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The newer update-copyright.py fixes file encoding too, removing cr/lf
on binutils/bfdtest2.c and ld/testsuite/ld-cygwin/exe-export.exp, and
embedded cr in binutils/testsuite/binutils-all/ar.exp string match.
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The result of running etc/update-copyright.py --this-year, fixing all
the files whose mode is changed by the script, plus a build with
--enable-maintainer-mode --enable-cgen-maint=yes, then checking
out */po/*.pot which we don't update frequently.
The copy of cgen was with commit d1dd5fcc38ead reverted as that commit
breaks building of bfp opcodes files.
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It's been a long time since most of this was written: it's long past
time to put it in the binutils source tree. It's believed correct and
complete insofar as it goes: it documents format v3 (the current
version) but not the libctf API or any earlier versions. (The
earlier versions can be read by libctf but not generated by it, and you
are highly unlikely ever to see an example of any of them.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-11-08 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* doc/ctf-spec.texi: New file.
* configure.ac (MAKEINFO): Add.
(BUILD_INFO): Likewise.
(AC_CONFIG_FILES) [doc/Makefile]: Add.
* Makefile.am [BUILD_INFO] (SUBDIRS): Add doc/.
* doc/Makefile.am: New file.
* doc/Makefile.in: Likewise.
* configure: Regenerated.
* Makefile.in: Likewise.
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ctf_type_visit (used, among other things, by the type dumping code) was
aborting when it saw a nonrepresentable type anywhere: even a single
structure member with a nonrepresentable type caused an abort with
ECTF_NONREPRESENTABLE. This is not useful behaviour, given that the
abort comes from a type-resolution we are only doing in order to
determine whether the type is a structure or union. We know
nonrepresentable types can't be either, so handle that case and
pass the nonrepresentable type down.
(The added test verifies that the dumper now handles this case and
prints nonrepresentable structure members as it already does
nonrepresentable top-level types, rather than skipping the whole
structure -- or, without the previous commit, skipping the whole types
section.)
ld/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable-member.*: New test.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-types.c (ctf_type_rvisit): Handle nonrepresentable types.
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If dumping of a single type fails, we obviously can't dump it; but just
as obviously this doesn't make the other types in the types section
invalid or undumpable. So we should not propagate errors seen when
type-dumping, but rather ignore them and carry on, so we dump as many
types as we can (leaving out the ones we can't grok).
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-10-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_type): Do not abort on error.
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An off-by-one bug in the check for pptrtab lookup meant that we could
access the pptrtab past its bounds (*well* past its bounds),
particularly if we called ctf_lookup_by_name in a child dict with "*foo"
where "foo" is a type that exists in the parent but not the child and no
previous lookups by name have been carried out. (Note that "*foo" is
not even a valid thing to call ctf_lookup_by_name with: foo * is.
Nonetheless, users sometimes do call ctf_lookup_by_name with invalid
content, and it should return ECTF_NOTYPE, not crash.)
ctf_pptrtab_len, as its name suggests (and as other tests of it in
ctf-lookup.c confirm), is one higher than the maximum valid permissible
index, so the comparison is wrong.
(Test added, which should fail pretty reliably in the presence of this
bug on any machine with 4KiB pages.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-lookup.c (ctf_lookup_by_name_internal): Fix pptrtab bounds.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab-writable-page-deep-lookup.*:
New test.
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These warnings are all off by default, but if they do fire you get
spurious ERRORs when running make check-libctf.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/enum-symbol.c: Remove unused label.
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/conflicting-type-syms.c: Remove unused
variables.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/pptrtab.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/reserialize-strtab-corruption.c:
Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld-r.c: Fix
format string.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.c:
Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld.lk: Adjust.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/symtypetab-nonlinker-writeout.c: Fix
initializer.
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Older (pre-upstreaming) GCC emits a function symtypetab section of a
format never read by any extant libctf. We can detect such CTF dicts by
the lack of the CTF_F_NEWFUNCINFO flag in their header, and we do so
when reading in the symtypetab section -- but if the set of symbols with
types is sufficiently sparse, even an older GCC will emit a function
index section.
In NEWFUNCINFO-capable compilers, this section will always be the exact
same length as the corresponding function section (each is an array of
uint32_t, associated 1:1 with each other). But this is not true for the
older compiler, for which the sections are different lengths. We check
to see if the function symtypetab section and its index are the same
length, but we fail to skip this check when this is not a NEWFUNCINFO
dict, and emit a spurious corruption error for a CTF dict we could
have perfectly well opened and used.
Fix trivial: check the flag (and fix the terrible grammar of the error
message at the same time).
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-open.c (ctf_bufopen_internal): Don't complain about corrupt
function index symtypetab sections if this is an old-format
function symtypetab section (which should be ignored in any case).
Fix bad grammar.
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(including sim/, which has no changelog.)
bfd/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
binutils/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
gas/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
gprof/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
opcodes/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
zlib/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure: Regenerate.
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Checking for linker versioning by just grepping ld --help output for
mentions of --version-script is inadequate now that Solaris 11.4
implements a --version-script with different semantics. Try linking a
test program with a small wildcard-using version script with each
supported set of flags in turn, to make sure that linker versioning is
not only advertised but actually works.
The Solaris "GNU-compatible" linker versioning is not quite
GNU-compatible enough, but we can work around the differences by
generating a new version script that removes the comments from the
original (Solaris ld requires #-style comments), and making another
version script for libctf-nonbfd in particular which doesn't mention any
of the symbols that appear in libctf.la, to avoid Solaris ld introducing
corresponding new NOTYPE symbols to match the version script.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27967
* configure.ac (VERSION_FLAGS): Replace with...
