This commit gives the users of the YAML Traits I/O library
the ability to serialize scalars using the YAML literal block
scalar notation by allowing them to implement a specialization
of the `BlockScalarTraits` struct for their custom types.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9613
llvm-svn: 237404
The commit r237314 that implements YAML block parsing
introduced a leak that was caught by the ASAN linux buildbot.
YAML Parser stores its tokens in an ilist, and allocates
tokens using a BumpPtrAllocator, but doesn't call the
destructor for the allocated tokens. R237314 added an
std::string field to a Token which leaked as the Token's
destructor wasn't called. This commit fixes this leak
by calling the Token's destructor when a Token is being
removed from an ilist of tokens.
llvm-svn: 237389
This commit implements the parsing of YAML block scalars.
Some code existed for it before, but it couldn't parse block
scalars.
This commit adds a new yaml node type to represent the block
scalar values.
This commit also deletes the 'spec-09-27' and 'spec-09-28' tests
as they are identical to the test file 'spec-09-26'.
This commit introduces 3 new utility functions to the YAML scanner
class: `skip_s_space`, `advanceWhile` and `consumeLineBreakIfPresent`.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9503
llvm-svn: 237314
sys/time.h on Solaris (and possibly other systems) defines "SEC" as "1"
using a cpp macro. The result is that this fails to compile.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR23482
llvm-svn: 237112
The TargetRegistry is just a namespace-like class, instantiated in one
place to use a range-based for loop. Instead, expose access to the
registry via a range-based 'targets()' function instead. This makes most
uses a bit awkward/more verbose - but eventually we should just add a
range-based find_if function which will streamline these functions. I'm
happy to mkae them a bit awkward in the interim as encouragement to
improve the algorithms in time.
llvm-svn: 237059
This new class in a global context contain arch-specific knowledge in order
to provide LLVM libraries, tools and projects with the ability to understand
the architectures. For now, only FPU, ARCH and ARCH extensions on ARM are
supported.
Current behaviour it to parse from free-text to enum values and back, so that
all users can share the same parser and codes. This simplifies a lot both the
ASM/Obj streamers in the back-end (where this came from), and the front-end
parsers for command line arguments (where this is going to be used next).
The previous implementation, using .def/.h includes is deprecated due to its
inflexibility to be built without the backend support and for being too
cumbersome. As more architectures join this scheme, and as more features of
such architectures are added (such as hardware features, type sizes, etc) into
a full blown TargetDescription class, having a set of classes is the most
sane implementation.
The ultimate goal of this refactor both LLVM's and Clang's target description
classes into one unique interface, so that we can de-duplicate and standardise
the descriptions, as well as make it available for other front-ends, tools,
etc.
The FPU parsing for command line options in Clang has been converted to use
this new library and a number of aliases were added for compatibility:
* A bogus neon-vfpv3 alias (neon defaults to vfp3)
* armv5/v6
* {fp4/fp5}-{sp/dp}-d16
Next steps:
* Port Clang's ARCH/EXT parsing to use this library.
* Create a TableGen back-end to generate this information.
* Run this TableGen process regardless of which back-ends are built.
* Expose more information and rename it to TargetDescription.
* Continue re-factoring Clang to use as much of it as possible.
llvm-svn: 236900
Restructure Triple::getARMCPUForArch so that invalid values will
return nullptr, while retaining the behaviour that an argument
specifying no particular architecture version will give a default
CPU. This will be used by clang to give an error on invalid -march
values.
Also restructure the extraction of the architecture version from
the MArch string a little to hopefully make what it's doing clearer.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9599
llvm-svn: 236845
This commit enables the tests located in test/YAMLParser directory.
Those tests were never actually enabled, as llvm-lit didn't pick up the
files with the 'data' extension. The commit renames those test files to files
with the 'test' extension so that llvm-lit would find them.
This commit also modifies yaml-bench so that it returns an error status
if an error occurred during parsing. It also adds the '-use-color'
command line option to yaml-bench (to make sure that file check matches
the error messages in the output stream).
This commit modifies some of the renamed tests so that they wouldn't
fail. It gets rid of XFAILs and uses the 'not' command instead for
some of the tests that have to fail during parsing. This commit
also adds some 'FIXME' comments to a couple of tests that are
supposed to fail but currently pass because of various bugs
in the implementation of the yaml parser.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9448
llvm-svn: 236754
Fix two other variables that might cause the same hang fixed in r235914.
The hang is caused by constructing ManagedStatic in signalhandler. In
this case, if FileToRemove or CallBacksToRun is not contructed, it means
there is no work to do.
llvm-svn: 236741
This commit extracts the code that skips over a YAML comment from
the 'scanToNextToken' method into a separate 'skipComment' method.
