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2   :format: html
3
4=================================
5LLVM Code Coverage Mapping Format
6=================================
7
8.. contents::
9   :local:
10
11Introduction
12============
13
14LLVM's code coverage mapping format is used to provide code coverage
15analysis using LLVM's and Clang's instrumentation based profiling
16(Clang's ``-fprofile-instr-generate`` option).
17
18This document is aimed at those who would like to know how LLVM's code coverage
19mapping works under the hood. A prior knowledge of how Clang's profile guided
20optimization works is useful, but not required. For those interested in using
21LLVM to provide code coverage analysis for their own programs, see the `Clang
22documentation <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/SourceBasedCodeCoverage.html>`.
23
24We start by briefly describing LLVM's code coverage mapping format and the
25way that Clang and LLVM's code coverage tool work with this format. After
26the basics are down, more advanced features of the coverage mapping format
27are discussed - such as the data structures, LLVM IR representation and
28the binary encoding.
29
30High Level Overview
31===================
32
33LLVM's code coverage mapping format is designed to be a self contained
34data format that can be embedded into the LLVM IR and into object files.
35It's described in this document as a **mapping** format because its goal is
36to store the data that is required for a code coverage tool to map between
37the specific source ranges in a file and the execution counts obtained
38after running the instrumented version of the program.
39
40The mapping data is used in two places in the code coverage process:
41
421. When clang compiles a source file with ``-fcoverage-mapping``, it
43   generates the mapping information that describes the mapping between the
44   source ranges and the profiling instrumentation counters.
45   This information gets embedded into the LLVM IR and conveniently
46   ends up in the final executable file when the program is linked.
47
482. It is also used by *llvm-cov* - the mapping information is extracted from an
49   object file and is used to associate the execution counts (the values of the
50   profile instrumentation counters), and the source ranges in a file.
51   After that, the tool is able to generate various code coverage reports
52   for the program.
53
54The coverage mapping format aims to be a "universal format" that would be
55suitable for usage by any frontend, and not just by Clang. It also aims to
56provide the frontend the possibility of generating the minimal coverage mapping
57data in order to reduce the size of the IR and object files - for example,
58instead of emitting mapping information for each statement in a function, the
59frontend is allowed to group the statements with the same execution count into
60regions of code, and emit the mapping information only for those regions.
61
62Advanced Concepts
63=================
64
65The remainder of this guide is meant to give you insight into the way the
66coverage mapping format works.
67
68The coverage mapping format operates on a per-function level as the
69profile instrumentation counters are associated with a specific function.
70For each function that requires code coverage, the frontend has to create
71coverage mapping data that can map between the source code ranges and
72the profile instrumentation counters for that function.
73
74Mapping Region
75--------------
76
77The function's coverage mapping data contains an array of mapping regions.
78A mapping region stores the `source code range`_ that is covered by this region,
79the `file id <coverage file id_>`_, the `coverage mapping counter`_ and
80the region's kind.
81There are several kinds of mapping regions:
82
83* Code regions associate portions of source code and `coverage mapping
84  counters`_. They make up the majority of the mapping regions. They are used
85  by the code coverage tool to compute the execution counts for lines,
86  highlight the regions of code that were never executed, and to obtain
87  the various code coverage statistics for a function.
88  For example:
89
90  :raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{    </span> <span class='c1'>// Code Region from 1:40 to 9:2</span>
91  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>                                            </span>
92  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  if (argc &gt; 1) </span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>{                         </span>   <span class='c1'>// Code Region from 3:17 to 5:4</span>
93  <span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>    printf("%s\n", argv[1]);              </span>
94  <span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>  }</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'> else </span><span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>{                                </span>   <span class='c1'>// Code Region from 5:10 to 7:4</span>
95  <span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>    printf("\n");                         </span>
96  <span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>  }</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>                                         </span>
97  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  return 0;                                 </span>
98  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
99  </pre>`
100* Skipped regions are used to represent source ranges that were skipped
101  by Clang's preprocessor. They don't associate with
102  `coverage mapping counters`_, as the frontend knows that they are never
103  executed. They are used by the code coverage tool to mark the skipped lines
104  inside a function as non-code lines that don't have execution counts.
