Original commit message:
"[cmake] Use find_package to discover zlib
This allows us to use standard cmake utilities to point to non-system zlib
locations.
Patch by Oksana Shadura and me (D39002)."
The new patch brings back the old behavior in the cases where find_package
cannot find zlib.
llvm-svn: 316150
This adds Intel's Knights Mill CPU to valid CPU names for the backend. For now its an alias of "knl", but ultimately we need to support AVX5124FMAPS and AVX5124VNNIW instruction sets for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38811
llvm-svn: 315722
In r315079 I added a check for the ERROR_CALL_NOT_IMPLEMENTED error
code, but it turns out earlier versions of Wine just returned false
without setting any error code.
This patch handles the unset error code case.
llvm-svn: 315597
Summary:
Add LLVM_FORCE_ENABLE_DUMP cmake option, and use it along with
LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS to set LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP.
Remove NDEBUG and only use LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP to enable dump methods.
Move definition of LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP from config.h to llvm-config.h so
it'll be picked up by public headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38406
llvm-svn: 315590
This reverts commit 4e4ee1c507e2707bb3c208e1e1b6551c3015cbf5.
This is failing due to some code that isn't built on MSVC
so I didn't catch. Not immediately obvious how to fix this
at first glance, so I'm reverting for now.
llvm-svn: 315536
There's a lot of misuse of Twine scattered around LLVM. This
ranges in severity from benign (returning a Twine from a function
by value that is just a string literal) to pretty sketchy (storing
a Twine by value in a class). While there are some uses for
copying Twines, most of the very compelling ones are confined
to the Twine class implementation itself, and other uses are
either dubious or easily worked around.
This patch makes Twine's copy constructor private, and fixes up
all callsites.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38767
llvm-svn: 315530
- Use HSA metadata streamer directly from AMDGPUAsmPrinter
- Make naming consistent with PAL metadata
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38746
llvm-svn: 315526
- Move PAL metadata definitions to AMDGPUMetadata
- Make naming consistent with HSA metadata
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38745
llvm-svn: 315523
- Rename AMDGPUCodeObjectMetadata to AMDGPUMetadata (PAL metadata will be included in this file in the follow up change)
- Rename AMDGPUCodeObjectMetadataStreamer to AMDGPUHSAMetadataStreamer
- Introduce HSAMD namespace
- Other minor name changes in function and test names
llvm-svn: 315522
In r315079, fs::rename was reimplemented in terms of CreateFile and
SetFileInformationByHandle. Unfortunately, the latter isn't supported by
Wine. This adds a fallback to MoveFileEx for that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38817
llvm-svn: 315520
Previously we would only look in the current directory for a
resource, which might not be the same as the directory of the
rc file. Furthermore, MSVC rc supports a /I option, and can
also look in the system environment. This patch adds support
for this search algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38740
llvm-svn: 315499
This allows clients to avoid an unnecessary fs::status() call on each
directory entry. Because the information returned by FindFirstFileEx
is a subset of the information returned by a regular status() call,
I needed to extract a base class from file_status that contains only
that information.
On my machine, this reduces the time required to enumerate a ThinLTO
cache directory containing 520k files from almost 4 minutes to less
than 2 seconds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38716
llvm-svn: 315378
This patch adds a post-linking pass which replaces the function pointer of enqueued
block kernel with a global variable (runtime handle) and adds
runtime-handle attribute to the enqueued block kernel.
In LLVM CodeGen the runtime-handle metadata will be translated to
RuntimeHandle metadata in code object. Runtime allocates a global buffer
for each kernel with RuntimeHandel metadata and saves the kernel address
required for the AQL packet into the buffer. __enqueue_kernel function
in device library knows that the invoke function pointer in the block
literal is actually runtime handle and loads the kernel address from it
and puts it into AQL packet for dispatching.
This cannot be done in FE since FE cannot create a unique global variable
with external linkage across LLVM modules. The global variable with internal
linkage does not work since optimization passes will try to replace loads
of the global variable with its initialization value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38610
llvm-svn: 315352
Microsoft's debug implementation of std::copy checks if the destination is an
array and then does some bounds checking. This was causing an assertion
failure in fs::rename_internal which copies to a buffer of the appropriate
size but that's type-punned to an array of length 1 for API compatibility
reasons.
