mirror of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.git
synced 2024-11-27 17:24:06 +00:00
Auto merge of #77627 - richkadel:rust-demangler, r=tmandry
rust-demangler tool strips crate disambiguators with < 16 digits Addresses Issue #77615.
This commit is contained in:
commit
9a74fb726e
@ -21,6 +21,41 @@
|
||||
//! $ "${TARGET}"/llvm/bin/llvm-cov show --Xdemangler="${TARGET}"/stage0-tools-bin/rust-demangler \
|
||||
//! --instr-profile=main.profdata ./main --show-line-counts-or-regions
|
||||
//! ```
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Note regarding crate disambiguators:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Some demangled symbol paths can include "crate disambiguator" suffixes, represented as a large
|
||||
//! hexadecimal value enclosed in square braces, and appended to the name of the crate. a suffix to the
|
||||
//! original crate name. For example, the `core` crate, here, includes a disambiguator:
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! ```rust
|
||||
//! <generics::Firework<f64> as core[a7a74cee373f048]::ops::drop::Drop>::drop
|
||||
//! ```
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! These disambiguators are known to vary depending on environmental circumstances. As a result,
|
||||
//! tests that compare results including demangled names can fail across development environments,
|
||||
//! particularly with cross-platform testing. Also, the resulting crate paths are not syntactically
|
||||
//! valid, and don't match the original source symbol paths, which can impact development tools.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! For these reasons, by default, `rust-demangler` uses a heuristic to remove crate disambiguators
|
||||
//! from their original demangled representation before printing them to standard output. If crate
|
||||
//! disambiguators are required, add the `-d` (or `--disambiguators`) flag, and the disambiguators
|
||||
//! will not be removed.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Also note that the disambiguators are stripped by a Regex pattern that is tolerant to some
|
||||
//! variation in the number of hexadecimal digits. The disambiguators come from a hash value, which
|
||||
//! typically generates a 16-digit hex representation on a 64-bit architecture; however, leading
|
||||
//! zeros are not included, which can shorten the hex digit length, and a different hash algorithm
|
||||
//! that might also be dependent on the architecture, might shorten the length even further. A
|
||||
//! minimum length of 5 digits is assumed, which should be more than sufficient to support hex
|
||||
//! representations that generate only 8-digits of precision with an extremely rare (but not
|
||||
//! impossible) result with up to 3 leading zeros.
|
||||
//!
|
||||
//! Using a minimum number of digits less than 5 risks the possibility of stripping demangled name
|
||||
//! components with a similar pattern. For example, some closures instantiated multiple times
|
||||
//! include their own disambiguators, demangled as non-hashed zero-based indexes in square brackets.
|
||||
//! These disambiguators seem to have more analytical value (for instance, in coverage analysis), so
|
||||
//! they are not removed.
|
||||
|
||||
use regex::Regex;
|
||||
use rustc_demangle::demangle;
|
||||
@ -29,7 +64,25 @@ use std::io::{self, Read, Write};
|
||||
const REPLACE_COLONS: &str = "::";
|
||||
|
||||
fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
|
||||
let mut strip_crate_disambiguators = Some(Regex::new(r"\[[a-f0-9]{16}\]::").unwrap());
|
||||
// FIXME(richkadel): In Issue #77615 discussed updating the `rustc-demangle` library, to provide
|
||||
// an option to generate demangled names without including crate disambiguators. If that
|
||||
// happens, update this tool to use that option (if the `-d` flag is not set) instead stripping
|
||||
// them via the Regex heuristic. The update the doc comments and help.
|
||||
|
||||
// Strip hashed hexadecimal crate disambiguators. Leading zeros are not enforced, and can be
|
||||
// different across different platform/architecture types, so while 16 hex digits are common,
|
||||
// they can also be shorter.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// Also note that a demangled symbol path may include the `[<digits>]` pattern, with zero-based
|
||||
// indexes (such as for closures, and possibly for types defined in anonymous scopes). Preferably
|
||||
// these should not be stripped.
|
||||
//
|
||||
// The minimum length of 5 digits supports the possibility that some target architecture (maybe
|
||||
// a 32-bit or smaller architecture) could generate a hash value with a maximum of 8 digits,
|
||||
// and more than three leading zeros should be extremely unlikely. Conversely, it should be
|
||||
// sufficient to assume the zero-based indexes for closures and anonymous scopes will never
|
||||
// exceed the value 9999.
|
||||
let mut strip_crate_disambiguators = Some(Regex::new(r"\[[a-f0-9]{5,16}\]::").unwrap());
|
||||
|
||||
let mut args = std::env::args();
|
||||
let progname = args.next().unwrap();
|
||||
@ -41,14 +94,19 @@ fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
|
||||
eprintln!("Usage: {} [-d|--disambiguators]", progname);
|
||||
eprintln!();
|
||||
eprintln!(
|
||||
"This tool converts a list of Rust mangled symbols (one per line) into a\n
|
||||
"This tool converts a list of Rust mangled symbols (one per line) into a\n\
|
||||
corresponding list of demangled symbols."
|
||||
);
|
||||
eprintln!();
|
||||
eprintln!(
|
||||
"With -d (--disambiguators), Rust symbols mangled with the v0 symbol mangler may\n\
|
||||
include crate disambiguators (a 16 character hex value in square brackets).\n\
|
||||
Crate disambiguators are removed by default."
|
||||
include crate disambiguators (a hexadecimal hash value, typically up to 16 digits\n\
|
||||
long, enclosed in square brackets)."
|
||||
);
|
||||
eprintln!();
|
||||
eprintln!(
|
||||
"By default, crate disambiguators are removed, using a heuristics-based regular\n\
|
||||
expression. (See the `rust-demangler` doc comments for more information.)"
|
||||
);
|
||||
eprintln!();
|
||||
std::process::exit(1)
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user