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runtime: create an API for unwinding inlined frames

We've replicated the code to expand inlined frames in many places in
the runtime at this point. This CL adds a simple iterator API that
abstracts this out.

We also use this to try out a new idea for structuring tests of
runtime internals: rather than exporting this whole internal data type
and API, we write the test in package runtime and import the few bits
of std we need. The idea is that, for tests of internals, it's easier
to inject public APIs from std than it is to export non-public APIs
from runtime. This is discussed more in #55108.

For #54466.

Change-Id: Iebccc04ff59a1509694a8ac0e0d3984e49121339
Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/466096
TryBot-Result: Gopher Robot <gobot@golang.org>
Reviewed-by: Michael Pratt <mpratt@google.com>
Run-TryBot: Austin Clements <austin@google.com>
This commit is contained in:
Austin Clements 2023-02-05 15:54:33 -05:00
parent dcb4c1c1aa
commit f52bede354
7 changed files with 340 additions and 9 deletions

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@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
// Copyright 2023 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// This file and importx_test.go make it possible to write tests in the runtime
// package, which is generally more convenient for testing runtime internals.
// For tests that mostly touch public APIs, it's generally easier to write them
// in the runtime_test package and export any runtime internals via
// export_test.go.
//
// There are a few limitations on runtime package tests that this bridges:
//
// 1. Tests use the signature "XTest<name>(t T)". Since runtime can't import
// testing, test functions can't use testing.T, so instead we have the T
// interface, which *testing.T satisfies. And we start names with "XTest"
// because otherwise go test will complain about Test functions with the wrong
// signature. To actually expose these as test functions, this file contains
// trivial wrappers.
//
// 2. Runtime package tests can't directly import other std packages, so we
// inject any necessary functions from std.
// TODO: Generate this
package runtime_test
import (
"fmt"
"internal/testenv"
"runtime"
"testing"
)
func init() {
runtime.FmtSprintf = fmt.Sprintf
runtime.TestenvOptimizationOff = testenv.OptimizationOff
}
func TestInlineUnwinder(t *testing.T) {
runtime.XTestInlineUnwinder(t)
}

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@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
// Copyright 2023 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
// See import_test.go. This is the half that lives in the runtime package.
// TODO: Generate this
package runtime
type TestingT interface {
Cleanup(func())
Error(args ...any)
Errorf(format string, args ...any)
Fail()
FailNow()
Failed() bool
Fatal(args ...any)
Fatalf(format string, args ...any)
Helper()
Log(args ...any)
Logf(format string, args ...any)
Name() string
Setenv(key, value string)
Skip(args ...any)
SkipNow()
Skipf(format string, args ...any)
Skipped() bool
TempDir() string
}
var FmtSprintf func(format string, a ...any) string
var TestenvOptimizationOff func() bool

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@ -924,6 +924,8 @@ type _func struct {
// Pseudo-Func that is returned for PCs that occur in inlined code.
// A *Func can be either a *_func or a *funcinl, and they are distinguished
// by the first uintptr.
//
// TODO(austin): Can we merge this with inlinedCall?
type funcinl struct {
ones uint32 // set to ^0 to distinguish from _func
entry uintptr // entry of the real (the "outermost") frame

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@ -345,6 +345,10 @@ func hasPrefix(s, prefix string) bool {
return len(s) >= len(prefix) && s[:len(prefix)] == prefix
}
func hasSuffix(s, suffix string) bool {
return len(s) >= len(suffix) && s[len(s)-len(suffix):] == suffix
}
const (
maxUint64 = ^uint64(0)
maxInt64 = int64(maxUint64 >> 1)