Fix is to make make the destination a pointer rather than an array.
llvm-svn: 315222
The current implementation of rename uses ReplaceFile if the
destination file already exists. According to the documentation for
ReplaceFile, the source file is opened without a sharing mode. This
means that there is a short interval of time between when ReplaceFile
renames the file and when it closes the file during which the
destination file cannot be opened.
This behaviour is not POSIX compliant because rename is supposed
to be atomic. It was also causing intermittent link failures when
linking with a ThinLTO cache; the ThinLTO cache implementation expects
all cache files to be openable.
This patch addresses that problem by re-implementing rename
using CreateFile and SetFileInformationByHandle. It is roughly a
reimplementation of ReplaceFile with a better sharing policy as well
as support for renaming in the case where the destination file does
not exist.
This implementation is still not fully POSIX. Specifically in the case
where the destination file is open at the point when rename is called,
there will be a short interval of time during which the destination
file will not exist. It isn't clear whether it is possible to avoid
this using the Windows API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38570
llvm-svn: 315079
But now include a check for CPU_COUNT so we still build on 10 year old
versions of glibc.
Original message:
Use sched_getaffinity instead of std:🧵:hardware_concurrency.
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314931
Summary:
This reverts D38481. The change breaks systems with older versions of glibc. It
injects a use of CPU_COUNT() from sched.h without checking to ensure that the
function exists first.
Reviewers:
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 314922
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314809
Summary:
This operating system type represents the AMDGPU PAL runtime, and will
be required by the AMDGPU backend in order to generate correct code for
this runtime.
Currently it generates the same code as not specifying an OS at all.
That will change in future commits.
Patch from Tim Corringham.
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37380
llvm-svn: 314500
If we do not initialize Prefix here, Prefix.data() returns a nullptr.
Later, it is passed to memcpy. memcpy's behavior is undefined if src (or
dst) is a nullptr even if a given size is 0. That's why this code
triggered UBsan.
llvm-svn: 314368
The tar format originally supported up to 99 byte filename. The two
extensions are proposed later: Ustar or PAX.
In the UStar extension, a pathanme is split at a '/' and its "prefix"
and "suffix" are stored in different locations in the tar header. Since
"prefix" can be up to 155 byte, it can represent up to 254 byte
filename (but exact limit depends on the location of '/' character in
a pathname.)
Our TarWriter first attempt to use UStar extension and then fallback to
PAX extension.
But there's a bug in UStar header creation. "Suffix" part must be a NUL-
terminated string, but we didn't handle it correctly. As a result, if
your filename just 100 characters long, the last character was droppped.
This patch fixes the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38149
llvm-svn: 314349
FileOutputBuffer::create() attempts to remove a target file if the file
is a regular one, which results in an unexpected result in a failure
scenario.
If something goes wrong and the user of FileOutputBuffer decides to not
call commit(), it leaves nothing. An existing file is removed, and no
new file is created.
What we should do is to atomically replace an existing file with a new
file using rename(), so that it wouldn't remove an existing file without
creating a new one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38283
llvm-svn: 314345
Summary:
Found when testing stage-2 build with D38101.
```
In file included from /build/llvm/lib/Support/Path.cpp:1045:
/build/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Path.inc:648:14: error: comparison 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') > 18446744073709551615 is always false [-Werror,-Wtautological-constant-compare]
if (length > std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max()) {
~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
`size_t` is `uint64_t` here, apparently, thus any `uint64_t` value
always fits into `size_t`.
Initial patch was to use some preprocessor logic to
not check if the size is known to fit at compile time.
But Zachary Turner suggested using this approach.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, rafael, zturner, mehdi_amini
Reviewed by (via email): zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38132
llvm-svn: 314312
Summary:
Sanitizer blacklist entries currently apply to all sanitizers--there
is no way to specify that an entry should only apply to a specific
sanitizer. This is important for Control Flow Integrity since there are
several different CFI modes that can be enabled at once. For maximum
security, CFI blacklist entries should be scoped to only the specific
CFI mode(s) that entry applies to.
