Previously, the matching was done incorrectly for the case where
operands for FCmpInst and SelectInst were in opposite order.
Patch by Andrei Elovikov.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33185
llvm-svn: 305308
Summary: Fixes an issue using RegisterStandardPasses from a statically linked object before PassManagerBuilder::addGlobalExtension is called from a dynamic library.
Reviewers: efriedma, theraven
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33515
llvm-svn: 305303
Summary:
Expose the module descriptor index and fill it in for section
contributions.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, ruiu, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34126
llvm-svn: 305296
Summary: Added test cases for multiple machine types, file merging, multiple languages, and more resource types. Also fixed new bugs these tests exposed.
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34047
llvm-svn: 305258
I accidentally combined this patch with one for adding more tests, they
should be separated.
This reverts commit 3da218a523be78df32e637d3446ecf97c9ea0465.
llvm-svn: 305257
This just forwarded to the same signature in User. The version in User is protected so there's no danger of anyone outside of PHINode constructing with the wrong operator new. All PHINodes are created by a static Create function in PHINode.
I believe at one point in history this called User::operator new(s, 0) so it was useful then.
llvm-svn: 305255
User has 3 signatures for operator new today. They take a single size, a size and a number of users, and a size, number of users, and descriptor size.
Historically there used to only be one signature that took size and a number of uses. Long ago derived classes implemented their own versions that took just a size and would call the size and use count version. Then they left an unimplemented signature for the size and use count signature from User. As we moved to C++11 this unimplemented signature because = delete.
Since then operator new has picked up two new signatures for operator new. But when the 3 argument version was added it was never added to the delete list in all of the derived classes where the 2 argument version is deleted. This makes things inconsistent.
I believe once one version of operator new is created in a derived class name hiding will take care of making all of the base class signatures unavailable. So I don't think the deleted lines are needed at all.
This patch removes all of the deletes in cases where there is an override or there is already a delete of another signature (that should trigger name hiding too).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34120
llvm-svn: 305251
The last fix required the user to manually add the required
feature. This caused an LLD test to fail because I failed to
update LLD. In practice we can hide this logic so it can just
be transparently added when we write the PDB.
llvm-svn: 305236
Older PDBs don't have this. Its presence is detected by using
the various "feature" flags that come at the end of the PDB
Stream. Detect this, and don't try to dump the ID stream if the
features tells us it's not present.
llvm-svn: 305235
This is a precursor to another change (coming soon) that aims to make
FoldingSet's API more type-safe. Without this, the type-safety change
would just duplicate 4 more public methods between the already very
similar classes.
This renames FoldingSetImpl to FoldingSetBase so it's consistent with
the FooBase -> FooImpl<T> -> Foo<T> convention we seem to have with
other containers.
llvm-svn: 305231
Summary:
Use the filepath used to open the archive member as the archive member
name instead of the file basename. This path might be absolute or
relative. This is important because the archive member name will show
up in the PDB, and we want our PDBs to look as much like MSVC's as
possible.
This also helps avoid an issue in our PDB module descriptor writing
code, which assumes that all module names are unique. Relative paths
still aren't guaranteed to be unique, but they're much better than
basenames, which definitely aren't unique.
Reviewers: ruiu, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33575
llvm-svn: 305223
This step is just intended to reduce code duplication rather than change any functionality.
A follow-up would be to replace PPCTargetLowering::spliceIntoChain() usage with this new helper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33649
llvm-svn: 305192
Summary: The method TargetTransformInfo::getRegisterBitWidth() is declared const, but the type erasing implementation classes (TargetTransformInfo::Concept & TargetTransformInfo::Model) that were introduced by Chandler in https://reviews.llvm.org/D7293 do not have the method declared const. This is an NFC to tidy up the const consistency between TTI and its implementation.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, reames
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: reames, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33903
llvm-svn: 305189
Summary:
LLDB built with asan on NetBSD detected issues in the following code:
```
void ArchSpec::Clear() {
m_triple = llvm::Triple();
m_core = kCore_invalid;
m_byte_order = eByteOrderInvalid;
m_distribution_id.Clear();
m_flags = 0;
}
```
--- lldb/source/Core/ArchSpec.cpp
Runtime error messages:
/public/pkgsrc-tmp/wip/lldb-netbsd/work/.buildlink/include/llvm/ADT/Triple.h:44:7: runtime error: load of value 32639, which is not a valid value for type 'SubArchType'
/public/pkgsrc-tmp/wip/lldb-netbsd/work/.buildlink/include/llvm/ADT/Triple.h:44:7: runtime error: load of value 3200171710, which is not a valid value for type 'SubArchType'
/public/pkgsrc-tmp/wip/lldb-netbsd/work/.buildlink/include/llvm/ADT/Triple.h:44:7: runtime error: load of value 3200171710, which is not a valid value for type 'SubArchType'
Correct this issue with initialization of SubArch() in the class Triple constructor.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: chandlerc, zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, zturner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33845
llvm-svn: 305178
Summary:
This prevents the iterator overrides from being selected in
the case where non-iterator types are used as arguments, which
is of particular importance in cases where other overrides with
identical types exist.
Reviewers: dblaikie, bkramer, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits, efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33919
llvm-svn: 305105
Previously extractors tried to be stateless with any additional
context information needed in order to parse items being passed
in via the extraction method. This led to quite cumbersome
implementation challenges and awkwardness of use. This patch
brings back support for stateful extractors, making the
implementation and usage simpler.
llvm-svn: 305093
Summary: Add the WindowsResourceCOFFWriter class for producing the final COFF after all parsing is done.
Reviewers: hiraditya!, zturner, ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34020
llvm-svn: 305092
By target hookifying getRegisterType, getNumRegisters, getVectorBreakdown,
backends can request that LLVM to scalarize vector types for calls
and returns.
The MIPS vector ABI requires that vector arguments and returns are passed in
integer registers. With SelectionDAG's new hooks, the MIPS backend can now
handle LLVM-IR with vector types in calls and returns. E.g.
'call @foo(<4 x i32> %4)'.
Previously these cases would be scalarized for the MIPS O32/N32/N64 ABI for
calls and returns if vector types were not legal. If vector types were legal,
a single 128bit vector argument would be assigned to a single 32 bit / 64 bit
integer register.
By teaching the MIPS backend to inspect the original types, it can now
implement the MIPS vector ABI which requires a particular method of
scalarizing vectors.
Previously, the MIPS backend relied on clang to scalarize types such as "call
@foo(<4 x float> %a) into "call @foo(i32 inreg %1, i32 inreg %2, i32 inreg %3,
i32 inreg %4)".
This patch enables the MIPS backend to take either form for vector types.
The previous version of this patch had a "conditional move or jump depends on
uninitialized value".
Reviewers: zoran.jovanovic, jaydeep, vkalintiris, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27845
llvm-svn: 305083
If we're shrinking a binary operation, it may be the case that the new
operations wraps where the old didn't. If this happens, the behavior
should be well-defined. So, we can't always carry wrapping flags with us
when we shrink operations.
If we do, we get incorrect optimizations in cases like:
void foo(const unsigned char *from, unsigned char *to, int n) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
to[i] = from[i] - 128;
}
which gets optimized to:
void foo(const unsigned char *from, unsigned char *to, int n) {
for (int i = 0; i < n; i++)
to[i] = from[i] | 128;
}
Because:
- InstCombine turned `sub i32 %from.i, 128` into
`add nuw nsw i32 %from.i, 128`.
- LoopVectorize vectorized the add to be `add nuw nsw <16 x i8>` with a
vector full of `i8 128`s
- InstCombine took advantage of the fact that the newly-shrunken add
"couldn't wrap", and changed the `add` to an `or`.
InstCombine seems happy to figure out whether we can add nuw/nsw on its
own, so I just decided to drop the flags. There are already a number of
places in LoopVectorize where we rely on InstCombine to clean up.
llvm-svn: 305053
Summary:
RelocOffset is a 32-bit value, but we previously truncated it to 16 bits.
Fixes PR33335.
Reviewers: zturner, hiraditya!
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33968
llvm-svn: 305043
This is a preparatory change to expose the debug compression style to
clang. It requires exposing the enumeration and passing the actual
value through to the backend from the frontend in actual value form
rather than a boolean that selects the GNU style of debug info
compression.
Minor tweak to the ELF Object Writer to use a variable for re-used
values. Add an assertion that debug information format is one of the
two currently known types if debug information is being compressed.
llvm-svn: 305038
This adds support for Symbols, StringTable, and FrameData subsection
types. Even though these subsections rarely if ever appear in a PDB
file (they are usually in object files), there's no theoretical reason
why they *couldn't* appear in a PDB. The real issue though is that in
order to add support for dumping and writing them (which will be useful
for object files), we need a way to test them. And since there is no
support for reading and writing them to / from object files yet, making
PDB support them is the best way to both add support for the underlying
format and add support for tests at the same time. Later, when we go
to add support for reading / writing them from object files, we'll need
only minimal changes in the underlying read/write code.
llvm-svn: 305037
This is the same change for the YAML Output style applied to the
raw output style. Previously we would queue up all subsections
until every one had been read, and then output them in a pre-
determined order. This was because some subsections need to be
read first in order to properly dump later subsections. This
patch allows them to be dumped in the order they appear.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34015
llvm-svn: 305034
These used to be virtual methods that would enable doing the right thing with only a TerminatorInst pointer. I believe they were also acting as vtable anchors in my cases. I think the fact that they had a separate name ending in V was to allow a version without V to be called without a virtual call in a pre-C++11 final keyword world.
Where possible the base methods in TerminatorInst dispatch directly to the public methods in the classes that have the same signature. For some classes this wasn't possible so I've left private method versions that match the name and signature of the version in TerminatorInst. All versions have been moved into the class definitions since we no longer need vtable anchors here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34011
llvm-svn: 305028
This is to prepare to allow for dead stripping of globals in the
merged modules.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33921
llvm-svn: 305027
This data type includes the contents of a bitcode file.
Right now a bitcode file can only contain modules, but
a later change will add a symbol table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33969
llvm-svn: 305019
(0) RegAllocPBQP: Since getRawAllocationOrder() may return a collection that includes reserved physical registers, iterate to find an un-reserved physical register.
(1) VirtRegMap: Enforce the invariant: "no reserved physical registers" in assignVirt2Phys(). Previously, this was checked only after the fact in VirtRegRewriter::rewrite.
(2) MachineVerifier: updated the test per MatzeB's review.
(3) +testcase
Patch by Nick Johnson<Nicholas.Paul.Johnson@deshawresearch.com>!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33947
llvm-svn: 305016
Apparently support for /debug:fastlink PDBs isn't part of the
DIA SDK (!), and it was causing llvm-pdbdump to crash because
we weren't checking for a null pointer return value. This
manifests when calling findChildren on the IDiaSymbol, and
it returns E_NOTIMPL.
llvm-svn: 304982
The zero heuristic assumes that integers are more likely positive than negative,
but this also has the effect of assuming that strcmp return values are more
likely positive than negative. Given that for nonzero strcmp return values it's
the ordering of arguments that determines the sign of the result there's no
reason to assume that's true.
