This involves temporarily hard wiring some parts to use the global context. This isn't ideal, but it's
the only way I could figure out to make this process vaguely incremental.
llvm-svn: 75445
Make llvm_unreachable take an optional string, thus moving the cerr<< out of
line.
LLVM_UNREACHABLE is now a simple wrapper that makes the message go away for
NDEBUG builds.
llvm-svn: 75379
into DarwinTargetAsmInfo.cpp. The remaining differences should
be evaluated. It seems strange that x86/arm has .zerofill but ppc
doesn't, etc.
llvm-svn: 73742
Create debug_inlined dwarf section using these information. This info is used by gdb, at least on Darwin, to enable better experience debugging inlined functions. See DwarfWriter.cpp for more information on structure of debug_inlined section.
llvm-svn: 68847
and extern_weak_odr. These are the same as the non-odr versions,
except that they indicate that the global will only be overridden
by an *equivalent* global. In C, a function with weak linkage can
be overridden by a function which behaves completely differently.
This means that IP passes have to skip weak functions, since any
deductions made from the function definition might be wrong, since
the definition could be replaced by something completely different
at link time. This is not allowed in C++, thanks to the ODR
(One-Definition-Rule): if a function is replaced by another at
link-time, then the new function must be the same as the original
function. If a language knows that a function or other global can
only be overridden by an equivalent global, it can give it the
weak_odr linkage type, and the optimizers will understand that it
is alright to make deductions based on the function body. The
code generators on the other hand map weak and weak_odr linkage
to the same thing.
llvm-svn: 66339
mergeable string section. I don't see any bad impact of such decision
(rather then placing it into mergeable const section, as it was before),
but at least Darwin linker won't complain anymore.
The problem in LLVM is that we don't have special type for string constants
(like gcc does). Even more, we have two separate types: ConstatArray for non-null
strings and ConstantAggregateZero for null stuff.... It's a bit weird :)
llvm-svn: 63142
objects in llvm.used (thanks Anton). Makes visible
the magic 'l' prefix for symbols on Darwin which are
to be passed through the assembler, then removed at
linktime (previously all references to this had been
hidden in the ObjC FE code, oh well).
llvm-svn: 55973