Adding section headers to SpecialCaseLists allows users to specify more
information about list entries, like sanitizer names or other metadata,
like so:
[section1]
fun:*fun1*
[section2|section3]
fun:*fun23*
The section headers are regular expressions. For backwards compatbility,
blacklist entries entered before a section header are put into the '[*]'
section so that blacklists without sections retain the same behavior.
SpecialCaseList has been modified to also accept a section name when
matching against the blacklist. It has also been modified so the
follow-up change to clang can define a derived class that allows
matching sections by SectionMask instead of by string.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis, vsk
Subscribers: vitalybuka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37924
llvm-svn: 314170
This returns "cortex-a73" for second-generation Kryo; not precisely
correct, but close enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37724
llvm-svn: 313200
Summary:
Change the type of the Redirects parameter of llvm::sys::ExecuteAndWait,
ExecuteNoWait and other APIs that wrap them from `const StringRef **` to
`ArrayRef<Optional<StringRef>>`, which is safer and simplifies the use of these
APIs (no more local StringRef variables just to get a pointer to).
Corresponding clang changes will be posted as a separate patch.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37563
llvm-svn: 313155
Most callers were not expecting the exit(0) and trying to exit with a
different value.
This also adds back the call to cl::PrintHelpMessage in llvm-ar.
llvm-svn: 312761
-mcpu=# will support:
. generic: the default insn set
. v1: insn set version 1, the same as generic
. v2: insn set version 2, version 1 + additional jmp insns
. probe: the compiler will probe the underlying kernel to
decide proper version of insn set.
We did not not use -mcpu=native since llc/llvm will interpret -mcpu=native
as the underlying hardware architecture regardless of -march value.
Currently, only x86_64 supports -mcpu=probe. Other architecture will
silently revert to "generic".
Also added -mcpu=help to print available cpu parameters.
llvm will print out the information only if there are at least one
cpu and at least one feature. Add an unused dummy feature to
enable the printout.
Examples for usage:
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=v1 -filetype=asm t.ll
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=v2 -filetype=asm t.ll
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=generic -filetype=asm t.ll
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=probe -filetype=asm t.ll
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=v3 -filetype=asm t.ll
'v3' is not a recognized processor for this target (ignoring processor)
...
$ llc -march=bpf -mcpu=help -filetype=asm t.ll
Available CPUs for this target:
generic - Select the generic processor.
probe - Select the probe processor.
v1 - Select the v1 processor.
v2 - Select the v2 processor.
Available features for this target:
dummy - unused feature.
Use +feature to enable a feature, or -feature to disable it.
For example, llc -mcpu=mycpu -mattr=+feature1,-feature2
...
Signed-off-by: Daniel Borkmann <daniel@iogearbox.net>
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Acked-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 311522
Summary:
The function widenPath() for Windows also normalizes long path names by
iterating over the path's components and calling append(). The
assumption during the iteration that separators are not returned by the
iterator doesn't hold because the iterators do return a separator when
the path has a drive name. Handle this case by ignoring separators
during iteration.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36752
llvm-svn: 311382
The various BinaryStream classes had explicit copy constructors
which resulted in deleted move constructors. This was causing
the internal std::shared_ptr to get copied rather than moved
very frequently, since these classes are often used as return
values.
Patch by Alex Telishev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36942
llvm-svn: 311368
An environment variable can be in one of three states:
1. undefined.
2. defined with a non-empty value.
3. defined but with an empty value.
The windows implementation did not support case 3
(it was not handling errors). The Linux implementation
is already correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36394
llvm-svn: 311174
I want to reuse this code in SimplifyDemandedBits handling of Add/Sub. This will make that easier.
Wonder if we should use it in SelectionDAG's computeKnownBits too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36433
llvm-svn: 310378
Summary:
Tools like clang that use RemoveFileOnSignal on their output files
weren't actually able to clean up their outputs before this change. Now
the call to llvm::sys::fs::remove succeeds and the temporary file is
deleted. This is a stop-gap to fix clang before implementing the
solution outlined in PR34070.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36337
llvm-svn: 310137
Summary:
It was added to support clang warnings about includes with case
mismatches, but it ended up not being necessary.
