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| <title>Source Level Debugging with LLVM</title> |
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| <body> |
| |
| <div class="doc_title">Source Level Debugging with LLVM</div> |
| |
| <table border="0" width="100%"> |
| <tr> |
| <td valign="top"> |
| <ul> |
| |
| <li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a> |
| <ol> |
| <li><a href="#phil">Philosophy behind LLVM debugging information</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#debugopt">Debugging optimized code</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#future">Future work</a></li> |
| </ol></li> |
| <li><a href="#llvm-db">Using the <tt>llvm-db</tt> tool</a> |
| <ol> |
| <li><a href="#limitations">Limitations of <tt>llvm-db</tt></a></li> |
| <li><a href="#sample">A sample <tt>llvm-db</tt> session</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#startup">Starting the debugger</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#commands">Commands recognized by the debugger</a></li> |
| </ol></li> |
| |
| <li><a href="#architecture">Architecture of the LLVM debugger</a> |
| <ol> |
| <li><a href="#arch_debugger">The Debugger and InferiorProcess classes</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#arch_info">The RuntimeInfo, ProgramInfo, and SourceLanguage classes</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#arch_llvm-db">The <tt>llvm-db</tt> tool</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#arch_todo">Short-term TODO list</a></li> |
| </ol></li> |
| |
| <li><a href="#format">Debugging information format</a> |
| <ol> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_anchors">Anchors for global objects</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_stoppoint">Representing stopping points in the source program</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_lifetime">Object lifetimes and scoping</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_descriptors">Object descriptor formats</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_source_files">Representation of source files</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_program_objects">Representation of program objects</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_object_contexts">Program object contexts</a></li> |
| </ul></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_intrinsics">Debugger intrinsic functions</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#format_common_tags">Values for debugger tags</a></li> |
| </ol></li> |
| <li><a href="#ccxx_frontend">C/C++ front-end specific debug information</a> |
| <ol> |
| <li><a href="#ccxx_pse">Program Scope Entries</a> |
| <ul> |
| <li><a href="#ccxx_compilation_units">Compilation unit entries</a></li> |
| <li><a href="#ccxx_modules">Module, namespace, and importing entries</a></li> |
| </ul></li> |
| <li><a href="#ccxx_dataobjects">Data objects (program variables)</a></li> |
| </ol></li> |
| </ul> |
| </td> |
| <td align="right" valign="top"> |
| <img src="img/venusflytrap.jpg" alt="A leafy and green bug eater" width="247" |
| height="369"> |
| </td> |
| </tr> |
| </table> |
| |
| <div class="doc_author"> |
| <p>Written by <a href="mailto:sabre@nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a></p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| <div class="doc_section"><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></div> <!-- |
| *********************************************************************** --> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>This document is the central repository for all information pertaining to |
| debug information in LLVM. It describes the <a href="#llvm-db">user |
| interface</a> for the <a href="CommandGuide/llvm-db.html"><tt>llvm-db</tt> |
| tool</a>, which provides a powerful <a href="#llvm-db">source-level debugger</a> |
| to users of LLVM-based compilers. It then describes the <a |
| href="#architecture">various components</a> that make up the debugger and the |
| libraries which future clients may use. Finally, it describes the <a |
| href="#format">actual format that the LLVM debug information</a> takes, |
| which is useful for those interested in creating front-ends or dealing directly |
| with the information.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="phil">Philosophy behind LLVM debugging information</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>The idea of the LLVM debugging information is to capture how the important |
| pieces of the source-language's Abstract Syntax Tree map onto LLVM code. |
| Several design aspects have shaped the solution that appears here. The |
| important ones are:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| <li>Debugging information should have very little impact on the rest of the |
| compiler. No transformations, analyses, or code generators should need to be |
| modified because of debugging information.</li> |
| |
| <li>LLVM optimizations should interact in <a href="#debugopt">well-defined and |
| easily described ways</a> with the debugging information.</li> |
| |
| <li>Because LLVM is designed to support arbitrary programming languages, |
| LLVM-to-LLVM tools should not need to know anything about the semantics of the |
| source-level-language.</li> |
| |
| <li>Source-level languages are often <b>widely</b> different from one another. |
| LLVM should not put any restrictions of the flavor of the source-language, and |
| the debugging information should work with any language.</li> |
| |
| <li>With code generator support, it should be possible to use an LLVM compiler |
| to compile a program to native machine code and standard debugging formats. |
| This allows compatibility with traditional machine-code level debuggers, like |
| GDB or DBX.</li> |
| |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>The approach used by the LLVM implementation is to use a small set of <a |
| href="#format_common_intrinsics">intrinsic functions</a> to define a mapping |
| between LLVM program objects and the source-level objects. The description of |