(ac_cv_libctf_version_script): ... this multiple test.
(VERSION_FLAGS_NOBFD): Substitute this too.
* Makefile.am (libctf_nobfd_la_LDFLAGS): Use it. Split out...
(libctf_ldflags_nover): ... non-versioning flags here.
(libctf_la_LDFLAGS): Use it.
* libctf.ver: Give every symbol not in libctf-nobfd a comment on
the same line noting as much.
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This ensures that the CTF_LIBADD, which always contains at least this
when doing a shared link:
-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic -liberty
appears in the link line before any requirements pulled in by libbfd.la,
which include -liberty but because it is install-time do not include the
-L`pwd`/../libiberty/pic portion (in an indirect dep like this, the path
comes from the libbfd.la file, and is an install path). libiberty also
appears after libbfd in the link line by virtue of libctf-nobfd.la,
because libctf-nobfd has to follow libbfd in the link line, and that
needs symbols from libiberty too.
Without this, an installed liberty might well be pulled in by libbfd,
and if --enable-install-libiberty is not specified this libiberty might
be completely incompatible with what is being installed and break either
or boht of libbfd and libctf. (The specific problem observed here is
that bsearch_r was not present, but other problems might easily be
observed in future too.)
Because ld links against libctf, this has a tendency to break the system
linker at install time too, if installing with --prefix=/usr. That's
quite unpleasant to recover from.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-09-27 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27360
* Makefile.am (libctf_la_LIBADD): Link against libiberty
before pulling in libbfd.la or pulling in libctf-nobfd.la.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
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* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dynset_eq_string): Don't declare.
* ctf-hash.c (ctf_dynset_eq_string): Delete function.
* ctf-dedup.c (make_set_element): Use htab_eq_string.
(ctf_dedup_atoms_init, ADD_CITER, ctf_dedup_init): Likewise.
(ctf_dedup_conflictify_unshared): Likewise.
(ctf_dedup_walk_output_mapping): Likewise.
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The tests currently in binutils are aimed at the original GCC-based
implementation of CTF, which emitted CTF directly from GCC's internal
representation. The approach now under review emits CTF from DWARF,
with an eye to eventually doing this for all non-DWARF debuginfo-like
formats GCC supports. It also uses a different flag to enable
CTF emission (-gctf rather than -gt).
Adjust the testsuite accordingly.
Given that the ld testsuite results are dependent on type ordering,
which we do not guarantee at all, it's amazing how little changes. We
see a few type ordering differences, slices change because the old GCC
was buggy (slices were emitted "backwards", from the wrong end of the
machine word) and its expected results were wrong, and GCC now emits the
underlying integral type for enumerated types, though CTF has no way to
record this yet (coming in v4).
GCC also now emits even hidden symbols into the symtab (and thus
symtypetab), so one symtypetab test changes its expected results
slightly to compensate.
Also add tests for the CTF_K_UNKNOWN nonrepresentable type: this
couldn't be done before now since the only GCC that emits CTF_K_UNKNOWN
for nonrepresentable types is the new one.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-05-06 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/ld-ctf/ctf.exp: Use -gctf, not -gt.
* testsuite/lib/ld-lib.exp: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable-1.c: New test for nonrepresentable types.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable-2.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/nonrepresentable.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/array.d: Larger type section.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/data-func-conflicted.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/enums.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/conflicting-enums.d: Don't compare types.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-cyclic-conflicting.d: Changed type order.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/cross-tu-noncyclic.d: Likewise.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.d: Adjust for improved slice emission.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-05-06 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/lib/ctf-lib.exp: Use -gctf, not -gt.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/nonstatic-var-section-ld-r.lk:
Hidden symbols now get into the symtypetab anyway.
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Before now, types that could not be encoded in CTF were represented as
references to type ID 0, which does not itself appear in the
dictionary. This choice is annoying in several ways, principally that it
forces generators and consumers of CTF to grow special cases for types
that are referenced in valid dicts but don't appear.
Allow an alternative representation (which will become the only
representation in format v4) whereby nonrepresentable types are encoded
as actual types with kind CTF_K_UNKNOWN (an already-existing kind
theoretically but not in practice used for padding, with value 0).
This is backward-compatible, because CTF_K_UNKNOWN was not used anywhere
before now: it was used in old-format function symtypetabs, but these
were never emitted by any compiler and the code to handle them in libctf
likely never worked and was removed last year, in favour of new-format
symtypetabs that contain only type IDs, not type kinds.
In order to link this type, we need an API addition to let us add types
of unknown kind to the dict: we let them optionally have names so that
GCC can emit many different unknown types and those types with identical
names will be deduplicated together. There are also small tweaks to the
deduplicator to actually dedup such types, to let opening of dicts with
unknown types with names work, to return the ECTF_NONREPRESENTABLE error
on resolution of such types (like ID 0), and to print their names as
something useful but not a valid C identifier, mostly for the sake of
the dumper.
Tests added in the next commit.
include/ChangeLog
2021-05-06 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf.h (CTF_K_UNKNOWN): Document that it can be used for
nonrepresentable types, not just padding.
* ctf-api.h (ctf_add_unknown): New.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-05-06 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-open.c (init_types): Unknown types may have names.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_type_resolve): CTF_K_UNKNOWN is as
non-representable as type ID 0.
(ctf_type_aname): Print unknown types.
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_hash_type): Do not early-exit for
CTF_K_UNKNOWN types: they have real hash values now.
