This cleans up all GetElementPtr creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
value type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57173
llvm-svn: 352913
This cleans up all LoadInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass the
value type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57172
llvm-svn: 352911
This cleans up all InvokeInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57171
llvm-svn: 352910
This cleans up all CallInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57170
llvm-svn: 352909
Recommit r352791 after tweaking DerivedTypes.h slightly, so that gcc
doesn't choke on it, hopefully.
Original Message:
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352827
This reverts commit f47d6b38c7 (r352791).
Seems to run into compilation failures with GCC (but not clang, where
I tested it). Reverting while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 352800
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352791
Summary:
Renamed setBaseDiscriminator to cloneWithBaseDiscriminator, to match
similar APIs. Also changed its behavior to copy over the other
discriminator components, instead of eliding them.
Renamed cloneWithDuplicationFactor to
cloneByMultiplyingDuplicationFactor, which more closely matches what
this API does.
Reviewers: dblaikie, wmi
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: zzheng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56220
llvm-svn: 351996
As noted in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36651, the specialization for
isPodLike<std::pair<...>> did not match the expectation of
std::is_trivially_copyable which makes the memcpy optimization invalid.
This patch renames the llvm::isPodLike trait into llvm::is_trivially_copyable.
Unfortunately std::is_trivially_copyable is not portable across compiler / STL
versions. So a portable version is provided too.
Note that the following specialization were invalid:
std::pair<T0, T1>
llvm::Optional<T>
Tests have been added to assert that former specialization are respected by the
standard usage of llvm::is_trivially_copyable, and that when a decent version
of std::is_trivially_copyable is available, llvm::is_trivially_copyable is
compared to std::is_trivially_copyable.
As of this patch, llvm::Optional is no longer considered trivially copyable,
even if T is. This is to be fixed in a later patch, as it has impact on a
long-running bug (see r347004)
Note that GCC warns about this UB, but this got silented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D50296.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54472
llvm-svn: 351701
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This shortcut mechanism for creating types was added 10 years ago, but
has seen almost no uptake since then, neither internally nor in
external projects.
The very small number of characters saved by using it does not seem
worth the mental overhead of an additional type-creation API, so,
delete it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56573
llvm-svn: 351020
Summary:
Added a pair of APIs for encoding/decoding the 3 components of a DWARF discriminator described in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106532.html: the base discriminator, the duplication factor (useful in profile-guided optimization) and the copy index (used to identify copies of code in cases like loop unrolling)
The encoding packs 3 unsigned values in 32 bits. This CL addresses 2 issues:
- communicates overflow back to the user
- supports encoding all 3 components together. Current APIs assume a sequencing of events. For example, creating a new discriminator based on an existing one by changing the base discriminator was not supported.
Reviewers: davidxl, danielcdh, wmi, dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: zzheng, dmgreen, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55681
llvm-svn: 349973
IR-printing AfterPass instrumentation might be called on a loop
that has just been invalidated. We should skip printing it to
avoid spurious asserts.
Reviewed By: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54740
llvm-svn: 348887
This patch fixes the issue noticed in D54532.
The problem is that cst_pred_ty-based matchers like m_Zero() currently do not match
scalar undefs (as expected), but *do* match vector undefs. This may lead to optimization
inconsistencies in rare cases.
There is only one existing test for which output changes, reverting the change from D53205.
The reason here is that vector fsub undef, %x is no longer matched as an m_FNeg(). While I
think that the new output is technically worse than the previous one, it is consistent with
scalar, and I don't think it's really important either way (generally that undef should have
been folded away prior to reassociation.)
I've also added another test case for this issue based on InstructionSimplify. It took some
effort to find that one, as in most cases undef folds are either checked first -- and in the
cases where they aren't it usually happens to not make a difference in the end. This is the
only case I was able to come up with. Prior to this patch the test case simplified to undef
in the scalar case, but zeroinitializer in the vector case.
Patch by: @nikic (Nikita Popov)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54631
llvm-svn: 347318
This will hold flags specific to subprograms. In the future
we could potentially free up scarce bits in DIFlags by moving
subprogram-specific flags from there to the new flags word.
This patch does not change IR/bitcode formats, that will be
done in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54597
llvm-svn: 347239
Summary:
Ranges base address specifiers can save a lot of object size in
relocation records especially in optimized builds.
For an optimized self-host build of Clang with split DWARF and debug
info compression in object files, but uncompressed debug info in the
executable, this change produces about 18% smaller object files and 6%
larger executable.
While it would've been nice to turn this on by default, gold's 32 bit
gdb-index support crashes on this input & I don't think there's any
perfect heuristic to implement solely in LLVM that would suffice - so
we'll need a flag one way or another (also possible people might want to
aggressively optimized for executable size that contains debug info
(even with compression this would still come at some cost to executable
size)) - so let's plumb it through.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54242
llvm-svn: 346788
Summary:
Change the dynamic cast in CallBase::getCalledFunction() to allow
null-valued function operands.
This patch fixes a crash that occurred when a funtion operand of a
call instruction was dropped, and later on a metadata-carrying
instruction was printed out. When allocating the metadata slot numbers,
getCalledFunction() would be invoked on the call with the dropped
operand, resulting in a failed non-null assertion in isa<>.
This fixes PR38924, in which a printout in DBCE crashed due to this.
This aligns getCalledFunction() with getCalledValue(), as the latter
allows the operand to be null.
Reviewers: vsk, dexonsmith, hfinkel
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52537
llvm-svn: 345966
All the PassBuilder::parse interfaces now return descriptive StringError
instead of a plain bool. It allows to make -passes/aa-pipeline parsing
errors context-specific and thus less confusing.
TODO: ideally we should also make suggestions for misspelled pass names,
but that requires some extensions to PassBuilder.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53246
llvm-svn: 344685
Summary:
All the PassBuilder::parse interfaces now return descriptive StringError
instead of a plain bool. It allows to make -passes/aa-pipeline parsing
errors context-specific and thus less confusing.
TODO: ideally we should also make suggestions for misspelled pass names,
but that requires some extensions to PassBuilder.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe, chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53246
llvm-svn: 344519
This removes the primary remaining API producing `TerminatorInst` which
will reduce the rate at which code is introduced trying to use it and
generally make it much easier to remove the remaining APIs across the
codebase.
Also clean up some of the stragglers that the previous mechanical update
of variables missed.
Users of LLVM and out-of-tree code generally will need to update any
explicit variable types to handle this. Replacing `TerminatorInst` with
`Instruction` (or `auto`) almost always works. Most of these edits were
made in prior commits using the perl one-liner:
```
perl -i -ple 's/TerminatorInst(\b.* = .*getTerminator\(\))/Instruction\1/g'
```
This also my break some rare use cases where people overload for both
`Instruction` and `TerminatorInst`, but these should be easily fixed by
removing the `TerminatorInst` overload.
llvm-svn: 344504
Summary:
These new intrinsics have the semantics of the `minimum` and `maximum`
operations specified by the latest draft of IEEE 754-2018. Unlike
llvm.minnum and llvm.maxnum, these new intrinsics propagate NaNs and
always treat -0.0 as less than 0.0. `minimum` and `maximum` lower
directly to the existing `fminnan` and `fmaxnan` ISel DAG nodes. It is
safe to reuse these DAG nodes because before this patch were only
emitted in situations where there were known to be no NaN arguments or
where NaN propagation was correct and there were known to be no zero
arguments. I know of only four backends that lower fminnan and
fmaxnan: WebAssembly, ARM, AArch64, and SystemZ, and each of these
lowers fminnan and fmaxnan to instructions that are compatible with
the IEEE 754-2018 semantics.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff, sunfish, javed.absar
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52764
llvm-svn: 344437
The IRBuilder CreateIntrinsic method wouldn't allow you to specify the
types that you wanted the intrinsic to be mangled with. To fix this
I've:
- Added an ArrayRef<Type *> member to both CreateIntrinsic overloads.
- Used that array to pass into the Intrinsic::getDeclaration call.
- Added a CreateUnaryIntrinsic to replace the most common use of
CreateIntrinsic where the type was auto-deduced from operand 0.
- Added a bunch more unit tests to test Create*Intrinsic calls that
weren't being tested (including the FMF flag that wasn't checked).
This was suggested as part of the AMDGPU specific atomic optimizer
review (https://reviews.llvm.org/D51969).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52087
llvm-svn: 343962
As a prerequisite to time-passes implementation which needs to time both passes
and analyses, adding instrumentation points to the Analysis Manager.