This refactoring is motivated by a patch that implements parsing
of YAML block scalars (http://reviews.llvm.org/D9503), as the
method that parses a block scalar reuses the 'skipComment' method.
llvm-svn: 236663
ole32 is considered a default library with MSVC, but apparently
not with MinGW. Since we use CoInitialize, we need to explicitly
link against it in LLVMSupport for a MinGW build.
llvm-svn: 236654
This patch adds support for the z13 processor type and its vector facility,
and adds MC support for all new instructions provided by that facilily.
Apart from defining the new instructions, the main changes are:
- Adding VR128, VR64 and VR32 register classes.
- Making FP64 a subclass of VR64 and FP32 a subclass of VR32.
- Adding a D(V,B) addressing mode for scatter/gather operations
- Adding 1-, 2-, and 3-bit immediate operands for some 4-bit fields.
Until now all immediate operands have been the same width as the
underlying field (hence the assert->return change in decode[SU]ImmOperand).
In addition, sys::getHostCPUName is extended to detect running natively
on a z13 machine.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236520
This patch adds an optional 'flow' field to the MappingTrait
class so that yaml IO will be able to output flow mappings.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9450
llvm-svn: 236456
After r210687, windows_error does nothing but call mapWindowsError.
Other Windows/*.inc files directly call mapWindowsError. This patch
updates Path.inc and Process.inc to do the same.
llvm-svn: 236409
This patch fixes a bug where the YAML Output class emitted
a sequence of flow sequences without the '-' characters.
Before:
seq:
[ a, b ]
[ c, d ]
After:
seq:
- [ a, b ]
- [ c, d ]
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9206
llvm-svn: 236329
We need to dereference the signals mutex during handler registration so that we force its construction. This is to prevent the first use being during handling an actual signal because you can't safely allocate memory in a signal handler.
llvm-svn: 235914
Summary: This patch fixes step D4 of Knuth's division algorithm implementation. Negative sign of the step result was not always detected due to incorrect "borrow" handling.
Test Plan: Unit test that reveals the bug included.
Reviewers: chandlerc, yaron.keren
Reviewed By: yaron.keren
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9196
llvm-svn: 235699
The current implementations could exhibit some behavior differences:
raw_fd_ostream: Whatever the underlying fd does with seek+write. In a normal
file, the write position would be back to the old offset.
raw_svector_ostream: The write position is always the end of the stream, so
after pwrite the write position would be the new end. This matches what OS_X
(all BSD?) do with a pwrite in a O_APPEND fd.
Given that we don't need that feature and don't use O_APPEND a lot in LLVM,
just disallow it.
I am open to suggestions on renaming pwrite to something else, but this fixes
the issue for now.
Thanks to Yaron Keren for reporting it.
llvm-svn: 235303
Now we don't have to do 2 synchronized passes to compute offsets and then
write the file.
This also includes a fix for the corner case of seeking in /dev/null. It
is not an error, but on some systems (Linux) the returned offset is
always 0. An error is signaled by returning -1. This is checked by
the existing tests now that "clang -o /dev/null ..." seeks.
llvm-svn: 234952
Original message.
Have one raw_fd_ostream constructor forward to the other.
This fixes some odd behaviour differences between the two. In particular,
the version that takes a FD no longer unconditionally sets stdout to binary.
llvm-svn: 234734
The patch is generated using clang-tidy misc-use-override check.
This command was used:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py \
-checks='-*,misc-use-override' -header-filter='llvm|clang' \
-j=32 -fix -format
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8925
llvm-svn: 234679
This fixes some odd behavior differences between the two. In particular,
the version that takes a FD no longer unconditionally sets stdout to binary.
llvm-svn: 234615
Previously we would always report success, which is pretty bogus.
I'm too lazy to write a test where rename will portably fail on all
platforms. I'm just trying to fix breakage introduced by r234597, which
happened to tickle this.
llvm-svn: 234611
Revert "Add classof implementations to the raw_ostream classes."
Revert "Use the cast machinery to remove dummy uses of formatted_raw_ostream."
The underlying issue can be fixed without classof.
llvm-svn: 234495
The current crash reporting on Mac OS is only disabled via an environment variable.
This adds a boolean (default false) which can also disable crash reporting.
The only client right now is the unittests which don't ever want crash reporting, but do want to detect killed programs.
