One of the tests is failing 50% of the time when expensive checks are
enabled. Not sure how deep the problem is so just reverting while the
author can investigate so that the bots stop repeatedly failing and
blaming things incorrectly. Will respond with details on the original
commit.
llvm-svn: 341365
Check for definedness of the __cpp_sized_deallocation and
__cpp_aligned_new feature test macros. These will not be defined
when the feature is not available, and that prevents any code that
includes this header from compiling with -Wundef -Werror.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51171
llvm-svn: 341364
Load Hardening.
Wires up the existing pass to work with a proper IR attribute rather
than just a hidden/internal flag. The internal flag continues to work
for now, but I'll likely remove it soon.
Most of the churn here is adding the IR attribute. I talked about this
Kristof Beyls and he seemed at least initially OK with this direction.
The idea of using a full attribute here is that we *do* expect at least
some forms of this for other architectures. There isn't anything
*inherently* x86-specific about this technique, just that we only have
an implementation for x86 at the moment.
While we could potentially expose this as a Clang-level attribute as
well, that seems like a good question to defer for the moment as it
isn't 100% clear whether that or some other programmer interface (or
both?) would be best. We'll defer the programmer interface side of this
for now, but at least get to the point where the feature can be enabled
without relying on implementation details.
This also allows us to do something that was really hard before: we can
enable *just* the indirect call retpolines when using SLH. For x86, we
don't have any other way to mitigate indirect calls. Other architectures
may take a different approach of course, and none of this is surfaced to
user-level flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51157
llvm-svn: 341363
Summary:
Refactoring done by rL340872 accidentally appeared to be non-NFC, changing the way how
multiple instances of the same pass are handled - aggregation of results by PassName
forced data for multiple instances to be merged together and reported as one line.
Getting back to creating/reporting timers per pass instance.
Reporting was a bit enhanced by counting pass instances and adding #<num> suffix
to the pass description. Note that it is instances that are being counted,
not invocations of them.
time-passes test updated to account for multiple passes being run.
Reviewers: paquette, jhenderson, MatzeB, skatkov
Reviewed By: skatkov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51535
llvm-svn: 341346
Also adjust some of dsymutil's headers to put the header guards at the top,
otherwise the compiler will not recognize them as header guards.
llvm-svn: 341323
For instructions that spill/fill to and from multiple frame-indices
in a single instruction, hasStoreToStackSlot and hasLoadFromStackSlot
should return an array of accesses, rather than just the first encounter
of such an access.
This better describes FI accesses for AArch64 (paired) LDP/STP
instructions.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51537
llvm-svn: 341301
In lib/CodeGen/LiveDebugVariables.cpp, it uses std::prev(MBBI) to
get DebugValue's SlotIndex. However, the previous instruction may be
also a debug instruction. It could not use a debug instruction to query
SlotIndex in mi2iMap.
Scan all debug instructions and use the first debug instruction to query
SlotIndex for following debug instructions. Only handle DBG_VALUE in
handleDebugValue().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50621
llvm-svn: 341289
If we have a pair of binops feeding another pair of binops, rearrange the operands so
the matching pair are together because that allows easy factorization folds to happen
in instcombine:
((X << S) & Y) & (Z << S) --> ((X << S) & (Z << S)) & Y (reassociation)
--> ((X & Z) << S) & Y (factorize shift from 'and' ops optimization)
This is part of solving PR37098:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37098
Note that there's an instcombine version of this patch attached there, but we're trying
to make instcombine have less responsibility to improve compile-time efficiency.
For reasons I still don't completely understand, reassociate does this kind of transform
sometimes, but misses everything in my motivating cases.
This patch on its own is gluing an independent cleanup chunk to the end of the existing
RewriteExprTree() loop. We can build on it and do something stronger to better order the
full expression tree like D40049. That might be an alternative to the proposal to add a
separate reassociation pass like D41574.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45842
llvm-svn: 341288
Removes the implicit conversion to the underlying type for
JITSymbolFlags::FlagNames and replaces it with some bitwise and comparison
operators.
llvm-svn: 341282
Summary:
Reid suggested making HasWinCFI a plain bool defaulting to false in D50288.
It's needed in order to add HasWinCFI to MIRPrinter. Otherwise, we'll get the
assertion:
HasWinCFI.hasValue() && "HasWinCFI not set yet!"'
Also, a few ARM64 Windows test cases will fail with the same assert if the ARM64
MCLayer part of EH work (D50166) goes in before the frame lowering part that
sets HasWinCFI (D50288 as of now).
Reviewers: rnk, mstorsjo, hans, javed.absar
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51560
llvm-svn: 341270
Leverage existing logic in constant hoisting pass to transform constant GEP
expressions sharing the same base global variable. Multi-dimensional GEPs are
rewritten into single-dimensional GEPs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51396
llvm-svn: 341269
These intrinsics use the same implementation as PTEST intrinsics, but use vXi1 vectors.
New clang builtins will be accompanying them shortly.
llvm-svn: 341259
In basic block, loop, and function passes, we already have a function that
we can use to emit optimization remarks. We can use that instead of searching
the module for the first suitable function (that is, one that contains at
least one basic block.)
llvm-svn: 341253
Instead of counting the size of the entire module every time we run a pass,
pass along a delta instead and use that to emit the remark.
This means we only have to use (on average) smaller IR units to calculate
instruction counts. E.g, in a BB pass, we only need to look at the delta of
the BB instead of the delta of the entire module.
6/6
(This improved compile time for size remarks on sqlite3 + O2 significantly)
llvm-svn: 341250
Previously we've been reading and writing the wrong types which only
worked in little endian implementations. This time we're writing the
same typed values the runtime is using, and reading them appropriately
as well.
llvm-svn: 341241
This change makes the writer implementation more consistent with the way
fields are written down to avoid assumptions on bitfield order and
padding. We also fix an inconsistency between the type returned by the
`delta()` accessor to match the data member it's returning.
This is a follow-up to D51289 and D51210.
llvm-svn: 341230
Following D50807, and heading towards D50664, this intermediary change does the following:
1. Upgrade all custom Error types in llvm/trunk/lib/DebugInfo/ to use the new StringError behavior (D50807).
2. Implement std::is_error_code_enum and make_error_code() for DebugInfo error enumerations.
3. Rename GenericError -> PDBError (the file will be renamed in a subsequent commit)
4. Update custom error messages to follow the same formatting: (\w\s*)+\.
5. Keep generic "file not found" (ENOENT) errors as they are in PDB code. Previously, there used to be a custom enumeration for that purpose.
6. Remove a few extraneous LF in log() implementations. Printing LF is a responsability at a higher level, not at the error level.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51499
llvm-svn: 341228
Before this patch, the FDRTraceWriter would not take endianness into
account when writing data into the output stream.
This is a follow-up to D51289 and D51210.
llvm-svn: 341223
Summary:
This patch defines two new base types called `RecordProducer` and
`RecordConsumer` which have default implementations for convenience
(particularly for testing).
A `RecordProducer` implementation has one member function called
`produce()` which serves as a factory constructor for `Record`
instances. This code exercises the `RecordInitializer` code path in the
implementation for `FileBasedRecordProducer`.
A `RecordConsumer` has a single member function called `consume(...)`
which, as the name implies, consumes instances of
`std::unique_ptr<Record>`. We have two implementations, one of which is
used in the test to generate a vector of `std::unique_ptr<Record>`
similar to how the `LogBuilder` implementation works.
We introduce a test in `FDRProducerConsumerTest` which ensures that
records we write through the `FDRTraceWriter` can be loaded by the
`FileBasedRecordProducer`. The record(s) loaded this way are written
again through the `FDRTraceWriter` into a separate string, which we then
compare. This ensures that the read-in bytes to create the `Record`
instances in memory can be replicated when written out through the
`FDRTraceWriter`.
This change depends on D51210 and is part of the refactoring of D50441
into smaller, more focused changes.
Reviewers: eizan, kpw
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51289
llvm-svn: 341180
management and materialization responsibility registration.
The setOverrideObjectFlagsWithResponsibilityFlags method instructs
RTDyldObjectlinkingLayer2 to override the symbol flags produced by RuntimeDyld with
the flags provided by the MaterializationResponsibility instance. This can be used
to enable symbol visibility (hidden/exported) for COFF object files, which do not
currently support the SF_Exported flag.
The setAutoClaimResponsibilityForObjectSymbols method instructs
RTDyldObjectLinkingLayer2 to claim responsibility for any symbols provided by a
given object file that were not already in the MaterializationResponsibility
instance. Setting this flag allows higher-level program representations (e.g.
LLVM IR) to be added based on only a subset of the symbols they provide, without
having to write intervening layers to scan and add the additional symbols. This
trades diagnostic quality for convenience however: If all symbols are enumerated
up-front then clashes can be detected and reported early. If this option is set,
clashes for the additional symbols may not be detected until late, and detection
may depend on the flow of control through JIT'd code.
llvm-svn: 341154
get_execution_seed returns a size_t which varies across platforms, but its
users actually always feed it into a uint64_t role so it makes sense to be
consistent.
Mostly this is just a tidy-up, but it also apparently allows PCH files to be
shared between Clang compilers built for 32-bit and 64-bit hosts.
llvm-svn: 341113
Summary: Add a new type for named metadata nodes. Use this to implement iterators and accessors for NamedMDNodes and extend the echo test to use them to copy module-level debug information.
Reviewers: whitequark, deadalnix, aprantl, dexonsmith
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: Wallbraker, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits, harlanhaskins
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47179
llvm-svn: 341085
This was one of the potential follow-ups suggested in D48236,
and these will be used to make matching the patterns in PR38691 cleaner:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38691
About the vocabulary: in the DAG, these would be concat_vector with an
undef operand or extract_subvector. Alternate names are discussed in the
review, but I think these are familiar/good enough to proceed. Once we
have uses of them in code, we might adjust if there are better options.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51392
llvm-svn: 341075
..Move all target-dependent checks into new isCopyInstrImpl method.
This change allows us to treat MoveReg-type instructions and generic
COPY instruction in the same way
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49913
llvm-svn: 341072
Summary:
This is patch 1 of the new DivergenceAnalysis (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50433).
The purpose of this patch is to free up the name DivergenceAnalysis for the new generic
implementation. The generic implementation class will be shared by specialized
divergence analysis classes.
Patch by: Simon Moll
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: jvesely, jholewinski, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50434
Change-Id: Ie8146b11be2c50d5312f30e11c7a3036a15b48cb
llvm-svn: 341071
FileError is meant to encapsulate both an Error and a file name/path. It should be used in cases where an Error occurs deep down the call chain, and we want to return it to the caller along with the file name.