The are two functional differences between Pass and Analysis instrumentation:
- the latter does not increment pass execution counter
- it does not provide ability to skip execution of the corresponding analysis
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51275
llvm-svn: 342778
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix
asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342664
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342597
Summary:
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342544
This was one of the potential follow-ups suggested in D48236,
and these will be used to make matching the patterns in PR38691 cleaner:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38691
About the vocabulary: in the DAG, these would be concat_vector with an
undef operand or extract_subvector. Alternate names are discussed in the
review, but I think these are familiar/good enough to proceed. Once we
have uses of them in code, we might adjust if there are better options.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51392
llvm-svn: 341075
The function's new implementation from r340583 had a bug in it that
could cause an invalid scope to be generated when merging two
DILocations with no common ancestor scope.
This patch detects this situation and picks the scope of the first
location. This is not perfect, because the scope is misleading, but on
the other hand, this will be a line 0 location.
rdar://problem/43687474
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51238
llvm-svn: 340672
In cases where the debugger load time is a worthwhile tradeoff (or less
costly - such as loading from a DWP instead of a variety of DWOs
(possibly over a high-latency/distributed filesystem)) against object
file size, it can be reasonable to disable pubnames and corresponding
gdb-index creation in the linker.
A backend-flag version of this was implemented for NVPTX in
D44385/r327994 - which was fine for NVPTX which wouldn't mix-and-match
CUs. Now that it's going to be a user-facing option (likely powered by
"-gno-pubnames", the same as GCC) it should be encoded in the
DICompileUnit so it can vary per-CU.
After this, likely the NVPTX support should be migrated to the metadata
& the previous flag implementation should be removed.
Reviewers: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50213
llvm-svn: 339939
Flags in DIBasicType will be used to pass attributes used in
DW_TAG_base_type, such as DW_AT_endianity.
Patch by Chirag Patel!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49610
llvm-svn: 339714
Summary:
Clean-up following D50479.
Make Update and LegalizeUpdate refer to the utilities in Support/CFGUpdate.
Reviewers: kuhar
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50669
llvm-svn: 339694
Summary: After converting all existing passes to use the new DomTreeUpdater interface, there isn't any usage of the original DeferredDominance class. Thus, we can safely remove it from the codebase.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, davide, grosser
Reviewed By: kuhar, brzycki
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49747
llvm-svn: 339502
Summary:
This patch refines the logic of `recalculate()` in the `DomTreeUpdater` in the following two aspects:
1. Previously, `recalculate()` tests whether there are pending updates/BBs awaiting deletion and then do recalculation under Lazy UpdateStrategy; and do recalculation immediately under Eager UpdateStrategy. (The former behavior is inherited from the `DeferredDominance` class). This is an inconsistency between two strategies and there is no obvious reason to do this. So the behavior is changed to always recalculate available trees when calling `recalculate()`.
2. Fix the issue of when DTU under Lazy UpdateStrategy holds nothing but with BBs awaiting deletion, after calling `recalculate()`, BBs awaiting deletion aren't flushed. An additional unittest is added to cover this case.
Reviewers: kuhar, dmgreen, brzycki, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50173
llvm-svn: 338822
LowerDbgDeclare inserts a dbg.value before each use of an address
described by a dbg.declare. When inserting a dbg.value before a CallInst
use, however, it fails to append DW_OP_deref to the DIExpression.
The DW_OP_deref is needed to reflect the fact that a dbg.value describes
a source variable directly (as opposed to a dbg.declare, which relies on
pointer indirection).
This patch adds in the DW_OP_deref where needed. This results in the
correct values being shown during a debug session for a program compiled
with ASan and optimizations (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D49520). Note
that ConvertDebugDeclareToDebugValue is already correct -- no changes
there were needed.
One complication is that SelectionDAG is unable to distinguish between
direct and indirect frame-index (FRAMEIX) SDDbgValues. This patch also
fixes this long-standing issue in order to not regress integration tests
relying on the incorrect assumption that all frame-index SDDbgValues are
indirect. This is a necessary fix: the newly-added DW_OP_derefs cannot
be lowered properly otherwise. Basically the fix prevents a direct
SDDbgValue with DIExpression(DW_OP_deref) from being dereferenced twice
by a debugger. There were a handful of tests relying on this incorrect
"FRAMEIX => indirect" assumption which actually had incorrect
DW_AT_locations: these are all fixed up in this patch.
Testing:
- check-llvm, and an end-to-end test using lldb to debug an optimized
program.
- Existing unit tests for DIExpression::appendToStack fully cover the
new DIExpression::append utility.
- check-debuginfo (the debug info integration tests)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49454
llvm-svn: 338069
Summary:
Previously, when both DT and PDT are nullptrs and the UpdateStrategy is Lazy, DomTreeUpdater still pends updates inside.
After this patch, DomTreeUpdater will ignore all updates from(`applyUpdates()/insertEdge*()/deleteEdge*()`) in this case. (call `delBB()` still pends BasicBlock deletion until a flush event according to the doc).
The behavior of DomTreeUpdater previously documented won't change after the patch.
Reviewers: dmgreen, davide, kuhar, brzycki, grosser
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48974
llvm-svn: 336968
Summary:
Previously, when people need to deal with DTU with different UpdateStrategy using different actions, they need to
```
if (DTU.getUpdateStrategy() == DomTreeUpdater::UpdateStrategy::Lazy) {
...
}
if (DTU.getUpdateStrategy() == DomTreeUpdater::UpdateStrategy::Eager) {
...
}
```
After the patch, they can avoid code patterns above
```
if (DTU.isUpdateLazy()){
...
}
if (!DTU.isUpdateLazy()){
...
}
```
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49056
llvm-svn: 336886
Summary:
This patch is the first in a series of patches related to the [[ http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123883.html | RFC - A new dominator tree updater for LLVM ]].
This patch introduces the DomTreeUpdater class, which provides a cleaner API to perform updates on available dominator trees (none, only DomTree, only PostDomTree, both) using different update strategies (eagerly or lazily) to simplify the updating process.
—Prior to the patch—
- Directly calling update functions of DominatorTree updates the data structure eagerly while DeferredDominance does updates lazily.
- DeferredDominance class cannot be used when a PostDominatorTree also needs to be updated.
- Functions receiving DT/DDT need to branch a lot which is currently necessary.
- Functions using both DomTree and PostDomTree need to call the update function separately on both trees.
- People need to construct an additional DeferredDominance class to use functions only receiving DDT.
—After the patch—
Patch by Chijun Sima <simachijun@gmail.com>.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: kuhar, brzycki
Author: NutshellySima
Subscribers: vsk, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48383
llvm-svn: 336163
Summary:
This patch is the first in a series of patches related to the [[ http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123883.html | RFC - A new dominator tree updater for LLVM ]].
This patch introduces the DomTreeUpdater class, which provides a cleaner API to perform updates on available dominator trees (none, only DomTree, only PostDomTree, both) using different update strategies (eagerly or lazily) to simplify the updating process.
—Prior to the patch—
- Directly calling update functions of DominatorTree updates the data structure eagerly while DeferredDominance does updates lazily.
- DeferredDominance class cannot be used when a PostDominatorTree also needs to be updated.
- Functions receiving DT/DDT need to branch a lot which is currently necessary.
- Functions using both DomTree and PostDomTree need to call the update function separately on both trees.
- People need to construct an additional DeferredDominance class to use functions only receiving DDT.
—After the patch—
Patch by Chijun Sima <simachijun@gmail.com>.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, grosser, davide
Reviewed By: kuhar, brzycki
Subscribers: vsk, mgorny, llvm-commits
Author: NutshellySima
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48383
llvm-svn: 336114
This addresses post-commit feedback about the name 'skipDebugInfo' being
misleading. This name could be interpreted as meaning 'a function that
skips instructions with debug locations'.
The new name, 'skipDebugIntrinsics', makes it clear that this function
only skips debug info intrinsics.
Thanks to Adrian Prantl for pointing this out!
llvm-svn: 335667
Summary: This is trying to add support for r334428.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: jlebar, hiraditya, bixia, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48399
llvm-svn: 335646
This patch introduces two helpers to make it easier to ignore debug
intrinsics:
- Instruction::getNextNonDebugInstruction()
This is just like Instruction::getNextNode(), except that it skips debug
info.
- skipDebugInfo(BasicBlock::iterator)
A free function which advances a BasicBlock iterator past any debug
info. This is a no-op when the iterator already points to a non-debug
instruction.
Part of: llvm.org/PR37728
Related to: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47874
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48305
llvm-svn: 335083
The optimizer is getting smarter (eg, D47986) about differentiating shuffles
based on its mask values, so we should make queries on the mask constant
operand generally available to avoid code duplication.
We'll probably use this soon in the vectorizers and instcombine (D48023 and
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37806).
