In preparation for removing the `#include "llvm/ADT/StringExtras.h"`
from the header to source file of `llvm/Support/Error.h`, first add in
all the missing includes that were previously included transitively
through this header.
When a user uses a mismatched clang + llvm-profdata, they didn't get a very
informative error message. It would just say "unsupported version".
As a result, users are often confused as to what they are supposed to do and
tend to assume that it's a bug in the profiling runtime.
This patch improves the error message by:
- Adding a new class of error (`raw_profile_version_mismatch`) to make it clear
that, specifically, the *raw profile* version is unsupported because of a
tool mismatch.
- Adding an error message that tells the user which raw profile version was
encountered, which version was expected, and instructs them to align their
tool versions.
To support this, this patch also updates `InstrProfError::take` to also
propagate the optional error message.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149361
This makes parsing for build IDs in the markup filter slightly more
permissive, in line with fromHex.
It also removes the distinction between missing build ID and empty build
ID; empty build IDs aren't a useful concept, since their purpose is to
uniquely identify a binary. This removes a layer of indirection wherever
build IDs are obtained.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D147485
This adds the --check-binary-id flag that makes sure that an object file
is available for every binary ID mentioned in the given profile. This
should help make the tool more robust in CI environments where it's
expected that coverage mappings should be available for every object
contributing to the profile.
Reviewed By: gulfem
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D144308
Make the access to profile data going through virtual file system so the
inputs can be remapped. In the context of the caching, it can make sure
we capture the inputs and provided an immutable input as profile data.
Reviewed By: akyrtzi, benlangmuir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139052
Indexed profiles already have a sorted and uniqued binary ID list, and
due to this, duplicates are harmless in the list of binary IDs found,
since it's set_differenced from the list in the indexed profile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136702
This reverts commit 46013fc10a6879f4c9b4c9b9fbd43e4dc70f3c8b.
The original commit efbc8bb18eda63007216ad0cb5a8de04963eddd5 is failing on several bots, so
reverting this follow-up commit as well as the original commit.
Use deduction guides instead of helper functions.
The only non-automatic changes have been:
1. ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, 0) needs to be changed into ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, (size_t)0) to avoid an ambiguous call with ArrayRef((uint8_t*), (uint8_t*))
2. CVSymbol sym(makeArrayRef(symStorage)); needed to be rewritten as CVSymbol sym{ArrayRef(symStorage)}; otherwise the compiler is confused and thinks we have a (bad) function prototype. There was a few similar situation across the codebase.
3. ADL doesn't seem to work the same for deduction-guides and functions, so at some point the llvm namespace must be explicitly stated.
4. The "reference mode" of makeArrayRef(ArrayRef<T> &) that acts as no-op is not supported (a constructor cannot achieve that).
Per reviewers' comment, some useless makeArrayRef have been removed in the process.
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D140896 that introduced
the deduction guides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140955
This is a fairly large changeset, but it can be broken into a few
pieces:
- `llvm/Support/*TargetParser*` are all moved from the LLVM Support
component into a new LLVM Component called "TargetParser". This
potentially enables using tablegen to maintain this information, as
is shown in https://reviews.llvm.org/D137517. This cannot currently
be done, as llvm-tblgen relies on LLVM's Support component.
- This also moves two files from Support which use and depend on
information in the TargetParser:
- `llvm/Support/Host.{h,cpp}` which contains functions for inspecting
the current Host machine for info about it, primarily to support
getting the host triple, but also for `-mcpu=native` support in e.g.
Clang. This is fairly tightly intertwined with the information in
`X86TargetParser.h`, so keeping them in the same component makes
sense.
- `llvm/ADT/Triple.h` and `llvm/Support/Triple.cpp`, which contains
the target triple parser and representation. This is very intertwined
with the Arm target parser, because the arm architecture version
appears in canonical triples on arm platforms.
- I moved the relevant unittests to their own directory.
And so, we end up with a single component that has all the information
about the following, which to me seems like a unified component:
- Triples that LLVM Knows about
- Architecture names and CPUs that LLVM knows about
- CPU detection logic for LLVM
Given this, I have also moved `RISCVISAInfo.h` into this component, as
it seems to me to be part of that same set of functionality.
If you get link errors in your components after this patch, you likely
need to add TargetParser into LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS in CMake.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137838
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
This improves consistency with other places (e.g. llvm::compression::decompress,
llvm::object::Decompressor::decompress, llvm-objcopy).
Note: when zstd::uncompress was added, we noticed that the API `ZSTD_decompress`
is fine while the zlib API `uncompress` is a misnomer.
If error occurs on constructing coverage info for one of the object files, it prints the name of the object file, so that users know which one is the cause of error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130196
It's more natural to use uint8_t * (std::byte needs C++17 and llvm has
too much uint8_t *) and most callers use uint8_t * instead of char *.
The functions are recently moved into `llvm::compression::zlib::`, so
downstream projects need to make adaption anyway.
(Reapply after revert in e9ce1a588030d8d4004f5d7e443afe46245e9a92 due to
Fuchsia test failures. Removed changes in lib/ExecutionEngine/ other
than error categories, to be checked in more detail and reapplied
separately.)
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
* Refactor compression namespaces across the project, making way for a possible
introduction of alternatives to zlib compression.
