COFF short import files are special kind of files that contains only
DLL-exported symbol names. That's different from object files because
it has no data except symbol names.
This change implements a SymbolicFile interface for the short import
files so that symbol names can be accessed through that interface.
llvm-ar is now able to read the file and create symbol table entries
for short import files.
llvm-svn: 246276
Summary:
Change the coloring algorithm in WinEHPrepare to visit a funclet's exits
in its parents' contexts and so properly classify the continuations of
nested funclets.
Also change the placement of cloned blocks to be deterministic and to
maintain the relative order of each funclet's blocks.
Add a lit test showing various patterns that require cloning, the last
several of which don't have CHECKs yet because they require cloning
entire funclets which is NYI.
Reviewers: rnk, andrew.w.kaylor, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12353
llvm-svn: 246245
After hitting @llvm.assume(X) we can:
- propagate equality that X == true
- if X is icmp/fcmp (with eq operation), and one of operand
is constant we can change all variables with constants in the same BasicBlock
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11918
llvm-svn: 246243
Prior to this patch, we hadn't been marking StratifiedSets with the
appropriate StratifiedAttrs when handling the result of no-args call
instructions. This caused us to report NoAlias when handed, for
example, an escaped alloca and a result from an opaque function. Now we
properly mark the return value of said functions.
Thanks again to Chandler, Richard, and Nick for pinging me about this.
Differential review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12408
llvm-svn: 246240
more than 2 instructions.
I introduced this regression a while back and did not noticed it because I
somehow forgot to push the initial test cases for the pass!
Fix that as well!
llvm-svn: 246239
llvm::splitCodeGen is a function that implements the core of parallel LTO
code generation. It uses llvm::SplitModule to split the module into linkable
partitions and spawning one code generation thread per partition. The function
produces multiple object files which can be linked in the usual way.
This has been threaded through to LTOCodeGenerator (and llvm-lto for testing
purposes). Separate patches will add parallel LTO support to the gold plugin
and lld.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12260
llvm-svn: 246236
We can now run 32-bit programs with empty catch bodies. The next step
is to change PEI so that we get funclet prologues and epilogues.
llvm-svn: 246235
Any call which is side effect free is trivially OK to speculate. We
already had similar logic in EarlyCSE and GVN but we were missing it
from isSafeToSpeculativelyExecute.
This fixes PR24601.
llvm-svn: 246232
Fixes PR24602: r245689 introduced an unguarded use of
SelectionDAG::FoldConstantArithmetic, which returns 0 when it fails
because of opaque (hoisted) constants.
llvm-svn: 246217
Constant propagation for single precision math functions (such as
tanf) is already working, but was not enabled. This patch enables
these for many single-precision functions, and adds respective test
cases.
Newly handled functions: acosf asinf atanf atan2f ceilf coshf expf
exp2f fabsf floorf fmodf logf log10f powf sinhf tanf tanhf
llvm-svn: 246194
This patch changes the analysis diagnostics produced when loops with
floating-point recurrences or memory operations are identified. The new messages
say "cannot prove it is safe to reorder * operations; allow reordering by
specifying #pragma clang loop vectorize(enable)". Depending on the type of
diagnostic the message will include additional options such as ffast-math or
__restrict__.
This patch also allows the vectorize(enable) pragma to override the low pointer
memory check threshold. When the hint is given a higher threshold is used.
See the clang patch for the options produced for each diagnostic.
llvm-svn: 246187
Constant propagation for single precision math functions (such as
tanf) is already working, but was not enabled. This patch enables
these for many single-precision functions, and adds respective test
cases.
Newly handled functions: acosf asinf atanf atan2f ceilf coshf expf
exp2f fabsf floorf fmodf logf log10f powf sinhf tanf tanhf
llvm-svn: 246186
Constant propagation for single precision math functions (such as
tanf) is already working, but was not enabled. This patch enables
these for many single-precision functions, and adds respective test
cases.