StringError was updated to display the error messages in different ways. These can be:
1. display the error_code message, and convert to the same error_code (ECError behavior)
2. display an arbitrary string, and convert to a provided error_code (current StringError behavior)
3. display both an error_code message and a string, in this order; and convert to the same error_code
These behaviors can be triggered depending on the constructor. The goal is to use StringError as a base class, when a library needs to provide a explicit Error type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50807
llvm-svn: 341064
Summary:
This is a continuation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D49727
Below the original text, current changes in the comments:
Currently, in line with GCC, when specifying reserved registers like sp or pc on an inline asm() clobber list, we don't always preserve the original value across the statement. And in general, overwriting reserved registers can have surprising results.
For example:
extern int bar(int[]);
int foo(int i) {
int a[i]; // VLA
asm volatile(
"mov r7, #1"
:
:
: "r7"
);
return 1 + bar(a);
}
Compiled for thumb, this gives:
$ clang --target=arm-arm-none-eabi -march=armv7a -c test.c -o - -S -O1 -mthumb
...
foo:
.fnstart
@ %bb.0: @ %entry
.save {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
.setfp r7, sp, #12
add r7, sp, #12
.pad #4
sub sp, #4
movs r1, #7
add.w r0, r1, r0, lsl #2
bic r0, r0, #7
sub.w r0, sp, r0
mov sp, r0
@APP
mov.w r7, #1
@NO_APP
bl bar
adds r0, #1
sub.w r4, r7, #12
mov sp, r4
pop {r4, r5, r6, r7, pc}
...
r7 is used as the frame pointer for thumb targets, and this function needs to restore the SP from the FP because of the variable-length stack allocation a. r7 is clobbered by the inline assembly (and r7 is included in the clobber list), but LLVM does not preserve the value of the frame pointer across the assembly block.
This type of behavior is similar to GCC's and has been discussed on the bugtracker: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11807 . No consensus seemed to have been reached on the way forward. Clang behavior has briefly been discussed on the CFE mailing (starting here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-July/058392.html). I've opted for following Eli Friedman's advice to print warnings when there are reserved registers on the clobber list so as not to diverge from GCC behavior for now.
The patch uses MachineRegisterInfo's target-specific knowledge of reserved registers, just before we convert the inline asm string in the AsmPrinter.
If we find a reserved register, we print a warning:
repro.c:6:7: warning: inline asm clobber list contains reserved registers: R7 [-Winline-asm]
"mov r7, #1"
^
Reviewers: efriedma, olista01, javed.absar
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: eraman, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51165
llvm-svn: 341062
Summary:
This is the first step in the larger refactoring and reduction of
D50441.
This step in the process does the following:
- Introduces more granular types of `Record`s representing the many
kinds of records written/read by the Flight Data Recorder (FDR) mode
`Trace` loading function(s).
- Introduces an abstract `RecordVisitor` type meant to handle the
processing of the various `Record` derived types. This `RecordVisitor`
has two implementations in this patch: `RecordInitializer` and
`FDRTraceWriter`.
- We also introduce a convenience interface for building a collection of
`Record` instances called a `LogBuilder`. This allows us to generate
sequences of `Record` instances manually (used in unit tests but
useful otherwise).
- The`FDRTraceWriter` class implements the `RecordVisitor` interface and
handles the writing of metadata records to a `raw_ostream`. We
demonstrate that in the unit test, we can generate in-memory FDR mode
traces using the specific `Record` derived types, which we load
through the `loadTrace(...)` function yielding valid `Trace` objects.
This patch introduces the required types and concepts for us to start
replacing the logic implemented in the `loadFDRLog` function to use the
more granular types. In subsequent patches, we will introduce more
visitor implementations which isolate the verification, printing,
indexing, production/consumption, and finally the conversion of the FDR
mode logs.
The overarching goal of these changes is to make handling FDR mode logs
better tested, more understandable, more extensible, and more
systematic. This will also allow us to better represent the execution
trace, as we improve the fidelity of the events we represent in an XRay
`Trace` object, which we intend to do after FDR mode log processing is
in better shape.
Reviewers: eizan
Reviewed By: eizan
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51210
llvm-svn: 341029
Check that Machine CSE correctly handles during the transformation, the
debug location information for local variables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50887
llvm-svn: 341025
These classes don't make any changes to IR and have no reason to be in
Transform/Utils. This patch moves them to Analysis folder. This will allow
us reusing these classes in some analyzes, like MustExecute.
llvm-svn: 341015
rL340921 has been reverted by rL340923 due to linkage dependency
from Transform/Utils to Analysis which is not allowed. In this patch
this has been fixed, a new utility function moved to Analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51152
llvm-svn: 341014
Summary:
This change implements the profile loading functionality in LLVM to
support XRay's profiling mode in compiler-rt.
We introduce a type named `llvm::xray::Profile` which allows building a
profile representation. We can load an XRay profile from a file to build
Profile instances, or do it manually through the Profile type's API.
The intent is to get the `llvm-xray` tool to generate `Profile`
instances and use that as the common abstraction through which all
conversion and analysis can be done. In the future we can generate
`Profile` instances from `Trace` instances as well, through conversion
functions.
Some of the key operations supported by the `Profile` API are:
- Path interning (`Profile::internPath(...)`) which returns a unique path
identifier.
- Block appending (`Profile::addBlock(...)`) to add thread-associated
profile information.
- Path ID to Path lookup (`Profile::expandPath(...)`) to look up a
PathID and return the original interned path.
- Block iteration.
A 'Path' in this context represents the function call stack in
leaf-to-root order. This is represented as a path in an internally
managed prefix tree in the `Profile` instance. Having a handle (PathID)
to identify the unique Paths we encounter for a particular Profile
allows us to reduce the amount of memory required to associate profile
data to a particular Path.
This is the first of a series of patches to migrate the `llvm-stacks`
tool towards using a single profile representation.
Depends on D48653.
Reviewers: kpw, eizan
Reviewed By: kpw
Subscribers: kpw, thakis, mgorny, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48370
llvm-svn: 341012
Variables declared with the dllimport attribute are accessed via a
stub variable named __imp_<var>. In MinGW configurations, variables that
aren't declared with a dllimport attribute might still end up imported
from another DLL with runtime pseudo relocs.
For x86_64, this avoids the risk that the target is out of range
for a 32 bit PC relative reference, in case the target DLL is loaded
further than 4 GB from the reference. It also avoids having to make the
text section writable at runtime when doing the runtime fixups, which
makes it worthwhile to do for i386 as well.
Add stub variables for all dso local data references where a definition
of the variable isn't visible within the module, since the DLL data
autoimporting might make them imported even though they are marked as
dso local within LLVM.
Don't do this for variables that actually are defined within the same
module, since we then know for sure that it actually is dso local.
Don't do this for references to functions, since there's no need for
runtime pseudo relocations for autoimporting them; if a function from
a different DLL is called without the appropriate dllimport attribute,
the call just gets routed via a thunk instead.
GCC does something similar since 4.9 (when compiling with -mcmodel=medium
or large; from that version, medium is the default code model for x86_64
mingw), but only for x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51288
llvm-svn: 340942
We have multiple places in code where we try to identify whether or not
some instruction is a guard. This patch factors out this logic into a separate
utility function which works uniformly in all places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51152
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 340921
This patch creates file GuardUtils which will contain logic for work with guards
that can be shared across different passes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51151
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 340914
These aren't used in tree and the number of operands in the type profile is wrong. X86 uses its own ISD opcode and type profile after op legalization.
llvm-svn: 340899
Now that we create the label at the point of the directive, we don't
need to set the "current CV location", and then later when we emit the
next instruction, create a label for it and emit it.
DWARF still defers the labels used in .debug_loc until the next
instruction or value, for reasons unknown.
llvm-svn: 340883
The new method name/behavior more closely models the way it was being used.
It also fixes an assertion that can occur when using the new ORC Core APIs,
where flags alone don't necessarily provide enough context to decide whether
the caller is responsible for materializing a given symbol (which was always
the reason this API existed).
The default implementation of getResponsibilitySet uses lookupFlags to determine
responsibility as before, so existing JITSymbolResolvers should continue to
work.
llvm-svn: 340874
Moving PassTimingInfo from legacy pass manager code into a separate header.
Making it suitable for both legacy and new pass manager.
Adding a test on -time-passes main functionality.
llvm-svn: 340872
The addObjectFile method adds the given object file to the JIT session, making
its code available for execution.
Support for the -extra-object flag is added to lli when operating in
-jit-kind=orc-lazy mode to support testing of this feature.
llvm-svn: 340870
These are intrinsics for supporting kadd builtins in clang. These builtins are already in gcc to implement intrinsics from icc. Though they are missing from the Intel Intrinsics Guide.
This instruction adds two mask registers together as if they were scalar rather than a vXi1. We might be able to get away with a bitcast to scalar and a normal add instruction, but that would require DAG combine smarts in the backend to recoqnize add+bitcast. For now I'd prefer to go with the easiest implementation so we can get these builtins in to clang with good codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51370
llvm-svn: 340869
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51197
Currently, IRTranslator (and GISel) seems to be arbitrarily picking
which overflow intrinsics get mapped into opcodes which either have a
carry as an input or not.
For intrinsics such as Intrinsic::uadd_with_overflow, translate it to an
opcode (G_UADDO) which doesn't have any carry inputs (similar to LLVM
IR).
This patch adds 4 missing opcodes for completeness - G_UADDO, G_USUBO,
G_SSUBE and G_SADDE.
llvm-svn: 340865
ImmutableList used to require elements to have a copy constructor for no
good reason, this patch aims to fix this.
It also required but did not enforce its elements to be trivially
destructible, so a new static_assert is added to guard against misuse.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49985
llvm-svn: 340824
We have a class `ImplicitControlFlowTracking` which allows us to keep track of
instructions that can abnormally exit and answer queries like "whether or not
there is side-exiting instruction above this instruction in its block".
We may want to have the similar tracking for other types of "special" instructions,
for example instructions that write memory.
This patch separates ImplicitControlFlowTracking into two classes, isolating all
general logic not related to implicit control flow into its parent class. We can
later make another child of this class to keep track of instructions that write
memory.
The motivation for that is that we want to make these checks efficiently in the
patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D50891.
NOTE: The naming of the parent class is not super cool, but the other options we
have are hardly better. Please feel free to rename it as NFC if you think you've
found a more informative name for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50954
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 340728
The existing method is protected, and requires using DataRefImpl
and SmallVector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50995
llvm-svn: 340725
I noticed this along with the patterns in D51125, but when the index is variable,
we don't convert insertelement into a build_vector.