Reduces the time to run the APFloat unittests on my machine from
[----------] 47 tests from APFloatTest (51250 ms total)
to
[----------] 47 tests from APFloatTest (765 ms total)
Reviewed by Reid Kleckner and Justin Bogner
llvm-svn: 234353
Most desktop environments let the users specify his preferred application per
file type. On mac/linux we can use open/xdg-open for that and should try this
first before starting a heuristic search for various programs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6534
llvm-svn: 234031
Corrected forgotten change to remove excess "generic-armv8.1-a" cpu
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Completion of http://reviews.llvm.org/rL233811
llvm-svn: 233903
The last user of this code vanished with r223368, but this function still was
around being executed on every process start, allocating some memory and then
never being used again. No functional change.
Also avoids occasional complaints about the benign leak in this function, like
PR23037.
llvm-svn: 233371
Summary:
When the arch is given as "arm" clang uses the default target CPU from
LLVM to determine what the real arch should be (i.e. "arm" becomes
"armv4t" because LLVM's getARMCPUForArch falls back to "arm7tdmi").
Default to "cortex-a8" so that we end up with "armv7" in clang.
the nacl-direct.c test in clang also covers this case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8589
llvm-svn: 233321
APInt uses Knuth's D algorithm for long division. In rare cases the
implementation applied a transformation that was not needed.
Added unit tests for long division. KnuthDiv() procedure is fully covered.
There is a case in APInt::divide() that I believe is never used (marked with
a comment) as all users of divide() handle trivial cases earlier.
Patch by Pawel Bylica!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8448
llvm-svn: 233312
Simplify boolean expressions using `true` and `false` with `clang-tidy`
Patch by Richard Thomson - I dropped the parens and != 0 test, for
consistency with other patches/tests like this, but I'm open to the
notion that we should add the explicit non-zero test in all these sort
of cases (non-bool assigned to a bool).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8526
llvm-svn: 233004
It's not intended to be polymorphically deleted. Make FoldingSet
and ContextualFoldingSet final to avoid noise from -Wnon-virtual-dtor.
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 232922
This should bring the windows bots back.
It is a bit ugly, but it is better than what we had before: The triple would
say that the object format was COFF, but llc/llvm-mc would produce an ELF.
llvm-svn: 232683
Now that SmallString is a first-class citizen, most SmallString::str()
calls are not required. This patch removes a whole bunch of them, yet
there are lots more.
There are two use cases where str() is really needed:
1) To use one of StringRef member functions which is not available in
SmallString.
2) To convert to std::string, as StringRef implicitly converts while
SmallString do not. We may wish to change this, but it may introduce
ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 232622
ARMv6K is another layer between ARMV6 and ARMV6T2. This is the LLVM
side of the changes.
ARMV6 family LLVM implementation.
+-------------------------------------+
| ARMV6 |
+----------------+--------------------+
| ARMV6M (thumb) | ARMV6K (arm,thumb) | <- From ARMV6K and ARMV6M processors
+----------------+--------------------+ have support for hint instructions
| ARMV6T2 (arm,thumb,thumb2) | (SEV/WFE/WFI/NOP/YIELD). They can
+-------------------------------------+ be either real or default to NOP.
| ARMV7 (arm,thumb,thumb2) | The two processors also use
+-------------------------------------+ different encoding for them.
Patch by Vinicius Tinti.
llvm-svn: 232468
Also replace an old use of qsort with it. Compiles down to the same thing but
gives us some type safety. Safes a couple of kb on CommandLine.o.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 232236
CloudABI is a POSIX-like runtime environment built around the concept of
capability-based security. More details:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
CloudABI uses its own ELFOSABI number. This number has been allocated by
the maintainers of ELF a couple of days ago.
Reviewed by: echristo
llvm-svn: 231681
We extend an underlying file before mmap'ing it, but it's not needed
on Windows. Extending file is slow on Windows, so we should avoid doing that.
The difference gets larger as the size of an output file gets larger.
It shove off 2 seconds out of 25 seconds when linking chrome.dll with LLD,
for example.
llvm-svn: 231452
This will be followed by a change on the clang side to update
the only user of this function with the new version.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8074
Reviewed By: Reid Kleckner
llvm-svn: 231392
The first element of STACKFRAME64 is a struct and Clang wants us to put
braces around it's initialization. Instead, drop the zero. The result
should be the same.
llvm-svn: 231387
llvm::sys::PrintBacktrace(FILE*) is supposed to print a backtrace
of the current thread given the current PC. This function was
unimplemented on Windows, and instead the only time we could
print a backtrace was as the result of an exception through
LLVMUnhandledExceptionFilter.
This patch implements backtracing of self by using
RtlCaptureContext to get a CONTEXT for the current thread, and
moving the printing and StackWalk64 code to a common method that
printing own stack trace and printing stack trace of an exception
can use.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8068
Reviewed by: Reid Kleckner
llvm-svn: 231382
When reading a yaml::SequenceTraits object, YAMLIO does not report an
error if the yaml item is not a sequence. Instead, YAMLIO reads an
empty sequence. For example:
---
seq:
foo: 1
bar: 2
...
