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Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +00001#!/usr/bin/perl
2
Brian Gaeke3fb290e2003-07-03 21:44:32 +00003use Getopt::Std;
4
Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +00005sub parse_objdump_file {
6 my ($filename) = @_;
7 my @result;
8 open (INPUT, $filename) or die "$filename: $!\n";
9 while (<INPUT>) {
10 if (/\s*([0-9a-f]*):\t(([0-9a-f]{2} )+) *\t(.*)$/) {
11 my ($addr, $bytes, $instr) = ($1, $2, $4);
12 $addr = "0x" . $addr;
13 $bytes =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/; # trim any remaining whitespace
14 $instr =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/;
15 push (@result, {'addr' => $addr, 'bytes' => $bytes, 'instr' => $instr});
16 }
17 }
18 close INPUT;
19 return @result;
20}
21
22sub parse_gdb_file {
23 my ($filename) = @_;
24 my @result;
25 my $got_addr;
26 open (INPUT, $filename) or die "$filename: $!\n";
27 while (<INPUT>) {
28 if (/^(0x[0-9a-f]*):\t([^\t]*)\t[^:]*:\t((0x[0-9a-f]{2}\s*)+)\s*$/) {
29 my ($addr, $bytes, $instr) = ($1, $3, $2);
30 $bytes =~ s/0x//g;
31 $bytes =~ s/\s+/ /g; # regularize whitespace
32 $bytes =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/; # trim any remaining whitespace
33 $instr =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/;
34 push (@result, {'addr' => $addr, 'bytes' => $bytes, 'instr' => $instr});
35 } elsif (/^(0x[0-9a-f]*):\t$/) { # deal with gdb's line breaker
36 $got_addr = $1;
37 } elsif ($got_addr && /^ ([^\t]*)\t[^:]*:\t((0x[0-9a-f]{2}\s*)+)\s*$/) {
38 my ($addr, $bytes, $instr) = ($got_addr, $2, $1);
39 $bytes =~ s/0x//g;
40 $bytes =~ s/\s+/ /g; # regularize whitespace
41 $bytes =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/; # trim any remaining whitespace
42 $instr =~ s/\s*(.*\S)\s*/$1/;
43 push (@result, {'addr' => $addr, 'bytes' => $bytes, 'instr' => $instr});
44 undef $got_addr;
45 }
46 }
47 close INPUT;
48 return @result;
49}
50
51sub binary_diffs {
52 my ($objdump_file, $gdb_file) = @_;
53 my @file1 = parse_objdump_file ($objdump_file);
54 my @file2 = parse_gdb_file ($gdb_file);
55 my $lastrecord = ($#file1 >= $#file2) ? ($#file1) : ($#file2);
56 for (my $i = 0; $i <= $lastrecord; ++$i) {
57 my $d1 = $file1[$i];
58 my $d2 = $file2[$i];
59 if ($d1->{'bytes'} ne $d2->{'bytes'}) {
Brian Gaeke3fb290e2003-07-03 21:44:32 +000060 next if (($d1->{'instr'} eq $d2->{'instr'}) && $opt_d);
Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +000061 printf "0x%08x:\t%30s \t%s\n", 0+$d1->{'addr'}, $d1->{'bytes'}, $d1->{'instr'};
62 printf "0x%08x:\t%30s \t%s\n\n", 0+$d2->{'addr'}, $d2->{'bytes'}, $d2->{'instr'};
63 }
64 }
65}
66
Brian Gaeke3fb290e2003-07-03 21:44:32 +000067&getopts('d');
Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +000068$objdump_file = $ARGV[0];
69$gdb_file = $ARGV[1];
70binary_diffs ($objdump_file, $gdb_file);
71exit (0);
72__END__
73=pod
74
75=head1 NAME
76
77codegen-diff
78
79=head1 SYNOPSIS
80
Brian Gaeke3fb290e2003-07-03 21:44:32 +000081codegen-diff [-d] I<OBJDUMP-OUTPUT-FILE> I<GDB-DISASSEMBLY-FILE>
Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +000082
83=head1 DESCRIPTION
84
85B<codegen-diff> is a program that tries to show you the differences
86between the code that B<llc> generated and the code that B<lli> generated.
87
88The way you use it is as follows: first, you create I<OBJDUMP-OUTPUT-FILE>
89by running B<objdump> on the B<llc> compiled and linked binary. You need to
90trim down the result so it contains only the function of interest.
91
92Second, you create I<GDB-DISASSEMBLY-FILE> by running B<gdb>, with my patch
93to print out hex bytes in the B<disassemble> command output, on
94B<lli>. Set a breakpoint in C<Emitter::finishFunction()> and wait until
95the function you want is compiled. Then use the B<disassemble> command
96to print out the assembly dump of the function B<lli> just compiled.
97(Use C<lli -debug> to find out where the function starts and ends in memory.)
98It's easiest to save this output by using B<script>.
99
100Finally, you run B<codegen-diff>, as indicated in the Synopsis section of
101this manpage. It will print out a two-line stanza for each mismatched
102instruction, with the B<llc> version first, and the B<lli> version second.
103
Brian Gaeke3fb290e2003-07-03 21:44:32 +0000104=head1 OPTIONS
105
106=over 4
107
108=item -d
109
110Don't show instructions where the bytes are different but they
111disassemble to the same thing. This puts a lot of trust in the
112disassembler, but it might help you highlight the more egregious cases
113of misassembly.
114
115=back
116
Brian Gaeke6bc3b7c2003-07-03 21:15:02 +0000117=head1 AUTHOR
118
119B<codegen-diff> was written by Brian Gaeke.
120
121=head1 SEE ALSO
122
123L<gdb(1)>, L<objdump(1)>, L<script(1)>.
124
125You will need my B<gdb> patch:
126
127 http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/~gaeke/gdb-disassembly-print-bytes.patch
128
129=cut