| the source-level program is maintained in LLVM global variables in an <a |
| href="#ccxx_frontend">implementation-defined format</a> (the C/C++ front-end |
| currently uses working draft 7 of the <a |
| href="http://www.eagercon.com/dwarf/dwarf3std.htm">Dwarf 3 standard</a>).</p> |
| |
| <p>When a program is debugged, the debugger interacts with the user and turns |
| the stored debug information into source-language specific information. As |
| such, the debugger must be aware of the source-language, and is thus tied to a |
| specific language of family of languages. The <a href="#llvm-db">LLVM |
| debugger</a> is designed to be modular in its support for source-languages.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="debugopt">Debugging optimized code</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>An extremely high priority of LLVM debugging information is to make it |
| interact well with optimizations and analysis. In particular, the LLVM debug |
| information provides the following guarantees:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| |
| <li>LLVM debug information <b>always provides information to accurately read the |
| source-level state of the program</b>, regardless of which LLVM optimizations |
| have been run, and without any modification to the optimizations themselves. |
| However, some optimizations may impact the ability to modify the current state |
| of the program with a debugger, such as setting program variables, or calling |
| function that have been deleted.</li> |
| |
| <li>LLVM optimizations gracefully interact with debugging information. If they |
| are not aware of debug information, they are automatically disabled as necessary |
| in the cases that would invalidate the debug info. This retains the LLVM |
| features making it easy to write new transformations.</li> |
| |
| <li>As desired, LLVM optimizations can be upgraded to be aware of the LLVM |
| debugging information, allowing them to update the debugging information as they |
| perform aggressive optimizations. This means that, with effort, the LLVM |
| optimizers could optimize debug code just as well as non-debug code.</li> |
| |
| <li>LLVM debug information does not prevent many important optimizations from |
| happening (for example inlining, basic block reordering/merging/cleanup, tail |
| duplication, etc), further reducing the amount of the compiler that eventually |
| is "aware" of debugging information.</li> |
| |
| <li>LLVM debug information is automatically optimized along with the rest of the |
| program, using existing facilities. For example, duplicate information is |
| automatically merged by the linker, and unused information is automatically |
| removed.</li> |
| |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>Basically, the debug information allows you to compile a program with |
| "<tt>-O0 -g</tt>" and get full debug information, allowing you to arbitrarily |
| modify the program as it executes from the debugger. Compiling a program with |
| "<tt>-O3 -g</tt>" gives you full debug information that is always available and |
| accurate for reading (e.g., you get accurate stack traces despite tail call |
| elimination and inlining), but you might lose the ability to modify the program |
| and call functions where were optimized out of the program, or inlined away |
| completely.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="future">Future work</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>There are several important extensions that could be eventually added to the |
| LLVM debugger. The most important extension would be to upgrade the LLVM code |
| generators to support debugging information. This would also allow, for |
| example, the X86 code generator to emit native objects that contain debugging |
| information consumable by traditional source-level debuggers like GDB or |
| DBX.</p> |
| |
| <p>Additionally, LLVM optimizations can be upgraded to incrementally update the |
| debugging information, <a href="#commands">new commands</a> can be added to the |
| debugger, and thread support could be added to the debugger.</p> |
| |
| <p>The "SourceLanguage" modules provided by <tt>llvm-db</tt> could be |
| substantially improved to provide good support for C++ language features like |
| namespaces and scoping rules.</p> |
| |
| <p>After working with the debugger for a while, perhaps the nicest improvement |
| would be to add some sort of line editor, such as GNU readline (but one that is |
| compatible with the LLVM license).</p> |
| |
| <p>For someone so inclined, it should be straight-forward to write different |
| front-ends for the LLVM debugger, as the LLVM debugging engine is cleanly |
| separated from the <tt>llvm-db</tt> front-end. A new LLVM GUI debugger or IDE |
| would be nice. :)</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| <div class="doc_section"> |
| <a name="llvm-db">Using the <tt>llvm-db</tt> tool</a> |
| </div> |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>The <tt>llvm-db</tt> tool provides a GDB-like interface for source-level |
| debugging of programs. This tool provides many standard commands for inspecting |
| and modifying the program as it executes, loading new programs, single stepping, |
| placing breakpoints, etc. This section describes how to use the debugger.</p> |
| |
| <p><tt>llvm-db</tt> has been designed to be as similar to GDB in its user |
| interface as possible. This should make it extremely easy to learn |
| <tt>llvm-db</tt> if you already know <tt>GDB</tt>. In general, <tt>llvm-db</tt> |
| provides the subset of GDB commands that are applicable to LLVM debugging users. |
| If there is a command missing that make a reasonable amount of sense within the |
| <a href="#limitations">limitations of <tt>llvm-db</tt></a>, please report it as |
| a bug or, better yet, submit a patch to add it. :)</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="limitations">Limitations of <tt>llvm-db</tt></a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p><tt>llvm-db</tt> is designed to be modular and easy to extend. This |