Newly handled functions: acosf asinf atanf atan2f ceilf coshf expf
exp2f fabsf floorf fmodf logf log10f powf sinhf tanf tanhf
llvm-svn: 246158
Unlike scalar operations, we can perform vector operations on element types that
are smaller than the native integer types. We type-promote scalar operations if
they are smaller than a native type (e.g., i8 arithmetic is promoted to i32
arithmetic on Arm targets). This patch detects and removes type-promotions
within the reduction detection framework, enabling the vectorization of small
size reductions.
In the legality phase, we look through the ANDs and extensions that InstCombine
creates during promotion, keeping track of the smaller type. In the
profitability phase, we use the smaller type and ignore the ANDs and extensions
in the cost model. Finally, in the code generation phase, we truncate the result
of the reduction to allow InstCombine to rewrite the entire expression in the
smaller type.
This fixes PR21369.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12202
Patch by Matt Simpson <mssimpso@codeaurora.org>!
llvm-svn: 246149
Globals in address spaces other than one may have 0 as a valid address,
so we should not assume that they can be null.
Reviewed by Philip Reames.
llvm-svn: 246137
A release fence acts as a publication barrier for stores within the current thread to become visible to other threads which might observe the release fence. It does not require the current thread to observe stores performed on other threads. As a result, we can allow store-load and load-store forwarding across a release fence.
We do need to make sure that stores before the fence can't be eliminated even if there's another store to the same location after the fence. In theory, we could reorder the second store above the fence and *then* eliminate the former, but we can't do this if the stores are on opposite sides of the fence.
Note: While more aggressive then what's there, this patch is still implementing a really conservative ordering. In particular, I'm not trying to exploit undefined behavior via races, or the fact that the LangRef says only 'atomic' accesses are ordered w.r.t. fences.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11434
llvm-svn: 246134
When computing base pointers, we introduce new instructions to propagate the base of existing instructions which might not be bases. However, the algorithm doesn't make any effort to recognize when the new instruction to be inserted is the same as an existing one already in the IR. Since this is happening immediately before rewriting, we don't really have a chance to fix it after the pass runs without teaching loop passes about statepoints.
I'm really not thrilled with this patch. I've rewritten it 4 different ways now, but this is the best I've come up with. The case where the new instruction is just the original base defining value could be merged into the existing algorithm with some complexity. The problem is that we might have something like an extractelement from a phi of two vectors. It may be trivially obvious that the base of the 0th element is an existing instruction, but I can't see how to make the algorithm itself figure that out. Thus, I resort to the call to SimplifyInstruction instead.
Note that we can only adjust the instructions we've inserted ourselves. The live sets are still being tracked in side structures at this point in the code. We can't easily muck with instructions which might be in them. Long term, I'm really thinking we need to materialize the live pointer sets explicitly in the IR somehow rather than using side structures to track them.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12004
llvm-svn: 246133
This patch ensures that every analysis diagnostic produced by the vectorizer
will be printed if the loop has a vectorization hint on it. The condition has
also been improved to prevent printing when a disabling hint is specified.
llvm-svn: 246132
This is a one-line-change patch that moves the update to UnhandledWeights to the correct position: it should be updated for all clusters instead of just range clusters.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12391
llvm-svn: 246129
As Sanjoy pointed out over in http://reviews.llvm.org/D11819, a switch on an icmp should always be able to become a branch instruction. This patch generalizes that notion slightly to prove that the default case of a switch is unreachable if the cases completely cover all possible bit patterns in the condition. Once that's done, the switch to branch conversion kicks in just fine.
Note: Duplicate case values are disallowed by the LangRef and verifier.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11995
llvm-svn: 246125
Summary:
Let NVPTX backend detect integer min and max patterns during isel and emit intrinsics that enable hardware support.
Reviewers: jholewinski, meheff, jingyue
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits, meheff, jingyue, eliben, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12377
llvm-svn: 246107
Currently, when lowering switch statement and a new basic block is built for jump table / bit test header, the edge to this new block is not assigned with a correct weight. This patch collects the edge weight from all its successors and assign this sum of weights to the edge (and also the other fall-through edge). Test cases are adjusted accordingly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12166#fae6eca7
llvm-svn: 246104
Things of note:
- Other linkage types aren't handled yet. We'll figure it out with dynamic linking.