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@ -898,6 +898,30 @@ func findfunc(pc uintptr) funcInfo {
return funcInfo{(*_func)(unsafe.Pointer(&datap.pclntable[funcoff])), datap}
}
// A srcFunc represents a logical function in the source code. This may
// correspond to an actual symbol in the binary text, or it may correspond to a
// source function that has been inlined.
type srcFunc struct {
datap *moduledata
nameOff int32
startLine int32
funcID funcID
}
func (f funcInfo) srcFunc() srcFunc {
if !f.valid() {
return srcFunc{}
}
return srcFunc{f.datap, f.nameOff, f.startLine, f.funcID}
}
func (s srcFunc) name() string {
if s.datap == nil {
return ""
}
return s.datap.funcName(s.nameOff)
}
type pcvalueCache struct {
entries [2][8]pcvalueCacheEnt
}
@ -1207,12 +1231,3 @@ func stackmapdata(stkmap *stackmap, n int32) bitvector {
}
return bitvector{stkmap.nbit, addb(&stkmap.bytedata[0], uintptr(n*((stkmap.nbit+7)>>3)))}
}
// inlinedCall is the encoding of entries in the FUNCDATA_InlTree table.
type inlinedCall struct {
funcID funcID // type of the called function
_ [3]byte
nameOff int32 // offset into pclntab for name of called function
parentPc int32 // position of an instruction whose source position is the call site (offset from entry)
startLine int32 // line number of start of function (func keyword/TEXT directive)
}

114
src/runtime/symtabinl.go Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
// Copyright 2023 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
// inlinedCall is the encoding of entries in the FUNCDATA_InlTree table.
type inlinedCall struct {
funcID funcID // type of the called function
_ [3]byte
nameOff int32 // offset into pclntab for name of called function
parentPc int32 // position of an instruction whose source position is the call site (offset from entry)
startLine int32 // line number of start of function (func keyword/TEXT directive)
}
// An inlineUnwinder iterates over the stack of inlined calls at a PC by
// decoding the inline table. The last step of iteration is always the frame of
// the physical function, so there's always at least one frame.
//
// This is typically used as:
//
// for u, uf := newInlineUnwinder(...); uf.valid(); uf = u.next(uf) { ... }
//
// Implementation note: This is used in contexts that disallow write barriers.
// Hence, the constructor returns this by value and pointer receiver methods
// must not mutate pointer fields. Also, we keep the mutable state in a separate
// struct mostly to keep both structs SSA-able, which generates much better
// code.
type inlineUnwinder struct {
f funcInfo
cache *pcvalueCache
inlTree *[1 << 20]inlinedCall
}
// An inlineFrame is a position in an inlineUnwinder.
type inlineFrame struct {
// pc is the PC giving the file/line metadata of the current frame. This is
// always a "call PC" (not a "return PC"). This is 0 when the iterator is
// exhausted.
pc uintptr
// index is the index of the current record in inlTree, or -1 if we are in
// the outermost function.
index int32
}
// newInlineUnwinder creates an inlineUnwinder initially set to the inner-most
// inlined frame at PC. PC should be a "call PC" (not a "return PC").
//
// This unwinder uses non-strict handling of PC because it's assumed this is
// only ever used for symbolic debugging. If things go really wrong, it'll just
// fall back to the outermost frame.
func newInlineUnwinder(f funcInfo, pc uintptr, cache *pcvalueCache) (inlineUnwinder, inlineFrame) {
inldata := funcdata(f, _FUNCDATA_InlTree)
if inldata == nil {
return inlineUnwinder{f: f}, inlineFrame{pc: pc, index: -1}
}
inlTree := (*[1 << 20]inlinedCall)(inldata)
u := inlineUnwinder{f: f, cache: cache, inlTree: inlTree}
return u, u.resolveInternal(pc)
}
func (u *inlineUnwinder) resolveInternal(pc uintptr) inlineFrame {
return inlineFrame{
pc: pc,
// Conveniently, this returns -1 if there's an error, which is the same
// value we use for the outermost frame.
index: pcdatavalue1(u.f, _PCDATA_InlTreeIndex, pc, u.cache, false),
}
}
func (uf inlineFrame) valid() bool {
return uf.pc != 0
}
// next returns the frame representing uf's logical caller.
func (u *inlineUnwinder) next(uf inlineFrame) inlineFrame {
if uf.index < 0 {
uf.pc = 0
return uf
}
parentPc := u.inlTree[uf.index].parentPc
return u.resolveInternal(u.f.entry() + uintptr(parentPc))
}
// isInlined returns whether uf is an inlined frame.
func (u *inlineUnwinder) isInlined(uf inlineFrame) bool {
return uf.index >= 0
}
// srcFunc returns the srcFunc representing the given frame.
func (u *inlineUnwinder) srcFunc(uf inlineFrame) srcFunc {
if uf.index < 0 {
return u.f.srcFunc()
}
t := &u.inlTree[uf.index]
return srcFunc{
u.f.datap,
t.nameOff,
t.startLine,
t.funcID,
}
}
// fileLine returns the file name and line number of the call within the given
// frame. As a convenience, for the innermost frame, it returns the file and
// line of the PC this unwinder was started at (often this is a call to another
// physical function).
//
// It returns "?", 0 if something goes wrong.
func (u *inlineUnwinder) fileLine(uf inlineFrame) (file string, line int) {
file, line32 := funcline1(u.f, uf.pc, false)
return file, int(line32)
}