| extensibility was key to getting the debugger up-and-running quickly, because we |
| can start with simple-but-unsophisicated implementations of various components. |
| Because of this, it is currently missing many features, though they should be |
| easy to add over time (patches welcomed!). The biggest inherent limitations of |
| <tt>llvm-db</tt> are currently due to extremely simple <a |
| href="#arch_debugger">debugger backend</a> (implemented in |
| "lib/Debugger/UnixLocalInferiorProcess.cpp") which is designed to work without |
| any cooperation from the code generators. Because it is so simple, it suffers |
| from the following inherent limitations:</p> |
| |
| <ul> |
| |
| <li>Running a program in <tt>llvm-db</tt> is a bit slower than running it with |
| <tt>lli</tt> (i.e., in the JIT).</li> |
| |
| <li>Inspection of the target hardware is not supported. This means that you |
| cannot, for example, print the contents of X86 registers.</li> |
| |
| <li>Inspection of LLVM code is not supported. This means that you cannot print |
| the contents of arbitrary LLVM values, or use commands such as <tt>stepi</tt>. |
| This also means that you cannot debug code without debug information.</li> |
| |
| <li>Portions of the debugger run in the same address space as the program being |
| debugged. This means that memory corruption by the program could trample on |
| portions of the debugger.</li> |
| |
| <li>Attaching to existing processes and core files is not currently |
| supported.</li> |
| |
| </ul> |
| |
| <p>That said, the debugger is still quite useful, and all of these limitations |
| can be eliminated by integrating support for the debugger into the code |
| generators, and writing a new <a href="#arch_debugger">InferiorProcess</a> |
| subclass to use it. See the <a href="#future">future work</a> section for ideas |
| of how to extend the LLVM debugger despite these limitations.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="sample">A sample <tt>llvm-db</tt> session</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>TODO: this is obviously lame, when more is implemented, this can be much |
| better.</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| $ <b>llvm-db funccall</b> |
| llvm-db: The LLVM source-level debugger |
| Loading program... successfully loaded 'funccall.bc'! |
| (llvm-db) <b>create</b> |
| Starting program: funccall.bc |
| main at funccall.c:9:2 |
| 9 -> q = 0; |
| (llvm-db) <b>list main</b> |
| 4 void foo() { |
| 5 int t = q; |
| 6 q = t + 1; |
| 7 } |
| 8 int main() { |
| 9 -> q = 0; |
| 10 foo(); |
| 11 q = q - 1; |
| 12 |
| 13 return q; |
| (llvm-db) <b>list</b> |
| 14 } |
| (llvm-db) <b>step</b> |
| 10 -> foo(); |
| (llvm-db) <b>s</b> |
| foo at funccall.c:5:2 |
| 5 -> int t = q; |
| (llvm-db) <b>bt</b> |
| #0 -> 0x85ffba0 in foo at funccall.c:5:2 |
| #1 0x85ffd98 in main at funccall.c:10:2 |
| (llvm-db) <b>finish</b> |
| main at funccall.c:11:2 |
| 11 -> q = q - 1; |
| (llvm-db) <b>s</b> |
| 13 -> return q; |
| (llvm-db) <b>s</b> |
| The program stopped with exit code 0 |
| (llvm-db) <b>quit</b> |
| $ |
| </pre> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="startup">Starting the debugger</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>There are three ways to start up the <tt>llvm-db</tt> debugger:</p> |
| |
| <p>When run with no options, just <tt>llvm-db</tt>, the debugger starts up |
| without a program loaded at all. You must use the <a |
| href="#c_file"><tt>file</tt> command</a> to load a program, and the <a |
| href="c_set_args"><tt>set args</tt></a> or <a href="#c_run"><tt>run</tt></a> |
| commands to specify the arguments for the program.</p> |
| |
| <p>If you start the debugger with one argument, as <tt>llvm-db |
| <program></tt>, the debugger will start up and load in the specified |
| program. You can then optionally specify arguments to the program with the <a |
| href="c_set_args"><tt>set args</tt></a> or <a href="#c_run"><tt>run</tt></a> |
| commands.</p> |
| |
| <p>The third way to start the program is with the <tt>--args</tt> option. This |
| option allows you to specify the program to load and the arguments to start out |
| with. <!-- No options to <tt>llvm-db</tt> may be specified after the |
| <tt>-args</tt> option. --> Example use: <tt>llvm-db --args ls /home</tt></p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="commands">Commands recognized by the debugger</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>FIXME: this needs work obviously. See the <a |
| href="http://sources.redhat.com/gdb/documentation/">GDB documentation</a> for |
| information about what these do, or try '<tt>help [command]</tt>' within |
| <tt>llvm-db</tt> to get information.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <h2>General usage:</h2> |
| <ul> |
| <li>help [command]</li> |
| <li>quit</li> |
| <li><a name="c_file">file</a> [program]</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h2>Program inspection and interaction:</h2> |
| <ul> |
| <li>create (start the program, stopping it ASAP in <tt>main</tt>)</li> |
| <li>kill</li> |
| <li>run [args]</li> |
| <li>step [num]</li> |
| <li>next [num]</li> |
| <li>cont</li> |
| <li>finish</li> |
| |
| <li>list [start[, end]]</li> |
| <li>info source</li> |
| <li>info sources</li> |
| <li>info functions</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h2>Call stack inspection:</h2> |
| <ul> |
| <li>backtrace</li> |
| <li>up [n]</li> |
| <li>down [n]</li> |
| <li>frame [n]</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| |
| <h2>Debugger inspection and interaction:</h2> |
| <ul> |
| <li>info target</li> |
| <li>show prompt</li> |
| <li>set prompt</li> |
| <li>show listsize</li> |
| <li>set listsize</li> |
| <li>show language</li> |
| <li>set language</li> |
| <li>show args</li> |
| <li>set args [args]</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h2>TODO:</h2> |
| <ul> |
| <li>info frame</li> |
| <li>break</li> |
| <li>print</li> |
| <li>ptype</li> |
| |
| <li>info types</li> |
| <li>info variables</li> |
| <li>info program</li> |
| |
| <li>info args</li> |
| <li>info locals</li> |
| <li>info catch</li> |