If `seq` is a SequenceTraits object, then reading the above yaml will
yield `seq` as an empty sequence.
Fix this to report an error for the above mapping ("not a sequence")
Patch by William Fisher. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 230976
When using SetConsoleTextAttribute() to set the foreground or
background color, if you don't explicitly set both colors, then
a default value of black will be chosen for whichever you don't
specify a value for.
This is annoying when you have a non default console background
color, for example, and you try to set the foreground color.
This patch gets the existing fg/bg color and when you set one
attribute, sets the opposite attribute to its existing color
prior to comitting the update.
Reviewed by: Aaron Ballman
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7967
llvm-svn: 230859
This assumes that
a) finding the bucket containing the value is LIKELY
b) finding an empty bucket is LIKELY
c) growing the table is UNLIKELY
I also switched the a) and b) cases for SmallPtrSet as we seem to use
the set mostly more for insertion than for checking existence.
In a simple benchmark consisting of 2^21 insertions of 2^20 unique
pointers into a DenseMap or SmallPtrSet a few percent speedup on average,
but nothing statistically significant.
llvm-svn: 230232
Older versions of the TargetConditionals header always defined TARGET_OS_IPHONE to something (0 or 1), so we need to test not only for the existence but also if it is 1.
This resolves PR22631.
llvm-svn: 229904
This is true in clang, and let's us remove the problematic code that
waits around for the original file and then times out if it doesn't get
created in short order. This caused any 'dead' lock file or legitimate
time out to cause a cascade of timeouts in any processes waiting on the
same lock (even if they only just showed up).
llvm-svn: 229881
For projects depending on LLVM, I find it very useful to combine a
release-no-asserts build of LLVM with a debug+asserts build of the dependent
project. The motivation is that when developing a dependent project, you are
debugging that project itself, not LLVM. In my usecase, a significant part of
the runtime is spent in LLVM optimization passes, so I would like to build LLVM
without assertions to get the best performance from this combination.
Currently, `lib/Support/Debug.cpp` changes the set of symbols it provides
depending on NDEBUG, while `include/llvm/Support/Debug.h` requires extra
symbols when NDEBUG is not defined. Thus, it is not possible to enable
assertions in an external project that uses facilities of `Debug.h`.
This patch changes `Debug.cpp` and `Valgrind.cpp` to always define the symbols
that other code may depend on when #including LLVM headers without NDEBUG.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7662
llvm-svn: 229819
Introduces a subset of C++14 integer sequences in STLExtras. This is
just enough to support unpacking a std::tuple into the arguments of
snprintf, we can add more of it when it's actually needed.
Also removes an ancient macro hack that leaks a macro into the global
namespace. Clean up users that made use of the convenient hack.
llvm-svn: 229337
Discovered by Halide users who had C++ code like this:
Triple.setArch(Triple::x86);
Triple.setOS(Triple::Windows);
Triple.setObjectFormat(Triple::ELF);
Triple.setEnvironment(Triple::MSVC);
This would produce the stringified triple of x86-windows-msvc, instead
of the x86-windows-msvc-elf string needed to run MCJIT.
With this change, they retain the -elf suffix.
llvm-svn: 229160
Should be no functional change, since most of the logic removed was
completely pointless (after some previous refactoring) and the rest
duplicated elsewhere.
Patch by Kamil Rytarowski.
llvm-svn: 228926
This reverts commit 228874. For some reason users reported
seeing Clang taking up 25+GB of memory and bringing down
machines with this change. Reverting until we figure it out.
llvm-svn: 228890
For Windows, filename_pos() tries to find the filename by
searching for separators after the last :. Instead, it should
really check for the only location that a : is valid, which is
in the second character, and search for separators after that.
llvm-svn: 228874
This allows IDEs to recognize the entire set of header files for
each of the core LLVM projects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7526
Reviewed By: Chris Bieneman
llvm-svn: 228798
Since header files are not compilation units, CMake does not require
you to specify them in the CMakeLists.txt file. As a result, unless a
header file is explicitly added, CMake won't know about it, and when
generating IDE-based projects, CMake won't put the header files into
the IDE project. LLVM currently tries to deal with this in two ways:
1) It looks for all .h files that are in the project directory, and
adds those.
2) llvm_add_library() understands the ADDITIONAL_HEADERS argument,
which allows one to list an arbitrary list of headers.
This patch takes things one step further. It adds the ability for
llvm_add_library() to take an ADDITIONAL_HEADER_DIRS argument, which
will specify a list of folders which CMake will glob for header files.