We might clean up TTI a bit more once all of its current 'SK_*' options are
covered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48236
llvm-svn: 335067
DominatorTreeBase::getNode does not modify its parameter and this change
allows callers that only have access to const pointers to use it without
casting.
Reviewers: kuhar, dblaikie, chandlerc
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48231
llvm-svn: 334892
and using the latter in DIBuilder::createArtificialType and
DIBuilder::createObjectPointerType methods as well as introducing
mirroring DISubprogram::cloneWithFlags and
DIBuilder::createArtificialSubprogram methods.
The primary goal here is to add createArtificialSubprogram to support
a pass downstream while keeping the method consistent with the
existing ones and making sure we don't encourage changing already
created DI-nodes.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47615
llvm-svn: 333806
Summary: This patch adds a PDT constructor from Function and lets codes previously using a local class to do this use PostDominatorTree class directly.
Reviewers: davide, kuhar, grosser, dberlin
Reviewed By: kuhar
Author: NutshellySima
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46709
llvm-svn: 333102
r332057 introduced distance() for ranges. Based on post-commit feedback,
this renames distance() to size(). The new size() is also only enabled
when the operation is O(1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46976
llvm-svn: 332551
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.
In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624
llvm-svn: 332240
Summary:
Currently the order of blocks returned by `IDF::calculate` can be
non-deterministic. This was discovered in several attempts to enable
SSAUpdaterBulk for JumpThreading (which led to miscompare in bootstrap between
stage 3 and stage4). Originally, the blocks were put into a priority queue with
a depth level as their key, and this patch adds a DFSIn number as a second key
to specify a deterministic order across blocks from one level.
The solution was suggested by Daniel Berlin.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46646
llvm-svn: 332167
Summary: Fix two typos which result in verifying wrong data structures (DT) instead of PDT in DominatorTreeBatchUpdatesTest.
Reviewers: davide, kuhar, grosser, dberlin
Reviewed By: davide, kuhar, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46696
llvm-svn: 332086
This commit adds a wrapper for std::distance() which works with ranges.
As it would be a common case to write `distance(predecessors(BB))`, this
also introduces `pred_size()` and `succ_size()` helpers to make that
easier to write.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46668
llvm-svn: 332057
In order to set breakpoints on labels and list source code around
labels, we need collect debug information for labels, i.e., label
name, the function label belong, line number in the file, and the
address label located. In order to keep these information in LLVM
IR and to allow backend to generate debug information correctly.
We create a new kind of metadata for labels, DILabel. The format
of DILabel is
!DILabel(scope: !1, name: "foo", file: !2, line: 3)
We hope to keep debug information as much as possible even the
code is optimized. So, we create a new kind of intrinsic for label
metadata to avoid the metadata is eliminated with basic block.
The intrinsic will keep existing if we keep it from optimized out.
The format of the intrinsic is
llvm.dbg.label(metadata !1)
It has only one argument, that is the DILabel metadata. The
intrinsic will follow the label immediately. Backend could get the
label metadata through the intrinsic's parameter.
We also create DIBuilder API for labels to be used by Frontend.
Frontend could use createLabel() to allocate DILabel objects, and use
insertLabel() to insert llvm.dbg.label intrinsic in LLVM IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45024
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331841
Inspired by r331508, I did a grep and found these.
Mostly just change from dyn_cast to cast. Some cases also showed a dyn_cast result being converted to bool, so those I changed to isa.
llvm-svn: 331577
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
LLVM_ON_WIN32 is set exactly with MSVC and MinGW (but not Cygwin) in
HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, which is where _WIN32 defined too. Just use the
default macro instead of a reinvented one.
See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.
No intended behavior change.
This moves over all uses of the macro, but doesn't remove the definition
of it in (llvm-)config.h yet.
llvm-svn: 331127
Summary:
Currently, we
1. match `LHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `RHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
If that does not match, we swap the `LHS` and `RHS` matchers:
1. match `RHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `LHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
This works ok.
But it complicates writing of commutative matchers, where one would like to match
(`m_Value()`) the value on one side, and use (`m_Specific()`) it on the other side.
This is additionally complicated by the fact that `m_Specific()` stores the `Value *`,
not `Value **`, so it won't work at all out of the box.
The last problem is trivially solved by adding a new `m_c_Specific()` that stores the
`Value **`, not `Value *`. I'm choosing to add a new matcher, not change the existing
one because i guess all the current users are ok with existing behavior,
and this additional pointer indirection may have performance drawbacks.
Also, i'm storing pointer, not reference, because for some mysterious-to-me reason
it did not work with the reference.
The first one appears trivial, too.
Currently, we
1. match `LHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `RHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
If that does not match, we swap the ~~`LHS` and `RHS` matchers~~ **operands**:
1. match ~~`RHS`~~ **`LHS`** matcher to the ~~`first`~~ **`second`** operand of binary operator,
2. and then match ~~`LHS`~~ **`RHS`** matcher to the ~~`second`~ **`first`** operand of binary operator.
Surprisingly, `$ ninja check-llvm` still passes with this.
But i expect the bots will disagree..
The motivational unittest is included.
I'd like to use this in D45664.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, arsenm, RKSimon
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: xbolva00, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45828
llvm-svn: 331085
This makes it possible to reverse a filtered range. For example, here's
a way to visit memory accesses in a BasicBlock in reverse order:
auto MemInsts = reverse(make_filter_range(BB, [](Instruction &I) {
return isa<StoreInst>(&I) || isa<LoadInst>(&I);
}));
for (auto &MI : MemInsts)
...
To implement this functionality, I factored out forward iteration
functionality into filter_iterator_base, and added a specialization of
filter_iterator_impl which supports bidirectional iteration. Thanks to
Tim Shen, Zachary Turner, and others for suggesting this design and
providing feedback! This version of the patch supersedes the original
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D45792).
This was motivated by a problem we encountered in D45657: we'd like to
visit the non-debug-info instructions in a BasicBlock in reverse order.
Testing: check-llvm, check-clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45853
llvm-svn: 330875
The code uses the index of the last element in the sorted array to determine the maximum size needed for the vector. But if the last index is a FunctionIndex(~0), attrIdxToArrayIdx will return 0 and the vector will have size 1. If there are any indices before FunctionIndex, those values would return a value larger than 0 from attrIdxToArrayIdx. So in this case we need to look in front of the FunctionIndex to get the true size needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45632
llvm-svn: 330136
This patch introduces a way to set custom OptPassGate instances to LLVMContext.
A new instance field OptBisector and a new method setOptBisect() are added
to the LLVMContext classes. These changes allow to set a custom OptBisect class
that can make its own decisions on skipping optional passes.
Another important feature of this change is ability to set different instances
of OptPassGate to different LLVMContexts. So the different contexts can be used
independently in several compiling threads of one process.
One unit test is added.
Patch by Yevgeny Rouban.
Reviewers: andrew.w.kaylor, fedor.sergeev, vsk, dberlin, Eugene.Zelenko, reames, skatkov
Reviewed By: andrew.w.kaylor, fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44464
llvm-svn: 329267
Summary:
There aren't any matchers for the three vector operations: insertelement, extractelement, and
shufflevector. This patch adds them as well as corresponding unit tests.
llvm-svn: 328709
Value::printAsOperand has been scanning the entire module just to
print a single value as an operand, regardless being asked to print a
type or not at all, and regardless really needing to scan the module
to print a type.
It made some of the users of the method exceptionally slow on large
IR-modules (or large MIR-files with large IR-modules embedded).
This patch defers scanning a module looking for struct types, mostly
numbered struct types, as much as possible, speeding up those users
w/o changing any APIs at all.
See speedup examples below:
Release Build:
# 83 seconds -> 5.5 seconds
time ./bin/llc -start-before=irtranslator -stop-after=irtranslator \
-global-isel -global-isel-abort=2 -simplify-mir sqlite3.O0.ll -o \
sqlite3.O0.ll.regbankselected.mir
# 133 seconds -> 6.2 seconds
time ./bin/opt sqlite3.O0.ll -dot-cfg -disable-output
Release + Asserts Build:
# 95 seconds -> 5.5 seconds
time ./bin/llc -start-before=irtranslator -stop-after=irtranslator \
-global-isel -global-isel-abort=2 -simplify-mir sqlite3.O0.ll -o \
sqlite3.O0.ll.regbankselected.mir
# 146 seconds -> 6.2 seconds
time ./bin/opt sqlite3.O0.ll -dot-cfg -disable-output
# 1096 seconds -> 553 seconds
time ./bin/llc -debug-only=isel -fast-isel=false -stop-after=isel \
sqlite3.O0.ll -o /dev/null 2> err
where sqlite3.O0.ll is non-optimized IR produced from
sqlite-amalgamation (http://sqlite.org/download.html), which is entire
SQLite3 implementation in a single C-file.
