* wrap code blocks in \code ... \endcode;
* refer to parameter names in paragraphs correctly (\arg is not what most
people want -- it starts a new paragraph);
* use \param instead of \arg to document parameters in order to be consistent
with the rest of the codebase.
llvm-svn: 163902
For some reason .lcomm uses byte alignment and .comm log2 alignment so we can't
use the same setting for both. Fix this by reintroducing the LCOMM enum.
I verified this against mingw's gcc.
llvm-svn: 163420
- Darwin lied about not supporting .lcomm and turned it into zerofill in the
asm parser. Push the zerofill-conversion down into macho-specific code.
- This makes the tri-state LCOMMType enum superfluous, there are no targets
without .lcomm.
- Do proper error reporting when trying to use .lcomm with alignment on a target
that doesn't support it.
- .comm and .lcomm alignment was parsed in bytes on COFF, should be power of 2.
- Fixes PR13755 (.lcomm crashes on ELF).
llvm-svn: 163395
There are situations where inline ASM may want to change the section -- for
instance, to create a variable in the .data section. However, it cannot do this
without (potentially) restoring to the wrong section. E.g.:
asm volatile (".section __DATA, __data\n\t"
".globl _fnord\n\t"
"_fnord: .quad 1f\n\t"
".text\n\t"
"1:" :::);
This may be wrong if this is inlined into a function that has a "section"
attribute. The user should use `.pushsection' and `.popsection' here instead.
The addition of `.previous' is added for completeness.
<rdar://problem/12048387>
llvm-svn: 161477
Empty macro arguments at the end of the list should be as-if not specified at
all, but those in the middle of the list need to be kept so as not to screw
up the positional numbering. E.g.:
.macro foo
foo_-bash___:
nop
.endm
foo 1, 2, 3, 4
foo 1, , 3, 4
Should create two labels, "foo_1_2_3_4" and "foo_1__3_4".
rdar://11948769
llvm-svn: 161002
Use a dedicated MachO load command to annotate data-in-code regions.
This is the same format the linker produces for final executable images,
allowing consistency of representation and use of introspection tools
for both object and executable files.
Data-in-code regions are annotated via ".data_region"/".end_data_region"
directive pairs, with an optional region type.
data_region_directive := ".data_region" { region_type }
region_type := "jt8" | "jt16" | "jt32" | "jta32"
end_data_region_directive := ".end_data_region"
The previous handling of ARM-style "$d.*" labels was broken and has
been removed. Specifically, it didn't handle ARM vs. Thumb mode when
marking the end of the section.
rdar://11459456
llvm-svn: 157062
Previously, an unsupported/unknown assembler directive issued a warning.
That's generally unsafe, and inconsistent with the behaviour of pretty
much every system assembler. Now that the MC assemblers are mature
enough to be the default on multiple targets, it's reasonable to
issue errors for these.
For target or platform directives that need to stay warnings, we
should add explicit handlers for them in, e.g., ELFAsmParser.cpp,
DarwinAsmParser.cpp, et. al., and issue the warning there.
rdar://9246275
llvm-svn: 155926
The caller is already responsible for eating any additional input on the
line. Putting an additional EatToEndOfStatement() in ParseStatement()
causes an entire extra statement to be consumed when treating warnings
as errors. For example, test/MC/macros.s will assert() because the
.endmacro directive is missed as a result.
rdar://11355843
llvm-svn: 155925
A trailing comma means no argument at all (i.e., as if the comma were not
present), not an empty argument to the invokee.
rdar://11252521
llvm-svn: 154863