Now that llvm::support::endianness has been renamed to
llvm::endianness, we can use the shorter form. This patch replaces
support::endianness with llvm::endianness.
Now that llvm::support::endianness has been renamed to
llvm::endianness, we can use the shorter form. This patch replaces
support::endianness::{big,little,native} with
llvm::endianness::{big,little,native}.
Constructs such as inline variables, #line, and #include can create
lexical blocks with a different filename.
GCOVProfiling and llvm-cov gcov currently don't handle such cases (see
GCOVLines::writeOut and GCOVFile::readGCNO) and would incorrectly
attribute the line number to the current file.
For now, ignore such blocks. Missing line execution counts is better
than wrong ones.
---
As a workaround that Apple targets don't use -mconstructor-aliases yet,
allow line execution count 4 on the A::A line (1f34e282e8066281eb1447e21e44a2a2e9983e79).
Constructs such as inline variables, #line, and #include can create
lexical blocks with a different filename.
GCOVProfiling and llvm-cov gcov currently don't handle such cases (see
GCOVLines::writeOut and GCOVFile::readGCNO) and would incorrectly
attribute the line number to the current file.
For now, ignore such blocks. Missing line execution counts is better
than wrong ones.
This patch adds nosantize metadata to memory access instructions inserted by gcov emitProfileNotes(), making sanitizers skip these instructions when gcov and sanitizer are used together.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150460
This commit moves the CFGMST.h file into the include directory. The
implemented algorithm is can be helpful for downstream projects that
want to use the PGO data in a non-standard way.
Reviewed By: gysit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D149336
Computing EH-related information was only relevant for analysis passes so far. Lifting it to IR will allow the IR Verifier to calculate EH funclet coloring and validate funclet operand bundles in a follow-up step.
Reviewed By: rnk, compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D138122
For the targets that have in their ABI the requirement that arguments and
return values are extended to the full register bitwidth, it is important
that calls when built also take care of this detail.
The OMPIRBuilder, AddressSanitizer, GCOVProfiling, MemorySanitizer and
ThreadSanitizer passes are with this patch hopefully now doing this properly.
Reviewed By: Eli Friedman, Ulrich Weigand, Johannes Doerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133949
With CONFIG_GCOV_KERNEL, the Linux kernel indirectly calls the
__llvm_gcov_* functions generated by LLVM. With -fsanitize=kcfi,
these calls are made from instrumented code and fail indirect
call checks as they don't have !kcfi_type metadata. Similarly
to D138945, set type metadata for these functions to allow GCOV
and KCFI to be both enabled.
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1778
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141444
As discussed in [0], this diff adds the `skipprofile` attribute to
prevent the function from being profiled while allowing profiled
functions to be inlined into it. The `noprofile` attribute remains
unchanged.
The `noprofile` attribute is used for functions where it is
dangerous to add instrumentation to while the `skipprofile` attribute is
used to reduce code size or performance overhead.
[0] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/why-does-the-noprofile-attribute-restrict-inlining/64108
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D130807
There are a few places where we use report_fatal_error when the input is broken.
Currently, this function always crashes LLVM with an abort signal, which
then triggers the backtrace printing code.
I think this is excessive, as wrong input shouldn't give a link to
LLVM's github issue URL and tell users to file a bug report.
We shouldn't print a stack trace either.
This patch changes report_fatal_error so it uses exit() rather than
abort() when its argument GenCrashDiag=false.
Reviewed by: nikic, MaskRay, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126550
Running iwyu-diff on LLVM codebase since fa5a4e1b95c8f37796 detected a few
regressions, fixing them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124847
Using the legacy PM for the optimization pipeline was deprecated in 13.0.0.
Following recent changes to remove non-core features of the legacy
PM/optimization pipeline, remove GCOVProfilerLegacyPass.
I have checked many LLVM users and only llvm-hs[1] uses the legacy gcov pass.
[1]: https://github.com/llvm-hs/llvm-hs/issues/392
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123829
The `SplitIndirectBrCriticalEdges` function was originally designed for
`CodeGenPrepare` and skipped splitting of edges when the destination
block didn't contain any `PHI` instructions. This only makes sense when
reducing COPYs like `CodeGenPrepare`. In the case of
`PGOInstrumentation` or `GCOVProfiling` it would result in missed
counters and wrong result in functions with computed goto.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120096
As described on D111049, we're trying to remove the <string> dependency from error handling and replace uses of report_fatal_error(const std::string&) with the Twine() variant which can be forward declared.