Furthermore, it will glob not only for .h files, but also for .inc
files.
Included in this CL is an update to one of the existing users of
ADDITIONAL_HEADERS to use this new argument instead, to serve as an
illustration of how this cleans up the CMake.
The big advantage of this new approach is that until now, there was no
way for the IDE projects to locate the header files that are in the
include tree. In other words, if you are in, for example,
lib/DebugInfo/DWARF, the corresponding includes for this project will
be located under include/llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF. Now, in the
CMakeLists.txt for lib/DebugInfo/DWARF, you can simply write:
ADDITIONAL_HEADER_DIRS
../../include/llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF
as an argument to llvm_add_library(), and all header files will get
added to the IDE project.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7460
Reviewed By: Chris Bieneman
llvm-svn: 228670
5 minutes is an eternity, so try to strike a better balance between
waiting long enough for any reasonable module build and not so long that
users kill the process because they think it's hanging.
Also give the client a way to delete the lock file after a timeout.
llvm-svn: 228603
heap. Problem identified by Guido Vranken. Changes differ from original
OpenBSD sources by not depending on non-portable reallocarray.
llvm-svn: 228507
Summary:
This change allows users to create SpecialCaseList objects from
multiple local files. This is needed to implement a proper support
for -fsanitize-blacklist flag (allow users to specify multiple blacklists,
in addition to default blacklist, see PR22431).
DFSan can also benefit from this change, as DFSan instrumentation pass now
accepts ABI-lists both from -fsanitize-blacklist= and -mllvm -dfsan-abilist flags.
Go bindings are fixed accordingly.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, axw, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367
llvm-svn: 228155
Also re-implements the `dwarf::Tag` enumerator. I've moved the mock
tags into the enumerator since there's no other way to do this. Really
they shouldn't be used at all (they're just a hack to identify
`MDNode`s, but we have a class hierarchy for that now).
llvm-svn: 228030
`dwarf::TagString()` shouldn't stringify `DW_TAG_lo_user` or
`DW_TAG_hi_user`. These aren't actual tags; they're markers for the
edge of vendor-specific tag regions.
llvm-svn: 228029
This has the nice secondary effect of allowing LLVM to continue to build
for targets without __thread or thread_local support to continue to work
so long as they build without support for backtraces.
llvm-svn: 227423
entirely when threads are not enabled. This should allow anyone who
needs to bootstrap or cope with a host loader without TLS support to
limp along without threading support.
There is still some bug in the PPC TLS stuff that is not worked around.
I'm getting access to a machine to reproduce and debug this further.
There is some chance that I'll have to add a terrible workaround for
PPC.
There is also some problem with iOS, but I have no ability to really
evaluate what the issue is there. I'm leaving it to folks maintaining
that platform to suggest a path forward -- personally I don't see any
useful path forward that supports threading in LLVM but does so without
support for *very basic* TLS. Note that we don't need more than some
pointers, and we don't need constructors, destructors, or any of the
other fanciness which remains widely unimplemented.
llvm-svn: 227411
Sadly, this precludes optimizing it down to initial-exec or local-exec
when statically linking, and in general makes the code slower on PPC 64,
but there's nothing else for it until we can arrange to produce the
correct bits for the linker.
Lots of thanks to Ulirch for tracking this down and Bill for working on
the long-term fix to LLVM so that we can relegate this to old host
clang versions.
I'll be watching the PPC build bots to make sure this effectively
revives them.
llvm-svn: 227352
Summary:
The primary goal of this patch is to remove the need for MarkOptionsChanged(). That goal is accomplished by having addOption and removeOption properly sort the options.
This patch puts the new add and remove functionality on a CommandLineParser class that is a placeholder. Some of the functionality in this class will need to be merged into the OptionRegistry, and other bits can hopefully be in a better abstraction.
This patch also removes the RegisteredOptionList global, and the need for cl::Option objects to be linked list nodes.
The changes in CommandLineTest.cpp are required because these changes shift when we validate that options are not duplicated. Before this change duplicate options were only found during certain cl API calls (like cl::ParseCommandLine). With this change duplicate options are found during option construction.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, chandlerc, pete
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: pete, majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7132
llvm-svn: 227345
tracing code.
Managed static was just insane overhead for this. We took memory fences
and external function calls in every path that pushed a pretty stack
frame. This includes a multitude of layers setting up and tearing down
passes, the parser in Clang, everywhere. For the regression test suite
or low-overhead JITs, this was contributing to really significant
overhead.