Fix this by inspecting the LHS of the compare and using TargetLibraryInfo to
decide if it's strcmp-like, and if so only assume that nonzero is more likely
than zero i.e. strings are more often different than the same. This causes a
slight code generation change in the spec2006 benchmark 403.gcc, but with no
noticeable performance impact. The intent of this patch is to allow better
optimisation of dhrystone on Cortex-M cpus, but currently it won't as there are
also some changes that need to be made to if-conversion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33934
llvm-svn: 304970
This code now lives in lib/Object. The idea is that it can now be reused by
IRObjectFile among other things.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31921
llvm-svn: 304958
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
Previously you would have to use operator==(uint64_t) which does the getActiveBits call and a uint64_t comparison. But we can get all we need to know from the getActiveBits call.
This method will be used in another commit.
llvm-svn: 304854
This patch introduces a new command line option, called brief, to
llvm-dwarfdump. When -brief is used, the attribute forms for the
.debug_info section will not be emitted to output.
Patch by Spyridoula Gravani!
rdar://problem/21474365
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33867
llvm-svn: 304844
Summary:
I would like to add printing of registered targets to clang's version
information. For this to work correctly, the VersionPrinter logic in
CommandLine.cpp should support printing to arbitrary raw_ostreams,
instead of always defaulting to outs().
Add a raw_ostream& parameter to the function pointer type used for
VersionPrinter, and while doing so, introduce a typedef for convenience.
Note that VersionPrinter::print() will still default to using outs(),
the clang part will necessarily go into a separate review.
Reviewers: beanz, chandlerc, dberris, mehdi_amini, zturner
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33899
llvm-svn: 304835
Summary:
LVIPrinter pass was previously relying on the LVICache. We now directly call the
the LVI functions which solves the value if the LVI information is not already
available in the cache. This has 2 benefits over the printing of LVI cache:
1. higher coverage (i.e. catches errors) in LVI code when cache value is
invalidated.
2. relies on the core functions, and not dependent on the LVI cache (which may
be scrapped at some point).
It would still catch any cache invalidation errors, since we first go through
the cache.
Reviewers: reames, dberlin, sanjoy
Reviewed by: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32135
llvm-svn: 304819
The change cleans up and unifies the handling of relocation
entries in WasmObjectWriter. Type index relocation no longer
need to be handled separately.
The only externally visible change should be that type
index relocations are no longer grouped at the end.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33918
llvm-svn: 304816
1. When there is no perfect iteration order, we can't let phi nodes
put themselves in terms of things that come later in the iteration
order, or we will endlessly cycle (the normal RPO algorithm clears the
hashtable to avoid this issue).
2. We are sometimes erasing the wrong expression (causing pessimism)
because our equality says loads and stores are the same.
We introduce an exact equality function and use it when erasing to
make sure we erase only identical expressions, not equivalent ones.
llvm-svn: 304807
Summary:
Expanding the loop idiom test for memcpy to also recognize
unordered atomic memcpy. The only difference for recognizing
an unordered atomic memcpy and instead of a normal memcpy is
that the loads and/or stores involved are unordered atomic operations.
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
Patch by Daniel Neilson!
Reviewers: reames, anna, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames, anna
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33243
llvm-svn: 304806
These methods looks like they were originally came from
MCELFObjectTargetWriter but they are never called by the
WasmObjectWriter.
Remove these methods meant the declaration of WasmRelocationEntry
could also move into the cpp file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33905
llvm-svn: 304804
This was masked by lucky #include ordering in the .cpp files and
uncovered when we moved to the canonical ordering because the primary
header was included first (yay!). Unfortunately, I can't build this
locally so took a build-bot iteration to find it.
llvm-svn: 304789
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
If -simplify-mir option is passed then MIRPrinter will not print such fields.
This change also required some lit test cases in CodeGen directory to be changed.
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32304
llvm-svn: 304779
Summary:
This problem stems from the fact that instructions are allocated using new
in LLVM, i.e. there is no relationship that can be derived by just looking
at the pointer value.
This interface dispatches to appropriate dominance check given 2 instructions,
i.e. in case the instructions are in the same basic block, ordered basicblock
(with instruction numbering and caching) are used. Otherwise, dominator tree
is used.
This is a preparation patch for https://reviews.llvm.org/D32720
Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel, davide
Subscribers: davide, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33380
llvm-svn: 304764
When parsing .mir files immediately construct the MachineFunctions and
put them into MachineModuleInfo.
This allows us to get rid of the delayed construction (and delayed error
reporting) through the MachineFunctionInitialzier interface.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33809
llvm-svn: 304758
Summary:
Reverse iteration can be turned on, by default, by setting -DLLVM_REVERSE_ITERATION:BOOL=ON during cmake.
With this enabled, we can uncover lots of cases of non-determinism in codegen by simply running our tests (without any other change).
We can then setup a buildbot which will have this turned on by default. Initially, a lot of unit tests will fail in this configuration.
Once we start fixing non-determinism issues, we can gradually make this a blocker for patches.
Reviewers: davide, dblaikie, mehdi_amini, dberlin
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: probinson, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33908
llvm-svn: 304757
- Move ISel (and pre-isel) pass construction into TargetPassConfig
- Extract AsmPrinter construction into a helper function
Putting the ISel code into TargetPassConfig seems a lot more natural and
both changes together make make it easier to build custom pipelines
involving .mir in an upcoming commit. This moves MachineModuleInfo to an
earlier place in the pass pipeline which shouldn't have any effect.
llvm-svn: 304754
While it's not entirely clear why a compiler or linker might
put this information into an object or PDB file, one has been
spotted in the wild which was causing llvm-pdbdump to crash.
This patch adds support for reading-writing these sections.
Since I don't know how to get one of the native tools to
generate this kind of debug info, the only test here is one
in which we feed YAML into the tool to produce a PDB and
then spit out YAML from the resulting PDB and make sure that
it matches.
llvm-svn: 304738
This ensures that we can emit the ObjC Image Info structure on COFF and
ELF as well. The frontend already would attempt to emit this
information but would get dropped when generating assembly or an object
file.
llvm-svn: 304736
This removes a quadratic behavior in assert-enabled builds.
GVN propagates the equivalence from a condition into the blocks guarded by the
condition. E.g. for 'if (a == 7) { ... }', 'a' will be replaced in the block
with 7. It does this by replacing all the uses of 'a' that are dominated by
the true edge.
For a switch with N cases and U uses of the value, this will mean N * U calls
to 'dominates'. Asserting isSingleEdge in 'dominates' make this N^2 * U
because this function checks for the uniqueness of the edge. I.e. traverses
each edge between the SwitchInst's block and the cases.
The change removes the assert and makes 'dominates' works correctly in the
presence of non-unique edges.
This brings build time down by an order of magnitude for an input that has
~10k cases in a switch statement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33584
llvm-svn: 304721
procedural optimizations to prevent dropping symbols and allow the linker
to process re-directs.
PR33145: --wrap doesn't work with lto.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33621
llvm-svn: 304719
Summary:
Since LLVM_NATIVE_ARCH, LLVM_NATIVE_ASMPARSER, LLVM_NATIVE_ASMPRINTER,
LLVM_NATIVE_DISASSEMBLER, LLVM_NATIVE_TARGET, LLVM_NATIVE_TARGETINFO and
LLVM_NATIVE_TARGETMC are already defined in llvm-config.h, there seems
to be no reason to also define them in config.h. Also, I can only find
usage of these macros in files that include llvm-config.h.
So let's remove the duplicated macros from config.h.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, mehdi_amini, joerg
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: chapuni, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33881
llvm-svn: 304714
The C functions added are LLVMGetNumContainedTypes and
LLVMGetSubtypes.
The OCaml function added is Llvm.subtypes.
Patch by Ekaterina Vaartis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33677
llvm-svn: 304709
This patch provides a means to specify section-names for global variables,
functions and static variables, using #pragma directives.
This feature is only defined to work sensibly for ELF targets.
One can specify section names as:
#pragma clang section bss="myBSS" data="myData" rodata="myRodata" text="myText"
One can "unspecify" a section name with empty string e.g.
#pragma clang section bss="" data="" text="" rodata=""
Reviewers: Roger Ferrer, Jonathan Roelofs, Reid Kleckner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33413
llvm-svn: 304704
Previously MappedBlockStream owned its own BumpPtrAllocator that
it would allocate from when a read crossed a block boundary. This
way it could still return the user a contiguous buffer of the
requested size. However, It's not uncommon to open a stream, read
some stuff, close it, and then save the information for later.
After all, since the entire file is mapped into memory, the data
should always be available as long as the file is open.
Of course, the exception to this is when the data isn't *in* the
file, but rather in some buffer that we temporarily allocated to
present this contiguous view. And this buffer would get destroyed
as soon as the strema was closed.
The fix here is to force the user to specify the allocator, this
way it can provide an allocator that has whatever lifetime it
chooses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33858
llvm-svn: 304623
We'd called this "vm state" in the early days, but have long since standardized on calling it "deopt" in line with the operand bundle tag. Fix a few cases we'd missed.
llvm-svn: 304607
This pass allows to run the register scavenging independently of
PrologEpilogInserter to allow targeted testing.
Also adds some basic register scavenging tests.
llvm-svn: 304606
Use the initializeXXX method to initialize the RABasic pass in the
pipeline. This enables us to take advantage of the .mir infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 304602
Previously we would expect certain subsections to appear
in a certain order because some subsections would reference
other subsections, but in practice we need to support
arbitrary orderings since some object file and PDB file
producers generate them this way. This also paves the
way for supporting Yaml <-> Object File conversion of
CodeView, since Object Files typically have quite a
large number of subsections in their debug info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33807
llvm-svn: 304588
This reverts commit r304561 and re-lands r303490 & co.
The fix was to use "SymbolName" when translating LLD's internal export
list to lib/Object's short export struct. The SymbolName reflects the
actual symbol name, which may include fastcall and stdcall mangling bits
not included in the /EXPORT or .def file EXPORTS name:
@@ -434,8 +434,7 @@ std::vector<COFFShortExport> createCOFFShortExportFromConfig() {
std::vector<COFFShortExport> Exports;
for (Export &E1 : Config->Exports) {
COFFShortExport E2;
- E2.Name = E1.Name;
+ // Use SymbolName, which will have any stdcall or fastcall qualifiers.
+ E2.Name = E1.SymbolName;
E2.ExtName = E1.ExtName;
E2.Ordinal = E1.Ordinal;
E2.Noname = E1.Noname;
llvm-svn: 304573
This might give a few better opportunities to optimize these to memcpy
rather than loops - also a few minor cleanups (StringRef-izing,
templating (to avoid std::function indirection), etc).
The SmallVector::assign(iter, iter) could be improved with the use of
SFINAE, but the (iter, iter) ctor and append(iter, iter) need it to and
don't have it - so, workaround it for now rather than bothering with the
added complexity.
(also, as noted in the added FIXME, these assign ops could potentially
be optimized better at least for non-trivially-copyable types)
llvm-svn: 304566
While doing so, clarify the comments and update them to reflect current reality.
Note: I'm going to let this sit for a week or so before adding further verification. I want to give this time to cycle through bots and merge it into our downstream tree before pushing this further.
llvm-svn: 304565
This initial patch doesn't actually do much useful. It's just to show where the new code goes. Once this is in, I'll extend the verification logic to check more useful properties.