For x86, that means these get expanded at legalization time into the loading/spilling
code that we see in the tests. I think it's always better to avoid going to memory on
these, and we get the optimal 'broadcast' if it's available.
I suspect other targets may want to look at enabling the hook. AArch64 and AMDGPU have
regression tests that would be affected (although I did not check what would happen in
those cases). In the most basic cases shown here, AArch64 would probably do much
better with a splat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51186
llvm-svn: 340705
This is a bit awkward in a handful of places where we didn't even have
an instruction and now we have to see if we can build one. But on the
whole, this seems like a win and at worst a reasonable cost for removing
`TerminatorInst`.
All of this is part of the removal of `TerminatorInst` from the
`Instruction` type hierarchy.
llvm-svn: 340701
`isExceptionalTermiantor` and implement it for opcodes as well following
the common pattern in `Instruction`.
Part of removing `TerminatorInst` from the `Instruction` type hierarchy
to make it easier to share logic and interfaces between instructions
that are both terminators and not terminators.
llvm-svn: 340699
The core get and set routines move to the `Instruction` class. These
routines are only valid to call on instructions which are terminators.
The iterator and *generic* range based access move to `CFG.h` where all
the other generic successor and predecessor access lives. While moving
the iterator here, simplify it using the iterator utilities LLVM
provides and updates coding style as much as reasonable. The APIs remain
pointer-heavy when they could better use references, and retain the odd
behavior of `operator*` and `operator->` that is common in LLVM
iterators. Adjusting this API, if desired, should be a follow-up step.
Non-generic range iteration is added for the two instructions where
there is an especially easy mechanism and where there was code
attempting to use the range accessor from a specific subclass:
`indirectbr` and `br`. In both cases, the successors are contiguous
operands and can be easily iterated via the operand list.
This is the first major patch in removing the `TerminatorInst` type from
the IR's instruction type hierarchy. This change was discussed in an RFC
here and was pretty clearly positive:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123407.html
There will be a series of much more mechanical changes following this
one to complete this move.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47467
llvm-svn: 340698
Summary:
Previously the value being stored is the last operand in SDNode. This causes the type legalizer to visit the mask operand before the value operand. The type legalizer was more complicated because of this since we want the type of the value to drive the decisions.
This patch moves the value to be the first operand so we visit it first during type legalization. It also simplifies the type legalization code accordingly.
X86 is currently the only in tree target that uses this SDNode. Not sure if there are any users out of tree.
Reviewers: RKSimon, delena, hfinkel, eli.friedman
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50402
llvm-svn: 340689
Summary:
Patch by Marek Olsak and David Stuttard, both of AMD.
This adds a new amdgcn intrinsic supporting s.buffer.load, in particular
multiple dword variants. These are convenient to use from some front-end
implementations.
Also modified the existing llvm.SI.load.const intrinsic to common up the
underlying implementation.
This modification also requires that we can lower to non-uniform loads correctly
by splitting larger dword variants into sizes supported by the non-uniform
versions of the load.
V2: Addressed minor review comments.
V3: i1 glc is now i32 cachepolicy for consistency with buffer and
tbuffer intrinsics, plus fixed formatting issue.
V4: Added glc test.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51098
Change-Id: I83a6e00681158bb243591a94a51c7baa445f169b
llvm-svn: 340684
HermitCore is a POSIX-compatible kernel for running a single application in an isolated environment to get maximum performance and predictable runtime behavior. It can either be used bare-metal on hardware or a VM (Unikernel) or side by side to an existing Linux system (Multikernel).
Due to the latter feature, HermitCore binaries are marked with ELFOSABI_STANDALONE to let the Linux ELF loader distinguish them from regular Unix/Linux binaries and load them using the HermitCore "proxy" tool.
Patch by Colin Finck!
llvm-svn: 340675
demangling process when it does.
Use this to support a "lookup" query for the mangling canonicalizer that
does not create new nodes. This could also be used to implement
demangling with a fixed-size temporary storage buffer.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51003
llvm-svn: 340670
This node doesn't directly correspond to a mangled name fragment, so
it's useful to explicitly describe when it's created and what it's for.
llvm-svn: 340664
Summary:
Given a set of equivalent name fragments, this mechanism determines whether two
mangled names are equivalent. The intent is to use this for fuzzy matching of
profile data against the program after certain refactorings are performed.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, dlj
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50935
llvm-svn: 340663
The way that PhiValues is integrated with BasicAA it is possible for a pass
which uses BasicAA to pick up an instance of BasicAA that uses PhiValues without
intending to, and then delete values from a function in a way that causes
PhiValues to return dangling pointers to these deleted values. Fix this by
having a set of callback value handles to invalidate values when they're
deleted.
llvm-svn: 340613
This adds a new method to ELFObjectFileBase that returns the symbols and addresses of PLT entries.
This design was suggested by pcc and eugenis in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49383.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50203
llvm-svn: 340610
This patch makes the DoesKMove argument non-optional, to force people
to think about it. Most cases where it is false are either code hoisting
or code sinking, where we pick one instruction from a set of
equal instructions among different code paths.
Reviewers: dberlin, nlopes, efriedma, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47475
llvm-svn: 340606
This patch splits the file trace loading function into two versions, one
that takes a filename and one that takes a `DataExtractor`.
This change is a precursor to larger changes to increase test coverage
for the trace loading implementation.
llvm-svn: 340603
Having the KnownBits as an output parameter is kind of awkward to use
and a holdover from when it was two separate APInts. Instead, just
return a KnownBits object.
I'm leaving the existing interface in place for now, since updating
the callers all at once would be thousands of lines of diff.
llvm-svn: 340594
Fix a set of related bugs:
* Considering two locations as equivalent when their lines are the same
but their scopes are different causes erroneous debug info that
attributes a commoned call to be attributed to one of the two calls it
was commoned from.
* The previous code to compute a new location's scope was inaccurate and
would use the inlinedAt that was the /parent/ of the inlinedAt that is
the nearest common one, and also used that parent scope instead of the
nearest common scope.
* Not generating new locations generally seemed like a lower quality
choice
There was some risk that generating more new locations could hurt object
size by making more fine grained line table entries, but it looks like
that was offset by the decrease in line table (& address & ranges) size
caused by more accurately computing the scope - which likely lead to
fewer range entries (more contiguous ranges) & reduced size that way.
All up with these changes I saw minor reductions (-1.21%, -1.77%) in
.rela.debug_ranges and .rela.debug_addr (in a fission, compressed debug
info build) as well as other minor size changes (generally reductinos)
across the board (-1.32% debug_info.dwo, -1.28% debug_loc.dwo). Measured
in an optimized (-O2) build of the clang binary.
If you are investigating a size regression in an optimized debug builds,
this is certainly a patch to look into - and I'd be happy to look into
any major regressions found & see what we can do to address them.
llvm-svn: 340583
In order for more complex updates of MSSA to happen (e.g. those in
D45299), MemoryDefs need to be actual `Use`s of what they're optimized
to. This patch makes that happen.
In addition, this patch changes our optimization behavior for Defs
slightly: we'll now consider a Def optimization invalid if the
MemoryAccess it's optimized to changes. That we weren't doing this
before was a bug, but given that we were tracking these with a WeakVH
before, it was sort of difficult for that to matter.
We're already have both of these behaviors for MemoryUses. The
difference is that a MemoryUse's defining access is always its optimized
access, and defining accesses are always `Use`s (in the LLVM sense).
Nothing exploded when testing a stage3 clang+llvm locally, so...
This also includes the test-case promised in r340461.
llvm-svn: 340577
Summary:
Remove the use of pair inside the tuple in concat_iterator, and create separate begins and ends tuples instead.
This fixes the failure for llvm <= 3.7 and libstd++ that broke the hexagon build.
Reviewers: timshen
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, dexonsmith, kparzysz, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51067
llvm-svn: 340567
These changes expand the FunctionAttr logic in order to mark functions as
WriteOnly when appropriate. This is done through an additional bool variable
and extended logic.
Reviewers: hfinkel, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48387
llvm-svn: 340537
Both DWARFDebugLine and DWARFDebugAddr used the same callback mechanism
for handling recoverable errors. They both implemented similar warn() function
to be used as such callbacks.
In this revision we get rid of code duplication and move this warn() function
to DWARFContext as DWARFContext::dumpWarning().
Reviewers: lhames, jhenderson, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie, JDevlieghere
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51033
llvm-svn: 340528
This version of the patch fixes cleaning up ssa_copy intrinsics, so it does not
crash for instructions in blocks that have been marked unreachable.
This patch updates IPSCCP to use PredicateInfo to propagate
facts to true branches predicated by EQ and to false branches
predicated by NE.
As a follow up, we should be able to extend it to also propagate additional
facts about nonnull.
Reviewers: davide, mssimpso, dberlin, efriedma
Reviewed By: davide, dberlin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45330
llvm-svn: 340525
Most users won't have to worry about this as all of the
'getOrInsertFunction' functions on Module will default to the program
address space.
An overload has been added to Function::Create to abstract away the
details for most callers.
This is based on https://reviews.llvm.org/D37054 but without the changes to
make passing a Module to Function::Create() mandatory. I have also added
some more tests and fixed the LLParser to accept call instructions for
types in the program address space.
Reviewed By: bjope
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47541
llvm-svn: 340519
This patch's test case relies on debug prints which isn't generally an
OK way to test stuff in LLVM and fails whenever asserts aren't enabled.
I've send a heads-up to the commit and detailed comments on the review.
llvm-svn: 340513
In lib/CodeGen/LiveDebugVariables.cpp, it uses std::prev(MBBI) to
get DebugValue's SlotIndex. However, the previous instruction may be
also a debug instruction. It could not use a debug instruction to query
SlotIndex in mi2iMap.
Scan all debug instructions and use the first debug instruction to query
SlotIndex for following debug instructions. Only handle DBG_VALUE in
handleDebugValue().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50621
llvm-svn: 340508
We're currently getting this behavior implicitly, since we determine if
a Def's optimization is valid based on the ID of its defining access.
This is incorrect, though I wouldn't be surprised if this was masked in
part by that we're using a WeakVH to track what Defs are optimized to.
(Not to mention that we don't move Defs super often, AFAICT). I'll
submit a patch to fix this shortly.
This also includes a minor refactor to reduce duplication a bit.