| <li>... many others</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| <div class="doc_section"> |
| <a name="architecture">Architecture of the LLVM debugger</a> |
| </div> |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>The LLVM debugger is built out of three distinct layers of software. These |
| layers provide clients with different interface options depending on what pieces |
| of they want to implement themselves, and it also promotes code modularity and |
| good design. The three layers are the <a href="#arch_debugger">Debugger |
| interface</a>, the <a href="#arch_info">"info" interfaces</a>, and the <a |
| href="#arch_llvm-db"><tt>llvm-db</tt> tool</a> itself.</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="arch_debugger">The Debugger and InferiorProcess classes</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>The Debugger class (defined in the <tt>include/llvm/Debugger/</tt> directory) |
| is a low-level class which is used to maintain information about the loaded |
| program, as well as start and stop the program running as necessary. This class |
| does not provide any high-level analysis or control over the program, only |
| exposing simple interfaces like <tt>load/unloadProgram</tt>, |
| <tt>create/killProgram</tt>, <tt>step/next/finish/contProgram</tt>, and |
| low-level methods for installing breakpoints.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The Debugger class is itself a wrapper around the lowest-level InferiorProcess |
| class. This class is used to represent an instance of the program running under |
| debugger control. The InferiorProcess class can be implemented in different |
| ways for different targets and execution scenarios (e.g., remote debugging). |
| The InferiorProcess class exposes a small and simple collection of interfaces |
| which are useful for inspecting the current state of the program (such as |
| collecting stack trace information, reading the memory image of the process, |
| etc). The interfaces in this class are designed to be as low-level and simple |
| as possible, to make it easy to create new instances of the class. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The Debugger class exposes the currently active instance of InferiorProcess |
| through the <tt>Debugger::getRunningProcess</tt> method, which returns a |
| <tt>const</tt> reference to the class. This means that clients of the Debugger |
| class can only <b>inspect</b> the running instance of the program directly. To |
| change the executing process in some way, they must use the interces exposed by |
| the Debugger class. |
| </p> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="arch_info">The RuntimeInfo, ProgramInfo, and SourceLanguage classes</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p> |
| The next-highest level of debugger abstraction is provided through the |
| ProgramInfo, RuntimeInfo, SourceLanguage and related classes (also defined in |
| the <tt>include/llvm/Debugger/</tt> directory). These classes efficiently |
| decode the debugging information and low-level interfaces exposed by |
| InferiorProcess into a higher-level representation, suitable for analysis by the |
| debugger. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The ProgramInfo class exposes a variety of different kinds of information about |
| the program objects in the source-level-language. The SourceFileInfo class |
| represents a source-file in the program (e.g. a .cpp or .h file). The |
| SourceFileInfo class captures information such as which SourceLanguage was used |
| to compile the file, where the debugger can get access to the actual file text |
| (which is lazily loaded on demand), etc. The SourceFunctionInfo class |
| represents a... <b>FIXME: finish</b>. The ProgramInfo class provides interfaces |
| to lazily find and decode the information needed to create the Source*Info |
| classes requested by the debugger. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The RuntimeInfo class exposes information about the currently executed program, |
| by decoding information from the InferiorProcess and ProgramInfo classes. It |
| provides a StackFrame class which provides an easy-to-use interface for |
| inspecting the current and suspended stack frames in the program. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| The SourceLanguage class is an abstract interface used by the debugger to |
| perform all source-language-specific tasks. For example, this interface is used |
| by the ProgramInfo class to decode language-specific types and functions and by |
| the debugger front-end (such as <a href="#arch_llvm-db"><tt>llvm-db</tt></a> to |
| evaluate source-langauge expressions typed into the debugger. This class uses |
| the RuntimeInfo & ProgramInfo classes to get information about the current |
| execution context and the loaded program, respectively. |
| </p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="arch_llvm-db">The <tt>llvm-db</tt> tool</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p> |
| The <tt>llvm-db</tt> is designed to be a debugger providing an interface as <a |
| href="#llvm-db">similar to GDB</a> as reasonable, but no more so than that. |
| Because the <a href="#arch_debugger">Debugger</a> and <a |
| href="#arch_info">info</a> classes implement all of the heavy lifting and |
| analysis, <tt>llvm-db</tt> (which lives in <tt>llvm/tools/llvm-db</tt>) consists |
| mainly of of code to interact with the user and parse commands. The CLIDebugger |
| constructor registers all of the builtin commands for the debugger, and each |
| command is implemented as a CLIDebugger::[name]Command method. |
| </p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="arch_todo">Short-term TODO list</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p> |
| FIXME: this section will eventually go away. These are notes to myself of |
| things that should be implemented, but haven't yet. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>Breakpoints:</b> Support is already implemented in the 'InferiorProcess' |