For those curious, the more complicated version of this patch already found one very suspicious thing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33819
llvm-svn: 304564
This reverts commits r303490, r303491, r303493, and r303494.
This caused http://crbug.com/728726. Essentially, exporting stdcall
functions doesn't appear to work after this change. Reduced test case
soon.
llvm-svn: 304561
Summary:
As we teach Clang to use ThinkLTO + new PM, it's good for the users to
inject through Config, instead of setting a flag in the LTOBackend
library. Move the flag to llvm-lto2.
As it moves to llvm-lto2, a new name -use-new-pm seems simpler and as
clear.
Reviewers: davide, tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, inglorion, eraman, chandlerc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33799
llvm-svn: 304492
This was rL304226, reverted in 304228 due to a clang assertion failure
on the build bots. That problem should have been addressed by clang
commit rL304470.
llvm-svn: 304488
Object files have symbol records not aligned to any particular
boundary (e.g. 1-byte aligned), while PDB files have symbol
records padded to 4-byte aligned boundaries. Since they share
the same reading / writing code, we have to provide an option to
specify the alignment and propagate it up to the producer or
consumer who knows what the alignment is supposed to be for the
given container type.
Added a test for this by modifying the existing PDB -> YAML -> PDB
round-tripping code to round trip symbol records as well as types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33785
llvm-svn: 304484
Summary:
Clang wants to clone a function before it is done building the entire
compilation unit. As of now, there is no good way to do that, because
CloneFunction doesn't like dealing with temporary metadata. However,
as long as clang doesn't want to add any variables to this SP, it
should be fine to just prematurely finalize it. Add an API to allow this.
This is done in preparation of a clang commit to fix the assertion that
necessitated the revert of D33655.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33704
llvm-svn: 304467
Replace GVFlags::LiveRoot with GVFlags::Live and use that instead of
all the DeadSymbols sets. This is refactoring in order to make
liveness information available in the RegularLTO pipeline.
llvm-svn: 304466
This commit introduces a structure that holds all the flags that
control the pretty printing of dwarf output.
Patch by Spyridoula Gravani!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33749
llvm-svn: 304446
Based on the original patch by Davide, but I've adjusted the API exposed
to just be different entry points rather than exposing more state
parameters. I've factored all the common logic out so that we don't have
any duplicate pipelines, we just stitch them together in different ways.
I think this makes the build easier to reason about and understand.
This adds a direct method for getting the module simplification pipeline
as well as a method to get the optimization pipeline. While not my
express goal, this seems nice and gives a good place comment about the
restrictions that are imposed on them.
I did make some minor changes to the way the pipelines are structured
here, but hopefully not ones that are significant or controversial:
1) I sunk the PGO indirect call promotion to only be run when we have
PGO enabled (or as part of the special ThinLTO pipeline).
2) I made the extra GlobalOpt run in ThinLTO just happen all the time
and at a slightly more powerful place (before we remove available
externaly functions). This seems like general goodness and not a big
compile time sink, so it didn't make sense to *only* use it in
ThinLTO. Fewer differences in the pipeline makes everything simpler
IMO.
3) I hoisted the ThinLTO stop point pre-link above the the RPO function
attr inference. The RPO inference won't infer anything terribly
meaningful pre-link (recursiveness?) so it didn't make a lot of
sense. But if the placement of RPO inference starts to matter, we
should move it to the canonicalization phase anyways which seems like
a better place for it (and there is a FIXME to this effect!). But
that seemed a bridge too far for this patch.
If we ever need to parameterize these pipelines more heavily, we can
always sink the logic to helper functions with parameters to keep those
parameters out of the public API. But the changes above seemed minor
that we could possible get away without the parameters entirely.
I added support for parsing 'thinlto' and 'thinlto-pre-link' names in
pass pipelines to make it easy to test these routines and play with them
in larger pipelines. I also added a really basic manifest of passes test
that will show exactly how the pipelines behave and work as well as
making updates to them clear.
Lastly, this factoring does introduce a nesting layer of module pass
managers in the default pipeline. I don't think this is a big deal and
the flexibility of decoupling the pipelines seems easily worth it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33540
llvm-svn: 304407
Summary:
This is a continuation of the work started in D29872 . Passing the carry down as a value rather than as a glue allows for further optimizations. Introducing setcccarry makes the use of addc/subc unecessary and we can start the removal process.
This patch only introduce the optimization strictly required to get the same level of optimization as was available before nothing more.
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33374
llvm-svn: 304404
They weren't used often enough to justify having two different interfaces. Push the responsiblity of creating a StringInit up to the caller.
llvm-svn: 304388
Summary: Also see D33429 for other ThinLTO + New PM related changes.
Reviewers: davide, chandlerc, tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, cfe-commits, inglorion, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33525
llvm-svn: 304378
Summary: LiveRangeShrink pass moves instruction right after the definition with the same BB if the instruction and its operands all have more than one use. This pass is inexpensive and guarantees optimal live-range within BB.
Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, hfinkel, MatzeB, andreadb
Reviewed By: MatzeB, andreadb
Subscribers: hiraditya, jyknight, sanjoy, skatkov, gberry, jholewinski, qcolombet, javed.absar, krytarowski, atrick, spatel, RKSimon, andreadb, MatzeB, mehdi_amini, mgorny, efriedma, davide, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32563
llvm-svn: 304371
After transforming FP to ST registers:
- Do not add the ST register to the livein lists, they are reserved so
we do not need to track their liveness.
- Remove the FP registers from the livein lists, they don't have defs or
uses anymore and so are not live.
- (The setKillFlags() call is moved to an earlier place as it relies on
the FP registers still being present in the livein list.)
llvm-svn: 304342
Summary:
Fairly straightforward patch to fill in some of the holes in the
attributes API with respect to accessing parameter/argument attributes.
The patch aims to step further towards encapsulating the
idx+FirstArgIndex pattern to access these attributes to within the
AttributeList.
Patch by Daniel Neilson!
Reviewers: rnk, chandlerc, pete, javed.absar, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33355
llvm-svn: 304329
Internally both these methods just return the result of getValue on either a StringInit or a CodeInit object. In both cases this returns a StringRef pointing to a string allocated in the BumpPtrAllocator so its not going anywhere. So we can just pass that StringRef along.
This is a fairly naive patch that targets just the build failures caused by this change. There's additional work that can be done to avoid creating std::string at call sites that still think getValueAsString returns a std::string. I'll try to clean those up in future patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33710
llvm-svn: 304325
This adds a callback to the LLVMTargetMachine that lets target indicate
that they do not pass the machine verifier checks in all cases yet.
This is intended to be a temporary measure while the targets are fixed
allowing us to enable the machine verifier by default with
EXPENSIVE_CHECKS enabled!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33696
llvm-svn: 304320
This reverts commit r304310.
It caused build failures in polly and mingw
due to undefined reference to
llvm::RTLIB::getMEMCPY_ELEMENT_ATOMIC.
llvm-svn: 304315
This patch does an inline expansion of memcmp.
It changes the memcmp library call into an inline expansion when the size is
known at compile time and is under a target specified threshold.
This expansion is implemented in CodeGenPrepare and expands into straight line
code. The target specifies a maximum load size and the expansion works by using
this size to load the two sources, compare, and exit early if a difference is
found. It also has a special case when the memcmp result is used in a compare
to zero equality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28637
llvm-svn: 304313
Summary:
Expanding the loop idiom test for memcpy to also recognize unordered atomic memcpy.
The only difference for recognizing
an unordered atomic memcpy and instead of a normal memcpy is
that the loads and/or stores involved are unordered atomic operations.
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
Patch by Daniel Neilson!
Reviewers: reames, anna, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33243
llvm-svn: 304310
The code was a mess and disorganized due to the sheer amount
of it being in one file. So I'm splitting this into three files.
One for CodeView types, one for CodeView symbols, and one for
CodeView debug subsections. NFC.
llvm-svn: 304278
CodeViewYAML.h attempts to hide the details of many of the
CodeView yaml structures and types, but at the same time it
exposes the mapping traits for them to external users of the
header.
This patch just hides these in the implementation files so that
the interface is kept as simple as possible.
llvm-svn: 304263
This continues the effort to get the CodeView YAML parsing logic
into ObjectYAML. After this patch, the only missing piece will
be the CodeView debug symbol subsections.
llvm-svn: 304256
This is the beginning of an effort to move the codeview yaml
reader / writer into ObjectYAML so that it can be shared.
Currently the only consumer / producer of CodeView YAML is
llvm-pdbdump, but CodeView can exist outside of PDB files, and
indeed is put into object files and passed to the linker to
produce PDB files. Furthermore, there are subtle differences
in the types of records that show up in object file CodeView
vs PDB file CodeView, but they are otherwise 99% the same.
By having this code in ObjectYAML, we can have llvm-pdbdump
reuse this code, while teaching obj2yaml and yaml2obj to use
this syntax for dealing with object files that can contain
CodeView.
This patch only adds support for CodeView type information
to ObjectYAML. Subsequent patches will add support for
CodeView symbol information.
llvm-svn: 304248
TargetPassConfig is not useful for targets that do not use the CodeGen
library, so we may just as well store a pointer to an
LLVMTargetMachine instead of just to a TargetMachine.
While at it, also change the constructor to take a reference instead of a
pointer as the TM must not be nullptr.
llvm-svn: 304247
Summary:
In rL302576, DISubprograms gained the constraint that a !dbg attachments to functions must
have a 1:1 mapping to DISubprograms. As part of that change, the function cloning support
was adjusted to attempt to enforce this invariant during cloning. However, there
were several problems with the implementation. Part of these were fixed in rL304079.
However, there was a more fundamental problem with these changes, namely that it
bypasses the matadata value map, causing the cloned metadata to be a mix of metadata
pointing to the new suprogram (where manual code was added to fix those up) and the
old suprogram (where this was not the case). This mismatch could cause a number of
different assertion failures in the DWARF emitter. Some of these are given at
https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/22069, but some others have been observed
as well. Attempt to rectify this by partially reverting the manual DI metadata fixup,
and instead using the standard value map approach. To retain the desired semantics
of not duplicating the compilation unit and inlined subprograms, explicitly freeze
these in the value map.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, GorNishanov, echristo
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33655
llvm-svn: 304226
This adds implementations for Symbols and FrameData, and renames
the existing codeview::StringTable class to conform to the
DebugSectionStringTable convention.
llvm-svn: 304222
Params DT and LI are redundant, because these values are contained in fields anyways.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33668
llvm-svn: 304204
The MC ConstantPool class uses a DenseMap to track generated constants, with
the int64_t value of the constant as the key. This fails when values of
0x7fffffffffffffff or 0x7ffffffffffffffe are inserted into the constant pool, as
these are sentinel values for DenseMap.
The fix is to use std::map instead, which doesn't use sentinel values.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33667
llvm-svn: 304199
This is super awkward, but GCC doesn't let us have template visible when
an argument is an inline function and -fvisibility-inlines-hidden is
used.
llvm-svn: 304175
With fix of uninitialized variable.
Original commit message:
This change is intended to use for LLD in D33183.
Problem we have in LLD when building .gdb_index is that we need to know section which address range belongs to.
