1================================
2Source Level Debugging with LLVM
3================================
4
5.. contents::
6   :local:
7
8Introduction
9============
10
11This document is the central repository for all information pertaining to debug
12information in LLVM.  It describes the :ref:`actual format that the LLVM debug
13information takes <format>`, which is useful for those interested in creating
14front-ends or dealing directly with the information.  Further, this document
15provides specific examples of what debug information for C/C++ looks like.
16
17Philosophy behind LLVM debugging information
18--------------------------------------------
19
20The idea of the LLVM debugging information is to capture how the important
21pieces of the source-language's Abstract Syntax Tree map onto LLVM code.
22Several design aspects have shaped the solution that appears here.  The
23important ones are:
24
25* Debugging information should have very little impact on the rest of the
26  compiler.  No transformations, analyses, or code generators should need to
27  be modified because of debugging information.
28
29* LLVM optimizations should interact in :ref:`well-defined and easily described
30  ways <intro_debugopt>` with the debugging information.
31
32* Because LLVM is designed to support arbitrary programming languages,
33  LLVM-to-LLVM tools should not need to know anything about the semantics of
34  the source-level-language.
35
36* Source-level languages are often **widely** different from one another.
37  LLVM should not put any restrictions of the flavor of the source-language,
38  and the debugging information should work with any language.
39
40* With code generator support, it should be possible to use an LLVM compiler
41  to compile a program to native machine code and standard debugging
42  formats.  This allows compatibility with traditional machine-code level
43  debuggers, like GDB or DBX.
44
45The approach used by the LLVM implementation is to use a small set of
46:ref:`intrinsic functions <format_common_intrinsics>` to define a mapping
47between LLVM program objects and the source-level objects.  The description of
48the source-level program is maintained in LLVM metadata in an
49:ref:`implementation-defined format <ccxx_frontend>` (the C/C++ front-end
50currently uses working draft 7 of the `DWARF 3 standard
51<http://www.eagercon.com/dwarf/dwarf3std.htm>`_).
52
53When a program is being debugged, a debugger interacts with the user and turns
54the stored debug information into source-language specific information.  As
55such, a debugger must be aware of the source-language, and is thus tied to a
56specific language or family of languages.
57
58Debug information consumers
59---------------------------
60
61The role of debug information is to provide meta information normally stripped
62away during the compilation process.  This meta information provides an LLVM
63user a relationship between generated code and the original program source
64code.
65
66Currently, there are two backend consumers of debug info: DwarfDebug and
67CodeViewDebug. DwarfDebug produces DWARF suitable for use with GDB, LLDB, and
68other DWARF-based debuggers. :ref:`CodeViewDebug <codeview>` produces CodeView,
69the Microsoft debug info format, which is usable with Microsoft debuggers such
70as Visual Studio and WinDBG. LLVM's debug information format is mostly derived
71from and inspired by DWARF, but it is feasible to translate into other target
72debug info formats such as STABS.
73
74It would also be reasonable to use debug information to feed profiling tools
75for analysis of generated code, or, tools for reconstructing the original
76source from generated code.
77
78.. _intro_debugopt:
79
80Debug information and optimizations
81-----------------------------------
82
83An extremely high priority of LLVM debugging information is to make it interact
84well with optimizations and analysis.  In particular, the LLVM debug
85information provides the following guarantees:
86
87* LLVM debug information **always provides information to accurately read
88  the source-level state of the program**, regardless of which LLVM
89  optimizations have been run, and without any modification to the
90  optimizations themselves.  However, some optimizations may impact the
91  ability to modify the current state of the program with a debugger, such
92  as setting program variables, or calling functions that have been
93  deleted.
94
95* As desired, LLVM optimizations can be upgraded to be aware of debugging
96  information, allowing them to update the debugging information as they
97  perform aggressive optimizations.  This means that, with effort, the LLVM
98  optimizers could optimize debug code just as well as non-debug code.
99
100* LLVM debug information does not prevent optimizations from
101  happening (for example inlining, basic block reordering/merging/cleanup,
102  tail duplication, etc).
103
104* LLVM debug information is automatically optimized along with the rest of
105  the program, using existing facilities.  For example, duplicate
106  information is automatically merged by the linker, and unused information
107  is automatically removed.
108
109Basically, the debug information allows you to compile a program with
110"``-O0 -g``" and get full debug information, allowing you to arbitrarily modify
111the program as it executes from a debugger.  Compiling a program with
112"``-O3 -g``" gives you full debug information that is always available and
113accurate for reading (e.g., you get accurate stack traces despite tail call
114elimination and inlining), but you might lose the ability to modify the program
115and call functions which were optimized out of the program, or inlined away
116completely.
117
118The :doc:`LLVM test-suite <TestSuiteMakefileGuide>` provides a framework to
119test the optimizer's handling of debugging information.  It can be run like
120this:
121
122.. code-block:: bash
123
124  % cd llvm/projects/test-suite/MultiSource/Benchmarks  # or some other level
125  % make TEST=dbgopt
126
127This will test impact of debugging information on optimization passes.  If
128debugging information influences optimization passes then it will be reported
129as a failure.  See :doc:`TestingGuide` for more information on LLVM test
130infrastructure and how to run various tests.
131
132.. _format:
133
134Debugging information format
135============================
136
137LLVM debugging information has been carefully designed to make it possible for
138the optimizer to optimize the program and debugging information without
139necessarily having to know anything about debugging information.  In
140particular, the use of metadata avoids duplicated debugging information from
141the beginning, and the global dead code elimination pass automatically deletes
142debugging information for a function if it decides to delete the function.
143
144To do this, most of the debugging information (descriptors for types,
145variables, functions, source files, etc) is inserted by the language front-end
146in the form of LLVM metadata.
147
148Debug information is designed to be agnostic about the target debugger and
149debugging information representation (e.g. DWARF/Stabs/etc).  It uses a generic
150pass to decode the information that represents variables, types, functions,
151namespaces, etc: this allows for arbitrary source-language semantics and
152type-systems to be used, as long as there is a module written for the target
153debugger to interpret the information.
154
155To provide basic functionality, the LLVM debugger does have to make some
156assumptions about the source-level language being debugged, though it keeps
157these to a minimum.  The only common features that the LLVM debugger assumes
158exist are `source files <LangRef.html#difile>`_, and `program objects
159<LangRef.html#diglobalvariable>`_.  These abstract objects are used by a
160debugger to form stack traces, show information about local variables, etc.
161
162This section of the documentation first describes the representation aspects
163common to any source-language.  :ref:`ccxx_frontend` describes the data layout
164conventions used by the C and C++ front-ends.
165
166Debug information descriptors are `specialized metadata nodes
167<LangRef.html#specialized-metadata>`_, first-class subclasses of ``Metadata``.
168
169.. _format_common_intrinsics:
170
171Debugger intrinsic functions
172----------------------------
173
174LLVM uses several intrinsic functions (name prefixed with "``llvm.dbg``") to
175track source local variables through optimization and code generation.
176
177``llvm.dbg.addr``
178^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
179
180.. code-block:: llvm
181
182  void @llvm.dbg.addr(metadata, metadata, metadata)
183
184This intrinsic provides information about a local element (e.g., variable).
185The first argument is metadata holding the address of variable, typically a
186static alloca in the function entry block.  The second argument is a
187`local variable <LangRef.html#dilocalvariable>`_ containing a description of
188the variable.  The third argument is a `complex expression
189<LangRef.html#diexpression>`_.  An `llvm.dbg.addr` intrinsic describes the
190*address* of a source variable.
191
192.. code-block:: text
193
194    %i.addr = alloca i32, align 4
195    call void @llvm.dbg.addr(metadata i32* %i.addr, metadata !1,
196                             metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !2
197    !1 = !DILocalVariable(name: "i", ...) ; int i
198    !2 = !DILocation(...)
199    ...
200    %buffer = alloca [256 x i8], align 8
201    ; The address of i is buffer+64.
202    call void @llvm.dbg.addr(metadata [256 x i8]* %buffer, metadata !3,
203                             metadata !DIExpression(DW_OP_plus, 64)), !dbg !4
204    !3 = !DILocalVariable(name: "i", ...) ; int i
205    !4 = !DILocation(...)
206
207A frontend should generate exactly one call to ``llvm.dbg.addr`` at the point
208of declaration of a source variable. Optimization passes that fully promote the
209variable from memory to SSA values will replace this call with possibly
210multiple calls to `llvm.dbg.value`. Passes that delete stores are effectively
211partial promotion, and they will insert a mix of calls to ``llvm.dbg.value``
212and ``llvm.dbg.addr`` to track the source variable value when it is available.
213After optimization, there may be multiple calls to ``llvm.dbg.addr`` describing
214the program points where the variables lives in memory. All calls for the same
215concrete source variable must agree on the memory location.
216
217
218``llvm.dbg.declare``
219^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
220
221.. code-block:: llvm
222
223  void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata, metadata, metadata)
224
225This intrinsic is identical to `llvm.dbg.addr`, except that there can only be
226one call to `llvm.dbg.declare` for a given concrete `local variable
227<LangRef.html#dilocalvariable>`_. It is not control-dependent, meaning that if
228a call to `llvm.dbg.declare` exists and has a valid location argument, that
229address is considered to be the true home of the variable across its entire
230lifetime. This makes it hard for optimizations to preserve accurate debug info
231in the presence of ``llvm.dbg.declare``, so we are transitioning away from it,
232and we plan to deprecate it in future LLVM releases.
233
234
235``llvm.dbg.value``
236^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
237
238.. code-block:: llvm
239
240  void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata, metadata, metadata)
241
242This intrinsic provides information when a user source variable is set to a new
243value.  The first argument is the new value (wrapped as metadata).  The second
244argument is a `local variable <LangRef.html#dilocalvariable>`_ containing a
245description of the variable.  The third argument is a `complex expression
246<LangRef.html#diexpression>`_.
247
248An `llvm.dbg.value` intrinsic describes the *value* of a source variable
249directly, not its address.  Note that the value operand of this intrinsic may
250be indirect (i.e, a pointer to the source variable), provided that interpreting
251the complex expression derives the direct value.
252
253Object lifetimes and scoping
254============================
255
256In many languages, the local variables in functions can have their lifetimes or
257scopes limited to a subset of a function.  In the C family of languages, for
258example, variables are only live (readable and writable) within the source
259block that they are defined in.  In functional languages, values are only
260readable after they have been defined.  Though this is a very obvious concept,
261it is non-trivial to model in LLVM, because it has no notion of scoping in this
262sense, and does not want to be tied to a language's scoping rules.
263
264In order to handle this, the LLVM debug format uses the metadata attached to
265llvm instructions to encode line number and scoping information.  Consider the
266following C fragment, for example:
267
268.. code-block:: c
269
270  1.  void foo() {
271  2.    int X = 21;
272  3.    int Y = 22;
273  4.    {
274  5.      int Z = 23;
275  6.      Z = X;
276  7.    }
277  8.    X = Y;
278  9.  }
279
280.. FIXME: Update the following example to use llvm.dbg.addr once that is the
281   default in clang.