No test is included, since like said, this already happens to be our
behavior. I'll add a test for this with my fix to the other bug
mentioned above.
llvm-svn: 340461
The inline sequence is very long (about 70 bytes on Thumb1), so it's
not really a good idea to inline it, especially when optimizing for
size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47917
llvm-svn: 340458
Add support for reading and writing MessagePack, a binary object serialization
format which aims to be more compact than text formats like JSON or YAML.
The specification can be found at
https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack/blob/master/spec.md
Will be used for encoding metadata in AMDGPU code objects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44429
llvm-svn: 340457
We're calling these functions quite a bit from outside of MemorySSA.cpp
now. Given that they're relatively simple one-liners, I think the style
preference is to have them inline.
llvm-svn: 340430
This adds the plumbing for the Tiny code model for the AArch64 backend. This,
instead of loading addresses through the normal ADRP;ADD pair used in the Small
model, uses a single ADR. The 21 bit range of an ADR means that the code and
its statically defined symbols need to be within 1MB of each other.
This makes it mostly interesting for embedded applications where we want to fit
as much as we can in as small a space as possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49673
llvm-svn: 340397
Summary:
This patch moves out the definition of the XRay log file header from
binary logs into its own header and implementation file.
This is one part of the refactoring being done in D50441.
Reviewers: eizan
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51086
llvm-svn: 340389
Summary:
Computing the remaining latency can be very expensive especially
on graphs of N nodes where the number of edges approaches N^2.
This reduces the compile time of a pathological case with the
AMDGPU backend from ~7.5 seconds to ~3 seconds. This test case has
a basic block with 2655 stores, each with somewhere between 500
and 1500 successors and predecessors.
Reviewers: atrick, MatzeB, airlied, mareko
Reviewed By: mareko
Subscribers: tpr, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50486
llvm-svn: 340346
Summary:
So far, `isReturn` property is used to mean both a return instruction
from a functon and the end of an EH scope, a scope that starts with a EH
scope entry BB and ends with a catchret or a cleanupret instruction.
Because WinEH uses funclets, all EH-scope-ending instructions are also
real return instruction from a function. But for wasm, they only serve
as the end marker of an EH scope but not a return instruction that
exits a function. This mismatch caused incorrect prolog and epilog
generation in wasm EH scopes. This patch fixes this.
This patch is in the same vein with rL333045, which splits
`MachineBasicBlock::isEHFuncletEntry` into `isEHFuncletEntry` and
`isEHScopeEntry`.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50653
llvm-svn: 340325
Volatility is not an aliasing property. We used to model volatile as if it had extremely conservative aliasing implications, but that hasn't been true for several years now. So, it doesn't make sense to be in AliasSet.
It also turns out the code is entirely a noop. Outside of the AST code to update it, there was only one user: load store promotion in LICM. L/S promotion doesn't need the check since it walks all the users of the address anyway. It already checks each load or store via !isUnordered which causes us to bail for volatile accesses. (Look at the lines immediately following the two remove asserts.)
There is the possibility of some small compile time impact here, but the only case which will get noticeably slower is a loop with a large number of loads and stores to the same address where only the last one we inspect is volatile. This is sufficiently rare it's not worth optimizing for..
llvm-svn: 340312
This reverts commit d1341152d91398e9a882ba2ee924147ea2f9b589.
This patch originally made use of Nested MachineIRBuilder buildInstr
calls, and since order of argument processing is not well defined, the
instructions were built slightly in a different order (still correct).
I've removed the nested buildInstr calls to have a defined order now.
Patch was tested by Mikael.
llvm-svn: 340309
A future change in clang necessitates access of this information
from the driver, so move this into a common place.
Try to mimic something resembling the API the other targets are
using here.
One thing I'm uncertain about is how to split amdgcn and r600
handling. Here I've mostly duplicated the functions for each,
while keeping the same enums. I think this is a bit awkward
for the features which don't matter for amdgcn.
It's also a bit messy that this isn't a complete set of
subtarget features. This is just the minimum set needed
for the driver code. For example building the list of
subtarget feature names is still in clang.
llvm-svn: 340291
Summary:
Previously the new llvm.amdgcn.raw/struct.buffer.load/store intrinsics
only allowed float types for the data to be loaded or stored, which
sometimes meant the frontend needed to generate a bitcast. In this, the
new intrinsics copied the old buffer intrinsics.
This commit extends the new intrinsics to allow int types as well.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50315
Change-Id: I8202af2d036455553681dcbb3d7d32ae273f8f85
llvm-svn: 340270
Summary:
This commit adds new intrinsics
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load.format
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load.format
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store.format
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store.format
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.atomic.*
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.atomic.*
with the following changes from the llvm.amdgcn.buffer.*
intrinsics:
* there are separate raw and struct versions: raw does not have an
index arg and sets idxen=0 in the instruction, and struct always sets
idxen=1 in the instruction even if the index is 0, to allow for the
fact that gfx9 does bounds checking differently depending on whether
idxen is set;
* there is a combined cachepolicy arg (glc+slc)
* there are now only two offset args: one for the offset that is
included in bounds checking and swizzling, to be split between the
instruction's voffset and immoffset fields, and one for the offset
that is excluded from bounds checking and swizzling, to go into the
instruction's soffset field.
The AMDISD::BUFFER_* SD nodes always have an index operand, all three
offset operands, combined cachepolicy operand, and an extra idxen
operand.
The obsolescent llvm.amdgcn.buffer.* intrinsics continue to work.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50306
Change-Id: If897ea7dc34fcbf4d5496e98cc99a934f62fc205
llvm-svn: 340269
Summary:
This commit adds new intrinsics
llvm.amdgcn.raw.tbuffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.struct.tbuffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.raw.tbuffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.struct.tbuffer.store
with the following changes from the llvm.amdgcn.tbuffer.* intrinsics:
* there are separate raw and struct versions: raw does not have an index
arg and sets idxen=0 in the instruction, and struct always sets
idxen=1 in the instruction even if the index is 0, to allow for the
fact that gfx9 does bounds checking differently depending on whether
idxen is set;
* there is a combined format arg (dfmt+nfmt)
* there is a combined cachepolicy arg (glc+slc)
* there are now only two offset args: one for the offset that is
included in bounds checking and swizzling, to be split between the
instruction's voffset and immoffset fields, and one for the offset
that is excluded from bounds checking and swizzling, to go into the
instruction's soffset field.
The AMDISD::TBUFFER_* SD nodes always have an index operand, all three
offset operands, combined format operand, combined cachepolicy operand,
and an extra idxen operand.
The tbuffer pseudo- and real instructions now also have a combined
format operand.
The obsolescent llvm.amdgcn.tbuffer.* and llvm.SI.tbuffer.store
intrinsics continue to work.
V2: Separate raw and struct intrinsics.
V3: Moved extract_glc and extract_slc defs to a more sensible place.
V4: Rebased on D49995.
V5: Only two separate offset args instead of three.
V6: Pseudo- and real instructions have joint format operand.
V7: Restored optionality of dfmt and nfmt in assembler.
V8: Addressed minor review comments.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49026
Change-Id: If22ad77e349fac3a5d2f72dda53c010377d470d4
llvm-svn: 340268
Summary:
We decided to revert this from i64 to i32 in Nov 28 CG meeting. Fixes
PR38632.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51010
llvm-svn: 340234
Summary:
This transforms the Itanium demangler into a generic reusable library that can
be used to build, traverse, and transform Itanium mangled name trees.
This is in preparation for adding a canonicalizing demangler, which
cannot live in the Demangle library for layering reasons. In order to
keep the diffs simpler, this patch moves more code to the new header
than is strictly necessary: in particular, all of the printLeft /
printRight implementations can be moved to the implementation file.
(And indeed we could make them non-virtual now if we wished, and remove
the vptr from Node.)
All nodes are now included in the Kind enumeration, rather than omitting
some of the Expr nodes, and the three different floating-point literal
node types now have distinct Kind values.
As a proof of concept for the visitation / matching mechanism, this
patch implements a Node dumping facility on top of it, replacing the
prior mechanism that produced the pretty-printed output rather than a
tree dump. Sample dump output:
FunctionEncoding(
NameType("int"),
NameWithTemplateArgs(
NestedName(
NameWithTemplateArgs(
NameType("A"),
TemplateArgs(
{NameType("B")})),
NameType("f")),
TemplateArgs(
{NameType("int")})),
{},
<null>,
QualConst, FunctionRefQual::FrefQualLValue)
As a next step, it would make sense to move the LLVM high-level interface to
the demangler (the itaniumDemangler function and ItaniumPartialDemangler class)
into the Support library, and implement them in terms of the Demangle library.
This would allow the libc++abi demangler implementation to be an identical copy
of the llvm Demangle library, and would allow the LLVM implementation to reuse
LLVM components such as llvm::BumpPtrAllocator, but we'll need to decide how to
coordinate that with the MS ABI demangler, so I'm not doing that in this patch.
No functionality change intended other than the behavior of dump().
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, zturner, chandlerc, dlj
Subscribers: aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50930
llvm-svn: 340203
getTargetCustom() requires values for "Kind" in the constructor
that are not in the PSVKind enum. Passing a value that is not inside
an enum as an argument to a constructor of the type of the enum is
UB. Changing to the underlying type of the enum would solve the UB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50909
llvm-svn: 340200
This reverts commit 7debc334e6421bb5251ef8f18e97166dfc7dd787.
I missed updating legalizer-info-validation.mir as I had assertions
turned off in my build and that specific test requires asserts. Fixed it
now.
llvm-svn: 340197
Since crash dumping landed in r268519, May 2016, I have not once seen
anyone use an uploaded minidump to debug a compiler crash. Therefore,
I'm turning this off by default. The dumps clutter up user and buildbot
temp directories. Each file is only about 56KB, but it adds up.
In the context of clang, the extra line about the minidump confuses
users, when what we really want from them is the pre-processed source
code.
llvm-svn: 340185
DWARF-related classes in lib/DebugInfo/DWARF contained
duplicating code for creating StringError instances, like:
template <typename... Ts>
static Error createError(char const *Fmt, const Ts &... Vals) {
std::string Buffer;
raw_string_ostream Stream(Buffer);
Stream << format(Fmt, Vals...);
return make_error<StringError>(Stream.str(), inconvertibleErrorCode());
}
Similar function was placed in Support lib in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49824
This revision makes DWARF classes use this function
instead of their local implementation of it.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson, wolfgangp, JDevlieghere, jhenderson
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49964
llvm-svn: 340163
This patch significantly improves performance of the YAML serializer by
optimizing `YAML::isNumeric` function. This function is called on the
most strings and is highly inefficient for two reasons:
* It uses `Regex`, which is parsed and compiled each time this
function is called
* It uses multiple passes which are not necessary
This patch introduces stateful ad hoc YAML number parser which does not
rely on `Regex`. It also fixes YAML number format inconsistency: current
implementation supports C-stile octal number format (`01234567`) which
was present in YAML 1.0 specialization (http://yaml.org/spec/1.0/),
[Section 2.4. Tags, Example 2.19] but was deprecated and is no longer
present in latest YAML 1.2 specification
(http://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html), see [Section 10.3.2. Tag
Resolution]. Since the rest of the rest of the implementation does not
support other deprecated YAML 1.0 numeric features such as sexagecimal
numbers, commas as delimiters it is treated as inconsistency and not
longer supported. This patch also adds unit tests to ensure the validity
of proposed implementation.
