Add a `MapVector::remove_if()` that erases items in bulk in linear time,
as opposed to quadratic time for repeated calls to `MapVector::erase()`.
llvm-svn: 213090
Actually update the changed indexes in the map portion of `MapVector`
when erasing from the middle. Add a unit test that checks for this.
Note that `MapVector::erase()` is a linear time operation (it was and
still is). I'll commit a new method in a moment called
`MapVector::remove_if()` that deletes multiple entries in linear time,
which should be slightly less painful.
llvm-svn: 213084
Until now, attempting to create an alias of a required option would
complain if the user supplied the alias, because the required option
didn't have a value. Similarly, if you said the alias was required,
then using the base option would complain that the alias wasn't
supplied. Lastly, if you put required on both, *neither* option would
work.
By changning alias to overload addOccurrence and setting cl::Required
on the original option, we can get this to behave in a more useful
way. I've also added a test and updated a user that was getting this
wrong.
llvm-svn: 212986
Turn llvm::SpecialCaseList into a simple class that parses text files in
a specified format and knows nothing about LLVM IR. Move this class into
LLVMSupport library. Implement two users of this class:
* DFSanABIList in DFSan instrumentation pass.
* SanitizerBlacklist in Clang CodeGen library.
The latter will be modified to use actual source-level information from frontend
(source file names) instead of unstable LLVM IR things (LLVM Module identifier).
Remove dependency edge from ClangCodeGen/ClangDriver to LLVMTransformUtils.
No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 212643
The slice(N, M) interface is powerful but not concise when wanting to
drop a few elements off of an ArrayRef, fix this by adding a drop_back
method.
llvm-svn: 212370
Now that we have a lib/MC/MCAnalysis, the dependency was there just because
of two helper classes. Move the two over to MC.
This will allow IRObjectFile to parse inline assembly.
llvm-svn: 212248
The new library is 150KB on a Release+Asserts build, so it is quiet a bit of
code that regular users of MC don't need to link with now.
llvm-svn: 212209
string_ostream is a safe and efficient string builder that combines opaque
stack storage with a built-in ostream interface.
small_string_ostream<bytes> additionally permits an explicit stack storage size
other than the default 128 bytes to be provided. Beyond that, storage is
transferred to the heap.
This convenient class can be used in most places an
std::string+raw_string_ostream pair or SmallString<>+raw_svector_ostream pair
would previously have been used, in order to guarantee consistent access
without byte truncation.
The patch also converts much of LLVM to use the new facility. These changes
include several probable bug fixes for truncated output, a programming error
that's no longer possible with the new interface.
llvm-svn: 211749
Certain versions of GCC (~4.7) couldn't handle the SFINAE on access
control, but with "= delete" (hidden behind a macro for portability)
this issue is worked around/addressed.
Patch by Agustín Bergé
llvm-svn: 211525
This reverts commit 1f502bd9d7d2c1f98ad93a09ffe435e11a95aedd, due to
GCC / MinGW's lack of support for C++11 threading.
It's possible this will go back in after we come up with a
reasonable solution.
llvm-svn: 211401
Start extracting helper functions out of -block-freq's `UnsignedFloat`
into `Support/ScaledNumber.h` with the eventual goal of moving and
renaming the class to `ScaledNumber`.
The bike shed about names is still being painted, but I'm going with
this for now.
llvm-svn: 211333
After a number of previous small iterations, the functions
llvm_start_multithreaded() and llvm_stop_multithreaded() have
been reduced essentially to no-ops. This change removes them
entirely.
Reviewed by: rnk, dblaikie
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4216
llvm-svn: 211287
This change has a bit of a trickle down effect due to the fact that
there are a number of derived implementations of ExecutionEngine,
and that the mutex is not tightly encapsulated so is used by other
classes directly.
Reviewed by: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4196
llvm-svn: 211214
This enables static polymorphism of the mutex type, which is
necessary in order to replace the standard mutex implementation
with a different type.
llvm-svn: 211080
While std::error_code itself seems to work OK in all platforms, there
are few annoying differences with regards to the std::errc enumeration.
This patch adds a simple llvm enumeration, which will hopefully avoid build
breakages in other platforms and surprises as we get more uses of
std::error_code.
llvm-svn: 210920
The idea of this patch is to turn llvm/Support/system_error.h into a
transitional header that just brings in the erorr_code api to the llvm
namespace. I will remove it shortly afterwards.
The cases where the general idea needed some tweaking:
* std::errc is a namespace in msvc, so we cannot use "using std::errc". I could
add an #ifdef, but there were not that many uses, so I just added std:: to
them in this patch.
* Template specialization had to be moved to the std namespace in this
patch set already.
* The msvc implementation of default_error_condition doesn't seem to
provide the same transformations as we need. Not too surprising since
the standard doesn't actually say what "equivalent" means. I fixed the
problem by keeping our old mapping and using it at error_code
construction time.
Despite these shortcomings I think this is still a good thing. Some reasons:
* The different implementations of system_error might improve over time.
* It removes 925 lines of code from llvm already.
* It removes 6313 bytes from the text segment of the clang binary when
it is built with gcc and 2816 bytes when building with clang and
libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 210687
MSVC doesn't seem to provide any is_error_code_enum enumeration for the
windows errors.
Fortunately very few places in llvm have to handle raw windows errors, so
we can just construct the corresponding error_code directly.
llvm-svn: 210631
Unfortunately there's no way to elegantly do this with pre-canned
algorithms. Using a generating iterator doesn't work because you default
construct for each element, then move construct into the actual slot
(bad for copy but non-movable types, and a little unneeded overhead even
in the move-only case), so just write it out manually.
This solution isn't exception safe (if one of the element's ctors calls
we don't fall back, destroy the constructed elements, and throw on -
which std::uninitialized_fill does do) but SmallVector (and LLVM) isn't
exception safe anyway.
llvm-svn: 210495
To test cases that involve actual repetition (> 1 elements), at least
one element before the insertion point, and some elements of the
original range that still fit in that range space after insertion.
Actually we need coverage for the inverse case too (where no elements
after the insertion point fit into the previously allocated space), but
this'll do for now, and I might end up rewriting bits of SmallVector to
avoid that special case anyway.
llvm-svn: 210436
Specifically this caused inserting an element from a SmallVector into
itself when such an insertion would cause a reallocation. We have code
to handle this for non-reallocating cases, but it's not robust against
reallocation.
llvm-svn: 210430
(& because it makes it easier to test, this also improves
correctness/performance slightly by moving the last element in an insert
operation, rather than copying it)
llvm-svn: 210429
Because we don't have a separate negate( ) function, 0 - NaN does double-duty as the IEEE-754 negate( ) operation, which (unlike most FP ops) *does* attach semantic meaning to the signbit of NaN.
llvm-svn: 210428
This would cause the last element in a range to be in a moved-from state
after an insert at a non-end position, losing that value entirely in the
process.
Side note: move_backward is subtle. It copies [A, B) to C-1 and down.
(the fact that it decrements both the second and third iterators before
the first movement is the subtle part... kind of surprising, anyway)
llvm-svn: 210426
Alias with unnamed_addr were in a strange state. It is stored in GlobalValue,
the language reference talks about "unnamed_addr aliases" but the verifier
was rejecting them.
It seems natural to allow unnamed_addr in aliases:
* It is a property of how it is accessed, not of the data itself.
* It is perfectly possible to write code that depends on the address
of an alias.
This patch then makes unname_addr legal for aliases. One side effect is that
the syntax changes for a corner case: In globals, unnamed_addr is now printed
before the address space.
llvm-svn: 210302
This patch changes GlobalAlias to point to an arbitrary ConstantExpr and it is
up to MC (or the system assembler) to decide if that expression is valid or not.
This reduces our ability to diagnose invalid uses and how early we can spot
them, but it also lets us do things like
@test5 = alias inttoptr(i32 sub (i32 ptrtoint (i32* @test2 to i32),
i32 ptrtoint (i32* @bar to i32)) to i32*)
An important implication of this patch is that the notion of aliased global
doesn't exist any more. The alias has to encode the information needed to
access it in its metadata (linkage, visibility, type, etc).
Another consequence to notice is that getSection has to return a "const char *".
It could return a NullTerminatedStringRef if there was such a thing, but when
that was proposed the decision was to just uses "const char*" for that.
llvm-svn: 210062
This patch changes the design of GlobalAlias so that it doesn't take a
ConstantExpr anymore. It now points directly to a GlobalObject, but its type is
independent of the aliasee type.
To avoid changing all alias related tests in this patches, I kept the common
syntax
@foo = alias i32* @bar
to mean the same as now. The cases that used to use cast now use the more
general syntax
@foo = alias i16, i32* @bar.
Note that GlobalAlias now behaves a bit more like GlobalVariable. We
know that its type is always a pointer, so we omit the '*'.
For the bitcode, a nice surprise is that we were writing both identical types
already, so the format change is minimal. Auto upgrade is handled by looking
through the casts and no new fields are needed for now. New bitcode will
simply have different types for Alias and Aliasee.
One last interesting point in the patch is that replaceAllUsesWith becomes
smart enough to avoid putting a ConstantExpr in the aliasee. This seems better
than checking and updating every caller.
A followup patch will delete getAliasedGlobal now that it is redundant. Another
patch will add support for an explicit offset.
llvm-svn: 209007
Sometimes a LLVM compilation may take more time then a client would like to
wait for. The problem is that it is not possible to safely suspend the LLVM
thread from the outside. When the timing is bad it might be possible that the
LLVM thread holds a global mutex and this would block any progress in any other
thread.
This commit adds a new yield callback function that can be registered with a
context. LLVM will try to yield by calling this callback function, but there is
no guaranteed frequency. LLVM will only do so if it can guarantee that
suspending the thread won't block any forward progress in other LLVM contexts
in the same process.
Once the client receives the call back it can suspend the thread safely and
resume it at another time.
Related to <rdar://problem/16728690>
llvm-svn: 208945
We already had an assert for foo->RAUW(foo), but not for something like
foo->RAUW(GEP(foo)) and would go in an infinite loop trying to apply
the replacement.
llvm-svn: 208663
operations on the call graph. This one forms a cycle, and while not as
complex as removing an internal edge from an SCC, it involves
a reasonable amount of work to find all of the nodes newly connected in
a cycle.
Also somewhat alarming is the worst case complexity here: it might have
to walk roughly the entire SCC inverse DAG to insert a single edge. This
is carefully documented in the API (I hope).
llvm-svn: 207935
This fix simply ensures that both metadata nodes are path-aware before
performing path-aware alias analysis.
This issue isn't normally triggered in LLVM, because we perform an autoupgrade
of the TBAA metadata to the new format when reading in LL or BC files. This
issue only appears when a client creates the IR manually and mixes old and new
TBAA metadata format.
This fixes <rdar://problem/16760860>.
llvm-svn: 207923
just connects an SCC to one of its descendants directly. Not much of an
impact. The last one is the hard one -- connecting an SCC to one of its
ancestors, and thereby forming a cycle such that we have to merge all
the SCCs participating in the cycle.
llvm-svn: 207751
of SCCs in the SCC DAG. Exercise them in the big graph test case. These
will be especially useful for establishing invariants in insertion
logic.
llvm-svn: 207749
We already do this for shstrtab, so might as well do it for strtab. This
extracts the string table building code into a separate class. The idea
is to use it for other object formats too.
I mostly wanted to do this for the general principle, but it does save a
little bit on object file size. I tried this on a clang bootstrap and
saved 0.54% on the sum of object file sizes (1.14 MB out of 212 MB for
a release build).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3533
llvm-svn: 207670
When we were moving from a larger vector to a smaller one but didn't
need to re-allocate, we would move-assign over uninitialized memory in
the target, then move-construct that same data again.
llvm-svn: 207663
edge entirely within an existing SCC. Shockingly, making the connected
component more connected is ... a total snooze fest. =]
Anyways, its wired up, and I even added a test case to make sure it
pretty much sorta works. =D
llvm-svn: 207631
bits), and discover that it's totally broken. Yay tests. Boo bug. Fix
the basic edge removal so that it works by nulling out the removed edges
rather than actually removing them. This leaves the indices valid in the
map from callee to index, and preserves some of the locality for
iterating over edges. The iterator is made bidirectional to reflect that
it now has to skip over null entries, and the skipping logic is layered
onto it.
As future work, I would like to track essentially the "load factor" of
the edge list, and when it falls below a threshold do a compaction.
An alternative I considered (and continue to consider) is storing the
callees in a doubly linked list where each element of the list is in
a set (which is essentially the classical linked-hash-table
datastructure). The problem with that approach is that either you need
to heap allocate the linked list nodes and use pointers to them, or use
a bucket hash table (with even *more* linked list pointer overhead!),
etc. It's pretty easy to get 5x overhead for values that are just
pointers. So far, I think punching holes in the vector, and periodic
compaction is likely to be much more efficient overall in the space/time
tradeoff.
llvm-svn: 207619
Change `BlockFrequency` to defer to `BranchProbability::scale()` and
`BranchProbability::scaleByInverse()`.
This removes `BlockFrequency::scale()` from its API (and drops the
ability to see the remainder), but the only user was the unit tests. If
some code in the future needs an API that exposes the remainder, we can
add something to `BranchProbability`, but I find that unlikely.
llvm-svn: 207550
This commit provides the necessary C/C++ APIs and infastructure to enable fine-
grain progress report and safe suspension points after each pass in the pass
manager.
Clients can provide a callback function to the pass manager to call after each
pass. This can be used in a variety of ways (progress report, dumping of IR
between passes, safe suspension of threads, etc).
The run listener list is maintained in the LLVMContext, which allows a multi-
threaded client to be only informed for it's own thread. This of course assumes
that the client created a LLVMContext for each thread.
This fixes <rdar://problem/16728690>
llvm-svn: 207430
contract (and be much more useful). It now provides exactly the
post-order traversal a caller might need to perform on newly formed
SCCs.
llvm-svn: 207410
API requirements much more obvious.
The key here is that there are two totally different use cases for
mutating the graph. Prior to doing any SCC formation, it is very easy to
mutate the graph. There may be users that want to do small tweaks here,
and then use the already-built graph for their SCC-based operations.
This method remains on the graph itself and is documented carefully as
being cheap but unavailable once SCCs are formed.
Once SCCs are formed, and there is some in-flight DFS building them, we
have to be much more careful in how we mutate the graph. These mutation
operations are sunk onto the SCCs themselves, which both simplifies
things (the code was already there!) and helps make it obvious that
these interfaces are only applicable within that context. The other
primary constraint is that the edge being mutated is actually related to
the SCC on which we call the method. This helps make it obvious that you
cannot arbitrarily mutate some other SCC.
I've tried to write much more complete documentation for the interesting
mutation API -- intra-SCC edge removal. Currently one aspect of this
documentation is a lie (the result list of SCCs) but we also don't even
have tests for that API. =[ I'm going to add tests and fix it to match
the documentation next.
llvm-svn: 207339
This should reduce the chance of memory leaks like those fixed in
r207240.
There's still some unclear ownership of DIEs happening in DwarfDebug.
Pushing unique_ptr and references through more APIs should help expose
the cases where ownership is a bit fuzzy.
llvm-svn: 207263
It's fishy to be changing the `std::vector<>` owned by the iterator, and
no one actual does it, so I'm going to remove the ability in a
subsequent commit. First, update the users.
<rdar://problem/14292693>
llvm-svn: 207252
Boost's iterator_adaptor, and a specific adaptor which iterates over
pointees when wrapped around an iterator over pointers.
This is the result of a long discussion on IRC with Duncan Smith, Dave
Blaikie, Richard Smith, and myself. Essentially, I could use some subset
of the iterator facade facilities often used from Boost, and everyone
seemed interested in having the functionality in a reasonably generic
form. I've tried to strike a balance between the pragmatism and the
established Boost design. The primary differences are:
1) Delegating to the standard iterator interface names rather than
special names that then make up a second iterator-like API.
2) Using the name 'pointee_iterator' which seems more clear than
'indirect_iterator'. The whole business of calling the '*p' operation
'pointer indirection' in the standard is ... quite confusing. And
'dereference' is no better of a term for moving from a pointer to
a reference.
Hoping Duncan, and others continue to provide comments on this until
we've got a nice, minimal abstraction.
llvm-svn: 207069
than functions. So far, this access pattern is *much* more common. It
seems likely that any user of this interface is going to have nodes at
the point that they are querying the SCCs.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 207045
This implements the core functionality necessary to remove an edge from
the call graph and correctly update both the basic graph and the SCC
structure. As part of that it has to run a tiny (in number of nodes)
Tarjan-style DFS walk of an SCC being mutated to compute newly formed
SCCs, etc.
This is *very rough* and a WIP. I have a bunch of FIXMEs for code
cleanup that will reduce the boilerplate in this change substantially.
I also have a bunch of simplifications to various parts of both
algorithms that I want to make, but first I'd like to have a more
holistic picture. Ideally, I'd also like more testing. I'll probably add
quite a few more unit tests as I go here to cover the various different
aspects and corner cases of removing edges from the graph.
Still, this is, so far, successfully updating the SCC graph in-place
without disrupting the identity established for the existing SCCs even
when we do challenging things like delete the critical edge that made an
SCC cycle at all and have to reform things as a tree of smaller SCCs.
Getting this to work is really critical for the new pass manager as it
is going to associate significant state with the SCC instance and needs
it to be stable. That is also the motivation behind the return of the
newly formed SCCs. Eventually, I'll wire this all the way up to the
public API so that the pass manager can use it to correctly re-enqueue
newly formed SCCs into a fresh postorder traversal.
llvm-svn: 206968
up the stack finishing the exploration of each entries children before
we're finished in addition to accounting for their low-links. Added
a unittest that really hammers home the need for this with interlocking
cycles that would each appear distinct otherwise and crash or compute
the wrong result. As part of this, nuke a stale fixme and bring the rest
of the implementation still more closely in line with the original
algorithm.
llvm-svn: 206966
resisted this for too long. Just with the basic testing here I was able
to exercise the analysis in more detail and sift out both type signature
bugs in the API and a bug in the DFS numbering. All of these are fixed
here as well.