(ctf_dedup_rwalk_one_output_mapping): Treat CTF_K_UNKNOWN types
like other types with no referents: call the callback and do not
skip them.
(ctf_dedup_emit_type): Emit via...
* ctf-create.c (ctf_add_unknown): ... this new function.
* libctf.ver (LIBCTF_1.2): Add it.
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The address sanitizer contains a redirector that captures dlopen calls,
so checks for dlopen with AC_SEARCH_LIBS will always conclude that
dlopen is present when the sanitizer is on. This means it won't add
-ldl to LIBS even if needed, and the immediately-following attempt to
actually link with -lbfd will fail because libbfd also needs dlsym,
which ASAN does *not* contain a redirector for.
If we check for dlsym instead of dlopen, the check works whether ASAN is
on or off. (bfd uses both in close proximity: if it needs one, it will
always need the other.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* configure.ac: Check for dlsym, not dlopen.
* configure: Regenerate.
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Harmless, but causes noise that makes it harder to spot other leaks.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/libctf-writable/symtypetab-nonlinker-writeout.c: Don't
leak buf.
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isqualifier, which is used by ctf_lookup_by_name to figure out if a
given word in a type name is a qualifier, takes the address of a
possibly out-of-bounds location before checking its bounds.
In any reasonable compiler this will just lead to a harmless address
computation that is then discarded if out-of-bounds, but it's still
undefined behaviour and the sanitizer rightly complains.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27628
* ctf-lookup.c (isqualifier): Don't dereference out-of-bounds
qhash values.
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This makes it possible to use LIBCTF_DEBUG to debug things that happen
before the ctf_bfdopen_internal call that ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect eventually
thunks down to (symtab/strtab lookup, archive opening, etc).
This is not important for ctf_open callers, since ctf_fdopen already
calls libctf_init_debug, but ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect is a public entry point
that can be called directly (e.g. objdump and readelf both do so).
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-open-bfd.c (ctf_bfdopen_ctfsect): Initialize debugging.
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Every place that accesses a function's dtd_vlen accesses it only if the
number of args is nonzero, except the serializer, which always tries to
memcpy it. The number of bytes it memcpys in this case is zero, but it
is still undefined behaviour to copy zero bytes from a null pointer.
So check for this case explicitly.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
PR libctf/27628
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_emit_type_sect): Allow for a NULL vlen in
CTF_K_FUNCTION types.
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When we dump normal types, we emit their size and/or alignment:
but size and alignment dumping can return errors if the type is
part of a chain that terminates in a forward.
Emitting 0xffffffff as a size or alignment is unhelpful, so simply
skip emitting this info for any type for which size or alignment
checks return an error, no matter what the error is.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-25 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_format_type): Don't emit size or alignment
on error.
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bfd/
* bfd-in.h (startswith): New inline.
(CONST_STRNEQ): Use startswith.
* bfd-in2.h: Regenerate.
gdbsupport/
* common-utils.h (startswith): Delete version now supplied by bfd.h.
libctf/
* ctf-impl.h: Include string.h.
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The previous commit started to error-check the lookup of
ctf_type_encoding for the underlying type that is internally done when
carrying out a ctf_type_encoding on a slice.
Unfortunately, enums have no encoding, so this has historically been
returning an error (which is ignored) and then populating the cte_format
with uninitialized data. Now the error is not ignored, this is
returning an error, which breaks linking of CTF containing bitfields of
enumerated type.
CTF format v3 does not record the actual underlying type of a enum, but
we can mock up something that is not *too* wrong, and that is at any
rate better than uninitialized data.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.c: Check slices of enums too.
* testsuite/ld-ctf/slice.d: Results adjusted.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-types.c (ctf_type_encoding): Support, after a fashion, for enums.
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_format_type): Do not report enums' degenerate
encoding.
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Out-of-memory errors initializing the string atoms table were
disregarded (though they would have caused a segfault very shortly
afterwards). Errors hashing types during deduplication were only
reported if they happened on the output dict, which is almost never the
case (most errors are going to be on the dict we're working over, which
is going to be one of the inputs). (The error was detected in both
cases, but the errno was extracted from the wrong dict.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_rhash_type): Report errors on the input
dict properly.
* ctf-open.c (ctf_bufopen_internal): Report errors initializing
the atoms table.
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This completes the job of unifying what was once three separate code
paths full of duplication for every function dealing with querying the
properties of struct and union members. The dynamic code path was
already removed: this change removes the distinction between small and
large members, by adding a helper that copies out members from the vlen,
expanding small members into large ones as it does so.
This makes it possible to have *more* representations of things like
structure members without needing to change the querying functions at
all. It also lets us check for buffer overruns more effectively,
verifying that we don't accidentally overrun the end of the vlen in
either the dynamic or static type case.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_next_t) <ctn_tp>: New.
<u.ctn_mp>: Remove.
<u.ctn_lmp>: Remove.
<u.ctn_vlen>: New.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_struct_member): New.
(ctf_member_next): Use it, dropping separate large/small code paths.
(ctf_type_align): Likewise.
(ctf_member_info): Likewise.
(ctf_type_rvisit): Likewise.
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Eliminate the dynamic member storage for structs and unions as we have
for other dynamic types. This is much like the previous enum
elimination, except that structs and unions are the only types for which
a full-sized ctf_type_t might be needed. Up to now, this decision has
been made in the individual ctf_add_{struct,union}_sized functions and
duplicated in ctf_add_member_offset. The vlen machinery lets us
simplify this, always allocating a ctf_lmember_t and setting the
dtd_data's ctt_size to CTF_LSIZE_SENT: we figure out whether this is
really justified and (almost always) repack things down into a
ctf_stype_t at ctf_serialize time.