105  For example:
106
107  :raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int main() </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{               </span> <span class='c1'>// Code Region from 1:12 to 6:2</span>
108  <span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>#ifdef DEBUG             </span>   <span class='c1'>// Skipped Region from 2:1 to 4:2</span>
109  <span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>  printf("Hello world"); </span>
110  <span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>#</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>endif                     </span>
111  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  return 0;                </span>
112  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
113  </pre>`
114* Expansion regions are used to represent Clang's macro expansions. They
115  have an additional property - *expanded file id*. This property can be
116  used by the code coverage tool to find the mapping regions that are created
117  as a result of this macro expansion, by checking if their file id matches the
118  expanded file id. They don't associate with `coverage mapping counters`_,
119  as the code coverage tool can determine the execution count for this region
120  by looking up the execution count of the first region with a corresponding
121  file id.
122  For example:
123
124  :raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int func(int x) </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{                             </span>
125  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  #define MAX(x,y) </span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>((x) &gt; (y)? </span><span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>(x)</span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'> : </span><span style='background-color:#F4BA70'>(y)</span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>)</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>     </span>
126  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  return </span><span style='background-color:#7FCA9F'>MAX</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>(x, 42);                          </span> <span class='c1'>// Expansion Region from 3:10 to 3:13</span>
127  <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
128  </pre>`
129* Branch regions associate instrumentable branch conditions in the source code
130  with a `coverage mapping counter`_ to track how many times an individual
131  condition evaluated to 'true' and another `coverage mapping counter`_ to
132  track how many times that condition evaluated to false.  Instrumentable
133  branch conditions may comprise larger boolean expressions using boolean
134  logical operators.  The 'true' and 'false' cases reflect unique branch paths
135  that can be traced back to the source code.
136  For example:
137
138  :raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int func(int x, int y) {
139  <span>  if (<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>(x &gt; 1)</span> || <span style='background-color:#4A789C'>(y &gt; 3)</span>) {</span>  <span class='c1'>// Branch Region from 3:6 to 3:12</span>
140  <span>                             </span><span class='c1'>// Branch Region from 3:17 to 3:23</span>
141  <span>    printf("%d\n", x);              </span>
142  <span>  } else {                                </span>
143  <span>    printf("\n");                         </span>
144  <span>  }</span>
145  <span>  return 0;                                 </span>
146  <span>}</span>
147  </pre>`
148
149.. _source code range:
150
151Source Range:
152^^^^^^^^^^^^^
153
154The source range record contains the starting and ending location of a certain
155mapping region. Both locations include the line and the column numbers.
156
157.. _coverage file id:
158
159File ID:
160^^^^^^^^
161
162The file id an integer value that tells us
163in which source file or macro expansion is this region located.
164It enables Clang to produce mapping information for the code
165defined inside macros, like this example demonstrates:
166
167:raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>void func(const char *str) </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{        </span> <span class='c1'>// Code Region from 1:28 to 6:2 with file id 0</span>
168<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  #define PUT </span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>printf("%s\n", str)</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>   </span> <span class='c1'>// 2 Code Regions from 2:15 to 2:34 with file ids 1 and 2</span>
169<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  if(*str)                          </span>
170<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>    </span><span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>PUT</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>;                            </span> <span class='c1'>// Expansion Region from 4:5 to 4:8 with file id 0 that expands a macro with file id 1</span>
171<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  </span><span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>PUT</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>;                              </span> <span class='c1'>// Expansion Region from 5:3 to 5:6 with file id 0 that expands a macro with file id 2</span>
172<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
173</pre>`
174
175.. _coverage mapping counter:
176.. _coverage mapping counters:
177
178Counter:
179^^^^^^^^
180
181A coverage mapping counter can represents a reference to the profile
182instrumentation counter. The execution count for a region with such counter
183is determined by looking up the value of the corresponding profile
184instrumentation counter.
185
186It can also represent a binary arithmetical expression that operates on
187coverage mapping counters or other expressions.
188The execution count for a region with an expression counter is determined by
189evaluating the expression's arguments and then adding them together or
190subtracting them from one another.
191In the example below, a subtraction expression is used to compute the execution
192count for the compound statement that follows the *else* keyword:
193
194:raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int main(int argc, const char *argv[]) </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{   </span> <span class='c1'>// Region's counter is a reference to the profile counter #0</span>
195<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>                                           </span>
196<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  if (argc &gt; 1) </span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>{                        </span>   <span class='c1'>// Region's counter is a reference to the profile counter #1</span>
197<span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>    printf("%s\n", argv[1]);             </span><span>   </span>
198<span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>  }</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'> else </span><span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>{                               </span>   <span class='c1'>// Region's counter is an expression (reference to the profile counter #0 - reference to the profile counter #1)</span>
199<span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>    printf("\n");                        </span>
200<span style='background-color:#F6D55D'>  }</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>                                        </span>
201<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  return 0;                                </span>
202<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
203</pre>`
204
205Finally, a coverage mapping counter can also represent an execution count of
206of zero. The zero counter is used to provide coverage mapping for
207unreachable statements and expressions, like in the example below:
208
209:raw-html:`<pre class='highlight' style='line-height:initial;'><span>int main() </span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>{                  </span>
210<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  return 0;                   </span>
211<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>  </span><span style='background-color:#85C1F5'>printf("Hello world!\n")</span><span style='background-color:#4A789C'>;   </span> <span class='c1'>// Unreachable region's counter is zero</span>
212<span style='background-color:#4A789C'>}</span>
213</pre>`
214
215The zero counters allow the code coverage tool to display proper line execution
216counts for the unreachable lines and highlight the unreachable code.