The unittests will be much more important for the mutation support where
it is necessary to craft minimal mutations and then inspect the state of
the graph. There is just no way to do that with a standard FileCheck
test. However, unittesting these kinds of analyses is really quite easy,
especially as they're designed with the new pass manager where there is
essentially no infrastructure required to rig up the core logic and
exercise it at an API level.
As a minor aside about the DFS numbering bug, the DFS numbering used in
LCG is a bit unusual. Rather than numbering from 0, we number from 1,
and use 0 as the sentinel "unvisited" state. Other implementations often
use '-1' for this, but I find it easier to deal with 0 and it shouldn't
make any real difference provided someone doesn't write silly bugs like
forgetting to actually initialize the DFS numbering. Oops. ;]
llvm-svn: 206954
this code ages ago and lost track of it. Seems worth doing though --
this thing can get called from places that would benefit from knowing
that std::distance is O(1). Also add a very fledgeling unittest for
Users and make sure various aspects of this seem to work reasonably.
llvm-svn: 206453
Implement DebugInfoVerifier, which steals verification relying on
DebugInfoFinder from Verifier.
- Adds LegacyDebugInfoVerifierPassPass, a ModulePass which wraps
DebugInfoVerifier. Uses -verify-di command-line flag.
- Change verifyModule() to invoke DebugInfoVerifier as well as
Verifier.
- Add a call to createDebugInfoVerifierPass() wherever there was a
call to createVerifierPass().
This implementation as a module pass should sidestep efficiency issues,
allowing us to turn debug info verification back on.
<rdar://problem/15500563>
llvm-svn: 206300
by removing the MallocSlabAllocator entirely and just using
MallocAllocator directly. This makes all off these allocators expose and
utilize the same core interface.
The only ugly part of this is that it exposes the fact that the JIT
allocator has no real handling of alignment, any more than the malloc
allocator does. =/ It would be nice to fix both of these to support
alignments, and then to leverage that in the BumpPtrAllocator to do less
over allocation in order to manually align pointers. But, that's another
patch for another day. This patch has no functional impact, it just
removes the somewhat meaningless wrapper around MallocAllocator.
llvm-svn: 206267
abstract interface. The only user of this functionality is the JIT
memory manager and it is quite happy to have a custom type here. This
removes a virtual function call and a lot of unnecessary abstraction
from the common case where this is just a *very* thin vaneer around
a call to malloc.
Hopefully still no functionality changed here. =]
llvm-svn: 206149
slabs rather than embedding a singly linked list in the slabs
themselves. This has a few advantages:
- Better utilization of the slab's memory by not wasting 16-bytes at the
front.
- Simpler allocation strategy by not having a struct packed at the
front.
- Avoids paging every allocated slab in just to traverse them for
deallocating or dumping stats.
The latter is the really nice part. Folks have complained from time to
time bitterly that tearing down a BumpPtrAllocator, even if it doesn't
run any destructors, pages in all of the memory allocated. Now it won't.
=]
Also resolves a FIXME with the scaling of the slab sizes. The scaling
now disregards specially sized slabs for allocations larger than the
threshold.
llvm-svn: 206147
Don't quote octal compatible strings if they are only two wide, they
aren't ambiguous.
This reverts commit r205857 which reverted r205857.
llvm-svn: 205914
YAMLIO would turn a BinaryRef into the string 0000000004000000.
However, the leading zero causes parsers to interpret it as being an
octal number instead of a hexadecimal one.
Instead, escape such strings as needed.
llvm-svn: 205839
- take->release: LLVM has moved to C++11. MockWrapper became an instance of unique_ptr.
- method symbol_iterator::increment disappeared recently, in this revision:
r200442 | rafael | 2014-01-29 20:49:50 -0600 (Wed, 29 Jan 2014) | 9 lines
Simplify the handling of iterators in ObjectFile.
None of the object file formats reported error on iterator increment. In
retrospect, that is not too surprising: no object format stores symbols or
sections in a linked list or other structure that requires chasing pointers.
As a consequence, all error checking can be done on begin() and end().
This reduces the text segment of bin/llvm-readobj in my machine from 521233 to
518526 bytes.
My change mimics the change that the revision made to lib/DebugInfo/DWARFContext.cpp .
- const_cast: Shut up a warning from gcc.
I ran unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/Debug+Asserts/JITTests to make sure it worked.
- Arch
llvm-svn: 205689
This avoids an extra copy during decompression and avoids the use of
MemoryBuffer which is a weirdly esoteric device that includes unrelated
concepts like "file name" (its rather generic name is a bit misleading).
Similar refactoring of zlib::compress coming up.
llvm-svn: 205676
Cygwin is now a proper environment rather than an OS. This updates the MCJIT
tests to avoid execution on Cygwin. This fixes native cygwin tests.
llvm-svn: 205266
This generalises the object file type parsing to all Windows environments. This
is used by cygwin as well as MSVC environments for MCJIT. This also makes the
triple more similar to Chandler's suggestion of a separate field for the object
file format.
llvm-svn: 205219
parameters rather than runtime parameters.
There is only one user of these parameters and they are compile time for
that user. Making these compile time seems to better reflect their
intended usage as well.
llvm-svn: 205143
If the environment is unknown and no object file is provided, then assume an
"MSVC" environment, otherwise, set the environment to the object file format.
In the case that we have a known environment but a non-native file format for
Windows (COFF) which is used for MCJIT, then append the custom file format to
the triple as an additional component.
This fixes the MCJIT tests on Windows.
llvm-svn: 205130
This adds a second implementation of the AArch64 architecture to LLVM,
accessible in parallel via the "arm64" triple. The plan over the
coming weeks & months is to merge the two into a single backend,
during which time thorough code review should naturally occur.
Everything will be easier with the target in-tree though, hence this
commit.
llvm-svn: 205090
Construct a uniform Windows target triple nomenclature which is congruent to the
Linux counterpart. The old triples are normalised to the new canonical form.
This cleans up the long-standing issue of odd naming for various Windows
environments.
There are four different environments on Windows:
MSVC: The MS ABI, MSVCRT environment as defined by Microsoft
GNU: The MinGW32/MinGW32-W64 environment which uses MSVCRT and auxiliary libraries
Itanium: The MSVCRT environment + libc++ built with Itanium ABI
Cygnus: The Cygwin environment which uses custom libraries for everything
The following spellings are now written as:
i686-pc-win32 => i686-pc-windows-msvc
i686-pc-mingw32 => i686-pc-windows-gnu
i686-pc-cygwin => i686-pc-windows-cygnus
This should be sufficiently flexible to allow us to target other windows
environments in the future as necessary.
llvm-svn: 204977
Summary:
Tested with a unit test because we don't appear to have any transforms
that use this other than ASan, I think.
Fixes PR17935.
Reviewers: nicholas
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3194
llvm-svn: 204866
In CallInst, op_end() points at the callee, which we don't want to iterate over
when just iterating over arguments. Now take this into account when returning
a iterator_range from arg_operands. Similar reasoning for InvokeInst.
Also adds a unit test to verify this actually works as expected.
llvm-svn: 204851
It is impossible to create a hard link to a non existing file, so create a
dummy file, create the link an delete the dummy file.
On windows one cannot remove the current directory, so chdir first.
llvm-svn: 204719
order to use the single assignment. That's probably worth doing for
a lot of these types anyways as they may have non-trivial moves and so
getting copy elision in more places seems worthwhile.
I've tried to add some tests that actually catch this mistake, and one
of the types is now well tested but the others' tests still fail to
catch this. I'll keep working on tests, but this gets the core pattern
right.
llvm-svn: 203780
Add a utility function to convert the Windows path separator to Unix style path
separators. This is used by a subsequent change in clang to enable the use of
Windows SDK headers on Linux.
llvm-svn: 203611
Before this patch the unix code for creating hardlinks was unused. The code
for creating symbolic links was implemented in lib/Support/LockFileManager.cpp
and the code for creating hard links in lib/Support/*/Path.inc.
The only use we have for these is in LockFileManager.cpp and it can use both
soft and hard links. Just have a create_link function that creates one or the
other depending on the platform.
llvm-svn: 203596
it is available. Also make the move semantics sufficiently correct to
tolerate move-only passes, as the PassManagers *are* move-only passes.
llvm-svn: 203391
This reverts commit r203374.
Ambiguities in assign... oh well. I'm just going to revert this and
probably not try to recommit it as it's not terribly important.
llvm-svn: 203375
Move a common utility (assign(iter, iter)) into SmallVector (some of the
others could be moved there too, but this one seemed particularly
generic) and replace repetitions overrides with using directives.
And simplify SmallVector::assign(num, element) while I'm here rather
than thrashing these files (that cause everyone to rebuild) again.
llvm-svn: 203374
Previously, the assertions in PointerIntPair would try to calculate the value
(1 << NumLowBitsAvailable); the inferred type here is 'int', so if there were
more than 31 bits available we'd get a shift overflow.
Also, add a rudimentary unit test file for PointerIntPair.
llvm-svn: 203273
This is a preliminary setup change to support a renaming of Windows target
triples. Split the object file format information out of the environment into a
separate entity. Unfortunately, file format was previously treated as an
environment with an unknown OS. This is most obvious in the ARM subtarget where
the handling for macho on an arbitrary platform switches to AAPCS rather than
APCS (as per Apple's needs).
llvm-svn: 203160
This compiles with no changes to clang/lld/lldb with MSVC and includes
overloads to various functions which are used by those projects and llvm
which have OwningPtr's as parameters. This should allow out of tree
projects some time to move. There are also no changes to libs/Target,
which should help out of tree targets have time to move, if necessary.
llvm-svn: 203083
When using a //net/ path, we were transforming the trailing / into a '.'
when the path was just the root path and we were iterating backwards.
Forwards iteration and other kinds of root path (C:\, /) were already
correct.
llvm-svn: 202999
This will allow external callers of these functions to switch over time
rather than forcing a breaking change all a once. These particular
functions were determined by building clang/lld/lldb.
llvm-svn: 202959
source file had already been moved. Also move the unittest into the IR
unittest library.
This may seem an odd thing to put in the IR library but we only really
use this with instructions and it needs the LLVM context to work, so it
is intrinsically tied to the IR library.
llvm-svn: 202842
a bit surprising, as the class is almost entirely abstracted away from
any particular IR, however it encodes the comparsion predicates which
mutate ranges as ICmp predicate codes. This is reasonable as they're
used for both instructions and constants. Thus, it belongs in the IR
library with instructions and constants.
llvm-svn: 202838
directly care about the Value class (it is templated so that the key can
be any arbitrary Value subclass), it is in fact concretely tied to the
Value class through the ValueHandle's CallbackVH interface which relies
on the key type being some Value subclass to establish the value handle
chain.
Ironically, the unittest is already in the right library.
llvm-svn: 202824
Move the test for this class into the IR unittests as well.
This uncovers that ValueMap too is in the IR library. Ironically, the
unittest for ValueMap is useless in the Support library (honestly, so
was the ValueHandle test) and so it already lives in the IR unittests.
Mmmm, tasty layering.
llvm-svn: 202821
business.
This header includes Function and BasicBlock and directly uses the
interfaces of both classes. It has to do with the IR, it even has that
in the name. =] Put it in the library it belongs to.
This is one step toward making LLVM's Support library survive a C++
modules bootstrap.
llvm-svn: 202814
The interaction between defaulted operators and move elision isn't
totally obvious, add a unit test so it doesn't break unintentionally.
llvm-svn: 202662
it interoperate (minimally) with std::unique_ptr<T>. This is part of my
plan to migrate LLVM to use std::unique_ptr with a minimal impact on
out-of-tree code.
Patch by Ahmed Charles with some minor cleanups (and bool casts) by me.
llvm-svn: 202608
No tool does this currently, but as everything else in a module we should be
able to change its DataLayout.
Most of the fix is in DataLayout to make sure it can be reset properly.
The test uses Module::setDataLayout since the fact that we mutate a DataLayout
is an implementation detail. The module could hold a OwningPtr<DataLayout> and
the DataLayout itself could be immutable.
Thanks to Philip Reames for pushing me in the right direction.
llvm-svn: 202198
See
<rdar://16149106> [MCJIT] provide a platform-independent way to communicate callee-save frame info.
<rdar://16149279> [MCJIT] get the host OS version from a runtime check, not a configure-time check.
llvm-svn: 202082
After this I will set the default back to F_None. The advantage is that
before this patch forgetting to set F_Binary would corrupt a file on windows.
Forgetting to set F_Text produces one that cannot be read in notepad, which
is a better failure mode :-)
llvm-svn: 202052
Before this patch they would take an boolean argument to say if the path
already existed. This was redundant with the returned error_code which is able
to represent that. This allowed for callers to incorrectly check only the
existed flag instead of first checking the error code.
Instead, pass in a boolean flag to say if the previous (non-)existence should be
an error or not.
Callers of the of the old simple versions are not affected. They still ignore
the previous (non-)existence as they did before.
llvm-svn: 201979
This commit moves getSLEB128Size() and getULEB128Size() from
MCAsmInfo to LEB128.h and removes some copy-and-paste code.
Besides, this commit also adds some unit tests for the LEB128
functions.
llvm-svn: 201937
should not be marked nounwind.
Marking them nounwind caused crashes in the WebKit FTL JIT, because if we enable
sufficient optimizations, LLVM starts eliding compact_unwind sections (or any unwind
data for that matter), making deoptimization via stackmaps impossible.
This changes the stackmap intrinsic to be may-throw, adds a test for exactly the
sympton that WebKit saw, and fixes TableGen to handle un-attributed intrinsics.
Thanks to atrick and philipreames for reviewing this.
llvm-svn: 201826
passing down an AsmPrinter instance so we could compute the size of
the block which could be target specific. All of the test cases in
the unittest don't have any target specific data so we can use a NULL
AsmPrinter there. This also depends upon block data being added as
integers.
We can now hash the entire fission-cu.ll compile unit so turn the
flag on there with the hash value.
llvm-svn: 201752
In theory, Clang should figure out how to parse this correctly without
typename, but since this is the last TU that Clang falls back on in the
self-host, I'm going to compromise and check for __clang__.
And now Clang can self-host on -win32 without fallback! The 'check' and
'check-clang' targets both pass.
llvm-svn: 201358
required for all sections in a module. This can be useful when targets or
code-models place strict requirements on how sections must be laid out
in memory.
If RTDyldMemoryManger::needsToReserveAllocationSpace() is overridden to return
true then the JIT will call the following method on the memory manager, which
can be used to preallocate the necessary memory.
void RTDyldMemoryManager::reserveAllocationSpace(uintptr_t CodeSize,
uintptr_t DataSizeRO,
uintptr_t DataSizeRW)
Patch by Vaidas Gasiunas. Thanks very much Viadas!
llvm-svn: 201259
I think this was just over-eagerness on my part. The analysis results
need to often be non-const because they need to (in some cases at least)
be updated by the transformation pass in order to remain correct. It
also makes lazy analyses (a common case) needlessly annoying to write in
order to make their entire state mutable.
llvm-svn: 200881
In file included from ../unittests/Support/ProcessTest.cpp:11:
../utils/unittest/googletest/include/gtest/gtest.h:1448:28: warning: comparison of integers of different signs: 'const unsigned int' and 'const int' [-Wsign-compare]
GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_(NE, !=);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~
../utils/unittest/googletest/include/gtest/gtest.h:1433:12: note: expanded from macro 'GTEST_IMPL_CMP_HELPER_'
if (val1 op val2) {\
^
../unittests/Support/ProcessTest.cpp:46:3: note: in instantiation of function template specialization 'testing::internal::CmpHelperNE<unsigned int, int>' requested here
EXPECT_NE((r1 | r2), 0);
^
llvm-svn: 200801
This library will be used by clang-query. I can imagine LLDB becoming another
client of this library, so I think LLVM is a sensible place for it to live.
It wraps libedit, and adds tab completion support.
The code is loosely based on the line editor bits in LLDB, with a few
improvements:
- Polymorphism for retrieving the list of tab completions, based on
the concept pattern from the new pass manager.
- Tab completion doesn't corrupt terminal output if the input covers
multiple lines. Unfortunately this can only be done in a truly horrible
way, as far as I can tell. But since the alternative is to implement our
own line editor (which I don't think LLVM should be in the business of
doing, at least for now) I think it may be acceptable.
- Includes a fallback for the case where the user doesn't have libedit
installed.
Note that this uses C stdio, mainly because libedit also uses C stdio.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2200
llvm-svn: 200595
This will be used by the line editor library to derive a default path to
the history file.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2199
llvm-svn: 200594
algorithm. Sink the 'A' + Attribute hash into each form so we don't
have to check valid forms before deciding whether or not we're going
to hash which will let the default be to return without doing anything.
llvm-svn: 200571
This can still be overridden by explicitly setting a value requirement on the
alias option, but by default it should be the same.
PR18649
llvm-svn: 200407
There are a couple of interesting things here that we want to check over
(particularly the expecting asserts in StringRef) and get right for general use
in ADT so hold back on this one. For clang we have a workable templated
solution to use in the meanwhile.
This reverts commit r200187.
llvm-svn: 200194
(1) Add llvm_expect(), an asserting macro that can be evaluated as a constexpr
expression as well as a runtime assert or compiler hint in release builds. This
technique can be used to construct functions that are both unevaluated and
compiled depending on usage.
(2) Update StringRef using llvm_expect() to preserve runtime assertions while
extending the same checks to static asserts in C++11 builds that support the
feature.