| class, though it hasn't been tested yet. To finish breakpoint support, we need |
| to implement breakCommand (which should reuse the linespec parser from the list |
| command), and handle the fact that 'break foo' or 'break file.c:53' may insert |
| multiple breakpoints. Also, if you say 'break file.c:53' and there is no |
| stoppoint on line 53, the breakpoint should go on the next available line. My |
| idea was to have the Debugger class provide a "Breakpoint" class which |
| encapsulated this messiness, giving the debugger front-end a simple interface. |
| The debugger front-end would have to map the really complex semantics of |
| temporary breakpoints and 'conditional' breakpoints onto this intermediate |
| level. Also, breakpoints should survive as much as possible across program |
| reloads. |
| </p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>UnixLocalInferiorProcess.cpp speedup</b>: There is no reason for the debugged |
| process to code gen the globals corresponding to debug information. The |
| IntrinsicLowering object could instead change descriptors into constant expr |
| casts of the constant address of the LLVM objects for the descriptors. This |
| would also allow us to eliminate the mapping back and forth between physical |
| addresses that must be done.</p> |
| |
| <p> |
| <b>Process deaths</b>: The InferiorProcessDead exception should be extended to |
| know "how" a process died, i.e., it was killed by a signal. This is easy to |
| collect in the UnixLocalInferiorProcess, we just need to represent it.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| <div class="doc_section"> |
| <a name="format">Debugging information format</a> |
| </div> |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>LLVM debugging information has been carefully designed to make it possible |
| for the optimizer to optimize the program and debugging information without |
| necessarily having to know anything about debugging information. In particular, |
| the global constant merging pass automatically eliminates duplicated debugging |
| information (often caused by header files), the global dead code elimination |
| pass automatically deletes debugging information for a function if it decides to |
| delete the function, and the linker eliminates debug information when it merges |
| <tt>linkonce</tt> functions.</p> |
| |
| <p>To do this, most of the debugging information (descriptors for types, |
| variables, functions, source files, etc) is inserted by the language front-end |
| in the form of LLVM global variables. These LLVM global variables are no |
| different from any other global variables, except that they have a web of LLVM |
| intrinsic functions that point to them. If the last references to a particular |
| piece of debugging information are deleted (for example, by the |
| <tt>-globaldce</tt> pass), the extraneous debug information will automatically |
| become dead and be removed by the optimizer.</p> |
| |
| <p>The debugger is designed to be agnostic about the contents of most of the |
| debugging information. It uses a <a href="#arch_info">source-language-specific |
| module</a> to decode the information that represents variables, types, |
| functions, namespaces, etc: this allows for arbitrary source-language semantics |
| and type-systems to be used, as long as there is a module written for the |
| debugger to interpret the information.</p> |
| |
| <p>To provide basic functionality, the LLVM debugger does have to make some |
| assumptions about the source-level language being debugged, though it keeps |
| these to a minimum. The only common features that the LLVM debugger assumes |
| exist are <a href="#format_common_source_files">source files</a>, and <a |
| href="#format_program_objects">program objects</a>. These abstract objects are |
| used by the debugger to form stack traces, show information about local |
| variables, etc.</p> |
| |
| <p>This section of the documentation first describes the representation aspects |
| common to any source-language. The <a href="#ccxx_frontend">next section</a> |
| describes the data layout conventions used by the C and C++ front-ends.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_anchors">Anchors for global objects</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>One important aspect of the LLVM debug representation is that it allows the |
| LLVM debugger to efficiently index all of the global objects without having the |
| scan the program. To do this, all of the global objects use "anchor" globals of |
| type "<tt>{}</tt>", with designated names. These anchor objects obviously do |
| not contain any content or meaning by themselves, but all of the global objects |
| of a particular type (e.g., source file descriptors) contain a pointer to the |
| anchor. This pointer allows the debugger to use def-use chains to find all |
| global objects of that type.</p> |
| |
| <p>So far, the following names are recognized as anchors by the LLVM |
| debugger:</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| %<a href="#format_common_source_files">llvm.dbg.translation_units</a> = linkonce global {} {} |
| %<a href="#format_program_objects">llvm.dbg.globals</a> = linkonce global {} {} |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p>Using anchors in this way (where the source file descriptor points to the |
| anchors, as opposed to having a list of source file descriptors) allows for the |
| standard dead global elimination and merging passes to automatically remove |
| unused debugging information. If the globals were kept track of through lists, |
| there would always be an object pointing to the descriptors, thus would never be |
| deleted.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_stoppoint"> |
| Representing stopping points in the source program |
| </a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>LLVM debugger "stop points" are a key part of the debugging representation |
| that allows the LLVM to maintain simple semantics for <a |
| href="#debugopt">debugging optimized code</a>. The basic idea is that the |