Even the LLVM ThreadLocal is really overkill here because it uses
pthread_{set,get}_specific logic, and has careful code to both allocate
and delete the thread local data. We don't actually want any of that,
and this code in particular has problems coping with deallocation. What
we want is a single TLS pointer that is valid to use during global
construction and during global destruction, any time we want. That is
exactly what every host compiler and OS we use has implemented for
a long time, and what was standardized in C++11. Even though not all of
our host compilers support the thread_local keyword, we can directly use
the platform-specific keywords to get the minimal functionality needed.
Provided this limited trial survives the build bots, I will move this to
Compiler.h so it is more widely available as a light weight if limited
alternative to the ThreadLocal class. Many thanks to David Majnemer for
helping me think through the implications across platforms and craft the
MSVC-compatible syntax.
The end result is *substantially* faster. When running llc in a tight
loop over a small IR file targeting the aarch64 backend, this improves
its performance by over 10% for me. It also seems likely to fix the
remaining regressions seen by JIT users with threading enabled.
This may actually have more impact on real-world compile times due to
the use of the pretty stack tracing utility throughout the rest of Clang
or LLVM, but I've not collected any detailed measurements.
llvm-svn: 227300
Use __clear_cache builtin instead of cacheflush() in
Unix Memory::InvalidateInstructionCache().
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7198
llvm-svn: 227269
r227148 added test CommandLineTest.HideUnrelatedOptionsMulti which repeatedly
outputs two following lines:
-tool: CommandLine Error: Option 'test-option-1' registered more than once!
-tool: CommandLine Error: Option 'test-option-2' registered more than once!
r227154 depends on changes from r227148
llvm-svn: 227167
This is especially useful for the UTF8 -> UTF16 direction, since
there is no equivalent of llvm::SmallString<> for wide characters.
This means that anyone who wants a null terminated string is forced
to manually push and pop their own null terminator.
Reviewed by: Reid Kleckner.
llvm-svn: 227143
Need a new API for clang-modernize that allows specifying a list of option categories to remain visible. This will allow clang-modernize to move off getRegisteredOptions.
llvm-svn: 227140
This can also be used instead of the WindowsSupport.h ConvertUTF8ToUTF16
helpers, but that will require massaging some character types. The
Windows support routines want wchar_t output, but wchar_t is often 32
bits on non-Windows OSs.
llvm-svn: 227122
Previously using format_hex() would always print a 0x prior to the
hex characters. This allows this to be optional, so that one can
choose to print (e.g.) 255 as either 0xFF or just FF.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7151
llvm-svn: 227108
Summary:
This puts all the options that CommandLine.cpp implements into a category so that the APIs to hide options can not hide based on the generic category instead of string matching a partial list of argument strings.
This patch is pretty simple and straight forward but it does impact the -help output of all tools using cl::opt. Specifically the options implemented in CommandLine.cpp (help, help-list, help-hidden, help-list-hidden, print-options, print-all-options, version) are all grouped together into an Option category, and these options are never hidden by the cl::HideUnrelatedOptions API.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, chandlerc, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7150
llvm-svn: 227093
suffix it seems:
# ./config.guess
earmv7hfeb-unknown-netbsd7.99.4
Extend the triple parsing to support this. Avoid running the ARM parser
multiple times because StringSwitch is not lazy.
Reviewers: Renato Golin, Tim Northover
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7166
llvm-svn: 227085
Summary:
V8->V9:
- cleanup tests
V7->V8:
- addressed feedback from David:
- switched to range-based 'for' loops
- fixed formatting of tests
V6->V7:
- rebased and adjusted AsmPrinter args
- CamelCased .td, fixed formatting, cleaned up names, removed unused patterns
- diffstat: 3 files changed, 203 insertions(+), 227 deletions(-)
V5->V6:
- addressed feedback from Chandler:
- reinstated full verbose standard banner in all files
- fixed variables that were not in CamelCase
- fixed names of #ifdef in header files
- removed redundant braces in if/else chains with single statements
- fixed comments
- removed trailing empty line
- dropped debug annotations from tests
- diffstat of these changes:
46 files changed, 456 insertions(+), 469 deletions(-)
V4->V5:
- fix setLoadExtAction() interface
- clang-formated all where it made sense
V3->V4:
- added CODE_OWNERS entry for BPF backend
V2->V3:
- fix metadata in tests
V1->V2:
- addressed feedback from Tom and Matt
- removed top level change to configure (now everything via 'experimental-backend')
- reworked error reporting via DiagnosticInfo (similar to R600)
- added few more tests
- added cmake build
- added Triple::bpf
- tested on linux and darwin
V1 cover letter:
---------------------
recently linux gained "universal in-kernel virtual machine" which is called
eBPF or extended BPF. The name comes from "Berkeley Packet Filter", since
new instruction set is based on it.
