that changes will cause binary incompatibilities. Mostly done by hiding naked
structs with function calls.
Structs hidden in this way were: UCodeBlock, SkinSupp and SkinError (which were
merged back with CoreSupp and CoreError into single types Supp and Error),
ShadowChunk, VgDetails, VgNeeds and VgTrackEvents. The last three are the most
important ones, as they are (I think) the most likely to change.
Suitable get()/set() methods were defined for each one. The way UCodeBlocks
are copied for instrumentation by skins is a little different now, using
setup_UCodeBlock. Had to add a few other functions here n there. Changed
how SK_(complete_shadow_chunk) works a bit.
Added a file coregrind/vg_needs.c which contains all the get/set functions.
It's pretty simple.
The changes are not totally ideal -- eg. ShadowChunks has get()/set() methods
for its `next' field which arguably shouldn't be exposed (betraying the fact
that it's a linked list), and the get()/set() methods are a bit cumbersome at
times, esp. for `Error' because the fields are accessed quite a few times, and
the treatment of Supps and Errors is a bit inconsistent (but they are used in
different ways), and sizeof_shadow_blocks is still a hack. But still better
than naked structs. And one advantage is that a bit of sanity checking can be
performed by the get()/set() methods, as is done for VG_({get,set}_sc_extra)()
to make sure no reading/writing occurs outside the allowed area.
I didn't do it for UInstr, because its fields are accessed directly in lots and
lots of spots, which would have been a great big pain and I was a little
worried about overhead of calling lots of extra functions, although in practice
translation times are small enough that it probably doesn't matter.
Updated the example skin and the docs, too, hurrah.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@1314
where I _should_ have put them in the first place, and fix up the
Makefile.am's accordingly. 'make' and 'make install' now work.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@1292
macro VG_DETERMINE_INTERFACE_VERSION exactly once. If the X.Y core and skin
versions don't have a matching X (indicating binary incompatibility), Valgrind
will abort execution immediately at startup.
I even documented it in the skins guide!
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@1279
Added "version" and "copyright_author" fields for skins to supply.
Now startup message looks something like this:
==12698== cachegrind, an I1/D1/L2 cache profiler for x86-linux.
==12698== Copyright (C) 2002, and GNU GPL'd, by Nicholas Nethercote.
==12698== Built with valgrind-HEAD, a program execution monitor.
==12698== Copyright (C) 2000-2002, and GNU GPL'd, by Julian Seward.
==12698== Estimated CPU clock rate is 1422 MHz
==12698== For more details, rerun with: -v
The skin can specify a version number, but the skins that will be distributed
with Valgrind don't.
Also changed "x86 GNU/Linux" to the wicked "x86-linux" at Julian's request.
Updated default regression test filter to handle this new startup message.
----
Also moved the skin's name, description, etc., fields out of VG_(needs) into a
new struct VG_(details), since they are logically quite different to the needs.
Did a little code formatting, etc., for this. Updated skin docs
correspondingly, too.
Also renamed the need `run_libc_freeres' --> `libc_freeres' so it's a noun
phrase rather than a verb phrase.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@1172
an example skin which is referred to in the documentation, and is designed to
be a template which can be copied.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@1122
to 4096, to possibly avoid deadlocks under very rare circumstances.
Is fully documented and commented.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@479
VG_(cachesim_discard_notify) is called, the cost centre array for the basic
block is removed from the table, and its counts are aggregated into a single
"discard" cost centre, and the cost centre array is free'd.
The aggregate discard cost centre is given the filename:function_name
"(discarded):(discarded)". Mentioned this in the manual.
Only tested with tests/discard.c. Seems to work well for that case though :)
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@385
add a simple compromise, in which the client can notify valgrind
that certain code address ranges are invalid and should be retranslated.
This is done using the VALGRIND_DISCARD_TRANSLATIONS macro in valgrind.h.
At the same time take the opportunity to close the potentially fatal
loophole that translations for executable segments were not being
discarded when those segments were munmapped. They are now.
Documentation updated.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@274
do things like "show functions covering 99% of all D2mr events *and* 99% of all
D2mw events" - before you could only choose the threshold for one.
Useful for me, but probably no-one else. Still mentioned it in the docs,
though.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@269
have been ioctl(TCSETA)'d with a VTIMEout, we appear to need to ask if
the fd is writable, for some reason. Ask me not why. Since this is
strange and potentially troublesome we only do it if the user asks
specially, by specifying --wierd-hacks=ioctl-VTIME.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@264
- No longer aborting when encountering a N_SOL symbol after the 65535th
line in a file, just printing a warning/apology that annotations/messages
might be wrong.
This is a pain to fix properly, since it requires first guessing when a
line number overflow happens, then switching to one or more other files,
then switching back.
manual: wibble
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@225
- vg_cachesim.c
- vg_cachesim_{I1,D1,L2}.c
- vg_annotate.in
- vg_cachegen.in
Changes to existing files:
- valgrind/valgrind.in, added option:
--cachesim=no|yes [no]
- Makefile/Makefile.am:
* added vg_cachesim.c to valgrind_so_SOURCES var
* added vg_cachesim_I1.c, vg_cachesim_D1.c, vg_cachesim_L2.c to
noinst_HEADERS var
* added vg_annotate, vg_cachegen to 'bin_SCRIPTS' var, and added empty
targets for them
- vg_main.c:
* added two offsets for cache sim functions (put in positions 17a,17b)
* added option handling (detection of --cachesim=yes which turns off of
--instrument);
* added calls to cachesim initialisation/finalisation functions
- vg_mylibc: added some system call wrappers (for chmod, open_write, etc) for
file writing
- vg_symtab2.c:
* allow it to read symbols if either of --instrument or --cachesim is
used
* made vg_symtab2.c:vg_what_{line,fn}_is_this extern, renaming it as
VG_(what_line_is_this) (and added to vg_include.h)
* completely rewrote the read loop in vg_read_lib_symbols, fixing
several bugs. Much better now, although probably not perfect. It's
also relatively fragile -- I'm using the "die immediately if anything
unexpected happens" approach.
- vg_to_ucode.c:
* in VG_(disBB), patching in x86 instruction size into extra4b field of
JMP instructions at the end of basic blocks if --cachesim=yes.
Shifted things around to do this; also had to fiddle around with
single-step stuff to get this to work, by not sticking extra JMPs on
the end of the single-instruction block if there was already one
there (to avoid breaking an assertion in vg_cachesim.c). Did a
similar thing to avoid an extra JMP on huge basic blocks that are
split.
- vg_translate.c:
* if --cachesim=yes call the cachesim instrumentation phase
* made some functions extern and renamed:
allocCodeBlock() --> VG_(allocCodeBlock)()
freeCodeBlock() --> VG_(freeCodeBlock)()
copyUInstr() --> VG_(copyUInstr)()
(added to vg_include.h too)
- vg_include.c: declared
* cachesim offsets
* exports of vg_cachesim.c
* added four new profiling events (increasing VGP_M_CCS to 24 -- I kept
the spare ones)
* added comment about UInstr.extra4b field being used for instr size in
JMPs for cache simulation
- docs/manual.html:
* Added --cachesim option to section 2.5.
* Added cache profiling stuff as section 7.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@168
of pthread event tracing. And allow this info to be passed across to
the client, where vg_libpthread.c uses it to also control verbosity.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@91
on the client-request subsystem, and disabling it is no longer a
sensible thing to do.
Also: in the manual, mention flags --trace-sched= and --trace-pthread=.
git-svn-id: svn://svn.valgrind.org/valgrind/trunk@79