This commit implements the initial serialization of the machine operand target
flags. It extends the 'TargetInstrInfo' class to add two new methods that help
to provide text based serialization for the target flags.
This commit can serialize only the X86 target flags, and the target flags for
the other targets will be serialized in the follow-up commits.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 244185
This reverts commit r244163. The workaround shouldn't be necessary
after r244172, and moreover the commit was slightly buggy as it
dis a simple mkdir without removing the directory first, which could
cause 'File exists' errors.
llvm-svn: 244182
Rotate the algorithm for remapping distinct nodes in order to simplify
how uniquing cycles get resolved. This removes some of the recursion,
and, most importantly, exposes all uniquing cycles at the top-level.
Besides being a little more efficient -- temporary MDNodes won't live as
long -- the clearer logic should help protect against bugs like those
fixed in r243961 and r243976.
What are uniquing cycles? Why do they present challenges when remapping
metadata?
!0 = !{!1}
!1 = !{!0}
!0 and !1 form a simple uniquing cycle. When remapping from one
metadata graph to another, every uniquing cycle gets "duplicated"
through a dance:
!0-temp = !{!1?} ; map(!0): clone !0, VM[!0] = !0-temp
!1-temp = !{!0?} ; ..map(!1): clone !1, VM[!1] = !1-temp
!1-temp = !{!0-temp} ; ..map(!1): remap !1's operands
!2 = !{!0-temp} ; ..map(!1): uniquify: !1-temp => !2
!0-temp = !{!2} ; map(!0): remap !0's operands
!3 = !{!2} ; map(!0): uniquify: !0-temp => !3
; Result
!2 = !{!3}
!3 = !{!2}
(In the two "uniquify" steps above, the operands of !X-temp are compared
to the operands of !X. If they're the same, then !X-temp gets RAUW'ed
to !X; if they're different, then !X-temp is promoted to a new unique
node. The latter case always hits in for uniquing cycles, so we
duplicate all the nodes involved.)
Why is this a problem? Uniquable Metadata nodes that have temporary
node as transitive operands keep RAUW support until the temporary nodes
get finalized. With non-cycles, this happens automatically: when a
uniquable node's count of unresolved operands drops to zero, it
immediately sheds its own RAUW support (possibly triggering the same in
any node that references it). However, uniquing cycles create a
reference cycle, and uniqued nodes that transitively reference a
uniquing cycle are "stuck" in an unresolved state until someone calls
`MDNode::resolveCycles()` on a node in the unresolved subgraph.
Distinct nodes should help here (and mostly do): since they aren't
uniqued anywhere, they are guaranteed not to be RAUW'ed. They
effectively form a barrier between uniqued nodes, breaking some uniquing
cycles, and shielding uniqued nodes from uniquing cycles.
Unfortunately, with this barrier in place, the unresolved subgraph(s)
can be disjoint from the top-level node. The mapping algorithm needs to
find at least one representative from each disjoint subgraph. But which
nodes are *stuck*, and which will get resolved automatically? And which
nodes are in the unresolved subgraph? The old logic was conservative.
This commit rotates the logic for distinct nodes, so that we have access
to unresolved nodes at the top-level call to `llvm::MapMetadata()`.
Each time we return to the top-level, we know that all temporaries have
been RAUW'ed away. Here, it's safe (and necessary) to call
`resolveCycles()` immediately on unresolved operands.
This should also perform better than the old algorithm. The recursion
stack is shorter, temporary nodes don't live as long, and there are
fewer tracking references to unresolved nodes. As the debug info graph
introduces more 'distinct' nodes, remapping should incrementally get
cheaper and cheaper.
Aside from possible performance improvements (and reduced cruft in the
`LLVMContext`), there should be no functionality change here.
llvm-svn: 244181
Various parameters are passed implicitly using Config global variable
already. Output file path is no different from others, so there was no
special reason to handle that differnetly.
This patch changes the signature of writeResult(SymbolTable *, StringRef)
to writeResult(SymbolTable *).
llvm-svn: 244180
The files were never written to and then deleted, but they were created
nonetheless. To prevent that, create a wrapper around the 2 variants of
createUniqueFile and use the one that only does an access(Exists) call
to check for name unicity in -no-output mode.
llvm-svn: 244172
We are using Writer more like a function instead of a class.
This patch makes it a function to simplify the interface.
All details of Writer class is now hidden from other parts of the linker.
llvm-svn: 244169
Rename `remap()` to `remapOperands()`, and restrict its contract to
remapping operands. Previously, it also called `mapToMetadata()`, but
this logic is hard to reason about externally. In particular, this
refactors `mapUniquedNode()` to avoid redundant mapping calls, taking
advantage of the RAUWs that are already in place.
llvm-svn: 244168
Summary: The casts from String to PatFrag weren't needed if we instead provided an SDNode. This fix was suggested by @pete in D11382.
Subscribers: pete, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11788
llvm-svn: 244167
More specifically, make NVPTXISelDAGToDAG able to emit cached loads (LDG) for pointer induction variables.
Also fix latent bug where LDG was not restricted to kernel functions. I believe that this could not be triggered so far since we do not currently infer that a pointer is global outside a kernel function, and only loads of global pointers are considered for cached loads.
llvm-svn: 244166
This is intended to help support the idiom of a class that has some
other objects (or multiple arrays of different types of objects)
appended on the end, which is used quite heavily in clang.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11272
llvm-svn: 244164
useless return value. Switch to using it directly when completing the
redeclaration chain for an anonymous declaration, and reduce the set of
declarations that we load in the process to just those of the right kind.
llvm-svn: 244161
This option allows to select a subset of the architectures when
performing a universal binary link. The filter is done completely
in the mach-o specific part of the code.
llvm-svn: 244160
Summary:
Emit both DWARF and CodeView if "CodeView" and "Dwarf Version" module
flags are set.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11756
llvm-svn: 244158
This commit serializes the offset for the following operands: target index,
global address, external symbol, constant pool index, and block address.
llvm-svn: 244157
1. Create a utility function normalizeEdgeWeights() in MachineBranchProbabilityInfo that normalizes a list of edge weights so that the sum of then can fit in uint32_t.
2. Provide an interface in MachineBasicBlock to normalize its successors' weights.
3. Add a flag in MachineBasicBlock that tracks whether its successors' weights are normalized.
4. Provide an overload of getSumForBlock that accepts a non-const pointer to a MBB so that it can force normalizing this MBB's successors' weights.
5. Update several uses of getSumForBlock() by eliminating the once needed weight scale.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11442
llvm-svn: 244154
This patch adds flags -fno-profile-instr-generate and
-fno-profile-instr-use, and the GCC aliases -fno-profile-generate and
-fno-profile-use.
These flags are used in situations where users need to disable profile
generation or use for specific files in a build, without affecting other
files.
llvm-svn: 244153
Summary: PR24191 finds that the expected memory-register operations aren't generated when relaxed { load ; modify ; store } is used. This is similar to PR17281 which was addressed in D4796, but only for memory-immediate operations (and for memory orderings up to acquire and release). This patch also handles some floating-point operations.
Reviewers: reames, kcc, dvyukov, nadav, morisset, chandlerc, t.p.northover, pete
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11382
llvm-svn: 244128
pass manager.
This never worked, and won't ever work. It was actually why I ended up
building the LazyCallGraph set of code which is more more effectively
wired up to the new pass manager. This accidentally got committed when
I was trying to land a cleanup of the code organization in the other
parts of this file. =[ My bad, but fortunately Dave was keen eyed enough
to spot that this code couldn't possibly work. =]
llvm-svn: 244127