217Without them, the tool would think that those lines and regions were still
218executed, as it doesn't possess the frontend's knowledge.
219
220Note that branch regions are created to track branch conditions in the source
221code and refer to two coverage mapping counters, one to track the number of
222times the branch condition evaluated to "true", and one to track the number of
223times the branch condition evaluated to "false".
224
225LLVM IR Representation
226======================
227
228The coverage mapping data is stored in the LLVM IR using a global constant
229structure variable called *__llvm_coverage_mapping* with the *IPSK_covmap*
230section specifier (i.e. ".lcovmap$M" on Windows and "__llvm_covmap" elsewhere).
231
232For example, let’s consider a C file and how it gets compiled to LLVM:
233
234.. _coverage mapping sample:
235
236.. code-block:: c
237
238  int foo() {
239    return 42;
240  }
241  int bar() {
242    return 13;
243  }
244
245The coverage mapping variable generated by Clang has 2 fields:
246
247* Coverage mapping header.
248
249* An optionally compressed list of filenames present in the translation unit.
250
251The variable has 8-byte alignment because ld64 cannot always pack symbols from
252different object files tightly (the word-level alignment assumption is baked in
253too deeply).
254
255.. code-block:: llvm
256
257  @__llvm_coverage_mapping = internal constant { { i32, i32, i32, i32 }, [32 x i8] }
258  {
259    { i32, i32, i32, i32 } ; Coverage map header
260    {
261      i32 0,  ; Always 0. In prior versions, the number of affixed function records
262      i32 32, ; The length of the string that contains the encoded translation unit filenames
263      i32 0,  ; Always 0. In prior versions, the length of the affixed string that contains the encoded coverage mapping data
264      i32 3,  ; Coverage mapping format version
265    },
266   [32 x i8] c"..." ; Encoded data (dissected later)
267  }, section "__llvm_covmap", align 8
268
269The current version of the format is version 6.
270
271There is one difference between versions 6 and 5:
272
273* The first entry in the filename list is the compilation directory. When the
274  filename is relative, the compilation directory is combined with the relative
275  path to get an absolute path. This can reduce size by omitting the duplicate
276  prefix in filenames.
277
278There is one difference between versions 5 and 4:
279
280* The notion of branch region has been introduced along with a corresponding
281  region kind.  Branch regions encode two counters, one to track how many
282  times a "true" branch condition is taken, and one to track how many times a
283  "false" branch condition is taken.
284
285There are two differences between versions 4 and 3:
286
287* Function records are now named symbols, and are marked *linkonce_odr*. This
288  allows linkers to merge duplicate function records. Merging of duplicate
289  *dummy* records (emitted for functions included-but-not-used in a translation
290  unit) reduces size bloat in the coverage mapping data. As part of this
291  change, region mapping information for a function is now included within the
292  function record, instead of being affixed to the coverage header.
293
294* The filename list for a translation unit may optionally be zlib-compressed.
295
296The only difference between versions 3 and 2 is that a special encoding for
297column end locations was introduced to indicate gap regions.
298
299In version 1, the function record for *foo* was defined as follows:
300
301.. code-block:: llvm
302
303     { i8*, i32, i32, i64 } { i8* getelementptr inbounds ([3 x i8]* @__profn_foo, i32 0, i32 0), ; Function's name
304       i32 3, ; Function's name length
305       i32 9, ; Function's encoded coverage mapping data string length
306       i64 0  ; Function's structural hash
307     }
308
309In version 2, the function record for *foo* was defined as follows:
310
311.. code-block:: llvm
312
313     { i64, i32, i64 } {
314       i64 0x5cf8c24cdb18bdac, ; Function's name MD5
315       i32 9, ; Function's encoded coverage mapping data string length
316       i64 0  ; Function's structural hash
317
318Coverage Mapping Header:
319------------------------
320
321The coverage mapping header has the following fields:
322
323* The number of function records affixed to the coverage header. Always 0, but present for backwards compatibility.