Benchmarked on 4-cores / 8 threads PCI-E SSD iMac running macOS
Reviewers: dexonsmith, bkramer, void, chandlerc, aditya_nandakumar, dsanders, qcolombet,
Reviewed By: bogner
Subscribers: thegameg, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44132
llvm-svn: 328246
Now the Windows mangling modes ('w' and 'x') do not do any mangling for
symbols starting with '?'. This means that clang can stop adding the
hideous '\01' leading escape. This means LLVM debug logs are less likely
to contain ASCII escape characters and it will be easier to copy and
paste MS symbol names from IR.
Finally.
For non-Windows platforms, names starting with '?' still get IR
mangling, so once clang stops escaping MS C++ names, we will get extra
'_' prefixing on MachO. That's fine, since it is currently impossible to
construct a triple that uses the MS C++ ABI in clang and emits macho
object files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D7775
llvm-svn: 327734
Removes verifyDomTree, using assert(verify()) everywhere instead, and
changes verify a little to always run IsSameAsFreshTree first in order
to print good output when we find errors. Also adds verifyAnalysis for
PostDomTrees, which will allow checking of PostDomTrees it the same way
we check DomTrees and MachineDomTrees.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41298
llvm-svn: 326315
In DWARF v5 the Line Number Program Header is extensible, allowing values with
new content types. In this extension a content type is added,
DW_LNCT_LLVM_source, which contains the embedded source code of the file.
Add new optional attribute for !DIFile IR metadata called source which contains
source text. Use this to output the source to the DWARF line table of code
objects. Analogously extend METADATA_FILE in Bitcode and .file directive in ASM
to support optional source.
Teach llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-objdump about the new values. Update the output
format of llvm-dwarfdump to make room for the new attribute on file_names
entries, and support embedded sources for the -source option in llvm-objdump.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42765
llvm-svn: 325970
The bug was introduced here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL296409
...but the patch doesn't use maxnum and nothing else in
trunk has tried since then, so the bug went unnoticed.
llvm-svn: 325607
Commit https://reviews.llvm.org/rL324489 added
EXPECT_EQ(false, N->isUnsigned());
which older GCC versions dislike for some reason. Anyway, it looks like the
proper GTest way is to use EXPECT_FALSE, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43233
llvm-svn: 325121
Rather than encode the absence of a checksum with a Kind variant, instead put
both the kind and value in a struct and wrap it in an Optional.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D43043
llvm-svn: 324928
This patch is the LLVM part of fixing the issues, described in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36168
* The representation of enumerator values in the debug info metadata now
contains a boolean flag isUnsigned, which determines how the bits of
the value are interpreted.
* The DW_TAG_enumeration type DIE now always (for DWARF version >= 3)
includes a DW_AT_type attribute, which refers to the underlying
integer type, as suggested in DWARFv4 (5.7 Enumeration Type Entries).
* The debug info metadata for enumeration type contains (in flags)
indication whether this is a C++11 "fixed enum".
* For C++11 enumeration with a fixed underlying type, the DIE also
includes the DW_AT_enum_class attribute (for DWARF version >= 4).
* Encoding of enumerator constants uses DW_FORM_sdata for signed values
and DW_FORM_udata for unsigned values, as suggested by DWARFv4 (7.5.4
Attribute Encodings).
The changes should be backwards compatible:
* the isUnsigned attribute is optional and defaults to false.
* if the underlying type for the enumeration is not available, the
enumerator values are considered signed.
* the FixedEnum flag defaults to clear.
* the bitcode format for DIEnumerator stores the unsigned flag bit #1 of
the first record element, so the format does not change and the zero
previously stored there is consistent with the false default for
IsUnsigned.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42734
llvm-svn: 324489
n Rust, an enum that carries data in the variants is, essentially, a
discriminated union. Furthermore, the Rust compiler will perform
space optimizations on such enums in some situations. Previously,
DWARF for these constructs was emitted using a hack (a magic field
name); but this approach stopped working when more space optimizations
were added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45225.
This patch changes LLVM to allow discriminated unions to be
represented in DWARF. It adds createDiscriminatedUnionType and
createDiscriminatedMemberType to DIBuilder and then arranges for this
to be emitted using DWARF's DW_TAG_variant_part and DW_TAG_variant.
Note that DWARF requires that a discriminated union be represented as
a structure with a variant part. However, as Rust only needs to emit
pure discriminated unions, this is what I chose to expose on
DIBuilder.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42082
llvm-svn: 324426
Summary:
This patch extends the DISubrange 'count' field to take either a
(signed) constant integer value or a reference to a DILocalVariable
or DIGlobalVariable.
This is patch [1/3] in a series to extend LLVM's DISubrange Metadata
node to support debugging of C99 variable length arrays and vectors with
runtime length like the Scalable Vector Extension for AArch64. It is
also a first step towards representing more complex cases like arrays
in Fortran.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl, dexonsmith, clayborg, kristof.beyls, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: rnk, probinson, fhahn, aemerson, rengolin, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41695
llvm-svn: 323313
Summary:
It's generally not safe to perform multiple DomTree updates without using the incremental API.
Although it is supposed to work in this particular case, the testcase is misleading/confusing, and it's better to remove it.
Reviewers: dberlin, brzycki, davide, grosser
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42333
llvm-svn: 323058
These fix some odd cfg cases where batch-updating the post
dom tree fails. Usually around infinite loops and roots
ending up being different.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42247
llvm-svn: 323034
Summary:
This patch attempts to fix the DomTree incremental insertion bug found here [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35969 | PR35969 ]] .
When performing an insertion into a piece of unreachable CFG, we may find the same not at different levels. When this happens, the node can turn out to be affected when we find it starting from a node with a lower level in the tree. The level at which we start visitation affects if we consider a node affected or not.
This patch tracks the lowest level at which each node was visited during insertion and allows it to be visited multiple times, if it can cause it to be considered affected.
Reviewers: brzycki, davide, dberlin, grosser
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42231
llvm-svn: 322993
Summary:
The class wraps a uint64_t and an enum to represent the type of profile
count (real and synthetic) with some helper methods.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41883
llvm-svn: 322771
Summary:
Discovered while working on a patch to move alignment in
@llvm.memcpy/move/set from an arg into parameter attributes.
The current implementations of AttributeSet::removeAttribute() and
AttributeList::removeAttribute crash when attempting to remove the
alignment attribute. Currently, these implementations add the
to-be-removed attributes to an AttrBuilder and then remove
the builder from the list/set. Alignment is special in that it
must be added to a builder with an integer value for the alignment;
attempts to add alignment to a builder without a value is an error.
This change fixes the removeAttribute implementations for AttributeSet and
AttributeList to make them able to remove the alignment, and other similar,
attributes.
Reviewers: rnk, chandlerc, pete, javed.absar, reames
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41951
llvm-svn: 322735
Summary:
See D37528 for a previous (non-deferred) version of this
patch and its description.
Preserves dominance in a deferred manner using a new class
DeferredDominance. This reduces the performance impact of
updating the DominatorTree at every edge insertion and
deletion. A user may call DDT->flush() within JumpThreading
for an up-to-date DT. This patch currently has one flush()
at the end of runImpl() to ensure DT is preserved across
the pass.
LVI is also preserved to help subsequent passes such as
CorrelatedValuePropagation. LVI is simpler to maintain and
is done immediately (not deferred). The code to perform the
preversation was minimally altered and simply marked as
preserved for the PassManager to be informed.
This extends the analysis available to JumpThreading for
future enhancements such as threading across loop headers.
Reviewers: dberlin, kuhar, sebpop
Reviewed By: kuhar, sebpop
Subscribers: mgorny, dmgreen, kuba, rnk, rsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40146
llvm-svn: 322401
Extend the ConstantRange implementation to compute the range of possible values resulting from an arithmetic right shift operation.
There will be a follow up patch to leverage this constant range infrastructure in LazyValueInfo.
Patch by Surya Kumari Jangala!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40881
llvm-svn: 320976
Previously ConstantRange::makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion only handled addition. This adds support for subtraction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40036
llvm-svn: 319806
In Rust, a trait can be implemented for any type, and if a trait
object pointer is used for the type, then a virtual table will be
emitted for that trait/type combination.
We would like debuggers to be able to inspect trait objects, which
requires finding the concrete type associated with a given vtable.
This patch changes LLVM so that any type can be passed to
replaceVTableHolder. This allows the Rust compiler to emit the needed
debug info -- associating a vtable with the concrete type for which it
was emitted.
