The minimun bound for number of edits is the size difference between the 2 arrays.
If MaxEditDistance is smaller than this, we can bail out early without needing to traverse any of the arrays.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127070
The test being change appears to have been intended to exercise PointerUnion, but what it actually did was cast<> a double to a double*. This only worked because cast<> was missing the required assertion. Adding the assertion reveals a template error where isa<const double*>(double) fails to compile.
In some instances its advantageous to calculate edit distances without worrying about casing.
Currently to achieve this both strings need to be converted to the same case first, then edit distance can be calculated.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126159
The default implementations will perform a shallow copy instead of a deep
copy, causing some internal data structures to be shared between different
objects. Disable these operations so they don't get accidentally used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126401
Currently added versions are from v1.0 to v1.5, other versions
can be added as needed.
This change also adds documentation about SPIR-V target support
in LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D124776
Allow zext, sext, trunc, truncUSat and truncSSat to extend or truncate
to the same bit width, which is a no-op.
Disallowing this forced clients to use workarounds like using
zextOrTrunc (even though they never wanted truncation) or zextOrSelf
(even though they did not want its strange behaviour of allowing a
*smaller* bit width, which is also treated as a no-op).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D125556
The patch adds SPIRV-specific MC layer implementation, SPIRV object
file support and SPIRVInstPrinter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116462
Authors: Aleksandr Bezzubikov, Lewis Crawford, Ilia Diachkov,
Michal Paszkowski, Andrey Tretyakov, Konrad Trifunovic
Co-authored-by: Aleksandr Bezzubikov <zuban32s@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ilia Diachkov <iliya.diyachkov@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Michal Paszkowski <michal.paszkowski@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrey Tretyakov <andrey1.tretyakov@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Konrad Trifunovic <konrad.trifunovic@intel.com>
clang may throw the following warning:
include/clang/AST/DeclarationName.h:210:52: error: arithmetic between
different enumeration types ('clang::DeclarationName::StoredNameKind'
and 'clang::detail::DeclarationNameExtra::ExtraKind') is deprecated
when flags -Werror,-Wdeprecated-enum-enum-conversion are on.
This adds the `addEnumValues()` helper function to STLExtras.h to hide
the details of adding enumeration values together from two different
enumerations.
DXIL is wrapped in a container format defined by the DirectX 11
specification. Codebases differ in calling this format either DXBC or
DXILContainer.
Since eventually we want to add support for DXBC as a target
architecture and the format is used by DXBC and DXIL, I've termed it
DXContainer here.
Most of the changes in this patch are just adding cases to switch
statements to address warnings.
Reviewed By: pete
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122062
Adding an initializer list specialization for is_contained allows for
compile-time evaluation when called with a constant or runtime
evaluation for non-constant values.
This patch doesn't add any uses of this template, but that is coming in
a subsequent patch.
Reviewed By: pete
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122079
Fleshing this out now allows me to rely on enum math to translate
values rather than having to translate the off cases.
I should have added this in the first pass, but wasn't thinking about
it.
This patch adds drop_end that is analogical to drop_begin.
It tries to fill the functional gap where one could drop first elements but not the last ones.
The need for it came in when refactoring clang-format.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122009
This patch adds triple support for:
* dxil architecture
* shadermodel OS (with version parsing)
* shader stages as environment
Reviewed By: MaskRay, pete
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122031
This avoids runtime initialization (a global constructor) whenever they appear
in the initializer.
The patch just adds the constexpr keyword to a couple of functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121281
This patch is the first in a series of patches to upstream the support for Apple's DriverKit. Once complete, it will allow targeting DriverKit platform with Clang similarly to AppleClang.
This code was originally authored by JF Bastien.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118046
In many cases, calls to isShiftedMask are immediately followed with checks to determine the size and position of the bitmask.
This patch adds variants of APInt::isShiftedMask, isShiftedMask_32 and isShiftedMask_64 that return these values as additional arguments.