324
325* The length of the string in the third field of *__llvm_coverage_mapping* that contains the encoded translation unit filenames.
326
327* The length of the string in the third field of *__llvm_coverage_mapping* that contains any encoded coverage mapping data affixed to the coverage header. Always 0, but present for backwards compatibility.
328
329* The format version. The current version is 4 (encoded as a 3).
330
331.. _function records:
332
333Function record:
334----------------
335
336A function record is a structure of the following type:
337
338.. code-block:: llvm
339
340  { i64, i32, i64, i64, [? x i8] }
341
342It contains the function name's MD5, the length of the encoded mapping data for
343that function, the function's structural hash value, the hash of the filenames
344in the function's translation unit, and the encoded mapping data.
345
346Dissecting the sample:
347^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
348
349Here's an overview of the encoded data that was stored in the
350IR for the `coverage mapping sample`_ that was shown earlier:
351
352* The IR contains the following string constant that represents the encoded
353  coverage mapping data for the sample translation unit:
354
355  .. code-block:: llvm
356
357    c"\01\15\1Dx\DA\13\D1\0F-N-*\D6/+\CE\D6/\C9-\D0O\CB\CF\D7K\06\00N+\07]"
358
359* The string contains values that are encoded in the LEB128 format, which is
360  used throughout for storing integers. It also contains a compressed payload.
361
362* The first three LEB128-encoded numbers in the sample specify the number of
363  filenames, the length of the uncompressed filenames, and the length of the
364  compressed payload (or 0 if compression is disabled). In this sample, there
365  is 1 filename that is 21 bytes in length (uncompressed), and stored in 29
366  bytes (compressed).
367
368* The coverage mapping from the first function record is encoded in this string:
369
370  .. code-block:: llvm
371
372    c"\01\00\00\01\01\01\0C\02\02"
373
374  This string consists of the following bytes:
375
376  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
377  | ``0x01`` | The number of file ids used by this function. There is only one file id used by the mapping data in this function.      |
378  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
379  | ``0x00`` | An index into the filenames array which corresponds to the file "/Users/alex/test.c".                                   |
380  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
381  | ``0x00`` | The number of counter expressions used by this function. This function doesn't use any expressions.                     |
382  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
383  | ``0x01`` | The number of mapping regions that are stored in an array for the function's file id #0.                                |
384  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
385  | ``0x01`` | The coverage mapping counter for the first region in this function. The value of 1 tells us that it's a coverage        |
386  |          | mapping counter that is a reference to the profile instrumentation counter with an index of 0.                          |
387  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
388  | ``0x01`` | The starting line of the first mapping region in this function.                                                         |
389  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
390  | ``0x0C`` | The starting column of the first mapping region in this function.                                                       |
391  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
392  | ``0x02`` | The ending line of the first mapping region in this function.                                                           |
393  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
394  | ``0x02`` | The ending column of the first mapping region in this function.                                                         |
395  +----------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
396
397* The length of the substring that contains the encoded coverage mapping data
398  for the second function record is also 9. It's structured like the mapping data
399  for the first function record.
400
401* The two trailing bytes are zeroes and are used to pad the coverage mapping
402  data to give it the 8 byte alignment.
403
404Encoding
405========
406
407The per-function coverage mapping data is encoded as a stream of bytes,
408with a simple structure. The structure consists of the encoding
409`types <cvmtypes_>`_ like variable-length unsigned integers, that
410are used to encode `File ID Mapping`_, `Counter Expressions`_ and
411the `Mapping Regions`_.
412
413The format of the structure follows:
414
415  ``[file id mapping, counter expressions, mapping regions]``
416
417The translation unit filenames are encoded using the same encoding
418`types <cvmtypes_>`_ as the per-function coverage mapping data, with the
419following structure:
420
421  ``[numFilenames : LEB128, filename0 : string, filename1 : string, ...]``
422
423.. _cvmtypes:
424
425Types
426-----
427
428This section describes the basic types that are used by the encoding format
429and can appear after ``:`` in the ``[foo : type]`` description.
430
431.. _LEB128:
432
433LEB128
434^^^^^^
435
436LEB128 is an unsigned integer value that is encoded using DWARF's LEB128
437encoding, optimizing for the case where values are small
438(1 byte for values less than 128).
439
440.. _CoverageStrings:
441
442Strings
443^^^^^^^
444
445``[length : LEB128, characters...]``
446
447String values are encoded with a `LEB value <LEB128_>`_ for the length
448of the string and a sequence of bytes for its characters.
