These two intrinsics are defined in arm_acle.h.
__rev16l needs to rotate by 16 bits, bit it was actually rotating by 2 bits.
For AArch64, where long is 64 bits, this would still be wrong.
__rev16ll was incorrect, it reversed the bytes in each 32-bit word, rather than
each 16-bit halfword. The correct implementation is to apply __rev16 to the top
and bottom words of the 64-bit value.
For AArch32 targets, these get compiled down to the hardware rev16 instruction
at -O1 and above. For AArch64 targets, the 64-bit ones get compiled to two
32-bit rev16 instructions, because there is not currently a pattern for the
64-bit rev16 instruction.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14609
llvm-svn: 253211
Summary:
* ARMv6KZ is the "canonical" name, given in the ARMARM
* ARMv6Z is an "official abbreviation" for it, mentioned in the ARMARM
* ARMv6ZK is a popular misspelling, which we should support as an alias.
The patch corrects the handling of the names.
Functional changes:
* ARMv6Z no longer treated as an architecture in its own right
* ARMv6ZK renamed to ARMv6KZ, accepting ARMv6ZK as an alias
* arm1176jz-s and arm1176jzf-s recognized as ARMv6ZK, instead of ARMv6K
* default ARMv6K CPU changed to arm1176j-s
Reviewers: rengolin, logan, compnerd
Subscribers: aemerson, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14568
llvm-svn: 253206
This patch adds assembly routines to enable setjmp/longjmp for aarch64
on linux. It fixes:
* test/tsan/longjmp2.cc
* test/tsan/longjmp3.cc
* test/tsan/longjmp4.cc
* test/tsan/signal_longjmp.cc
I also checked with perlbench from specpu2006 (it fails to run
with missing setjmp/longjmp intrumentation).
llvm-svn: 253205
This has seen quite some usage and I am not aware of any issues. Also
add a style option to enable/disable include sorting. The existing
command line flag can from now on be used to override whatever is set
in the style.
llvm-svn: 253202
Summary:
* declare FPUNames, ARCHNames, ARCHExtNames, HWDivNames, CPUNames
as static const
* implement getDefaultExtensions with a StringSwitch, in the same
way getDefaultFPU is implemented
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14648
llvm-svn: 253201
The TargetParser API to get the default FPU and default extensions has
changed so that it can fall back to the architecture in case of a
generic CPU.
llvm-svn: 253199
Instead of defaulting to an empty string, we want to default to
the CPU 'generic' in the case of no valid default CPU being found,
(as long as the architecture is actually valid).
In order to do this we add a default FPU for each architecture, as
well as falling back to architecture defaults for extensions and FPU
in the case of a generic CPU is specified.
llvm-svn: 253198
This allows for accurate architecture targeting as well as removing
duplicate information (hardcoded feature strings) from MCTargetDesc.
llvm-svn: 253196
This was left implicit and never ever checked, which means we could have a CMPZ against some non-zero value and we were carrying on with BFI conversion regardless.
Caught by Oliver Stannard using csmith; regression test added.
llvm-svn: 253195
Summary:
This fails a check in Verifier.cpp, which checks for location matches between the declared
variable and the !dbg attachments.
Reviewers: dnovillo, dblaikie, danielcdh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14657
llvm-svn: 253194
The AArch64 assembler was silently ignoring instructions like this:
ldr foo, =bar
AArch64AsmParser::parseOperand was returning true as the parse failed, but was
not calling AArch64AsmParser::Error to report this to the user, so the
instruction was ignored without printing an error message.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14651
llvm-svn: 253193
Address Duncan Exon Smith's comments on D14148, which was added after the patch had been LGTM'd and committed:
* clang-format one area where whitespace diffs occurred.
* Add a threshold to limit the store/load dominance checks as they are quadratic.
llvm-svn: 253192
In r253186, I changed the DIBuilder API to now take size and align
for reference types as well. This was done in preparation for upcoming
changes to the Verifier that will validate that sizes match between
DI types and IR values that are declared as having those types.
This updates clang to actually pass the information through.
llvm-svn: 253190
Summary: Since we're passing references to dbg.value as pointers,
we need to have the frontend properly declare their sizes and
alignments (as it already does for regular pointers) in preparation
for my upcoming patch to have the verifer check that the sizes agree.