Previously it was solved on LLD side by providing fake section addresses with use of llvm::LoadedObjectInfo
interface. We assigned file offsets as addressed. Then after obtaining ranges lists, for each range we had to find section ID's.
That not only was slow, but also complicated implementation and was the reason of incorrect behavior when
sections share the same offsets, like D33176 shows.
This patch makes DWARF parsers to return section index as well. That solves problem mentioned above.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33184
llvm-svn: 304078
DagInits are allocated in a BumpPtrAllocator so they are never destructed. This means the destructor for the SmallVector never runs.
To fix this we now allocate the vectors in the BumpPtrAllocator too using TrailingObjects.
llvm-svn: 304077
Rewrite fixupKills() to use the LivePhysRegs class. Simplifies the code
and fixes a bug where the CSR registers in return blocks where missed
leading to invalid kill flags. Also remove the unnecessary rule that we
wouldn't set kill flags on tied operands.
No tests as I have an upcoming commit improving MachineVerifier checks
to catch these cases in multiple existing lit tests.
llvm-svn: 304055
This reverts commit r299287 plus clean-ups.
The localizer pass is a helper pass that could be run at O0 in the GISel
pipeline to work around the deficiency of the fast register allocator.
It basically shortens the live-ranges of the constants so that the
allocator does not spill all over the place.
Long term fix would be to make the greedy allocator fast.
llvm-svn: 304051
The recommit is to fix a bug about ExtractValue and InsertValue ops. For those
ops, some varargs inside GVN::Expression are not value numbers but raw index
numbers. It is wrong to do phi-translate for raw index numbers, and the fix is
to stop doing that.
Right now scalarpre doesn't have phi-translate support, so it will miss some
simple pre opportunities. Like the following testcase, current scalarpre cannot
recognize the last "a * b" is fully redundent because a and b used by the last
"a * b" expr are both defined by phis.
long a[100], b[100], g1, g2, g3;
__attribute__((pure)) long goo();
void foo(long a, long b, long c, long d) {
g1 = a * b;
if (__builtin_expect(g2 > 3, 0)) {
a = c;
b = d;
g2 = a * b;
}
g3 = a * b; // fully redundant.
}
The patch adds phi-translate support in scalarpre. This is only a temporary
solution before the newpre based on newgvn is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32252
llvm-svn: 304050
[AMDGPU] add intrinsic for s_getpc
Summary: The s_getpc instruction is exposed as intrinsic llvm.amdgcn.s.getpc.
Patch by Tim Corringham
llvm-svn: 304031
Consistent with GCC and addresses a shortcoming with ThinLTO where many
imported CUs may end up being empty (because the functions imported from
them either ended up not being used (and were then discarded, since
they're imported as available_externally) or optimized away entirely).
Test cases previously testing empty CUs (either intentionally, or
because they didn't need anything more complicated) had a trivial 'int'
or similar basic type added to their retained types list.
This is a first order approximation - a deeper implementation could do
things like:
1) Be more lazy about construction of the CU - for example if two CUs
containing a single identical retained type are linked together, with
this change one of the two CUs will be produced but empty (since a
duplicate type won't be produced).
2) Go further and invert all the CU links the same way the subprogram
link is inverted - keep named CU lists of retained types, macros, etc,
and have those link back to the CU. Then if they're emitted, the CU is
emitted, but never otherwise - this would allow the metadata itself to
be dropped earlier too, though it seems unlikely that's an important
optimization as there shouldn't be many CUs relative to the number of
other entities.
llvm-svn: 304020
This change is intended to use for LLD in D33183.
Problem we have in LLD when building .gdb_index is that we need to know section which address range belongs to.
Previously it was solved on LLD side by providing fake section addresses with use of llvm::LoadedObjectInfo
interface. We assigned file offsets as addressed. Then after obtaining ranges lists, for each range we had to find section ID's.
That not only was slow, but also complicated implementation and was the reason of incorrect behavior when
sections share the same offsets, like D33176 shows.
This patch makes DWARF parsers to return section index as well. That solves problem mentioned above.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33184
llvm-svn: 304002
With fix of test compilation.
Initial commit message:
This change is intended to use for LLD in D33183.
Problem we have in LLD when building .gdb_index is that we need to know section
which address range belongs to.
Previously it was solved on LLD side by providing fake section addresses
with use of llvm::LoadedObjectInfo interface. We assigned file offsets as addressed.
Then after obtaining ranges lists, for each range we had to find section ID's.
That not only was slow, but also complicated implementation and was the reason
of incorrect behavior when
sections share the same offsets, like D33176 shows.
This patch makes DWARF parsers to return section index as well.
That solves problem mentioned above.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33184
llvm-svn: 303983
This change is intended to use for LLD in D33183.
Problem we have in LLD when building .gdb_index is that we need to know section
which address range belongs to.
Previously it was solved on LLD side by providing fake section addresses
with use of llvm::LoadedObjectInfo interface. We assigned file offsets as addressed.
Then after obtaining ranges lists, for each range we had to find section ID's.
That not only was slow, but also complicated implementation and was the reason
of incorrect behavior when
sections share the same offsets, like D33176 shows.
This patch makes DWARF parsers to return section index as well.
That solves problem mentioned above.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33184
llvm-svn: 303978
The patch rL303730 was reverted because test lsr-expand-quadratic.ll failed on
many non-X86 configs with this patch. The reason of this is that the patch
makes a correctless fix that changes optimizer's behavior for this test.
Without the change, LSR was making an overconfident simplification basing on a
wrong SCEV. Apparently it did not need the IV analysis to do this. With the
change, it chose a different way to simplify (that wasn't so confident), and
this way required the IV analysis. Now, following the right execution path,
LSR tries to make a transformation relying on IV Users analysis. This analysis
is target-dependent due to this code:
// LSR is not APInt clean, do not touch integers bigger than 64-bits.
// Also avoid creating IVs of non-native types. For example, we don't want a
// 64-bit IV in 32-bit code just because the loop has one 64-bit cast.
uint64_t Width = SE->getTypeSizeInBits(I->getType());
if (Width > 64 || !DL.isLegalInteger(Width))
return false;
To make a proper transformation in this test case, the type i32 needs to be
legal for the specified data layout. When the test runs on some non-X86
configuration (e.g. pure ARM 64), opt gets confused by the specified target
and does not use it, rejecting the specified data layout as well. Instead,
it uses some default layout that does not treat i32 as a legal type
(currently the layout that is used when it is not specified does not have
legal types at all). As result, the transformation we expect to happen does
not happen for this test.
This re-enabling patch does not have any source code changes compared to the
original patch rL303730. The only difference is that the failing test is
moved to X86 directory and now has requirement of running on x86 only to comply
with the specified target triple and data layout.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33543
llvm-svn: 303971
Re-commit r303937 + r303949 as they were not the cause for the build
failures.
We do not track liveness of reserved registers so adding them to the
liveins list in computeLiveIns() was completely unnecessary.
llvm-svn: 303970
block.
This allows writing much more natural and readable range based for loops
directly over the PHI nodes. It also takes advantage of the same tricks
for terminating the sequence as the hand coded versions.
I've replaced one example of this mostly to showcase the difference and
I've added a unit test to make sure the facilities really work the way
they're intended. I want to use this inside of SimpleLoopUnswitch but it
seems generally nice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33533
llvm-svn: 303964
Summary:
RelocVisitor had too many, too small functions. This patch group them
by architecture rather than each relocation type.
Reviewers: grimar, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33580
llvm-svn: 303950
Merging two type streams is one of the most time consuming
parts of generating a PDB, and as such it needs to be as
fast as possible. The visitor abstractions used for interoperating
nicely with many different types of inputs and outputs have
been used widely and help greatly for testability and implementing
tools, but the abstractions build up and get in the way of
performance.
This patch removes all of the visitation stuff from the type
stream merger, essentially re-inventing the leaf / member switch
and loop, but at a very low level. This allows us many other
optimizations, such as not actually deserializing *any* records
(even member records which don't describe their own length), as
the operation of "figure out how long this record is" is somewhat
faster than "figure out how long this record *and* get all its
fields out". Furthermore, whereas before we had to deserialize,
re-write type indices, then re-serialize, now we don't have to
do any of those 3 steps. We just find out where the type indices
are and pull them directly out of the byte stream and re-write
them.
This is worth a 50-60% performance increase. On top of all other
optimizations that have been applied this week, I now get the
following numbers when linking lld.exe and lld.pdb
MSVC: 25.67s
Before This Patch: 18.59s
After This Patch: 8.92s
So this is a huge performance win.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33564
llvm-svn: 303935
Right now scalarpre doesn't have phi-translate support, so it will miss some
simple pre opportunities. Like the following testcase, current scalarpre cannot
recognize the last "a * b" is fully redundent because a and b used by the last
"a * b" expr are both defined by phis.
long a[100], b[100], g1, g2, g3;
__attribute__((pure)) long goo();
void foo(long a, long b, long c, long d) {
g1 = a * b;
if (__builtin_expect(g2 > 3, 0)) {
a = c;
b = d;
g2 = a * b;
}
g3 = a * b; // fully redundant.
}
The patch adds phi-translate support in scalarpre. This is only a temporary
solution before the newpre based on newgvn is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32252
llvm-svn: 303923
Originally this was intended to be set up so that when linking
a PDB which refers to a type server, it would only visit the
PDB once, and on subsequent visitations it would just skip it
since all the records had already been added.
Due to some C++ scoping issues, this was not occurring and it
was revisiting the type server every time, which caused every
record to end up being thrown away on all subsequent visitations.
This doesn't affect the performance of linking clang-cl generated
object files because we don't use type servers, but when linking
object files and libraries generated with /Zi via MSVC, this means
only 1 object file has to be linked instead of N object files, so
the speedup is quite large.
llvm-svn: 303920
Previously, every time we wanted to serialize a field list record, we
would create a new copy of FieldListRecordBuilder, which would in turn
create a temporary instance of TypeSerializer, which itself had a
std::vector<> that was about 128K in size. So this 128K allocation was
happening every time. We can re-use the same instance over and over, we
just have to clear its internal hash table and seen records list between
each run. This saves us from the constant re-allocations.
This is worth an ~18.5% speed increase (3.75s -> 3.05s) in my tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33506
llvm-svn: 303919
Summary:
DbiStreamBuilder calculated the offset of the source file names inside
the file info substream as the size of the file info substream minus
the size of the file names. Since the file info substream is padded to
a multiple of 4 bytes, this caused the first file name to be aligned
on a 4-byte boundary. By contrast, DbiModuleList would read the file
names immediately after the file name offset table, without skipping
to the next 4-byte boundary. This change makes it so that the file
names are written to the location where DbiModuleList expects them,
and puts any necessary padding for the file info substream after the
file names instead of before it.
Reviewers: amccarth, rnk, zturner
Reviewed By: amccarth, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33475
llvm-svn: 303917
It was using the number of blocks of the entire PDB file as the number
of blocks of each stream that was created. This was only an issue in
the readLongestContiguousChunk function, which was never called prior.
This bug surfaced when I updated an algorithm to use this function and
the algorithm broke.
llvm-svn: 303916
A profile shows the majority of time doing type merging is spent
deserializing records from sequences of bytes into friendly C++ structures
that we can easily access members of in order to find the type indices to
re-write.