This is a DWARF extension: DWARF only specifies the meaning of
DW_AT_containing_type in one specific situation. This style of DWARF
extension is routine, though, and LLVM already has one such case for
DW_AT_containing_type.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39503
llvm-svn: 317730
As discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-November/107104.html
and again more recently:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-October/118118.html
...this is a step in cleaning up our fast-math-flags implementation in IR to better match
the capabilities of both clang's user-visible flags and the backend's flags for SDNode.
As proposed in the above threads, we're replacing the 'UnsafeAlgebra' bit (which had the
'umbrella' meaning that all flags are set) with a new bit that only applies to algebraic
reassociation - 'AllowReassoc'.
We're also adding a bit to allow approximations for library functions called 'ApproxFunc'
(this was initially proposed as 'libm' or similar).
...and we're out of bits. 7 bits ought to be enough for anyone, right? :) FWIW, I did
look at getting this out of SubclassOptionalData via SubclassData (spacious 16-bits),
but that's apparently already used for other purposes. Also, I don't think we can just
add a field to FPMathOperator because Operator is not intended to be instantiated.
We'll defer movement of FMF to another day.
We keep the 'fast' keyword. I thought about removing that, but seeing IR like this:
%f.fast = fadd reassoc nnan ninf nsz arcp contract afn float %op1, %op2
...made me think we want to keep the shortcut synonym.
Finally, this change is binary incompatible with existing IR as seen in the
compatibility tests. This statement:
"Newer releases can ignore features from older releases, but they cannot miscompile
them. For example, if nsw is ever replaced with something else, dropping it would be
a valid way to upgrade the IR."
( http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#ir-backwards-compatibility )
...provides the flexibility we want to make this change without requiring a new IR
version. Ie, we're not loosening the FP strictness of existing IR. At worst, we will
fail to optimize some previously 'fast' code because it's no longer recognized as
'fast'. This should get fixed as we audit/squash all of the uses of 'isFast()'.
Note: an inter-dependent clang commit to use the new API name should closely follow
commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39304
llvm-svn: 317488
This came out of a recent discussion on llvm-dev
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D38042). Currently the Verifier will strip
the debug info metadata from a module if it finds the dbeug info to be
malformed. This feature is very valuable since it allows us to improve
the Verifier by making it stricter without breaking bcompatibility,
but arguable the Verifier pass should not be modifying the IR. This
patch moves the stripping of broken debug info into AutoUpgrade
(UpgradeDebugInfo to be precise), which is a much better location for
this since the stripping of malformed (i.e., produced by older, buggy
versions of Clang) is a (harsh) form of AutoUpgrade.
This change is mostly NFC in nature, the one big difference is the
behavior when LLVM module passes are introducing malformed debug
info. Prior to this patch, a NoAsserts build would have printed a
warning and stripped the debug info, after this patch the Verifier
will report a fatal error. I believe this behavior is actually more
desirable anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38184
llvm-svn: 314699
This reverts commit 6389e7aa724ea7671d096f4770f016c3d86b0d54.
There is a bug in this implementation where the string value of the
checksum is outputted, instead of the actual hex bytes. Therefore the
checksum is incorrect, and this prevent pdbs from being loaded by visual
studio. Revert this until the checksum is emitted correctly.
llvm-svn: 313431
Summary:
The checksums had already been placed in the IR, this patch allows
MCCodeView to actually write it out to an MCStreamer.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37157
llvm-svn: 313374
Now that we print DIExpressions inline everywhere, we don't need to
print them once as an operand and again as a value. This is only really
visible when calling dump() or print() directly on a DIExpression during
debugging.
llvm-svn: 312168
Summary:
This patch introduces a way of informing the (Post)DominatorTree about multiple CFG updates that happened since the last tree update. This makes performing tree updates much easier, as it internally takes care of applying the updates in lockstep with the (virtual) updates to the CFG, which is done by reverse-applying future CFG updates.
The batch updater is able to remove redundant updates that cancel each other out. In the future, it should be also possible to reorder updates to reduce the amount of work needed to perform the updates.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, davide, brzycki
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36167
llvm-svn: 311015
Summary:
This patch teaches PostDominatorTree about infinite loops. It is built on top of D29705 by @dberlin which includes a very detailed motivation for this change.
What's new is that the patch also teaches the incremental updater how to deal with reverse-unreachable regions and how to properly maintain and verify tree roots. Before that, the incremental algorithm sometimes ended up preserving reverse-unreachable regions after updates that wouldn't appear in the tree if it was constructed from scratch on the same CFG.
This patch makes the following assumptions:
- A sequence of updates should produce the same tree as a recalculating it.
- Any sequence of the same updates should lead to the same tree.
- Siblings and roots are unordered.
The last two properties are essential to efficiently perform batch updates in the future.
When it comes to the first one, we can decide later that the consistency between freshly built tree and an updated one doesn't matter match, as there are many correct ways to pick roots in infinite loops, and to relax this assumption. That should enable us to recalculate postdominators less frequently.
This patch is pretty conservative when it comes to incremental updates on reverse-unreachable regions and ends up recalculating the whole tree in many cases. It should be possible to improve the performance in many cases, if we decide that it's important enough.
That being said, my experiments showed that reverse-unreachable are very rare in the IR emitted by clang when bootstrapping clang. Here are the statistics I collected by analyzing IR between passes and after each removePredecessor call:
```
# functions: 52283
# samples: 337609
# reverse unreachable BBs: 216022
# BBs: 247840796
Percent reverse-unreachable: 0.08716159869015269 %
Max(PercRevUnreachable) in a function: 87.58620689655172 %
# > 25 % samples: 471 ( 0.1395104988314885 % samples )
... in 145 ( 0.27733680163724345 % functions )
```
Most of the reverse-unreachable regions come from invalid IR where it wouldn't be possible to construct a PostDomTree anyway.
I would like to commit this patch in the next week in order to be able to complete the work that depends on it before the end of my internship, so please don't wait long to voice your concerns :).
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, brzycki, davide, chandlerc, hfinkel
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: nhaehnle, javed.absar, kparzysz, uabelho, jlebar, hiraditya, llvm-commits, dberlin, david2050
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35851
llvm-svn: 310940
They hang for me locally. I suspect that there is a use-after-free when
attempting to destroy an LLVMContext after asserting from the middle of
metadata tracking. It doesn't seem worth debugging it further.
llvm-svn: 310660
Remove the second part of the TODO comment that highlighted an issue with
possibly connecting all nodes to the exit of the CFG. This caused concerns
with Jakub Kuderski regarding its feasability, hence we remove it. Such
points are better discussed outside of CFG. If connecting all nodes makes
sense and what the impact is is currently part of an active review discussion.
llvm-svn: 309919
Summary:
This patch makes LoopDeletion use the incremental DominatorTree API.
We modify LoopDeletion to perform the deletion in 5 steps:
1. Create a new dummy edge from the preheader to the exit, by adding a conditional branch.
2. Inform the DomTree about the new edge.
3. Remove the conditional branch and replace it with an unconditional edge to the exit. This removes the edge to the loop header, making it unreachable.
4. Inform the DomTree about the deleted edge.
5. Remove the unreachable block from the function.
Creating the dummy conditional branch is necessary to perform incremental DomTree update.
We should consider using the batch updater when it's ready.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, grosser, sanjoy
Reviewed By: dberlin, grosser
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35391
llvm-svn: 309850
Summary:
As we are in the process of changing the behavior of how the post-dominator tree
is computed, make sure we have some more test coverage in this area.
Current inconsistencies:
- Newly unreachable nodes are not added as new roots, in case the PDT is updated
but not rebuilt.
- Newly unreachable loops are not added to the CFG at all (neither when
building from scratch nor when updating the CFG). This is inconsistent with
the fact that unreachables are added to the PDT, but unreachable loops not.
On the other side, PDT relationships are not loosened at the moment in
cases where new unreachable loops are built.
This commit is providing additional test coverage for
https://reviews.llvm.org/D35851
Reviewers: dberlin, kuhar
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36107
llvm-svn: 309684
DIImportedEntity has a line number, but not a file field. To determine
the decl_line/decl_file we combine the line number from the
DIImportedEntity with the file from the DIImportedEntity's scope. This
does not work correctly when the parent scope is a DINamespace or a
DIModule, both of which do not have a source file.
This patch adds a file field to DIImportedEntity to unambiguously
identify the source location of the using/import declaration. Most
testcase updates are mechanical, the interesting one is the removal of
the FIXME in test/DebugInfo/Generic/namespace.ll.
This fixes PR33822. See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33822
for more context.