- Special LLVM globals are either ignored, or error out for now.
- TLS isn't supported yet (WebAssembly will have threads later).
- There currently isn't a syntax for alignment, I left it in a comment so it's easy to hook up.
- Undef is convereted to whatever the type's appropriate null value is.
- assert versus report_fatal_error: follow what other AsmPrinters do, and assert only on what should have been caught elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 246092
This was causing problems when some functions use a GuardReg and some
don't as can happen when mixing SelectionDAG and FastISel generated
functions.
llvm-svn: 246075
If you're going to realign %sp to get object alignment properly (which
the code does), and stack offsets and alignments are calculated going
down from %fp (which they are), then the total stack size had better
be a multiple of the alignment. LLVM did indeed ensure that.
And then, after aligning, the sparc frame code added 96 (for sparcv8)
to the frame size, making any requested alignment of 64-bytes or
higher *guaranteed* to be misaligned. The test case added with r245668
even tests this exact scenario, and asserted the incorrect behavior,
which I somehow failed to notice. D'oh.
This change fixes the frame lowering code to align the stack size
*after* adding the spill area, instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12349
llvm-svn: 246042
This is a fix for disassembling unusual instruction sequences in 64-bit
mode w.r.t the CALL rel16 instruction. It might be desirable to move the
check somewhere else, but it essentially mimics the special case
handling with JCXZ in 16-bit mode.
The current behavior accepts the opcode size prefix and causes the
call's immediate to stop disassembling after 2 bytes. When debugging
sequences of instructions with this pattern, the disassembler output
becomes extremely unreliable and essentially useless (if you jump midway
into what lldb thinks is a unified instruction, you'll lose %rip). So we
ignore the prefix and consume all 4 bytes when disassembling a 64-bit
mode binary.
Note: in Vol. 2A 3-99 the Intel spec states that CALL rel16 is N.S. N.S.
is defined as:
Indicates an instruction syntax that requires an address override
prefix in 64-bit mode and is not supported. Using an address
override prefix in 64-bit mode may result in model-specific
execution behavior. (Vol. 2A 3-7)
Since 0x66 is an operand override prefix we should be OK (although we
may want to warn about 0x67 prefixes to 0xe8). On the CPUs I tested
with, they all ignore the 0x66 prefix in 64-bit mode.
Patch by Matthew Barney!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9573
llvm-svn: 246038
This was only added to preserve the old ScalarRepl's use of SSAUpdater
which was originally to avoid use of dominance frontiers. Now, we only
need a domtree, and we'll need a domtree right after this pass as well
and so it makes perfect sense to always and only use the dom-tree
powered mem2reg. This was flag-flipper earlier and has stuck reasonably
so I wanted to gut the now-dead code out of SROA before we waste more
time with it. Among other things, this will make passmanager porting
easier.
llvm-svn: 246028
The binaries containing the linked DWARF generated by dsymutil are not
standard relocatable object files like emitted did previsously. They should be
dSYM companion files, which means they have a different file type in the
header, but also a couple other peculiarities:
- they contain the segments and sections from the original binary in their
load commands, but not the actual contents. This means they get an address
and a size, but their offset is always 0 (but these are not virtual sections)
- they also conatin all the defined symbols from the original binary
This makes MC a really bad fit to emit these kind of binaries. The approach
that was used in this patch is to leverage MC's section layout for the
debug sections, but to use a replacement for MachObjectWriter that lives
in MachOUtils.cpp. Some of the low-level helpers from MachObjectWriter
were reused too.
llvm-svn: 246012
llvm-dsymutil needs to emit dSYM companion bundles. These are binary files
that replicate some of the orignal binary file properties (sections and
symbols). To get acces to these properties, pass the binary path in the
debug map.
llvm-svn: 246011
Summary: When comparing basic blocks, there is an additional check that two Value*'s should have the same ID, which interferes with merging equivalent constants of different kinds (such as a ConstantInt and a ConstantPointerNull in the included testcase). The cmpValues function already ensures that the two values in each function are the same, so removing this check should not cause incorrect merging.