282
283Compiled to LLVM, this function would be represented like this:
284
285.. code-block:: text
286
287  ; Function Attrs: nounwind ssp uwtable
288  define void @foo() #0 !dbg !4 {
289  entry:
290    %X = alloca i32, align 4
291    %Y = alloca i32, align 4
292    %Z = alloca i32, align 4
293    call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %X, metadata !11, metadata !13), !dbg !14
294    store i32 21, i32* %X, align 4, !dbg !14
295    call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %Y, metadata !15, metadata !13), !dbg !16
296    store i32 22, i32* %Y, align 4, !dbg !16
297    call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %Z, metadata !17, metadata !13), !dbg !19
298    store i32 23, i32* %Z, align 4, !dbg !19
299    %0 = load i32, i32* %X, align 4, !dbg !20
300    store i32 %0, i32* %Z, align 4, !dbg !21
301    %1 = load i32, i32* %Y, align 4, !dbg !22
302    store i32 %1, i32* %X, align 4, !dbg !23
303    ret void, !dbg !24
304  }
305
306  ; Function Attrs: nounwind readnone
307  declare void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata, metadata, metadata) #1
308
309  attributes #0 = { nounwind ssp uwtable "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "no-frame-pointer-elim"="true" "no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "stack-protector-buffer-size"="8" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" }
310  attributes #1 = { nounwind readnone }
311
312  !llvm.dbg.cu = !{!0}
313  !llvm.module.flags = !{!7, !8, !9}
314  !llvm.ident = !{!10}
315
316  !0 = !DICompileUnit(language: DW_LANG_C99, file: !1, producer: "clang version 3.7.0 (trunk 231150) (llvm/trunk 231154)", isOptimized: false, runtimeVersion: 0, emissionKind: FullDebug, enums: !2, retainedTypes: !2, subprograms: !3, globals: !2, imports: !2)
317  !1 = !DIFile(filename: "/dev/stdin", directory: "/Users/dexonsmith/data/llvm/debug-info")
318  !2 = !{}
319  !3 = !{!4}
320  !4 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "foo", scope: !1, file: !1, line: 1, type: !5, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 1, isOptimized: false, variables: !2)
321  !5 = !DISubroutineType(types: !6)
322  !6 = !{null}
323  !7 = !{i32 2, !"Dwarf Version", i32 2}
324  !8 = !{i32 2, !"Debug Info Version", i32 3}
325  !9 = !{i32 1, !"PIC Level", i32 2}
326  !10 = !{!"clang version 3.7.0 (trunk 231150) (llvm/trunk 231154)"}
327  !11 = !DILocalVariable(name: "X", scope: !4, file: !1, line: 2, type: !12)
328  !12 = !DIBasicType(name: "int", size: 32, align: 32, encoding: DW_ATE_signed)
329  !13 = !DIExpression()
330  !14 = !DILocation(line: 2, column: 9, scope: !4)
331  !15 = !DILocalVariable(name: "Y", scope: !4, file: !1, line: 3, type: !12)
332  !16 = !DILocation(line: 3, column: 9, scope: !4)
333  !17 = !DILocalVariable(name: "Z", scope: !18, file: !1, line: 5, type: !12)
334  !18 = distinct !DILexicalBlock(scope: !4, file: !1, line: 4, column: 5)
335  !19 = !DILocation(line: 5, column: 11, scope: !18)
336  !20 = !DILocation(line: 6, column: 11, scope: !18)
337  !21 = !DILocation(line: 6, column: 9, scope: !18)
338  !22 = !DILocation(line: 8, column: 9, scope: !4)
339  !23 = !DILocation(line: 8, column: 7, scope: !4)
340  !24 = !DILocation(line: 9, column: 3, scope: !4)
341
342
343This example illustrates a few important details about LLVM debugging
344information.  In particular, it shows how the ``llvm.dbg.declare`` intrinsic and
345location information, which are attached to an instruction, are applied
346together to allow a debugger to analyze the relationship between statements,
347variable definitions, and the code used to implement the function.
348
349.. code-block:: llvm
350
351  call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %X, metadata !11, metadata !13), !dbg !14
352    ; [debug line = 2:7] [debug variable = X]
353
354The first intrinsic ``%llvm.dbg.declare`` encodes debugging information for the
355variable ``X``.  The metadata ``!dbg !14`` attached to the intrinsic provides
356scope information for the variable ``X``.
357
358.. code-block:: text
359
360  !14 = !DILocation(line: 2, column: 9, scope: !4)
361  !4 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "foo", scope: !1, file: !1, line: 1, type: !5,
362                              isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 1,
363                              isOptimized: false, variables: !2)
364
365Here ``!14`` is metadata providing `location information
366<LangRef.html#dilocation>`_.  In this example, scope is encoded by ``!4``, a
367`subprogram descriptor <LangRef.html#disubprogram>`_.  This way the location
368information attached to the intrinsics indicates that the variable ``X`` is
369declared at line number 2 at a function level scope in function ``foo``.
370
371Now lets take another example.
372
373.. code-block:: llvm
374
375  call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %Z, metadata !17, metadata !13), !dbg !19
376    ; [debug line = 5:9] [debug variable = Z]
377
378The third intrinsic ``%llvm.dbg.declare`` encodes debugging information for
379variable ``Z``.  The metadata ``!dbg !19`` attached to the intrinsic provides
380scope information for the variable ``Z``.
381
382.. code-block:: text
383
384  !18 = distinct !DILexicalBlock(scope: !4, file: !1, line: 4, column: 5)
385  !19 = !DILocation(line: 5, column: 11, scope: !18)
386
387Here ``!19`` indicates that ``Z`` is declared at line number 5 and column
388number 11 inside of lexical scope ``!18``.  The lexical scope itself resides
389inside of subprogram ``!4`` described above.
390
391The scope information attached with each instruction provides a straightforward
392way to find instructions covered by a scope.
393
394Object lifetime in optimized code
395=================================
396
397In the example above, every variable assignment uniquely corresponds to a
398memory store to the variable's position on the stack. However in heavily
399optimized code LLVM promotes most variables into SSA values, which can
400eventually be placed in physical registers or memory locations. To track SSA
401values through compilation, when objects are promoted to SSA values an
402``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsic is created for each assignment, recording the
403variable's new location. Compared with the ``llvm.dbg.declare`` intrinsic:
404
405* A dbg.value terminates the effect of any preceeding dbg.values for (any
406  overlapping fragments of) the specified variable.
407* The dbg.value's position in the IR defines where in the instruction stream
408  the variable's value changes.
409* Operands can be constants, indicating the variable is assigned a
410  constant value.
411
412Care must be taken to update ``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsics when optimization
413passes alter or move instructions and blocks -- the developer could observe such
414changes reflected in the value of variables when debugging the program. For any
415execution of the optimized program, the set of variable values presented to the
416developer by the debugger should not show a state that would never have existed
417in the execution of the unoptimized program, given the same input. Doing so
418risks misleading the developer by reporting a state that does not exist,
419damaging their understanding of the optimized program and undermining their
420trust in the debugger.
421
422Sometimes perfectly preserving variable locations is not possible, often when a
423redundant calculation is optimized out. In such cases, a ``llvm.dbg.value``
424with operand ``undef`` should be used, to terminate earlier variable locations
425and let the debugger present ``optimized out`` to the developer. Withholding
426these potentially stale variable values from the developer diminishes the
427amount of available debug information, but increases the reliability of the
428remaining information.
429
430To illustrate some potential issues, consider the following example:
431
432.. code-block:: llvm
433
434  define i32 @foo(i32 %bar, i1 %cond) {
435  entry:
436    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 0, metadata !1, metadata !2)
437    br i1 %cond, label %truebr, label %falsebr
438  truebr:
439    %tval = add i32 %bar, 1
440    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %tval, metadata !1, metadata !2)
441    %g1 = call i32 @gazonk()
442    br label %exit
443  falsebr:
444    %fval = add i32 %bar, 2
445    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %fval, metadata !1, metadata !2)
446    %g2 = call i32 @gazonk()
447    br label %exit
448  exit:
449    %merge = phi [ %tval, %truebr ], [ %fval, %falsebr ]
450    %g = phi [ %g1, %truebr ], [ %g2, %falsebr ]
451    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %merge, metadata !1, metadata !2)
452    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %g, metadata !3, metadata !2)
453    %plusten = add i32 %merge, 10
454    %toret = add i32 %plusten, %g
455    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %toret, metadata !1, metadata !2)
456    ret i32 %toret
457  }
458
459Containing two source-level variables in ``!1`` and ``!3``. The function could,
460perhaps, be optimized into the following code:
461
462.. code-block:: llvm
463
464  define i32 @foo(i32 %bar, i1 %cond) {
465  entry:
466    %g = call i32 @gazonk()
467    %addoper = select i1 %cond, i32 11, i32 12
468    %plusten = add i32 %bar, %addoper
469    %toret = add i32 %plusten, %g
470    ret i32 %toret
471  }
472
473What ``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsics should be placed to represent the original variable
474locations in this code? Unfortunately the the second, third and fourth
475dbg.values for ``!1`` in the source function have had their operands
476(%tval, %fval, %merge) optimized out. Assuming we cannot recover them, we
477might consider this placement of dbg.values:
478
479.. code-block:: llvm
480
481  define i32 @foo(i32 %bar, i1 %cond) {
482  entry:
483    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 0, metadata !1, metadata !2)
484    %g = call i32 @gazonk()
485    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %g, metadata !3, metadata !2)
486    %addoper = select i1 %cond, i32 11, i32 12
487    %plusten = add i32 %bar, %addoper
488    %toret = add i32 %plusten, %g
489    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %toret, metadata !1, metadata !2)
490    ret i32 %toret
491  }
492
493However, this will cause ``!3`` to have the return value of ``@gazonk()`` at
494the same time as ``!1`` has the constant value zero -- a pair of assignments
495that never occurred in the unoptimized program. To avoid this, we must terminate
496the range that ``!1`` has the constant value assignment by inserting an undef
497dbg.value before the dbg.value for ``!3``:
498
499.. code-block:: llvm
500
501  define i32 @foo(i32 %bar, i1 %cond) {
502  entry:
503    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 0, metadata !1, metadata !2)
504    %g = call i32 @gazonk()
505    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 undef, metadata !1, metadata !2)
506    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %g, metadata !3, metadata !2)
507    %addoper = select i1 %cond, i32 11, i32 12
508    %plusten = add i32 %bar, %addoper
509    %toret = add i32 %plusten, %g
510    call @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %toret, metadata !1, metadata !2)
511    ret i32 %toret
512  }
513
514In general, if any dbg.value has its operand optimized out and cannot be
515recovered, then an undef dbg.value is necessary to terminate earlier variable
516locations. Additional undef dbg.values may be necessary when the debugger can
517observe re-ordering of assignments.
518
519How variable location metadata is transformed during CodeGen
520============================================================
521
522LLVM preserves debug information throughout mid-level and backend passes,
523ultimately producing a mapping between source-level information and
524instruction ranges. This
525is relatively straightforwards for line number information, as mapping
526instructions to line numbers is a simple association. For variable locations
527however the story is more complex. As each ``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsic
528represents a source-level assignment of a value to a source variable, the
529variable location intrinsics effectively embed a small imperative program
530within the LLVM IR. By the end of CodeGen, this becomes a mapping from each
531variable to their machine locations over ranges of instructions.
532From IR to object emission, the major transformations which affect variable
533location fidelity are:
534
5351. Instruction Selection
5362. Register allocation
5373. Block layout
538
539each of which are discussed below. In addition, instruction scheduling can
540significantly change the ordering of the program, and occurs in a number of
541different passes.
542
543Some variable locations are not transformed during CodeGen. Stack locations
544specified by ``llvm.dbg.declare`` are valid and unchanging for the entire
545duration of the function, and are recorded in a simple MachineFunction table.
546Location changes in the prologue and epilogue of a function are also ignored:
547frame setup and destruction may take several instructions, require a
548disproportionate amount of debugging information in the output binary to
549describe, and should be stepped over by debuggers anyway.