This patch adds a new backend that emits extended BPF instruction set.
The concept and development are covered by the following articles:
http://lwn.net/Articles/599755/http://lwn.net/Articles/575531/http://lwn.net/Articles/603983/http://lwn.net/Articles/606089/http://lwn.net/Articles/612878/
One of use cases: dtrace/systemtap alternative.
bpf syscall manpage:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=b4fc1a460f3017e958e6a8ea560ea0afd91bf6fe
instruction set description and differences vs classic BPF:
http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/networking/filter.txt
Short summary of instruction set:
- 64-bit registers
R0 - return value from in-kernel function, and exit value for BPF program
R1 - R5 - arguments from BPF program to in-kernel function
R6 - R9 - callee saved registers that in-kernel function will preserve
R10 - read-only frame pointer to access stack
- two-operand instructions like +, -, *, mov, load/store
- implicit prologue/epilogue (invisible stack pointer)
- no floating point, no simd
Short history of extended BPF in kernel:
interpreter in 3.15, x64 JIT in 3.16, arm64 JIT, verifier, bpf syscall in 3.18, more to come in the future.
It's a very small and simple backend.
There is no support for global variables, arbitrary function calls, floating point, varargs,
exceptions, indirect jumps, arbitrary pointer arithmetic, alloca, etc.
From C front-end point of view it's very restricted. It's done on purpose, since kernel
rejects all programs that it cannot prove safe. It rejects programs with loops
and with memory accesses via arbitrary pointers. When kernel accepts the program it is
guaranteed that program will terminate and will not crash the kernel.
This patch implements all 'must have' bits. There are several things on TODO list,
so this is not the end of development.
Most of the code is a boiler plate code, copy-pasted from other backends.
Only odd things are lack or < and <= instructions, specialized load_byte intrinsics
and 'compare and goto' as single instruction.
Current instruction set is fixed, but more instructions can be added in the future.
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <alexei.starovoitov@gmail.com>
Subscribers: majnemer, chandlerc, echristo, joerg, pete, rengolin, kristof.beyls, arsenm, t.p.northover, tstellarAMD, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6494
llvm-svn: 227008
Summary: cl::getRegisteredOptions really exposes some of the innards of how command line parsing is implemented. Exposing new APIs that allow us to disentangle client code from implementation details will allow us to make more extensive changes to command line parsing.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dexonsmith, beanz
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7100
llvm-svn: 226729
utils/sort_includes.py.
I clearly haven't done this in a while, so more changed than usual. This
even uncovered a missing include from the InstrProf library that I've
added. No functionality changed here, just mechanical cleanup of the
include order.
llvm-svn: 225974
No functional changes, I'm just going to be doing a lot of work in these files and it would be helpful if they had more current LLVM style.
llvm-svn: 225817
This patch adds a check for underflow when truncating results back to lower
precision at the end of an FMA. The additional sign handling logic in
APFloat::fusedMultiplyAdd should only be performed when the result of the
addition step of the FMA (in full precision) is exactly zero, not when the
result underflows to zero.
Unit tests for this case and related signed zero FMA results are included.
Fixes <rdar://problem/18925551>.
llvm-svn: 225123
This patch removes the RNG from Module. Passes should instead create a new RNG for their use as needed.
Patch by Stephen Crane @rinon.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4377
llvm-svn: 224444
This mirrors the behavior of APInt::udiv and APInt::urem. Some
architectures, like X86, have a single instruction which can compute
both division and remainder.
llvm-svn: 224217
Clang's static analyzer found several potential cases of undefined
behavior, use of un-initialized values, and potentially null pointer
dereferences in tablegen, Support, MC, and ADT. This cleans them up
with specific assertions on the assumptions of the code.
llvm-svn: 224154
This operating system type represents the AMD HSA runtime,
and will be required by the R600 backend in order to generate
correct code for this runtime.
llvm-svn: 223124
In both the Unix and Windows variants, std::getenv was called and the
result passed directly to a function accepting a StringRef. This isn't
OK because it might return a null pointer and that causes the StringRef
constructor to assert (and generally produces crash-prone code if
asserts are disabled). Fix this by independently testing the result as
non-null prior to splitting things.
This in turn uncovered another bug in the Unix variant where it would
infinitely recurse if PATH="", or after this fix if PATH isn't set.
There is no need to recurse at all. Slightly re-arrange the code to make
it clear that we can just fixup the Paths argument based on the
environment if we find anything.