Also, the type comparison is redundant, based on reviewing the code and testing on the test suite and several large LTO bitcodes.
Author: jrkoenig
Reviewers: nlewycky, jfb, dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12302
llvm-svn: 246001
Summary:
This change makes the variable argument intrinsics, `llvm.va_start` and
`llvm.va_copy`, and the `va_arg` instruction behave as they do on Windows
inside a `CallingConv::X86_64_Win64` function. It's needed for a Clang patch
I have to add support for GCC's `__builtin_ms_va_list` constructs.
Reviewers: nadav, asl, eugenis
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1622
llvm-svn: 245990
There was an issue in the test setup because the test requires an arch that
wasn't filtered by the lit.local.cfg, but given the set of bots that failed,
I'm not confident this is the (only) issue. So this commit also adds more
output to the test to help me track down the failure if it happens again.
Original commit message:
[dsymutil] Rewrite thumb triple names in user visible messages.
We autodetect triples from the input file(s) while reading the mach-o debug map.
As we need to create a Target from those triples, we always chose the thumb
variant (because the arm variant might not be 'instantiable' eg armv7m). The
user visible architecture names should still be 'arm' and not 'thumb' variants
though.
llvm-svn: 245988
Extend signed relational comparison instrumentation with a special
case for comparisons with -1. This fixes an MSan false positive when
such comparison is used as a sign bit test.
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24561
llvm-svn: 245980
When lowering switch statement, if bit tests are used then LLVM will always generates a jump to the default statement in the last bit test. However, this is not necessary when all cases in bit tests cover a contiguous range. This is because when generating the bit tests header MBB, there is a range check that guarantees cases in bit tests won't go outside of [low, high], where low and high are minimum and maximum case values in the bit tests. This patch checks if this is the case and then doesn't emit jump to default statement and hence saves a bit test and a branch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12249
llvm-svn: 245976
This reverts commit r245960.
Multiple bots are failing on the new test. It seemd like llvm-dsymutil exits with an error. Investigating.
llvm-svn: 245964
We autodetect triples from the input file(s) while reading the mach-o debug map.
As we need to create a Target from those triples, we always chose the thumb
variant (because the arm variant might not be 'instantiable' eg armv7m). The
user visible architecture names should still be 'arm' and not 'thumb' variants
though.
llvm-svn: 245960
The loop minimum iterations check below ensures the loop has enough trip count so the generated
vector loop will likely be executed, and it covers the overflow check.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12107.
llvm-svn: 245952
This is a follow-on from the discussion in http://reviews.llvm.org/D12154.
This change allows memset/memcpy to use SSE or AVX memory accesses for any chip that has
generally fast unaligned memory ops.
A motivating use case for this change is a clang invocation that doesn't explicitly set
the CPU, but does target a feature that we know only exists on a CPU that supports fast
unaligned memops. For example:
$ clang -O1 foo.c -mavx
This resolves a difference in lowering noted in PR24449:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24449
Before this patch, we used different store types depending on whether the example can be
lowered as a memset or not.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12288
llvm-svn: 245950
This fixes two issues in x86 fptoui lowering.
1) Makes conversions from f80 go through the right path on AVX-512.
2) Implements an inline sequence for fptoui i64 instead of a library
call. This improves performance by 6X on SSE3+ and 3X otherwise.
Incidentally, it also removes the use of ftol2 for fptoui, which was
wrong to begin with, as ftol2 converts to a signed i64, producing
wrong results for values >= 2^63.
