//===- NonRelocatableStringpool.h - A simple stringpool --------*- C++ -*-===// // // The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure // // This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source // License. See LICENSE.TXT for details. // //===----------------------------------------------------------------------===// #ifndef LLVM_TOOLS_DSYMUTIL_NONRELOCATABLESTRINGPOOL_H #define LLVM_TOOLS_DSYMUTIL_NONRELOCATABLESTRINGPOOL_H #include "llvm/ADT/StringMap.h" #include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" #include "llvm/CodeGen/DwarfStringPoolEntry.h" #include "llvm/Support/Allocator.h" #include #include namespace llvm { namespace dsymutil { /// A string table that doesn't need relocations. /// /// We are doing a final link, no need for a string table that has relocation /// entries for every reference to it. This class provides this ability by just /// associating offsets with strings. class NonRelocatableStringpool { public: /// Entries are stored into the StringMap and simply linked together through /// the second element of this pair in order to keep track of insertion /// order. using MapTy = StringMap; NonRelocatableStringpool() { // Legacy dsymutil puts an empty string at the start of the line table. EmptyString = getEntry(""); } DwarfStringPoolEntryRef getEntry(StringRef S); /// Get the offset of string \p S in the string table. This can insert a new /// element or return the offset of a pre-existing one. uint32_t getStringOffset(StringRef S) { return getEntry(S).getOffset(); } /// Get permanent storage for \p S (but do not necessarily emit \p S in the /// output section). A latter call to getStringOffset() with the same string /// will chain it though. /// /// \returns The StringRef that points to permanent storage to use /// in place of \p S. StringRef internString(StringRef S); uint64_t getSize() { return CurrentEndOffset; } std::vector getEntries() const; private: MapTy Strings; uint32_t CurrentEndOffset = 0; unsigned NumEntries = 0; DwarfStringPoolEntryRef EmptyString; }; /// Helper for making strong types. template class StrongType : public T { public: template explicit StrongType(Args... A) : T(std::forward(A)...) {} }; /// It's very easy to introduce bugs by passing the wrong string pool in the /// dwarf linker. By using strong types the interface enforces that the right /// kind of pool is used. struct UniqueTag {}; struct OffsetsTag {}; using UniquingStringPool = StrongType; using OffsetsStringPool = StrongType; } // end namespace dsymutil } // end namespace llvm #endif // LLVM_TOOLS_DSYMUTIL_NONRELOCATABLESTRINGPOOL_H