I've updated a number of cases that were either performing seperate size/position calculations or had created their own local wrapper versions of these.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119019
Now that VS2017 support has been dropped (D114639), the LLVM_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCE_THIS define is always true and the LLVM_LVALUE_FUNCTION define is always enabled for ref-qualifiers.
This patch proposes we remove the defines and use the qualifiers directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118609
This file was added in https://reviews.llvm.org/D74415. There was no
justification as to why it was added, and after about a year of being
in-tree, it's still unused, so this removes it.
Branch protection in M-class is supported by
- Armv8.1-M.Main
- Armv8-M.Main
- Armv7-M
Attempting to enable this for other architectures, either by
command-line (e.g -mbranch-protection=bti) or by target attribute
in source code (e.g. __attribute__((target("branch-protection=..."))) )
will generate a warning.
In both cases function attributes related to branch protection will not
be emitted. Regardless of the warning, module level attributes related to
branch protection will be emitted when it is enabled via the command-line.
The following people also contributed to this patch:
- Victor Campos
Reviewed By: chill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115501
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
Only using that change in StringRef already decreases the number of
preoprocessed lines from 7837621 to 7776151 for LLVMSupport
Perhaps more interestingly, it shows that many files were relying on the
inclusion of StringRef.h to have the declaration from STLExtras.h. This
patch tries hard to patch relevant part of llvm-project impacted by this
hidden dependency removal.
Potential impact:
- "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" no longer includes <memory>,
"llvm/ADT/Optional.h" nor "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
Related Discourse thread:
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
This change moves EOL detection out of the clang::InclusionRewriter into
llvm::StringRef so that it can be easily reused elsewhere. It also adds
additional explicit test cases to verify the correct and expected return
results.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117626
LLVM Programmer’s Manual strongly discourages the use of `std::vector<bool>` and suggests `llvm::BitVector` as a possible replacement.
Currently, some users of `std::vector<bool>` cannot switch to `llvm::BitVector` because it doesn't implement the `pop_back()` and `back()` functions.
To enable easy transition of `std::vector<bool>` users, this patch implements `llvm::BitVector::pop_back()` and `llvm::BitVector::back()`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117115
Fix the compatibility of Optional<> with some GCC versions that it will fail
to compile when T is getting checked for `is_trivially_move_constructible`
as mentioned here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93510#2538983
Fix the problem by using `llvm::is_trivially_move_constructible`.
Reviewed By: jplayer-nv, tatyana-krasnukha
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117254
Similar versions of these already exist, this effectively just just
factors them out into STLExtras. I plan to use these in future patches.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100672
Add `SmallVectorImpl::truncate()`, a variant of `resize()` that cannot
increase the size.
- Compared to `resize()`, this has no code path for growing the
allocation and can be better optimized.
- Compared to `set_size()`, this formally calls destructors, and does
not skip any constructors.
- Compared to `pop_back_n()`, this takes the new desired size, which in
many contexts is more intuitive than the number of elements to remove.
The immediate motivation is to pair this with `resize_for_overwrite()`
to remove uses of `set_size()`, which can then be made private.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115383
Remove assertion that disallows getting a zero-extended value from a
zero-width APInt. This check is too restrictive and makes it difficult
to use APInt to model zero-width things, e.g., zero-width wires in the
CIRCT project.
Signed-off-by: Schuyler Eldridge <schuyler.eldridge@sifive.com>
Reviewed By: lattner, darthscsi, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114768
This allows for using SFINAE partial specialization for DenseMapInfo.
In MLIR, this is particularly useful as it will allow for defining partial
specializations that support all Attribute, Op, and Type classes without
needing to specialize DenseMapInfo for each individual class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113641
Fix the const-ness of `iterator_facade_base::operator->` and
`iterator_facade_base::operator[]`. This is a follow-up to
1b651be046, which fixed const-ness of
various iterator adaptors.
Iterators, like the pointers that they generalize, have two types of
`const`.
- The `const` qualifier on members indicates whether the iterator
itself can be changed. This is analagous to `int *const`.
