Since the parameter is not used anywhere, and the default size of 16
apparently causes PR47359, remove it. This ensures that IntervalMap will
automatically determine the optimal size, using its NodeSizer struct.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87044
Caused by D86662. The fix is only checking some fields when the expect_debug_info_size flag is true. For some reason this was not failing on a local linux machine.
This patch adds an option "keep_seed" to keep all initial seed inputs in the
corpus. Previously, only the initial seed inputs that find new coverage were
added to the corpus, and all the other initial inputs were discarded. We
observed in some circumstances that useful initial seed inputs are discarded as
they find no new coverage, even though they contain useful fragments in them
(e.g., SQLITE3 FuzzBench benchmark). This newly added option provides a way to
keeping seed inputs in the corpus for those circumstances. With this patch, and
with -keep_seed=1, all initial seed inputs are kept in the corpus regardless of
whether they find new coverage or not. Further, these seed inputs are not
replaced with smaller inputs even if -reduce_inputs=1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86577
A new hidden option -print-changed is added along with code to support
printing the IR as it passes through the opt pipeline in the new pass
manager. Only those passes that change the IR are reported, with others
only having the banner reported, indicating that they did not change the
IR, were filtered out or ignored. Filtering of output via the
-filter-print-funcs is supported and a new supporting hidden option
-filter-passes is added. The latter takes a comma separated list of pass
names and filters the output to only show those passes in the list that
change the IR. The output can also be modified via the -print-module-scope
function.
The code introduces a template base class that generalizes the comparison
of IRs that takes an IR representation as template parameter. The
constructor takes a series of lambdas that provide an event based API
for generalized reporting of IRs as they are changed in the opt pipeline
through the new pass manager.
The first of several instantiations is provided that prints the IR
in a form similar to that produced by -print-after-all with the above
mentioned filtering capabilities. This version, and the others to
follow will be introduced at the upcoming developer's conference.
See https://hotcrp.llvm.org/usllvm2020/paper/29 for more information.
Reviewed By: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86360
Propose Ahmed as a replacement. He's fixed many security issues in LLVM for Apple in the last few years, as such he'll fit the "Individual contributors" description.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86742
Currently, libFuzzer will exit with an error message if a non-existent
directory is provided for any of the appropriate arguments. For cases
where libFuzzer is used in a specialized embedded environment, it would
be much easier to have libFuzzer create the directories for the user.
This patch accommodates for this scenario by allowing the user to provide
the argument `-create_missing_dirs=1` which makes libFuzzer attempt to
create the `artifact_prefix`, `exact_artifact_path`,
`features_dir` and/or corpus directory if they don't already exist rather
than throw an error and exit.
Split off from D84808 as requested [here](https://reviews.llvm.org/D84808#2208546).
Reviewed By: morehouse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86733
The new overloads apply directly to a node, like the
`clang::ast_matchers::match` functions, Rather than generating an
`EditGenerator` combinator.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87031
Following 97febb1, fix the out-of-memory error associated with buffering the output
in-memory by writing to an allocated file with the minimum offset and running it
on ppc system-linux only.
Peer reviewed by: nemanjai
Its handling is similar to optional attributes, except for the
getter method.
Reviewed By: rsuderman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87055
As far as I am aware, the placement of MergedLoadStoreMotion in the
pipeline is not heavily tuned currently. It seems to not matter much if
we do it after DSE in the LTO pipeline (no binary changes for -O3 -flto
on MultiSource/SPEC2000/SPEC2006). Moving it after DSE however has a
major benefit: MemorySSA is constructed by LICM and is consumed by DSE,
so if MergedLoadStoreMotion happens after DSE, we do not need to
preserve MemorySSA in it.
If there are any concerns with this move, I can also update
MergedLoadStoreMotion to preserve MemorySSA.
This patch together with D86651 (preserve MemSSA in MemCpyOpt) and
D86534 (preserve MemSSA in GVN) are the remaining patches to bring down
compile-time for DSE + MemorySSA to the levels outlined in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144417.html
Once they land, we should be able to start with flipping the switch on
enabling DSE + MmeorySSA.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86967
This updates the errors reported by expect()
to something like:
```
Ran command:
"help"
Got output:
Debugger commands:
<...>
Expecting start string: "Debugger commands:" (was found)
Expecting end string: "foo" (was not found)
```
(see added tests for more examples)
This shows the user exactly what was run,
what checks passed and which failed. Along with
whether that check was supposed to pass.
(including what regex patterns matched)
These lines are also output to the test
trace file, whether the test passes or not.
Note that expect() will still fail at the first failed
check, in line with previous behaviour.