Changes are as follows:
* Relocate the `llvm::zlib` namespace to `llvm::compression::zlib`.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, leonardchan, phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128953
We already remove dots from collected paths and path mappings. This
makes it difficult to match paths inside the profile which contain
dots. For example, we would never match /path/to/../file.c because
the collected path is always be normalized to /path/file.c. This
change enables dot removal for paths inside the profile to address
the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123164
We already remove dots from collected paths and path mappings. This
makes it difficult to match paths inside the profile which contain
dots. For example, we would never match /path/to/../file.c because
the collected path is always be normalized to /path/file.c. This
change enables dot removal for paths inside the profile to address
the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122750
C++ generated code with huge amount of switch cases chokes badly while emitting
coverage mapping, in our specific testcase (~72k cases), it won't stop after hours.
After this change, the frontend job now finishes in 4.5s and shrinks down `@__covrec_`
by 288k when compared to disabling simplification altogether.
There's probably no good way to create a testcase for this, but it's easy to
reproduce, just add thousands of cases in the below switch, and build with
`-fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping`.
```
enum type : int {
FEATURE_INVALID = 0,
FEATURE_A = 1,
...
};
const char *to_string(type e) {
switch (e) {
case type::FEATURE_INVALID: return "FEATURE_INVALID";
case type::FEATURE_A: return "FEATURE_A";}
...
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126345
With a sufficiently large output buffer, the only failure is Z_MEM_ERROR.
Check it and call the noreturn report_bad_alloc_error if applicable.
resize_for_overwrite may call report_bad_alloc_error as well.
Now that there is no other error type, we can replace the return type with void
and simplify call sites.
Reviewed By: ikudrin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121512
Most notably,
llvm/Object/Binary.h no longer includes llvm/Support/MemoryBuffer.h
llvm/Object/MachOUniversal*.h no longer include llvm/Object/Archive.h
llvm/Object/TapiUniversal.h no longer includes llvm/Object/TapiFile.h
llvm-project preprocessed size:
before: 1068185081
after: 1068324320
Discourse thread: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119457
If profile data is malformed for any kind of reason, we generate
an error that only reports "malformed instrumentation profile data"
without any further information. This patch extends InstrProfError
class to receive an optional error message argument, so that we can
do better error reporting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108942
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
Function Records are required to be aligned on 8 bytes. This is enforced for each
records except the first, when one relies on the default alignment within an
std::string. There's no such guarantee, and indeed on 32 bits for some
implementation of std::string this is not enforced.
Provide a portable implementation based on llvm's MemoryBuffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104745
For source-based coverage, the frontend sets the counter IDs and the
constraints of counter IDs is not defined. For e.g., the Rust frontend
until recently had a reserved counter #0
(https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/83774). Rust coverage
instrumentation also creates counters on edges in addition to basic
blocks. Some functions may have more counters than regions.
This breaks an assumption in CoverageMapping.cpp where the number of
counters in a function is assumed to be bounded by the number of
regions:
Counts.assign(Record.MappingRegions.size(), 0);
This assumption causes CounterMappingContext::evaluate() to fail since
there are not enough counter values created in the above call to
`Counts.assign`. Consequently, some uncovered functions are not
reported in coverage reports.
This change walks a Function's CoverageMappingRecord to find the maximum
counter ID, and uses it to initialize the counter array when instrprof
records are missing for a function in sparse profiles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101780
When making compilation relocatable, for example in distributed
compilation scenarios, we want to set compilation dir to a relative
value like `.` but this presents a problem when generating reports
because if the file path is relative as well, for example `..`, you
may end up writing files outside of the output directory.
This change introduces a flag that allows overriding the compilation
directory that's stored inside the profile with a different value that
is absolute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100232
CommandLine.h is indirectly included in ~50% of TUs when building
clang, and VirtualFileSystem.h is large.
(Already remarked by jhenderson on D70769.)
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100957
The current implementation keeps buffers generated for each object file
until it completes loading of all files. This approach requires a lot of memory
if there are a lot of huge object files. Thus, make it to load coverage records
immediately rather than waiting for other binaries to be loaded.
This reduces memory usage of llvm-cov from >128GB to 5GB when
loading Chromium binaries in Windows.
Additional testing: check-profile, check-llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99110
We currently always store absolute filenames in coverage mapping. This
is problematic for several reasons. It poses a problem for distributed
compilation as source location might vary across machines. We are also
duplicating the path prefix potentially wasting space.
This change modifies how we store filenames in coverage mapping. Rather
than absolute paths, it stores the compilation directory and file paths
as given to the compiler, either relative or absolute. Later when
reading the coverage mapping information, we recombine relative paths
with the working directory. This approach is similar to handling
ofDW_AT_comp_dir in DWARF.
Finally, we also provide a new option, -fprofile-compilation-dir akin
to -fdebug-compilation-dir which can be used to manually override the
compilation directory which is useful in distributed compilation cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95753
We currently always store absolute filenames in coverage mapping. This
is problematic for several reasons. It poses a problem for distributed
compilation as source location might vary across machines. We are also
duplicating the path prefix potentially wasting space.
This change modifies how we store filenames in coverage mapping. Rather
than absolute paths, it stores the compilation directory and file paths
as given to the compiler, either relative or absolute. Later when
reading the coverage mapping information, we recombine relative paths
with the working directory. This approach is similar to handling
ofDW_AT_comp_dir in DWARF.
Finally, we also provide a new option, -fprofile-compilation-dir akin
to -fdebug-compilation-dir which can be used to manually override the
compilation directory which is useful in distributed compilation cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95753
This is an enhancement to LLVM Source-Based Code Coverage in clang to track how
many times individual branch-generating conditions are taken (evaluate to TRUE)
and not taken (evaluate to FALSE). Individual conditions may comprise larger
boolean expressions using boolean logical operators. This functionality is
very similar to what is supported by GCOV except that it is very closely
anchored to the ASTs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84467