550
551Variable locations in Instruction Selection and MIR
552---------------------------------------------------
553
554Instruction selection creates a MIR function from an IR function, and just as
555it transforms ``intermediate`` instructions into machine instructions, so must
556``intermediate`` variable locations become machine variable locations.
557Within IR, variable locations are always identified by a Value, but in MIR
558there can be different types of variable locations. In addition, some IR
559locations become unavailable, for example if the operation of multiple IR
560instructions are combined into one machine instruction (such as
561multiply-and-accumulate) then intermediate Values are lost. To track variable
562locations through instruction selection, they are first separated into
563locations that do not depend on code generation (constants, stack locations,
564allocated virtual registers) and those that do. For those that do, debug
565metadata is attached to SDNodes in SelectionDAGs. After instruction selection
566has occurred and a MIR function is created, if the SDNode associated with debug
567metadata is allocated a virtual register, that virtual register is used as the
568variable location. If the SDNode is folded into a machine instruction or
569otherwise transformed into a non-register, the variable location becomes
570unavailable.
571
572Locations that are unavailable are treated as if they have been optimized out:
573in IR the location would be assigned ``undef`` by a debug intrinsic, and in MIR
574the equivalent location is used.
575
576After MIR locations are assigned to each variable, machine pseudo-instructions
577corresponding to each ``llvm.dbg.value`` and ``llvm.dbg.addr`` intrinsic are
578inserted. These ``DBG_VALUE`` instructions appear thus:
579
580.. code-block:: text
581
582  DBG_VALUE %1, $noreg, !123, !DIExpression()
583
584And have the following operands:
585 * The first operand can record the variable location as a register,
586   a frame index, an immediate, or the base address register if the original
587   debug intrinsic referred to memory. ``$noreg`` indicates the variable
588   location is undefined, equivalent to an ``undef`` dbg.value operand.
589 * The type of the second operand indicates whether the variable location is
590   directly referred to by the DBG_VALUE, or whether it is indirect. The
591   ``$noreg`` register signifies the former, an immediate operand (0) the
592   latter.
593 * Operand 3 is the Variable field of the original debug intrinsic.
594 * Operand 4 is the Expression field of the original debug intrinsic.
595
596The position at which the DBG_VALUEs are inserted should correspond to the
597positions of their matching ``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsics in the IR block.  As
598with optimization, LLVM aims to preserve the order in which variable
599assignments occurred in the source program. However SelectionDAG performs some
600instruction scheduling, which can reorder assignments (discussed below).
601Function parameter locations are moved to the beginning of the function if
602they're not already, to ensure they're immediately available on function entry.
603
604To demonstrate variable locations during instruction selection, consider
605the following example:
606
607.. code-block:: llvm
608
609  define i32 @foo(i32* %addr) {
610  entry:
611    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 0, metadata !3, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !5
612    br label %bb1, !dbg !5
613
614  bb1:                                              ; preds = %bb1, %entry
615    %bar.0 = phi i32 [ 0, %entry ], [ %add, %bb1 ]
616    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %bar.0, metadata !3, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !5
617    %addr1 = getelementptr i32, i32 *%addr, i32 1, !dbg !5
618    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 *%addr1, metadata !3, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !5
619    %loaded1 = load i32, i32* %addr1, !dbg !5
620    %addr2 = getelementptr i32, i32 *%addr, i32 %bar.0, !dbg !5
621    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 *%addr2, metadata !3, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !5
622    %loaded2 = load i32, i32* %addr2, !dbg !5
623    %add = add i32 %bar.0, 1, !dbg !5
624    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %add, metadata !3, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !5
625    %added = add i32 %loaded1, %loaded2
626    %cond = icmp ult i32 %added, %bar.0, !dbg !5
627    br i1 %cond, label %bb1, label %bb2, !dbg !5
628
629  bb2:                                              ; preds = %bb1
630    ret i32 0, !dbg !5
631  }
632
633If one compiles this IR with ``llc -o - -start-after=codegen-prepare -stop-after=expand-isel-pseudos -mtriple=x86_64--``, the following MIR is produced:
634
635.. code-block:: text
636
637  bb.0.entry:
638    successors: %bb.1(0x80000000)
639    liveins: $rdi
640
641    %2:gr64 = COPY $rdi
642    %3:gr32 = MOV32r0 implicit-def dead $eflags
643    DBG_VALUE 0, $noreg, !3, !DIExpression(), debug-location !5
644
645  bb.1.bb1:
646    successors: %bb.1(0x7c000000), %bb.2(0x04000000)
647
648    %0:gr32 = PHI %3, %bb.0, %1, %bb.1
649    DBG_VALUE %0, $noreg, !3, !DIExpression(), debug-location !5
650    DBG_VALUE %2, $noreg, !3, !DIExpression(DW_OP_plus_uconst, 4, DW_OP_stack_value), debug-location !5
651    %4:gr32 = MOV32rm %2, 1, $noreg, 4, $noreg, debug-location !5 :: (load 4 from %ir.addr1)
652    %5:gr64_nosp = MOVSX64rr32 %0, debug-location !5
653    DBG_VALUE $noreg, $noreg, !3, !DIExpression(), debug-location !5
654    %1:gr32 = INC32r %0, implicit-def dead $eflags, debug-location !5
655    DBG_VALUE %1, $noreg, !3, !DIExpression(), debug-location !5
656    %6:gr32 = ADD32rm %4, %2, 4, killed %5, 0, $noreg, implicit-def dead $eflags :: (load 4 from %ir.addr2)
657    %7:gr32 = SUB32rr %6, %0, implicit-def $eflags, debug-location !5
658    JB_1 %bb.1, implicit $eflags, debug-location !5
659    JMP_1 %bb.2, debug-location !5
660
661  bb.2.bb2:
662    %8:gr32 = MOV32r0 implicit-def dead $eflags
663    $eax = COPY %8, debug-location !5
664    RET 0, $eax, debug-location !5
665
666Observe first that there is a DBG_VALUE instruction for every ``llvm.dbg.value``
667intrinsic in the source IR, ensuring no source level assignments go missing.
668Then consider the different ways in which variable locations have been recorded:
669
670* For the first dbg.value an immediate operand is used to record a zero value.
671* The dbg.value of the PHI instruction leads to a DBG_VALUE of virtual register
672  ``%0``.
673* The first GEP has its effect folded into the first load instruction
674  (as a 4-byte offset), but the variable location is salvaged by folding
675  the GEPs effect into the DIExpression.
676* The second GEP is also folded into the corresponding load. However, it is
677  insufficiently simple to be salvaged, and is emitted as a ``$noreg``
678  DBG_VALUE, indicating that the variable takes on an undefined location.
679* The final dbg.value has its Value placed in virtual register ``%1``.
680
681Instruction Scheduling
682----------------------
683
684A number of passes can reschedule instructions, notably instruction selection
685and the pre-and-post RA machine schedulers. Instruction scheduling can
686significantly change the nature of the program -- in the (very unlikely) worst
687case the instruction sequence could be completely reversed. In such
688circumstances LLVM follows the principle applied to optimizations, that it is
689better for the debugger not to display any state than a misleading state.
690Thus, whenever instructions are advanced in order of execution, any
691corresponding DBG_VALUE is kept in its original position, and if an instruction
692is delayed then the variable is given an undefined location for the duration
693of the delay. To illustrate, consider this pseudo-MIR:
694
695.. code-block:: text
696
697  %1:gr32 = MOV32rm %0, 1, $noreg, 4, $noreg, debug-location !5 :: (load 4 from %ir.addr1)
698  DBG_VALUE %1, $noreg, !1, !2
699  %4:gr32 = ADD32rr %3, %2, implicit-def dead $eflags
700  DBG_VALUE %4, $noreg, !3, !4
701  %7:gr32 = SUB32rr %6, %5, implicit-def dead $eflags
702  DBG_VALUE %7, $noreg, !5, !6
703
704Imagine that the SUB32rr were moved forward to give us the following MIR:
705
706.. code-block:: text
707
708  %7:gr32 = SUB32rr %6, %5, implicit-def dead $eflags
709  %1:gr32 = MOV32rm %0, 1, $noreg, 4, $noreg, debug-location !5 :: (load 4 from %ir.addr1)
710  DBG_VALUE %1, $noreg, !1, !2
711  %4:gr32 = ADD32rr %3, %2, implicit-def dead $eflags
712  DBG_VALUE %4, $noreg, !3, !4
713  DBG_VALUE %7, $noreg, !5, !6
714
715In this circumstance LLVM would leave the MIR as shown above. Were we to move
716the DBG_VALUE of virtual register %7 upwards with the SUB32rr, we would re-order
717assignments and introduce a new state of the program. Wheras with the solution
718above, the debugger will see one fewer combination of variable values, because
719``!3`` and ``!5`` will change value at the same time. This is preferred over
720misrepresenting the original program.
721
722In comparison, if one sunk the MOV32rm, LLVM would produce the following:
723
724.. code-block:: text
725
726  DBG_VALUE $noreg, $noreg, !1, !2
727  %4:gr32 = ADD32rr %3, %2, implicit-def dead $eflags
728  DBG_VALUE %4, $noreg, !3, !4
729  %7:gr32 = SUB32rr %6, %5, implicit-def dead $eflags
730  DBG_VALUE %7, $noreg, !5, !6
731  %1:gr32 = MOV32rm %0, 1, $noreg, 4, $noreg, debug-location !5 :: (load 4 from %ir.addr1)
732  DBG_VALUE %1, $noreg, !1, !2
733
734Here, to avoid presenting a state in which the first assignment to ``!1``
735disappears, the DBG_VALUE at the top of the block assigns the variable the
736undefined location, until its value is available at the end of the block where
737an additional DBG_VALUE is added. Were any other DBG_VALUE for ``!1`` to occur
738in the instructions that the MOV32rm was sunk past, the DBG_VALUE for ``%1``
739would be dropped and the debugger would never observe it in the variable. This
740accurately reflects that the value is not available during the corresponding
741portion of the original program.
742
743Variable locations during Register Allocation
744---------------------------------------------
745
746To avoid debug instructions interfering with the register allocator, the
747LiveDebugVariables pass extracts variable locations from a MIR function and
748deletes the corresponding DBG_VALUE instructions. Some localized copy
749propagation is performed within blocks. After register allocation, the
750VirtRegRewriter pass re-inserts DBG_VALUE instructions in their orignal
751positions, translating virtual register references into their physical
752machine locations. To avoid encoding incorrect variable locations, in this
753pass any DBG_VALUE of a virtual register that is not live, is replaced by
754the undefined location.
755
756LiveDebugValues expansion of variable locations
757-----------------------------------------------
758
759After all optimizations have run and shortly before emission, the
760LiveDebugValues pass runs to achieve two aims:
761
762* To propagate the location of variables through copies and register spills,
763* For every block, to record every valid variable location in that block.