<rdar://problem/33357889>
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33822
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35583
llvm-svn: 308398
This fixes a minor bug in insertion to a reachable node that caused
DominatorTree.InsertDeleteExhaustive flakiness. The patch also adds
a new testcase for this exact failure.
llvm-svn: 308074
The DominatorTree.InsertDeleteExhaustive uses a RNG with a
constant seed to generate different sequences of updates. The test
fails on some buildbots and this patch disables it for now.
llvm-svn: 308070
Summary:
This patch implements incremental edge deletions.
It also makes DominatorTreeBase store a pointer to the parent function. The parent function is needed to perform full rebuilts during some deletions, but it is also used to verify that inserted and deleted edges come from the same function.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, grosser, sanjoy, brzycki
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35342
llvm-svn: 308062
Summary:
This patch introduces incremental edge insertions based on the Depth Based Search algorithm.
Insertions should work for both dominators and postdominators.
Reviewers: dberlin, grosser, davide, sanjoy, brzycki
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35341
llvm-svn: 308054
Summary:
DominatorTreeBase used to have IsPostDominators (bool) member to indicate if the tree is a dominator or a postdominator tree. This made it possible to switch between the two 'modes' at runtime, but it isn't used in practice anywhere.
This patch makes IsPostDominator a template argument. This way, it is easier to switch between different algorithms at compile-time based on this argument and design external utilities around it. It also makes it impossible to incidentally assign a postdominator tree to a dominator tree (and vice versa), and to further simplify template code in GenericDominatorTreeConstruction.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, davide, grosser
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35315
llvm-svn: 308040
Summary:
This patch introduces a new testing utility for building and modifying CFG -- CFGBuilder. The primary use case for the utility is testing the upcoming incremental dominator tree update API.
The current design provides a simple mechanism of constructing arbitrary graphs and then applying series of updates to them. CFGBuilder takes care of creating empty functions, connecting and disconnecting basic blocks. Under the hood it uses SwitchInst and UnreachableInst.
It will be also possible to create a thin wrapper over CFGBuilder for parsing string input and to hook it up to other textual tools (e.g. opt used with FileCheck).
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: davide, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34798
llvm-svn: 307960
Summary:
This patch adds a callback registration API to the PassBuilder,
enabling registering out-of-tree passes with it.
Through the Callback API, callers may register callbacks with the
various stages at which passes are added into pass managers, including
parsing of a pass pipeline as well as at extension points within the
default -O pipelines.
Registering utilities like `require<>` and `invalidate<>` needs to be
handled manually by the caller, but a helper is provided.
Additionally, adding passes at pipeline extension points is exposed
through the opt tool. This patch adds a `-passes-ep-X` commandline
option for every extension point X, which opt parses into pipelines
inserted into that extension point.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: lksbhm, grosser, davide, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33464
llvm-svn: 307532
This reverts commit r306907 and reapplies the patches in the title.
The patches used to make one of the
CodeGen/ARM/2011-02-07-AntidepClobber.ll test to fail because of a
missing null check.
llvm-svn: 306919
This reverts commit r306894.
Revert "[Dominators] Add NearestCommonDominator verification"
This reverts commit r306893.
Revert "[Dominators] Keep tree level in DomTreeNode and use it to find NCD and answer dominance queries"
This reverts commit r306892.
llvm-svn: 306907
Summary:
This patch makes DomTreeNodes keep their level (depth) in the DomTree. By having this information always available, it is possible to speedup and simplify findNearestCommonDominator and certain dominance queries.
In the future, level information will be also needed to perform incremental updates.
My testing doesn't show any noticeable performance differences after applying this patch. There may be some improvements when other passes are thought to use the level information.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, chandlerc, grosser
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34548
llvm-svn: 306892
Summary:
DFS InOut numbers currently get eagerly computer upon DomTree construction. They are only needed to answer dome dominance queries and they get invalidated by updates and recalculations. Because of that, it is faster in practice to compute them lazily when they are actually needed.
Clang built without this patch takes 6m 45s to boostrap on my machine, and with the patch applied 6m 38s.
Reviewers: sanjoy, dberlin, chandlerc
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34296
llvm-svn: 306778
Summary:
This patch is part of 3 patches that together form a single patch, but must be introduced in stages in order not to break things.
The way that LLVM interprets DW_OP_plus in DIExpression nodes is basically that of the DW_OP_plus_uconst operator since LLVM expects an unsigned constant operand. This unnecessarily restricts the DW_OP_plus operator, preventing it from being used to describe the evaluation of runtime values on the expression stack. These patches try to align the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus with that of the DWARF definition, which pops two elements off the expression stack, performs the operation and pushes the result back on the stack.
This is done in three stages:
• The first patch (LLVM) adds support for DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The second patch (Clang) contains changes all its uses from DW_OP_plus to DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The third patch (LLVM) changes the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus to be in line with its DWARF meaning. This patch includes the bitcode upgrade from legacy DIExpressions.
Patch by Sander de Smalen.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, javed.absar, aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33894
llvm-svn: 305386
Previously, the matching was done incorrectly for the case where
operands for FCmpInst and SelectInst were in opposite order.
Patch by Andrei Elovikov.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33185
llvm-svn: 305308
Summary:
This patch is part of 3 patches that together form a single patch, but must be introduced in stages in order not to break things.
The way that LLVM interprets DW_OP_plus in DIExpression nodes is basically that of the DW_OP_plus_uconst operator since LLVM expects an unsigned constant operand. This unnecessarily restricts the DW_OP_plus operator, preventing it from being used to describe the evaluation of runtime values on the expression stack. These patches try to align the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus with that of the DWARF definition, which pops two elements off the expression stack, performs the operation and pushes the result back on the stack.
This is done in three stages:
• The first patch (LLVM) adds support for DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The second patch (Clang) contains changes all its uses from DW_OP_plus to DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The third patch (LLVM) changes the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus to be in line with its DWARF meaning. This patch includes the bitcode upgrade from legacy DIExpressions.
Patch by Sander de Smalen.
Reviewers: pcc, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, aprantl, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33892
llvm-svn: 305304
clang-format (https://reviews.llvm.org/D33932) to keep primary headers
at the top and handle new utility headers like 'gmock' consistently with
other utility headers.
No other change was made. I did no manual edits, all of this is
clang-format.
This should allow other changes to have more clear and focused diffs,
and is especially motivated by moving some headers into more focused
libraries.
llvm-svn: 304786
This removes a quadratic behavior in assert-enabled builds.
GVN propagates the equivalence from a condition into the blocks guarded by the
condition. E.g. for 'if (a == 7) { ... }', 'a' will be replaced in the block
with 7. It does this by replacing all the uses of 'a' that are dominated by
the true edge.
For a switch with N cases and U uses of the value, this will mean N * U calls
to 'dominates'. Asserting isSingleEdge in 'dominates' make this N^2 * U
because this function checks for the uniqueness of the edge. I.e. traverses
each edge between the SwitchInst's block and the cases.
The change removes the assert and makes 'dominates' works correctly in the
presence of non-unique edges.
This brings build time down by an order of magnitude for an input that has
~10k cases in a switch statement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33584
llvm-svn: 304721
I've taken the approach from the LoopInfo test:
* Rather than running in the pass manager just build the analyses manually
* Split out the common parts (makeLLVMModule, runWithDomTree) into helpers
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33617
llvm-svn: 304061
block.
This allows writing much more natural and readable range based for loops
directly over the PHI nodes. It also takes advantage of the same tricks
for terminating the sequence as the hand coded versions.
I've replaced one example of this mostly to showcase the difference and
I've added a unit test to make sure the facilities really work the way
they're intended. I want to use this inside of SimpleLoopUnswitch but it
seems generally nice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33533
llvm-svn: 303964
getParamAlignment expects an argument number, not an AttributeList
index.
Johan Englan, who works on LDC, found this bug and told me about it off
list.
llvm-svn: 303458
Summary:
Implements PR889
Removing the virtual table pointer from Value saves 1% of RSS when doing
LTO of llc on Linux. The impact on time was positive, but too noisy to
conclusively say that performance improved. Here is a link to the
spreadsheet with the original data:
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1F4FHir0qYnV0MEp2sYYp_BuvnJgWlWPhWOwZ6LbW7W4/edit?usp=sharing
This change makes it invalid to directly delete a Value, User, or
Instruction pointer. Instead, such code can be rewritten to a null check
and a call Value::deleteValue(). Value objects tend to have their
lifetimes managed through iplist, so for the most part, this isn't a big
deal. However, there are some places where LLVM deletes values, and
those places had to be migrated to deleteValue. I have also created
llvm::unique_value, which has a custom deleter, so it can be used in
place of std::unique_ptr<Value>.
I had to add the "DerivedUser" Deleter escape hatch for MemorySSA, which
derives from User outside of lib/IR. Code in IR cannot include MemorySSA
headers or call the MemoryAccess object destructors without introducing
a circular dependency, so we need some level of indirection.