This allows us to eliminate the dynamic member paths from the iterators and
query functions in ctf-types.c in favour of always using the large-structure
vlen stuff for dynamic types (the diff is ugly but that's just because of the
volume of reindentation this calls for). This also means the large-structure
vlen stuff gets more heavily tested, which is nice because it was an almost
totally unused code path before now (it only kicked in for structures of size
>4GiB, and how often do you see those?)
The only extra complexity here is ctf_add_type. Back in the days of the
nondeduplicating linker this was called a ridiculous number of times for
countless identical copies of structures: eschewing the repeated lookups of the
dtd in ctf_add_member_offset and adding the members directly saved an amazing
amount of time. Now the nondeduplicating linker is gone, this is extreme
overoptimization: we can rip out the direct addition and use ctf_member_next and
ctf_add_member_offset, just like ctf_dedup_emit does.
We augment a ctf_add_type test to try adding a self-referential struct, the only
thing the ctf_add_type part of this change really perturbs.
This completes the elimination of dtd_u.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dtdef_t) <dtu_members>: Remove.
<dtd_u>: Likewise.
(ctf_dmdef_t): Remove.
(struct ctf_next) <u.ctn_dmd>: Remove.
* ctf-create.c (INITIAL_VLEN): New, more-or-less arbitrary initial
vlen size.
(ctf_add_enum): Use it.
(ctf_dtd_delete): Do not free the (removed) dmd; remove string
refs from the vlen on struct deletion.
(ctf_add_struct_sized): Populate the vlen: do it by hand if
promoting forwards. Always populate the full-size
lsizehi/lsizelo members.
(ctf_add_union_sized): Likewise.
(ctf_add_member_offset): Set up the vlen rather than the dmd.
Expand it as needed, repointing string refs via
ctf_str_move_pending. Add the member names as pending strings.
Always populate the full-size lsizehi/lsizelo members.
(membadd): Remove, folding back into...
(ctf_add_type_internal): ... here, adding via an ordinary
ctf_add_struct_sized and _next iteration rather than doing
everything by hand.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_copy_smembers): Remove this...
(ctf_copy_lmembers): ... and this...
(ctf_emit_type_sect): ... folding into here. Figure out if a
ctf_stype_t is needed here, not in ctf_add_*_sized.
(ctf_type_sect_size): Figure out the ctf_stype_t stuff the same
way here.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_member_next): Remove the dmd path and always
use the vlen. Force large-structure usage for dynamic types.
(ctf_type_align): Likewise.
(ctf_member_info): Likewise.
(ctf_type_rvisit): Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct-ctf.c: Add a
self-referential type to this test.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.c: Adjusted
accordingly.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.lk: Likewise.
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This is the first tricky one, the first complex multi-entry vlen
containing strings. To handle this in vlen form, we have to handle
pending refs moving around on realloc.
We grow vlen regions using a new ctf_grow_vlen function, and iterate
through the existing enums every time a grow happens, telling the string
machinery the distance between the old and new vlen region and letting
it adjust the pending refs accordingly. (This avoids traversing all
outstanding refs to find the refs that need adjusting, at the cost of
having to traverse one enum: an obvious major performance win.)
Addition of enums themselves (and also structs/unions later) is a bit
trickier than earlier forms, because the type might be being promoted
from a forward, and forwards have no vlen: so we have to spot that and
create it if needed.
Serialization of enums simplifies down to just telling the string
machinery about the string refs; all the enum type-lookup code loses all
its dynamic member lookup complexity entirely.
A new test is added that iterates over (and gets values of) an enum with
enough members to force a round of vlen growth.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dtdef_t) <dtd_vlen_alloc>: New.
(ctf_str_move_pending): Declare.
* ctf-string.c (ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Fix error return.
(ctf_str_move_pending): New.
* ctf-create.c (ctf_grow_vlen): New.
(ctf_dtd_delete): Zero out the vlen_alloc after free. Free the
vlen later: iterate over it and free enum name refs first.
(ctf_add_generic): Populate dtd_vlen_alloc from vlen.
(ctf_add_enum): populate the vlen; do it by hand if promoting
forwards.
(ctf_add_enumerator): Set up the vlen rather than the dmd. Expand
it as needed, repointing string refs via ctf_str_move_pending. Add
the enumerand names as pending strings.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_copy_emembers): Remove.
(ctf_emit_type_sect): Copy the vlen into place and ref the
strings.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_enum_next): The dynamic portion now uses
the same code as the non-dynamic.
(ctf_enum_name): Likewise.
(ctf_enum_value): Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/enum-many-ctf.c: New test.
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/enum-many.lk: New test.
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The preceding change revealed a new bug: the string table is sorted for
better compression, so repeated serialization with type (or member)
additions in the middle can move strings around. But every
serialization flushes the set of refs (the memory locations that are
automatically updated with a final string offset when the strtab is
updated), so if we are not to have string offsets go stale, we must do
all ref additions within the serialization code (which walks the
complete set of types and symbols anyway). Unfortunately, we were adding
one ref in another place: the type name in the dynamic type definitions,
which has a ref added to it by ctf_add_generic.
So adding a type, serializing (via, say, one of the ctf_write
functions), adding another type with a name that sorts earlier, and
serializing again will corrupt the name of the first type because it no
longer had a ref pointing to its dtd entry's name when its string offset
was shifted later in the strtab to mae way for the other type.