Records are prefixed with their length, however, and most records have
type indices that appear at fixed offsets in the record. For these
records, we can save some cycles by just looking at the right place in the
byte sequence and re-writing the value, then skipping the record in the
type stream. This saves us from the costly deserialization of examining
every field, including potentially null terminated strings which are the
slowest, even though it was unnecessary to begin with.
In addition, we apply another optimization. Previously, after
deserializing a record and re-writing its type indices, we would
unconditionally re-serialize it in order to compute the hash of the
re-written record. This would result in an alloc and memcpy for every
record. If no type indices were re-written, however, this was an
unnecessary allocation. In this patch re-writing is made two phase. The
first phase discovers the indices that need to be rewritten and their new
values. This information is passed through to the de-duplication code,
which only copies and re-writes type indices in the serialized byte
sequence if at least one type index is different.
Some records have type indices which only appear after variable length
strings, or which have lists of type indices, or various other situations
that can make it tricky to make this optimization. While I'm not giving up
on optimizing these cases as well, for now we can get the easy cases out
of the way and lay the groundwork for more complicated cases later.
This patch yields another 50% speedup on top of the already large speedups
submitted over the past 2 days. In two tests I have run, I went from 9
seconds to 3 seconds, and from 16 seconds to 8 seconds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33480
llvm-svn: 303914
This patch provides an initial prototype for a pass that sinks instructions based on GVN information, similar to GVNHoist. It is not yet ready for commiting but I've uploaded it to gather some initial thoughts.
This pass attempts to sink instructions into successors, reducing static
instruction count and enabling if-conversion.
We use a variant of global value numbering to decide what can be sunk.
Consider:
[ %a1 = add i32 %b, 1 ] [ %c1 = add i32 %d, 1 ]
[ %a2 = xor i32 %a1, 1 ] [ %c2 = xor i32 %c1, 1 ]
\ /
[ %e = phi i32 %a2, %c2 ]
[ add i32 %e, 4 ]
GVN would number %a1 and %c1 differently because they compute different
results - the VN of an instruction is a function of its opcode and the
transitive closure of its operands. This is the key property for hoisting
and CSE.
What we want when sinking however is for a numbering that is a function of
the *uses* of an instruction, which allows us to answer the question "if I
replace %a1 with %c1, will it contribute in an equivalent way to all
successive instructions?". The (new) PostValueTable class in GVN provides this
mapping.
This pass has some shown really impressive improvements especially for codesize already on internal benchmarks, so I have high hopes it can replace all the sinking logic in SimplifyCFG.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24805
llvm-svn: 303850
If Op is equal to array_lengthof, the lookup would be out of bounds, but we were only checking for greater than. I suspect nothing ever passes in the equal value because its a sentinel to mark the end of the builtin opcodes and not a real opcode.
So really this fix is just so that the code looks right and makes sense.
llvm-svn: 303840
having it internally allocate the loop.
This is a much more flexible API and necessary in the new loop unswitch
to reasonably support both new and old PMs in common code. It also just
seems like a cleaner separation of concerns.
NFC, this should just be a pure refactoring.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33528
llvm-svn: 303834
This change allows llvm-nm to print symbols found in import libraries,
in part by allowing COFFImportFiles to be casted to SymbolicFiles.
Patch by Dave Lee!
llvm-svn: 303821
The loop vectorizer usually vectorizes any instruction it can and then
extracts the elements for a scalarized use. On SystemZ, all elements
containing addresses must be extracted into address registers (GRs). Since
this extraction is not free, it is better to have the address in a suitable
register to begin with. By forcing address arithmetic instructions and loads
of addresses to be scalar after vectorization, two benefits result:
* No need to extract the register
* LSR optimizations trigger (LSR isn't handling vector addresses currently)
Benchmarking show improvements on SystemZ with this new behaviour.
Any other target could try this by returning false in the new hook
prefersVectorizedAddressing().
Review: Renato Golin, Elena Demikhovsky, Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32422
llvm-svn: 303744
When folding arguments of AddExpr or MulExpr with recurrences, we rely on the fact that
the loop of our base recurrency is the bottom-lost in terms of domination. This assumption
may be broken by an expression which is treated as invariant, and which depends on a complex
Phi for which SCEVUnknown was created. If such Phi is a loop Phi, and this loop is lower than
the chosen AddRecExpr's loop, it is invalid to fold our expression with the recurrence.
Another reason why it might be invalid to fold SCEVUnknown into Phi start value is that unlike
other SCEVs, SCEVUnknown are sometimes position-bound. For example, here:
for (...) { // loop
phi = {A,+,B}
}
X = load ...
Folding phi + X into {A+X,+,B}<loop> actually makes no sense, because X does not exist and cannot
exist while we are iterating in loop (this memory can be even not allocated and not filled by this moment).
It is only valid to make such folding if X is defined before the loop. In this case the recurrence {A+X,+,B}<loop>
may be existant.
This patch prohibits folding of SCEVUnknown (and those who use them) into the start value of an AddRecExpr,
if this instruction is dominated by the loop. Merging the dominating unknown values is still valid. Some tests that
relied on the fact that some SCEVUnknown should be folded into AddRec's are changed so that they no longer
expect such behavior.
llvm-svn: 303730
LazyRandomTypeCollection is designed for random access, and in
order to provide this it lazily indexes ranges of types. In the
case of types from an object file, there is no partial index
to build off of, so it has to index the full stream up front.
However, merging types only requires sequential access, and when
that is needed, this extra work is simply wasted. Changing the
algorithm to work on sequential arrays of types rather than
random access type collections eliminates this up front scan.
llvm-svn: 303707
When writing field list records, we would construct a temporary
type serializer that shared a bump ptr allocator with the rest
of the application, so anything allocated from here would live
forever. Furthermore, this temporary serializer had all the
properties of a full blown serializer including record hashing
and de-duplication.
These features are required when you're merging multiple type
streams into each other, because different streams may contain
identical records, but records from the same type stream will
never collide with each other. So all of this hashing was
unnecessary.
To solve this, two fixes are made:
1) The temporary serializer keeps its own bump ptr allocator
instead of sharing a global one. When it's finished, all of
its memory is freed.
2) Instead of using the same temporary serializer for the life
of an entire type stream, we use it only for the life of a single
field list record and delete it when the field list record is
completed. This way the hash table will not grow as other
records from the same type stream get inserted. Further improvements
could eliminate hashing entirely from this codepath.
This reduces the link time by 85% in my test, from 1 minute to 9
seconds.
llvm-svn: 303676
Summary:
This is a first patch for GSoC project, bash-completion for clang.
To use this on bash, please run `source clang/utils/bash-autocomplete.sh`.
bash-autocomplete.sh is code for bash-completion.
Simple flag completion and path completion is available in this patch.
Reviewers: teemperor, v.g.vassilev, ruiu, Bigcheese, efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33237
llvm-svn: 303670
Summary:
First, StringMap uses llvm::HashString, which is only good for short
identifiers and really bad for large blobs of binary data like type
records. Moving to `DenseMap<StringRef, TypeIndex>` with some tricks for
memory allocation fixes that.
Unfortunately, that didn't buy very much performance. Profiling showed
that we spend a long time during DenseMap growth rehashing existing
entries. Also, in general, DenseMap is faster when the keys are small.
This change takes that to the logical conclusion by introducing a small
wrapper value type around a pointer to key data. The key data contains a
precomputed hash, the original record data (pointer and size), and the
type index, which is the "value" of our original map.
This reduces the time to produce llvm-as.exe and llvm-as.pdb from ~15s
on my machine to 3.5s, which is about a 4x improvement.
Reviewers: zturner, inglorion, ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33428
llvm-svn: 303665
Summary:
Before this change, AttributeLists stored a pair of index and
AttributeSet. This is memory efficient if most arguments do not have
attributes. However, it requires doing a search over the pairs to test
an argument or function attribute. Profiling shows that this loop was
0.76% of the time in 'opt -O2' of sqlite3.c, because LLVM constantly
tests values for nullability.
This was worth about 2.5% of mid-level optimization cycles on the
sqlite3 amalgamation. Here are the full perf results:
https://reviews.llvm.org/P7995
Here are just the before and after cycle counts:
```
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_before -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
13,274,181,184 cycles # 3.047 GHz ( +- 0.28% )
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_after -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
12,906,927,263 cycles # 3.043 GHz ( +- 0.51% )
```
This patch *does not* change the indices used to query attributes, as
requested by reviewers. Tracking whether an index is usable for array
indexing is a huge pain that affects many of the internal APIs, so it
would be good to come back later and do a cleanup to remove this
internal adjustment.
Reviewers: pete, chandlerc
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32819
llvm-svn: 303654
This patch builds over https://reviews.llvm.org/rL303349 and replaces
the use of the condition only if it is safe to do so.
We should not blindly RAUW the condition if experimental.guard or assume
is a use of that
condition. This is because LVI may have used the guard/assume to
identify the
value of the condition, and RUAWing will fold the guard/assume and uses
before the guards/assumes.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames, trentxintong, mkazantsev
Reviewed by: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33257
llvm-svn: 303633
Summary:
Add Max ModFlagBehavior, which can be used to take the max of two
module flag values when merging modules. Use it for the PIE and PIC
levels.
This avoids an error when we try to import from a module built -fpic
into a module built -fPIC, for example. For both PIE and PIC levels,
this will be legal, since the code generation gets more conservative
as the level is increased. Therefore we can take the max instead of
somehow trying to block importing between modules compiled with
different levels.
Reviewers: tmsriram, pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33418
llvm-svn: 303590
The forward declarations and the SimplifyQuery class at the beginning of the namespace weren't indented. But the closing brace for SimplifyQuery and everything after it were indented.
This commit makes the whole file consistent to no identation per coding standards. The signature of every function in this file changed a few weeks ago so this isn't a big disturbance to the revision history.
llvm-svn: 303588
Previous algotirhm assumed that types and ids are in a single
unified stream. For inputs that come from object files, this
is the case. But if the input is already a PDB, or is the result
of a previous merge, then the types and ids will already have
been split up, in which case we need an algorithm that can
accept operate on independent streams of types and ids that
refer across stream boundaries to each other.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33417
llvm-svn: 303577
MachineInstructions that don't generate any code (such as
IMPLICIT_DEFs) should not generate any debug info either.
Fixes PR33107.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33107
This reapplies r303566 without any modifications. The stage2 build
failures persisted even after reverting this patch, and looking back
through history, it looks like these tests are flaky.
llvm-svn: 303575
MachineInstructions that don't generate any code (such as
IMPLICIT_DEFs) should not generate any debug info either.
Fixes PR33107.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33107
llvm-svn: 303566
It's causing some buildbots to timeout whenever tablegen needs re-compilation,
particularly those with -fsanitize=memory but not only them. A compile time
regression was expected since it triples the amount of SelectionDAG rules we
are able to import but it's currently too high.
llvm-svn: 303542
Re-applying now that PR32825 which was raised on the commit this fixed up is now known to have also been fixed by this commit.
Original commit message:
Multiple ldr pseudoinstructions with the same constant value will
reuse the same constant pool entry. However, if the constant pool
is explicitly flushed with a .ltorg directive, we should not try
to reference constants in the previous pool any longer, since they
may be out of range.