Unfortunately, no class derived from User may have any virtual methods,
because adding a virtual method would break User::getHungOffOperands(),
which assumes that it can find the use list immediately prior to the
User object. I've added a static_assert to the appropriate OperandTraits
templates to help people avoid this trap.
Reviewers: chandlerc, mehdi_amini, pete, dberlin, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: krytarowski, eraman, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin, Prazek, nlewycky, hans, inglorion, pcc, tejohnson, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31261
llvm-svn: 303362
r271020 added an early out to skip the signed multiply portion of ConstantRange::multiply. The comment says we don't need to do signed multiply if the range is only positive numbers, but the implemented check only ensures that the start of the range is positive. It doesn't look at the end of the range.
This patch checks the end of the range instead. Because Upper is one more than the end we have to see if its positive or if its one past the last positive number.
llvm-svn: 302717
Use variadic templates instead of relying on <cstdarg> + sentinel.
This enforces better type checking and makes code more readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32541
llvm-svn: 302571
Summary:
Following up on Sanjay's suggetion in D32955, move this functionality
into ShuffleVectornstruction.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32956
llvm-svn: 302420
Summary:
This frees up one slot in the HandleBaseKind enum, which I will use
later to add a new kind of value handle. The size of the
HandleBaseKind enum is important because we store a HandleBaseKind in
the low two bits of a (in the worst case) 4 byte aligned pointer.
Reviewers: davide, chandlerc
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32634
llvm-svn: 301809
This broke the Clang build. (Clang-side patch missing?)
Original commit message:
> [IR] Make add/remove Attributes use AttrBuilder instead of
> AttributeList
>
> This change cleans up call sites and avoids creating temporary
> AttributeList objects.
>
> NFC
llvm-svn: 301712
Fixes the issue highlighted in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-June/037500.html.
The DW_AT_decl_file and DW_AT_decl_line attributes on namespaces can
prevent LLVM from uniquing types that are in the same namespace. They
also don't carry any meaningful information.
rdar://problem/17484998
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32648
llvm-svn: 301706
For Swift we would like to be able to encode the error types that a
function may throw, so the debugger can display them alongside the
function's return value when finish-ing a function.
DWARF defines DW_TAG_thrown_type (intended to be used for C++ throw()
declarations) that is a perfect fit for this purpose. This patch wires
up support for DW_TAG_thrown_type in LLVM by adding a list of thrown
types to DISubprogram.
To offset the cost of the extra pointer, there is a follow-up patch
that turns DISubprogram into a variable-length node.
rdar://problem/29481673
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32559
llvm-svn: 301489
Commits were:
"Use WeakVH instead of WeakTrackingVH in AliasSetTracker's UnkownInsts"
"Add a new WeakVH value handle; NFC"
"Rename WeakVH to WeakTrackingVH; NFC"
The changes assumed pointers are 8 byte aligned on all architectures.
llvm-svn: 301429
Summary:
WeakVH nulls itself out if the value it was tracking gets deleted, but
it does not track RAUW.
Reviewers: dblaikie, davide
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32267
llvm-svn: 301425
Summary:
I plan to use WeakVH to mean "nulls itself out on deletion, but does
not track RAUW" in a subsequent commit.
Reviewers: dblaikie, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: arsenm, mehdi_amini, mcrosier, mzolotukhin, jfb, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32266
llvm-svn: 301424
The 'addAttributes(unsigned, AttrBuilder)' overload delegated to 'get'
instead of 'addAttributes'.
Since we can implicitly construct an AttrBuilder from an AttributeSet,
just standardize on AttrBuilder.
llvm-svn: 300651
and to expose a handle to represent the actual case rather than having
the iterator return a reference to itself.
All of this allows the iterator to be used with common STL facilities,
standard algorithms, etc.
Doing this exposed some missing facilities in the iterator facade that
I've fixed and required some work to the actual iterator to fully
support the necessary API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31548
llvm-svn: 300032
-ffp-contract=fast does not currently work with LTO because it's passed as a
TargetOption to the backend rather than in the IR. This adds it to
FastMathFlags.
This is toward fixing PR25721
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31164
llvm-svn: 298939
Summary:
This class is a list of AttributeSetNodes corresponding the function
prototype of a call or function declaration. This class used to be
called ParamAttrListPtr, then AttrListPtr, then AttributeSet. It is
typically accessed by parameter and return value index, so
"AttributeList" seems like a more intuitive name.
Rename AttributeSetImpl to AttributeListImpl to follow suit.
It's useful to rename this class so that we can rename AttributeSetNode
to AttributeSet later. AttributeSet is the set of attributes that apply
to a single function, argument, or return value.
Reviewers: sanjoy, javed.absar, chandlerc, pete
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: pete, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, mehdi_amini, jfb, nhaehnle, sbc100, void, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31102
llvm-svn: 298393
Users often call getArgumentList().size(), which is a linear way to get
the number of function arguments. arg_size(), on the other hand, is
constant time.
In general, the fact that arguments are stored in an iplist is an
implementation detail, so I've removed it from the Function interface
and moved all other users to the argument container APIs (arg_begin(),
arg_end(), args(), arg_size()).
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31052
llvm-svn: 298010
Summary:
The helper will be used in a later change. This change itself is NFC
since the only user of this new function is its unit test.
Reviewers: majnemer, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30184
llvm-svn: 296035
Summary:
In rL291613, the section name was interned in LLVMContext. However,
this broke the ability to remove the section from a GlobalObject,
because it tried to intern empty strings, which is not allowed.
Fix that and add an appropriate regression test.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29795
llvm-svn: 295238
AssertingVH that delays any reported error until the handle is *used*.
This allows data structures to contain handles which become dangling
provided the data structure is cleaned up afterward rather than used for
anything interesting.
The implementation is moderately horrible in part because it works to
leave AssertingVH in place, undisturbed. If at some point there is
consensus that this is simply how AssertingVH should be used, it can be
substantially simplified.
This remains a boring pointer in a non-asserts build as you would
expect. The only place we pay cost is in asserts builds.
I plan to use this as a basis for replacing the asserting VHs that
currently dangle in the new PM until invalidation occurs in both LVI and
SCEV.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29061
llvm-svn: 292925
In some cases StructurizeCfg updates root node, but dominator info
remains unchanges, it causes crash when expensive checks are enabled.
To cope with this problem a new method was added to DominatorTreeBase
that allows adding new root nodes, it is called in StructurizeCfg to
put dominator tree in sync.
This change fixes PR27488.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28114
llvm-svn: 291530
that require deferred invalidation.
This handles the other real-world invalidation scenario that we have
cases of: a function analysis which caches references to a module
analysis. We currently do this in the AA aggregation layer and might
well do this in other places as well.
Since this is relative rare, the technique is somewhat more cumbersome.
Analyses need to register themselves when accessing the outer analysis
manager's proxy. This proxy is already necessarily present to allow
access to the outer IR unit's analyses. By registering here we can track
and trigger invalidation when that outer analysis goes away.
To make this work we need to enhance the PreservedAnalyses
infrastructure to support a (slightly) more explicit model for "sets" of
analyses, and allow abandoning a single specific analyses even when
a set covering that analysis is preserved. That allows us to describe
the scenario of preserving all Function analyses *except* for the one
where deferred invalidation has triggered.
We also need to teach the invalidator API to support direct ID calls
instead of always going through a template to dispatch so that we can
just record the ID mapping.
I've introduced testing of all of this both for simple module<->function
cases as well as for more complex cases involving a CGSCC layer.
Much like the previous patch I've not tried to fully update the loop
pass management layer because that layer is due to be heavily reworked
to use similar techniques to the CGSCC to handle updates. As that
happens, we'll have a better testing basis for adding support like this.
Many thanks to both Justin and Sean for the extensive reviews on this to
help bring the API design and documentation into a better state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27198
llvm-svn: 290594
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades and a change
to the Bitcode record for DIGlobalVariable, that makes upgrading the
old format unambiguous also for variables without DIExpressions.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 290153
This reverts commit 289920 (again).
I forgot to implement a Bitcode upgrade for the case where a DIGlobalVariable
has not DIExpression. Unfortunately it is not possible to safely upgrade
these variables without adding a flag to the bitcode record indicating which
version they are.
My plan of record is to roll the planned follow-up patch that adds a
unit: field to DIGlobalVariable into this patch before recomitting.
This way we only need one Bitcode upgrade for both changes (with a
version flag in the bitcode record to safely distinguish the record
formats).
Sorry for the churn!
llvm-svn: 289982
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
This reapplies r289902 with additional testcase upgrades.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289920
This patch implements PR31013 by introducing a
DIGlobalVariableExpression that holds a pair of DIGlobalVariable and
DIExpression.