To ensure that we don't miss strings, we also maintain a set of *pending
refs* that will be added later (during serialization), and remove
entries from that set when the ref is finally added. We always use
ctf_str_add_pending outside ctf-serialize.c, ensure that ctf_serialize
adds all strtab offsets as refs (even those in the dtds) on every
serialization, and mandate that no refs are live on entry to
ctf_serialize and that all pending refs are gone before strtab
finalization. (Of necessity ctf_serialize has to traverse all strtab
offsets in the dtds in order to serialize them, so adding them as refs
at the same time is easy.)
(Note that we still can't erase unused atoms when we roll back, though
we can erase unused refs: members and enums are still not removed by
rollbacks and might reference strings added after the snapshot.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-hash.c (ctf_dynset_elements): New.
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dynset_elements): Declare it.
(ctf_str_add_pending): Likewise.
(ctf_dict_t) <ctf_str_pending_ref>: New, set of refs that must be
added during serialization.
* ctf-string.c (ctf_str_create_atoms): Initialize it.
(CTF_STR_ADD_REF): New flag.
(CTF_STR_MAKE_PROVISIONAL): Likewise.
(CTF_STR_PENDING_REF): Likewise.
(ctf_str_add_ref_internal): Take a flags word rather than int
params. Populate, and clear out, ctf_str_pending_ref.
(ctf_str_add): Adjust accordingly.
(ctf_str_add_external): Likewise.
(ctf_str_add_pending): New.
(ctf_str_remove_ref): Also remove the potential ref if it is a
pending ref.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_serialize): Prohibit addition of strings
with ctf_str_add_ref before serialization. Ensure that the
ctf_str_pending_ref set is empty before strtab finalization.
(ctf_emit_type_sect): Add a ref to the ctt_name.
* ctf-create.c (ctf_add_generic): Add the ctt_name as a pending
ref.
* testsuite/libctf-writable/reserialize-strtab-corruption.*: New test.
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One pattern which is rarely done in libctf but which is meant to work is
this:
ctf_create();
ctf_add_*(); // add stuff
ctf_type_*() // look stuff up
ctf_write_*();
ctf_add_*(); // should still work
ctf_type_*() // so should this
ctf_write_*(); // and this
i.e., writing out a dict should not break it and you should be able to
do everything you could do with it before, including writing it out
again.
Unfortunately this has been broken for a while because the field which
indicates the maximum valid type ID was not preserved across
serialization: so type additions after serialization would overwrite
types (obviously disastrous) and type lookups would just fail.
Fix trivial.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_serialize): Preserve ctf_typemax across
serialization.
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One more member vanishes from the dtd_u, leaving only the member for
struct/union/enum members.
There's not much to do here, since as of commit afd78bd6f0a30ba5 we use
the same representation (type sizes, etc) in the dtu_argv as we will
use in the final vlen, with one exception: the vlen has alignment
padding, and the dtu_argv did not. Simplify things by adding suitable
padding in both cases.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dtdef_t) <dtd_u.dtu_argv>: Remove.
* ctf-create.c (ctf_dtd_delete): No longer free it.
(ctf_add_function): Use the dtd_vlen, not dtu_argv. Properly align.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_emit_type_sect): Just copy the dtd_vlen.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_func_type_info): Just use the vlen.
(ctf_func_type_args): Likewise.
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This is even simpler than ints, floats and slices, with the only extra
complication being the need to manually transfer the array parameter in
the rarely-used function ctf_set_array. (Arrays are unique in libctf in
that they can be modified post facto, not just created and appended to.
I'm not sure why they got this exemption, but it's easy to maintain.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dtdef_t) <dtd_u.dtu_arr>: Remove.
* ctf-create.c (ctf_add_array): Use the dtd_vlen, not dtu_arr.
(ctf_set_array): Likewise.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_emit_type_sect): Just copy the dtd_vlen.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_array_info): Just use the vlen.
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This series eliminates a lot of special-case code to handle dynamic
types (types added to writable dicts and not yet serialized).
Historically, when such types have variable-length data in their final
CTF representations, libctf has always worked by adding such types to a
special union (ctf_dtdef_t.dtd_u) in the dynamic type definition
structure, then picking the members out of this structure at
serialization time and packing them into their final form.
This has the advantage that the ctf_add_* code doesn't need to know
anything about the final CTF representation, but the significant
disadvantage that all code that looks up types in any way needs two code
paths, one for dynamic types, one for all others. Historically libctf
"handled" this by not supporting most type lookups on dynamic types at
all until ctf_update was called to do a complete reserialization of the
entire dict (it didn't emit an error, it just emitted wrong results).
Since commit 676c3ecbad6e9c4, which eliminated ctf_update in favour of
the internal-only ctf_serialize function, all the type-lookup paths
grew an extra branch to handle dynamic types.
We can eliminate this branch again by dropping the dtd_u stuff and
simply writing out the vlen in (close to) its final form at ctf_add_*
time: type lookup for types using this approach is then identical for
types in writable dicts and types that are in read-only ones, and
serialization is also simplified (we just need to write out the vlen
we already created).
The only complexity lies in type kinds for which multiple
vlen representations are valid depending on properties of the type,
e.g. structures. But we can start simple, adjusting ints, floats,
and slices to work this way, and leaving everything else as is.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dtdef_t) <dtd_u.dtu_enc>: Remove.
<dtd_u.dtu_slice>: Likewise.
<dtd_vlen>: New.