This fixes assembling hand-written assembler source which repeatedly
loads the same constant value, across a binary size larger than the
pc-relative fixup range for ldr instructions (4096 bytes). Such
assembler source already uses explicit .ltorg instructions to emit
constant pools with regular intervals. However if we try to reuse
constants emitted in earlier pools, they end up out of range.
This makes the output of the testcase match what binutils gas does
(prior to this patch, it would fail to assemble).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32847
llvm-svn: 303540
Re-applying now that the open bug on this commit, PR32825, is known to be fixed.
Original commit message:
Summary: This patch returns the same label if the CP entry with the same value has been created.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, rengolin, jmolloy
Subscribers: majnemer, jmolloy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25804
llvm-svn: 303539
This reverts commit r302416. This was a fixup for r286006, which has now been reverted so this doesn't apply (either in concept or in code).
This commit itself has no problems, but the underlying issue it was fixing has now disappeared from the codebase.
llvm-svn: 303536
llvm-symbolizer would fail to symbolize addresses in unlinked object
files when handling .dwo file data because the addresses would not be
relocated in the same way as the ranges in the skeleton CU in the object
file.
Fix that so object files can be symbolized the same as executables.
llvm-svn: 303532
This is a re-application of a r303497 that was reverted in r303498.
I thought it had broken a bot when it had not (the breakage did not
go away with the revert).
This change makes the split between the "exact" backedge taken count
and the "maximum" backedge taken count a bit more obvious. Both of
these are upper bounds on the number of times the loop header
executes (since SCEV does not account for most kinds of abnormal
control flow), but the latter is guaranteed to be a constant.
There were a few places where the max backedge taken count *was* a
non-constant; I've changed those to compute constants instead.
At this point, I'm not sure if the constant max backedge count can be
computed by calling `getUnsignedRange(Exact).getUnsignedMax()` without
losing precision. If it can, we can simplify even further by making
`getMaxBackedgeTakenCount` a thin wrapper around
`getBackedgeTakenCount` and `getUnsignedRange`.
llvm-svn: 303531
This change makes the split between the "exact" backedge taken count
and the "maximum" backedge taken count a bit more obvious. Both of
these are upper bounds on the number of times the loop header
executes (since SCEV does not account for most kinds of abnormal
control flow), but the latter is guaranteed to be a constant.
There were a few places where the max backedge taken count *was* a
non-constant; I've changed those to compute constants instead.
At this point, I'm not sure if the constant max backedge count can be
computed by calling `getUnsignedRange(Exact).getUnsignedMax()` without
losing precision. If it can, we can simplify even further by making
`getMaxBackedgeTakenCount` a thin wrapper around
`getBackedgeTakenCount` and `getUnsignedRange`.
llvm-svn: 303497
Summary: This allows pthread_self to be pulled out of a loop by LICM.
Reviewers: hfinkel, arsenm, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: davide, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32782
llvm-svn: 303495
This is split up into two commits.
The will create the DEF parser in LLVM.
Check the following commit to see the removal from LLD
Reviewers: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32689
llvm-svn: 303490
Summary: Added the new modules in the Object/ folder. Updated the
llvm-cvtres interface as well, and added additional tests.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33180
llvm-svn: 303480
This reapplies commit r303438 modified to not verify cross-imported
bitcode in FunctionImporter.
rdar://problem/31233625
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33370
llvm-svn: 303470
Refactor the strlen optimization code to work for both strlen and wcslen.
This especially helps with programs in the wild where people pass
L"string"s to const std::wstring& function parameters and the wstring
constructor gets inlined.
This also fixes a lingerind API problem/bug in getConstantStringInfo()
where zeroinitializers would always give you an empty string (without a
length) back regardless of the actual length of the initializer which
did not work well in the TrimAtNul==false causing the PR mentioned
below.
Note that the fixed getConstantStringInfo() needed fixes to SelectionDAG
memcpy lowering and may lead to some cases for out-of-bounds
zeroinitializer accesses not getting optimized anymore. So some code
with UB may produce out of bound memory reads now instead of just
producing zeros.
The refactoring "accidentally" fixes http://llvm.org/PR32124
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32839
llvm-svn: 303461
This is a complicated bug involving two issues:
1. What do we do with phi nodes when we prove all arguments are not
live?
2. When is it safe to use value leaders to determine if we can ignore
an argumnet?
llvm-svn: 303453
This was originally reverted because it was a breaking a bunch
of bots and the breakage was not surfacing on Windows. After much
head-scratching this was ultimately traced back to a bug in the
lit test runner related to its pipe handling. Now that the bug
in lit is fixed, Windows correctly reports these test failures,
and as such I have finally (hopefully) fixed all of them in this
patch.
llvm-svn: 303446
Summary:
This patch adds udiv/sdiv/urem/srem/udivrem/sdivrem methods that can divide by a uint64_t. This makes division consistent with all the other arithmetic operations.
This modifies the interface of the divide helper method to work on raw arrays instead of APInts. This way we can pass the uint64_t in for the RHS without wrapping it in an APInt. This required moving all the Quotient and Remainder allocation handling up to the callers. For udiv/urem this was as simple as just creating the Quotient/Remainder with the right size when they were declared. For udivrem we have to rely on reallocate not changing the contents of the variable LHS or RHS is aliased with the Quotient or Remainder APInts. We also have to zero the upper bits of Remainder and Quotient that divide doesn't write to if lhsWords/rhsWords is smaller than the width.
I've update the toString method to use the new udivrem.
Reviewers: hans, dblaikie, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33310
llvm-svn: 303431
This is a squash of ~5 reverts of, well, pretty much everything
I did today. Something is seriously broken with lit on Windows
right now, and as a result assertions that fire in tests are
triggering failures. I've been breaking non-Windows bots all
day which has seriously confused me because all my tests have
been passing, and after running lit with -a to view the output
even on successful runs, I find out that the tool is crashing
and yet lit is still reporting it as a success!
At this point I don't even know where to start, so rather than
leave the tree broken for who knows how long, I will get this
back to green, and then once lit is fixed on Windows, hopefully
hopefully fix the remaining set of problems for real.
llvm-svn: 303409
We were using a BumpPtrAllocator to allocate stable storage for
a record, then trying to insert that into a hash table. If a
collision occurred, the bytes were never inserted and the
allocation was unnecessary. At the cost of an extra hash
computation, check first if it exists, and only if it does do
we allocate and insert.
llvm-svn: 303407
This reverts commit r303383.
This breaks the modules-enabled macOS build with:
lib/Support/LockFileManager.cpp:86:7: error: declaration of 'gethostuuid' must be imported from module 'Darwin.POSIX.unistd' before it is required
llvm-svn: 303402
Merging PDBs is a feature that will be used heavily by
the linker. The functionality already exists but does not
have deep test coverage because it's not easily exposed through
any tools. This patch aims to address that by adding the
ability to merge PDBs via llvm-pdbdump. It takes arbitrarily
many PDBs and outputs a single PDB.
Using this new functionality, a test is added for merging
type records. Future patches will add the ability to merge
symbol records, module information, etc.
llvm-svn: 303389
Right now we have multiple notions of things that represent collections of
types. Most commonly used are TypeDatabase, which is supposed to keep
mappings from TypeIndex to type name when reading a type stream, which
happens when reading PDBs. And also TypeTableBuilder, which is used to
build up a collection of types dynamically which we will later serialize
(i.e. when writing PDBs).
But often you just want to do some operation on a collection of types, and
you may want to do the same operation on any kind of collection. For
example, you might want to merge two TypeTableBuilders or you might want
to merge two type streams that you loaded from various files.
This dichotomy between reading and writing is responsible for a lot of the
existing code duplication and overlapping responsibilities in the existing
CodeView library classes. For example, after building up a
TypeTableBuilder with a bunch of type records, if we want to dump it we
have to re-invent a bunch of extra glue because our dumper takes a
TypeDatabase or a CVTypeArray, which are both incompatible with
TypeTableBuilder.
This patch introduces an abstract base class called TypeCollection which
is shared between the various type collection like things. Wherever we
previously stored a TypeDatabase& in some common class, we now store a
TypeCollection&.
The advantage of this is that all the details of how the collection are
implemented, such as lazy deserialization of partial type streams, is
completely transparent and you can just treat any collection of types the
same regardless of where it came from.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33293
llvm-svn: 303388
Currently m_Not only works the canonical xor X, -1 form that InstCombine produces. InstSimplify can't rely on this canonicalization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33331
llvm-svn: 303379
This also reverts follow-ups r303292 and r303298.
It broke some Chromium tests under MSan, and apparently also internal
tests at Google.
llvm-svn: 303369
Summary:
Implements PR889
Removing the virtual table pointer from Value saves 1% of RSS when doing
LTO of llc on Linux. The impact on time was positive, but too noisy to
conclusively say that performance improved. Here is a link to the
spreadsheet with the original data:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1F4FHir0qYnV0MEp2sYYp_BuvnJgWlWPhWOwZ6LbW7W4/edit?usp=sharing
This change makes it invalid to directly delete a Value, User, or
Instruction pointer. Instead, such code can be rewritten to a null check
and a call Value::deleteValue(). Value objects tend to have their
lifetimes managed through iplist, so for the most part, this isn't a big
deal. However, there are some places where LLVM deletes values, and
those places had to be migrated to deleteValue. I have also created
llvm::unique_value, which has a custom deleter, so it can be used in
place of std::unique_ptr<Value>.
I had to add the "DerivedUser" Deleter escape hatch for MemorySSA, which
derives from User outside of lib/IR. Code in IR cannot include MemorySSA
headers or call the MemoryAccess object destructors without introducing
a circular dependency, so we need some level of indirection.
Unfortunately, no class derived from User may have any virtual methods,
because adding a virtual method would break User::getHungOffOperands(),
which assumes that it can find the use list immediately prior to the
User object. I've added a static_assert to the appropriate OperandTraits
templates to help people avoid this trap.
Reviewers: chandlerc, mehdi_amini, pete, dberlin, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: krytarowski, eraman, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin, Prazek, nlewycky, hans, inglorion, pcc, tejohnson, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31261
llvm-svn: 303362
This provides a new way to access the TargetMachine through
TargetPassConfig, as a dependency.
The patterns replaced here are:
* Passes handling a null TargetMachine call
`getAnalysisIfAvailable<TargetPassConfig>`.
* Passes not handling a null TargetMachine
`addRequired<TargetPassConfig>` and call
`getAnalysis<TargetPassConfig>`.
* MachineFunctionPasses now use MF.getTarget().
* Remove all the TargetMachine constructors.
* Remove INITIALIZE_TM_PASS.
This fixes a crash when running `llc -start-before prologepilog`.
PEI needs StackProtector, which gets constructed without a TargetMachine
by the pass manager. The StackProtector pass doesn't handle the case
where there is no TargetMachine, so it segfaults.
Related to PR30324.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33222
llvm-svn: 303360
Summary:
As of this patch, 1018 out of 3938 rules are currently imported.
Depends on D32275
Reviewers: qcolombet, kristof.beyls, rovka, t.p.northover, ab, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: dberris, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32278
The previous commit failed on test-suite/Bitcode/simd_ops/AArch64_halide_runtime.bc
because isImmOperandEqual() assumed MO was a register operand and that's not
always true.
llvm-svn: 303341
We do not need to store relocation width field.