449
450.. _file id mapping:
451
452File ID Mapping
453---------------
454
455``[numIndices : LEB128, filenameIndex0 : LEB128, filenameIndex1 : LEB128, ...]``
456
457File id mapping in a function's coverage mapping stream
458contains the indices into the translation unit's filenames array.
459
460Counter
461-------
462
463``[value : LEB128]``
464
465A `coverage mapping counter`_ is stored in a single `LEB value <LEB128_>`_.
466It is composed of two things --- the `tag <counter-tag_>`_
467which is stored in the lowest 2 bits, and the `counter data`_ which is stored
468in the remaining bits.
469
470.. _counter-tag:
471
472Tag:
473^^^^
474
475The counter's tag encodes the counter's kind
476and, if the counter is an expression, the expression's kind.
477The possible tag values are:
478
479* 0 - The counter is zero.
480
481* 1 - The counter is a reference to the profile instrumentation counter.
482
483* 2 - The counter is a subtraction expression.
484
485* 3 - The counter is an addition expression.
486
487.. _counter data:
488
489Data:
490^^^^^
491
492The counter's data is interpreted in the following manner:
493
494* When the counter is a reference to the profile instrumentation counter,
495  then the counter's data is the id of the profile counter.
496* When the counter is an expression, then the counter's data
497  is the index into the array of counter expressions.
498
499.. _Counter Expressions:
500
501Counter Expressions
502-------------------
503
504``[numExpressions : LEB128, expr0LHS : LEB128, expr0RHS : LEB128, expr1LHS : LEB128, expr1RHS : LEB128, ...]``
505
506Counter expressions consist of two counters as they
507represent binary arithmetic operations.
508The expression's kind is determined from the `tag <counter-tag_>`_ of the
509counter that references this expression.
510
511.. _Mapping Regions:
512
513Mapping Regions
514---------------
515
516``[numRegionArrays : LEB128, regionsForFile0, regionsForFile1, ...]``
517
518The mapping regions are stored in an array of sub-arrays where every
519region in a particular sub-array has the same file id.
520
521The file id for a sub-array of regions is the index of that
522sub-array in the main array e.g. The first sub-array will have the file id
523of 0.
524
525Sub-Array of Regions
526^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
527
528``[numRegions : LEB128, region0, region1, ...]``
529
530The mapping regions for a specific file id are stored in an array that is
531sorted in an ascending order by the region's starting location.
532
533Mapping Region
534^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
535
536``[header, source range]``
537
538The mapping region record contains two sub-records ---
539the `header`_, which stores the counter and/or the region's kind,
540and the `source range`_ that contains the starting and ending
541location of this region.
542
543.. _header:
544
545Header
546^^^^^^
547
548``[counter]``
549
550or
551
552``[pseudo-counter]``
553
554The header encodes the region's counter and the region's kind. A branch region
555will encode two counters.
556
557The value of the counter's tag distinguishes between the counters and
558pseudo-counters --- if the tag is zero, than this header contains a
559pseudo-counter, otherwise this header contains an ordinary counter.
560
561Counter:
562""""""""
563
564A mapping region whose header has a counter with a non-zero tag is
565a code region.
566
567Pseudo-Counter:
568"""""""""""""""
569
570``[value : LEB128]``
571
572A pseudo-counter is stored in a single `LEB value <LEB128_>`_, just like
573the ordinary counter. It has the following interpretation:
574
575* bits 0-1: tag, which is always 0.
576
577* bit 2: expansionRegionTag. If this bit is set, then this mapping region
578  is an expansion region.
579
580* remaining bits: data. If this region is an expansion region, then the data
581  contains the expanded file id of that region.
582
583  Otherwise, the data contains the region's kind. The possible region
584  kind values are:
585
586  * 0 - This mapping region is a code region with a counter of zero.
587  * 2 - This mapping region is a skipped region.
588  * 4 - This mapping region is a branch region.
589
590.. _source range:
591
592Source Range
593^^^^^^^^^^^^
594
595``[deltaLineStart : LEB128, columnStart : LEB128, numLines : LEB128, columnEnd : LEB128]``
596
597The source range record contains the following fields:
598
599* *deltaLineStart*: The difference between the starting line of the
600  current mapping region and the starting line of the previous mapping region.
601
602  If the current mapping region is the first region in the current
603  sub-array, then it stores the starting line of that region.
604
605* *columnStart*: The starting column of the mapping region.
606
607* *numLines*: The difference between the ending line and the starting line
608  of the current mapping region.
609
610* *columnEnd*: The ending column of the mapping region. If the high bit is set,
611  the current mapping region is a gap area. A count for a gap area is only used
612  as the line execution count if there are no other regions on a line.
613