Reviewers: twoh, rafael
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36328
llvm-svn: 310078
The full story is in the comments:
// Do not attempt to close stdout or stderr. We used to try to maintain the
// property that tools that support writing file to stdout should not also
// write informational output to stdout, but in practice we were never able to
// maintain this invariant. Many features have been added to LLVM and clang
// (-fdump-record-layouts, optimization remarks, etc) that print to stdout, so
// users must simply be aware that mixed output and remarks is a possibility.
NFC, I am just updating comments to reflect reality.
llvm-svn: 310016
The file is called "intrin.h". When building targeting Windows on a Linux
system, with the SDK mounted in a case-insensitive file system, "Intrin.h" will
miss clang's intrin.h header (because that's not in a case-insensitive file
system) but then find intrin.h in the Microsoft SDK. clang can't handle the
SDK's intrin.h.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D36281
llvm-svn: 309980
Found it during work on LLD, it would crash on following
linker script:
SECTIONS { .foo : { *("*®") } }
That happens because ® has int value -82. And chars are used as
array index in code, and are signed by default.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35891
llvm-svn: 309549
Summary:
Using c++11 enum classes ensures that only valid enum values are used
for ArchKind, ProfileKind, VersionKind and ISAKind. This removes the
need for checks that the provided values map to a proper enum value,
allows us to get rid of AK_LAST and prevents comparing values from
different enums. It also removes a bunch of static_cast
from unsigned to enum values and vice versa, at the cost of introducing
static casts to access AArch64ARCHNames and ARMARCHNames by ArchKind.
FPUKind and ArchExtKind are the only remaining old-style enum in
TargetParser.h. I think it's beneficial to keep ArchExtKind as old-style
enum, but FPUKind can be converted too, but this patch is quite big, so
could do this in a follow-up patch. I could also split this patch up a
bit, if people would prefer that.
Reviewers: rengolin, javed.absar, chandlerc, rovka
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35882
llvm-svn: 309287
This patch improves our guessing of unknown Intel CPUs to support Goldmont and skylake-avx512.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35161
llvm-svn: 309246
Summary:
Previously were in support. Since many many things depend on support,
were all forced to also depend on libxml2, which we only want in a few cases.
This puts all the libxml2 deps in a separate lib to be used only in a few
places.
Reviewers: ruiu, thakis, rnk
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35819
llvm-svn: 309070
Summary:
Does a simple merge, where mergeable elements are combined, all others
are appended. Does not apply trickly namespace rules.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35753
llvm-svn: 309047
Summary: Implement parsing and writing of a single xml manifest file.
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35425
llvm-svn: 308679
As a follow up of the bad alloc handler patch, this patch introduces nullptr checks on pointers returned from the
malloc/realloc/calloc functions. In addition some memory size assignments are moved behind the allocation
of the corresponding memory to fulfill exception safe memory management (RAII).
patch by Klaus Kretzschmar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35414
llvm-svn: 308576
It was warning like:
../llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp:172:51: warning:
ignoring return value of ‘ssize_t write(int, const void*, size_t)’,
declared with attribute warn_unused_result [-Wunused-result]
(void)::write(2, OOMMessage, strlen(OOMMessage));
Work around the warning by storing the return value in a variable and
casting that to void instead. We already did this for the other write()
call in this file.
llvm-svn: 308483
This patch series adds support for the IBM z14 processor. This part includes:
- Basic support for the new processor and its features.
- Support for new instructions (except vector 32-bit float and 128-bit float).
- CodeGen for new instructions, including new LLVM intrinsics.
- Scheduler description for the new processor.
- Detection of z14 as host processor.
Support for the new 32-bit vector float and 128-bit vector float
instructions is provided by separate patches.
llvm-svn: 308194
Summary:
The current yaml::Input constructor takes a StringRef of data as its
first parameter, discarding any filename information that may have been
present when a YAML file was opened. Add an alterate yaml::Input
constructor that takes a MemoryBufferRef, which can have a filename
associated with it. This leads to clearer diagnostic messages.
Sponsored By: DARPA, AFRL
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35398
Patch by: Jonathan Anderson (trombonehero)
llvm-svn: 308172
We're already using it in 64-bit builds because 64-bit MSVC doesn't support inline assembly.