* ctf-create.c (ctf_add_generic): Perhaps allocate it. All
callers adjusted.
(ctf_dtd_delete): Free it.
(ctf_add_slice): Use the dtd_vlen, not dtu_enc.
(ctf_add_encoded): Likewise. Assert that this must be an int or
float.
* ctf-serialize.c (ctf_emit_type_sect): Just copy the dtd_vlen.
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_rhash_type): Use the dtd_vlen, not
dtu_slice.
* ctf-types.c (ctf_type_reference): Likewise.
(ctf_type_encoding): Remove most dynamic-type-specific code: just
get the vlen from the right place. Report failure to look up the
underlying type's encoding.
|
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It's formatted like this:
do
{
...
}
while (...);
Not like this:
do
{
...
} while (...);
or this:
do {
...
} while (...);
We used both in various places in libctf. Fixing it necessitated some
light reindentation.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-archive.c (ctf_archive_next): GNU style fix for do {} while.
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_rhash_type): Likewise.
(ctf_dedup_rwalk_one_output_mapping): Likewise.
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_format_type): Likewise.
* ctf-lookup.c (ctf_symbol_next): Likewise.
* swap.h (swap_thing): Likewise.
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ctf_serialize and its various pieces may be split out into a separate
file now, but ctf_serialize is still far too long and disordered, mixing
header initialization, sizing of multiple CTF sections, sorting and
emission of multiple CTF sections, strtab construction and ctf_dict_t
copying into a single ugly organically-grown mess.
Fix the worst of this by migrating all section sizing and emission into
separate functions, two per section (or class of section in the case of
the symtypetabs). Only the variable section is now sized and emitted
directly in ctf_serialize (because it only takes about three lines to do
so).
The section sizes themselves are still maintained by ctf_serialize so
that it can work out the header offsets, but ctf_symtypetab_sect_sizes
and ctf_emit_symtypetab_sects share a lot of extra state: migrate that
into a shared structure, emit_symtypetab_state_t.
(Test results unchanged.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-serialize.c: General reshuffling, and...
(emit_symtypetab_state_t): New, migrated from
local variables in ctf_serialize.
(ctf_serialize): Split out most section sizing and
emission.
(ctf_symtypetab_sect_sizes): New (split out).
(ctf_emit_symtypetab_sects): Likewise.
(ctf_type_sect_size): Likewise.
(ctf_emit_type_sect): Likewise.
|
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It is perfectly possible to have dynamically allocated data owned by a
specific dict: you just have to teach ctf_serialize about it.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dict_t): Fix comment.
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The code to serialize CTF dicts just gets bigger and bigger as the
dictionary's complexity grows: adding symtypetabs almost doubled it on
its own. It's long past time to split this out into its own source
file, accompanied by the functions that do the actual writeout.
This leaves ctf-create.c populated exclusively by functions related to
actual writable dict creation (ctf_add_*, ctf_create etc), and leaves
both files a much more reasonable size.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-create.c (symtypetab_delete_nonstatic_vars): Move
into ctf-serialize.c.
(ctf_symtab_skippable): Likewise.
(CTF_SYMTYPETAB_EMIT_FUNCTION): Likewise.
(CTF_SYMTYPETAB_EMIT_PAD): Likewise.
(CTF_SYMTYPETAB_FORCE_INDEXED): Likewise.
(symtypetab_density): Likewise.
(emit_symtypetab): Likewise.
(emit_symtypetab_index): Likewise.
(ctf_copy_smembers): Likewise.
(ctf_copy_lmembers): Likewise.
(ctf_copy_emembers): Likewise.
(ctf_sort_var): Likewise.
(ctf_serialize): Likewise.
(ctf_gzwrite): Likewise.
(ctf_compress_write): Likewise.
(ctf_write_mem): Likewise.
(ctf_write): Likewise.
* ctf-serialize.c: New file.
* Makefile.am (libctf_nobfd_la_SOURCES): Add it.
* Makefile.in: Regenerate.
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ctf-link.c is unnecessarily confusing because ctf_link_lazy_open is
positioned near functions that have nothing to do with opening files.
Move it around, and fix some tabdamage that's crept in lately.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-18 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_lazy_open): Move up in the file, to near
ctf_link_add_ctf.
* ctf-lookup.c (ctf_lookup_symbol_idx): Repair tabdamage.
(ctf_lookup_by_sym_or_name): Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-lookup/struct-iteration.c: Likewise.
* testsuite/libctf-regression/type-add-unnamed-struct.c: Likewise.
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This is a tricky one. BFD, on the linker's behalf, reports symbols to
libctf via the ctf_new_symbol and ctf_new_dynsym callbacks, which
ultimately call ctf_link_add_linker_symbol. But while this happens
after strtab offsets are finalized, it happens before the .dynstr is
actually laid out, so we can't iterate over it at this stage and
it is not clear what the reported symbols are actually called. So
a second callback, examine_strtab, is called after the .dynstr is
finalized, which calls ctf_link_add_strtab and ultimately leads
to ldelf_ctf_strtab_iter_cb being called back repeatedly until the
offsets of every string in the .dynstr is passed to libctf.
libctf can then use this to get symbol names out of the input (which
usually stores symbol types in the form of a name -> type mapping at
this stage) and extract the types of those symbols, feeding them back
into their final form as a 1:1 association with the real symtab's
STT_OBJ and STT_FUNC symbols (with a few skipped, see
ctf_symtab_skippable).