(3) Introduce ConstStringRef, a strong subclass of StringRef that references
compile-time constant strings. It's convertible to, but not from, ordinary
StringRef and thus can be used to add compile-time safety to various interfaces
in LLVM and clang that only accept fixed inputs such as diagnostic format
strings that tend to get misused.
llvm-svn: 200187
different number of elements.
Bitcasts were passing with vectors of pointers with different number of
elements since the number of elements was checking
SrcTy->getVectorNumElements() == SrcTy->getVectorNumElements() which
isn't helpful. The addrspacecast was also wrong, but that case at least
is caught by the verifier. Refactor bitcast and addrspacecast handling
in castIsValid to be more readable and fix this problem.
llvm-svn: 199821
This was due to arithmetic overflow in the getNumBits() computation. Now we
cast BitWidth to a uint64_t so that does not occur during the computation. After
the computation is complete, the uint64_t is truncated when the function
returns.
I know that this is not something that is likely to happen, but it *IS* a valid
input and we should not blow up.
llvm-svn: 199609
This makes the 'verifyFunction' and 'verifyModule' functions totally
independent operations on the LLVM IR. It also cleans up their API a bit
by lifting the abort behavior into their clients and just using an
optional raw_ostream parameter to control printing.
The implementation of the verifier is now just an InstVisitor with no
multiple inheritance. It also is significantly more const-correct, and
hides the const violations internally. The two layers that force us to
break const correctness are building a DomTree and dispatching through
the InstVisitor.
A new VerifierPass is used to implement the legacy pass manager
interface in terms of the other pieces.
The error messages produced may be slightly different now, and we may
have slightly different short circuiting behavior with different usage
models of the verifier, but generally everything works equivalently and
this unblocks wiring the verifier up to the new pass manager.
llvm-svn: 199569
Move copying of global initializers below the cloning of functions.
The BlockAddress doesn't have access to the correct basic blocks until the
functions have been cloned. This causes the BlockAddress to point to the old
values. Just wait until the functions have been cloned before copying the
initializers.
PR13163
llvm-svn: 199354
can be used by both the new pass manager and the old.
This removes it from any of the virtual mess of the pass interfaces and
lets it derive cleanly from the DominatorTreeBase<> template. In turn,
tons of boilerplate interface can be nuked and it turns into a very
straightforward extension of the base DominatorTree interface.
The old analysis pass is now a simple wrapper. The names and style of
this split should match the split between CallGraph and
CallGraphWrapperPass. All of the users of DominatorTree have been
updated to match using many of the same tricks as with CallGraph. The
goal is that the common type remains the resulting DominatorTree rather
than the pass. This will make subsequent work toward the new pass
manager significantly easier.
Also in numerous places things became cleaner because I switched from
re-running the pass (!!! mid way through some other passes run!!!) to
directly recomputing the domtree.
llvm-svn: 199104
directory. These passes are already defined in the IR library, and it
doesn't make any sense to have the headers in Analysis.
Long term, I think there is going to be a much better way to divide
these matters. The dominators code should be fully separated into the
abstract graph algorithm and have that put in Support where it becomes
obvious that evn Clang's CFGBlock's can use it. Then the verifier can
manually construct dominance information from the Support-driven
interface while the Analysis library can provide a pass which both
caches, reconstructs, and supports a nice update API.
But those are very long term, and so I don't want to leave the really
confusing structure until that day arrives.
llvm-svn: 199082
name to match the source file which I got earlier. Update the include
sites. Also modernize the comments in the header to use the more
recommended doxygen style.
llvm-svn: 199041
mode that can be used to debug the execution of everything.
No support for analyses here, that will come later. This already helps
show parts of the opt commandline integration that isn't working. Tests
of that will start using it as the bugs are fixed.
llvm-svn: 199004
I would not normally add tests like these, but the copy constructor is not
used at all in our codebase with c++11, so having this tests might prevent
breaking the c++03 build again.
llvm-svn: 198886
are part of the core IR library in order to support dumping and other
basic functionality.
Rename the 'Assembly' include directory to 'AsmParser' to match the
library name and the only functionality left their -- printing has been
in the core IR library for quite some time.
Update all of the #includes to match.
All of this started because I wanted to have the layering in good shape
before I started adding support for printing LLVM IR using the new pass
infrastructure, and commandline support for the new pass infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 198688
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.
Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.
llvm-svn: 198685
instructions. I needed this for a quick experiment I was making, and
while I've no idea if that will ever get committed, I didn't want to
throw away the pattern match code and for anyone else to have to write
it again. I've added unittests to make sure this works correctly.
In fun news, this also uncovered the IRBuilder bug. Doh!
llvm-svn: 198541
failed to correctly propagate the NUW and NSW flags to the constant
folder for two instructions. I've added a unittest to cover flag
propagation for the rest of the instructions and constant expressions.
llvm-svn: 198538
basic block to hold instructions, and managing all of their lifetimes in
a fixture. This makes it easy to sink the expectations into the test
cases themselves which also makes things a bit more explicit and clearer
IMO.
llvm-svn: 198532
This functionality was enabled by r198374. Here's a test to ensure it
works and we don't regress it.
Based on a patch by Maciej Piechotka.
llvm-svn: 198377
This is an iterator which you can build around a MemoryBuffer. It will
iterate through the non-empty, non-comment lines of the buffer as
a forward iterator. It should be small and reasonably fast (although it
could be made much faster if anyone cares, I don't really...).
This will be used to more simply support the text-based sample
profile file format, and is largely based on the original patch by
Diego. I've re-worked the style of it and separated it from the work of
producing a MemoryBuffer from a file which both simplifies the interface
and makes it easier to test.
The style of the API follows the C++ standard naming conventions to fit
in better with iterators in general, much like the Path and FileSystem
interfaces follow standard-based naming conventions.
llvm-svn: 198068
According to the docs, ThreadLocal<>::get() should return NULL
if no object has been set. This patch makes that the case also for non-thread
builds and adds a very basic unit test to check it.
(This was causing PR18205 because PrettyStackTraceHead didn't get zero-
initialized and we'd crash trying to read past the end of that list. We didn't
notice this so much on Linux since we'd crash after printing all the entries,
but on Mac we print into a SmallString, and would crash before printing that.)
llvm-svn: 197718
Stray *Tests might stay after reverting.
FIXME: Could we apply this feature to clang/unittests?
FIXME: Implement this feature to CMake.
llvm-svn: 197661
The old AddFixedStringToRegEx() it was based on got away with this for the
longest time, but the problem became easy to spot after the cleanup in r197096.
Also add a quick unit test to cover regex escaping.
llvm-svn: 197121
Defaulting to iOS 3.0 when LLVM has to guess the version is no longer a useful
option and can give surprising results (like tail calls being disabled).
5.0 seems like a reasonable compromise as a platform that's still interesting
to some people.
rdar://problem/15567348
llvm-svn: 196912
Summary:
Rewrite asan's stack frame layout.
First, most of the stack layout logic is moved into a separte file
to make it more testable and (potentially) useful for other projects.
Second, make the frames more compact by using adaptive redzones
(smaller for small objects, larger for large objects).
Third, try to minimized gaps due to large alignments (this is hypothetical since
today we don't see many stack vars aligned by more than 32).
The frames indeed become more compact, but I'll still need to run more benchmarks
before committing, but I am sking for review now to get early feedback.
This change will be accompanied by a trivial change in compiler-rt tests
to match the new frame sizes.
Reviewers: samsonov, dvyukov
Reviewed By: samsonov
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2324
llvm-svn: 196568
We were previously not adding fast-math flags through CreateBinOp()
when it happened to be making a floating point binary operator. This
patch updates it to do so similarly to directly calling CreateF*().
llvm-svn: 196438
When a block is unreachable, asking its dom tree descendants should
return the empty set. However, the computation of the descendants
was causing a segmentation fault because the dom tree node we get
from the basic block is initially NULL.
Fixed by adding a test for a valid dom tree node before we iterate.
The patch also adds some unit tests to the existing dom tree tests.
llvm-svn: 196099
CallGraph.
This makes the CallGraph a totally generic analysis object that is the
container for the graph data structure and the primary interface for
querying and manipulating it. The pass logic is separated into its own
class. For compatibility reasons, the pass provides wrapper methods for
most of the methods on CallGraph -- they all just forward.
This will allow the new pass manager infrastructure to provide its own
analysis pass that constructs the same CallGraph object and makes it
available. The idea is that in the new pass manager, the analysis pass's
'run' method returns a concrete analysis 'result'. Here, that result is
a 'CallGraph'. The 'run' method will typically do only minimal work,
deferring much of the work into the implementation of the result object
in order to be lazy about computing things, but when (like DomTree)
there is *some* up-front computation, the analysis does it prior to
handing the result back to the querying pass.
I know some of this is fairly ugly. I'm happy to change it around if
folks can suggest a cleaner interim state, but there is going to be some
amount of unavoidable ugliness during the transition period. The good
thing is that this is very limited and will naturally go away when the
old pass infrastructure goes away. It won't hang around to bother us
later.
Next up is the initial new-PM-style call graph analysis. =]
llvm-svn: 195722
proxy. This lets a function pass query a module analysis manager.
However, the interface is const to indicate that only cached results can
be safely queried.
With this, I think the new pass manager is largely functionally complete
for modules and analyses. Still lots to test, and need to generalize to
SCCs and Loops, and need to build an adaptor layer to support the use of
existing Pass objects in the new managers.
llvm-svn: 195538
results.
This is the last piece of infrastructure needed to effectively support
querying *up* the analysis layers. The next step will be to introduce
a proxy which provides access to those layers with appropriate use of
const to direct queries to the safe interface.
llvm-svn: 195525
one function's analyses are invalidated at a time. Also switch the
preservation of the proxy to *fully* preserve the lower (function)
analyses.
Combined, this gets both upward and downward analysis invalidation to
a point I'm happy with:
- A function pass invalidates its function analyses, and its parent's
module analyses.
- A module pass invalidates all of its functions' analyses including the
set of which functions are in the module.
- A function pass can preserve a module analysis pass.
- If all function passes preserve a module analysis pass, that
preservation persists. If any doesn't the module analysis is
invalidated.
- A module pass can opt into managing *all* function analysis
invalidation itself or *none*.
- The conservative default is none, and the proxy takes the maximally
conservative approach that works even if the set of functions has
changed.
- If a module pass opts into managing function analysis invalidation it
has to propagate the invalidation itself, the proxy just does nothing.
The only thing really missing is a way to query for a cached analysis or
nothing at all. With this, function passes can more safely request
a cached module analysis pass without fear of it accidentally running
part way through.
llvm-svn: 195519
run methods of the analysis passes.
Also generalizes and re-uses the SFINAE for transformation passes so
that users can write an analysis pass and only accept an analysis
manager if that is useful to their pass.
This completes the plumbing to make an analysis manager available
through every pass's run method if desired so that passes no longer need
to be constructed around them.
llvm-svn: 195451
Since the analysis managers were split into explicit function and module
analysis managers, it is now completely trivial to specify this when
building up the concept and model types explicitly, and it is impossible
to end up with a type error at run time. We instantiate a template when
registering a pass that will enforce the requirement at a type-system
level, and we produce a dynamic error on all the other query paths to
the analysis manager if the pass in question isn't registered.
llvm-svn: 195447
This is supposed to be the whole type of the IR unit, and so we
shouldn't pass a pointer to it but rather the value itself. In turn, we
need to provide a 'Module *' as that type argument (for example). This
will become more relevant with SCCs or other units which may not be
passed as a pointer type, but also brings consistency with the
transformation pass templates.
llvm-svn: 195445
rather than the constructors of passes.
This simplifies the APIs of passes significantly and removes an error
prone pattern where the *same* manager had to be given to every
different layer. With the new API the analysis managers themselves will
have to be cross connected with proxy analyses that allow a pass at one
layer to query for the analysis manager of another layer. The proxy will
both expose a handle to the other layer's manager and it will provide
the invalidation hooks to ensure things remain consistent across layers.
Finally, the outer-most analysis manager has to be passed to the run
method of the outer-most pass manager. The rest of the propagation is
automatic.
I've used SFINAE again to allow passes to completely disregard the
analysis manager if they don't need or want to care. This helps keep
simple things simple for users of the new pass manager.
Also, the system specifically supports passing a null pointer into the
outer-most run method if your pass pipeline neither needs nor wants to
deal with analyses. I find this of dubious utility as while some
*passes* don't care about analysis, I'm not sure there are any
real-world users of the pass manager itself that need to avoid even
creating an analysis manager. But it is easy to support, so there we go.
Finally I renamed the module proxy for the function analysis manager to
the more verbose but less confusing name of
FunctionAnalysisManagerModuleProxy. I hate this name, but I have no idea
what else to name these things. I'm expecting in the fullness of time to
potentially have the complete cross product of types at the proxy layer:
{Module,SCC,Function,Loop,Region}AnalysisManager{Module,SCC,Function,Loop,Region}Proxy
(except for XAnalysisManagerXProxy which doesn't make any sense)
This should make it somewhat easier to do the next phases which is to
build the upward proxy and get its invalidation correct, as well as to
make the invalidation within the Module -> Function mapping pass be more
fine grained so as to invalidate fewer fuction analyses.
After all of the proxy analyses are done and the invalidation working,
I'll finally be able to start working on the next two fun fronts: how to
adapt an existing pass to work in both the legacy pass world and the new
one, and building the SCC, Loop, and Region counterparts. Fun times!
llvm-svn: 195400
it is completely optional, and sink the logic for handling the preserved
analysis set into it.
This allows us to implement the delegation logic desired in the proxy
module analysis for the function analysis manager where if the proxy
itself is preserved we assume the set of functions hasn't changed and we
do a fine grained invalidation by walking the functions in the module
and running the invalidate for them all at the manager level and letting
it try to invalidate any passes.
This in turn makes it blindingly obvious why we should hoist the
invalidate trait and have two collections of results. That allows
handling invalidation for almost all analyses without indirect calls and
it allows short circuiting when the preserved set is all.
llvm-svn: 195338
type and detect whether or not it provides an 'invalidate' member the
analysis manager should use.
This lets the overwhelming common case of *not* caring about custom
behavior when an analysis is invalidated be the the obvious default
behavior with no code written by the author of an analysis. Only when
they write code specifically to handle invalidation does it get used.
Both cases are actually covered by tests here. The test analysis uses
the default behavior, and the proxy module analysis actually has custom
behavior on invalidation that is firing correctly. (In fact, this is the
analysis which was the primary motivation for having custom invalidation
behavior in the first place.)
llvm-svn: 195332
This proxy will fill the role of proxying invalidation events down IR
unit layers so that when a module changes we correctly invalidate
function analyses. Currently this is a very coarse solution -- any
change blows away the entire thing -- but the next step is to make
invalidation handling more nuanced so that we can propagate specific
amounts of invalidation from one layer to the next.
The test is extended to place a module pass between two function pass
managers each of which have preserved function analyses which get
correctly invalidated by the module pass that might have changed what
functions are even in the module.
llvm-svn: 195304
MappingTrait template specializations can now have a validate() method which
performs semantic checking. For details, see <http://llvm.org/docs/YamlIO.html>.
llvm-svn: 195286
Enhance the tests to actually require moves in C++11 mode, in addition
to testing the moved-from state. Further enhance the tests to cover
copy-assignment into a moved-from object and moving a large-state
object. (Note that we can't really test small-state vs. large-state as
that isn't an observable property of the API really.) This should finish
addressing review on r195239.
llvm-svn: 195261
r195239, as well as a comment about the fact that assigning over
a moved-from object was in fact tested. Addresses some of the review
feedback on r195239.
llvm-svn: 195260
This adds a new set-like type which represents a set of preserved
analysis passes. The set is managed via the opaque PassT::ID() void*s.
The expected convenience templates for interacting with specific passes
are provided. It also supports a symbolic "all" state which is
represented by an invalid pointer in the set. This state is nicely
saturating as it comes up often. Finally, it supports intersection which
is used when finding the set of preserved passes after N different
transforms.
The pass API is then changed to return the preserved set rather than
a bool. This is much more self-documenting than the previous system.
Returning "none" is a conservatively correct solution just like
returning "true" from todays passes and not marking any passes as
preserved. Passes can also be dynamically preserved or not throughout
the run of the pass, and whatever gets returned is the binding state.
Finally, preserving "all" the passes is allowed for no-op transforms
that simply can't harm such things.
Finally, the analysis managers are changed to instead of blindly
invalidating all of the analyses, invalidate those which were not
preserved. This should rig up all of the basic preservation
functionality. This also correctly combines the preservation moving up
from one IR-layer to the another and the preservation aggregation across
N pass runs. Still to go is incrementally correct invalidation and
preservation across IR layers incrementally during N pass runs. That
will wait until we have a device for even exposing analyses across IR
layers.
While the core of this change is obvious, I'm not happy with the current
testing, so will improve it to cover at least some of the invalidation
that I can test easily in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 195241
Somehow, this ADT got missed which is moderately terrifying considering
the efficiency of move for it.
The code to implement move semantics for it is pretty horrible
currently but was written to reasonably closely match the rest of the
code. Unittests that cover both copying and moving (at a basic level)
added.
llvm-svn: 195239
The FunctionPassManager is now itself a function pass. When run over
a function, it runs all N of its passes over that function. This is the
1:N mapping in the pass dimension only. This allows it to be used in
either a ModulePassManager or potentially some other manager that
works on IR units which are supersets of Functions.
This commit also adds the obvious adaptor to map from a module pass to
a function pass, running the function pass across every function in the
module.
The test has been updated to use this new pattern.
llvm-svn: 195192
a module-specific interface. This is the first of many steps necessary
to generalize the infrastructure such that we can support both
a Module-to-Function and Module-to-SCC-to-Function pass manager
nestings.
