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1 106 markom
What's LRS?
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===========
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LRS, or Live Range Splitting is an optimization technique which allows
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a user variable to reside in different locations during different parts
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of a function.
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For example, a variable might reside in the stack for part of a function
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and in a register during a loop and in a different register during
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another loop.
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Clearly, if a variable may reside in different locations, then the
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compiler must describe to the debugger where the variable resides for
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any given part of the function.
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This document describes the debug format for encoding these extensions
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in stabs.
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Since these extensions are gcc specific, these additional symbols and
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stabs can be disabled by the gcc command option -gstabs.
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GNU extensions for LRS under stabs:
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===================================
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range symbols:
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-------------
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    A range symbol will be used to mark the beginning or end of a
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    live range (the range which describes where a symbol is active,
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    or live).  These symbols will later be referenced in the stabs for
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    debug purposes.  For simplicity, we'll use the terms "range_start"
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    and "range_end" to identify the range symbols which mark the beginning
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    and end of a live range respectively.
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    Any text symbol which would normally appear in the symbol table
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    (eg. a function name) can be used as range symbol.  If an address
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    is needed to delimit a live range and does not match any of the
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    values of symbols which would normally appear in the symbol table,
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    a new symbol will be added to the table whose value is that address.
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    The three new symbol types described below have been added for this
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    purpose.
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    For efficiency, the compiler should use existing symbols as range
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    symbols whenever possible; this reduces the number of additional
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    symbols which need to be added to the symbol table.
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New debug symbol type for defining ranges:
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------------------------------------------
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    range_off - contains PC function offset for start/end of a live range.
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                Its location is relative to the function start and therefore
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                eliminates the need for additional relocation.
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    This symbol has a values in the text section, and does not have a name.
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            NOTE: the following may not be needed but are included here just
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                in case.
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            range - contains PC value of beginning or end of a live range
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                (relocs required).
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            NOTE: the following will be required if we desire LRS debugging
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                to work with old style a.out stabs.
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            range_abs - contains absolute PC value of start/end of a live
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                range.  The range_abs debug symbol is provided for
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                completeness, in case there is a need to describe addresses
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                in ROM, etc.
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Live range:
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-----------
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    The compiler and debugger view a variable with multiple homes as
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    a primary symbol and aliases for that symbol.  The primary symbol
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    describes the default home of the variable while aliases describe
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    alternate homes for the variable.
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    A live range defines the interval of instructions beginning with
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    range_start and ending at range_end-1, and is used to specify a
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    range of instructions where an alias is active or "live".  So,
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    the actual end of the range will be one less than the value of the
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    range_end symbol.
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    Ranges do not have to be nested. Eg. Two ranges may intersect while
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        each range contains subranges which are not in the other range.
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    There does not have to be a 1-1 mapping from range_start to
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        range_end symbols.  Eg. Two range_starts can share the same
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        range_end, while one symbol's range_start can be another symbol's
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        range_end.
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    When a variable's storage class changes (eg. from stack to register,
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        or from one register to another), a new symbol entry will be
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        added to the symbol table with stabs describing the new type,
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        and appropriate live ranges refering to the variable's initial
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        symbol index.
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    For variables which are defined in the source but optimized away,
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        a symbol should be emitted with the live range l(0,0).
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    Live ranges for aliases of a particular variable should always
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        be disjoint.  Overlapping ranges for aliases of the same variable
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        will be treated as an error by the debugger, and the overlapping
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        range will be ignored.
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    If no live range information is given, the live range will be assumed to
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        span the symbol's entire lexical scope.
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New stabs string identifiers:
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-----------------------------
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  "id" in "#id" in the following section refers to a numeric value.
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  New stab syntax for live range:  l(,)
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     - "#id" where #id identifies the text symbol (range symbol) to
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                use as the start of live range (range_start).  The value for
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                the referenced text symbol is the starting address of the
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                live range.
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     - "#id" where #id identifies the text symbol (range symbol) to
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                use as the end of live range (range_end).  The value for
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                the referenced text symbol is ONE BYTE PAST the ending
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                address of the live range.
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  New stab syntax for identifying symbols.
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     - "#id="
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            Uses:
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              :...
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                  When used in front of a symbol name, "#id=" defines a
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                  unique reference number for this symbol.  The reference
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                  number can be used later when defining aliases for this
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                  symbol.
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                  When used as the entire stab string, "#id=" identifies this
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                  nameless symbol as being the symbol for which "#id" refers to.
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     - "#id" where "#id" refers to the symbol for which the string
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                "#id=" identifies.
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            Uses:
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              :;;...
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                  Defines an alias for the symbol identified by the reference
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                  number ID.
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              l(,)
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                  When used within a live range, "#id" refers to the text
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                  symbol identified by "#id=" to use as the range symbol.
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     - "l(,)" - specifies a live range for a
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                symbol.  Multiple "l" specifiers can be combined to represent
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                mutiple live ranges, separated by semicolons.
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Example:
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========
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Consider a program of the form:
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    void foo(){
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      int a = ...;
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      ...
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      while (b--)
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       c += a;
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      ..
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      d = a;
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      ..
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    }
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Assume that "a" lives in the stack at offset -8, except for inside the
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loop where "a" resides in register "r5".
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The way to describe this is to create a stab for the variable "a" which
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describes "a" as living in the stack and an alias for the variable "a"
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which describes it as living in register "r5" in the loop.
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Let's assume that "#1" and "#2" are symbols which bound the area where
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"a" lives in a register.
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The stabs to describe "a" and its alias would look like this:
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        .stabs "#3=a:1",128,0,8,-8
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        .stabs "#3:r1;l(#1,#2)",64,0,0,5
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This design implies that the debugger will keep a chain of aliases for
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any given variable with aliases and that chain will be searched first
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to find out if an alias is active.  If no alias is active, then the
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debugger will assume that the main variable is active.

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