764
765After this pass the DBG_VALUE instruction changes meaning: rather than
766corresponding to a source-level assignment where the variable may change value,
767it asserts the location of a variable in a block, and loses effect outside the
768block. Propagating variable locations through copies and spills is
769straightforwards: determining the variable location in every basic block
770requries the consideraton of control flow. Consider the following IR, which
771presents several difficulties:
772
773.. code-block:: text
774
775  define dso_local i32 @foo(i1 %cond, i32 %input) !dbg !12 {
776  entry:
777    br i1 %cond, label %truebr, label %falsebr
778
779  bb1:
780    %value = phi i32 [ %value1, %truebr ], [ %value2, %falsebr ]
781    br label %exit, !dbg !26
782
783  truebr:
784    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %input, metadata !30, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !24
785    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 1, metadata !23, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !24
786    %value1 = add i32 %input, 1
787    br label %bb1
788
789  falsebr:
790    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %input, metadata !30, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !24
791    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 2, metadata !23, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !24
792    %value = add i32 %input, 2
793    br label %bb1
794
795  exit:
796    ret i32 %value, !dbg !30
797  }
798
799Here the difficulties are:
800
801* The control flow is roughly the opposite of basic block order
802* The value of the ``!23`` variable merges into ``%bb1``, but there is no PHI
803  node
804
805As mentioned above, the ``llvm.dbg.value`` intrinsics essentially form an
806imperative program embedded in the IR, with each intrinsic defining a variable
807location. This *could* be converted to an SSA form by mem2reg, in the same way
808that it uses use-def chains to identify control flow merges and insert phi
809nodes for IR Values. However, because debug variable locations are defined for
810every machine instruction, in effect every IR instruction uses every variable
811location, which would lead to a large number of debugging intrinsics being
812generated.
813
814Examining the example above, variable ``!30`` is assigned ``%input`` on both
815conditional paths through the function, while ``!23`` is assigned differing
816constant values on either path. Where control flow merges in ``%bb1`` we would
817want ``!30`` to keep its location (``%input``), but ``!23`` to become undefined
818as we cannot determine at runtime what value it should have in %bb1 without
819inserting a PHI node. mem2reg does not insert the PHI node to avoid changing
820codegen when debugging is enabled, and does not insert the other dbg.values
821to avoid adding very large numbers of intrinsics.
822
823Instead, LiveDebugValues determines variable locations when control
824flow merges. A dataflow analysis is used to propagate locations between blocks:
825when control flow merges, if a variable has the same location in all
826predecessors then that location is propagated into the successor. If the
827predecessor locations disagree, the location becomes undefined.
828
829Once LiveDebugValues has run, every block should have all valid variable
830locations described by DBG_VALUE instructions within the block. Very little
831effort is then required by supporting classes (such as
832DbgEntityHistoryCalculator) to build a map of each instruction to every
833valid variable location, without the need to consider control flow. From
834the example above, it is otherwise difficult to determine that the location
835of variable ``!30`` should flow "up" into block ``%bb1``, but that the location
836of variable ``!23`` should not flow "down" into the ``%exit`` block.
837
838.. _ccxx_frontend:
839
840C/C++ front-end specific debug information
841==========================================
842
843The C and C++ front-ends represent information about the program in a
844format that is effectively identical to `DWARF <http://www.dwarfstd.org/>`_
845in terms of information content.  This allows code generators to
846trivially support native debuggers by generating standard dwarf
847information, and contains enough information for non-dwarf targets to
848translate it as needed.
849
850This section describes the forms used to represent C and C++ programs.  Other
851languages could pattern themselves after this (which itself is tuned to
852representing programs in the same way that DWARF does), or they could choose
853to provide completely different forms if they don't fit into the DWARF model.
854As support for debugging information gets added to the various LLVM
855source-language front-ends, the information used should be documented here.
856
857The following sections provide examples of a few C/C++ constructs and
858the debug information that would best describe those constructs.  The
859canonical references are the ``DINode`` classes defined in
860``include/llvm/IR/DebugInfoMetadata.h`` and the implementations of the
861helper functions in ``lib/IR/DIBuilder.cpp``.
862
863C/C++ source file information
864-----------------------------
865
866``llvm::Instruction`` provides easy access to metadata attached with an
867instruction.  One can extract line number information encoded in LLVM IR using
868``Instruction::getDebugLoc()`` and ``DILocation::getLine()``.
869
870.. code-block:: c++
871
872  if (DILocation *Loc = I->getDebugLoc()) { // Here I is an LLVM instruction
873    unsigned Line = Loc->getLine();
874    StringRef File = Loc->getFilename();
875    StringRef Dir = Loc->getDirectory();
876    bool ImplicitCode = Loc->isImplicitCode();
877  }
878
879When the flag ImplicitCode is true then it means that the Instruction has been
880added by the front-end but doesn't correspond to source code written by the user. For example
881
882.. code-block:: c++
883
884  if (MyBoolean) {
885    MyObject MO;
886    ...
887  }
888
889At the end of the scope the MyObject's destructor is called but it isn't written
890explicitly. This information is useful to avoid to have counters on brackets when
891making code coverage.
892
893C/C++ global variable information
894---------------------------------
895
896Given an integer global variable declared as follows:
897
898.. code-block:: c
899
900  _Alignas(8) int MyGlobal = 100;
901
902a C/C++ front-end would generate the following descriptors:
903
904.. code-block:: text
905
906  ;;
907  ;; Define the global itself.
908  ;;
909  @MyGlobal = global i32 100, align 8, !dbg !0
910
911  ;;
912  ;; List of debug info of globals
913  ;;
914  !llvm.dbg.cu = !{!1}
915
916  ;; Some unrelated metadata.
917  !llvm.module.flags = !{!6, !7}
918  !llvm.ident = !{!8}
919
920  ;; Define the global variable itself
921  !0 = distinct !DIGlobalVariable(name: "MyGlobal", scope: !1, file: !2, line: 1, type: !5, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, align: 64)
922
923  ;; Define the compile unit.
924  !1 = distinct !DICompileUnit(language: DW_LANG_C99, file: !2,
925                               producer: "clang version 4.0.0",
926                               isOptimized: false, runtimeVersion: 0, emissionKind: FullDebug,
927                               enums: !3, globals: !4)
928
929  ;;
930  ;; Define the file
931  ;;
932  !2 = !DIFile(filename: "/dev/stdin",
933               directory: "/Users/dexonsmith/data/llvm/debug-info")
934
935  ;; An empty array.
936  !3 = !{}
937
938  ;; The Array of Global Variables
939  !4 = !{!0}
940
941  ;;
942  ;; Define the type
943  ;;
944  !5 = !DIBasicType(name: "int", size: 32, encoding: DW_ATE_signed)
945
946  ;; Dwarf version to output.
947  !6 = !{i32 2, !"Dwarf Version", i32 4}
948
949  ;; Debug info schema version.
950  !7 = !{i32 2, !"Debug Info Version", i32 3}
951
952  ;; Compiler identification
953  !8 = !{!"clang version 4.0.0"}
954
955
956The align value in DIGlobalVariable description specifies variable alignment in
957case it was forced by C11 _Alignas(), C++11 alignas() keywords or compiler
958attribute __attribute__((aligned ())). In other case (when this field is missing)
959alignment is considered default. This is used when producing DWARF output
960for DW_AT_alignment value.
961
962C/C++ function information
963--------------------------
964
965Given a function declared as follows:
966
967.. code-block:: c
968
969  int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
970    return 0;
971  }
972
973a C/C++ front-end would generate the following descriptors:
974
975.. code-block:: text
976
977  ;;
978  ;; Define the anchor for subprograms.
979  ;;
980  !4 = !DISubprogram(name: "main", scope: !1, file: !1, line: 1, type: !5,
981                     isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 1,
982                     flags: DIFlagPrototyped, isOptimized: false,
983                     variables: !2)
984
985  ;;
986  ;; Define the subprogram itself.
987  ;;
988  define i32 @main(i32 %argc, i8** %argv) !dbg !4 {
989  ...
990  }
991
992C++ specific debug information
993==============================
994
995C++ special member functions information
996----------------------------------------
997
998DWARF v5 introduces attributes defined to enhance debugging information of C++ programs. LLVM can generate (or omit) these appropriate DWARF attributes. In C++ a special member function Ctors, Dtors, Copy/Move Ctors, assignment operators can be declared with C++11 keyword deleted. This is represented in LLVM using spFlags value DISPFlagDeleted.
999
1000Given a class declaration with copy constructor declared as deleted:
1001
1002.. code-block:: c
1003
1004  class foo {
1005   public:
1006     foo(const foo&) = deleted;
1007  };
1008
1009A C++ frontend would generate follwing:
1010
1011.. code-block:: text
1012
1013  !17 = !DISubprogram(name: "foo", scope: !11, file: !1, line: 5, type: !18, scopeLine: 5, flags: DIFlagPublic | DIFlagPrototyped, spFlags: DISPFlagDeleted)
1014
1015and this will produce an additional DWARF attibute as:
1016
1017.. code-block:: text
1018
1019  DW_TAG_subprogram [7] *
1020    DW_AT_name [DW_FORM_strx1]    (indexed (00000006) string = "foo")
1021    DW_AT_decl_line [DW_FORM_data1]       (5)
1022    ...
1023    DW_AT_deleted [DW_FORM_flag_present]  (true)
1024
1025Fortran specific debug information
1026==================================
1027
1028Fortran function information
1029----------------------------
1030
1031There are a few DWARF attributes defined to support client debugging of Fortran programs.  LLVM can generate (or omit) the appropriate DWARF attributes for the prefix-specs of ELEMENTAL, PURE, IMPURE, RECURSIVE, and NON_RECURSIVE.  This is done by using the spFlags values: DISPFlagElemental, DISPFlagPure, and DISPFlagRecursive.
1032
1033.. code-block:: fortran
1034
1035  elemental function elem_func(a)
1036
1037a Fortran front-end would generate the following descriptors:
1038
1039.. code-block:: text
1040
1041  !11 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "subroutine2", scope: !1, file: !1,
1042          line: 5, type: !8, scopeLine: 6,
1043          spFlags: DISPFlagDefinition | DISPFlagElemental, unit: !0,
1044          retainedNodes: !2)
1045
1046and this will materialize an additional DWARF attribute as:
1047
1048.. code-block:: text
1049
1050  DW_TAG_subprogram [3]
1051     DW_AT_low_pc [DW_FORM_addr]     (0x0000000000000010 ".text")
1052     DW_AT_high_pc [DW_FORM_data4]   (0x00000001)
1053     ...
1054     DW_AT_elemental [DW_FORM_flag_present]  (true)
1055
1056Debugging information format
1057============================
1058
1059Debugging Information Extension for Objective C Properties
1060----------------------------------------------------------
1061
1062Introduction
1063^^^^^^^^^^^^
1064
1065Objective C provides a simpler way to declare and define accessor methods using
1066declared properties.  The language provides features to declare a property and
1067to let compiler synthesize accessor methods.
1068
1069The debugger lets developer inspect Objective C interfaces and their instance
1070variables and class variables.  However, the debugger does not know anything
1071about the properties defined in Objective C interfaces.  The debugger consumes
1072information generated by compiler in DWARF format.  The format does not support
1073encoding of Objective C properties.  This proposal describes DWARF extensions to
1074encode Objective C properties, which the debugger can use to let developers
1075inspect Objective C properties.
1076
1077Proposal
1078^^^^^^^^
1079
1080Objective C properties exist separately from class members.  A property can be
1081defined only by "setter" and "getter" selectors, and be calculated anew on each
1082access.  Or a property can just be a direct access to some declared ivar.
1083Finally it can have an ivar "automatically synthesized" for it by the compiler,
1084in which case the property can be referred to in user code directly using the
1085standard C dereference syntax as well as through the property "dot" syntax, but
1086there is no entry in the ``@interface`` declaration corresponding to this ivar.
1087
1088To facilitate debugging, these properties we will add a new DWARF TAG into the
1089``DW_TAG_structure_type`` definition for the class to hold the description of a
1090given property, and a set of DWARF attributes that provide said description.
1091The property tag will also contain the name and declared type of the property.