Patch by: mitch.l.bodart@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11316
llvm-svn: 245924
It doesn't solve the problem, when for example we load something, and
then assume that it is the same as some constant value, because
globalopt will fail on unknown load instruction. The proposed solution
would be to skip some instructions that we can't evaluate and they are
safe to skip (f.e. load, assume and many others) and see if they are
required to perform optimization (f.e. we don't care about ephemeral
instructions that may appear using @llvm.assume())
http://reviews.llvm.org/D12266
llvm-svn: 245919
We might end up with a trivial copy as the addend, and if so, we should ignore
the corresponding FMA instruction. The trivial copy can be coalesced away later,
so there's nothing to do here. We should not, however, assert. Fixes PR24544.
llvm-svn: 245907
Summary: I forgot to squash git commits before doing an svn dcommit of D12219. Reverting, and re-submitting.
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12298
llvm-svn: 245886
This patch fixes PR24546, which demonstrates a segfault during the VSX
swap removal pass. The problem is that debug value instructions were
not excluded from the list of instructions to be analyzed for webs of
related computation. I've added the test case from the PR as a crash
test in test/CodeGen/PowerPC.
llvm-svn: 245862
The FP16_TO_FP node only uses the bottom 16 bits of its input, so the
following pattern can be optimised by removing the AND:
(FP16_TO_FP (AND op, 0xffff)) -> (FP16_TO_FP op)
This is a common pattern for ARM targets when functions have __fp16
arguments, as they are passed as floats (so that they get passed in the
correct registers), but then bitcast and truncated to ignore the top 16
bits.
llvm-svn: 245832
Not only do we not need to do anything to read correct values from the
object files, but the current logic actually wrongly applies twice the
section base address when there is no LoadedObjectInfo passed to the
DWARFContext creation (as the added test shows).
Simply do not apply any relocations on the mach-o debug info if there is
no load offset to apply.
llvm-svn: 245807
This patch adds all the refactored tests in new files, the old
tests will be removed by a followup commit.
Thanks to D. Blaikie for all the feedback.
llvm-svn: 245803
Summary:
WinEHPrepare is going to require that cleanuppad and catchpad produce values
of token type which are consumed by any cleanupret or catchret exiting the
pad. This change updates the signatures of those operators to require/enforce
that the type produced by the pads is token type and that the rets have an
appropriate argument.
The catchpad argument of a `CatchReturnInst` must be a `CatchPadInst` (and
similarly for `CleanupReturnInst`/`CleanupPadInst`). To accommodate that
restriction, this change adds a notion of an operator constraint to both
LLParser and BitcodeReader, allowing appropriate sentinels to be constructed
for forward references and appropriate error messages to be emitted for
illegal inputs.
Also add a verifier rule (noted in LangRef) that a catchpad with a catchpad
predecessor must have no other predecessors; this ensures that WinEHPrepare
will see the expected linear relationship between sibling catches on the
same try.
Lastly, remove some superfluous/vestigial casts from instruction operand
setters operating on BasicBlocks.
Reviewers: rnk, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12108
llvm-svn: 245797
Some debug info was drastically out of date, from the days where we used
to emit a list of length one (with a single null entry) rather than an
empty list (or, more recently, no list at all) for list fields that have
no elements.
llvm-svn: 245796
There was already a good error path for this. Added a test for it & made
a minor code change to ensure the error path was actually reached,
rather than crashing before we got that far.
llvm-svn: 245795
Summary:
__shared__ variable may now emit undef value as initializer, do not
throw error on that.
Test Plan: test/CodeGen/NVPTX/global-addrspace.ll
Patch by Xuetian Weng
Reviewers: jholewinski, tra, jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12242
llvm-svn: 245785
Summary:
Merge functions previously relied on unsigned comparisons of pointer values to
order functions. This caused observable non-determinism in the compiler for
large bitcode programs. Basically, opt -mergefuncs program.bc | md5sum produces
different hashes when run repeatedly on the same machine. Differing output was
observed on three large bitcodes, but it was less frequent on the smallest file.
It is possible that this only manifests on the large inputs, hence remaining
undetected until now.
This patch fixes this by removing (almost, see below) all places where
comparisons between pointers are used to order functions. Most of these changes
are local, but the comparison of global values requires assigning an identifier
to each local in the order it is visited. This is very similar to the way the
comparison function identifies Value*'s defined within a function. Because the
order of visiting the functions and their subparts is deterministic, the
identifiers assigned to the globals will be as well, and the order of functions
will be deterministic.
