The issue is uncovered by #47698: for IR files without a target triple,
-mtriple= specifies the full target triple while -march= merely sets the
architecture part of the default target triple, leaving a target triple which
may not make sense, e.g. riscv64-apple-darwin.
Therefore, -march= is error-prone and not recommended for tests without a target
triple. The issue has been benign as we recognize $unknown-apple-darwin as ELF instead
of rejecting it outrightly.
This prepares for an upcoming change to make --print-imm-hex the default
behavior of llvm-objdump. These tests were updated in a semi-automatic
fashion.
See D136972 for details.
add BPF disassembler, so tools like llvm-objdump can be used:
$ llvm-objdump -d -no-show-raw-insn ./sockex1_kern.o
./sockex1_kern.o: file format ELF64-BPF
Disassembly of section socket1:
bpf_prog1:
0: r6 = r1
8: r0 = *(u8 *)skb[23]
10: *(u32 *)(r10 - 4) = r0
18: r1 = *(u32 *)(r6 + 4)
20: if r1 != 4 goto 8
28: r2 = r10
30: r2 += -4
ld_imm64 (the only 16-byte insn) and special ld_abs/ld_ind instructions
had to be treated in a special way. The decoders for the rest of the insns
are automatically generated.
Add tests to cover new functionality.
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 287477