This performance bottleneck was identified while profiling Clangd's
global-symbol-builder tool with my colleague @ilya-biryukov. The
substantial part of the runtime was spent during a single-thread Reduce
phase, which concludes with YAML serialization of collected symbol
collection. Regex matching was accountable for approximately 45% of the
whole runtime (which involves sharded Map phase), now it is reduced to
18% (which is spent in `clang::clangd::CanonicalIncludes` and can be
also optimized because all used regexes are in fact either suffix
matches or exact matches).
`llvm-yaml-numeric-parser-fuzzer` was used to ensure the validity of the
proposed regex replacement. Fuzzing for ~60 hours using 10 threads did
not expose any bugs.
Benchmarking `global-symbol-builder` (using `hyperfine --warmup 2
--min-runs 5 'command 1' 'command 2'`) tool by processing a reasonable
amount of code (26 source files matched by
`clang-tools-extra/clangd/*.cpp` with all transitive includes) confirmed
our understanding of the performance bottleneck nature as it speeds up
the command by the factor of 1.6x:
| Command | Mean [s] | Min…Max [s] |
| this patch (D50839) | 84.7 ± 0.6 | 83.3…84.7 |
| master (rL339849) | 133.1 ± 0.8 | 132.4…134.6 |
Using smaller samples (e.g. by collecting symbols from
`clang-tools-extra/clangd/AST.cpp` only) yields even better performance
improvement, which is expected because Map phase takes less time
compared to Reduce and is 2.05x faster and therefore would significantly
improve the performance of standalone YAML serializations.
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min…Max [ms] |
| this patch (D50839) | 3702.2 ± 48.7 | 3635.1…3752.3 |
| master (rL339849) | 7607.6 ± 109.5 | 7533.3…7796.4 |
Reviewed by: zturner, ilya-biryukov
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50839
llvm-svn: 340154
Added DIFlags in LLVMDIBuilderCreateBasicType to add optional DWARF
attributes, such as DW_AT_endianity.
Patch by Chirag Patel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50832
llvm-svn: 340146
An emitted symbol has had its contents written and its memory protections
applied, but it is not automatically ready to execute.
Prior to ORC supporting concurrent compilation, the term "finalized" could be
interpreted two different (but effectively equivalent) ways: (1) The finalized
symbol's contents have been written and its memory protections applied, and (2)
the symbol is ready to run. Now that ORC supports concurrent compilation, sense
(1) no longer implies sense (2). We have already introduced a new term, 'ready',
to capture sense (2), so rename sense (1) to 'emitted' to avoid any lingering
confusion.
llvm-svn: 340115
VSO was a little close to VDSO (an acronym on Linux for Virtual Dynamic Shared
Object) for comfort. It also risks giving the impression that instances of this
class could be shared between ExecutionSessions, which they can not.
JITDylib seems moderately less confusing, while still hinting at how this
class is intended to be used, i.e. as a JIT-compiled stand-in for a dynamic
library (code that would have been a dynamic library if you had wanted to
compile it ahead of time).
llvm-svn: 340084
The method AliasSetTracker::getAliasSetForPointer was removed and replaced by AliasSetTracker::getAliasSetFor for the restructuring in r339930.
Since Polly uses AliasSetTracker::getAliasSetForPointer, a temporary fix has been committed in r339937 with a comment:
Can someone from polly please migrate usage and then delete the wrapper?
This commit is doing exactly that.
llvm-svn: 340072
Summary:
Create the ability to compute IDF using a CFG View.
For this, we'll need a new DT created using a list of Updates (to be refactored later to a GraphDiff), and the GraphTraits based on the same GraphDiff.
Reviewers: kuhar, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50675
llvm-svn: 340052
Summary:
Adds the option for the printing of summary information about functions
considered but rejected for importing during the thin link.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50881
llvm-svn: 340047
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 340039
NewGVN uses InstructionSimplify for simplifications of leaders of
congruence classes. It is not guaranteed that the metadata or other
flags/keywords (like nsw or exact) of the leader is available for all members
in a congruence class, so we cannot use it for simplification.
This patch adds a InstrInfoQuery struct with a boolean field
UseInstrInfo (which defaults to true to keep the current behavior as
default) and a set of helper methods to get metadata/keywords for a
given instruction, if UseInstrInfo is true. The whole thing might need a
better name, to avoid confusion with TargetInstrInfo but I am not sure
what a better name would be.
The current patch threads through InstrInfoQuery to the required
places, which is messier then it would need to be, if
InstructionSimplify and ValueTracking would share the same Query struct.
The reason I added it as a separate struct is that it can be shared
between InstructionSimplify and ValueTracking's query objects. Also,
some places do not need a full query object, just the InstrInfoQuery.
It also updates some interfaces that do not take a Query object, but a
set of optional parameters to take an additional boolean UseInstrInfo.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37540.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, efriedma, sebpop, hiraditya
Reviewed By: hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47143
llvm-svn: 340031
Add +fp16fml feature for new FP16 instructions, which are a
mandatory part of FP16 from v8.4-A and an optional part of FP16
from v8.2-A. It doesn't seem to be possible to model this in
LLVM, but the relationship between the options is handled by
the related clang patch.
In keeping with what I think is the usual practice, the fp16fml
extension is accepted regardless of base architecture version.
Builds on/replaces Sjoerd Meijer's patch to add these instructions at
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49839.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50228
llvm-svn: 340013
The description of `isGuaranteedToExecute` does not correspond to its implementation.
According to description, it should return `true` if an instruction is executed under the
assumption that its loop is *entered*. However there is a sophisticated alrogithm inside
that tries to prove that the instruction is executed if the loop is *exited*, which is not the
same thing for infinite loops. There is an attempt to protect from dealing with infinite loops
by prohibiting loops without exit blocks, however an infinite loop can have exit blocks.
As result of that, MustExecute can falsely consider some blocks that are never entered as
mustexec, and LICM can hoist dangerous instructions out of them basing on this fact.
This may introduce UB to programs which did not contain it initially.
This patch removes the problematic algorithm and replaced it with a one which tries to
prove what is required in description.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50558
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 339984
Summary:
Formerly, all timer groups were automatically cleared when printed out. In
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL324788 this behaviour was changed to not-clearing
timers on printout, to allow printing timers more than once, but as a result
clients (specifically Swift) that relied on the clear-on-print behaviour to
inhibit duplicate timer printing on shutdown were broken.
Rather than revert that change, this change adds a new API that enables
clients that _want_ to clear all timers to do so explicitly.
Reviewers: george.karpenkov, thegameg
Reviewed By: george.karpenkov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50874
llvm-svn: 339980
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50401
Add opcodes for llvm.intrinsic.trunc, round, and update the IRTranslator
for the same.
Reviewed by: dsanders.
llvm-svn: 339977
constructor.
This breaking an old/weird host compiler is my best bet for the current
crashes I'm getting from bots since this functionality was added to this
ADT.
llvm-svn: 339975
well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s.
The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to
use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch
as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it
doesn't really seem worth it.
The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is
now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed)
AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit
these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the
code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support
so that we can write useful tests.
The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the
symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However,
those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics
desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and
de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty
to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands.
The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite
straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax
similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me
use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation
like we use for memoperands.
However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to
change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary
symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things
with MIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833
llvm-svn: 339962
Thread sanitizer instrumentation fails to skip all loads and stores to
profile counters. This can happen if profile counter updates are merged:
%.sink = phi i64* ...
%pgocount5 = load i64, i64* %.sink
%27 = add i64 %pgocount5, 1
%28 = bitcast i64* %.sink to i8*
call void @__tsan_write8(i8* %28)
store i64 %27, i64* %.sink
To suppress TSan diagnostics about racy counter updates, make the
counter updates atomic when TSan is enabled. If there's general interest
in this mode it can be surfaced as a clang/swift driver option.
Testing: check-{llvm,clang,profile}
rdar://40477803
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50867
llvm-svn: 339955
Summary:
Add the posibility of creating a new DT using a set of Updates.
This will essentially create a DT based on a CFG snapshot/view.
Additional refactoring for either this patch or follow-ups:
- create an utility for building BUI.
- replace BUI with a GraphDiff.
Reviewers: kuhar
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50671
llvm-svn: 339947
a generically extensible collection of extra info attached to
a `MachineInstr`.
The primary change here is cleaning up the APIs used for setting and
manipulating the `MachineMemOperand` pointer arrays so chat we can
change how they are allocated.
Then we introduce an extra info object that using the trailing object
pattern to attach some number of MMOs but also other extra info. The
design of this is specifically so that this extra info has a fixed
necessary cost (the header tracking what extra info is included) and
everything else can be tail allocated. This pattern works especially
well with a `BumpPtrAllocator` which we use here.
I've also added the basic scaffolding for putting interesting pointers
into this, namely pre- and post-instruction symbols. These aren't used
anywhere yet, they're just there to ensure I've actually gotten the data
structure types correct. I'll flesh out support for these in
a subsequent patch (MIR dumping, parsing, the works).
Finally, I've included an optimization where we store any single pointer
inline in the `MachineInstr` to avoid the allocation overhead. This is
expected to be the overwhelmingly most common case and so should avoid
any memory usage growth due to slightly less clever / dense allocation
when dealing with >1 MMO. This did require several ergonomic
improvements to the `PointerSumType` to reasonably support the various
usage models.
This also has a side effect of freeing up 8 bits within the
`MachineInstr` which could be repurposed for something else.
The suggested direction here came largely from Hal Finkel. I hope it was
worth it. ;] It does hopefully clear a path for subsequent extensions
w/o nearly as much leg work. Lots of thanks to Reid and Justin for
careful reviews and ideas about how to do all of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50701
llvm-svn: 339940
In cases where the debugger load time is a worthwhile tradeoff (or less
costly - such as loading from a DWP instead of a variety of DWOs
(possibly over a high-latency/distributed filesystem)) against object
file size, it can be reasonable to disable pubnames and corresponding
gdb-index creation in the linker.