After a *lot* of attempts that never worked and didn't even make it to
a committable state, it became clear that I had gotten the layering
design of analyses flat out wrong. Four days later, I think I have most
of the plan for how to correct this, and I'm starting to reshape the
code into it. This is just a baby step I'm afraid, but starts separating
the fundamentally distinct concepts of function analysis passes and
module analysis passes so that in subsequent steps we can effectively
layer them, and have a consistent design for the eventual SCC layer.
As part of this, I've started some interface changes to make passes more
regular. The module pass accepts the module in the run method, and some
of the constructor parameters are gone. I'm still working out exactly
where constructor parameters vs. method parameters will be used, so
I expect this to fluctuate a bit.
This actually makes the invalidation less "correct" at this phase,
because now function passes don't invalidate module analysis passes, but
that was actually somewhat of a misfeature. It will return in a better
factored form which can scale to other units of IR. The documentation
has gotten less verbose and helpful.
llvm-svn: 195189
This patch places class definitions in implementation files into anonymous
namespaces to prevent weak vtables. This eliminates the need of providing an
out-of-line definition to pin the vtable explicitly to the file.
llvm-svn: 195092
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file. The memory leaks in this version have been fixed. Thanks
Alexey for pointing them out.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 195064
This change is incorrect. If you delete virtual destructor of both a base class
and a subclass, then the following code:
Base *foo = new Child();
delete foo;
will not cause the destructor for members of Child class. As a result, I observe
plently of memory leaks. Notable examples I investigated are:
ObjectBuffer and ObjectBufferStream, AttributeImpl and StringSAttributeImpl.
llvm-svn: 194997
This change is the first in a series of changes improving LLVM's Block
Frequency propogation implementation to not lose probability mass in
branchy code when propogating block frequency information from a basic
block to its successors. This patch is a simple infrastructure
improvement that does not actually modify the block frequency
algorithm. The specific changes are:
1. Changes the division algorithm used when scaling block frequencies by
branch probabilities to a short division algorithm. This gives us the
remainder for free as well as provides a nice speed boost. When I
benched the old routine and the new routine on a Sandy Bridge iMac with
disabled turbo mode performing 8192 iterations on an array of length
32768, I saw ~600% increase in speed in mean/median performance.
2. Exposes a scale method that returns a remainder. This is important so
we can ensure that when we scale a block frequency by some branch
probability BP = N/D, the remainder from the division by D can be
retrieved and propagated to other children to ensure no probability mass
is lost (more to come on this).
llvm-svn: 194950
AnalysisManager. All this method did was assert something and we have
a perfectly good way to trigger that assert from the query path.
llvm-svn: 194947
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194865
Summary:
Some machine-type-neutral object files containing only undefined symbols
actually do exist in the Windows standard library. Need to recognize them
as COFF files.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2164
llvm-svn: 194734
This bug only bit the C++98 build bots because all of the actual uses
really do move. ;] But not *quite* ready to do the whole C++11 switch
yet, so clean it up. Also add a unit test that catches this immediately.
llvm-svn: 194548
more smarts in it. This is where most of the interesting logic that used
to live in the implicit-scheduling-hackery of the old pass manager will
live.
Like the previous commits, note that this is a very early prototype!
I expect substantial changes before this is ready to use.
The core of the design is the following:
- We have an AnalysisManager which can be used across a series of
passes over a module.
- The code setting up a pass pipeline registers the analyses available
with the manager.
- Individual transform passes can check than an analysis manager
provides the analyses they require in order to fail-fast.
- There is *no* implicit registration or scheduling.
- Analysis passes are different from other passes: they produce an
analysis result that is cached and made available via the analysis
manager.
- Cached results are invalidated automatically by the pass managers.
- When a transform pass requests an analysis result, either the analysis
is run to produce the result or a cached result is provided.
There are a few aspects of this design that I *know* will change in
subsequent commits:
- Currently there is no "preservation" system, that needs to be added.
- All of the analysis management should move up to the analysis library.
- The analysis management needs to support at least SCC passes. Maybe
loop passes. Living in the analysis library will facilitate this.
- Need support for analyses which are *both* module and function passes.
- Need support for pro-actively running module analyses to have cached
results within a function pass manager.
- Need a clear design for "immutable" passes.
- Need support for requesting cached results when available and not
re-running the pass even if that would be necessary.
- Need more thorough testing of all of this infrastructure.
There are other aspects that I view as open questions I'm hoping to
resolve as I iterate a bit on the infrastructure, and especially as
I start writing actual passes against this.
- Should we have separate management layers for function, module, and
SCC analyses? I think "yes", but I'm not yet ready to switch the code.
Adding SCC support will likely resolve this definitively.
- How should the 'require' functionality work? Should *that* be the only
way to request results to ensure that passes always require things?
- How should preservation work?
- Probably some other things I'm forgetting. =]
Look forward to more patches in shorter order now that this is in place.
llvm-svn: 194538
This is still just a skeleton. I'm trying to pull together the
experimentation I've done into committable chunks, and this is the first
coherent one. Others will follow in hopefully short order that move this
more toward a useful initial implementation. I still expect the design
to continue evolving in small ways as I work through the different
requirements and features needed here though.
Keep in mind, all of this is off by default.
Currently, this mostly exercises the use of a polymorphic smart pointer
and templates to hide the polymorphism for the pass manager from the
pass implementation. The next step will be more significant, adding the
first framework of analysis support.
llvm-svn: 194325
give the files a legacy prefix in the right directory. Use forwarding
headers in the old locations to paper over the name change for most
clients during the transitional period.
No functionality changed here! This is just clearing some space to
reduce renaming churn later on with a new system.
Even when the new stuff starts to go in, it is going to be hidden behind
a flag and off-by-default as it is still WIP and under development.
This patch is specifically designed so that very little out-of-tree code
has to change. I'm going to work as hard as I can to keep that the case.
Only direct forward declarations of the PassManager class are impacted
by this change.
llvm-svn: 194324
r-value references. I still want to test that when we have them,
llvm_move is actually a move.
Have I mentioned that I really want to move to C++11? ;]
llvm-svn: 194318
Clang managed to never instantiate the copy constructor. Added tests to
ensure this path is tested.
We could still use tests for the polymorphic nature. Those coming up
next.
llvm-svn: 194317
unique ownership smart pointer which is *deep* copyable by assuming it
can call a T::clone() method to allocate a copy of the owned data.
This is mostly useful with containers or other collections of uniquely
owned data in C++98 where they *might* copy. With C++11 we can likely
remove this in favor of move-only types and containers wrapped around
those types.
llvm-svn: 194315
The BlockAddress doesn't have access to the correct basic blocks until the
functions have been cloned. This causes the BlockAddress to point to the old
values. Just wait until the functions have been cloned before copying the
initializers.
PR13163
llvm-svn: 194218
ErrorOr had quiet a bit of complexity and indirection to be able to hold a user
type with the error.
That feature is not used anymore. This patch removes it, it will live in svn
history if we ever need it again.
If we do need it again, IMHO there is one thing that should be done
differently: Holding extra info in the error is not a property a function also
returning a value or not. The ability to hold extra info should be in the error
type and ErrorOr templated over it so that we don't need the funny looking
ErrorOr<void>.
llvm-svn: 194030
The function verifyFunction() in lib/IR/Verifier.cpp misses some
calls. It creates a temporary FunctionPassManager that will run a
single Verifier pass. Unfortunately, FunctionPassManager is no
PassManager and does not call doInitialization() and doFinalization()
by itself. Verifier does important tasks in doInitialization() such as
collecting type information used to check DebugInfo metadata and
doFinalization() does some additional checks. Therefore these checks
were missed and debug info couldn't be verified at all, it just
crashed if the function had some.
verifyFunction() is currently not used in llvm unless -debug option is
enabled, and in unittests/IR/VerifierTest.cpp
VerifierTest had to be changed to create the function in a module from
which the type debug info can be collected.
Patch by Michael Kruse.
llvm-svn: 193719
startswith_lower is ocassionally useful and I think worth adding.
endwith_lower is added for completeness.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2041
llvm-svn: 193706
Summary:
Use DWARF4 table of form classes to fetch attributes from DIE
in a more consistent way. This shouldn't change the functionality and
serves as a refactoring for upcoming change: DW_AT_high_pc has different
semantics depending on its form class.
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
CC: echristo, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1961
llvm-svn: 193553
Includes a test case/FIXME demonstrating a bug/limitation in pointer to
member hashing. To be honest I'm not sure why we don't just always use
summary hashing for referenced types... but perhaps I'm missing
something.
llvm-svn: 193175
This uses a map, keeping the type DIE numbering separate from the DIEs
themselves - alternatively we could do things the way GCC does if we
want to add an integer to the DIE type to record the numbering there.
llvm-svn: 193105
GTest assumes the left hand side of the assert is the expectation and
the right hand side is the test result. It's easier to read gtest
failures when these things are ordered correctly.
llvm-svn: 192854
This patch fixes a small mistake in MCDataAtom::addData() where it doesn't ever
call remap():
- if (Data.size() > Begin - End - 1)
+ if (Data.size() > End + 1 - Begin)
remap(Begin, End + 1);
This is currently not visible because of another bug is the disassembler, so
the patch includes a unit test.
Patch by Stephen Checkoway.
llvm-svn: 192823
Before this patch we would assert when building llvm as multiple shared
libraries (cmake's BUILD_SHARED_LIBS). The problem was the line
if (T.AsmStreamerCtorFn == Target::createDefaultAsmStreamer)
which returns false because of -fvisibility-inlines-hidden. It is easy
to fix just this one case, but I decided to try to also make the
registration more strict. It looks like the old logic for ignoring
followup registration was just a temporary hack that outlived its
usefulness.
This patch converts the ifs to asserts, fixes the few cases that were
registering twice and makes sure all the asserts compare with null.
Thanks for Joerg for reporting the problem and reviewing the patch.
llvm-svn: 192803
It's useful for the memory managers that are allocating a section to know what the name of the section is.
At a minimum, this is useful for low-level debugging - it's customary for JITs to be able to tell you what
memory they allocated, and as part of any such dump, they should be able to tell you some meta-data about
what each allocation is for. This allows clients that supply their own memory managers to do this.
Additionally, we also envision the SectionName being useful for passing meta-data from within LLVM to an LLVM
client.
This changes both the C and C++ APIs, and all of the clients of those APIs within LLVM. I'm assuming that
it's safe to change the C++ API because that API is allowed to change. I'm assuming that it's safe to change
the C API because we haven't shipped the API in a release yet (LLVM 3.3 doesn't include the MCJIT memory
management C API).
llvm-svn: 191804
- New ProcessInfo class to encapsulate information about child processes.
- Generalized the Wait() to support non-blocking wait on child processes.
- ExecuteNoWait() now returns a ProcessInfo object with information about
the launched child. Users will be able to use this object to
perform non-blocking wait.
- ExecuteNoWait() now accepts an ExecutionFailed param that tells if execution
failed or not.
These changes will allow users to implement basic process parallel
tools.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1728
llvm-svn: 191763
Inspired by the object from the SLPVectorizer. This found a minor bug in the
debug loc restoration in the vectorizer where the location of a following
instruction was attached instead of the location from the original instruction.
llvm-svn: 191673
YAMLIO printed a string as is without quotes unless it contains a newline
character. That did not suffice. We also need to quote a string if it starts
with a backquote, quote, double quote or atsign, or it's the empty string.
llvm-svn: 190469
On Windows, character encoding of multibyte environment variable varies
depending on settings. The only reliable way to handle it I think is to use
GetEnvironmentVariableW().
GetEnvironmentVariableW() works on wchar_t string, which is on Windows UTF16
string. That's not ideal because we use UTF-8 as the internal encoding in LLVM.
This patch defines a wrapper function which takes and returns UTF-8 string for
GetEnvironmentVariableW().
The wrapper function does not do any conversion and just forwards the argument
to getenv() on Unix.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1612
llvm-svn: 190423
The work on this project was left in an unfinished and inconsistent state.
Hopefully someone will eventually get a chance to implement this feature, but
in the meantime, it is better to put things back the way the were. I have
left support in the bitcode reader to handle the case-range bitcode format,
so that we do not lose bitcode compatibility with the llvm 3.3 release.
This reverts the following commits: 155464, 156374, 156377, 156613, 156704,
156757, 156804 156808, 156985, 157046, 157112, 157183, 157315, 157384, 157575,
157576, 157586, 157612, 157810, 157814, 157815, 157880, 157881, 157882, 157884,
157887, 157901, 158979, 157987, 157989, 158986, 158997, 159076, 159101, 159100,
159200, 159201, 159207, 159527, 159532, 159540, 159583, 159618, 159658, 159659,
159660, 159661, 159703, 159704, 160076, 167356, 172025, 186736
llvm-svn: 190328
Summary:
This is needed so we can use generic columnWidthUTF8 in clang-format on
win32 simultaneously with a separate system-dependent implementations of
isPrint/columnWidth in TextDiagnostic.cpp to avoid attempts to print Unicode
characters using narrow-character interfaces (which is not supported on Windows,
and we'll have to figure out how to handle this).
Reviewers: jordan_rose
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
CC: llvm-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1559
llvm-svn: 189952
This is a re-commit of r189442; I'll follow up with clang changes.
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189624
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189442
Link.exe's command line options are case-insensitive. This patch
adds a new attribute to OptTable to let the option parser to compare
options, ignoring case.
Command lines are generally case-insensitive on Windows. CL.exe is an
exception. So this new attribute should be useful for other commands
running on Windows.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1485
llvm-svn: 189416
Clients of the option parsing library should handle it explicitly
using a KIND_REMAINING_ARGS option.
Clang and lld have been updated in r188316 and r188318, respectively.
Also fix -Wsign-compare warning in the option parsing test.
llvm-svn: 188323
This adds KIND_REMAINING_ARGS, a class of options that consume
all remaining arguments on the command line.
This will be used to support /link in clang-cl, which is used
to forward all remaining arguments to the linker.
It also allows us to remove the hard-coded handling of "--",
allowing clients (clang and lld) to implement that functionality
themselves with this new option class.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1387
llvm-svn: 188314
to find loops if the From and To instructions were in the same block.
Refactor the code a little now that we need to fill to start the CFG-walking
algorithm with more than one starting basic block sometimes.
Special thanks to Andrew Trick for catching an error in my understanding of
natural loops in code review.
llvm-svn: 188236
Summary:
Doing work in constructors is bad: this change suggests to
call SpecialCaseList::create(Path, Error) instead of
"new SpecialCaseList(Path)". Currently the latter may crash with
report_fatal_error, which is undesirable - sometimes we want to report
the error to user gracefully - for example, if he provides an incorrect
file as an argument of Clang's -fsanitize-blacklist flag.
Reviewers: pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1327
llvm-svn: 188156
Summary:
This is consistent with MacOSX implementation, and most terminals
actually display this character (checked on gnome-terminal, lxterminal, lxterm,
Terminal.app, iterm2). Actually, this is in line with the ISO Latin 1 standard
(ISO 8859-1), which defines it differently from the Unicode Standard. More
information here: http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/shy.html
Reviewers: gribozavr, jordan_rose
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1310
llvm-svn: 187949
Summary:
This is a second attempt to get this right. After reading the Unicode
Standard I came up with the code that uses definitions of "printable" and
"column width" more suitable for terminal output (i.e. fixed-width fonts and
special treatment of many control characters).
The implementation here can probably be used for Windows and MacOS if someone
can test it properly.
The patch addresses PR14910.
Reviewers: jordan_rose, gribozavr
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1253
llvm-svn: 187837
This will be used to implement an optimisation for literal entries
in special case lists.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1278
llvm-svn: 187731
Everything that comes after -- should be treated as a filename. This
enables passing in filenames that would otherwise be conflated with
command-line options.
This is especially important for clang-cl which supports options
starting with /, which are easily conflatable with Unix-style
path names.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1274
llvm-svn: 187675
This makes option aliases more powerful by enabling them to
pass along arguments to the option they're aliasing.
For example, if we have a joined option "-foo=", we can now
specify a flag option "-bar" to be an alias of that, with the
argument "baz".
This is especially useful for the cl.exe compatible clang driver,
where many options are aliases. For example, this patch enables
us to alias "/Ox" to "-O3" (-O is a joined option), and "/WX" to
"-Werror" (again, -W is a joined option).
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1245
llvm-svn: 187537
One form would accept a vector of pointers, and the other did not.
Make both accept vectors of pointers, and add an assertion
for the number of elements.
llvm-svn: 187464
The unix one was returning no_such_file_or_directory, but the windows one
was return success.
Update the one one caller that was depending on the old behavior.
llvm-svn: 187463
This avoids constant folding bitcast/ptrtoint/inttoptr combinations
that have illegal bitcasts between differently sized address spaces.
llvm-svn: 187455
It will now only convert the arguments / return value and call
the underlying function if the types are able to be bitcasted.
This avoids using fp<->int conversions that would occur before.
llvm-svn: 187444
IEEE-754R 1.4 Exclusions states that IEEE-754R does not specify the
interpretation of the sign of NaNs. In order to remove an irrelevant
variable that most floating point implementations do not use,
standardize add, sub, mul, div, mod so that operating anything with
NaN always yields a positive NaN.
In a later commit I am going to update the APIs for creating NaNs so
that one can not even create a negative NaN.
llvm-svn: 187314
Adds unit tests for it too.
Split BasicBlockUtils into an analysis-half and a transforms-half, and put the
analysis bits into a new Analysis/CFG.{h,cpp}. Promote isPotentiallyReachable
into llvm::isPotentiallyReachable and move it into Analysis/CFG.
llvm-svn: 187283
Both GCC and LLVM will implicitly define __ppc__ and __powerpc__ for
all PowerPC targets, whether 32- or 64-bit. They will both implicitly
define __ppc64__ and __powerpc64__ for 64-bit PowerPC targets, and not
for 32-bit targets. We cannot be sure that all other possible
compilers used to compile Clang/LLVM define both __ppc__ and
__powerpc__, for example, so it is best to check for both when relying
on either inside the Clang/LLVM code base.