1092
1093If there is a related ivar, there will also be a DWARF property attribute placed
1094in the ``DW_TAG_member`` DIE for that ivar referring back to the property TAG
1095for that property.  And in the case where the compiler synthesizes the ivar
1096directly, the compiler is expected to generate a ``DW_TAG_member`` for that
1097ivar (with the ``DW_AT_artificial`` set to 1), whose name will be the name used
1098to access this ivar directly in code, and with the property attribute pointing
1099back to the property it is backing.
1100
1101The following examples will serve as illustration for our discussion:
1102
1103.. code-block:: objc
1104
1105  @interface I1 {
1106    int n2;
1107  }
1108
1109  @property int p1;
1110  @property int p2;
1111  @end
1112
1113  @implementation I1
1114  @synthesize p1;
1115  @synthesize p2 = n2;
1116  @end
1117
1118This produces the following DWARF (this is a "pseudo dwarfdump" output):
1119
1120.. code-block:: none
1121
1122  0x00000100:  TAG_structure_type [7] *
1123                 AT_APPLE_runtime_class( 0x10 )
1124                 AT_name( "I1" )
1125                 AT_decl_file( "Objc_Property.m" )
1126                 AT_decl_line( 3 )
1127
1128  0x00000110    TAG_APPLE_property
1129                  AT_name ( "p1" )
1130                  AT_type ( {0x00000150} ( int ) )
1131
1132  0x00000120:   TAG_APPLE_property
1133                  AT_name ( "p2" )
1134                  AT_type ( {0x00000150} ( int ) )
1135
1136  0x00000130:   TAG_member [8]
1137                  AT_name( "_p1" )
1138                  AT_APPLE_property ( {0x00000110} "p1" )
1139                  AT_type( {0x00000150} ( int ) )
1140                  AT_artificial ( 0x1 )
1141
1142  0x00000140:    TAG_member [8]
1143                   AT_name( "n2" )
1144                   AT_APPLE_property ( {0x00000120} "p2" )
1145                   AT_type( {0x00000150} ( int ) )
1146
1147  0x00000150:  AT_type( ( int ) )
1148
1149Note, the current convention is that the name of the ivar for an
1150auto-synthesized property is the name of the property from which it derives
1151with an underscore prepended, as is shown in the example.  But we actually
1152don't need to know this convention, since we are given the name of the ivar
1153directly.
1154
1155Also, it is common practice in ObjC to have different property declarations in
1156the @interface and @implementation - e.g. to provide a read-only property in
1157the interface,and a read-write interface in the implementation.  In that case,
1158the compiler should emit whichever property declaration will be in force in the
1159current translation unit.
1160
1161Developers can decorate a property with attributes which are encoded using
1162``DW_AT_APPLE_property_attribute``.
1163
1164.. code-block:: objc
1165
1166  @property (readonly, nonatomic) int pr;
1167
1168.. code-block:: none
1169
1170  TAG_APPLE_property [8]
1171    AT_name( "pr" )
1172    AT_type ( {0x00000147} (int) )
1173    AT_APPLE_property_attribute (DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_readonly, DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_nonatomic)
1174
1175The setter and getter method names are attached to the property using
1176``DW_AT_APPLE_property_setter`` and ``DW_AT_APPLE_property_getter`` attributes.
1177
1178.. code-block:: objc
1179
1180  @interface I1
1181  @property (setter=myOwnP3Setter:) int p3;
1182  -(void)myOwnP3Setter:(int)a;
1183  @end
1184
1185  @implementation I1
1186  @synthesize p3;
1187  -(void)myOwnP3Setter:(int)a{ }
1188  @end
1189
1190The DWARF for this would be:
1191
1192.. code-block:: none
1193
1194  0x000003bd: TAG_structure_type [7] *
1195                AT_APPLE_runtime_class( 0x10 )
1196                AT_name( "I1" )
1197                AT_decl_file( "Objc_Property.m" )
1198                AT_decl_line( 3 )
1199
1200  0x000003cd      TAG_APPLE_property
1201                    AT_name ( "p3" )
1202                    AT_APPLE_property_setter ( "myOwnP3Setter:" )
1203                    AT_type( {0x00000147} ( int ) )
1204
1205  0x000003f3:     TAG_member [8]
1206                    AT_name( "_p3" )
1207                    AT_type ( {0x00000147} ( int ) )
1208                    AT_APPLE_property ( {0x000003cd} )
1209                    AT_artificial ( 0x1 )
1210
1211New DWARF Tags
1212^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1213
1214+-----------------------+--------+
1215| TAG                   | Value  |
1216+=======================+========+
1217| DW_TAG_APPLE_property | 0x4200 |
1218+-----------------------+--------+
1219
1220New DWARF Attributes
1221^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1222
1223+--------------------------------+--------+-----------+
1224| Attribute                      | Value  | Classes   |
1225+================================+========+===========+
1226| DW_AT_APPLE_property           | 0x3fed | Reference |
1227+--------------------------------+--------+-----------+
1228| DW_AT_APPLE_property_getter    | 0x3fe9 | String    |
1229+--------------------------------+--------+-----------+
1230| DW_AT_APPLE_property_setter    | 0x3fea | String    |
1231+--------------------------------+--------+-----------+
1232| DW_AT_APPLE_property_attribute | 0x3feb | Constant  |
1233+--------------------------------+--------+-----------+
1234
1235New DWARF Constants
1236^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1237
1238+--------------------------------------+-------+
1239| Name                                 | Value |
1240+======================================+=======+
1241| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_readonly           | 0x01  |
1242+--------------------------------------+-------+
1243| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_getter             | 0x02  |
1244+--------------------------------------+-------+
1245| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_assign             | 0x04  |
1246+--------------------------------------+-------+
1247| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_readwrite          | 0x08  |
1248+--------------------------------------+-------+
1249| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_retain             | 0x10  |
1250+--------------------------------------+-------+
1251| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_copy               | 0x20  |
1252+--------------------------------------+-------+
1253| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_nonatomic          | 0x40  |
1254+--------------------------------------+-------+
1255| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_setter             | 0x80  |
1256+--------------------------------------+-------+
1257| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_atomic             | 0x100 |
1258+--------------------------------------+-------+
1259| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_weak               | 0x200 |
1260+--------------------------------------+-------+
1261| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_strong             | 0x400 |
1262+--------------------------------------+-------+
1263| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_unsafe_unretained  | 0x800 |
1264+--------------------------------------+-------+
1265| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_nullability        | 0x1000|
1266+--------------------------------------+-------+
1267| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_null_resettable    | 0x2000|
1268+--------------------------------------+-------+
1269| DW_APPLE_PROPERTY_class              | 0x4000|
1270+--------------------------------------+-------+
1271
1272Name Accelerator Tables
1273-----------------------
1274
1275Introduction
1276^^^^^^^^^^^^
1277
1278The "``.debug_pubnames``" and "``.debug_pubtypes``" formats are not what a
1279debugger needs.  The "``pub``" in the section name indicates that the entries
1280in the table are publicly visible names only.  This means no static or hidden
1281functions show up in the "``.debug_pubnames``".  No static variables or private
1282class variables are in the "``.debug_pubtypes``".  Many compilers add different
1283things to these tables, so we can't rely upon the contents between gcc, icc, or
1284clang.
1285
1286The typical query given by users tends not to match up with the contents of
1287these tables.  For example, the DWARF spec states that "In the case of the name
1288of a function member or static data member of a C++ structure, class or union,
1289the name presented in the "``.debug_pubnames``" section is not the simple name
1290given by the ``DW_AT_name attribute`` of the referenced debugging information
1291entry, but rather the fully qualified name of the data or function member."
1292So the only names in these tables for complex C++ entries is a fully
1293qualified name.  Debugger users tend not to enter their search strings as
1294"``a::b::c(int,const Foo&) const``", but rather as "``c``", "``b::c``" , or
1295"``a::b::c``".  So the name entered in the name table must be demangled in
1296order to chop it up appropriately and additional names must be manually entered
1297into the table to make it effective as a name lookup table for debuggers to
1298use.
1299
1300All debuggers currently ignore the "``.debug_pubnames``" table as a result of
1301its inconsistent and useless public-only name content making it a waste of
1302space in the object file.  These tables, when they are written to disk, are not
1303sorted in any way, leaving every debugger to do its own parsing and sorting.
1304These tables also include an inlined copy of the string values in the table
1305itself making the tables much larger than they need to be on disk, especially
1306for large C++ programs.
1307
1308Can't we just fix the sections by adding all of the names we need to this
1309table? No, because that is not what the tables are defined to contain and we
1310won't know the difference between the old bad tables and the new good tables.
1311At best we could make our own renamed sections that contain all of the data we
1312need.
1313
1314These tables are also insufficient for what a debugger like LLDB needs.  LLDB
1315uses clang for its expression parsing where LLDB acts as a PCH.  LLDB is then
1316often asked to look for type "``foo``" or namespace "``bar``", or list items in
1317namespace "``baz``".  Namespaces are not included in the pubnames or pubtypes
1318tables.  Since clang asks a lot of questions when it is parsing an expression,
1319we need to be very fast when looking up names, as it happens a lot.  Having new
1320accelerator tables that are optimized for very quick lookups will benefit this
1321type of debugging experience greatly.
1322
1323We would like to generate name lookup tables that can be mapped into memory
1324from disk, and used as is, with little or no up-front parsing.  We would also
1325be able to control the exact content of these different tables so they contain
1326exactly what we need.  The Name Accelerator Tables were designed to fix these
1327issues.  In order to solve these issues we need to:
1328
1329* Have a format that can be mapped into memory from disk and used as is
1330* Lookups should be very fast
1331* Extensible table format so these tables can be made by many producers
1332* Contain all of the names needed for typical lookups out of the box
1333* Strict rules for the contents of tables
1334
1335Table size is important and the accelerator table format should allow the reuse
1336of strings from common string tables so the strings for the names are not
1337duplicated.  We also want to make sure the table is ready to be used as-is by
1338simply mapping the table into memory with minimal header parsing.
1339
1340The name lookups need to be fast and optimized for the kinds of lookups that
1341debuggers tend to do.  Optimally we would like to touch as few parts of the
1342mapped table as possible when doing a name lookup and be able to quickly find
1343the name entry we are looking for, or discover there are no matches.  In the
1344case of debuggers we optimized for lookups that fail most of the time.
1345
1346Each table that is defined should have strict rules on exactly what is in the
1347accelerator tables and documented so clients can rely on the content.
1348
1349Hash Tables
1350^^^^^^^^^^^
1351
1352Standard Hash Tables
1353""""""""""""""""""""
1354
1355Typical hash tables have a header, buckets, and each bucket points to the
1356bucket contents:
1357
1358.. code-block:: none
1359
1360  .------------.
1361  |  HEADER    |
1362  |------------|
1363  |  BUCKETS   |
1364  |------------|
1365  |  DATA      |
1366  `------------'
1367
1368The BUCKETS are an array of offsets to DATA for each hash:
1369
1370.. code-block:: none
1371
1372  .------------.
1373  | 0x00001000 | BUCKETS[0]
1374  | 0x00002000 | BUCKETS[1]
1375  | 0x00002200 | BUCKETS[2]
1376  | 0x000034f0 | BUCKETS[3]
1377  |            | ...
1378  | 0xXXXXXXXX | BUCKETS[n_buckets]
1379  '------------'
1380
1381So for ``bucket[3]`` in the example above, we have an offset into the table
13820x000034f0 which points to a chain of entries for the bucket.  Each bucket must
1383contain a next pointer, full 32 bit hash value, the string itself, and the data
1384for the current string value.