A backend-flag version of this was implemented for NVPTX in
D44385/r327994 - which was fine for NVPTX which wouldn't mix-and-match
CUs. Now that it's going to be a user-facing option (likely powered by
"-gno-pubnames", the same as GCC) it should be encoded in the
DICompileUnit so it can vary per-CU.
After this, likely the NVPTX support should be migrated to the metadata
& the previous flag implementation should be removed.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50213
llvm-svn: 339939
I don't have polly setup to bulld locally and don't plan to. This should let the old API adapt to the new one. Can someone from polly please migrate usage and then delete the wrapper?
llvm-svn: 339937
Main value is just simplifying code. I'll further simply the argument handling case in a bit, but that involved a slightly orthogonal change so I went with the mildy ugly intermediate for this patch.
Note that the isSized check in the old LICM code was not carried across. It turns out that check was dead. a) no test exercised it, and b) langref and verifier had been updated to disallow unsized types used in loads.
llvm-svn: 339930
Summary:
This prefix was added in r333421, and it changed our dumper output to
say things like "CVRegEAX" instead of just "EAX". That's a functional
change that I'd rather avoid.
I tested GCC, Clang, and MSVC, and all of them support #pragma
push_macro. They don't issue warnings whem the macro is not defined
either.
I don't have a Mac so I can't test the real termios.h header, but I
looked at the termios.h sources online and looked for other conflicts.
I saw only the CR* macros, so those are the ones we work around.
Reviewers: zturner, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50851
llvm-svn: 339907
Allow the comparison of x86 registers in the evaluation of assembler
directives. This generalizes and simplifies the extension from r334022
to catch another case found in the Linux kernel.
Reviewers: rnk, void
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, nickdesaulniers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50795
llvm-svn: 339895
When compiling with /arch:AVX512 and optimizations turned on,
we could crash while emitting debug info because we did not
have CodeView register constants for the AVX 512 register
set defined. This patch defines them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50819
llvm-svn: 339893
When emitting the difference between two symbols, the standard behavior is
that the difference will be resolved to an absolute value if both of the
symbols are offsets from the same data fragment. This is undesirable on
architectures such as RISC-V where relaxation in the linker may cause the
computed difference to become invalid. This caused an issue when compiling to
object code, where the size of a function in the debug information was already
calculated even though it could change as a consequence of relaxation in the
subsequent linking stage.
This patch inhibits the resolution of symbol differences to absolute values
where the target's AsmBackend has declared that it does not want these to be
folded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45773
Patch by Edward Jones.
llvm-svn: 339864
The windows SDK defines WORD_MAX, so any poor soul that wants to use LLVM in a project that depends on the windows SDK gets a build error.
Given that it actually describes the maximal value of WordType, it actually fits even better than WORD_MAX
Patch by: @miscco
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50777
llvm-svn: 339863
Summary:
The C-API supports consuming errors, converting an error to a string error
message, and querying an error's type. Other LLVM C APIs that wish to use
llvm::Error can supply error-type-id checkers and custom
error-to-structured-type converters for any custom errors they provide.
Reviewers: bogner, zturner, labath, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50716
llvm-svn: 339802
Summary: Expose VerifyMemorySSA as a debug option. If set, passes will call the MSSA->verifyMemorySSA() after calling into the updater's APIs when MemorySSA should be valid.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50749
llvm-svn: 339795
`MachineMemOperand` pointers attached to `MachineSDNodes` and instead
have the `SelectionDAG` fully manage the memory for this array.
Prior to this change, the memory management was deeply confusing here --
The way the MI was built relied on the `SelectionDAG` allocating memory
for these arrays of pointers using the `MachineFunction`'s allocator so
that the raw pointer to the array could be blindly copied into an
eventual `MachineInstr`. This creates a hard coupling between how
`MachineInstr`s allocate their array of `MachineMemOperand` pointers and
how the `MachineSDNode` does.
This change is motivated in large part by a change I am making to how
`MachineFunction` allocates these pointers, but it seems like a layering
improvement as well.
This would run the risk of increasing allocations overall, but I've
implemented an optimization that should avoid that by storing a single
`MachineMemOperand` pointer directly instead of allocating anything.
This is expected to be a net win because the vast majority of uses of
these only need a single pointer.
As a side-effect, this makes the API for updating a `MachineSDNode` and
a `MachineInstr` reasonably different which seems nice to avoid
unexpected coupling of these two layers. We can map between them, but we
shouldn't be *surprised* at where that occurs. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50680
llvm-svn: 339740
Intentionally excluding nodes from the DAGCombine worklist is likely to
lead to weird optimizations and infinite loops, so it's generally a bad
idea.
To avoid the infinite loops, fix DAGCombine to use the
isDesirableToCommuteWithShift target hook before performing the
transforms in question, and implement the target hook in the ARM backend
disable the transforms in question.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38530 . (I don't have a
reduced testcase for that bug. But we should have sufficient test
coverage for PerformSHLSimplify given that we're not playing weird
tricks with the worklist. I can try to bugpoint it if necessary,
though.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50667
llvm-svn: 339734
Summary:
Fix module build after r339694.
Add headers needed in CFGUpdate.h.
Add CFGDiff.h in the list of delayed headers for LLVM_intrinsic_gen.
Up for post-commit review.
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50734
llvm-svn: 339724
Flags in DIBasicType will be used to pass attributes used in
DW_TAG_base_type, such as DW_AT_endianity.
Patch by Chirag Patel!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49610
llvm-svn: 339714
This patch removes redundant template argument `TargetName` from TIIPredicate.
Tablegen can always infer the target name from the context. So we don't need to
force users of TIIPredicate to always specify it.
This allows us to better modularize the tablegen class hierarchy for the
so-called "function predicates". class FunctionPredicateBase has been added; it
is currently used as a building block for TIIPredicates. However, I plan to
reuse that class to model other function predicate classes too (i.e. not just
TIIPredicates). For example, this can be a first step towards implementing
proper support for dependency breaking instructions in tablegen.
This patch also adds a verification step on TIIPredicates in tablegen.
We cannot have multiple TIIPredicates with the same name. Otherwise, this will
cause build errors later on, when tablegen'd .inc files are included by cpp
files and then compiled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50708
llvm-svn: 339706
Summary:
Treating a graph in reverse is a property of the GraphDiff and should instead be a template argument, just like IsPostDom is one for DomTrees.
If it's just an argument to all methods, we could have mismatches between the constructor of the GraphDiff which may reverse the updates when filtering them, and the calls retrieving the filtered delete/insert updates.
Also, since this will be used in IDF, where we're using a DomTree, this creates a cleaner interface for the GraphTraits to use the existing template argument of DomTreeBase.
Separate patch from the one adding GraphDiff, so get a clear diff of what changed.
Reviewers: timshen, kuhar
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, jlebar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50687
llvm-svn: 339699
Summary:
Clean-up following D50479.
Make Update and LegalizeUpdate refer to the utilities in Support/CFGUpdate.
Reviewers: kuhar
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50669
llvm-svn: 339694
Summary:
Certain passes or analysis need to view a CFG snapshot rather than the actual CFG. This patch provides GraphTraits to offer such a view.
The patch defines GraphTraits for BasicBlock* and Inverse<BasicBlock*> to provide CFG successors and predecessors based on a list of CFG updates.
An Update is defined as a triple {InsertOrDeleteKind, BlockStartOfEdge, BlockEndOfEdge}.
A GraphDiff is defined as a list of Updates that has been preprocessed to treat the CFG as a graph rather than a multi-graph. As such, there can only exist a single Update given two nodes. All duplicates will be filtered and Insert/Delete edges that cancel out will be ignored.
The methods GraphDiff exposes are:
- Determine if an existing child needs to be ignored, i.e. an Update exists in the correct direction to assume the removal of that edge.
- Return a list of new children to be considered, i.e. an Update exists in the correct direction for each child in the list to assume the insertion of that edge.
Reviewers: timshen, kuhar, chandlerc
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50479
llvm-svn: 339689
There are two forms for label debug information in DWARF format.
1. Labels in a non-inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_name
DW_AT_decl_file
DW_AT_decl_line
DW_AT_low_pc
2. Labels in an inlined function:
DW_TAG_label
DW_AT_abstract_origin
DW_AT_low_pc
We will collect label information from DBG_LABEL. Before every DBG_LABEL,
we will generate a temporary symbol to denote the location of the label.
The symbol could be used to get DW_AT_low_pc afterwards. So, we create a
mapping between 'inlined label' and DBG_LABEL MachineInstr in DebugHandlerBase.
The DBG_LABEL in the mapping is used to query the symbol before it.
The AbstractLabels in DwarfCompileUnit is used to process labels in inlined
functions.
We also keep a mapping between scope and labels in DwarfFile to help to
generate correct tree structure of DIEs.
It also generates label debug information under global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45556
llvm-svn: 339676
Summary: This revision improves previous version (rL330322) which has been reverted due to crashes.
This is the patch that lowers x86 intrinsics to native IR
in order to enable optimizations. The patch also includes folding
of previously missing saturation patterns so that IR emits the same
machine instructions as the intrinsics.
Reviewers: craig.topper, spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: mike.dvoretsky, DavidKreitzer, sroland, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46179
llvm-svn: 339650
Summary:
Add an overload to sys::fs::setLastModificationAndAccessTime that allows setting last access and modification times separately. This will allow tools to use this API when they want to preserve both the access and modification times from an input file, which may be different.
Also note that both the POSIX (futimens/futimes) and Windows (SetFileTime) APIs take the two timestamps in the order of (1) access (2) modification time, so this renames the method to "setLastAccessAndModificationTime" to make it clear which timestamp is which.
For existing callers, the 1-arg overload just sets both timestamps to the same thing.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50521
llvm-svn: 339628
This is a very partial fix for the reported problem. I suspect
we do not get this fold in most motivating cases because most of
the time, the libcall would have been replaced by an intrinsic,
and that optimization is handled elsewhere...but maybe it should
be handled here?
llvm-svn: 339604
This function calls a callback whenever a <type> is parsed.
This is necessary to implement FindAlternateFunctionManglings in LLDB, which
uses a similar hack in FastDemangle. Once that function has been updated to use
this version, FastDemangle can finally be removed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50586
llvm-svn: 339580
This patch refactors the logic that expands predicates of a variant scheduling
class.
The idea is to improve the readability of the auto-generated code by removing
redundant parentheses around predicate expressions, and by removing redundant
if(true) statements.
