The checker adds assumptions that the return values from the known APIs
are non-nil. Teach the checker about NSArray/NSMutableArray/NSOrderedSet
objectAtIndex, objectAtIndexedSubscript.
llvm-svn: 162398
As part of this change, I discovered that a few of our tests were not testing
the RangeConstraintManager. Luckily all of those passed when I moved them
over to use that constraint manager.
llvm-svn: 162384
Assertion failed: (Start.isValid() == End.isValid() && "Start and end should
either both be valid or both be invalid!")
when parsing inline asm. SMLoc assumes that the first char * in the source is
invalid. However, when parsing an inline asm the mnemonic is at this location.
I don't want to change SMLoc, so use a trivial workaround.
llvm-svn: 162381
The conditions described by POSIX can never happen with IEEE-754 floats.
When the function is const we can emit a single sse4.1 instruction for
it, without losing anything :)
llvm-svn: 162379
into individually named log destinations. In the simple usage-lldb-loggings example, we ran two cases which resulted
in two lldb_log files.
llvm-svn: 162378
There were missed optimizations when the system headers didn't have attributes
in place, specifically:
- Add copysign, exp2, log2, nearbyint, rint and trunc to the list.
These are functions that get inlined by LLVM's optimizer, but only when they
have the right attributes.
- Mark copysign, fabs, fmax, fmin and trunc const unconditionally.
Previously these were only const with -fno-math-errno, but they never set
errno per POSIX.
For ceil/floor/nearbyint/round I'm not aware of any implementation that sets
errno, but POSIX says it may signal overflow so I left them alone for now.
llvm-svn: 162375
optimizations are guarded by the -enable-double-float-shrink LLVM option.
Last bit of PR13574. Patch by Weiming Zhao <weimingz@codeaurora.org>.
llvm-svn: 162368
Based on CR feedback from r162301 and Craig Topper's refactoring in r162347
here are a few other places that could use the same API (& in one instance drop
a Function.h dependency).
llvm-svn: 162367
- no setting auto completion
- very manual and error prone way of getting/setting variables
- tons of code duplication
- useless instance names for processes, threads
Now settings can easily be defined like option values. The new settings makes use of the "OptionValue" classes so we can re-use the option value code that we use to set settings in command options. No more instances, just "does the right thing".
llvm-svn: 162366
Since DynamicTypeInfo is not inherently related to inlining or to dynamic
calls, it makes more sense (to me) to discuss it first.
Also fix some typos, massage some grammar, and (hopefully) improve precision
and clarity.
llvm-svn: 162365
Also, remove the FIXME about merging -analyzer-stats and the debug.Stats
checker. This would be a bad idea because simply running debug.Stats can
affect the output of -analyzer-stats.
llvm-svn: 162364
Now it's possible to use SBInputReader callbacks in Python.
We leak the callback object, unfortunately. A __del__ method can be added
to SBInputReader, but we have no way to check the callback function that
is on the reader. So we can't call Py_DECREF on it when we have our
PythonCallback function. One way to do it is to assume that reified
SBInputReaders always have a Python callback (and always call Py_DECREF).
Another one is to add methods or properties to SBInputReader (or make the
m_callback_function property public).
llvm-svn: 162356
Also rename 'getCurrentBlockCounter()' to 'blockCount()'.
This ripples a bunch of code simplifications; mostly aesthetic,
but makes the code a bit tighter.
llvm-svn: 162349
No need to have the "get", the word "conjure" is a verb too!
Getting a conjured symbol is the same as conjuring one up.
This shortening is largely cosmetic, but just this simple changed
cleaned up a handful of lines, making them less verbose.
llvm-svn: 162348