1385
1386.. code-block:: none
1387
1388              .------------.
1389  0x000034f0: | 0x00003500 | next pointer
1390              | 0x12345678 | 32 bit hash
1391              | "erase"    | string value
1392              | data[n]    | HashData for this bucket
1393              |------------|
1394  0x00003500: | 0x00003550 | next pointer
1395              | 0x29273623 | 32 bit hash
1396              | "dump"     | string value
1397              | data[n]    | HashData for this bucket
1398              |------------|
1399  0x00003550: | 0x00000000 | next pointer
1400              | 0x82638293 | 32 bit hash
1401              | "main"     | string value
1402              | data[n]    | HashData for this bucket
1403              `------------'
1404
1405The problem with this layout for debuggers is that we need to optimize for the
1406negative lookup case where the symbol we're searching for is not present.  So
1407if we were to lookup "``printf``" in the table above, we would make a 32-bit
1408hash for "``printf``", it might match ``bucket[3]``.  We would need to go to
1409the offset 0x000034f0 and start looking to see if our 32 bit hash matches.  To
1410do so, we need to read the next pointer, then read the hash, compare it, and
1411skip to the next bucket.  Each time we are skipping many bytes in memory and
1412touching new pages just to do the compare on the full 32 bit hash.  All of
1413these accesses then tell us that we didn't have a match.
1414
1415Name Hash Tables
1416""""""""""""""""
1417
1418To solve the issues mentioned above we have structured the hash tables a bit
1419differently: a header, buckets, an array of all unique 32 bit hash values,
1420followed by an array of hash value data offsets, one for each hash value, then
1421the data for all hash values:
1422
1423.. code-block:: none
1424
1425  .-------------.
1426  |  HEADER     |
1427  |-------------|
1428  |  BUCKETS    |
1429  |-------------|
1430  |  HASHES     |
1431  |-------------|
1432  |  OFFSETS    |
1433  |-------------|
1434  |  DATA       |
1435  `-------------'
1436
1437The ``BUCKETS`` in the name tables are an index into the ``HASHES`` array.  By
1438making all of the full 32 bit hash values contiguous in memory, we allow
1439ourselves to efficiently check for a match while touching as little memory as
1440possible.  Most often checking the 32 bit hash values is as far as the lookup
1441goes.  If it does match, it usually is a match with no collisions.  So for a
1442table with "``n_buckets``" buckets, and "``n_hashes``" unique 32 bit hash
1443values, we can clarify the contents of the ``BUCKETS``, ``HASHES`` and
1444``OFFSETS`` as:
1445
1446.. code-block:: none
1447
1448  .-------------------------.
1449  |  HEADER.magic           | uint32_t
1450  |  HEADER.version         | uint16_t
1451  |  HEADER.hash_function   | uint16_t
1452  |  HEADER.bucket_count    | uint32_t
1453  |  HEADER.hashes_count    | uint32_t
1454  |  HEADER.header_data_len | uint32_t
1455  |  HEADER_DATA            | HeaderData
1456  |-------------------------|
1457  |  BUCKETS                | uint32_t[n_buckets] // 32 bit hash indexes
1458  |-------------------------|
1459  |  HASHES                 | uint32_t[n_hashes] // 32 bit hash values
1460  |-------------------------|
1461  |  OFFSETS                | uint32_t[n_hashes] // 32 bit offsets to hash value data
1462  |-------------------------|
1463  |  ALL HASH DATA          |
1464  `-------------------------'
1465
1466So taking the exact same data from the standard hash example above we end up
1467with:
1468
1469.. code-block:: none
1470
1471              .------------.
1472              | HEADER     |
1473              |------------|
1474              |          0 | BUCKETS[0]
1475              |          2 | BUCKETS[1]
1476              |          5 | BUCKETS[2]
1477              |          6 | BUCKETS[3]
1478              |            | ...
1479              |        ... | BUCKETS[n_buckets]
1480              |------------|
1481              | 0x........ | HASHES[0]
1482              | 0x........ | HASHES[1]
1483              | 0x........ | HASHES[2]
1484              | 0x........ | HASHES[3]
1485              | 0x........ | HASHES[4]
1486              | 0x........ | HASHES[5]
1487              | 0x12345678 | HASHES[6]    hash for BUCKETS[3]
1488              | 0x29273623 | HASHES[7]    hash for BUCKETS[3]
1489              | 0x82638293 | HASHES[8]    hash for BUCKETS[3]
1490              | 0x........ | HASHES[9]
1491              | 0x........ | HASHES[10]
1492              | 0x........ | HASHES[11]
1493              | 0x........ | HASHES[12]
1494              | 0x........ | HASHES[13]
1495              | 0x........ | HASHES[n_hashes]
1496              |------------|
1497              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[0]
1498              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[1]
1499              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[2]
1500              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[3]
1501              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[4]
1502              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[5]
1503              | 0x000034f0 | OFFSETS[6]   offset for BUCKETS[3]
1504              | 0x00003500 | OFFSETS[7]   offset for BUCKETS[3]
1505              | 0x00003550 | OFFSETS[8]   offset for BUCKETS[3]
1506              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[9]
1507              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[10]
1508              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[11]
1509              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[12]
1510              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[13]
1511              | 0x........ | OFFSETS[n_hashes]
1512              |------------|
1513              |            |
1514              |            |
1515              |            |
1516              |            |
1517              |            |
1518              |------------|
1519  0x000034f0: | 0x00001203 | .debug_str ("erase")
1520              | 0x00000004 | A 32 bit array count - number of HashData with name "erase"
1521              | 0x........ | HashData[0]
1522              | 0x........ | HashData[1]
1523              | 0x........ | HashData[2]
1524              | 0x........ | HashData[3]
1525              | 0x00000000 | String offset into .debug_str (terminate data for hash)
1526              |------------|
1527  0x00003500: | 0x00001203 | String offset into .debug_str ("collision")
1528              | 0x00000002 | A 32 bit array count - number of HashData with name "collision"
1529              | 0x........ | HashData[0]
1530              | 0x........ | HashData[1]
1531              | 0x00001203 | String offset into .debug_str ("dump")
1532              | 0x00000003 | A 32 bit array count - number of HashData with name "dump"
1533              | 0x........ | HashData[0]
1534              | 0x........ | HashData[1]
1535              | 0x........ | HashData[2]
1536              | 0x00000000 | String offset into .debug_str (terminate data for hash)
1537              |------------|
1538  0x00003550: | 0x00001203 | String offset into .debug_str ("main")
1539              | 0x00000009 | A 32 bit array count - number of HashData with name "main"
1540              | 0x........ | HashData[0]
1541              | 0x........ | HashData[1]
1542              | 0x........ | HashData[2]
1543              | 0x........ | HashData[3]
1544              | 0x........ | HashData[4]
1545              | 0x........ | HashData[5]
1546              | 0x........ | HashData[6]
1547              | 0x........ | HashData[7]
1548              | 0x........ | HashData[8]
1549              | 0x00000000 | String offset into .debug_str (terminate data for hash)
1550              `------------'
1551
1552So we still have all of the same data, we just organize it more efficiently for
1553debugger lookup.  If we repeat the same "``printf``" lookup from above, we
1554would hash "``printf``" and find it matches ``BUCKETS[3]`` by taking the 32 bit
1555hash value and modulo it by ``n_buckets``.  ``BUCKETS[3]`` contains "6" which
1556is the index into the ``HASHES`` table.  We would then compare any consecutive
155732 bit hashes values in the ``HASHES`` array as long as the hashes would be in
1558``BUCKETS[3]``.  We do this by verifying that each subsequent hash value modulo
1559``n_buckets`` is still 3.  In the case of a failed lookup we would access the
1560memory for ``BUCKETS[3]``, and then compare a few consecutive 32 bit hashes
1561before we know that we have no match.  We don't end up marching through
1562multiple words of memory and we really keep the number of processor data cache
1563lines being accessed as small as possible.
1564
1565The string hash that is used for these lookup tables is the Daniel J.
1566Bernstein hash which is also used in the ELF ``GNU_HASH`` sections.  It is a
1567very good hash for all kinds of names in programs with very few hash
1568collisions.
1569
1570Empty buckets are designated by using an invalid hash index of ``UINT32_MAX``.
1571
1572Details
1573^^^^^^^
1574
1575These name hash tables are designed to be generic where specializations of the
1576table get to define additional data that goes into the header ("``HeaderData``"),
1577how the string value is stored ("``KeyType``") and the content of the data for each
1578hash value.
1579
1580Header Layout
1581"""""""""""""
1582
1583The header has a fixed part, and the specialized part.  The exact format of the
1584header is:
1585
1586.. code-block:: c
1587
1588  struct Header
1589  {
1590    uint32_t   magic;           // 'HASH' magic value to allow endian detection
1591    uint16_t   version;         // Version number
1592    uint16_t   hash_function;   // The hash function enumeration that was used
1593    uint32_t   bucket_count;    // The number of buckets in this hash table
1594    uint32_t   hashes_count;    // The total number of unique hash values and hash data offsets in this table
1595    uint32_t   header_data_len; // The bytes to skip to get to the hash indexes (buckets) for correct alignment
1596                                // Specifically the length of the following HeaderData field - this does not
1597                                // include the size of the preceding fields
1598    HeaderData header_data;     // Implementation specific header data
1599  };
1600
1601The header starts with a 32 bit "``magic``" value which must be ``'HASH'``
1602encoded as an ASCII integer.  This allows the detection of the start of the
1603hash table and also allows the table's byte order to be determined so the table
1604can be correctly extracted.  The "``magic``" value is followed by a 16 bit
1605``version`` number which allows the table to be revised and modified in the
1606future.  The current version number is 1. ``hash_function`` is a ``uint16_t``
1607enumeration that specifies which hash function was used to produce this table.
1608The current values for the hash function enumerations include:
1609
1610.. code-block:: c
1611
1612  enum HashFunctionType
1613  {
1614    eHashFunctionDJB = 0u, // Daniel J Bernstein hash function
1615  };
1616
1617``bucket_count`` is a 32 bit unsigned integer that represents how many buckets
1618are in the ``BUCKETS`` array.  ``hashes_count`` is the number of unique 32 bit
1619hash values that are in the ``HASHES`` array, and is the same number of offsets
1620are contained in the ``OFFSETS`` array.  ``header_data_len`` specifies the size
1621in bytes of the ``HeaderData`` that is filled in by specialized versions of
1622this table.
1623
1624Fixed Lookup
1625""""""""""""
1626
1627The header is followed by the buckets, hashes, offsets, and hash value data.
1628
1629.. code-block:: c
1630
1631  struct FixedTable
1632  {
1633    uint32_t buckets[Header.bucket_count];  // An array of hash indexes into the "hashes[]" array below
1634    uint32_t hashes [Header.hashes_count];  // Every unique 32 bit hash for the entire table is in this table
1635    uint32_t offsets[Header.hashes_count];  // An offset that corresponds to each item in the "hashes[]" array above
1636  };
1637
1638``buckets`` is an array of 32 bit indexes into the ``hashes`` array.  The
1639``hashes`` array contains all of the 32 bit hash values for all names in the
1640hash table.  Each hash in the ``hashes`` table has an offset in the ``offsets``
1641array that points to the data for the hash value.
1642
1643This table setup makes it very easy to repurpose these tables to contain
1644different data, while keeping the lookup mechanism the same for all tables.
1645This layout also makes it possible to save the table to disk and map it in
1646later and do very efficient name lookups with little or no parsing.