This patch replaces the definition of NoSchedPred in TargetSchedule.td with an
instance of MCSchedPredicate. The new definition is sematically equivalent to
the previous one. The main difference is that now SubtargetEmitter knows that it
represents predicate "true".
Before this patch, we always generated an if (true) for the default transition
of a variant scheduling class.
Example (taken from AArch64GenSubtargetInfo.inc) :
```
if (SchedModel->getProcessorID() == 3) { // CycloneModel
if ((TII->isScaledAddr(*MI)))
return 927; // (WriteIS_WriteLD)_ReadBaseRS
if ((true))
return 928; // WriteLD_ReadDefault
}
```
Extra parentheses were also generated around the predicate expressions.
With this patch, we get the following auto-generated checks:
```
if (SchedModel->getProcessorID() == 3) { // CycloneModel
if (TII->isScaledAddr(*MI))
return 927; // (WriteIS_WriteLD)_ReadBaseRS
return 928; // WriteLD_ReadDefault
}
```
The new auto-generated code behaves exactly the same as before. So, technically
this is a non functional change.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50566
llvm-svn: 339552
Summary:
The as<T>() method would trigger the following warning on GCC <7:
warning: dereferencing type-punned pointer will break
strict-aliasing rules [-Wstrict-aliasing]
return *reinterpret_cast<T *>(Union.buffer);
^
Union.buffer is guaranteed to be aligned to whatever types it contains,
and json::Value maintains the invariant that it only calls as<T>() for a
T it has previously placement-newed into Union.buffer. This should
follow the rules for strict aliasing.
Using two static_cast via void * instead of reinterpret_cast
silences the warning and presumably makes GCC understand that no
strict-aliasing violation is happening.
No functional change intended.
Patch by: kimgr (Kim Gräsman)
Reviewers: sammccall, xiangzhai, HaoLiu, llvm-commits, xbolva00
Reviewed By: sammccall, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50608
llvm-svn: 339521
Summary: After converting all existing passes to use the new DomTreeUpdater interface, there isn't any usage of the original DeferredDominance class. Thus, we can safely remove it from the codebase.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, davide, grosser
Reviewed By: kuhar, brzycki
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49747
llvm-svn: 339502
Pulled out a separate function for some code that calculates
if an inner loop iteration count is invariant to it's outer
loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50063
llvm-svn: 339500
Summary:
The TType encoding, LSDA encoding, and personality encoding are all
passed explicitly by CodeGen to the assembler through .cfi_* directives,
so only the AsmPrinter needs to know about them.
The FDE CFI encoding however, controls the encoding of the label
implicitly created by the .cfi_startproc directive. That directive seems
to be special in that it doesn't take an encoding, so the assembler just
has to know how to encode one DSO-local label reference from .eh_frame
to .text.
As a result, it looks like MC will continue to have to know when the
large code model is in use. Perhaps we could invent a '.cfi_startproc
[large]' flag so that this knowledge doesn't need to pollute the
assembler.
Reviewers: davide, lliu0, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50533
llvm-svn: 339397
The motivating case is an otherwise dead loop with a fence in it. At the moment, this goes all the way through the optimizer and we end up emitting an entirely pointless loop on x86. This case may seem a bit contrived, but we've seen it in real code as the result of otherwise reasonable lowering strategies combined w/thread local memory optimizations (such as escape analysis).
To handle this simple case, we can teach LICM to hoist must execute fences when there is no other memory operation within the loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50489
llvm-svn: 339378
This patch introduces tablegen class MCStatement.
Currently, an MCStatement can be either a return statement, or a switch
statement.
```
MCStatement:
MCReturnStatement
MCOpcodeSwitchStatement
```
A MCReturnStatement expands to a return statement, and the boolean expression
associated with the return statement is described by a MCInstPredicate.
An MCOpcodeSwitchStatement is a switch statement where the condition is a check
on the machine opcode. It allows the definition of multiple checks, as well as a
default case. More details on the grammar implemented by these two new
constructs can be found in the diff for TargetInstrPredicates.td.
This patch makes it easier to read the body of auto-generated TargetInstrInfo
predicates.
In future, I plan to reuse/extend the MCStatement grammar to describe more
complex target hooks. For now, this is just a first step (mostly a minor
cosmetic change to polish the new predicates framework).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50457
llvm-svn: 339352
Summary:
The interface to get size and spill size of a register
was moved from MCRegisterInfo to TargetRegisterInfo over
a year ago. Afaik the old interface has bee around
to give out-of-tree targets a chance to adapt to the
new interface.
One problem with the old MCRegisterClass::PhysRegSize was that
it represented the size of a register as "size in bits" / 8.
So a register had to be a multiple of eight bits wide for the
size to be correct (and the byte size for the target needed to
be eight bits).
Reviewers: kparzysz, qcolombet
Reviewed By: kparzysz
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47199
llvm-svn: 339350
Summary:
Currently, in line with GCC, when specifying reserved registers like sp or pc on an inline asm() clobber list, we don't always preserve the original value across the statement. And in general, overwriting reserved registers can have surprising results.
For example:
```
extern int bar(int[]);
int foo(int i) {
int a[i]; // VLA
asm volatile(
"mov r7, #1"
:
:
: "r7"
);
return 1 + bar(a);
}
```
Compiled for thumb, this gives:
```
$ clang --target=arm-arm-none-eabi -march=armv7a -c test.c -o - -S -O1 -mthumb
...
foo:
.fnstart
@ %bb.0: @ %entry
.save {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
.setfp r7, sp, #12
add r7, sp, #12
.pad #4
sub sp, #4
movs r1, #7
add.w r0, r1, r0, lsl #2
bic r0, r0, #7
sub.w r0, sp, r0
mov sp, r0
@APP
mov.w r7, #1
@NO_APP
bl bar
adds r0, #1
sub.w r4, r7, #12
mov sp, r4
pop {r4, r5, r6, r7, pc}
...
```
r7 is used as the frame pointer for thumb targets, and this function needs to restore the SP from the FP because of the variable-length stack allocation a. r7 is clobbered by the inline assembly (and r7 is included in the clobber list), but LLVM does not preserve the value of the frame pointer across the assembly block.
This type of behavior is similar to GCC's and has been discussed on the bugtracker: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11807 . No consensus seemed to have been reached on the way forward. Clang behavior has briefly been discussed on the CFE mailing (starting here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-July/058392.html). I've opted for following Eli Friedman's advice to print warnings when there are reserved registers on the clobber list so as not to diverge from GCC behavior for now.
The patch uses MachineRegisterInfo's target-specific knowledge of reserved registers, just before we convert the inline asm string in the AsmPrinter.
If we find a reserved register, we print a warning:
```
repro.c:6:7: warning: inline asm clobber list contains reserved registers: R7 [-Winline-asm]
"mov r7, #1"
^
```
Reviewers: eli.friedman, olista01, javed.absar, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, eraman, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49727
llvm-svn: 339257
Summary:
This particular map is hardly ever queried and has a phased usage pattern (insert,
iterate, query, insert, iterate) so it's a good candidate for a sorted vector and
std::lower_bound.
This significantly reduces the run time of runTargetDesc() in some circumstances.
One llvm-tblgen invocation in my build improves the time spent in runTargetDesc()
from 9.86s down to 0.80s (~92%) without changing the output. The same invocation
also has 2GB less allocation churn.
Reviewers: bogner, rtereshin, aditya_nandakumar, volkan
Reviewed By: rtereshin
Subscribers: mgrang, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50272
llvm-svn: 339208
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50283
reviewed by bogner
This patch refactors FileCheck's implementation into support so it can
be used from C++ in other places (Unit tests).
llvm-svn: 339192
In combineMetadata, we should be able to preserve K's nonnull metadata,
if K does not move. This condition should hold for all replacements by
NewGVN/GVN, but I added a bunch of assertions to verify that.
Fixes PR35038.
There probably are additional kinds of metadata that could be preserved
using similar reasoning. This is follow-up work.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, efriedma, nlopes
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47339
llvm-svn: 339149
This function is shared between both implementations. I am not sure if
Utils/Local.h is the best place though.
Reviewers: davide, dberlin, efriedma, xbolva00
Reviewed By: efriedma, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47337
llvm-svn: 339138
PFM counters don't need to be passed in input to the definition of
ProcResourceUnits. class PfmIssueCounter (see r329675) is used to map resources
to PFM counter(s).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50333
llvm-svn: 339125
Summary:
The accelerator tables use the debug_str section to store their strings.
However, they do not support the indirect method of access that is
available for the debug_info section (DW_FORM_strx et al.).
Currently our code is assuming that all strings can/will be referenced
indirectly, and puts all of them into the debug_str_offsets section.
This is generally true for regular (unsplit) dwarf, but in the DWO case,
most of the strings in the debug_str section will only be used from the
accelerator tables. Therefore the contents of the debug_str_offsets
section will be largely unused and bloating the main executable.
This patch rectifies this by teaching the DwarfStringPool to
differentiate between strings accessed directly and indirectly. When a
user inserts a string into the pool it has to declare whether that
string will be referenced directly or not. If at least one user requsts
indirect access, that string will be assigned an index ID and put into
debug_str_offsets table. Otherwise, the offset table is skipped.
This approach reduces the overall binary size (when compiled with
-gdwarf-5 -gsplit-dwarf) in my tests by about 2% (debug_str_offsets is
shrunk by 99%).
Reviewers: probinson, dblaikie, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: aprantl, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49493
llvm-svn: 339122
This patch refactors the existing TargetLowering::BuildUDIV base implementation to support non-uniform constant vector denominators.
It also includes a fold for MULHU by pow2 constants to SRL which can now more readily occur from BuildUDIV.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49248
llvm-svn: 339121
I was trying to add a test case for LLD and found that it
is impossible to set sh_entsize via yaml.
The patch implements the missing part.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50235
llvm-svn: 339113
Src0 doesn't really convey any meaning to what the operand is. Passthru matches what's used in the documentation for the intrinsic this comes from.
llvm-svn: 339101
Logic for tracking implicit control flow instructions was added to GVN to
perform PRE optimizations correctly. It appears that GVN is not the only
optimization that sometimes does PRE, so this logic is required in other
places (such as Jump Threading).
This is an NFC patch that encapsulates all ICF-related logic in a dedicated
utility class separated from GVN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40293
llvm-svn: 339086
In the past, DbgInfoIntrinsic has a strong assumption that these
intrinsics all have variables and expressions attached to them.
However, it is too strong to derive the class for other debug entities.
Now, it has problems for debug labels.