This representation is compact, but has one problem: if libctf somehow
gets confused about the st_type of a symbol, it'll stick an entry into
the function symtypetab when it should put it into the object
symtypetab, or vice versa, and *every symbol from that one on* will have
the wrong CTF type because it's actually looking up the type for a
different symbol.
And we have just such a bug. ctf_link_add_strtab was not taking the
refcounts of strings into consideration, so even strings that had been
eliminated from the strtab by virtue of being in objects eliminated via
--as-needed etc were being reported. This is harmful because it can
lead to multiple strings with the same apparent offset, and if the last
duplicate to be reported relates to an eliminated symbol, we look up the
wrong symbol from the input and gets its type wrong: if it's unlucky and
the eliminated symbol is also of the wrong st_type, we will end up with
a corrupted symtypetab.
Thankfully the wrong-st_type case is already diagnosed by a
this-can-never-happen paranoid warning:
CTF warning: Symbol 61a added to CTF as a function but is of type 1
or the converse
* CTF warning: Symbol a3 added to CTF as a data object but is of type 2
so at least we can tell when the corruption has spread to more than one
symbol's type.
Skipping zero-refcounted strings is easy: teach _bfd_elf_strtab_str to
skip them, and ldelf_ctf_strtab_iter_cb to loop over skipped strings
until it falls off the end or finds one that isn't skipped.
bfd/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* elf-strtab.c (_bfd_elf_strtab_str): Skip strings with zero refcount.
ld/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ldelfgen.c (ldelf_ctf_strtab_iter_cb): Skip zero-refcount strings.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-create.c (symtypetab_density): Report the symbol name as
well as index in the name != object error; note the likely
consequences.
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_shuffle_syms): Report the symbol index
as well as name.
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In the "no symbols" case (commonplace for executables), we were freeing
the ctf_dynsyms using free(), instead of ctf_dynhash_destroy(), leaking
a little memory.
(This is harmless in the common case of ld usage, but libctf might be
used by persistent processes too.)
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_shuffle_syms): Free ctf_dynsyms properly.
|
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Comparing an encoding's cte_bits to a ctf_type_size needs a cast:
one is a uint32_t and the other is an ssize_t.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dump.c (ctf_dump_format_type): Fix signed/unsigned confusion.
|
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A transient bug in the preceding change (fixed before commit) exposed a
new failure, of ld/testsuite/ld-ctf/diag-parname.d. This attempts to
ensure that if we link a dict with child type IDs but no attached
parent, we get a suitable ECTF_NOPARENT error. This was happening
before this commit, but only by chance, because ctf_variable_iter and
ctf_variable_next check to see if the dict they're passed is a child
dict without an associated parent. We forgot error-checking on the
ctf_variable_next call, and as a result this was concealed -- and
looking for the problem exposed a new bug.
If any of the lookups beneath ctf_dedup_hash_type fail, the CTF link
does *not* fail, but acts quite bizarrely, skipping the type but
emitting an error to the CTF error/warning log -- so the linker will
report an error, emit a partial CTF dict missing some types, and exit
with exitcode 0 as if nothing went wrong. Since ctf_dedup_hash_type is
never expected to fail in normal operation, this is surely wrong:
failures at emission time do not emit partial CTF dicts, so failures
at hashing time should not either.
So propagate the error back up.
Also fix a couple of smaller bugs where we fail to properly free things
and/or propagate error codes on various rare link-time errors and
out-of-memory conditions.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup): Pass on errors from ctf_dedup_hash_type.
Call ctf_dedup_fini properly on other errors.
(ctf_dedup_emit_type): Set the errno on dynhash insertion failure.
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_deduplicating_per_cu): Close outputs beyond
output 0 when asserting because >1 output is found.
(ctf_link_deduplicating): Likewise, when asserting because the
shared output is not the same as the passed-in fp.
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When CTF linking is done, the linker has to track the association
between types in the inputs and types in the outputs. The deduplicator
does this via the cd_output_emission_hashes, which maps from hashes of
types (valid in both the input and output) to the IDs of types in the
specific dict in which the cd_emission_hashes is held. However, the
nondeduplicating linker and ctf_add_type used a different mechanism, a
dedicated hashtab stored in the ctf_link_type_mapping, populated via
ctf_add_type_mapping and queried via the ctf_type_mapping function. To
allow the same functions to be used for variable and symbol population
in both the deduplicating and nondeduplicating linker, the deduplicator
carefully transferred all its input->output mappings into this hashtab
before returning.
This is *expensive*. The number of entries in this hashtab scales as the
number of input types, and unlike the hashing machinery the type mapping
machinery (the only other thing which scales that way) has not been much
optimized.
Now the nondeduplicating linker is gone, we can throw this out, move
the existing type mapping machinery to ctf-create.c and dedicate it to
ctf_add_type alone, and add a new function ctf_dedup_type_mapping which
uses the deduplicator's built-in knowledge of type mappings directly,
without requiring an expensive repopulation phase.
This speeds up a test link of nouveau.ko (a good worst-case candidate
with a lot of types in each of a lot of input files) from 9.11s to 7.15s
in my testing, a speedup of over 20%.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-impl.h (ctf_dict_t) <ctf_link_type_mapping>: No longer used
by the nondeduplicating linker.
(ctf_add_type_mapping): Removed, now static.
(ctf_type_mapping): Likewise.
(ctf_dedup_type_mapping): New.
(ctf_dedup_t) <cd_input_nums>: New.
* ctf-dedup.c (ctf_dedup_init): Populate it.
(ctf_dedup_fini): Free it again. Emphasise that this has to be
the last thing called.
(ctf_dedup): Populate it.