This patch makes sure we always check for both variants. In addition,
it fixes one unnecessary check in lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCJITInfo.cpp.
(At least one of __ppc__ and __powerpc__ should always be defined when
compiling for a PowerPC target, no matter which compiler is used, so
testing for them is unnecessary.)
There are some places in the compiler that check for other variants,
like __POWERPC__ and _POWER, and I have left those in place. There is
no need to add them elsewhere. This seems to be in Apple-specific
code, and I won't take a chance on breaking it.
There is no intended change in behavior; thus, no test cases are
added.
llvm-svn: 187248
Similar to ARM change r182800, dynamic linker will read bits/addends from
the original object rather than from the object that might have been patched
previously. For the purpose of relocations for MCJIT stubs on MIPS, we
internally use otherwise unused MIPS relocations.
The change also enables MCJIT unit tests for MIPS (EL/BE), and the following
two tests now pass:
- MCJITTest.return_global and
- MCJITTest.multiple_functions.
These issues have been tracked as Bug 16250.
Patch by Petar Jovanovic.
llvm-svn: 187019
The main observation is that we never need both the filesize and the map size.
When mapping a slice of a file, it doesn't make sense to request a null
terminator and that would be the only case where the filesize would be used.
There are other cleanups that should be done in this area:
* A client should not have to pass the size (even an explicit -1) to say if
it wants a null terminator or not, so we should probably swap the argument
order.
* The default should be to not require a null terminator. Very few clients
require this, but many end up asking for it just because it is the default.
llvm-svn: 186984
Option aliases in option groups were previously disallowed by an assert.
As far as I can tell, there was no technical reason for this, and I would
like to be able to put cl.exe compatible options in their own group for Clang,
so let's change the assert.
llvm-svn: 186838
The plan is to use it for clang and lld.
Major behavior changes:
- We can now parse UTF-16 files that have a byte order mark.
- PR16209: Don't drop backslashes on the floor if they don't escape
anything.
The actual parsing loop was based on code from Clang's driver.cpp,
although it's been rewritten to track its state with control flow rather
than state variables.
Reviewers: hans
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1170
llvm-svn: 186587
We don't want cast and dyn_cast to work on temporaries. They don't extend
lifetime like a direct bind to a reference would, so they can introduce
hard to find bugs.
I added tests to make sure we don't regress this. Thanks to Eli Friedman for
noticing this and for his suggestions on how to test it.
llvm-svn: 186559
There were a couple of different loops that were not handling
'.' correctly in APFloat::convertFromHexadecimalString; these mistakes
could lead to assertion failures and incorrect rounding for overlong
hex float literals.
Fixes PR16643.
llvm-svn: 186539
This is to support parsing UTF16 response files in LLVM/lib/Option for
lld and clang.
Reviewers: hans
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1138
llvm-svn: 186426
It is failing with
YAMLTest.cpp:38: instantiated from here
YAMLTraits.h:226: error: 'llvm::yaml::MappingTraits<<unnamed>::BinaryHolder>::mapping' is not a valid template argument for type 'void (*)(llvm::yaml::IO&, <unnamed>::BinaryHolder&)' because function 'static void llvm::yaml::MappingTraits<<unnamed>::BinaryHolder>::mapping(llvm::yaml::IO&, <unnamed>::BinaryHolder&)' has not external linkage
llvm-svn: 186245
A special case list can now specify categories for specific globals,
which can be used to instruct an instrumentation pass to treat certain
functions or global variables in a specific way, such as by omitting
certain aspects of instrumentation while keeping others, or informing
the instrumentation pass that a specific uninstrumentable function
has certain semantics, thus allowing the pass to instrument callers
according to those semantics.
For example, AddressSanitizer now uses the "init" category instead of
global-init prefixes for globals whose initializers should not be
instrumented, but which in all other respects should be instrumented.
The motivating use case is DataFlowSanitizer, which will have a
number of different categories for uninstrumentable functions, such
as "functional" which specifies that a function has pure functional
semantics, or "discard" which indicates that a function's return
value should not be labelled.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1092
llvm-svn: 185978
- lit tests verify that each line of input LLVM IR gets a !dbg node and a
corresponding entry of metadata that contains the line number
- unit tests verify that DebugIR works as advertised in the interface
- refactored some useful IR generation functionality from the MCJIT unit tests
so it can be reused
llvm-svn: 185212
Allow a BlockFrequency to be divided by a non-zero BranchProbability
with saturating arithmetic. This will be used to compute the frequency
of a loop header given the probability of leaving the loop.
Our long division algorithm already saturates on overflow, so that was a
freebie.
llvm-svn: 185184
There are a few valid situation where we care about the structure inside a
directory, but not about the directory itself. A simple example is for unit
testing directory traversal.
PathV1 had a function like this, add one to V2 and port existing users of the
created temp file and delete it hack to using it.
llvm-svn: 185059
Zero is used by BlockFrequencyInfo as a special "don't know" value. It also
causes a sink for frequencies as you can't ever get off a zero frequency with
more multiplies.
This recovers a 10% regression on MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip. A zero frequency
was propagated into an inner loop causing excessive spilling.
PR16402.
llvm-svn: 184584
MIPS does not handle multiple relocations correctly, so two tests from the
unittests are expected to fail. These are:
- MCJITTest.return_global and
- MCJITTest.multiple_functions.
Until the multiple relocations are fixed, XFAIL the MCJIT unittests for
MIPS. This issue is tracked as Bug 16250.
Patch by Petar Jovanovic.
llvm-svn: 184461
The old isNormal is already functionally replaced by the method isFiniteNonZero
in r184350 and all references to said method were replaced in LLVM/clang in
r184356/134366.
llvm-svn: 184449
This is the first patch in a series of patches to rename isNormal =>
isFiniteNonZero and isIEEENormal => isNormal. In order to prevent careless
errors on my part the overall plan is:
1. Add the isFiniteNonZero predicate with tests. I can do this in a method
independent of isNormal. (This step is this patch).
2. Convert all references to isNormal with isFiniteNonZero. My plan is to
comment out isNormal locally and continually convert isNormal references =>
isFiniteNonZero until llvm/clang compiles.
3. Remove old isNormal and rename isIEEENormal to isNormal.
4. Look through all of said references from patch 2 and see if we can simplify
them by using the new isNormal.
llvm-svn: 184350
It was only used to implement ExecuteAndWait and ExecuteNoWait. Expose just
those two functions and make Execute and Wait implementations details.
llvm-svn: 183864
Specifically the following work was done:
1. If the operation was not implemented, I implemented it.
2. If the operation was already implemented, I just moved its location
in the APFloat header into the IEEE-754R 5.7.2 section. If the name was
incorrect, I put in a comment giving the true IEEE-754R name.
Also unittests have been added for all of the functions which did not
already have a unittest.
llvm-svn: 183179
the C API to provide their own way of allocating JIT memory (both code
and data) and finalizing memory permissions (page protections, cache
flush).
llvm-svn: 182448
the C API to provide their own way of allocating JIT memory (both code
and data) and finalizing memory permissions (page protections, cache
flush).
llvm-svn: 182408
Revision r182233 partially reverted the change in r181200 to simplify
JIT unif test #ifdefs, because that change caused a link error on some
host operating systems where the export list requires the following
symbols to be defined:
JITTest_AvailableExternallyFunction
JITTest_AvailableExternallyGlobal
As discussed on the list, the commit reverts r182233 (and re-installs
the full r181200 change), and instead fixes the link problem by moving
those two symbols to the top of the file and unconditionally defining
them.
llvm-svn: 182367
The export list for this test requires the following symbols to be available:
JITTest_AvailableExternallyFunction
JITTest_AvailableExternallyGlobal
The change in r181200 commented them out, which caused the test to fail to
link, at least on Darwin. I have only reverted the change for arm, since I
can't test the other targets and since it sounds like that change was fixing
real problems for those other targets. It should be possible to rearrange the
code to keep those definitions outside the #ifdefs, but that should be done by
someone who can reproduce the problems that r181200 was trying to fix.
llvm-svn: 182233
BitVector/SmallBitVector::reference::operator bool remain implicit since
they model more exactly a bool, rather than something else that can be
boolean tested.
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
One behavior change (YAMLParser) was made, though no test case is
included as I'm not sure how to reach that code path. Essentially any
comparison of llvm::yaml::document_iterators would be invalid if neither
iterator was at the end.
This helped uncover a couple of bugs in Clang - test cases provided for
those in a separate commit along with similar changes to `operator bool`
instances in Clang.
llvm-svn: 181868
EngineBuilder interface required a JITMemoryManager even if it was being used
to construct an MCJIT. But the MCJIT actually wants a RTDyldMemoryManager.
Consequently, the SectionMemoryManager, which is meant for MCJIT, derived
from the JITMemoryManager and then stubbed out a bunch of JITMemoryManager
methods that weren't relevant to the MCJIT.
This patch fixes the situation: it teaches the EngineBuilder that
RTDyldMemoryManager is a supertype of JITMemoryManager, and that it's
appropriate to pass a RTDyldMemoryManager instead of a JITMemoryManager if
we're using the MCJIT. This allows us to remove the stub methods from
SectionMemoryManager, and make SectionMemoryManager a direct subtype of
RTDyldMemoryManager.
llvm-svn: 181820
MCJIT on Windows requires an explicit target triple with "-elf" appended to generate objects in ELF format. The common test framework was setting up this triple, but it wasn't passed to the C API in the test.
llvm-svn: 181614
This patch adds the necessary configuration bits and #ifdef's to set up
the JIT/MCJIT test cases for SystemZ. Like other recent targets, we do
fully support MCJIT, but do not support the old JIT at all. Set up the
lit config files accordingly, and disable old-JIT unit tests.
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181207
Several platforms need to disable all old-JIT unit tests, since they only
support the new MCJIT. This currently done via #ifdef'ing out those tests
in the ExecutionEngine/JIT/*.cpp files. As those #ifdef's have grown
historically, we now have a number of repeated directives which -in total-
cover nearly the whole file, but leave a couple of helper functions out.
When building the tests with clang itself, those helper functions now
cause spurious "unused function" warnings.
To fix those warnings, and also to remove the duplicate #ifdef conditions
and make it easier to disable the tests for a new target, this patch
consolidates the #ifdefs into a single one per file, which covers all
the tests including all helper routines.
Tested on PowerPC and SystemZ.
llvm-svn: 181200
Add support for matching 'ordered' and 'unordered' floating point min/max
constructs.
In LLVM we can express min/max functions as a combination of compare and select.
We have support for matching such constructs for integers but not for floating
point. In floating point math there is no total order because of the presence of
'NaN'. Therefore, we have to be careful to preserve the original fcmp semantics
when interpreting floating point compare select combinations as a minimum or
maximum function. The resulting 'ordered/unordered' floating point maximum
function has to select the same value as the select/fcmp combination it is based
on.
ordered_max(x,y) = max(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, y otherwise
unordered_max(x,y) = max(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, x otherwise
ordered_min(x,y) = min(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, y otherwise
unordered_min(x,y) = min(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, x otherwise
This matches the behavior of the underlying select(fcmp(olt/ult/.., L, R), L, R)
construct.
Any code using this predicate has to preserve this semantics.
A follow-up patch will use this to implement floating point min/max reductions
in the vectorizer.
radar://13723044
llvm-svn: 181143
CodeModel: It's now possible to create an MCJIT instance with any CodeModel you like. Previously it was only possible to
create an MCJIT that used CodeModel::JITDefault.
EnableFastISel: It's now possible to turn on the fast instruction selector.
The CodeModel option required some trickery. The problem is that previously, we were ensuring future binary compatibility in
the MCJITCompilerOptions by mandating that the user bzero's the options struct and passes the sizeof() that he saw; the
bindings then bzero the remaining bits. This works great but assumes that the bitwise zero equivalent of any field is a
sensible default value.
But this is not the case for LLVMCodeModel, or its internal equivalent, llvm::CodeModel::Model. In both of those, the default
for a JIT is CodeModel::JITDefault (or LLVMCodeModelJITDefault), which is not bitwise zero.
Hence this change introduces LLVMInitializeMCJITCompilerOptions(), which will initialize the user's options struct with
defaults. The user will use this in the same way that they would have previously used memset() or bzero(). MCJITCAPITest.cpp
illustrates the change, as does the comment in ExecutionEngine.h.
llvm-svn: 180893
Re-submitting with fix for OCaml dependency problems (removing dependency on SectionMemoryManager when it isn't used).
Patch by Fili Pizlo
llvm-svn: 180720
That seems to interact poorly with the environ and _environ macros
defined in MSVC's <stdlib.h>.
Also remove the incorrect comment about _NSGetEnviron().
llvm-svn: 180200
This was r180041 and r180046, which was reverted in r180066.
Re-committing this should fix the dragonegg bootstrap, which I presume
needs LD_LIBRARY_PATH to be propagated to the child.
Tested on Linux, Windows, and Mac OS 10.6.
llvm-svn: 180099
Summary:
This is http://llvm.org/PR15802. Backslashes preceding double quotes in
arguments must be escaped. The interesting bit is that all other
backslashes should *not* be escaped, because the un-escaping logic is
only triggered by the presence of a double quote character.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D705
llvm-svn: 180035
Change unittests/ExecutionEngine/Makefile to include Makefile.config before
TARGET_HAS_JIT flag is checked.
Fixes bug: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15669
llvm-svn: 178871
On freebsd this makes sure that symbols are exported on the binaries that need
them. The net result is that we should get symbols in the binaries that need
them on every platform.
On linux x86-64 this reduces the size of the bin directory from 262MB to 250MB.
Patch by Stephen Checkoway.
llvm-svn: 178725
This reverts commit 617330909f0c26a3f2ab8601a029b9bdca48aa61.
It broke the bots:
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:150: PushPopTest
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:118: Failure
Value of: v[i].getValue()
Actual: 0
Expected: value
Which is: 2
llvm-svn: 178334
This generalizes Optional to require less from the T type by using aligned
storage for backing & placement new/deleting the T into it when necessary.
Also includes unit tests.
llvm-svn: 175580
PR15138 was opened because of a segfault in the Bitcode writer.
The actual issue ended up being a bug in APInt where calls to
APInt::getActiveWords returns a bogus value when the APInt value
is 0. This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that getActiveWords
returns 1 for 0 valued APInts.
llvm-svn: 174641
This reverts commit a33e1fafac7fedb1b080ef07ddf9ad6ddff3a830.
This unit test crashes on Darwon. It needs to be temporarily reverted
to unblock the test infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 174458
As a bonus I put in some extra checks to make sure that we are identifying the
machine word of various Mac OS X/iOS targets appropriately.
llvm-svn: 173994
ErrorOr<void> represents an operation that returns nothing, but can still fail.
It should be used in cases where you need the aditional user data that ErrorOr
provides over error_code.
llvm-svn: 173209
A SparseMultiSet adds multiset behavior to SparseSet, while retaining SparseSet's desirable properties. Essentially, SparseMultiSet provides multiset behavior by storing its dense data in doubly linked lists that are inlined into the dense vector. This allows it to provide good data locality as well as vector-like constant-time clear() and fast constant time find(), insert(), and erase(). It also allows SparseMultiSet to have a builtin recycler rather than keeping SparseSet's behavior of always swapping upon removal, which allows it to preserve more iterators. It's often a better alternative to a SparseSet of a growable container or vector-of-vector.
llvm-svn: 173064
In r143502, we renamed getHostTriple() to getDefaultTargetTriple()
as part of work to allow the user to supply a different default
target triple at configure time. This change also affected the JIT.
However, it is inappropriate to use the default target triple in the
JIT in most circumstances because this will not necessarily match
the current architecture used by the process, leading to illegal
instruction and other such errors at run time.
Introduce the getProcessTriple() function for use in the JIT and
its clients, and cause the JIT to use it. On architectures with a
single bitness, the host and process triples are identical. On other
architectures, the host triple represents the architecture of the
host CPU, while the process triple represents the architecture used
by the host CPU to interpret machine code within the current process.
For example, when executing 32-bit code on a 64-bit Linux machine,
the host triple may be 'x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu', while the process
triple may be 'i386-unknown-linux-gnu'.
This fixes JIT for the 32-on-64-bit (and vice versa) build on non-Apple
platforms.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D254
llvm-svn: 172627
This is similar to the existing Recycler allocator, but instead of
recycling individual objects from a BumpPtrAllocator, arrays of
different sizes can be allocated.
llvm-svn: 171581
wall time, user time, and system time since a process started.
For walltime, we currently use TimeValue's interface and a global
initializer to compute a close approximation of total process runtime.
For user time, this adds support for an somewhat more precise timing
mechanism -- clock_gettime with the CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID clock
selected.
For system time, we have to do a full getrusage call to extract the
system time from the OS. This is expensive but unavoidable.
In passing, clean up the implementation of the old APIs and fix some
latent bugs in the Windows code. This might have manifested on Windows
ARM systems or other systems with strange 64-bit integer behavior.
The old API for this both user time and system time simultaneously from
a single getrusage call. While this results in fewer system calls, it
also results in a lower precision user time and if only user time is
desired, it introduces a higher overhead. It may be worthwhile to switch
some of the pass timers to not track system time and directly track user
and wall time. The old API also tracked walltime in a confusing way --
it just set it to the current walltime rather than providing any measure
of wall time since the process started the way buth user and system time
are tracked. The new API is more consistent here.
The plan is to eventually implement these methods for a *child* process
by using the wait3(2) system call to populate an rusage struct
representing the whole subprocess execution. That way, after waiting on
a child process its stats will become accurate and cheap to query.
llvm-svn: 171551
The iplist::clear() function can be quite expensive because it traverses
the entire list, calling deleteNode() and removeNodeFromList() on each
element. If node destruction and deallocation can be handled some other
way, clearAndLeakNodesUnsafely() can be used to jettison all nodes
without bringing them into cache.