With these changes, there is no more observed non-determinism. There is also
only minor slowdowns (negligible to 4%) compared to the baseline, which is
likely a result of the fact that global comparisons involve hash lookups and not
just pointer comparisons.
The one caveat so far is that programs containing BlockAddress constants can
still be non-deterministic. It is not clear what the right solution is here. In
particular, even if the global numbers are used to order by function, we still
need a way to order the BasicBlock*'s. Unfortunately, we cannot just bail out
and fail to order the functions or consider them equal, because we require a
total order over functions. Note that programs with BlockAddress constants are
relatively rare, so the impact of leaving this in is minor as long as this pass
is opt-in.
Author: jrkoenig
Reviewers: nlewycky, jfb, dschuff
Subscribers: jevinskie, llvm-commits, chapuni
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12168
llvm-svn: 245762
SCEV expansion can invalidate previously expanded values. For example
in SCEVExpander::ReuseOrCreateCast, if we already have the requested
cast value but it's not at the desired location, a new cast is inserted
and the old cast will be invalidated.
Therefore, when expanding the bounds for the pointers, a later entry can
invalidate the IR value for an earlier one. The fix is to store a value
handle rather than the value itself.
The newly added test has a more detailed description of how the bug
triggers.
This bug can have a negative but potentially highly variable performance
impact in Loop Distribution. Because one of the bound values was
invalidated and is an undef expression now, InstCombine is free to
transform the array overlap check:
Start0 <= End1 && Start1 <= End0
into:
Start0 <= End1
So depending on the runtime location of the arrays, we would detect a
conflict and fall back on the original loop of the versioned loop.
Also tested compile time with SPEC2006 LTO bc files.
llvm-svn: 245760
We can wait on either VM, EXP or LGKM.
The waits are independent.
Without this patch, a wait inserted because of one of them
would also wait for all the previous others.
This patch makes s_wait only wait for the ones we need for the next
instruction.
Here's an example of subtle perf reduction this patch solves:
This is without the patch:
buffer_load_format_xyzw v[8:11], v0, s[44:47], 0 idxen
buffer_load_format_xyzw v[12:15], v0, s[48:51], 0 idxen
s_load_dwordx4 s[44:47], s[8:9], 0xc
s_waitcnt lgkmcnt(0)
buffer_load_format_xyzw v[16:19], v0, s[52:55], 0 idxen
s_load_dwordx4 s[48:51], s[8:9], 0x10
s_waitcnt vmcnt(1)
buffer_load_format_xyzw v[20:23], v0, s[44:47], 0 idxen
The s_waitcnt vmcnt(1) is useless.
The reason it is added is because the last
buffer_load_format_xyzw needs s[44:47], which was issued
by the first s_load_dwordx4. It waits for all VM
before that call to have finished.
Internally after every instruction, 3 counters (for VM, EXP and LGTM)
are updated after every instruction. For example buffer_load_format_xyzw
will
increase the VM counter, and s_load_dwordx4 the LGKM one.
Without the patch, for every defined register,
the current 3 counters are stored, and are used to know
how long to wait when an instruction needs the register.
Because of that, the s[44:47] counter includes that to use the register
you need to wait for the previous buffer_load_format_xyzw.
Instead this patch stores only the counters that matter for the
register,
and puts zero for the other ones, since we don't need any wait for them.
Patch by: Axel Davy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11883
llvm-svn: 245755
The original checkin was buggy, this change has a fix.
Original commit message:
[InstCombine] Transform A & (L - 1) u< L --> L != 0
Summary:
This transform is never a pessimization at the IR level (since it
replaces an `icmp` with another), and has potentiall payoffs:
1. It may make the `icmp` fold away or become loop invariant.
2. It may make the `A & (L - 1)` computation dead.
This shows up in Java, in range checks generated by array accesses of
the form `a[i & (a.length - 1)]`.
Reviewers: reames, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12210
llvm-svn: 245753