For a very large module, __llvm_gcov_reset can become very large.
__llvm_gcov_reset previously emitted stores to a bunch of globals in one
huge basic block. MemCpyOpt would turn many of these stores into
memsets, and updating MemorySSA would be extremely slow.
Verified that this makes the compile time of certain files go down
drastically (20min -> 5min).
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107538
This applies the D100251 mechanism to the gcov instrumentation pass.
With this patch, `-fno-omit-frame-pointer` in
`clang -fprofile-arcs -O1 -fno-omit-frame-pointer` will be respected for synthesized
`__llvm_gcov_writeout,__llvm_gcov_reset,__llvm_gcov_init` functions: the frame pointer
will be kept (note: on many targets -O1 eliminates the frame pointer by default).
`clang -fno-exceptions -fno-asynchronous-unwind-tables -g -fprofile-arcs` will
produce .debug_frame instead of .eh_frame.
Fix: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/955
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101129
And then push those change throughout LLVM.
Keep the old signature in Clang's CGBuilder for now -- that will be
updated in a follow-on patch (D97224).
The MLIR LLVM-IR dialect is not updated to support the new alignment
attribute, but preserves its existing behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97223
... by using MapVector. The issue was caused by 63182c2ac0b643a60d397274e8a31166fc7243fa.
Also use stable_partition instead of partition to get stable results
across different STL implementations.
Turns out this was use-after-move of function_ref, which is trivially
copyable and movable, so the move did nothing and use after move was
safe.
But since this function_ref is being copied into a std::function, change
the function_ref to be std::function to avoid extra layers of type
erasure indirection - and then it's a real use after move, and fix that
by referring to the moved-to member variable rather than the moved-from
parameter.
gcov is an "Edge Profiling with Edge Counters" application according to
Optimally Profiling and Tracing Programs (1994).
The minimum number of counters necessary is |E|-(|V|-1). The unmeasured edges
form a spanning tree. Both GCC --coverage and clang -fprofile-generate leverage
this optimization. This patch implements the optimization for clang --coverage.
The produced .gcda files are much smaller now.
i.e. change the work flow from
* .gcno for function A
* .gcno for function B
* .gcno for function C
* .gcda for function A
* .gcda for function B
* .gcda for function C
to
* .gcno for function A
* .gcda for function A
* .gcno for function B
* .gcda for function B
* .gcno for function C
* .gcda for function C
Currently there is duplicate logic in .gcno & .gcda processing: how functions
are filtered, which edges are instrumented, etc. This refactor enables simplification.
Since we always process .gcno, in -fprofile-arcs -fno-test-coverage mode,
__llvm_internal_gcov_emit_function_args.0 will have non-zero checksums.
The entry block is split at the first instruction where `shouldKeepInEntry`
returns false. The created basic block has a br jumping to the original entry
block. The new basic block causes the function label line and the other entry
block lines to be covered by different basic blocks, which can affect line
counts with special control flows (fork/exec in the entry block requires
heuristics in llvm-cov gcov to get consistent line counts).
int main() { // BB0
return 0; // BB2 (due to entry block splitting)
}
// BB1 is the exit block (since gcov 4.8)
This patch adds a synthetic entry block (like PGOInstrumentation and GCC) and
inserts an edge from the synthetic entry block to the original entry block. We
can thus remove the tricky `shouldKeepInEntry` and entry block splitting. The
number of basic blocks does not change, but the emitted .gcno files will be
smaller because we can save one GCOV_TAG_LINES tag.
// BB0 is the synthetic entry block with a single edge to BB2
int main() { // BB2
return 0; // BB2
}
// BB1 is the exit block (since gcov 4.8)
GCC r187297 (2012-05) introduced `__gcov_dump` and `__gcov_reset`.
`__gcov_flush = __gcov_dump + __gcov_reset`
The resolution to https://gcc.gnu.org/PR93623 ("No need to dump gcdas when forking" target GCC 11.0) removed the unuseful and undocumented __gcov_flush.
Close PR38064.
Reviewed By: calixte, serge-sans-paille
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83149