The function name is meant to be ominous.
llvm-svn: 171540
* Add support for specifying the alignment to use.
* Add the concept of native endianness. Used for unaligned native types.
The native alignment and read/write simplification is based on a patch by Richard Smith.
llvm-svn: 171406
into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the
directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point
of file layout clutter in LLVM.
There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle
them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each
layer easier.
The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic
tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today.
I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my
tests think, but I may have missed something).
I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be
committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily.
llvm-svn: 171366
Implement the old API in terms of the new one. This simplifies the
implementation on Windows which can now re-use the self_process's once
initialization.
llvm-svn: 171330
This adds AlignedCharArray<Alignment, Size>. A templated struct that contains
a member named buffer of type char[Size] that is aligned to Alignment.
llvm-svn: 171319
The coding style used here is not LLVM's style because this is modeled
after a Boost interface and thus done in the style of a candidate C++
standard library interface. I'll probably end up proposing it as
a standard C++ library if it proves to be reasonably portable and
useful.
This is just the most basic parts of the interface -- getting the
process ID out of it. However, it helps sketch out some of the boiler
plate such as the base class, derived class, shared code, and static
factory function. It also introduces a unittest so that I can
incrementally ensure this stuff works.
However, I've not even compiled this code for Windows yet. I'll try to
fix any Windows fallout from the bots, and if I can't fix it I'll revert
and get someone on Windows to help out. There isn't a lot more that is
mandatory, so soon I'll switch to just stubbing out the Windows side and
get Michael Spencer to help with implementation as he can test it
directly.
llvm-svn: 171289
The single-element ilist::splice() function supports a noop move:
List.splice(I, List, I);
The corresponding std::list function doesn't allow that, so add a unit
test to document that behavior.
This also means that
List.splice(I, List, F);
is somewhat surprisingly not equivalent to
List.splice(I, List, F, next(F));
This patch adds an assertion to catch the illegal case I == F above.
Alternatively, we could make I == F a legal noop, but that would make
ilist differ even more from std::list.
llvm-svn: 170443
structures to and from YAML using traits. The first client will
be the test suite of lld. The documentation will show up at:
http://llvm.org/docs/YamlIO.html
llvm-svn: 170019
Rationale:
1) This was the name in the comment block. ;]
2) It matches Clang's __has_feature naming convention.
3) It matches other compiler-feature-test conventions.
Sorry for the noise. =]
I've also switch the comment block to use a \brief tag and not duplicate
the name.
llvm-svn: 168996
appropriate unit tests. This change in itself is not expected to
affect any functionality at this point, but it will serve as a
stepping stone to improve FileCheck's variable matching capabilities.
Luckily, our regex implementation already supports backreferences,
although a bit of hacking is required to enable it. It supports both
Basic Regular Expressions (BREs) and Extended Regular Expressions
(EREs), without supporting backrefs for EREs, following POSIX strictly
in this respect. And EREs is what we actually use (rightly). This is
contrary to many implementations (including the default on Linux) of
POSIX regexes, that do allow backrefs in EREs.
Adding backref support to our EREs is a very simple change in the
regcomp parsing code. I fail to think of significant cases where it
would clash with existing things, and can bring more versatility to
the regexes we write. There's always the danger of a backref in a
specially crafted regex causing exponential matching times, but since
we mainly use them for testing purposes I don't think it's a big
problem. [it can also be placed behind a flag specific to FileCheck,
if needed].
For more details, see:
* http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-November/055840.html
* http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20121126/156878.html
llvm-svn: 168802
The SectionMemoryManager now supports (and requires) applying section-specific page permissions. Clients using this memory manager must call either MCJIT::finalizeObject() or SectionMemoryManager::applyPermissions() before executing JITed code.
See r168718 for changes from the previous implementation.
llvm-svn: 168721
This commit is primarily here for the revision history. I'm about to move the SectionMemoryManager into the RuntimeDyld library, but I wanted to check the changes in here so people could see the differences in the updated implementation.
llvm-svn: 168718
The rationale is to get YAML filenames in diagnostics from
yaml::Stream::printError -- currently the filename is hard-coded as
"YAML" because there's no buffer information available.
Patch by Kim Gräsman!
llvm-svn: 168341
These tests were all failing since the old JIT doesn't work
for PowerPC (any more), and there are no plans to attempt to
fix it again (instead, work focuses on MCJIT).
llvm-svn: 167133
treating it as if it were an IEEE floating-point type with 106-bit
mantissa.
This makes compile-time arithmetic on "long double" for PowerPC
in clang (in particular parsing of floating point constants)
work, and fixes all "long double" related failures in the test
suite.
llvm-svn: 166951
When building with LTO, the internalize pass is hiding some global symbols
that are necessary for the JIT unittests. It seems like that may be a bug in
LTO to do that by default, but until that gets fixed, this change makes sure
that we export the necessary symbols for the tests to pass.
llvm-svn: 166220
Additionally, all such cases are handled with no dynamic check.
All `classof()` of the form
class Foo {
[...]
static bool classof(const Bar *) { return true; }
[...]
}
where Foo is an ancestor of Bar are no longer necessary.
Don't write them!
Note: The exact test is `is_base_of<Foo, Bar>`, which is non-strict, so
that Foo is considered an ancestor of itself.
This leads to the following rule of thumb for LLVM-style RTTI:
The argument type of `classof()` should be a strict ancestor.
For more information about implementing LLVM-style RTTI, see
docs/HowToSetUpLLVMStyleRTTI.rst
llvm-svn: 165765
- The current_pos function is supposed to return all the written bytes, not the
current position of the underlying stream.
- This caused tell() to be broken whenever the underlying stream had buffered
content.
llvm-svn: 163948
TinyPtrVector. With these, it is sufficiently functional for my more
normal / pedestrian uses.
I've not included some r-value reference stuff here because the value
type for a TinyPtrVector is, necessarily, just a pointer.
I've added tests that cover the basic behavior of these routines, but
they aren't as comprehensive as I'd like. In particular, they don't
really test the iterator semantics as thoroughly as they should. Maybe
some brave soul will feel enterprising and flesh them out. ;]
llvm-svn: 161104
Since the llvm::sys::fs::map_file_pages() support function it relies on
is not yet implemented on Windows, the unit tests for FileOutputBuffer
are currently conditionalized to run only on unix.
llvm-svn: 161099
No new test case is added.
This patch makes test JITTest.FunctionIsRecompiledAndRelinked pass on mips
platform.
Patch by Petar Jovanovic.
llvm-svn: 161098
for this class. These tests exercise most of the basic properties, but
the API for TinyPtrVector is very strange currently. My plan is to start
fleshing out the API to match that of SmallVector, but I wanted a test
for what is there first.
Sadly, it doesn't look reasonable to just re-use the SmallVector tests,
as this container can only ever store pointers, and much of the
SmallVector testing is to get construction and destruction right.
Just to get this basic test working, I had to add value_type to the
interface.
While here I found a subtle bug in the combination of 'erase', 'begin',
and 'end'. Both 'begin' and 'end' wanted to use a null pointer to
indicate the "end" iterator of an empty vector, regardless of whether
there is actually a vector allocated or the pointer union is null.
Everything else was fine with this except for erase. If you erase the
last element of a vector after it has held more than one element, we
return the end iterator of the underlying SmallVector which need not be
a null pointer. Instead, simply use the pointer, and poniter + size()
begin/end definitions in the tiny case, and delegate to the inner vector
whenever it is present.
llvm-svn: 161024
test more than a single instantiation of SmallVector.
Add testing for 0, 1, 2, and 4 element sized "small" buffers. These
appear to be essentially untested in the unit tests until now.
Fix several tests to be robust in the face of a '0' small buffer. As
a consequence of this size buffer, the growth patterns are actually
observable in the test -- yes this means that many tests never caused
a grow to occur before. For some tests I've merely added a reserve call
to normalize behavior. For others, the growth is actually interesting,
and so I captured the fact that growth would occur and adjusted the
assertions to not assume how rapidly growth occured.
Also update the specialization for a '0' small buffer length to have all
the same interface points as the normal small vector.
llvm-svn: 161001
Added a basic unit test for this with CreateCondBr. I didn't go all the
way and test the switch side as the boilerplate for setting up the
switch IRBuilder unit tests is a lot more. Fortunately, the two share
all the interesting code paths.
llvm-svn: 160251
the move of *Builder classes into the Core library.
No uses of this builder in Clang or DragonEgg I could find.
If there is a desire to have an IR-building-support library that
contains all of these builders, that can be easily added, but currently
it seems likely that these add no real overhead to VMCore.
llvm-svn: 160243
IRBuilder, DIBuilder, etc.
This is the proper layering as MDBuilder can't be used (or implemented)
without the Core Metadata representation.
Patches to Clang and Dragonegg coming up.
llvm-svn: 160237
This was always part of the VMCore library out of necessity -- it deals
entirely in the IR. The .cpp file in fact was already part of the VMCore
library. This is just a mechanical move.
I've tried to go through and re-apply the coding standard's preferred
header sort, but at 40-ish files, I may have gotten some wrong. Please
let me know if so.
I'll be committing the corresponding updates to Clang and Polly, and
Duncan has DragonEgg.
Thanks to Bill and Eric for giving the green light for this bit of cleanup.
llvm-svn: 159421
include/llvm/Analysis/DebugInfo.h to include/llvm/DebugInfo.h.
The reasoning is because the DebugInfo module is simply an interface to the
debug info MDNodes and has nothing to do with analysis.
llvm-svn: 159312
- LHS exclude RHS
- LHS intersect RHS (LHS successors will keeped)
- RHS exclude LHS
The complexity is N+M, where
N is size of LHS
M is size of RHS.
llvm-svn: 159201
Makefiles, the CMake files in every other part of the LLVM tree, and
sanity.
This should also restore the output tree structure of all the unit
tests, sorry for breaking that, and thanks for letting me know.
The fundamental change is to put a CMakeLists.txt file in the unittest
directory, with a single test binary produced from it. This has several
advantages:
- No more weird directory stripping in the unittest macro, allowing it
to be used more readily in other projects.
- No more directory prefixes on all the source files.
- Allows correct and precise use of LLVM's per-directory dependency
system.
- Allows use of the checking logic for source files that have not been
added to the CMake build. This uncovered a file being skipped with
CMake in LLVM and one in Clang's unit tests.
- Makes Specifying conditional compilation or other custom logic for JIT
tests easier.
It did require adding the concept of an explicit 'optional' source file
to the CMake build so that the missing-file check can skip cases where
the file is *supposed* to be missing. =]
This is another chunk of refactoring the CMake build in order to make it
usable for other clients like CompilerRT / ASan / TSan.
Note that this is interdependent with a Clang CMake change.
llvm-svn: 158909
facilities.
This was only used in one place in LLVM, and was used pervasively (but
with different code!) in Clang. It has no advantages over the standard
CMake facilities and in some cases disadvantages.
llvm-svn: 158889
The TEST_F macros actually declare *subclasses* of the test fixtures.
Even if they didn't we don't want them to declare external functions.
The entire unit test, including both the fixture class and the fixture
test cases should be wrapped in the anonymous namespace.
This issue was caught by the new '-Winternal-linkage-in-inline' warning.
llvm-svn: 158798
StringMap suffered from the same bug as DenseMap: when you explicitly
construct it with a small number of buckets, you can arrange for the
tombstone-based growth path to be followed when the number of buckets
was less than '8'. In that case, even with a full map, it would compare
'0' as not less than '0', and refuse to grow the table, leading to
inf-loops trying to find an empty bucket on the next insertion. The fix
is very simple: use '<=' as the comparison. The same fix was applied to
DenseMap as well during its recent refactoring.
Thanks to Alex Bolz for the great report and test case. =]
llvm-svn: 158725
It always returns the iterator for the first inserted element, or the passed in
iterator if the inserted range was empty. Flesh out the unit test more and fix
all the cases it uncovered so far.
llvm-svn: 158645
SmallDenseMap::swap.
First, make it parse cleanly. Yay for uninstantiated methods.
Second, make the inline-buckets case work correctly. This is way
trickier than it should be due to the uninitialized values in empty and
tombstone buckets.
Finally fix a few typos that caused construction/destruction mismatches
in the counting unittest.
llvm-svn: 158641
destruction and fix a bug in SmallDenseMap they caught.
This is kind of a poor-man's version of the testing that just adds the
addresses to a set on construction and removes them on destruction. We
check that double construction and double destruction don't occur.
Amusingly enough, this is enough to catch a lot of SmallDenseMap issues
because we spend a lot of time with fixed stable addresses in the inline
buffer.
The SmallDenseMap bug fix included makes grow() not double-destroy in
some cases. It also fixes a FIXME there, the code was pretty crappy. We
now don't have any wasted initialization, but we do move the entries in
inline bucket array an extra time. It's probably a better tradeoff, and
is much easier to get correct.
llvm-svn: 158639
implementation.
This type includes an inline bucket array which is used initially. Once
it is exceeded, an array of 64 buckets is allocated on the heap. The
bucket count grows from there as needed. Some highlights of this
implementation:
- The inline buffer is very carefully aligned, and so supports types
with alignment constraints.
- It works hard to avoid aliasing issues.
- Supports types with non-trivial constructors, destructors, copy
constructions, etc. It works reasonably hard to minimize copies and
unnecessary initialization. The most common initialization is to set
keys to the empty key, and so that should be fast if at all possible.
This class has a performance / space trade-off. It tries to optimize for
relatively small maps, and so packs the inline bucket array densely into
the object. It will be marginally slower than a normal DenseMap in a few
use patterns, so it isn't appropriate everywhere.
The unit tests for DenseMap have been generalized a bit to support
running over different map implementations in addition to different
key/value types. They've then been automatically extended to cover the
new container through the magic of GoogleTest's typed tests.
All of this is still a bit rough though. I'm going to be cleaning up
some aspects of the implementation, documenting things better, and
adding tests which include non-trivial types. As soon as I'm comfortable
with the correctness, I plan to switch existing users of SmallMap over
to this class as it is already more correct w.r.t. construction and
destruction of objects iin the map.
Thanks to Benjamin Kramer for all the reviews of this and the lead-up
patches. That said, more review on this would really be appreciated. As
I've noted a few times, I'm quite surprised how hard it is to get the
semantics for a hashtable-based map container with a small buffer
optimization correct. =]
llvm-svn: 158638
platforms.
Also, remove one assertion on MSVC because it produces a completely
preposterous result, claiming something needs 12-byte alignment.
llvm-svn: 158599
array of a suitable size and alignment for any of a number of different
types to be stored into the character array.
The mechanisms for producing an explicitly aligned type are fairly
complex because this operation is poorly supported on all compilers.
We've spent a fairly significant amount of time experimenting with
different implementations inside of Google, and the one using explicitly
expanded templates has been the most robust.
Credit goes to Nick Lewycky for writing the first 20 versions or so of
this logic we had inside of Google. I based this on the only one to
actually survive. In case anyone is worried, yes we are both explicitly
re-contributing and re-licensing it for LLVM. =]
Once the issues with actually specifying the alignment are finished, it
turns out that most compilers don't in turn align anything the way they
are instructed. Testing of this logic against both Clang and GCC
indicate that the alignment constraints are largely ignored by both
compilers! I've come up with and used a work-around by wrapping each
alignment-hinted type directly in a struct, and using that struct to
align the character array through a union. This elaborate hackery is
terrifying, but I've included testing that caught a terrifying number of
bugs in every other technique I've tried.
All of this in order to implement a poor C++98 programmers emulation of
C++11 unrestricted unions in classes such as SmallDenseMap.
llvm-svn: 158597
of typename. GCC and Clang were fine with this, but MSVC won't accept
it. Fortunately, it also doesn't need it. Yuck.
Thanks to Nakamura for pointing this out in IRC.
llvm-svn: 158593
These were already trying to be type parameterized over different
key/value pairs. I've realized this goal using GoogleTest's typed test
functionality. This allows us to easily replicate the tests across
different key/value combinations and soon different mapping templates.
I've fixed a few bugs in the tests and extended them a bit in the
process as many tests were only applying to the int->int mapping.
llvm-svn: 158589
LLVM is now -Wunused-private-field clean except for
- lib/MC/MCDisassembler/Disassembler.h. Not sure why it keeps all those unaccessible fields.
- gtest.
llvm-svn: 158096
Changed type of Items collection: from std::vector to std::list.
Also some small fixes made in IntegersSubset.h, IntegersSubsetMapping.h and IntegersSubsetTest.cpp.
llvm-svn: 157987
Returning a temporary BitVector is very expensive. If you must, create
the temporary explicitly: Use BitVector(A).flip() instead of ~A.
llvm-svn: 156768
- FlatArrayMap. Very simple map container that uses flat array inside.
- MultiImplMap. Map container interface, that has two modes, one for small amount of elements and one for big amount.
- SmallMap. SmallMap is DenseMap compatible MultiImplMap. It uses FlatArrayMap for small mode, and DenseMap for big mode.
Also added unittests for new classes and update for ProgrammersManual.
For more details about new classes see ProgrammersManual and comments in sourcecode.
llvm-svn: 155557
This nicely handles the most common case of virtual register sets, but
also handles anticipated cases where we will map pointers to IDs.
The goal is not to develop a completely generic SparseSet
template. Instead we want to handle the expected uses within llvm
without any template antics in the client code. I'm adding a bit of
template nastiness here, and some assumption about expected usage in
order to make the client code very clean.