- The `const` qualifier on return values of `operator*()`,
`operator[]()`, and `operator->()` controls whether the the
pointed-to value can be changed. This is analogous to `const int*`.
If an iterator facade returns a handle to its own state, then T (and
PointerT and ReferenceT) should usually be const-qualified. Otherwise,
if clients are expected to modify the state itself, the field can be
declared mutable or a const_cast can be used.
Take advantage of class name injection to avoid redundantly specifying
template parameters of iterator adaptor/facade base classes.
No functionality change, although the private typedefs changed in a
couple of cases.
- Added a private typedef HashTableIterator::BaseT, following the
pattern from r207084 / 3478d4b164, to
pre-emptively appease MSVC (maybe it's not necessary anymore but
looks like we do this pretty consistently). Otherwise, I removed
private
- Removed private typedefs filter_iterator_impl::BaseT and
FilterIteratorTest::InputIterator::BaseT since there was only one
use of each and the definition was no longer interesting.
This fixes const-correctness of iterator adaptors, dropping non-`const`
overloads for `operator*()`.
Iterators, like the pointers that they generalize, have two types of
`const`.
The `const` qualifier on members indicates whether the iterator itself
can be changed. This is analagous to `int *const`.
The `const` qualifier on return values of `operator*()`, `operator[]()`,
and `operator->()` controls whether the the pointed-to value can be
changed. This is analogous to `const int *`.
Since `operator*()` does not (in principle) change the iterator, then
there should only be one definition, which is `const`-qualified. E.g.,
iterators wrapping `int*` should look like:
```
int *operator*() const; // always const-qualified, no overloads
```
ba7a6b314f changed `iterator_adaptor_base`
away from this to work around bugs in other iterator adaptors. That was
already reverted. This patch adds back its test, which combined
llvm::enumerate() and llvm::make_filter_range(), adds a test for
iterator_adaptor_base itself, and cleans up the `const`-ness of the
other iterator adaptors.
This also updates the documented requirements for
`iterator_facade_base`:
```
/// OLD:
/// - const T &operator*() const;
/// - T &operator*();
/// New:
/// - T &operator*() const;
```
In a future commit we might also clean up `iterator_facade`'s overloads
of `operator->()` and `operator[]()`. These already (correctly) return
non-`const` proxies regardless of the iterator's `const` qualifier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113158
mapped_iterator is a useful abstraction for applying a
map function over an existing iterator, but our current
usage ends up allocating storage/making indirect calls
even with the map function is a known function, which
is horribly inefficient. This commit refactors the usage
of mapped_iterator to avoid this, and allows for directly
referencing the map function when dereferencing.
Fixes PR52319
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113511
Add new triple and target info for ‘spirv32’ and ‘spirv64’ and,
thus, enabling clang (LLVM IR) code emission to SPIR-V target.
The target for SPIR-V is mostly reused from SPIR by derivation
from a common base class since IR output for SPIR-V is mostly
the same as SPIR. Some refactoring are made accordingly.
Added and updated tests for parts that are different between
SPIR and SPIR-V.
Patch by linjamaki (Henry Linjamäki)!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109144
This expands the lookup table statically and avoids routing through methods that
contain asserts (like StringRef/std::string element accessors and drop_front)
such that performance is more predictable across compilation environments. This
was primarily driven by slow debug mode performance but has a large benefit in
release builds as well.
```
ssd_mobilenet_v2_face_float (42MB .mlir)
Debug/MSVC (old): 5.22s
Debug/MSVC (new): 0.16s
Release/MSVC (old): 0.81s
Release/MSVC (new): 0.02s
huggingface_minilm (536MB .mlir)
Debug/MSVC (old): 65.31s
Debug/MSVC (new): 2.03s
Release/MSVC (old): 9.93s
Release/MSVC (new): 0.27s
```
Now in debug the time is split evenly between lexString, tryGetFromHex, and
element attrs hashing, with the next step to making it faster being to combine
the work (incremental hashing during conversion, etc) - but this is at least in
the right order of magnitude and retains the original API surface.