(ctf_dedup_populate_type_mapping): Removed.
(ctf_dedup_populate_type_mappings): Likewise.
(ctf_dedup_emit): No longer call it. No longer call
ctf_dedup_fini either.
(ctf_dedup_type_mapping): New.
* ctf-link.c (ctf_unnamed_cuname): New.
(ctf_create_per_cu): Arguments must be non-null now.
(ctf_in_member_cb_arg): Removed.
(ctf_link): No longer populate it. No longer discard the
mapping table.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_one_symtypetab): Use
ctf_dedup_type_mapping, not ctf_type_mapping. Use
ctf_unnamed_cuname.
(ctf_link_one_variable): Likewise. Pass in args individually: no
longer a ctf_variable_iter callback.
(empty_link_type_mapping): Removed.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_variables): Use ctf_variable_next, not
ctf_variable_iter. No longer pack arguments to
ctf_link_one_variable into a struct.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_per_cu): Call ctf_dedup_fini once
all link phases are done.
(ctf_link_deduplicating): Likewise.
(ctf_link_intern_extern_string): Improve comment.
(ctf_add_type_mapping): Migrate...
(ctf_type_mapping): ... these functions...
* ctf-create.c (ctf_add_type_mapping): ... here...
(ctf_type_mapping): ... and make static, for the sole use of
ctf_add_type.
|
|
There is no such thing, and the comment makes no sense, and doesn't
match what the code is doing. We always want to put variables in the
same dicts as the types they relate to if at all possible.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-link.c (ctf_link_one_variable): Remove reference to
"unconflicted link mode".
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|
The nondeduplicating CTF linker was kept around when the deduplicating
one was added so that people had something to fall back to in case the
deduplicating linker turned out to be buggy. It's now much more stable
than the nondeduplicating linker, in addition to much faster, using much
less memory and producing much better output. In addition, while
libctf has a linker flag to invoke the nondeduplicating linker, ld does
not expose it: the only way to turn it on within ld is an intentionally-
undocumented environment variable. So we can remove it without any ABI
or user-visibility concerns (the only thing we leave around is the
CTF_LINK_NONDEDUP flag, which can easily be interpreted as "deduplicate
less", though right now it does nothing).
This lets us remove a lot of complexity associated with tracking
filenames and CU names separately (something the deduplcating linker
never bothered with, since the cunames are always reliable and ld never
hands us useful filenames anyway)
The biggest lacuna left behind is the ctf_type_mapping machinery, which
slows down deduplicating links quite a lot. We can't just ditch it
because ctf_add_type uses it: removing the slowdown from the
deduplicating linker is a job for another commit.
include/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-api.h (CTF_LINK_SHARE_DUPLICATED): Note that this might
merely change how much deduplication is done.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-link.c (ctf_create_per_cu): Drop FILENAME now that it is
always identical to CUNAME.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_one_symtypetab): Adjust.
(ctf_link_one_type): Remove.
(ctf_link_one_input_archive_member): Likewise.
(ctf_link_close_one_input_archive): Likewise.
(ctf_link_one_input_archive): Likewise.
(ctf_link): No longer call it. Drop CTF_LINK_NONDEDUP path.
Improve header comment a bit (dicts, not files). Adjust
ctf_create_per_cu call.
(ctf_link_deduplicating_variables): Simplify.
(ctf_link_in_member_cb_arg_t) <cu_name>: Remove.
<in_input_cu_file>: Likewise.
<in_fp_parent>: Likewise.
<done_parent>: Likewise.
(ctf_link_one_variable): Turn uses of in_file_name to in_cuname.
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I pushed this change without fixing up the date by mistake.
|
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Ever since the generator-style _next iterators were introduced, there
have been separate implementations of the functional-style _iter
iterators that do the same thing as _next.
This is annoying and adds more dependencies on the internal guts of the
file format. Rip them all out and replace them with the corresponding
_next iterators. Only ctf_archive_raw_iter and ctf_label_iter survive,
the former because there is no access to the raw binary data of archives
via any _next iterator, and the latter because ctf_label_next hasn't
been implemented (because labels are currently not used for anything).
Tested by reverting the change (already applied) that reimplemented
ctf_member_iter in terms of ctf_member_next, then verifying that the
_iter and _next iterators produced the same results for every iterable
entity within a large type archive.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-types.c (ctf_member_iter): Move 'rc' to an inner scope.
(ctf_enum_iter): Reimplement in terms of ctf_enum_next.
(ctf_type_iter): Reimplement in terms of ctf_type_next.
(ctf_type_iter_all): Likewise.
(ctf_variable_iter): Reimplement in terms of ctf_variable_next.
* ctf-archive.c (ctf_archive_iter_internal): Remove.
(ctf_archive_iter): Reimplement in terms of ctf_archive_next.
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The top level of CTF containers is a "CTF archive", which contains a
collection of named members (each a CTF dictionary). In the serialized
file format, this is optional and skipped if the archive would have only
one member, as when no ambiguous types are present: so it is commonplace
to have a simple ctf_dict_t written out, with no archive container
wrapped around it.
But, unlike ctf_archive_iter, ctf_archive_next didn't quite handle this
case right. It should set the name of this fake "member" to
_CTF_SECTION, i.e. ".ctf", but it was failing to do so, so callers got
an unintialized variable back instead and were understandably confused.
So set the name properly.
libctf/ChangeLog
2021-03-02 Nick Alcock <nick.alcock@oracle.com>
* ctf-archive.c (ctf_archive_next): Set the name of parents in
single-member archives.
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