| front-end inserts calls to the <tt>%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</tt> intrinsic function |
| at every point in the program where the debugger should be able to inspect the |
| program (these correspond to places the debugger stops when you "<tt>step</tt>" |
| through it). The front-end can choose to place these as fine-grained as it |
| would like (for example, before every subexpression evaluated), but it is |
| recommended to only put them after every source statement that includes |
| executable code.</p> |
| |
| <p>Using calls to this intrinsic function to demark legal points for the |
| debugger to inspect the program automatically disables any optimizations that |
| could potentially confuse debugging information. To non-debug-information-aware |
| transformations, these calls simply look like calls to an external function, |
| which they must assume to do anything (including reading or writing to any part |
| of reachable memory). On the other hand, it does not impact many optimizations, |
| such as code motion of non-trapping instructions, nor does it impact |
| optimization of subexpressions, code duplication transformations, or basic-block |
| reordering transformations.</p> |
| |
| <p>An important aspect of the calls to the <tt>%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</tt> |
| intrinsic is that the function-local debugging information is woven together |
| with use-def chains. This makes it easy for the debugger to, for example, |
| locate the 'next' stop point. For a concrete example of stop points, see the |
| example in <a href="#format_common_lifetime">the next section</a>.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_lifetime">Object lifetimes and scoping</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>In many languages, the local variables in functions can have their lifetime |
| or scope limited to a subset of a function. In the C family of languages, for |
| example, variables are only live (readable and writable) within the source block |
| that they are defined in. In functional languages, values are only readable |
| after they have been defined. Though this is a very obvious concept, it is also |
| non-trivial to model in LLVM, because it has no notion of scoping in this sense, |
| and does not want to be tied to a language's scoping rules.</p> |
| |
| <p>In order to handle this, the LLVM debug format uses the notion of "regions" |
| of a function, delineated by calls to intrinsic functions. These intrinsic |
| functions define new regions of the program and indicate when the region |
| lifetime expires. Consider the following C fragment, for example:</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| 1. void foo() { |
| 2. int X = ...; |
| 3. int Y = ...; |
| 4. { |
| 5. int Z = ...; |
| 6. ... |
| 7. } |
| 8. ... |
| 9. } |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p>Compiled to LLVM, this function would be represented like this (FIXME: CHECK |
| AND UPDATE THIS):</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| void %foo() { |
| %X = alloca int |
| %Y = alloca int |
| %Z = alloca int |
| <a name="#icl_ex_D1">%D1</a> = call {}* %llvm.dbg.func.start(<a href="#format_program_objects">%lldb.global</a>* %d.foo) |
| %D2 = call {}* <a href="#format_common_stoppoint">%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</a>({}* %D1, uint 2, uint 2, <a href="#format_common_source_files">%lldb.compile_unit</a>* %file) |
| |
| %D3 = call {}* %llvm.dbg.DEFINEVARIABLE({}* %D2, ...) |
| <i>;; Evaluate expression on line 2, assigning to X.</i> |
| %D4 = call {}* <a href="#format_common_stoppoint">%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</a>({}* %D3, uint 3, uint 2, <a href="#format_common_source_files">%lldb.compile_unit</a>* %file) |
| |
| %D5 = call {}* %llvm.dbg.DEFINEVARIABLE({}* %D4, ...) |
| <i>;; Evaluate expression on line 3, assigning to Y.</i> |
| %D6 = call {}* <a href="#format_common_stoppoint">%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</a>({}* %D5, uint 5, uint 4, <a href="#format_common_source_files">%lldb.compile_unit</a>* %file) |
| |
| <a name="#icl_ex_D1">%D7</a> = call {}* %llvm.region.start({}* %D6) |
| %D8 = call {}* %llvm.dbg.DEFINEVARIABLE({}* %D7, ...) |
| <i>;; Evaluate expression on line 5, assigning to Z.</i> |
| %D9 = call {}* <a href="#format_common_stoppoint">%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</a>({}* %D8, uint 6, uint 4, <a href="#format_common_source_files">%lldb.compile_unit</a>* %file) |
| |
| <i>;; Code for line 6.</i> |
| %D10 = call {}* %llvm.region.end({}* %D9) |
| %D11 = call {}* <a href="#format_common_stoppoint">%llvm.dbg.stoppoint</a>({}* %D10, uint 8, uint 2, <a href="#format_common_source_files">%lldb.compile_unit</a>* %file) |
| |
| <i>;; Code for line 8.</i> |
| <a name="#icl_ex_D1">%D12</a> = call {}* %llvm.region.end({}* %D11) |
| ret void |
| } |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p>This example illustrates a few important details about the LLVM debugging |
| information. In particular, it shows how the various intrinsics used are woven |
| together with def-use and use-def chains, similar to how <a |
| href="#format_common_anchors">anchors</a> are used with globals. This allows |
| the debugger to analyze the relationship between statements, variable |
| definitions, and the code used to implement the function.</p> |
| |
| <p>In this example, two explicit regions are defined, one with the <a |
| href="#icl_ex_D1">definition of the <tt>%D1</tt> variable</a> and one with the |
| <a href="#icl_ex_D7">definition of <tt>%D7</tt></a>. In the case of |
| <tt>%D1</tt>, the debug information indicates that the function whose <a |
| href="#format_program_objects">descriptor</a> is specified as an argument to the |
| intrinsic. This defines a new stack frame whose lifetime ends when the region |
| is ended by <a href="#icl_ex_D12">the <tt>%D12</tt> call</a>.</p> |
| |
| <p>Using regions to represent the boundaries of source-level functions allow |
| LLVM interprocedural optimizations to arbitrarily modify LLVM functions without |