I have not profiled a build with clang but this is strictly less code and simpler
data structures so I'd expect improvements there as well.
This also fixes a bug where 0xFF bytes in the input would read out of bounds.
Reviewed By: dblaikie, stellaraccident
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112105
By default `llvm::seq` would happily iterate over enums, which may be unsafe if the enum values are not continuous. This patch disable enum iteration with `llvm::seq` and `llvm::seq_inclusive` and adds two new functions: `enum_seq` and `enum_seq_inclusive`.
To make sure enum iteration is safe, we require users to declare their enum types as iterable by specializing `enum_iteration_traits<SomeEnum>`. Because it's not always possible to add these traits next to enum definition (e.g., for enums defined in external libraries), we provide an escape hatch to allow iteration on per-callsite basis by passing `force_iteration_on_noniterable_enum`.
The main benefit of this approach is that these global declarations via traits can appear just next to enum definitions, making easy to spot when enums are miss-labeled, e.g., after introducing new enum values, whereas `force_iteration_on_noniterable_enum` should stand out and be easy to grep for.
This emerged from a discussion with gchatelet@ about reusing llvm's `Sequence.h` in lieu of https://github.com/GPUOpen-Drivers/llpc/blob/dev/lgc/interface/lgc/EnumIterator.h.
Reviewed By: dblaikie, gchatelet, aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107378
* Properly specify reference type in enumerator_iter
* Fix constness of iterator_adaptor_base::operator*
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112981
Optimize the iterator comparison logic to compare Current.data()
pointers. Use std::tie for assignments from std::pair. Replace
the custom class with a function returning iterator_range.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110535
If clang driver gets 64-bit r6 target triple like `mipsisa64r6` and
additional option forces switching to generation of 32-bit code, it
loses r6 abi and generates 32-bit r2-r5 abi code.
```
$ clang -target mipsisa64r6-linux-gnu -mabi=32
```
This patch fixes the problem.
- Add optional `SubArchType` argument to the `Triple::setArch()` method.
- Implement generation of mips r6 target triples in the
`Triple::getArchName()` method.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110514.diff
Inspired by D111968, provide a isNegatedPowerOf2() wrapper instead of obfuscating code with (-Value).isPowerOf2() patterns, which I'm sure are likely avenues for typos.....
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111998
The sdiv used to check for overflow can itself overflow if the
LHS is signed min and the RHS is -1. The code tried to account for
this by also checking the commuted version. However, for 1-bit
values, signed min and -1 are the same value, so both divisions
overflow. As such, the overflow for -1 * -1 was not detected
(which results in -1 rather than 1 for 1-bit values). Fix this by
explicitly checking for this case instead.
Noticed while adding exhaustive test coverage for smul_ov(),
which is also part of this commit.
isAllOnes() should return true for zero bit values because
there are no zeros in it.
Thanks to Jay Foad for pointing this out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111241
These should both clearly work with our current model for zero width
integers, but don't until now!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111113
Add a llvm::Split() implementation that can be used via range-for loop,
e.g.:
for (StringRef x : llvm::Split("foo,bar,baz", ','))
...
The implementation uses an additional SplittingIterator class that
uses StringRef::split() internally.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110496
Three unrelated changes:
1) Add a concat method as a convenience to help write bitvector
use cases in a nicer way.
2) Use LLVM_UNLIKELY as suggested by @xbolva00 in a previous patch.
3) Fix casing of some "slow" methods to follow naming standards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109620
std::is_convertible has no defined behavior when its arguments
are incomplete, even if they are equal. In practice, it returns false.
Adding std::is_same allows us to use the constructor using a callable,
even if the return value is incomplete. We also check the case where
we convert a T into a const T.
Reviewed By: DaniilSuchkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104703
Committer: Daniil Suchkov <dsuchkov@azul.com>
APInt is used to describe a bit mask in a variety of value tracking and demanded bits/elts functions.