I don't know of a particularly useful way to test these routines in
LLVM. I'll commit a test to Clang that ensures that its driver correctly
handles various settings of PATH. However, I have no idea how to
correctly write a Windows test for the PATHEXT change. Any Windows
developers who could provide such a test, please have at. =D
Many thanks to Nick Lewycky and others for helping debug this. =/ It was
quite nasty for us to track down.
llvm-svn: 223099
Mark destination buffer in zlib::compress and zlib::decompress as fully
initialized.
When building LLVM with system zlib and MemorySanitizer instrumentation,
MSan does not observe memory writes in zlib code and erroneously considers
zlib output buffers as uninitialized, resulting in false use-of-uninitialized
memory reports. This change helps MSan understand the state of that memory
and prevents such reports.
llvm-svn: 222763
"global-init", "global-init-src" and "global-init-type" were originally
used to blacklist entities in ASan init-order checker. However, they
were never documented, and later were replaced by "=init" category.
Old blacklist entries should be converted as follows:
* global-init:foo -> global:foo=init
* global-init-src:bar -> src:bar=init
* global-init-type:baz -> type:baz=init
llvm-svn: 222401
As detailed at http://llvm.org/PR20728, due to an internal overflow in
APFloat::multiplySignificand the APFloat::fusedMultiplyAdd method can return
incorrect results for x87DoubleExtended (x86_fp80) values. This commonly
manifests as incorrect constant folding of libm fmal calls on x86. E.g.
fmal(1.0L, 1.0L, 3.0L) == 0.0L (should be 4.0L)
This patch fixes PR20728 by adding an extra bit to the significand for
intermediate results of APFloat::multiplySignificand, avoiding the overflow.
llvm-svn: 222374
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.
This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...
llvm-svn: 222334
Having two ways to do this doesn't seem terribly helpful and
consistently using the insert version (which we already has) seems like
it'll make the code easier to understand to anyone working with standard
data structures. (I also updated many references to the Entry's
key and value to use first() and second instead of getKey{Data,Length,}
and get/setValue - for similar consistency)
Also removes the GetOrCreateValue functions so there's less surface area
to StringMap to fix/improve/change/accommodate move semantics, etc.
llvm-svn: 222319
The triple parser should only accept existing architecture names
when the triple starts with armv, armebv, thumbv or thumbebv.
Patch by Gabor Ballabas.
llvm-svn: 222129
Fix for LLI failure on Windows\X86: http://llvm.org/PR5053
LLI.exe crashes on Windows\X86 when single precession floating point
intrinsics like the following are used: acos, asin, atan, atan2, ceil,
copysign, cos, cosh, exp, floor, fmin, fmax, fmod, log, pow, sin, sinh,
sqrt, tan, tanh
The above intrinsics are defined as inline-expansions in math.h, and are
not exported by msvcr120.dll (Win32 API GetProcAddress returns null).
For an FREM instruction, the JIT compiler generates a call to a stub for
the fmodf() intrinsic, and adds a relocation to fixup at load time. The
loader searches the libraries for the function, but fails because the
symbol is not exported. So, the call target remains NULL and the
execution crashes.
Since the math functions are loaded at JIT/runtime, the JIT can patch
CALL instruction directly instead of the searching the libraries'
exported symbols. However, this fix caused build failures due to
unresolved symbols like _fmodf at link time.
Therefore, the current fix defines helper functions in the Runtime
link/load library to perform the above operations. The address of these
helper functions are used to patch up the CALL instruction at load time.
Reviewers: lhames, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5387
Patch by Swaroop Sridhar!
llvm-svn: 221947
Windows normally limits the length of an absolute path name to 260
characters; directories can have lower limits. These limits increase
to about 32K if you use absolute paths with the special '\\?\'
prefix. Teach Support\Windows\Path.inc to use that prefix as needed.
TODO: Other parts of Support could also learn to use this prefix.
llvm-svn: 221841
Every MemoryObject is a StreamableMemoryObject since the removal of
StringRefMemoryObject, so just merge the two.
I will clean up the MemoryObject interface in the upcoming commits.
llvm-svn: 221766
Commit 220932 caused crash when building clang-tblgen on aarch64 debian target,
so it's blocking all daily tests.
The std::call_once implementation in pthread has bug for aarch64 debian.
llvm-svn: 221331
1>C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\8.1\Include\um\minwinbase.h(46):
error C2146: syntax error : missing ';' before identifier 'nLength'
1>C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\8.1\Include\um\minwinbase.h(46):
error C4430: missing type specifier - int assumed. Note: C++ does not support default-int
...
including <windows.h> is actually required.
llvm-svn: 221244
The MRI scripts have to work with CRLF, and in general it is probably
a good idea to support this in a core utility like LineIterator.
llvm-svn: 221153