Currently, DIGlobalVariables holds a DIExpression. This is not the
best way to model this:
(1) The DIGlobalVariable should describe the source level variable,
not how to get to its location.
(2) It makes it unsafe/hard to update the expressions when we call
replaceExpression on the DIGLobalVariable.
(3) It makes it impossible to represent a global variable that is in
more than one location (e.g., a variable with multiple
DW_OP_LLVM_fragment-s). We also moved away from attaching the
DIExpression to DILocalVariable for the same reasons.
<rdar://problem/29250149>
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31013
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26769
llvm-svn: 289902
This way it will be easier to expand DIFile (e.g., to contain checksum) without the need to modify the createCompileUnit() API.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27762
llvm-svn: 289702
Summary:
This never really got implemented, and was very hard to test before
a lot of the refactoring changes to make things more robust. But now we
can test it thoroughly and cleanly, especially at the CGSCC level.
The core idea is that when an inner analysis manager proxy receives the
invalidation event for the outer IR unit, it needs to walk the inner IR
units and propagate it to the inner analysis manager for each of those
units. For example, each function in the SCC needs to get an
invalidation event when the SCC gets one.
The function / module interaction is somewhat boring here. This really
becomes interesting in the face of analysis-backed IR units. This patch
effectively handles all of the CGSCC layer's needs -- both invalidating
SCC analysis and invalidating function analysis when an SCC gets
invalidated.
However, this second aspect doesn't really handle the
LoopAnalysisManager well at this point. That one will need some change
of design in order to fully integrate, because unlike the call graph,
the entire function behind a LoopAnalysis's results can vanish out from
under us, and we won't even have a cached API to access. I'd like to try
to separate solving the loop problems into a subsequent patch though in
order to keep this more focused so I've adapted them to the API and
updated the tests that immediately fail, but I've not added the level of
testing and validation at that layer that I have at the CGSCC layer.
An important aspect of this change is that the proxy for the
FunctionAnalysisManager at the SCC pass layer doesn't work like the
other proxies for an inner IR unit as it doesn't directly manage the
FunctionAnalysisManager and invalidation or clearing of it. This would
create an ever worsening problem of dual ownership of this
responsibility, split between the module-level FAM proxy and this
SCC-level FAM proxy. Instead, this patch changes the SCC-level FAM proxy
to work in terms of the module-level proxy and defer to it to handle
much of the updates. It only does SCC-specific invalidation. This will
become more important in subsequent patches that support more complex
invalidaiton scenarios.
Reviewers: jlebar
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mcrosier, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27197
llvm-svn: 289317
so we can stop using DW_OP_bit_piece with the wrong semantics.
The entire back story can be found here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20161114/405934.html
The gist is that in LLVM we've been misinterpreting DW_OP_bit_piece's
offset field to mean the offset into the source variable rather than
the offset into the location at the top the DWARF expression stack. In
order to be able to fix this in a subsequent patch, this patch
introduces a dedicated DW_OP_LLVM_fragment operation with the
semantics that we used to apply to DW_OP_bit_piece, which is what we
actually need while inside of LLVM. This patch is complete with a
bitcode upgrade for expressions using the old format. It does not yet
fix the DWARF backend to use DW_OP_bit_piece correctly.
Implementation note: We discussed several options for implementing
this, including reserving a dedicated field in DIExpression for the
fragment size and offset, but using an custom operator at the end of
the expression works just fine and is more efficient because we then
only pay for it when we need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27361
rdar://problem/29335809
llvm-svn: 288683
accept an Invalidator that allows them to invalidate themselves if their
dependencies are in turn invalidated.
Rather than recording the dependency graph ahead of time when analysis
get results from other analyses, this simply lets each result trigger
the immediate invalidation of any analyses they actually depend on. They
do this in a way that has three nice properties:
1) They don't have to handle transitive dependencies because the
infrastructure will recurse for them.
2) The invalidate methods are still called only once. We just
dynamically discover the necessary topological ordering, everything
is memoized nicely.
3) The infrastructure still provides a default implementation and can
access it so that only analyses which have dependencies need to do
anything custom.
To make this work at all, the invalidation logic also has to defer the
deletion of the result objects themselves so that they can remain alive
until we have collected the complete set of results to invalidate.
A unittest is added here that has exactly the dependency pattern we are
concerned with. It hit the use-after-free described by Sean in much
detail in the long thread about analysis invalidation before this
change, and even in an intermediate form of this change where we failed
to defer the deletion of the result objects.
There is an important problem with doing dependency invalidation that
*isn't* solved here: we don't *enforce* that results correctly
invalidate all the analyses whose results they depend on.
I actually looked at what it would take to do that, and it isn't as hard
as I had thought but the complexity it introduces seems very likely to
outweigh the benefit. The technique would be to provide a base class for
an analysis result that would be populated with other results, and
automatically provide the invalidate method which immediately does the
correct thing. This approach has some nice pros IMO:
- Handles the case we care about and nothing else: only *results*
that depend on other analyses trigger extra invalidation.
- Localized to the result rather than centralized in the analysis
manager.
- Ties the storage of the reference to another result to the triggering
of the invalidation of that analysis.
- Still supports extending invalidation in customized ways.
But the down sides here are:
- Very heavy-weight meta-programming is needed to provide this base
class.
- Requires a pretty awful API for accessing the dependencies.
Ultimately, I fear it will not pull its weight. But we can re-evaluate
this at any point if we start discovering consistent problems where the
invalidation and dependencies get out of sync. It will fit as a clean
layer on top of the facilities in this patch that we can add if and when
we need it.
Note that I'm not really thrilled with the names for these APIs... The
name "Invalidator" seems ok but not great. The method name "invalidate"
also. In review some improvements were suggested, but they really need
*other* uses of these terms to be updated as well so I'm going to do
that in a follow-up commit.
I'm working on the actual fixes to various analyses that need to use
these, but I want to try to get tests for each of them so we don't
regress. And those changes are seperable and obvious so once this goes
in I should be able to roll them out throughout LLVM.
Many thanks to Sean, Justin, and others for help reviewing here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23738
llvm-svn: 288077
analyses to have a common type which is enforced rather than using
a char object and a `void *` type when used as an identifier.
This has a number of advantages. First, it at least helps some of the
confusion raised in Justin Lebar's code review of why `void *` was being
used everywhere by having a stronger type that connects to documentation
about this.
However, perhaps more importantly, it addresses a serious issue where
the alignment of these pointer-like identifiers was unknown. This made
it hard to use them in pointer-like data structures. We were already
dodging this in dangerous ways to create the "all analyses" entry. In
a subsequent patch I attempted to use these with TinyPtrVector and
things fell apart in a very bad way.
And it isn't just a compile time or type system issue. Worse than that,
the actual alignment of these pointer-like opaque identifiers wasn't
guaranteed to be a useful alignment as they were just characters.
This change introduces a type to use as the "key" object whose address
forms the opaque identifier. This both forces the objects to have proper
alignment, and provides type checking that we get it right everywhere.
It also makes the types somewhat less mysterious than `void *`.
We could go one step further and introduce a truly opaque pointer-like
type to return from the `ID()` static function rather than returning
`AnalysisKey *`, but that didn't seem to be a clear win so this is just
the initial change to get to a reliably typed and aligned object serving
is a key for all the analyses.
Thanks to Richard Smith and Justin Lebar for helping pick plausible
names and avoid making this refactoring many times. =] And thanks to
Sean for the super fast review!
While here, I've tried to move away from the "PassID" nomenclature
entirely as it wasn't really helping and is overloaded with old pass
manager constructs. Now we have IDs for analyses, and key objects whose
address can be used as IDs. Where possible and clear I've shortened this
to just "ID". In a few places I kept "AnalysisID" to make it clear what
was being identified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27031
llvm-svn: 287783
Change type of some missed DebugInfo-related alignment variables,
that are still uint64_t, to uint32_t.
Original change introduced in r284482.
llvm-svn: 285242
- Add alignment attribute to DIVariable family
- Modify bitcode format to match new DIVariable representation
- Update tests to match these changes (also add bitcode upgrade test)
- Expect that frontend passes non-zero align value only when it is not default
(was forcibly aligned by alignas()/_Alignas()/__atribute__(aligned())
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25073
llvm-svn: 284678
In futher patches we shall have alignment field added to DIVariable family
and switching from uint64_t to uint32_t will save 4 bytes per variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25620
llvm-svn: 284482
LLVM's RandomNumberGenerator wasn't compatible with
the random distribution from <random>.
Fixes PR25105
Patch by: Serge Guelton <serge.guelton@telecom-bretagne.eu>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25443
llvm-svn: 283854