Spotted by my super-optimizer in 186.crafty and 450.soplex. We really
need a proper infrastructure for handling generalizations of this kind
of thing (which occur a lot), however this case is so simple that I decided
to go ahead and implement it directly.
llvm-svn: 143214
fixes: Use a separate register, instead of SP, as the
calling-convention resource, to avoid spurious conflicts with
actual uses of SP. Also, fix unscheduling of calling sequences,
which can be triggered by pseudo-two-address dependencies.
llvm-svn: 143206
are present in all the necessary places:
In constant expression evaluation, evaluate lvalues as lvalues and rvalues as
rvalues. Remove special case for caching reference initialization and fix a
cyclic initialization crash in the process.
llvm-svn: 143204
Outside an IT block, "add r3, #2" should select a 32-bit wide encoding
rather than generating an error indicating the 16-bit encoding is only
legal in an IT block (outside, the 'S' suffic is required for the 16-bit
encoding).
rdar://10348481
llvm-svn: 143201
If the register class in the source alias is a subclass of the register class
of the actual instruction, the alias can still match OK since the constraints
are strictly a subset of what the instruction can actually handle.
llvm-svn: 143200
Don't assume APInt::getRawData() would hold target-aware endianness nor host-compliant endianness. rawdata[0] holds most lower i64, even on big endian host.
FIXME: Add a testcase for big endian target.
FIXME: Ditto on CompileUnit::addConstantFPValue() ?
llvm-svn: 143194
it fixes the dragonegg self-host (it looks like gcc is miscompiled).
Original commit messages:
Eliminate LegalizeOps' LegalizedNodes map and have it just call RAUW
on every node as it legalizes them. This makes it easier to use
hasOneUse() heuristics, since unneeded nodes can be removed from the
DAG earlier.
Make LegalizeOps visit the DAG in an operands-last order. It previously
used operands-first, because LegalizeTypes has to go operands-first, and
LegalizeTypes used to be part of LegalizeOps, but they're now split.
The operands-last order is more natural for several legalization tasks.
For example, it allows lowering code for nodes with floating-point or
vector constants to see those constants directly instead of seeing the
lowered form (often constant-pool loads). This makes some things
somewhat more complicated today, though it ought to allow things to be
simpler in the future. It also fixes some bugs exposed by Legalizing
using RAUW aggressively.
Remove the part of LegalizeOps that attempted to patch up invalid chain
operands on libcalls generated by LegalizeTypes, since it doesn't work
with the new LegalizeOps traversal order. Instead, define what
LegalizeTypes is doing to be correct, and transfer the responsibility
of keeping calls from having overlapping calling sequences into the
scheduler.
Teach the scheduler to model callseq_begin/end pairs as having a
physical register definition/use to prevent calls from having
overlapping calling sequences. This is also somewhat complicated, though
there are ways it might be simplified in the future.
This addresses rdar://9816668, rdar://10043614, rdar://8434668, and others.
Please direct high-level questions about this patch to management.
Delete #if 0 code accidentally left in.
llvm-svn: 143188
on every node as it legalizes them. This makes it easier to use
hasOneUse() heuristics, since unneeded nodes can be removed from the
DAG earlier.
Make LegalizeOps visit the DAG in an operands-last order. It previously
used operands-first, because LegalizeTypes has to go operands-first, and
LegalizeTypes used to be part of LegalizeOps, but they're now split.
The operands-last order is more natural for several legalization tasks.
For example, it allows lowering code for nodes with floating-point or
vector constants to see those constants directly instead of seeing the
lowered form (often constant-pool loads). This makes some things
somewhat more complicated today, though it ought to allow things to be
simpler in the future. It also fixes some bugs exposed by Legalizing
using RAUW aggressively.
Remove the part of LegalizeOps that attempted to patch up invalid chain
operands on libcalls generated by LegalizeTypes, since it doesn't work
with the new LegalizeOps traversal order. Instead, define what
LegalizeTypes is doing to be correct, and transfer the responsibility
of keeping calls from having overlapping calling sequences into the
scheduler.
Teach the scheduler to model callseq_begin/end pairs as having a
physical register definition/use to prevent calls from having
overlapping calling sequences. This is also somewhat complicated, though
there are ways it might be simplified in the future.
This addresses rdar://9816668, rdar://10043614, rdar://8434668, and others.
Please direct high-level questions about this patch to management.
llvm-svn: 143177
then we spawn child processes (debugserver, etc) and those bad settings get
inherited. We stop this from happening by correctly mucking with the posix
spawn attributes.
llvm-svn: 143176
Previously, if invoked from a CMake build directory, 'llvm-config
--cppflags' and friends would only print a -I flag for the build
directory's header search path, because it would assume that it was
already installed, not recognising its parent directory as being the
build directory. Teach llvm-config about CMake build directories
so that it prints a -I for both the source and build directory's
search paths.
llvm-svn: 143171
string is part of the function call, then there is no difference. If the
format string is not, the warning will point to the call site and a note
will point to where the format string is.
Fix-it hints for strings are moved to the note if a note is emitted. This will
prevent changes to format strings that may be used in multiple places.
llvm-svn: 143168