Patch removes relative code, that simplifies implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33274
llvm-svn: 303335
I revisited Decompressor API (issue with it was triggered during D32865 review)
and found it is probably provides more then we really need.
Issue was about next method's signature:
Error decompress(SmallString<32> &Out);
It is too strict. At first I wanted to change it to decompress(SmallVectorImpl<char> &Out),
but then found it is still not flexible because sticks to SmallVector.
During reviews was suggested to use templating to simplify code. Patch do that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33200
llvm-svn: 303331
compatible target triple
Currently, an assertion fails in ThinLTOCodeGenerator::addModule when
the target triple of the module being added doesn't match that of the
one stored in TMBuilder. This patch relaxes the constraint and makes
changes to allow target triples that only differ in their version
numbers on Apple platforms, similarly to what r228999 did.
rdar://problem/30133904
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33291
llvm-svn: 303326
Summary:
There are several places in the codebase that try to calculate a maximum value in a Statistic object. We currently do this in one of two ways:
MaxNumFoo = std::max(MaxNumFoo, NumFoo);
or
MaxNumFoo = (MaxNumFoo > NumFoo) ? MaxNumFoo : NumFoo;
The first version reads from MaxNumFoo one time and uncontionally rwrites to it. The second version possibly reads it twice depending on the result of the first compare. But we have no way of knowing if the value was changed by another thread between the reads and the writes.
This patch adds a method to the Statistic object that can ensure that we only store if our value is the max and the previous max didn't change after we read it. If it changed we'll recheck if our value should still be the max or not and try again.
This spawned from an audit I'm trying to do of all places we uses the implicit conversion to unsigned on the Statistics objects. See my previous thread on llvm-dev https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/llvm-dev/yfvxiorKrDQ
Reviewers: dberlin, chandlerc, hfinkel, dblaikie
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33301
llvm-svn: 303318
Often you have an array and you just want to use it. With the current
design, you have to first construct a `BinaryByteStream`, and then create
a `BinaryStreamRef` from it. Worse, the `BinaryStreamRef` holds a pointer
to the `BinaryByteStream`, so you can't just create a temporary one to
appease the compiler, you have to actually hold onto both the `ArrayRef`
as well as the `BinaryByteStream` *AND* the `BinaryStreamReader` on top of
that. This makes for very cumbersome code, often requiring one to store a
`BinaryByteStream` in a class just to circumvent this.
At the cost of some added complexity (not exposed to users, but internal
to the library), we can do better than this. This patch allows us to
construct `BinaryStreamReaders` and `BinaryStreamWriters` directly from
source data (e.g. `StringRef`, `MutableArrayRef<uint8_t>`, etc). Not only
does this reduce the amount of code you have to type and make it more
obvious how to use it, but it solves real lifetime issues when it's
inconvenient to hold onto a `BinaryByteStream` for a long time.
The additional complexity is in the form of an added layer of indirection.
Whereas before we simply stored a `BinaryStream*` in the ref, we now store
both a `BinaryStream*` **and** a `std::shared_ptr<BinaryStream>`. When
the user wants to construct a `BinaryStreamRef` directly from an
`ArrayRef` etc, we allocate an internal object that holds ownership over a
`BinaryByteStream` and forwards all calls, and store this in the
`shared_ptr<>`. This also maintains the ref semantics, as you can copy it
by value and references refer to the same underlying stream -- the one
being held in the object stored in the `shared_ptr`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33293
llvm-svn: 303294
There is often a lot of boilerplate code required to visit a type
record or type stream. The #1 use case is that you have a sequence
of bytes that represent one or more records, and you want to
deserialize each one, switch on it, and call a callback with the
deserialized record that the user can examine. Currently this
requires at least 6 lines of code:
codeview::TypeVisitorCallbackPipeline Pipeline;
Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(Deserializer);
Pipeline.addCallbackToPipeline(MyCallbacks);
codeview::CVTypeVisitor Visitor(Pipeline);
consumeError(Visitor.visitTypeRecord(Record));
With this patch, it becomes one line of code:
consumeError(codeview::visitTypeRecord(Record, MyCallbacks));
This is done by having the deserialization happen internally inside
of the visitTypeRecord function. Since this is occasionally not
desirable, the function provides a 3rd parameter that can be used
to change this behavior.
Hopefully this can significantly reduce the barrier to entry
to using the visitation infrastructure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33245
llvm-svn: 303271
A lot of code is duplicated between the first_last and the
next / prev methods. All of this code can be shared if they
are implemented in terms of find_first_in(Begin, End) etc,
in which case find_first = find_first_in(0, Size) and find_next
is find_first_in(Prev+1, Size), with similar reductions for
the other methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33104
llvm-svn: 303269
Summary:
As of this patch, 1018 out of 3938 rules are currently imported.
Depends on D32275
Reviewers: qcolombet, kristof.beyls, rovka, t.p.northover, ab, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: dberris, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32278
llvm-svn: 303259
RelocAddrMap was a pair of <width, address>, where width is relocation size (4/8/x, x < 8),
and width field was never used in code.
Relocations proccessing loop had checks for width field. Does not look like DWARF parser
should do that. There is probably no much sense to validate relocations during proccessing
them in parser.
Patch removes relocation's width relative code from DWARFContext.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33194
llvm-svn: 303251
Summary:
This fixes pr32392.
The lowering pipeline is:
llvm.ppc.cfence in IR -> PPC::CFENCE8 in isel -> Actual instructions in
expandPostRAPseudo.
The reason why expandPostRAPseudo is chosen is because previous passes
are likely eliminating instructions like cmpw 3, 3 (early CSE) and bne-
7, .+4 (some branch pass(s)).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32763
llvm-svn: 303205
ProfileSummaryInfo already checks whether the module has sample profile
in determining profile counts. This will also be useful in inliner to
clean up threshold updates.
llvm-svn: 303204
Recommit of r303159 "[DWARF] - Use DWARFAddressRange struct instead of uint64_t pair for DWARFAddressRangesVector"
All places were shitched to use DWARFAddressRange now.
Suggested during review of D33184.
llvm-svn: 303163
The information collected when requested by -time-passes is only printed when
llvm_shutdown is called at the moment. This means that when linking against the LTO
library dynamically and using the C interface, it is not possible to see the timing
information, because llvm_shutdown cannot be called. This change modifies the LTO
code generation functions for both regular LTO and thin LTO to explicitly print and
reset the timing information.
I have tested that this works with our proprietary linker. However, as this relies
on a specific method of building and linking against the LTO library, I'm not sure
how or if this can be tested in the LLVM testsuite.
Reviewed by: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32803
llvm-svn: 303152
This function gives the wrong answer on some non-ELF platforms in some
cases. The function that does the right thing lives in Mangler.h. To try to
discourage people from using this function, give it a different name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33162
llvm-svn: 303134
ARM Neon has native support for half-sized vector registers (64 bits). This
is beneficial for example for 2D and 3D graphics. This patch adds the option
to lower MinVecRegSize from 128 via a TTI in the SLP Vectorizer.
*** Performance Analysis
This change was motivated by some internal benchmarks but it is also
beneficial on SPEC and the LLVM testsuite.
The results are with -O3 and PGO. A negative percentage is an improvement.
The testsuite was run with a sample size of 4.
** SPEC
* CFP2006/482.sphinx3 -3.34%
A pretty hot loop is SLP vectorized resulting in nice instruction reduction.
This used to be a +22% regression before rL299482.
* CFP2000/177.mesa -3.34%
* CINT2000/256.bzip2 +6.97%
My current plan is to extend the fix in rL299482 to i16 which brings the
regression down to +2.5%. There are also other problems with the codegen in
this loop so there is further room for improvement.
** LLVM testsuite
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/ReedSolomon -10.75%
There are multiple small SLP vectorizations outside the hot code. It's a bit
surprising that it adds up to 10%. Some of this may be code-layout noise.
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/VersaBench/beamformer/beamformer -8.40%
The opt-viewer screenshot can be seen at F3218284. We start at a colder store
but the tree leads us into the hottest loop.
* MultiSource/Applications/lambda-0.1.3/lambda -2.68%
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet -2.18%
This is using 3D vectors.
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/Shootout-C++-lists +6.67%
Noise, binary is unchanged.
* MultiSource/Benchmarks/Ptrdist/anagram/anagram +4.90%
There is an additional SLP in the cold code. The test runs for ~1sec and
prints out over 2000 lines. This is most likely noise.
* MultiSource/Applications/aha/aha +1.63%
* MultiSource/Applications/JM/lencod/lencod +1.41%
* SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/richards_benchmark +1.15%
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31965
llvm-svn: 303116
Currently, when masked load, store, gather or scatter intrinsics are used, we check in CodeGenPrepare pass if the subtarget support these intrinsics, if not we replace them with scalar code - this is a functional transformation not an optimization (not optional).
CodeGenPrepare pass does not run when the optimization level is set to CodeGenOpt::None (-O0).
Functional transformation should run with all optimization levels, so here I created a new pass which runs on all optimization levels and does no more than this transformation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32487
llvm-svn: 303050
This is a very thin wrapper around StringRef::getAsInteger.
It serves three purposes.
1) It allows a cleaner syntax when you have something other than
a StringRef - for example, a std::string or an llvm::SmallString.
Previously, in this case you would have to write something like:
StringRef(MyStr).getAsInteger(0, Result)
by explicitly constructing a temporary StringRef. This can be
done implicitly however with the new function by just writing:
to_integer(MyStr, ...).
2) Correcting the travesty that is getAsInteger's return value.
This function returns true on success, and false on failure.
While this may cause confusion with people familiar with the
getAsInteger API, there seems to be widespread agreement that
the return semantics of getAsInteger was a mistake.
3) It allows the Radix to be deduced as a default argument by
putting it last in the parameter list. Most uses of getAsInteger
pass 0 for the first argument. With this syntax it can just be
omitted.
llvm-svn: 303011
This reorganisation prevents us from cluttering up the top-level lib directory
with more driver libraries such as llvm-dlltool (see D29892).
llvm-svn: 302995
- MIRYamlMapping: Default value provided for fields which have optional
mappings. Implemented == operators for required classes. When a field's value is
same as default value specified YAML IO class will not print it.
- MIRPrinter: Above mentioned behaviour is not on by default. If -simplify-mir
option not specified, then make yaml::Output to print fields with default values
too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32304
llvm-svn: 302984
We end up dereferencing the end iterator here when the Aspect doesn't exist in the DefaultAction map.
Change the API to return Optional<LLT> and return None when not found.
Also update the callers to handle the None case
llvm-svn: 302963
Summary:
As discussed in the D32195 review thread and on IRC, remove this option
and replace with parameter, which will be set to true when invoked
from clang in the context of a ThinLTO distributed backend.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33133
llvm-svn: 302939
Summary: LiveRangeShrink pass moves instruction right after the definition with the same BB if the instruction and its operands all have more than one use. This pass is inexpensive and guarantees optimal live-range within BB.
Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, hfinkel, MatzeB, andreadb
Reviewed By: MatzeB, andreadb
Subscribers: hiraditya, jyknight, sanjoy, skatkov, gberry, jholewinski, qcolombet, javed.absar, krytarowski, atrick, spatel, RKSimon, andreadb, MatzeB, mehdi_amini, mgorny, efriedma, davide, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32563
llvm-svn: 302938
Summary:
Eli pointed out that it's unsafe to combine the shifts to ISD::SHL etc.,
because those are not defined for b > sizeof(a) * 8, even after some of
the combiners run.
However, PPCISD::SHL defines that behavior (as the instructions themselves).
Move the combination to the backend.
The tests in shift_mask.ll still pass.
Reviewers: echristo, hfinkel, efriedma, iteratee
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33076
llvm-svn: 302937
This adds a visitor that is capable of accessing type
records randomly and caching intermediate results that it
learns about during partial linear scans. This yields
amortized O(1) access to a type stream even though type
streams cannot normally be indexed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33009
llvm-svn: 302936
This patch adds min/max population count, leading/trailing zero/one bit counting methods.
The min methods return answers based on bits that are known without considering unknown bits. The max methods give answers taking into account the largest count that unknown bits could give.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32931
llvm-svn: 302925
The functions in MathExtras.h uses a safer memcpy instead of going through a union.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33116
llvm-svn: 302916
I tried to compile LLD using GCC 7.1.0 and got warnings like
"warning: this statement may fall through [-Wimplicit-fallthrough=]"
(some more details are here: D32907)
GCC's __cplusplus value is 201402L by default, so macro expands to nothing,
though GCC 7 has support for [[fallthrough]].
Patch uses gnu::fallthrough when it is available and fixes warning I am observing.
Initial idea of way to fix belongs to Davide Italiano.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33036
llvm-svn: 302878
Summary:
This adds a resize method to APInt that manages deleting/allocating storage for an APInt and changes its bit width. Use this to simplify code in copy assignment and divide.
The assignment code in particular was overly complicated. Treating every possible case as a separate implementation. I'm also pretty sure the clearUnusedBits code at the end was unnecessary. Since we always copying whole words from the source APInt. All unused bits should be clear in the source.
Reviewers: hans, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33073
llvm-svn: 302863
Summary: This patch changes the function profile output order to be deterministic. In order to make it easier to understand, hottest functions (with most total samples) is ordered first.
Reviewers: dnovillo, davidxl
Reviewed By: dnovillo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33111
llvm-svn: 302851
The erase/remove from parent methods now use a switch table to remove
themselves from their appropriate parent ilist.
The copyAttributesFrom method is now completely non-virtual, since we
only ever copy attributes from a global of the appropriate type.
Pre-requisite to de-virtualizing Value to save a vptr
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D31261).
NFC
llvm-svn: 302823
Updates the MSP430 target to generate EABI-compatible libcall names.
As a byproduct, adjusts the hardware multiplier options available in
the MSP430 target, adds support for promotion of the ISD::MUL operation
for 8-bit integers, and correctly marks R11 as used by call instructions.
Patch by Andrew Wygle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32676
llvm-svn: 302820
The approach I followed was to emit the remark after getTreeCost concludes
that SLP is profitable. I initially tried emitting them after the
vectorizeRootInstruction calls in vectorizeChainsInBlock but I vaguely
remember missing a few cases for example in HorizontalReduction::tryToReduce.
ORE is placed in BoUpSLP so that it's available from everywhere (notably
HorizontalReduction::tryToReduce).
We use the first instruction in the root bundle as the locator for the remark.
In order to get a sense how far the tree is spanning I've include the size of
the tree in the remark. This is not perfect of course but it gives you at
least a rough idea about the tree. Then you can follow up with -view-slp-tree
to really see the actual tree.
llvm-svn: 302811
A recent commit made GlobalVariable.h depend on intrinsics generation, so (I
think) it needs to be in the lower-level module. I'll confirm with others, but
this should fix the bots.
llvm-svn: 302803
This patch extends llvm-ir to allow attributes to be set on global variables.
An RFC was sent out earlier by my colleague James Molloy: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2017-March/053100.html
A key part of that proposal was to extend LLVM-IR to carry attributes on global variables.
This generic feature could be useful for multiple purposes.
In our present context, it would be useful to carry user specified sections for bss/rodata/data.
Reviewed by: Jonathan Roelofs, Reid Kleckner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32009
llvm-svn: 302794
This reverts r302712.
The change fails with ASAN enabled:
ERROR: AddressSanitizer: use-after-poison on address ... at ...
READ of size 2 at ... thread T0
#0 ... in llvm::SDNode::getNumValues() const <snip>/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:855:42
#1 ... in llvm::SDNode::hasAnyUseOfValue(unsigned int) const <snip>/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:7270:3
#2 ... in llvm::SDValue::use_empty() const <snip> include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:1042:17
#3 ... in (anonymous namespace)::DAGCombiner::MergeConsecutiveStores(llvm::StoreSDNode*) <snip>/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/DAGCombiner.cpp:12944:7
Reviewers: niravd
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33081
llvm-svn: 302746
Summary:
Allow consecutive stores whose values come from consecutive loads to
merged in the presense of other uses of the loads. Previously this was
disallowed as in general the merged load cannot be shared with the
other uses. Merging N stores into 1 may cause as many as N redundant
loads. However in the context of caching this should have neglible
affect on memory pressure and reduce instruction count making it
almost always a win.
Fixes PR32086.
Reviewers: spatel, jyknight, andreadb, hfinkel, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30471
llvm-svn: 302712
This pass uses a new target hook to decide whether or not to expand a particular
intrinsic to the shuffevector sequence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32245
llvm-svn: 302631
Before r247167, the pass manager builder controlled which AA
implementations were used, exporting them all in the AliasAnalysis
analysis group.
Now, AAResultsWrapperPass always uses BasicAA, but still uses other AA
implementations if made available in the pass pipeline.
But regardless, SDAGISel is required at O0, and really doesn't need to
be doing fancy optimizations based on useful AA results.
Don't require AA at CodeGenOpt::None, and only use it otherwise.
This does have a functional impact (and one testcase is pessimized
because we can't reuse a load). But I think that's desirable no matter
what.
Note that this alone doesn't result in less DT computations: TwoAddress
was previously able to reuse the DT we computed for SDAG. That will be
fixed separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32766
llvm-svn: 302611
This lets the pass focus on gathering the required analyzes, and the
utility class focus on the transformation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31303
llvm-svn: 302609
This warning didn't show up on my local build
but is causing the bots to fail. Seems like a
bad idea to have types and variables with the
same name anyhow.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33022
llvm-svn: 302606
Previously we had only supported the importing and
exporting of functions and globals.
Also, add usefull overload of getWasmSymbol() and
getNumberOfSymbols() in support of lld port.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33011
llvm-svn: 302601
This change is required because the notion of count is different for
sample profiling and getProfileCount will need to determine the
underlying profile type.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33012
llvm-svn: 302597
frames.
RuntimeDyld was previously responsible for tracking allocated EH frames, but it
makes more sense to have the RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager track them (since the
frames are allocated through the memory manager, and written to memory owned by
the memory manager). This patch moves the frame tracking into
RTDyldMemoryManager, and changes the deregisterFrames method on
RuntimeDyld::MemoryManager from:
void deregisterEHFrames(uint8_t *Addr, uint64_t LoadAddr, size_t Size);
to:
void deregisterEHFrames();
Separating this responsibility will allow ORC to continue to throw the
RuntimeDyld instances away post-link (saving a few dozen bytes per lazy
function) while properly deregistering frames when modules are unloaded.
This patch also updates ORC to call deregisterEHFrames when modules are
unloaded. This fixes a bug where an exception that tears down the JIT can then
unwind through dangling EH frames that have been deallocated but not
deregistered, resulting in UB.
For people using SectionMemoryManager this should be pretty much a no-op. For
people with custom allocators that override registerEHFrames/deregisterEHFrames,
you will now be responsible for tracking allocated EH frames.
Reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D32829
llvm-svn: 302589
Fixes inalloca parameters, which previously all pointed to the same
offset. Extend the test to use llvm-readobj so that we can test the
offset in a readable way.
llvm-svn: 302578
As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
general-purpose utility in DILocation.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
<rdar://problem/31926379>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
This reapplies r302469 with a fix for a bot failure (reparentDebugInfo
now checks for the case the orig and new function are identical).
llvm-svn: 302576
Use variadic templates instead of relying on <cstdarg> + sentinel.
This enforces better type checking and makes code more readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32541
llvm-svn: 302571
The description says it returns the number of words needed to represent the results. But the way it was coded it always returns (lhsWords + rhsWords) or (lhsWords + rhsWords - 1). But the result could be even smaller than that and it wouldn't tell you.
No one uses the result today so rather than try to fix it, just remove it.
llvm-svn: 302551
Now both emitLeadingFence and emitTrailingFence take the instruction
itself, instead of taking IsLoad/IsStore pairs.
Instruction::mayReadFromMemory and Instrucion::mayWriteToMemory are used
for determining those two booleans.
The instruction argument is also useful for later D32763, in
emitTrailingFence. For emitLeadingFence, it seems to have cleaner
interface with the proposed change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32762
llvm-svn: 302539
This caused PR32977.
Original commit message:
> Make it illegal for two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram
>
> As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
> two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
> FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
> to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
> out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
> general-purpose utility in DILocation.
>
> [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
> <rdar://problem/31926379>
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
llvm-svn: 302533
Using arguments with attribute inalloca creates problems for verification
of machine representation. This attribute instructs the backend that the
argument is prepared in stack prior to CALLSEQ_START..CALLSEQ_END
sequence (see http://llvm.org/docs/InAlloca.htm for details). Frame size
stored in CALLSEQ_START in this case does not count the size of this
argument. However CALLSEQ_END still keeps total frame size, as caller can
be responsible for cleanup of entire frame. So CALLSEQ_START and
CALLSEQ_END keep different frame size and the difference is treated by
MachineVerifier as stack error. Currently there is no way to distinguish
this case from actual errors.
This patch adds additional argument to CALLSEQ_START and its
target-specific counterparts to keep size of stack that is set up prior to
the call frame sequence. This argument allows MachineVerifier to calculate
actual frame size associated with frame setup instruction and correctly
process the case of inalloca arguments.
The changes made by the patch are:
- Frame setup instructions get the second mandatory argument. It
affects all targets that use frame pseudo instructions and touched many
files although the changes are uniform.
- Access to frame properties are implemented using special instructions
rather than calls getOperand(N).getImm(). For X86 and ARM such
replacement was made previously.
- Changes that reflect appearance of additional argument of frame setup
instruction. These involve proper instruction initialization and
methods that access instruction arguments.
- MachineVerifier retrieves frame size using method, which reports sum of
frame parts initialized inside frame instruction pair and outside it.
The patch implements approach proposed by Quentin Colombet in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27481#c1.
It fixes 9 tests failed with machine verifier enabled and listed
in PR27481.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32394
llvm-svn: 302527
- This change allows targets to opt-in to using them instead of the log2
shufflevector algorithm.
- The SLP and Loop vectorizers have the common code to do shuffle reductions
factored out into LoopUtils, and now have a unified interface for generating
reductions regardless of the preference of the target. LoopUtils now uses TTI
to determine what kind of reductions the target wants to handle.
- For CodeGen, basic legalization support is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30086
llvm-svn: 302514