Also I have flipped the wording of the assert
message functions (.*_MSG) to describe failures
not successes. This makes more sense as they are
only shown on assert failures.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86792
Preserve MemorySSA if it is available before running GVN.
DSE with MemorySSA will run closely after GVN. If GVN and 2 other
passes preserve MemorySSA, DSE can re-use MemorySSA used by LICM
when doing LTO.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86534
This is a followup to 1ccfb52a61, which made a number of changes
including the apparently innocuous reordering of required passes in
MemCpyOptimizer. This however altered the creation order of BasicAA vs
Phi Values analysis, meaning BasicAA did not pick up PhiValues as a
cached result. Instead if we require MemoryDependence first it will
require PhiValuesAnalysis allowing BasicAA to use it for better results.
I don't claim this is an excellent design, but it fixes a nasty little
regressions where a query later in JumpThreading was getting worse
results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87027
Previous implementations for the TLS models General Dynamic and Initial Exec
were missing the ELF::STT_TLS type on symbols that required the type. This patch
adds the type.
Reviewed By: sfertile, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86777
Instead of referring to stack sizes sections only by name, we can add
section indexes and types to warnings reported.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86934
The __ARM_FEATURE_SVE_BITS feature macro is specified in the Arm C
Language Extensions (ACLE) for SVE [1] (version 00bet5). From the spec,
where __ARM_FEATURE_SVE_BITS==N:
When N is nonzero, indicates that the implementation is generating
code for an N-bit SVE target and that the arm_sve_vector_bits(N)
attribute is available.
This was defined in D83550 as __ARM_FEATURE_SVE_BITS_EXPERIMENTAL and
enabled under the -msve-vector-bits flag to simplify initial tests.
This patch drops _EXPERIMENTAL now there is support for the feature.
[1] https://developer.arm.com/documentation/100987/latest
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86720
Currently IPSCCP (and others like CVP/GVN) blindly propagate pointer
equalities. In certain cases, that leads to dereferenceable pointers
being replaced, as in the example test case.
I think this is not allowed, as it introduces an access of an
un-dereferenceable pointer. Note that the pointer is inbounds, but one
past the last element, so it is valid, but not dereferenceable.
This patch is mostly to highlight the issue and start a discussion.
Currently it only checks for specifically looking
one-past-the-last-element pointers with array typed bases.
This causes the mis-compile outlined in
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55754313/is-this-gcc-clang-past-one-pointer-comparison-behavior-conforming-or-non-standar
In the test case, if we replace %p with the GEP for the store, we
subsequently determine that the store and the load cannot alias, because
they are to different underlying objects.
Note that Alive2 seems to think that the replacement is valid:
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/2rorhk
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85332
We have 2 DumpStyles currently:
`class GNUStyle : public DumpStyle<ELFT>` and `class LLVMStyle : public DumpStyle<ELFT>`.
The problem of `DumpStyle` interface is that almost for each method
we provide `const ELFFile<ELFT> *` as argument. But in fact each of
dump styles keeps `ELFDumper<ELFT> *Dumper` which can be used to get an object from.
But since we use the `Obj` too often, I've decided to introduce a one more reference member
instead of reading it from the `Dumper` each time:
`const ELFFile<ELFT> &Obj;` This is kind of similar to `FileName` member which we have already:
it is also used to store a the file name which can be read from `Dumper->getElfObject()->getFileName()`.
I had to adjust the code which previously worked with a pointer to an object
and now works with a reference.
In a follow-up I am going to try to get rid of `const ELFObjectFile<ELFT>` arguments
which are still passed to a set of functions.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87040
Previously, before loading the REPL language-specific init file, lldb
checked the selected target language in which case it returned an unknown
language type with the REPL target.
Instead, the patch calls `Language::GetLanguagesSupportingREPLs` and
look for the first element of that set. In case lldb was not configured
with a REPL language, then, it will just stop sourcing the REPL init
file and fallback to the original logic (continuing with the default
init file).
rdar://65836048
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87076
Signed-off-by: Med Ismail Bennani <medismail.bennani@gmail.com>
`image dump symtab` seems to output the symbols in whatever order they appear in
the DenseMap that is used to filter out symbols with non-unique addresses. As
DenseMap is a hash map this order can change at any time so the output of this
command is pretty unstable. This also causes the `Breakpad/symtab.test` to fail
with enabled reverse iteration (which reverses the DenseMap order to find issues
like this).
This patch makes the DenseMap a std::vector and uses a separate DenseSet to do
the address filtering. The output order is now dependent on the order in which
the symbols are read (which should be deterministic). It might also avoid a bit
of work as all the work for creating the Symbol constructor parameters is only
done when we can actually emplace a new Symbol.
Reviewed By: labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87036