1647
1648DWARF lookup tables can be implemented in a variety of ways and can store a lot
1649of information for each name.  We want to make the DWARF tables extensible and
1650able to store the data efficiently so we have used some of the DWARF features
1651that enable efficient data storage to define exactly what kind of data we store
1652for each name.
1653
1654The ``HeaderData`` contains a definition of the contents of each HashData chunk.
1655We might want to store an offset to all of the debug information entries (DIEs)
1656for each name.  To keep things extensible, we create a list of items, or
1657Atoms, that are contained in the data for each name.  First comes the type of
1658the data in each atom:
1659
1660.. code-block:: c
1661
1662  enum AtomType
1663  {
1664    eAtomTypeNULL       = 0u,
1665    eAtomTypeDIEOffset  = 1u,   // DIE offset, check form for encoding
1666    eAtomTypeCUOffset   = 2u,   // DIE offset of the compiler unit header that contains the item in question
1667    eAtomTypeTag        = 3u,   // DW_TAG_xxx value, should be encoded as DW_FORM_data1 (if no tags exceed 255) or DW_FORM_data2
1668    eAtomTypeNameFlags  = 4u,   // Flags from enum NameFlags
1669    eAtomTypeTypeFlags  = 5u,   // Flags from enum TypeFlags
1670  };
1671
1672The enumeration values and their meanings are:
1673
1674.. code-block:: none
1675
1676  eAtomTypeNULL       - a termination atom that specifies the end of the atom list
1677  eAtomTypeDIEOffset  - an offset into the .debug_info section for the DWARF DIE for this name
1678  eAtomTypeCUOffset   - an offset into the .debug_info section for the CU that contains the DIE
1679  eAtomTypeDIETag     - The DW_TAG_XXX enumeration value so you don't have to parse the DWARF to see what it is
1680  eAtomTypeNameFlags  - Flags for functions and global variables (isFunction, isInlined, isExternal...)
1681  eAtomTypeTypeFlags  - Flags for types (isCXXClass, isObjCClass, ...)
1682
1683Then we allow each atom type to define the atom type and how the data for each
1684atom type data is encoded:
1685
1686.. code-block:: c
1687
1688  struct Atom
1689  {
1690    uint16_t type;  // AtomType enum value
1691    uint16_t form;  // DWARF DW_FORM_XXX defines
1692  };
1693
1694The ``form`` type above is from the DWARF specification and defines the exact
1695encoding of the data for the Atom type.  See the DWARF specification for the
1696``DW_FORM_`` definitions.
1697
1698.. code-block:: c
1699
1700  struct HeaderData
1701  {
1702    uint32_t die_offset_base;
1703    uint32_t atom_count;
1704    Atoms    atoms[atom_count0];
1705  };
1706
1707``HeaderData`` defines the base DIE offset that should be added to any atoms
1708that are encoded using the ``DW_FORM_ref1``, ``DW_FORM_ref2``,
1709``DW_FORM_ref4``, ``DW_FORM_ref8`` or ``DW_FORM_ref_udata``.  It also defines
1710what is contained in each ``HashData`` object -- ``Atom.form`` tells us how large
1711each field will be in the ``HashData`` and the ``Atom.type`` tells us how this data
1712should be interpreted.
1713
1714For the current implementations of the "``.apple_names``" (all functions +
1715globals), the "``.apple_types``" (names of all types that are defined), and
1716the "``.apple_namespaces``" (all namespaces), we currently set the ``Atom``
1717array to be:
1718
1719.. code-block:: c
1720
1721  HeaderData.atom_count = 1;
1722  HeaderData.atoms[0].type = eAtomTypeDIEOffset;
1723  HeaderData.atoms[0].form = DW_FORM_data4;
1724
1725This defines the contents to be the DIE offset (eAtomTypeDIEOffset) that is
1726encoded as a 32 bit value (DW_FORM_data4).  This allows a single name to have
1727multiple matching DIEs in a single file, which could come up with an inlined
1728function for instance.  Future tables could include more information about the
1729DIE such as flags indicating if the DIE is a function, method, block,
1730or inlined.
1731
1732The KeyType for the DWARF table is a 32 bit string table offset into the
1733".debug_str" table.  The ".debug_str" is the string table for the DWARF which
1734may already contain copies of all of the strings.  This helps make sure, with
1735help from the compiler, that we reuse the strings between all of the DWARF
1736sections and keeps the hash table size down.  Another benefit to having the
1737compiler generate all strings as DW_FORM_strp in the debug info, is that
1738DWARF parsing can be made much faster.
1739
1740After a lookup is made, we get an offset into the hash data.  The hash data
1741needs to be able to deal with 32 bit hash collisions, so the chunk of data
1742at the offset in the hash data consists of a triple:
1743
1744.. code-block:: c
1745
1746  uint32_t str_offset
1747  uint32_t hash_data_count
1748  HashData[hash_data_count]
1749
1750If "str_offset" is zero, then the bucket contents are done. 99.9% of the
1751hash data chunks contain a single item (no 32 bit hash collision):
1752
1753.. code-block:: none
1754
1755  .------------.
1756  | 0x00001023 | uint32_t KeyType (.debug_str[0x0001023] => "main")
1757  | 0x00000004 | uint32_t HashData count
1758  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[0] DIE offset
1759  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[1] DIE offset
1760  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[2] DIE offset
1761  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[3] DIE offset
1762  | 0x00000000 | uint32_t KeyType (end of hash chain)
1763  `------------'
1764
1765If there are collisions, you will have multiple valid string offsets:
1766
1767.. code-block:: none
1768
1769  .------------.
1770  | 0x00001023 | uint32_t KeyType (.debug_str[0x0001023] => "main")
1771  | 0x00000004 | uint32_t HashData count
1772  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[0] DIE offset
1773  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[1] DIE offset
1774  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[2] DIE offset
1775  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[3] DIE offset
1776  | 0x00002023 | uint32_t KeyType (.debug_str[0x0002023] => "print")
1777  | 0x00000002 | uint32_t HashData count
1778  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[0] DIE offset
1779  | 0x........ | uint32_t HashData[1] DIE offset
1780  | 0x00000000 | uint32_t KeyType (end of hash chain)
1781  `------------'
1782
1783Current testing with real world C++ binaries has shown that there is around 1
178432 bit hash collision per 100,000 name entries.
1785
1786Contents
1787^^^^^^^^
1788
1789As we said, we want to strictly define exactly what is included in the
1790different tables.  For DWARF, we have 3 tables: "``.apple_names``",
1791"``.apple_types``", and "``.apple_namespaces``".
1792
1793"``.apple_names``" sections should contain an entry for each DWARF DIE whose
1794``DW_TAG`` is a ``DW_TAG_label``, ``DW_TAG_inlined_subroutine``, or
1795``DW_TAG_subprogram`` that has address attributes: ``DW_AT_low_pc``,
1796``DW_AT_high_pc``, ``DW_AT_ranges`` or ``DW_AT_entry_pc``.  It also contains
1797``DW_TAG_variable`` DIEs that have a ``DW_OP_addr`` in the location (global and
1798static variables).  All global and static variables should be included,
1799including those scoped within functions and classes.  For example using the
1800following code:
1801
1802.. code-block:: c
1803
1804  static int var = 0;
1805
1806  void f ()
1807  {
1808    static int var = 0;
1809  }
1810
1811Both of the static ``var`` variables would be included in the table.  All
1812functions should emit both their full names and their basenames.  For C or C++,
1813the full name is the mangled name (if available) which is usually in the
1814``DW_AT_MIPS_linkage_name`` attribute, and the ``DW_AT_name`` contains the
1815function basename.  If global or static variables have a mangled name in a
1816``DW_AT_MIPS_linkage_name`` attribute, this should be emitted along with the
1817simple name found in the ``DW_AT_name`` attribute.
1818
1819"``.apple_types``" sections should contain an entry for each DWARF DIE whose
1820tag is one of:
1821
1822* DW_TAG_array_type
1823* DW_TAG_class_type
1824* DW_TAG_enumeration_type
1825* DW_TAG_pointer_type
1826* DW_TAG_reference_type
1827* DW_TAG_string_type
1828* DW_TAG_structure_type
1829* DW_TAG_subroutine_type
1830* DW_TAG_typedef
1831* DW_TAG_union_type
1832* DW_TAG_ptr_to_member_type
1833* DW_TAG_set_type
1834* DW_TAG_subrange_type
1835* DW_TAG_base_type
1836* DW_TAG_const_type
1837* DW_TAG_file_type
1838* DW_TAG_namelist
1839* DW_TAG_packed_type
1840* DW_TAG_volatile_type
1841* DW_TAG_restrict_type
1842* DW_TAG_atomic_type
1843* DW_TAG_interface_type
1844* DW_TAG_unspecified_type
1845* DW_TAG_shared_type
1846
1847Only entries with a ``DW_AT_name`` attribute are included, and the entry must
1848not be a forward declaration (``DW_AT_declaration`` attribute with a non-zero
1849value).  For example, using the following code:
1850
1851.. code-block:: c
1852
1853  int main ()
1854  {
1855    int *b = 0;
1856    return *b;
1857  }
1858
1859We get a few type DIEs:
1860
1861.. code-block:: none
1862
1863  0x00000067:     TAG_base_type [5]
1864                  AT_encoding( DW_ATE_signed )
1865                  AT_name( "int" )
1866                  AT_byte_size( 0x04 )
1867
1868  0x0000006e:     TAG_pointer_type [6]
1869                  AT_type( {0x00000067} ( int ) )
1870                  AT_byte_size( 0x08 )
1871
1872The DW_TAG_pointer_type is not included because it does not have a ``DW_AT_name``.
1873
1874"``.apple_namespaces``" section should contain all ``DW_TAG_namespace`` DIEs.
1875If we run into a namespace that has no name this is an anonymous namespace, and
1876the name should be output as "``(anonymous namespace)``" (without the quotes).
1877Why?  This matches the output of the ``abi::cxa_demangle()`` that is in the
1878standard C++ library that demangles mangled names.
1879
1880
1881Language Extensions and File Format Changes
1882^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1883
1884Objective-C Extensions
1885""""""""""""""""""""""
1886
1887"``.apple_objc``" section should contain all ``DW_TAG_subprogram`` DIEs for an
1888Objective-C class.  The name used in the hash table is the name of the
1889Objective-C class itself.  If the Objective-C class has a category, then an
1890entry is made for both the class name without the category, and for the class
1891name with the category.  So if we have a DIE at offset 0x1234 with a name of
1892method "``-[NSString(my_additions) stringWithSpecialString:]``", we would add
1893an entry for "``NSString``" that points to DIE 0x1234, and an entry for
1894"``NSString(my_additions)``" that points to 0x1234.  This allows us to quickly
1895track down all Objective-C methods for an Objective-C class when doing
1896expressions.  It is needed because of the dynamic nature of Objective-C where
1897anyone can add methods to a class.  The DWARF for Objective-C methods is also
1898emitted differently from C++ classes where the methods are not usually
1899contained in the class definition, they are scattered about across one or more
1900compile units.  Categories can also be defined in different shared libraries.
1901So we need to be able to quickly find all of the methods and class functions
1902given the Objective-C class name, or quickly find all methods and class
1903functions for a class + category name.  This table does not contain any
1904selector names, it just maps Objective-C class names (or class names +
1905category) to all of the methods and class functions.  The selectors are added
1906as function basenames in the "``.debug_names``" section.
1907
1908In the "``.apple_names``" section for Objective-C functions, the full name is
1909the entire function name with the brackets ("``-[NSString
1910stringWithCString:]``") and the basename is the selector only
1911("``stringWithCString:``").