The expected common uses cases I'm designing for:
- integer keys that need to be reindexed, and may map to additional
data
- densely numbered objects where we want pointer keys because no
number->object map exists.
llvm-svn: 155227
through the use of 'fpmath' metadata. Currently this only provides a 'fpaccuracy'
value, which may be a number in ULPs or the keyword 'fast', however the intent is
that this will be extended with additional information about NaN's, infinities
etc later. No optimizations have been hooked up to this so far.
llvm-svn: 154822
(and hopefully on Windows). The bots have been down most of the day
because of this, and it's not clear to me what all will be required to
fix it.
The commits started with r153205, then r153207, r153208, and r153221.
The first commit seems to be the real culprit, but I couldn't revert
a smaller number of patches.
When resubmitting, r153207 and r153208 should be folded into r153205,
they were simple build fixes.
llvm-svn: 153241
1. Declare a virtual function getPointerToNamedFunction() in JITMemoryManager
2. Move the implementation of getPointerToNamedFunction() form JIT/MCJIT to DefaultJITMemoryManager.
llvm-svn: 153205
Also refactor the existing OProfile profiling code to reuse the same interfaces with the VTune profiling code.
In addition, unit tests for the profiling interfaces were added.
This patch was prepared by Andrew Kaylor and Daniel Malea, and reviewed in the llvm-commits list by Jim Grosbach
llvm-svn: 152620
integral and enumeration types. This is accomplished with a bit of
template type trait magic. Thanks to Richard Smith for the core idea
here to detect viable types by detecting the set of types which can be
default constructed in a template parameter.
This is used (in conjunction with a system for detecting nullptr_t
should it exist) to provide an is_integral_or_enum type trait that
doesn't need a whitelist or direct compiler support.
With this, the hashing is extended to the more general facility. This
will be used in a subsequent commit to hashing more things, but I wanted
to make sure the type trait magic went through the build bots separately
in case other compilers don't like this formulation.
llvm-svn: 152217
This currently assumes that both sets have the same SmallSize to keep the implementation simple,
a limitation that can be lifted if someone cares.
llvm-svn: 152143
just ensure that the number of bytes in the pair is the sum of the bytes
in each side of the pair. As long as thats true, there are no extra
bytes that might be padding.
Also add a few tests that previously would have slipped through the
checking. The more accurate checking mechanism catches these and ensures
they are handled conservatively correctly.
Thanks to Duncan for prodding me to do this right and more simply.
llvm-svn: 151891
hashable data. This matters when we have pair<T*, U*> as a key, which is
quite common in DenseMap, etc. To that end, we need to detect when this
is safe. The requirements on a generic std::pair<T, U> are:
1) Both T and U must satisfy the existing is_hashable_data trait. Note
that this includes the requirement that T and U have no internal
padding bits or other bits not contributing directly to equality.
2) The alignment constraints of std::pair<T, U> do not require padding
between consecutive objects.
3) The alignment constraints of U and the size of T do not conspire to
require padding between the first and second elements.
Grow two somewhat magical traits to detect this by forming a pod
structure and inspecting offset artifacts on it. Hopefully this won't
cause any compilers to panic.
Added and adjusted tests now that pairs, even nested pairs, are treated
as just sequences of data.
Thanks to Jeffrey Yasskin for helping me sort through this and reviewing
the somewhat subtle traits.
llvm-svn: 151883
an open question of whether we can do better than this by treating pairs
as boring data containers and directly hashing the two subobjects. This
at least makes the API reasonable.
In order to make this change, I reorganized the header a bit. I lifted
the declarations of the hash_value functions up to the top of the header
with their doxygen comments as these are intended for users to interact
with. They shouldn't have to wade through implementation details. I then
defined them at the very end so that they could be defined in terms of
hash_combine or any other hashing infrastructure.
Added various pair-hashing unittests.
llvm-svn: 151882
the hash_code. I'm not sure what I was thinking here, the use cases for
special values are in the *keys*, not in the hashes of those keys.
We can always resurrect this if needed, or clients can accomplish the
same goal themselves. This makes the general case somewhat faster (~5
cycles faster on my machine) and smaller with less branching.
llvm-svn: 151865
of the proposed standard hashing interfaces (N3333), and to use
a modified and tuned version of the CityHash algorithm.
Some of the highlights of this change:
-- Significantly higher quality hashing algorithm with very well
distributed results, and extremely few collisions. Should be close to
a checksum for up to 64-bit keys. Very little clustering or clumping of
hash codes, to better distribute load on probed hash tables.
-- Built-in support for reserved values.
-- Simplified API that composes cleanly with other C++ idioms and APIs.
-- Better scaling performance as keys grow. This is the fastest
algorithm I've found and measured for moderately sized keys (such as
show up in some of the uniquing and folding use cases)
-- Support for enabling per-execution seeds to prevent table ordering
or other artifacts of hashing algorithms to impact the output of
LLVM. The seeding would make each run different and highlight these
problems during bootstrap.
This implementation was tested extensively using the SMHasher test
suite, and pased with flying colors, doing better than the original
CityHash algorithm even.
I've included a unittest, although it is somewhat minimal at the moment.
I've also added (or refactored into the proper location) type traits
necessary to implement this, and converted users of GeneralHash over.
My only immediate concerns with this implementation is the performance
of hashing small keys. I've already started working to improve this, and
will continue to do so. Currently, the only algorithms faster produce
lower quality results, but it is likely there is a better compromise
than the current one.
Many thanks to Jeffrey Yasskin who did most of the work on the N3333
paper, pair-programmed some of this code, and reviewed much of it. Many
thanks also go to Geoff Pike Pike and Jyrki Alakuijala, the original
authors of CityHash on which this is heavily based, and Austin Appleby
who created MurmurHash and the SMHasher test suite.
Also thanks to Nadav, Tobias, Howard, Jay, Nick, Ahmed, and Duncan for
all of the review comments! If there are further comments or concerns,
please let me know and I'll jump on 'em.
llvm-svn: 151822
chip in r139383, and the PSP components of the triple are really
annoying to parse. Let's leave this chapter behind. There is no reason
to expect LLVM to see a PSP-related triple these days, and so no
reasonable motivation to support them.
It might be reasonable to prune a few of the older MIPS triple forms in
general, but as those at least cause no burden on parsing (they aren't
both a chip and an OS!), I'm happy to leave them in for now.
llvm-svn: 151156
For objects that can be identified by small unsigned keys, SparseSet
provides constant time clear() and fast deterministic iteration. Insert,
erase, and find operations are typically faster than hash tables.
SparseSet is useful for keeping information about physical registers,
virtual registers, or numbered basic blocks.
llvm-svn: 151110
construction. Simplify its interface, implementation, and users
accordingly as there is no longer an 'uninitialized' state to check for.
Also, fixes a bug lurking in the interface as there was one method that
didn't correctly check for initialization.
llvm-svn: 151024
now that this handles the release / retain calls.
Adds a regression test for that bug (which is a compile-time
regression) and for the last two changes to the IntrusiveRefCntPtr,
especially tests for the memory leak due to copy construction of the
ref-counted object and ensuring that the traits are used for release /
retain calls.
llvm-svn: 149411
BitVector uses the native word size for its internal representation.
That doesn't work well for literal bit masks in source code.
This patch adds BitVector operations to efficiently apply literal bit
masks specified as arrays of uint32_t. Since each array entry always
holds exactly 32 bits, these portable bit masks can be source code
literals, probably produced by TableGen.
llvm-svn: 148272
Move to a by-section allocation and relocation scheme. This allows
better support for sections which do not contain externally visible
symbols.
Flesh out the relocation address vs. local storage address separation a
bit more as well. Remote process JITs use this to tell the relocation
resolution code where the code will live when it executes.
The startFunctionBody/endFunctionBody interfaces to the JIT and the
memory manager are deprecated. They'll stick around for as long as the
old JIT does, but the MCJIT doesn't use them anymore.
llvm-svn: 148258
is testing the bitcode reader's functionality, not VMCore's. Add the
what is a hope sufficient build system mojo to build and run a new
unittest.
Also clean up some of the test's naming. The goal for the file should be
to unittest the Bitcode Reader, and this is just one particular test
among potentially many in the future. Also, reverse my position and
relegate the PR# to a comment, but stash the comment on the same line as
the test name so it doesn't get lost. This makes the code more
self-documenting hopefully w/o losing track of the PR number.
llvm-svn: 147431
build. This didn't show up in the CMake build because the CMake build
for the unittests is rather poorly factored.
This probably isn't the correct fix. This should be a bitcode reader
unittest not a VMCore unittest. I'll move it and clean various parts of
the unittest up in a follow-up patch, but I wanted to unbreak the bots.
llvm-svn: 147427
Diagnostics are now emitted via the SourceMgr and we use MemoryBuffer
for buffer management. Switched the code to make use of the trailing
'0' that MemoryBuffer guarantees where it makes sense.
llvm-svn: 147063
make VariadicFunction actually be trivial. Do so, and also make it look
more like your standard trivial functor by making it a struct with no
access specifiers. The unit test is updated to initialize its functors
properly.
llvm-svn: 146827
variadic-like functions in C++98. See the comments in the header file
for a more detailed description of how these work. We plan to use these
extensively in the AST matching library. This code and idea were
originally authored by Zhanyong Wan. I've condensed it using macros
to reduce repeatition and adjusted it to fit better with LLVM's ADT.
Thanks to both David Blaikie and Doug Gregor for the review!
llvm-svn: 146729
was returning incorrect values in rare cases, and incorrectly marking
exact conversions as inexact in some more common cases. Fixes PR11406, and a
missed optimization in test/CodeGen/X86/fp-stack-O0.ll.
llvm-svn: 145141
These annotations are disabled entirely when either ENABLE_THREADS is off, or
building a release build. When enabled, they add calls to functions with no
statements to ManagedStatic's getters.
Use these annotations to inform tsan that the race used inside ManagedStatic
initialization is actually benign. Thanks to Kostya Serebryany for helping
write this patch!
llvm-svn: 144567
the X86 asmparser to produce ranges in the one case that was annoying me, for example:
test.s:10:15: error: invalid operand for instruction
movl 0(%rax), 0(%edx)
^~~~~~~
It should be straight-forward to enhance filecheck, tblgen, and/or the .ll parser to use
ranges where appropriate if someone is interested.
llvm-svn: 142106
Based on Horspool's simplified version of Boyer-Moore. We use a constant-sized table of
uint8_ts to keep cache thrashing low, needles bigger than 255 bytes are uncommon anyways.
The worst case is still O(n*m) but we do a lot better on the average case now.
llvm-svn: 142061
It is an endian-aware helper that can read data from a StringRef. It will
come in handy for DWARF parsing. This class is inspired by LLDB's
DataExtractor, but is stripped down to the bare minimum needed for DWARF.
Comes with unit tests!
llvm-svn: 139626
The APFloat "Zero" test was actually calling the
APFloat(const fltSemantics &, integerPart) constructor, and EXPECT_EQ was
treating 0 and -0 as equal.
llvm-svn: 138745
more graphs, like all graphs with 5 nodes or less. With a 32 bit
unsigned type, the maximum is graphs with 6 nodes or less, but that
would take a while to test - 5 nodes or less already requires a few
seconds.
llvm-svn: 136354
This computes every graph with 4 or fewer nodes, and checks that the SCC
class indeed returns exactly the simply connected components reachable
from the initial node.
llvm-svn: 136351
an assert on Darwin llvm-gcc builds.
Assertion failed: (castIsValid(op, S, Ty) && "Invalid cast!"), function Create, file /Users/buildslave/zorg/buildbot/smooshlab/slave-0.8/build.llvm-gcc-i386-darwin9-RA/llvm.src/lib/VMCore/Instructions.cpp, li\
ne 2067.
etc.
http://smooshlab.apple.com:8013/builders/llvm-gcc-i386-darwin9-RA/builds/2354
--- Reverse-merging r134893 into '.':
U include/llvm/Target/TargetData.h
U include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h
U tools/bugpoint/ExtractFunction.cpp
U unittests/Support/TypeBuilderTest.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMGlobalMerge.cpp
U lib/Target/TargetData.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Constants.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Type.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Core.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/CodeExtractor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/ProfilingUtils.cpp
U lib/Transforms/IPO/DeadArgumentElimination.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/SjLjEHPrepare.cpp
--- Reverse-merging r134888 into '.':
G include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h
U include/llvm/Support/TypeBuilder.h
U include/llvm/Intrinsics.h
U unittests/Analysis/ScalarEvolutionTest.cpp
U unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JITTest.cpp
U unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JITMemoryManagerTest.cpp
U unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp
G unittests/Support/TypeBuilderTest.cpp
U lib/Target/MBlaze/MBlazeIntrinsicInfo.cpp
U lib/Target/Blackfin/BlackfinIntrinsicInfo.cpp
U lib/VMCore/IRBuilder.cpp
G lib/VMCore/Type.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Function.cpp
G lib/VMCore/Core.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Module.cpp
U lib/AsmParser/LLParser.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/CloneFunction.cpp
G lib/Transforms/Utils/CodeExtractor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/InlineFunction.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/GCOVProfiling.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/ObjCARC.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/SimplifyLibCalls.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/MemCpyOptimizer.cpp
G lib/Transforms/IPO/DeadArgumentElimination.cpp
U lib/Transforms/IPO/ArgumentPromotion.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCompares.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineAndOrXor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCalls.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/DwarfEHPrepare.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/IntrinsicLowering.cpp
U lib/Bitcode/Reader/BitcodeReader.cpp
llvm-svn: 134949
patch brings numerous advantages to LLVM. One way to look at it
is through diffstat:
109 files changed, 3005 insertions(+), 5906 deletions(-)
Removing almost 3K lines of code is a good thing. Other advantages
include:
1. Value::getType() is a simple load that can be CSE'd, not a mutating
union-find operation.
2. Types a uniqued and never move once created, defining away PATypeHolder.
3. Structs can be "named" now, and their name is part of the identity that
uniques them. This means that the compiler doesn't merge them structurally
which makes the IR much less confusing.
4. Now that there is no way to get a cycle in a type graph without a named
struct type, "upreferences" go away.
5. Type refinement is completely gone, which should make LTO much MUCH faster
in some common cases with C++ code.
6. Types are now generally immutable, so we can use "Type *" instead
"const Type *" everywhere.
Downsides of this patch are that it removes some functions from the C API,
so people using those will have to upgrade to (not yet added) new API.
"LLVM 3.0" is the right time to do this.
There are still some cleanups pending after this, this patch is large enough
as-is.
llvm-svn: 134829
vec.insert(vec.begin(), vec[3]);
The issue was that vec[3] returns a reference into the vector, which is invalidated when insert() memmove's the elements down to make space. The method needs to specifically detect and handle this case to correctly match std::vector's semantics.
Thanks to Howard Hinnant for clarifying the correct behavior, and explaining how std::vector solves this problem.
llvm-svn: 134554
all over the place in different styles and variants. Standardize on two
preferred entrypoints: one that takes a StructType and ArrayRef, and one that
takes StructType and varargs.
In cases where there isn't a struct type convenient, we now add a
ConstantStruct::getAnon method (whose name will make more sense after a few
more patches land).
It would be "really really nice" if the ConstantStruct::get and
ConstantVector::get methods didn't make temporary std::vectors.
llvm-svn: 133412
can be used to turn a <4 x i64> into a <4 x i32> but getCastOpcode would assert
if you passed these types to it. Note that this strictly extends the previous
functionality: if getCastOpcode previously accepted two vector types (i.e. didn't
assert) then it still will and returns the same opcode (BitCast). That's because
before it would only accept vectors with the same bitwidth, and the new code only
touches vectors with the same length. However if two vectors have both the same
bitwidth and the same length then their element types have the same bitwidth, so
the new logic will return BitCast as before.
llvm-svn: 131530
had gotten out of sync: isCastable didn't think it was possible to
cast the x86_mmx type to anything, while it did think it possible
to cast an i64 to x86_mmx.
llvm-svn: 128705
The idea is, that if an ieee 754 float is divided by a power of two, we can
turn the division into a cheaper multiplication. This function sees if we can
get an exact multiplicative inverse for a divisor and returns it if possible.
This is the hard part of PR9587.
I tested many inputs against llvm-gcc's frotend implementation of this
optimization and didn't find any difference. However, floating point is the
land of weird edge cases, so any review would be appreciated.
llvm-svn: 128545
should be that if the phi is used by a side-effect free instruction with
no uses then the phi and the instruction now get zapped (checked by the
unittest).
llvm-svn: 126124
of a constant had a minor typo introduced when copying it from the book, which
caused it to favor negative approximations over positive approximations in many
cases. Positive approximations require fewer operations beyond the multiplication.
In the case of division by 3, we still generate code that is a single instruction
larger than GCC's code.
llvm-svn: 126097
test for that. With this change, test/CodeGen/X86/codegen-dce.ll no longer finds
any instructions to DCE, so delete the test.
Also renamed J and JP to I and IP in RecursivelyDeleteDeadPHINode.
llvm-svn: 126088
may be useful to understand "none", this is not the place for it. Tweak
the fix to Normalize while there: the fix added in 123990 works correctly,
but I like this way better. Finally, now that Triple understands some
non-trivial environment values, teach the unittests about them.
llvm-svn: 124720
Add a unnamed_addr bit to global variables and functions. This will be used
to indicate that the address is not significant and therefore the constant
or function can be merged with others.
If an optimization pass can show that an address is not used, it can set this.
Examples of things that can have this set by the FE are globals created to
hold string literals and C++ constructors.
Adding unnamed_addr to a non-const global should have no effect unless
an optimization can transform that global into a constant.
Aliases are not allowed to have unnamed_addr since I couldn't figure
out any use for it.
llvm-svn: 123063
This implementation already exists as ConnectedVNInfoEqClasses in
LiveInterval.cpp, and it seems to be generally useful to have a light-weight way
of forming equivalence classes of small integers.
IntEqClasses doesn't allow enumeration of the elements in a class.
llvm-svn: 122293
moves the iterator to end(), and it is valid to call it on end().
