thorin
is an DWARF packaging utility for creating DWARF packages (*.dwp
files) out of input
DWARF objects (*.dwo
files; or *.o
files with .dwo
sections), supporting both the pre-standard
GNU extension format for DWARF packages and the standardized format introduced in DWARF 5.
thorin
was written as part of the implementation of Split DWARF in rustc
. A Rust implementation
of a DWARF packaging utility is easier to integrate into the compiler and can support features like
loading dwarf objects from archive files (or rustc's rlibs) which are helpful in supporting
cross-crate Split DWARF packaging in rustc
.
See the README documents of the thorin
crate and the
thorin-bin
crate for usage details of the library and binary interfaces
respectively.
If you want help or mentorship, reach out to us in a GitHub issue, or ask davidtwco
or in
#t-compiler
on the Rust Zulip instance.
thorin
should always build on stable rustc
. To build thorin
:
$ cargo build
To run the tests, first install the relevant dependencies:
$ apt install --no-install-recommends --yes llvm-15 llvm-15-tools
$ pip install lit
Next, run the lit
testsuite (replacing /path/to/llvm/bin
with the correct path to your LLVM
installation, if required):
$ cargo build # in debug mode..
$ lit -v --path "$PWD/target/debug/:/path/to/llvm/bin/" ./tests
$ cargo build --release # ..or in release mode
$ lit -v --path "$PWD/target/release/:/path/to/llvm/bin/" ./tests
We use rustfmt
to automatically format and style all of our code. To install and use rustfmt
:
$ rustup component add rustfmt
$ cargo fmt
Think you've found a bug? File an issue! To help us understand and reproduce the issue, provide us with:
- The (preferably minimal) test case
- Steps to reproduce the issue using the test case
- The expected result of following those steps
- The actual result of following those steps
Definitely file an issue if you see an unexpected panic originating from within thorin
!
thorin
should never panic unless it is explicitly documented to panic in the specific
circumstances provided.
thorin
is named after Thorin Oakenshield from The Hobbit, as Thorin is
a dwarf who leads other dwarves. thorin
uses the gimli
library
(named after a dwarf from Lord of the Rings) to read DWARF format debug information,
the name of which is a medieval fantasy complement to ELF, the file format for executables
and object files.
You could also call this project
rust-dwp
, if you'd prefer that.
thorin
is authored by David Wood of Huawei
Technologies Research & Development (UK) Ltd. thorin
is maintained by the
Rust Compiler Team.
In addition, thanks to the authors of
object
and gimli
, on which this
utility depends heavily; and to Philip Craig for advice
and reviews during initial implementation of thorin
.
Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
When contributing or interacting with this project, we ask abide the Rust Code of Conduct and ask that you do too.