In order to make DbgInfoIntrinsic as a base class for 'debug info', I
create a class for 'variable debug info', DbgVariableIntrinsic.
DbgDeclareInst, DbgAddrIntrinsic, and DbgValueInst will be derived from it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50220
llvm-svn: 338984
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338969
This allows us to model the common LLVM idiom of incrementing
immediately after dereferencing so that we can remove or update the
entity w/o losing our ability to reach the "next".
However, these are not real or proper iterators. They are just enough to
allow range based for loops and very simple range algorithms to work,
but should not be considered full general.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49956
llvm-svn: 338955
Summary:
Previously, in the NewPM pipeline, TailCallElim recalculates the DomTree when it modifies any instruction in the Function.
For example,
```
CallInst *CI = dyn_cast<CallInst>(&I);
...
CI->setTailCall();
Modified = true;
...
if (!Modified || ...)
return PreservedAnalyses::all();
```
After applying this patch, the DomTree only recalculates if needed (plus an extra insertEdge() + an extra deleteEdge() call).
When optimizing SQLite with `-passes="default<O3>"` pipeline of the newPM, the number of DomTree recalculation decreases by 6.2%, the number of nodes visited by DFS decreases by 2.9%. The time used by DomTree will decrease approximately 1%~2.5% after applying the patch.
Statistics:
```
Before the patch:
23010 dom-tree-stats - Number of DomTree recalculations
489264 dom-tree-stats - Number of nodes visited by DFS -- DomTree
After the patch:
21581 dom-tree-stats - Number of DomTree recalculations
475088 dom-tree-stats - Number of nodes visited by DFS -- DomTree
```
Reviewers: kuhar, dmgreen, brzycki, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: kuhar, brzycki
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49982
llvm-svn: 338954
This change allows users pass compression level that was not listed
in the enum. Also, I think using different values than zlib's
compression levels was just confusing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50196
llvm-svn: 338939
Add a parameter for testing specifically for
sNaNs - at least one instruction pattern on AMDGPU
needs to check specifically for this.
Also handle more cases, and add a target hook
for custom nodes, similar to the hooks for known
bits.
llvm-svn: 338910
First step towards a BuildSDIV equivalent to D49248 for non-uniform vector support - this just pushes the splat detection down into TargetLowering::BuildSDIV where its still used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50185
llvm-svn: 338838
Summary:
This change implements the profile loading functionality in LLVM to
support XRay's profiling mode in compiler-rt.
We introduce a type named `llvm::xray::Profile` which allows building a
profile representation. We can load an XRay profile from a file to build
Profile instances, or do it manually through the Profile type's API.
The intent is to get the `llvm-xray` tool to generate `Profile`
instances and use that as the common abstraction through which all
conversion and analysis can be done. In the future we can generate
`Profile` instances from `Trace` instances as well, through conversion
functions.
Some of the key operations supported by the `Profile` API are:
- Path interning (`Profile::internPath(...)`) which returns a unique path
identifier.
- Block appending (`Profile::addBlock(...)`) to add thread-associated
profile information.
- Path ID to Path lookup (`Profile::expandPath(...)`) to look up a
PathID and return the original interned path.
- Block iteration.
A 'Path' in this context represents the function call stack in
leaf-to-root order. This is represented as a path in an internally
managed prefix tree in the `Profile` instance. Having a handle (PathID)
to identify the unique Paths we encounter for a particular Profile
allows us to reduce the amount of memory required to associate profile
data to a particular Path.
This is the first of a series of patches to migrate the `llvm-stacks`
tool towards using a single profile representation.
Depends on D48653.
Reviewers: kpw, eizan
Reviewed By: kpw
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48370
llvm-svn: 338825
Summary:
This patch refines the logic of `recalculate()` in the `DomTreeUpdater` in the following two aspects:
1. Previously, `recalculate()` tests whether there are pending updates/BBs awaiting deletion and then do recalculation under Lazy UpdateStrategy; and do recalculation immediately under Eager UpdateStrategy. (The former behavior is inherited from the `DeferredDominance` class). This is an inconsistency between two strategies and there is no obvious reason to do this. So the behavior is changed to always recalculate available trees when calling `recalculate()`.
2. Fix the issue of when DTU under Lazy UpdateStrategy holds nothing but with BBs awaiting deletion, after calling `recalculate()`, BBs awaiting deletion aren't flushed. An additional unittest is added to cover this case.
Reviewers: kuhar, dmgreen, brzycki, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50173
llvm-svn: 338822
Summary:
This patch is the second in a series of patches related to the [[ http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123883.html | RFC - A new dominator tree updater for LLVM ]].
It converts passes (e.g. adce/jump-threading) and various functions which currently accept DDT in local.cpp and BasicBlockUtils.cpp to use the new DomTreeUpdater class.
These converted functions in utils can accept DomTreeUpdater with either UpdateStrategy and can deal with both DT and PDT held by the DomTreeUpdater.
Reviewers: brzycki, kuhar, dmgreen, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48967
llvm-svn: 338814
An instance of ReexportsFallbackDefinitionGenerator can be attached to a VSO
(via setFallbackDefinitionGenerator) to re-export symbols on demandy from a
backing VSO.
llvm-svn: 338764
r337748 made us start incrementing DebugCounters all of the time. This
makes tsan unhappy in multithreaded environments.
Since it doesn't make much sense to use DebugCounters with multiple
threads, this patch makes us only count anything if the user passed a
-debug-counter option or if some other piece of code explicitly asks
for it (e.g. the pass in D50031).
The amount of global state here makes writing a unittest for this
behavior somewhat awkward. So, no test is provided.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50150
llvm-svn: 338762
This method has three callers, each of which wanted distinct handling:
1) Sinking into a loop is moving an instruction known to execute before a loop into the loop. We don't need to worry about introducing a fault at all in this case.
2) Hoisting from a loop into a preheader already duplicated the check in the caller.
3) Sinking from the loop into an exit block was the only true user of the code within the routine. For the moment, this has just been lifted into the caller, but up next is examining the logic more carefully. Whitelisting of loads and calls - while consistent with the previous code - is rather suspicious. Either way, a behavior change is worthy of it's own patch.
llvm-svn: 338671
AArch64 ELF ABI does not define a static relocation type for TLS offset within
a module, which makes it impossible for compiler to generate a valid
DW_AT_location content for thread local variables. Currently LLVM generates an
invalid R_AARCH64_ABS64 relocation at the DW_AT_location field for a TLS
variable. That causes trouble for linker because thread local variable does
not have an absolute address at link time. AArch64 GCC solves the problem by
not generating DW_AT_location for thread local variables. We should do the
same in LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43860
llvm-svn: 338655
The callable flag can be used to indicate that a symbol is callable. If present,
the symbol is callable. If absent, the symbol may or may not be callable (the
client must determine this by context, for example by examining the program
representation that will provide the symbol definition).
This flag will be used in the near future to enable creation of lazy compilation
stubs based on SymbolFlagsMap instances only (without having to provide
additional information to determine which symbols need stubs).
llvm-svn: 338649
This is patch 4 of 4 NFC refactorings to handle type units and compile
units more consistently and with less concern about the object-file
section that they came from.
Patch 4 combines separate DWARFUnitVectors for compile and type units
into a single DWARFUnitVector that contains both. For now the
implementation distinguishes compile units from type units by putting
all compile units at the front of the vector, reflecting the DWARF v4
distinction between .debug_info and .debug_types sections. A future
patch will change this to allow the free mixing of unit kinds, as is
specified by DWARF v5.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49744
llvm-svn: 338633
This is patch 3 of 4 NFC refactorings to handle type units and compile
units more consistently and with less concern about the object-file
section that they came from.
Patch 3 simply renames DWARFUnitSection to DWARFUnitVector, as the
object-file section of a unit is nearly irrelevant now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49743
llvm-svn: 338632
This is patch 2 of 4 NFC refactorings to handle type units and compile
units more consistently and with less concern about the object-file
section that they came from.
Patch 2 takes the existing std::deque<DWARFUnitSection> for type units
and makes it a simple DWARFUnitSection, simplifying the handling of
type units and making it more consistent with compile units.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49742
llvm-svn: 338629
This is patch 1 of 4 NFC refactorings to handle type units and compile
units more consistently and with less concern about the object-file
section that they came from.
Patch 1 replaces the templated DWARFUnitSection with a non-templated
version. That is, instead of being a SmallVector of pointers to a
specific unit kind, it is not a SmallVector of pointers to the base
class for both type and compile units. Virtual methods are magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49741
llvm-svn: 338628
Summary:
Added an option that allows to emit only '.loc' and '.file' kind debug
directives, but disables emission of the DWARF sections. Required for
NVPTX target to support profiling. It requires '.loc' and '.file'
directives, but does not require any DWARF sections for the profiler.
Reviewers: probinson, echristo, dblaikie
Subscribers: aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46021
llvm-svn: 338616
This is useful for understanding how our demangler processes
back references and for investigating issues related to
back references. But it's a feature only useful for debugging
the demangling process itself, so I'm marking it hidden.
llvm-svn: 338609
There is nothing x86-specific about this code, so it'd be nice to make this available for other targets to use in the future (and get it out of X86ISelLowering!).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50083
llvm-svn: 338586
The DWARFDie is a lightweight utility wrapper that stores a pointer to a
compile unit and a debug info entry. Currently, its iterator (used for
walking over its children) stores a DWARFDie and returns a const
reference when dereferencing it.
When the iterator is modified (by incrementing or decrementing it), this
reference becomes invalid. This was happening when calling reverse on
it, because the std::reverse_iterator is keeping a temporary copy of the
iterator (see
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/iterator/reverse_iterator for a good
illustration).
The relevant code in libcxx:
reference operator*() const {_Iter __tmp = current; return *--__tmp;}
When dereferencing the reverse iterator, we decrement and return a
reference to a DWARFDie stored in the stack frame of this function,
resulting in UB at runtime.
This patch specifies the std::reverse_iterator for DWARFDie to do the
right thing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49679
llvm-svn: 338506
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338494
It is necessary to generate fixups in .debug_line as relaxation is
enabled due to the address delta may be changed after relaxation.
DWARF will record the mappings of lines and addresses in
.debug_line section. It will encode the information using special
opcodes, standard opcodes and extended opcodes in Line Number
Program. I use DW_LNS_fixed_advance_pc to encode fixed length
address delta and DW_LNE_set_address to encode absolute address
to make it possible to generate fixups in .debug_line section.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46850
llvm-svn: 338477
This patch does the same thing as r338153 for COFF.
Note that this patch affects only the order of log messages.
The output file is already deterministic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50023
llvm-svn: 338406