When traversing through dst/src operands, we have a number of places where these masks need to widened/narrowed to translate through bitcasts, reductions etc. to a different type.
This patch add a APIntOps::ScaleBitMask common helper, adds unit test coverage, and updates a number of cases to use the the helper instead of their own implementation.
This came up on D109065 where we currently have to add yet another implementation of the same code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109683
Motivation: APInt not supporting zero bit values leads to
a lot of special cases in various bits of code, particularly
when using APInt as a bit vector (where you want to start with
zero bits and then concat on more. This is particularly
challenging in the CIRCT project, where the absence of zero-bit
ConstantOp forces duplication of ops and makes instcombine-like
logic far more complicated.
Approach: zero bit integers are weird. There are two reasonable
approaches: either make it illegal to do general arithmetic on
them (e.g. sign extends), or treat them as as implicitly having
a zero value. This patch takes the conservative approach, which
enables their use in bitvector applications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109555
This renames the primary methods for creating a zero value to `getZero`
instead of `getNullValue` and renames predicates like `isAllOnesValue`
to simply `isAllOnes`. This achieves two things:
1) This starts standardizing predicates across the LLVM codebase,
following (in this case) ConstantInt. The word "Value" doesn't
convey anything of merit, and is missing in some of the other things.
2) Calling an integer "null" doesn't make any sense. The original sin
here is mine and I've regretted it for years. This moves us to calling
it "zero" instead, which is correct!
APInt is widely used and I don't think anyone is keen to take massive source
breakage on anything so core, at least not all in one go. As such, this
doesn't actually delete any entrypoints, it "soft deprecates" them with a
comment.
Included in this patch are changes to a bunch of the codebase, but there are
more. We should normalize SelectionDAG and other APIs as well, which would
make the API change more mechanical.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109483
This moves one mid-size function out of line, inlines the
trivial tcAnd/tcOr/tcXor/tcComplement methods into their only
caller, and moves the magic/umagic functions into SelectionDAG
since they are implementation details of its algorithm. This
also removes the unit tests for magic, but these are already
tested in the divide lowering logic for various targets.
This also upgrades some C style comments to C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109476
Use the `HBuilder` interface to provide default implementations of `llvm::hash_value`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109024
Looks like the MS STL wants StringMapKeyIterator::operator*() to be const.
Return the result by copy instead of reference to do that.
Assigning to a hash map key iterator doesn't make sense anyways.
Also reverts 123f811fe5 which is now hopefully no longer needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109167
Now prints the list of known archs. This requires plumbing a Driver
arg through a few functions.
Also add two more convenience insert() overlods to StringMap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109105
This takes two ranges and invokes a predicate on the element-wise pair in the
ranges. It returns true if all the pairs are matching the predicate and the ranges
have the same size.
It is useful with containers that aren't random iterator where we can't check the
sizes in O(1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106605
Make it easier to initialize small maps inline. Note that DenseMap already has an initializer_list constructor.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106363
This patch allows iterating typed enum via the ADT/Sequence utility.
It also changes the original design to better separate concerns:
- `StrongInt` only deals with safe `intmax_t` operations,
- `SafeIntIterator` presents the iterator and reverse iterator
interface but only deals with safe `StrongInt` internally.
- `iota_range` only deals with `SafeIntIterator` internally.
This design ensures that operations are always valid. In particular,
"Out of bounds" assertions fire when:
- the `value_type` is not representable as an `intmax_t`
- iterator operations make internal computation underflow/overflow
- the internal representation cannot be converted back to `value_type`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106279
After rGbbbc4f110e35ac709b943efaa1c4c99ec073da30, we can move
any string type that has convenient pointer and length fields
into the PtrAndLengthKind, reducing the amount of code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106381
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D103935
A Twine's internal layout should not depend on which version of the
C++ standard is in use. Dynamically linking binaries compiled with two
different layouts (eg, --std=c++14 vs --std=c++17) ends up
problematic.
