The Blocks runtime provide a header named Block.h.
It is generally preferable to avoid name collision with system headers
(reducing reliance on -isystem order, more friendly when navigating files in
an editor, etc).
Reviewed By: gribozavr2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74934
\<foo\> is more correct, but since we use shell=True on Windows,
the < and > get interpreted as redirection operators.
Rather than adding cmd escaping, just use \bfoo\b, which is Good
Enough Often Enough.
Essentially, fold OrderedBasicBlock into BasicBlock, and make it
auto-invalidate the instruction ordering when new instructions are
added. Notably, we don't need to invalidate it when removing
instructions, which is helpful when a pass mostly delete dead
instructions rather than transforming them.
The downside is that Instruction grows from 56 bytes to 64 bytes. The
resulting LLVM code is substantially simpler and automatically handles
invalidation, which makes me think that this is the right speed and size
tradeoff.
The important change is in SymbolTableTraitsImpl.h, where the numbering
is invalidated. Everything else should be straightforward.
We probably want to implement a fancier re-numbering scheme so that
local updates don't invalidate the ordering, but I plan for that to be
future work, maybe for someone else.
Reviewed By: lattner, vsk, fhahn, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51664
Summary:
Many directives are unavailable, and support for others may be limited.
This first draft has preliminary support for:
- conditional directives (including errors),
- data allocation (unsigned types up to 8 bytes, and ALIGN),
- equates/variables (numeric and text),
- and procedure directives (without parameters),
as well as COMMENT, ECHO, INCLUDE, INCLUDELIB, PUBLIC, and EXTERN. Text variables (aka text macros) are expanded in-place wherever the identifier occurs.
We deliberately ignore all ml.exe processor directives.
Prominent features not yet supported:
- structs
- macros (both procedures and functions)
- procedures (with specified parameters)
- substitution & expansion operators
Conditional directives are complicated by the fact that "ifdef rax" is a valid way to check if a file is being assembled for a 64-bit x86 processor; we add support for "ifdef <register>" in general, which requires adding a tryParseRegister method to all MCTargetAsmParsers. (Some targets require backtracking in the non-register case.)
Reviewers: rnk, thakis
Reviewed By: thakis
Subscribers: kerbowa, merge_guards_bot, wuzish, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, mgorny, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Jim, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72680
This is like -fdata-sections, and it's not part of /O2 by default for some reason.
In the cmake build, reduces the size of clang.exe from 70,358,016 bytes to 69,982,720 bytes.
clang-format.exe goes from 3,703,296 bytes to 3,331,072 bytes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74573
Before, the script used `git log -SFoo.cpp` to find a commit where
the number of occurrences of "Foo.cpp" changed -- but since
a patch with
+ LLVMFoo.cpp
- Foo.cpp
contains the same number of instances of "Foo.cpp", the script
incorrectly skipped this type of rename.
As fix, look for '\bFoo\.cpp\b' instead and pass --pickaxe-regex
so that we can grep for word boundaries.
To test, check out 7531a5039f (which renamed in llvm/lib/IR
RemarkStreamer.cpp to LLVMRemarkStreamer.cpp) and look at the output of
the script. Before this change, it correctly assigned the addition
of LLVMRemarkStreamer.cpp to 7531a5039f but incorrectly assigned
the removal of RemarkStreamer.cpp to b8a847c. With this, it
correctly assigns both to 7531a5039f.
On macOS, libc++ headers are distributed with the compiler, not
the sysroot. Without this, compiling a file that includes something
like <string> won't compile with gn-built clang without manual tweaks.
I used to do the manual tweaks, but now that other people are starting
to use this on mac, let's make it Just Work.
(This is marginally nicer than the cmake build now in that you can
just build 'clang' and it'll do the right thing.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74247