"id" from being found by the parser as an
externally-defined type. Before, "id" would
sometimes make it through if it was defined in
a namespace, but this sometimes caused
confusion, for example when it conflicted with
std::locale::id.
llvm-svn: 146891
This change reduces the number of instructions generated.
For example,
(load (add (sub $n0, $n1), (MipsLo got(s))))
results in the following sequence of instructions:
1. sub $n2, $n0, $n1
2. lw got(s)($n2)
Previously, three instructions were needed.
1. sub $n2, $n0, $n1
2. addiu $n3, $n2, got(s)
3. lw 0($n3)
llvm-svn: 146888
with a definition pointer (e.g., C++ and Objective-C classes), zip
through the redeclaration chain to make sure that all of the
declarations point to the definition data.
As part of this, realized again why the first redeclaration of an
entity in a file is important, and brought back that idea.
llvm-svn: 146886
redeclaration templates (RedeclarableTemplateDecl), similarly to the
way (de-)serialization is implemented for Redeclarable<T>. In the
process, found a simpler formulation for handling redeclaration
chains and implemented that in both places.
The new test establishes that we're building the redeclaration chains
properly. However, the FIXME indicates where we're tickling a
different bug that has to do with us not setting the DefinitionData
pointer properly in redeclarations that we detected after the
definition itself was deserialized. The (separable) fix for that bug
is forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 146883
Now that getMatchingSuperRegClass() returns accurate results, it can be
used to compute constraints imposed by instructions using a sub-register
of a virtual register.
This means we can recompute the register class of any virtual register
by combining the constraints from all its uses.
llvm-svn: 146874
Use information computed while inferring new register classes to emit
accurate, table-driven implementations of getMatchingSuperRegClass().
Delete the old manual, error-prone implementations in the targets.
llvm-svn: 146873
Teach TableGen to create the missing register classes needed for
getMatchingSuperRegClass() to return maximal results. The function is
still not auto-generated, so it still returns inexact results.
This produces these new register classes:
ARM:
QQPR_with_dsub_0_in_DPR_8
QQQQPR_with_dsub_0_in_DPR_8
X86:
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX_and_GR32_NOSP
GR64_with_sub_16bit_in_GR16_NOREX
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX_and_GR32_NOREX
GR64_TC_and_GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX_and_GR32_NOREX_NOSP
GR64_TCW64_and_GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX
GR64_TC_and_GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX_and_GR32_NOREX
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_TC
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_ABCD_and_GR32_NOAX
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_NOAX_and_GR32_TC
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_AD
GR64_with_sub_32bit_in_GR32_AD_and_GR32_NOAX
The other targets in the tree are not weird enough to be affected.
llvm-svn: 146872
imported modules that don't introduce any new entities of a particular
kind. Allow these entries to be replaced with entries for another
loaded module.
In the included test case, selectors exhibit this behavior.
llvm-svn: 146870
which there are no redeclarations. This reduced by size of the PCH
file for Cocoa.h by ~650k: ~536k of that was in the new
LOCAL_REDECLARATIONS table, which went from a ridiculous 540k down to
an acceptable 3.5k, while the rest was due to the more compact
abbreviated representation of redeclarable declaration kinds (which no
longer need to store the 'first' declaration ID).
llvm-svn: 146869
The integral types now work with clang trunk (if you remove the guard), although we're still missing an intrinsic for initialising atomics (needed for C1x too).
Howard: Please review.
llvm-svn: 146865
variable is initialized by a non-constant expression, and pass in the variable
being declared so that earlier-initialized fields' values can be used.
Rearrange VarDecl init evaluation to make this possible, and in so doing fix a
long-standing issue in our C++ constant expression handling, where we would
mishandle cases like:
extern const int a;
const int n = a;
const int a = 5;
int arr[n];
Here, n is not initialized by a constant expression, so can't be used in an ICE,
even though the initialization expression would be an ICE if it appeared later
in the TU. This requires computing whether the initializer is an ICE eagerly,
and saving that information in PCH files.
llvm-svn: 146856
And fix the double-[]. It was including the [] as part of
the project name somehow, resulting in PACKAGE_TARNAME "-llvm-"
and a strange docdir default:
./configure --help | grep docdir
--docdir=DIR documentation root [DATAROOTDIR/doc/-llvm-]
llvm-svn: 146849
floating literal value does not fit into the destination type. Such casts have
undefined behavior at translation time; treating them as non-ICE matches the
behavior of modern gcc versions.
llvm-svn: 146842
chains. The previous implementation relied heavily on the declaration
chain being stored as a (circular) linked list on disk, as it is in
memory. However, when deserializing from multiple modules, the
different chains could get mixed up, leading to broken declaration chains.
The new solution keeps track of the first and last declarations in the
chain for each module file. When we load a declaration, we search all
of the module files for redeclarations of that declaration, then
splice together all of the lists into a coherent whole (along with any
redeclarations that were actually parsed).
As a drive-by fix, (de-)serialize the redeclaration chains of
TypedefNameDecls, which had somehow gotten missed previously. Add a
test of this serialization.
This new scheme creates a redeclaration table that is fairly large in
the PCH file (on the order of 400k for Cocoa.h's 12MB PCH file). The
table is mmap'd in and searched via a binary search, but it's still
quite large. A future tweak will eliminate entries for declarations
that have no redeclarations anywhere, and should
drastically reduce the size of this table.
llvm-svn: 146841
especially nice as the Windows toolchain needs the windows header files,
and has lots of platform specific hooks in it.
To facilitate the split, hoist a bunch of file-level static helpers into
class-level static helpers. Spiff up their doxygen comments while there
as they're now more likely to be looked up via docs.
Hopefully, this will be followed by further breaking apart of the
toolchain definitions. Most of the large and complex ones should likely
live on their own. I'm looking at you Darwin. ;]
llvm-svn: 146840
internal nightly testers. Original commit message:
By popular demand, link up types by name if they are isomorphic and one is an
autorenamed version of the other. This makes the IR easier to read, because
we don't end up with random renamed versions of the types after LTO'ing a large
app.
llvm-svn: 146838