Also augment the backend logic that skips actually emitting this
information into DWARF such that it also handles reference types.
Reviewers: aprantl, dexonsmith, dblaikie
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14275
llvm-svn: 253186
is_empty, is_polymorphic, and is_abstract didn't handle incomplete types
correctly. Only non-union class types must be complete for these
traits.
is_final and is_sealed don't care about the particular spelling of the
FinalAttr.
is_interface_class should always return false regardless of its input.
The type trait can only be satisfied in a mode we do not support (/CLR).
llvm-svn: 253184
Summary: The Old personality function gets copied over, but the
Materializer didn't have a chance to inspect it (e.g. to fix up
references to the correct module for the target function).
Also add a verifier check that makes sure the personality routine
is in the same module as the function whose personality it is.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: jevinskie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14474
llvm-svn: 253183
Summary: Moving landingpads into successor basic blocks makes the
verifier sad. Teach Sink that much like PHI nodes and terminator
instructions, landingpads (and cleanuppads, etc.) may not be moved
between basic blocks.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14475
llvm-svn: 253182
When calling a ObjC method on super from inside a C++ lambda, look at the
captures to find "self". This mirrors how the analyzer handles calling super in
an ObjC block and fixes an assertion failure.
rdar://problem/23550077
llvm-svn: 253176
Summary:
The patch to move metadata linking after global value linking didn't
correctly map unmaterialized global values to null as desired. They
were in fact mapped to the source copy. It largely worked by accident
since most module linker clients destroyed the source module which
caused the source GVs to be replaced by null, but caused a failure with
LTO linking on Windows:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312869.html
The problem is that a null return value from materializeValueFor is
handled by mapping the value to self. This is the desired behavior when
materializeValueFor is passed a non-GlobalValue. The problem is how to
distinguish that case from the case where we really do want to map to
null.
This patch addresses this by passing in a new flag to the value mapper
indicating that unmapped global values should be mapped to null. Other
Value types are handled as before.
Note that the documented behavior of asserting on unmapped values when
the flag RF_IgnoreMissingValues isn't set is currently disabled with
FIXME notes due to bootstrap failures. I modified these disabled asserts
so when they are eventually enabled again it won't assert for the
unmapped values when the new RF_NullMapMissingGlobalValues flag is set.
I also considered using a callback into the value materializer, but a
flag seemed cleaner given that there are already existing flags.
I also considered modifying materializeValueFor to return the input
value when we want to map to source and then treat a null return
to mean map to null. However, there are other value materializer
subclasses that implement materializeValueFor, and they would all need
to be audited and the return values possibly changed, which seemed
error-prone.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, joker.eph
Subscribers: pcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14682
llvm-svn: 253170
Global to local demotion can speed up programs that use globals a lot. It is particularly useful with LTO, when the entire call graph is known and most functions have been internalized.
For a global to be demoted, it must only be accessed by one function and that function:
1. Must never recurse directly or indirectly, else the GV would be clobbered.
2. Must never rely on the value in GV at the start of the function (apart from the initializer).
GlobalOpt can already do this, but it is hamstrung and only ever tries to demote globals inside "main", because C++ gives extra guarantees about how main is called - once and only once.
In LTO mode, we can often prove the first property (if the function is internal by this point, we know enough about the callgraph to determine if it could possibly recurse). FunctionAttrs now infers the "norecurse" attribute for this reason.
The second property can be proven for a subset of functions by proving that all loads from GV are dominated by a store to GV. This is conservative in the name of compile time - this only requires a DominatorTree which is fairly cheap in the grand scheme of things. We could do more fancy stuff with MemoryDependenceAnalysis too to catch more cases but this appears to catch most of the useful ones in my testing.
llvm-svn: 253168
The current implementation of GEP visitor in InstCombine fails with assertion on Vector GEP with mix of scalar and vector types, like this:
getelementptr double, double* %a, <8 x i32> %i
(It fails to create a "sext" from <8 x i32> to <8 x i64>)
I fixed it and added some tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14485
llvm-svn: 253162