This change avoids that issue by immediately converting a
string_view to a pointer-and-length at the cost of an extra eight-bytes
in Twine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106186
Address mistakenly comparing the pointer values of two C-style strings
rather than comparing their contents in the unit tests for makeVisitor,
added in 6d6f35eb7b
Relands patch reverted by 61242c0add
The original patch mistakenly included unrelated tests.
Adds a utility to combine multiple Callables into a single Callable.
This is useful to make constructing a visitor for `std::visit`-like
functions more natural; functions like this will be added in future
patches.
Intended to supercede https://reviews.llvm.org/D99560 by
perfectly-forwarding the combined Callables.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100670
Adds a utility to combine multiple Callables into a single Callable.
This is useful to make constructing a visitor for `std::visit`-like
functions more natural; functions like this will be added in future
patches.
Intended to supercede https://reviews.llvm.org/D99560 by
perfectly-forwarding the combined Callables.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100670
This is a mechanical change. This actually also renames the
similarly named methods in the SmallString class, however these
methods don't seem to be used outside of the llvm subproject, so
this doesn't break building of the rest of the monorepo.
Rename functions with the `xx_lower()` names to `xx_insensitive()`.
This was requested during the review of D104218.
Test names and variables in llvm/unittests/ADT/StringRefTest.cpp
that refer to "lower" are renamed to "insensitive" correspondingly.
Unused function aliases with the former method names are left
in place (without any deprecation attributes) for transition purposes.
All references within the monorepo will be changed (with essentially
mechanical changes), and then the old names will be removed in a
later commit.
Also remove the superfluous method names at the start of doxygen
comments, for the methods that are touched here. (There are more
occurrances of this left in other methods though.) Also remove
duplicate doxygen comments from the implementation file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104819
These serve as a convenient combination of consume_front/back and
startswith_lower/endswith_lower, consistent with other existing
case insensitive methods named <operation>_lower.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104218
<string> is currently the highest impact header in a clang+llvm build:
https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html
One of the most common places this is being included is the APInt.h header, which needs it for an old toString() implementation that returns std::string - an inefficient method compared to the SmallString versions that it actually wraps.
This patch replaces these APInt/APSInt methods with a pair of llvm::toString() helpers inside StringExtras.h, adjusts users accordingly and removes the <string> from APInt.h - I was hoping that more of these users could be converted to use the SmallString methods, but it appears that most end up creating a std::string anyhow. I avoided trying to use the raw_ostream << operators as well as I didn't want to lose having the integer radix explicit in the code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103888
This is a roll forward of D102679.
This patch simplifies the implementation of Sequence and makes it compatible with llvm::reverse.
It exposes the reverse iterators through rbegin/rend which prevents a dangling reference in std::reverse_iterator::operator++().
Note: Compared to D102679, this patch introduces a `asSmallVector()` member function and fixes compilation issue with GCC 5.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103948
With Twine now ubiquitous after rG92a79dbe91413f685ab19295fc7a6297dbd6c824,
it needs support for string_view when building clang with newer C++ standards.
This is similar to how StringRef is handled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103935
This reverts commit e772216e70
(and fixup 7f6c878a2c).
The build is broken with gcc5 host compiler:
In file included from
from mlir/lib/Dialect/Utils/StructuredOpsUtils.cpp:9:
tools/mlir/include/mlir/IR/BuiltinAttributes.h.inc:424:57: error: type/value mismatch at argument 1 in template parameter list for 'template<class ItTy, class FuncTy, class FuncReturnTy> class llvm::mapped_iterator'
std::function<T(ptrdiff_t)>>;
^
tools/mlir/include/mlir/IR/BuiltinAttributes.h.inc:424:57: note: expected a type, got 'decltype (seq<ptrdiff_t>(0, 0))::const_iterator'
This patch simplifies the implementation of Sequence and makes it compatible with llvm::reverse.
It exposes the reverse iterators through rbegin/rend which prevents a dangling reference in std::reverse_iterator::operator++().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102679