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@ -0,0 +1,122 @@
// Copyright 2023 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package runtime
import (
"internal/abi"
"runtime/internal/sys"
)
func XTestInlineUnwinder(t TestingT) {
if TestenvOptimizationOff() {
t.Skip("skipping test with inlining optimizations disabled")
}
pc1 := abi.FuncPCABIInternal(tiuTest)
f := findfunc(pc1)
if !f.valid() {
t.Fatalf("failed to resolve tiuTest at PC %#x", pc1)
}
want := map[string]int{
"tiuInlined1:3 tiuTest:10": 0,
"tiuInlined1:3 tiuInlined2:6 tiuTest:11": 0,
"tiuInlined2:7 tiuTest:11": 0,
"tiuTest:12": 0,
}
wantStart := map[string]int{
"tiuInlined1": 2,
"tiuInlined2": 5,
"tiuTest": 9,
}
// Iterate over the PCs in tiuTest and walk the inline stack for each.
prevStack := "x"
var cache pcvalueCache
for pc := pc1; pc < pc1+1024 && findfunc(pc) == f; pc += sys.PCQuantum {
stack := ""
u, uf := newInlineUnwinder(f, pc, &cache)
if file, _ := u.fileLine(uf); file == "?" {
// We're probably in the trailing function padding, where findfunc
// still returns f but there's no symbolic information. Just keep
// going until we definitely hit the end. If we see a "?" in the
// middle of unwinding, that's a real problem.
//
// TODO: If we ever have function end information, use that to make
// this robust.
continue
}
for ; uf.valid(); uf = u.next(uf) {
file, line := u.fileLine(uf)
const wantFile = "symtabinl_test.go"
if !hasSuffix(file, wantFile) {
t.Errorf("tiuTest+%#x: want file ...%s, got %s", pc-pc1, wantFile, file)
}
sf := u.srcFunc(uf)
name := sf.name()
const namePrefix = "runtime."
if hasPrefix(name, namePrefix) {
name = name[len(namePrefix):]
}
if !hasPrefix(name, "tiu") {
t.Errorf("tiuTest+%#x: unexpected function %s", pc-pc1, name)
}
start := int(sf.startLine) - tiuStart
if start != wantStart[name] {
t.Errorf("tiuTest+%#x: want startLine %d, got %d", pc-pc1, wantStart[name], start)
}
if sf.funcID != funcID_normal {
t.Errorf("tiuTest+%#x: bad funcID %v", pc-pc1, sf.funcID)
}
if len(stack) > 0 {
stack += " "
}
stack += FmtSprintf("%s:%d", name, line-tiuStart)
}
if stack != prevStack {
prevStack = stack
t.Logf("tiuTest+%#x: %s", pc-pc1, stack)
if _, ok := want[stack]; ok {
want[stack]++
}
}
}
// Check that we got all the stacks we wanted.
for stack, count := range want {
if count == 0 {
t.Errorf("missing stack %s", stack)
}
}
}
func lineNumber() int {
_, _, line, _ := Caller(1)
return line // return 0 for error
}
// Below here is the test data for XTestInlineUnwinder
var tiuStart = lineNumber() // +0
var tiu1, tiu2, tiu3 int // +1
func tiuInlined1() { // +2
tiu1++ // +3
} // +4
func tiuInlined2() { // +5
tiuInlined1() // +6
tiu2++ // +7
} // +8
func tiuTest() { // +9
tiuInlined1() // +10
tiuInlined2() // +11
tiu3++ // +12
} // +13