That means it is valid to call advanceTo() with any monotonic key sequence.
llvm-svn: 122092
zextOrTrunc(), and APSInt methods extend(), extOrTrunc() and new method
trunc(), to be const and to return a new value instead of modifying the
object in place.
llvm-svn: 121120
editing of the current interval.
These methods may cause coalescing, there are corresponding set*Unchecked
methods for editing without coalescing. The non-coalescing methods are useful
for applying monotonic transforms to all keys or values in a map without
accidentally coalescing transformed and untransformed intervals.
llvm-svn: 120829
We always disallowed overlapping inserts with different values, and this makes
the insertion code smaller and faster.
If an overwriting insert is needed, it can be added as a separate method that
trims any existing intervals before inserting. The immediate use cases for
IntervalMap don't need this - they only use disjoint insertions.
llvm-svn: 120264
Implement iterator::erase() in a simple version that erases nodes when they
become empty, but doesn't try to redistribute elements among siblings for better
packing.
Handle coalescing across leaf nodes which may require erasing entries.
llvm-svn: 120226
to use lowercase letters for the start of most
method names and to replace some method names
with more descriptive names (e.g., "getLeft()"
instead of "Left()"). No real functionality
change.
llvm-svn: 120070
This is a sorted interval map data structure for small keys and values with
automatic coalescing and bidirectional iteration over coalesced intervals.
Except for coalescing intervals, it provides similar functionality to std::map.
It is however much more compact for small keys and values, and hopefully faster
too.
The container object itself can hold the first few intervals without any
allocations, then it switches to a cache conscious B+-tree representation. A
recycling allocator can be shared between many containers, even between
containers holding different types.
The IntervalMap is initially intended to be used with SlotIndex intervals for:
- Backing store for LiveIntervalUnion that is smaller and faster than std::set.
- Backing store for LiveInterval with less overhead than std::vector for typical
intervals and O(N log N) merging of large intervals. 99% of virtual registers
need 4 entries or less and would benefit from the small object optimization.
- Backing store for LiveDebugVariable which doesn't exist yet, but will track
debug variables during register allocation.
This is a work in progress. Missing items are:
- Performance metrics.
- erase().
- insert() shrinkage.
- clear().
- More performance metrics.
- Simplification and detemplatization.
llvm-svn: 119787
This is a sorted interval map data structure for small keys and values with
automatic coalescing and bidirectional iteration over coalesced intervals.
Except for coalescing intervals, it provides similar functionality to std::map.
It is however much more compact for small keys and values, and hopefully faster
too.
The container object itself can hold the first few intervals without any
allocations, then it switches to a cache conscious B+-tree representation. A
recycling allocator can be shared between many containers, even between
containers holding different types.
The IntervalMap is initially intended to be used with SlotIndex intervals for:
- Backing store for LiveIntervalUnion that is smaller and faster than std::set.
- Backing store for LiveInterval with less overhead than std::vector for typical
intervals and O(N log N) merging of large intervals. 99% of virtual registers
need 4 entries or less and would benefit from the small object optimization.
- Backing store for LiveDebugVariable which doesn't exist yet, but will track
debug variables during register allocation.
This is a work in progress. Missing items are:
- Performance metrics.
- erase().
- insert() shrinkage.
- clear().
- More performance metrics.
- Simplification and detemplatization.
llvm-svn: 119772
must be called in the pass's constructor. This function uses static dependency declarations to recursively initialize
the pass's dependencies.
Clients that only create passes through the createFooPass() APIs will require no changes. Clients that want to use the
CommandLine options for passes will need to manually call the appropriate initialization functions in PassInitialization.h
before parsing commandline arguments.
I have tested this with all standard configurations of clang and llvm-gcc on Darwin. It is possible that there are problems
with the static dependencies that will only be visible with non-standard options. If you encounter any crash in pass
registration/creation, please send the testcase to me directly.
llvm-svn: 116820
available targets unless LLVM_INCLUDE_X is ON. LLVM_BUILD_X implies
LLVM_INCLUDE_X"
It breaks the configuration phase when cmake is invoked without
parameters, it is too complex for the purpose and introduces an
incovenience for the user (as both LLVM_BUILD_X and LLVM_INCLUDE_X
must set to OFF for not including X on the build)
llvm-svn: 114795
Fix zeroExtend and signExtend to support empty sets, and to return the smallest
possible result set which contains the extension of each element in their
inputs. For example zext i8 [100, 10) to i16 is now [0, 256), not i16 [100, 10)
which contains 63446 members.
llvm-svn: 113187
target triple and straightens it out. This does less than gcc's script
config.sub, for example it turns i386-mingw32 into i386--mingw32 not
i386-pc-mingw32, but it does a decent job of turning funky triples into
something that the rest of the Triple class can understand. The plan
is to use this to canonicalize triple's when they are first provided
by users, and have the rest of LLVM only deal with canonical triples.
Once this is done the special case workarounds in the Triple constructor
can be removed, making the class more regular and easier to use. The
comments and unittests for the Triple class are already adjusted in this
patch appropriately for this brave new world of increased uniformity.
llvm-svn: 110909
- remove ashr which never worked.
- fix lshr and shl and add tests.
- remove dead function "intersect1Wrapped".
- add a new sub method to subtract ranges, with test.
llvm-svn: 110861
of Value deletions and RAUWs, instead of relying on ScalarEvolution's
Scalars map being notified, as that's complicated at best, and
insufficient in general.
This means SCEVUnknown needs a non-trivial destructor, so introduce
a mechanism to allow ScalarEvolution to locate all the SCEVUnknowns.
llvm-svn: 110086
handles with a pointer to the containing map. When a map is copied, these
pointers need to be corrected to point to the new map. If not, then consider
the case of a map M1 which maps a value V to something. Create a copy M2 of
M1. At this point there are two value handles on V, one representing V as a
key in M1, the other representing V as a key in M2. But both value handles
point to M1 as the containing map. Now delete V. The value handles remove
themselves from their containing map (which destroys them), but only the first
value handle is successful: the second one cannot remove itself from M1 as
(once the first one has removed itself) there is nothing there to remove; it
is therefore not destroyed. This causes an assertion failure "All references
to V were not removed?".
llvm-svn: 109851
extend it to handle the case where multiple RAUWs affect a single
SCEVUnknown.
Add a ScalarEvolution unittest to test for this situation.
llvm-svn: 109705
rip out the implementation of X86InstrInfo::GetInstSizeInBytes.
The code being ripped out just implemented a copy and hacked up
version of the (old) instruction encoder, and is buggy and
terrible in other ways. Since "GetInstSizeInBytes" is really
only there to support the JIT's "NeedsExactSize" hook (which
noone is using), just rip out the code. I will rip out the
NeedsExactSize hook next.
This resolves rdar://7617809 - switch X86InstrInfo::GetInstSizeInBytes to use X86MCCodeEmitter
llvm-svn: 109149
- This provides a convenient alternative to using something llvm::prior or
manual iterator access, for example::
if (T *Prev = foo->getPrevNode())
...
instead of::
iterator it(foo);
if (it != begin()) {
--it;
...
}
- Chris, please review.
llvm-svn: 103647
to CallGraphSCCPass's instead of passing around a
std::vector<CallGraphNode*>. No functionality change,
but now we have a much tidier interface.
llvm-svn: 101558
adjusted unittest
I have added some doxygen to OptionalOperandTraits,
so hopefully there will be no confusion in the future.
Incidentally OptionalOperandTraits is not used any more (IIUC),
but the obvious client would be BranchInstr, and I plan
to rearrange it that way.
llvm-svn: 98624
just count references to it from JIT output to decide when to destroy it. This
patch waits to destroy the JIT's memory of a stub until the Function it refers
to is destroyed. External function stubs and GVIndirectSyms aren't destroyed
until the JIT itself is.
llvm-svn: 97737
payloads. APFloat's internal folding routines always make QNaNs now,
instead of sometimes making QNaNs and sometimes SNaNs depending on the
type.
llvm-svn: 97364
--enable-shared configure flag to have the tools linked shared. (2.7svn is just
$(LLVMVersion) so it'll change to "2.7" in the release.) Always link the
example programs shared to test that the shared library keeps working.
On my mac laptop, Debug libLLVM2.7svn.dylib is 39MB, and opt (for example) is
16M static vs 440K shared.
Two things are less than ideal here:
1) The library doesn't include any version information. Since we expect to break
the ABI with every release, this shouldn't be much of a problem. If we do
release a compatible 2.7.1, we may be able to hack its library to work with
binaries compiled against 2.7.0, or we can just ask them to recompile. I'm
hoping to get a real packaging expert to look at this for the 2.8 release.
2) llvm-config doesn't yet have an option to print link options for the shared
library. I'll add this as a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 96559
the global TheJIT and TheJITResolver variables. Lazy compilation is supported
by a global map from a stub address to the JITResolver that knows how to
compile it.
Patch by Olivier Meurant!
llvm-svn: 95837
It fails with a release build only, for reasons
as yet unknown. (If there's a better way to Xfail
things here let me know, doesn't seem to be any
prior art in unittests.)
llvm-svn: 95700
Modules and ModuleProviders. Because the "ModuleProvider" simply materializes
GlobalValues now, and doesn't provide modules, it's renamed to
"GVMaterializer". Code that used to need a ModuleProvider to materialize
Functions can now materialize the Functions directly. Functions no longer use a
magic linkage to record that they're materializable; they simply ask the
GVMaterializer.
Because the C ABI must never change, we can't remove LLVMModuleProviderRef or
the functions that refer to it. Instead, because Module now exposes the same
functionality ModuleProvider used to, we store a Module* in any
LLVMModuleProviderRef and translate in the wrapper methods. The bindings to
other languages still use the ModuleProvider concept. It would probably be
worth some time to update them to follow the C++ more closely, but I don't
intend to do it.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR5737 and http://llvm.org/PR5735.
llvm-svn: 94686
TimeValue()::now().toEpochTime() is supposed to be the same as time(),
but it wasn't, because toEpoch subtracted PosixZeroTime, but now()
didn't add PosixZeroTime!
Add a unittest to check this works.
llvm-svn: 94178
missing ones are libsupport, libsystem and libvmcore. libvmcore is
currently blocked on bugpoint, which uses EH. Once it stops using
EH, we can switch it off.
This #if 0's out 3 unit tests, because gtest requires RTTI information.
Suggestions welcome on how to fix this.
llvm-svn: 94164
a single pointer (PointerIntPair) member. In "small" mode, the
pointer field is reinterpreted as a set of bits. In "large" mode,
the pointer points to a heap-allocated object.
Also, give BitVector empty and swap functions.
And, add some simple unittests for BitVector and SmallBitVector.
llvm-svn: 92730
argument-dependent lookup can find it. This is another case where an
LLVM bug (not making operator<< visible) was masked by a GCC bug
(looking in the global namespace when it shouldn't).
llvm-svn: 92144
smallest-normalized-magnitude values in a given FP semantics.
Provide an APFloat-to-string conversion which I am quite ready to admit could
be much more efficient.
llvm-svn: 92126
they're available_externally broke VMKit, which was relying on the fact that
functions would only be materialized when they were first called. We'll have
to wait for http://llvm.org/PR5737 to really fix this.
I also added a test for one of the F->isDeclaration() calls which wasn't
covered by anything else in the test suite.
llvm-svn: 91943
way for each TargetJITInfo subclass to allocate its own stubs. This
means stubs aren't as exactly-sized anymore, but it lets us get rid of
TargetJITInfo::emitFunctionStubAtAddr(), which lets ARM and PPC
support the eager JIT, fixing http://llvm.org/PR4816.
* Rename the JITEmitter's stub creation functions to describe the kind
of stub they create. So far, all of them create lazy-compilation
stubs, but they sometimes get used when far-call stubs are needed.
Fixing http://llvm.org/PR5201 will involve fixing this.
llvm-svn: 89715
address space (though it only uses a small fraction of that), and the
buildbots disallow that.
Also add a comment to the Makefile's ulimit line warning future
developers that changing it won't work.
llvm-svn: 88994
The large code model is documented at
http://www.x86-64.org/documentation/abi.pdf and says that calls should
assume their target doesn't live within the 32-bit pc-relative offset
that fits in the call instruction.
To do this, we turn off the global-address->target-global-address
conversion in X86TargetLowering::LowerCall(). The first attempt at
this broke the lazy JIT because it can separate the movabs(imm->reg)
from the actual call instruction. The lazy JIT receives the address of
the movabs as a relocation and needs to record the return address from
the call; and then when that call happens, it needs to patch the
movabs with the newly-compiled target. We could thread the call
instruction into the relocation and record the movabs<->call mapping
explicitly, but that seems to require at least as much new
complication in the code generator as this change.
To fix this, we make lazy functions _always_ go through a call
stub. You'd think we'd only have to force lazy calls through a stub on
difficult platforms, but that turns out to break indirect calls
through a function pointer. The right fix for that is to distinguish
between calls and address-of operations on uncompiled functions, but
that's complex enough to leave for someone else to do.
Another attempt at this defined a new CALL64i pseudo-instruction,
which expanded to a 2-instruction sequence in the assembly output and
was special-cased in the X86CodeEmitter's emitInstruction()
function. That broke indirect calls in the same way as above.
This patch also removes a hack forcing Darwin to the small code model.
Without far-call-stubs, the small code model requires things of the
JITMemoryManager that the DefaultJITMemoryManager can't provide.
Thanks to echristo for lots of testing!
llvm-svn: 88984
This patch forbids implicit conversion of DenseMap::const_iterator to
DenseMap::iterator which was possible because DenseMapIterator inherited
(publicly) from DenseMapConstIterator. Conversion the other way around is now
allowed as one may expect.
The template DenseMapConstIterator is removed and the template parameter
IsConst which specifies whether the iterator is constant is added to
DenseMapIterator.
Actually IsConst parameter is not necessary since the constness can be
determined from KeyT but this is not relevant to the fix and can be addressed
later.
Patch by Victor Zverovich!
llvm-svn: 86636
http://llvm.org/PR5184, and beef up the comments to describe what both options
do and the risks of lazy compilation in the presence of threads.
llvm-svn: 85295
being destroyed. This allows users to run global optimizations like globaldce
even after some functions have been jitted.
This patch also removes the Function* parameter to
JITEventListener::NotifyFreeingMachineCode() since it can cause that to be
called when the Function is partially destroyed. This change will be even more
helpful later when I think we'll want to allow machine code to actually outlive
its Function.
llvm-svn: 85182
compiled.
When functions are compiled, they accumulate references in the JITResolver's
stub maps. This patch removes those references when the functions are
destroyed. It's illegal to destroy a Function when any thread may still try to
call its machine code.
This patch also updates r83987 to use ValueMap instead of explicit CallbackVHs
and fixes a couple "do stuff inside assert()" bugs from r84522.
llvm-svn: 84975
even when keys get RAUWed and deleted during its lifetime. By default the keys
act like WeakVHs, but users can pass a third template parameter to configure
how updates work and whether to do anything beyond updating the map on each
action.
It's also possible to automatically acquire a lock around ValueMap updates
triggered by RAUWs and deletes, to support the ExecutionEngine.
llvm-svn: 84890
JITEmitter.
I'm gradually making Functions auto-remove themselves from the JIT when they're
destroyed. In this case, the Function needs to be removed from the JITEmitter,
but the map recording which Functions need to be removed lived behind the
JITMemoryManager interface, which made things difficult.
This patch replaces the deallocateMemForFunction(Function*) method with a pair
of methods deallocateFunctionBody(void *) and deallocateExceptionTable(void *)
corresponding to the two startFoo/endFoo pairs.
llvm-svn: 84651
mappings, which could cause errors and assert-failures. This patch fixes that,
adds a test, and refactors the global-mapping-removal code into a single place.
llvm-svn: 83678
- MingW needs -lpsapi (in ${LIBS}) linked after -lLLVMSystem.
Noticed by Ronald Pijnacker!
- Some parts of the System library must be build with exceptions on windows.
Based on a patch by Jay Foad!
llvm-svn: 83251
TypeBuilder was using a local static variable to cache its result. This made it
ignore changes in its LLVMContext argument and always return a type constructed
from the argument to the first call.
llvm-svn: 81316
equality. Prefer EXPECT_EQ(foo, Full) over EXPECT_TRUE(foo.isFullSet()) because
the former will print out the contents of the constant range that failed.
llvm-svn: 81094
This can break when there are implicit conversions from types raw_ostream
understands but std::ostream doesn't, but it increases the number of cases that
Just Work.
llvm-svn: 81093
Use CallbackVH, instead of WeakVH, to hold MDNode elements.
Use FoldingSetNode to unique MDNodes in a context.
Use CallbackVH hooks to update context's MDNodeSet appropriately.
llvm-svn: 80868
means that raw_ostream no longer has to #include <iosfwd>. Nothing in llvm
should use raw_os_ostream.h, but llvm-gcc and some unit tests do.
llvm-svn: 79886
- This also shortens the Format.h implementation, and uses the print buffer
fully (it was wasting a character).
- This manifested as llvm-test failures, because one side effect was that
raw_ostream would write garbage '\x00' values into the output stream if it
happened that the string was at the end of the buffer. This meant that grep
would report 'Binary file matches', which meant the silly pattern matching
llvm-test eventually does would fail. Cute. :)
llvm-svn: 79862
- These allow clients to make use of the extra elements in the vector which
have already been allocated, without requiring them to be value initialized.
llvm-svn: 79433
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=rev&revision=78127, I'm changing the
ExecutionEngine's global mappings to hold AssertingVH<const GlobalValue>. That
way, if unregistering a mapping fails to actually unregister it, we'll get an
assert. Running the jit nightly tests didn't uncover any actual instances of
the problem.
This also uncovered the fact that AssertingVH<const X> didn't work, so I fixed
that too.
llvm-svn: 78400