| having to worry about breaking mapping information between the LLVM code and the |
| and source-level program. In particular, the inliner requires no modification |
| to support inlining with debugging information: there is no explicit correlation |
| drawn between LLVM functions and their source-level counterparts (note however, |
| that if the inliner inlines all instances of a non-strong-linkage function into |
| its caller that it will not be possible for the user to manually invoke the |
| inlined function from the debugger).</p> |
| |
| <p>Once the function has been defined, the <a |
| href="#format_common_stoppoint">stopping point</a> corresponding to line #2 of |
| the function is encountered. At this point in the function, <b>no</b> local |
| variables are live. As lines 2 and 3 of the example are executed, their |
| variable definitions are automatically introduced into the program, without the |
| need to specify a new region. These variables do not require new regions to be |
| introduced because they go out of scope at the same point in the program: line |
| 9.</p> |
| |
| <p>In contrast, the <tt>Z</tt> variable goes out of scope at a different time, |
| on line 7. For this reason, it is defined within <a href="#icl_ex_D7">the |
| <tt>%D7</tt> region</a>, which kills the availability of <tt>Z</tt> before the |
| code for line 8 is executed. In this way, regions can support arbitrary |
| source-language scoping rules, as long as they can only be nested (ie, one scope |
| cannot partially overlap with a part of another scope).</p> |
| |
| <p>It is worth noting that this scoping mechanism is used to control scoping of |
| all declarations, not just variable declarations. For example, the scope of a |
| C++ using declaration is controlled with this, and the <tt>llvm-db</tt> C++ |
| support routines could use this to change how name lookup is performed (though |
| this is not implemented yet).</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_descriptors">Object descriptor formats</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>The LLVM debugger expects the descriptors for program objects to start in a |
| canonical format, but the descriptors can include additional information |
| appended at the end that is source-language specific. All LLVM debugging |
| information is versioned, allowing backwards compatibility in the case that the |
| core structures need to change in some way. Also, all debugging information |
| objects start with a <a href="#format_common_tags">tag</a> to indicate what type |
| of object it is. The source-language is allows to define its own objects, by |
| using unreserved tag numbers.</p> |
| |
| <p>The lowest-level descriptor are those describing <a |
| href="#format_common_source_files">the files containing the program source |
| code</a>, as most other descriptors (sometimes indirectly) refer to them. |
| </p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ -> |
| <div class="doc_subsubsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_source_files">Representation of source files</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p> |
| Source file descriptors are patterned after the Dwarf "compile_unit" object. |
| The descriptor currently is defined to have at least the following LLVM |
| type entries:</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| %lldb.compile_unit = type { |
| uint, <i>;; Tag: <a href="#tag_compile_unit">LLVM_COMPILE_UNIT</a></i> |
| ushort, <i>;; LLVM debug version number</i> |
| ushort, <i>;; Dwarf language identifier</i> |
| sbyte*, <i>;; Filename</i> |
| sbyte*, <i>;; Working directory when compiled</i> |
| sbyte* <i>;; Producer of the debug information</i> |
| } |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p> |
| These descriptors contain the version number for the debug info, a source |
| language ID for the file (we use the Dwarf 3.0 ID numbers, such as |
| <tt>DW_LANG_C89</tt>, <tt>DW_LANG_C_plus_plus</tt>, <tt>DW_LANG_Cobol74</tt>, |
| etc), three strings describing the filename, working directory of the compiler, |
| and an identifier string for the compiler that produced it. Note that actual |
| compile_unit declarations must also include an <a |
| href="#format_common_anchors">anchor</a> to <tt>llvm.dbg.translation_units</tt>, |
| but it is not specified where the anchor is to be located. Here is an example |
| descriptor: |
| </p> |
| |
| <p><pre> |
| %arraytest_source_file = internal constant %lldb.compile_unit { |
| <a href="#tag_compile_unit">uint 17</a>, ; Tag value |
| ushort 0, ; Version #0 |
| ushort 1, ; DW_LANG_C89 |
| sbyte* getelementptr ([12 x sbyte]* %.str_1, long 0, long 0), ; filename |
| sbyte* getelementptr ([12 x sbyte]* %.str_2, long 0, long 0), ; working dir |
| sbyte* getelementptr ([12 x sbyte]* %.str_3, long 0, long 0), ; producer |
| {}* %llvm.dbg.translation_units ; Anchor |
| } |
| %.str_1 = internal constant [12 x sbyte] c"arraytest.c\00" |
| %.str_2 = internal constant [12 x sbyte] c"/home/sabre\00" |
| %.str_3 = internal constant [12 x sbyte] c"llvmgcc 3.4\00" |
| </pre></p> |
| |
| <p> |
| Note that the LLVM constant merging pass should eliminate duplicate copies of |
| the strings that get emitted to each translation unit, such as the producer. |
| </p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- --> |
| <div class="doc_subsubsection"> |
| <a name="format_program_objects">Representation of program objects</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p> |
| The LLVM debugger needs to know about some source-language program objects, in |
| order to build stack traces, print information about local variables, and other |
| related activities. The LLVM debugger differentiates between three different |
| types of program objects: subprograms (functions, messages, methods, etc), |
| variables (locals and globals), and others. Because source-languages have |
| widely varying forms of these objects, the LLVM debugger expects only a few |
| fields in the descriptor for each object: |
| </p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| %lldb.object = type { |
| uint, <i>;; <a href="#format_common_tag">A tag</a></i> |
