llvm-6502/tools/bugpoint/BugDriver.cpp
Chris Lattner afade9294a Initial checkin of bugpoint
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@4789 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2002-11-20 22:28:10 +00:00

101 lines
3.4 KiB
C++

//===- BugDriver.cpp - Top-Level BugPoint class implementation ------------===//
//
// This class contains all of the shared state and information that is used by
// the BugPoint tool to track down errors in optimizations. This class is the
// main driver class that invokes all sub-functionality.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "BugDriver.h"
#include "llvm/Module.h"
#include "llvm/Bytecode/Reader.h"
#include "llvm/Assembly/Parser.h"
#include "llvm/Transforms/Utils/Linker.h"
#include "llvm/Pass.h"
#include <memory>
/// ParseInputFile - Given a bytecode or assembly input filename, parse and
/// return it, or return null if not possible.
///
Module *BugDriver::ParseInputFile(const std::string &InputFilename) const {
Module *Result = 0;
try {
Result = ParseBytecodeFile(InputFilename);
if (!Result && !(Result = ParseAssemblyFile(InputFilename))){
std::cerr << ToolName << ": could not read input file '"
<< InputFilename << "'!\n";
}
} catch (const ParseException &E) {
std::cerr << ToolName << ": " << E.getMessage() << "\n";
Result = 0;
}
return Result;
}
// This method takes the specified list of LLVM input files, attempts to load
// them, either as assembly or bytecode, then link them together.
//
bool BugDriver::addSources(const std::vector<std::string> &Filenames) {
assert(Program == 0 && "Cannot call addSources multiple times!");
assert(!Filenames.empty() && "Must specify at least on input filename!");
// Load the first input file...
Program = ParseInputFile(Filenames[0]);
if (Program == 0) return true;
std::cout << "Read input file : '" << Filenames[0] << "'\n";
for (unsigned i = 1, e = Filenames.size(); i != e; ++i) {
std::auto_ptr<Module> M(ParseInputFile(Filenames[i]));
if (M.get() == 0) return true;
std::cout << "Linking in input file: '" << Filenames[i] << "'\n";
std::string ErrorMessage;
if (LinkModules(Program, M.get(), &ErrorMessage)) {
std::cerr << ToolName << ": error linking in '" << Filenames[i] << "': "
<< ErrorMessage << "\n";
return true;
}
}
std::cout << "*** All input ok\n";
// All input files read successfully!
return false;
}
/// run - The top level method that is invoked after all of the instance
/// variables are set up from command line arguments.
///
bool BugDriver::run() {
// The first thing that we must do is determine what the problem is. Does the
// optimization series crash the compiler, or does it produce illegal code? We
// make the top-level decision by trying to run all of the passes on the the
// input program, which should generate a bytecode file. If it does generate
// a bytecode file, then we know the compiler didn't crash, so try to diagnose
// a miscompilation.
//
std::cout << "Running selected passes on program to test for crash: ";
if (runPasses(PassesToRun))
return debugCrash();
else
return debugMiscompilation();
}
/// debugMiscompilation - This method is used when the passes selected are not
/// crashing, but the generated output is semantically different from the
/// input.
///
bool BugDriver::debugMiscompilation() {
std::cout << "*** Debugging miscompilation!\n";
std::cerr << "Sorry, bugpoint cannot debug a miscompilation yet!\n";
// If no reference output was specified, run the program without optimizations
// to get a reference output.
//
return true;
}