As far as I know we were using inline assembly because at the time the code was added we had to support MSVC 2008 pre-SP1 while the intrinsic was added to MSVC in SP1. Now that we don't have to support that we should be able to just use the intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 308163
As far as I can tell we can simply distinguish based on features rather than model number. Many of the strings we were previously using are treated the same by the backend.
llvm-svn: 307884
Summary: Different JITs and other clients of LLVM may have different needs in how symbol resolution should occur.
Reviewers: v.g.vassilev, lhames, karies
Reviewed By: v.g.vassilev
Subscribers: pcanal, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33529
llvm-svn: 307849
ManagedStatic<sys::Mutex> would lazilly allocate a sys::Mutex to lock
when reporting an OOM, which is a bad idea.
The three STL implementations that I know of use pthread_mutex_lock and
EnterCriticalSection to implement std::mutex. I'm pretty sure that
neither of those allocate heap memory.
It seems that we unconditionally use std::mutex without testing
LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS elsewhere in the codebase, so this should be
portable.
llvm-svn: 307827
This adds all the feature bits libgcc has. They will soon be added to compiler-rt as well. This adds a second 32 bit feature variable to hold the bits that are needed by getHostCPUName that are not in libgcc. libgcc had already used 31 of the 32 bits in the existing variable and we needed 3 bits so at minimum 2 bits would spill over. I chose to move all 3.
llvm-svn: 307758
Summary:
A space was added between '-' and 'help' when emitting help output.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D22621 for details.
Reviewers: MaggieYi, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35283
llvm-svn: 307745
Summary:
Patch by Klaus Kretzschmar
We would like to introduce a new type of llvm error handler for handling
bad alloc fault situations. LLVM already provides a fatal error handler
for serious non-recoverable error situations which by default writes
some error information to stderr and calls exit(1) at the end (functions
are marked as 'noreturn').
For long running processes (e.g. a server application), exiting the
process is not an acceptable option, especially not when the system is
in a temporary resource bottleneck with a good chance to recover from
this fault situation. In such a situation you would rather throw an
exception to stop the current compilation and try to overcome the
resource bottleneck. The user should be aware of the problem of throwing
an exception in bad alloc situations, e.g. you must not do any
allocations in the unwind chain. This is especially true when adding
exceptions in existing unfamiliar code (as already stated in the comment
of the current fatal error handler)
So the new handler can also be used to distinguish from general fatal
error situations where recovering is no option. It should be used in
cases where a clean unwind after the allocation is guaranteed.
This patch contains:
- A report_bad_alloc function which calls a user defined bad alloc
error handler. If no user handler is registered the
report_fatal_error function is called. This function is not marked as
'noreturn'.
- A install/restore_bad_alloc_error_handler to install/restore the bad
alloc handler.
- An example (in Mutex.cpp) where the report_bad_alloc function is
called in case of a malloc returns a nullptr.
If this patch gets accepted we would create similar patches to fix
corresponding malloc/calloc usages in the llvm code.
Reviewers: chandlerc, greened, baldrick, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits, MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34753
llvm-svn: 307673
These asserts could only occur if we fail to properly detect the compiler, but an assert is not a good way to do that because it doesn't work in release builds.
I wonder if we could use #error?
llvm-svn: 307520
Users of getHostCPUName should also use getHostCPUFeatures which will take care of making sure avx512 is disabled if the CPU doesn't support it. This is consistent with what we do for other CPUs.
llvm-svn: 307495
Summary:
(re)definition of _RESTRICT_KYWD rightfully causes a warning message during the Solaris build.
This hack is not needed if build compiler is properly configured (.e.g /usr/bin/gcc) so just remove it.
Reviewers: ro, mgorny, krytarowski, joerg
Reviewed By: joerg
Subscribers: quenelle, llvm-commits
Patch by Fedor Sergeev (Oracle).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35054
llvm-svn: 307469
The CPU name is really just used for scheduler and other microarchitectural optimizations. The feature flags should be determined by getHostCPUFeatures which should always be used with getHostCPUName. Trying to alter CPU name strings to control features just isn't practical.
Most of these types of things were removed from Intel CPUs a while ago.
This is part of my plan to bring compiler-rt's cpu_model.c file up to date with the equivalent functionality in libgcc. A lot of the code in that file is copied from Host.cpp and we want to keep them reasonably in sync.
llvm-svn: 307467