| <i>any</i>*, <i>;; The <a href="#format_common_object_contexts">context</a> for the object</i> |
| sbyte* <i>;; The object 'name'</i> |
| } |
| </pre> |
| |
| <p>The first field contains a tag for the descriptor. The second field contains |
| either a pointer to the descriptor for the containing <a |
| href="#format_common_source_files">source file</a>, or it contains a pointer to |
| another program object whose context pointer eventually reaches a source file. |
| Through this <a href="#format_common_object_contexts">context</a> pointer, the |
| LLVM debugger can establish the debug version number of the object.</p> |
| |
| <p>The third field contains a string that the debugger can use to identify the |
| object if it does not contain explicit support for the source-language in use |
| (ie, the 'unknown' source language handler uses this string). This should be |
| some sort of unmangled string that corresponds to the object, but it is a |
| quality of implementation issue what exactly it contains (it is legal, though |
| not useful, for all of these strings to be null).</p> |
| |
| <p>Note again that descriptors can be extended to include |
| source-language-specific information in addition to the fields required by the |
| LLVM debugger. See the <a href="#ccxx_descriptors">section on the C/C++ |
| front-end</a> for more information. Also remember that global objects |
| (functions, selectors, global variables, etc) must contain an <a |
| href="format_common_anchors">anchor</a> to the <tt>llvm.dbg.globals</tt> |
| variable.</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_object_contexts">Program object contexts</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <pre> |
| Allow source-language specific contexts, use to identify namespaces etc |
| Must end up in a source file descriptor. |
| Debugger core ignores all unknown context objects. |
| </pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_intrinsics">Debugger intrinsic functions</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <pre> |
| Define each intrinsics, as an extension of the language reference manual. |
| |
| llvm.dbg.stoppoint |
| llvm.dbg.region.start |
| llvm.dbg.region.end |
| llvm.dbg.function.start |
| llvm.dbg.declare |
| </pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="format_common_tags">Values for debugger tags</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>Happen to be the same value as the similarly named Dwarf-3 tags, this may |
| change in the future.</p> |
| |
| <pre> |
| <a name="tag_compile_unit">LLVM_COMPILE_UNIT</a> : 17 |
| <a name="tag_subprogram">LLVM_SUBPROGRAM</a> : 46 |
| <a name="tag_variable">LLVM_VARIABLE</a> : 52 |
| <!-- <a name="tag_formal_parameter">LLVM_FORMAL_PARAMETER : 5--> |
| </pre> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| <div class="doc_section"> |
| <a name="ccxx_frontend">C/C++ front-end specific debug information</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| |
| <p>The C and C++ front-ends represent information about the program in a format |
| that is effectively identical to <a |
| href="http://www.eagercon.com/dwarf/dwarf3std.htm">Dwarf 3.0</a> in terms of |
| information content. This allows code generators to trivially support native |
| debuggers by generating standard dwarf information, and contains enough |
| information for non-dwarf targets to translate it as needed.</p> |
| |
| <p>The basic debug information required by the debugger is (intentionally) |
| designed to be as minimal as possible. This basic information is so minimal |
| that it is unlikely that <b>any</b> source-language could be adequately |
| described by it. Because of this, the debugger format was designed for |
| extension to support source-language-specific information. The extended |
| descriptors are read and interpreted by the <a |
| href="#arch_info">language-specific</a> modules in the debugger if there is |
| support available, otherwise it is ignored.</p> |
| |
| <p>This section describes the extensions used to represent C and C++ programs. |
| Other languages could pattern themselves after this (which itself is tuned to |
| representing programs in the same way that Dwarf 3 does), or they could choose |
| to provide completely different extensions if they don't fit into the Dwarf |
| model. As support for debugging information gets added to the various LLVM |
| source-language front-ends, the information used should be documented here.</p> |
| |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="ccxx_pse">Program Scope Entries</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>TODO</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- --------------------------------------------------------------------------> |
| <div class="doc_subsubsection"> |
| <a name="ccxx_compilation_units">Compilation unit entries</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p> |
| Translation units do not add any information over the standard <a |
| href="#format_common_source_files">source file representation</a> already |
| expected by the debugger. As such, it uses descriptors of the type specified, |
| with a trailing <a href="#format_common_anchors">anchor</a>. |
| </p> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- --------------------------------------------------------------------------> |
| <div class="doc_subsubsection"> |
| <a name="ccxx_modules">Module, namespace, and importing entries</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>TODO</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| <!-- ======================================================================= --> |
| <div class="doc_subsection"> |
| <a name="ccxx_dataobjects">Data objects (program variables)</a> |
| </div> |
| |
| <div class="doc_text"> |
| <p>TODO</p> |
| </div> |
| |
| |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** --> |
| |
| <hr> |
| <address> |
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| <a href="mailto:sabre@nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a><br> |
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