1912
1913Mach-O Changes
1914""""""""""""""
1915
1916The sections names for the apple hash tables are for non-mach-o files.  For
1917mach-o files, the sections should be contained in the ``__DWARF`` segment with
1918names as follows:
1919
1920* "``.apple_names``" -> "``__apple_names``"
1921* "``.apple_types``" -> "``__apple_types``"
1922* "``.apple_namespaces``" -> "``__apple_namespac``" (16 character limit)
1923* "``.apple_objc``" -> "``__apple_objc``"
1924
1925.. _codeview:
1926
1927CodeView Debug Info Format
1928==========================
1929
1930LLVM supports emitting CodeView, the Microsoft debug info format, and this
1931section describes the design and implementation of that support.
1932
1933Format Background
1934-----------------
1935
1936CodeView as a format is clearly oriented around C++ debugging, and in C++, the
1937majority of debug information tends to be type information. Therefore, the
1938overriding design constraint of CodeView is the separation of type information
1939from other "symbol" information so that type information can be efficiently
1940merged across translation units. Both type information and symbol information is
1941generally stored as a sequence of records, where each record begins with a
194216-bit record size and a 16-bit record kind.
1943
1944Type information is usually stored in the ``.debug$T`` section of the object
1945file.  All other debug info, such as line info, string table, symbol info, and
1946inlinee info, is stored in one or more ``.debug$S`` sections. There may only be
1947one ``.debug$T`` section per object file, since all other debug info refers to
1948it. If a PDB (enabled by the ``/Zi`` MSVC option) was used during compilation,
1949the ``.debug$T`` section will contain only an ``LF_TYPESERVER2`` record pointing
1950to the PDB. When using PDBs, symbol information appears to remain in the object
1951file ``.debug$S`` sections.
1952
1953Type records are referred to by their index, which is the number of records in
1954the stream before a given record plus ``0x1000``. Many common basic types, such
1955as the basic integral types and unqualified pointers to them, are represented
1956using type indices less than ``0x1000``. Such basic types are built in to
1957CodeView consumers and do not require type records.
1958
1959Each type record may only contain type indices that are less than its own type
1960index. This ensures that the graph of type stream references is acyclic. While
1961the source-level type graph may contain cycles through pointer types (consider a
1962linked list struct), these cycles are removed from the type stream by always
1963referring to the forward declaration record of user-defined record types. Only
1964"symbol" records in the ``.debug$S`` streams may refer to complete,
1965non-forward-declaration type records.
1966
1967Working with CodeView
1968---------------------
1969
1970These are instructions for some common tasks for developers working to improve
1971LLVM's CodeView support. Most of them revolve around using the CodeView dumper
1972embedded in ``llvm-readobj``.
1973
1974* Testing MSVC's output::
1975
1976    $ cl -c -Z7 foo.cpp # Use /Z7 to keep types in the object file
1977    $ llvm-readobj --codeview foo.obj
1978
1979* Getting LLVM IR debug info out of Clang::
1980
1981    $ clang -g -gcodeview --target=x86_64-windows-msvc foo.cpp -S -emit-llvm
1982
1983  Use this to generate LLVM IR for LLVM test cases.
1984
1985* Generate and dump CodeView from LLVM IR metadata::
1986
1987    $ llc foo.ll -filetype=obj -o foo.obj
1988    $ llvm-readobj --codeview foo.obj > foo.txt
1989
1990  Use this pattern in lit test cases and FileCheck the output of llvm-readobj
1991
1992Improving LLVM's CodeView support is a process of finding interesting type
1993records, constructing a C++ test case that makes MSVC emit those records,
1994dumping the records, understanding them, and then generating equivalent records
1995in LLVM's backend.
1996
1997Testing Debug Info Preservation in Optimizations
1998================================================
1999
2000The following paragraphs are an introduction to the debugify utility
2001and examples of how to use it in regression tests to check debug info
2002preservation after optimizations.
2003
2004The ``debugify`` utility
2005------------------------
2006
2007The ``debugify`` synthetic debug info testing utility consists of two
2008main parts. The ``debugify`` pass and the ``check-debugify`` one. They are
2009meant to be used with ``opt`` for development purposes.
2010
2011The first applies synthetic debug information to every instruction of the module,
2012while the latter checks that this DI is still available after an optimization
2013has occurred, reporting any errors/warnings while doing so.
2014
2015The instructions are assigned sequentially increasing line locations,
2016and are immediately used by debug value intrinsics when possible.
2017
2018For example, here is a module before:
2019
2020.. code-block:: llvm
2021
2022   define void @f(i32* %x) {
2023   entry:
2024     %x.addr = alloca i32*, align 8
2025     store i32* %x, i32** %x.addr, align 8
2026     %0 = load i32*, i32** %x.addr, align 8
2027     store i32 10, i32* %0, align 4
2028     ret void
2029   }
2030
2031and after running ``opt -debugify``  on it we get:
2032
2033.. code-block:: text
2034
2035   define void @f(i32* %x) !dbg !6 {
2036   entry:
2037     %x.addr = alloca i32*, align 8, !dbg !12
2038     call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32** %x.addr, metadata !9, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !12
2039     store i32* %x, i32** %x.addr, align 8, !dbg !13
2040     %0 = load i32*, i32** %x.addr, align 8, !dbg !14
2041     call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32* %0, metadata !11, metadata !DIExpression()), !dbg !14
2042     store i32 10, i32* %0, align 4, !dbg !15
2043     ret void, !dbg !16
2044   }
2045
2046   !llvm.dbg.cu = !{!0}
2047   !llvm.debugify = !{!3, !4}
2048   !llvm.module.flags = !{!5}
2049
2050   !0 = distinct !DICompileUnit(language: DW_LANG_C, file: !1, producer: "debugify", isOptimized: true, runtimeVersion: 0, emissionKind: FullDebug, enums: !2)
2051   !1 = !DIFile(filename: "debugify-sample.ll", directory: "/")
2052   !2 = !{}
2053   !3 = !{i32 5}
2054   !4 = !{i32 2}
2055   !5 = !{i32 2, !"Debug Info Version", i32 3}
2056   !6 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", linkageName: "f", scope: null, file: !1, line: 1, type: !7, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 1, isOptimized: true, unit: !0, retainedNodes: !8)
2057   !7 = !DISubroutineType(types: !2)
2058   !8 = !{!9, !11}
2059   !9 = !DILocalVariable(name: "1", scope: !6, file: !1, line: 1, type: !10)
2060   !10 = !DIBasicType(name: "ty64", size: 64, encoding: DW_ATE_unsigned)
2061   !11 = !DILocalVariable(name: "2", scope: !6, file: !1, line: 3, type: !10)
2062   !12 = !DILocation(line: 1, column: 1, scope: !6)
2063   !13 = !DILocation(line: 2, column: 1, scope: !6)
2064   !14 = !DILocation(line: 3, column: 1, scope: !6)
2065   !15 = !DILocation(line: 4, column: 1, scope: !6)
2066   !16 = !DILocation(line: 5, column: 1, scope: !6)
2067
2068The following is an example of the -check-debugify output:
2069
2070.. code-block:: none
2071
2072   $ opt -enable-debugify -loop-vectorize llvm/test/Transforms/LoopVectorize/i8-induction.ll -disable-output
2073   ERROR: Instruction with empty DebugLoc in function f --  %index = phi i32 [ 0, %vector.ph ], [ %index.next, %vector.body ]
2074
2075Errors/warnings can range from instructions with empty debug location to an
2076instruction having a type that's incompatible with the source variable it describes,
2077all the way to missing lines and missing debug value intrinsics.
2078
2079Fixing errors
2080^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2081
2082Each of the errors above has a relevant API available to fix it.
2083
2084* In the case of missing debug location, ``Instruction::setDebugLoc`` or possibly
2085  ``IRBuilder::setCurrentDebugLocation`` when using a Builder and the new location
2086  should be reused.
2087
2088* When a debug value has incompatible type ``llvm::replaceAllDbgUsesWith`` can be used.
2089  After a RAUW call an incompatible type error can occur because RAUW does not handle
2090  widening and narrowing of variables while ``llvm::replaceAllDbgUsesWith`` does. It is
2091  also capable of changing the DWARF expression used by the debugger to describe the variable.
2092  It also prevents use-before-def by salvaging or deleting invalid debug values.
2093
2094* When a debug value is missing ``llvm::salvageDebugInfo`` can be used when no replacement
2095  exists, or ``llvm::replaceAllDbgUsesWith`` when a replacement exists.
2096
2097Using ``debugify``
2098------------------
2099
2100In order for ``check-debugify`` to work, the DI must be coming from
2101``debugify``. Thus, modules with existing DI will be skipped.
2102
2103The most straightforward way to use ``debugify`` is as follows::
2104
2105  $ opt -debugify -pass-to-test -check-debugify sample.ll
2106
2107This will inject synthetic DI to ``sample.ll`` run the ``pass-to-test``
2108and then check for missing DI.
2109
2110Some other ways to run debugify are avaliable:
2111
2112.. code-block:: bash
2113
2114   # Same as the above example.
2115   $ opt -enable-debugify -pass-to-test sample.ll
2116
2117   # Suppresses verbose debugify output.
2118   $ opt -enable-debugify -debugify-quiet -pass-to-test sample.ll
2119
2120   # Prepend -debugify before and append -check-debugify -strip after
2121   # each pass on the pipeline (similar to -verify-each).
2122   $ opt -debugify-each -O2 sample.ll
2123
2124``debugify`` can also be used to test a backend, e.g:
2125
2126.. code-block:: bash
2127
2128   $ opt -debugify < sample.ll | llc -o -
2129
2130``debugify`` in regression tests
2131^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
2132
2133The ``-debugify`` pass is especially helpful when it comes to testing that
2134a given pass preserves DI while transforming the module. For this to work,
2135the ``-debugify`` output must be stable enough to use in regression tests.
2136Changes to this pass are not allowed to break existing tests.
2137
2138It allows us to test for DI loss in the same tests we check that the
2139transformation is actually doing what it should.
2140
2141Here is an example from ``test/Transforms/InstCombine/cast-mul-select.ll``:
2142
2143.. code-block:: llvm
2144
2145   ; RUN: opt < %s -debugify -instcombine -S | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=DEBUGINFO
2146
2147   define i32 @mul(i32 %x, i32 %y) {
2148   ; DBGINFO-LABEL: @mul(
2149   ; DBGINFO-NEXT:    [[C:%.*]] = mul i32 {{.*}}
2150   ; DBGINFO-NEXT:    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 [[C]]
2151   ; DBGINFO-NEXT:    [[D:%.*]] = and i32 {{.*}}
2152   ; DBGINFO-NEXT:    call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 [[D]]
2153
2154     %A = trunc i32 %x to i8
2155     %B = trunc i32 %y to i8
2156     %C = mul i8 %A, %B
2157     %D = zext i8 %C to i32
2158     ret i32 %D
2159   }
2160
2161Here we test that the two ``dbg.value`` instrinsics are preserved and
2162are correctly pointing to the ``[[C]]`` and ``[[D]]`` variables.
2163
2164.. note::
2165
2166   Note, that when writing this kind of regression tests, it is important
2167   to make them as robust as possible. That's why we should try to avoid
2168   hardcoding line/variable numbers in check lines. If for example you test
2169   for a ``DILocation`` to have a specific line number, and someone later adds
2170   an instruction before the one we check the test will fail. In the cases this
2171   can't be avoided (say, if a test wouldn't be precise enough), moving the
2172   test to its own file is preferred.
2173