit the xray_fn_idx to cut size overhead and relocations
roughly in half at the cost of reduced performance for single function
patching.  Minor additions to compiler-rt support per-function patching
without the index.

Reviewers: dberris, MaskRay, johnislarry

Subscribers: hiraditya, arphaman, cfe-commits, #sanitizers, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81995
2020-06-17 13:49:01 -04:00
diggerlin
9ad4371a4e [NFC] clean up the AsmPrinter::emitLinkage for AIX part
SUMMARY:

Since we deal with aix emitLinkage in the PPCAIXAsmPrinter::emitLinkage() in the patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D75866. It do not go to AsmPrinter::emitLinkage() any more, we clean up some aix related code in the AsmPrinter::emitLinkage()

Reviewers:  Jason liu

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81613
2020-06-11 13:33:51 -04:00
diggerlin
d98ed2e336 [AIX] supporting the visibility attribute for aix assembly
SUMMARY:

in the aix assembly , it do not have .hidden and .protected directive.
in current llvm. if a function or a variable which has visibility attribute, it will generate something like the .hidden or .protected , it can not recognize by aix as.
in aix assembly, the visibility attribute are support in the pseudo-op like
.extern Name [ , Visibility ]
.globl Name [, Visibility ]
.weak Name [, Visibility ]

in this patch, we implement the visibility attribute for the global variable, function or extern function .

for example.

extern __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden"))) int
  bar(int* ip);
__attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden"))) int b = 0;
__attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden"))) int
  foo(int* ip){
   return (*ip)++;
}
the visibility of .comm linkage do not support , we will have a separate patch for it.
we have the unsupported cases ("default" and "internal") , we will implement them in a a separate patch for it.

Reviewers: Jason Liu ,hubert.reinterpretcast,James Henderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75866
2020-06-09 16:15:06 -04:00