local submodule visibility enabled; that top-level file might not actually be
the module includes buffer if use of prebuilt modules is disabled.
llvm-svn: 241120
Summary:
This change introduces a !make.implicit metadata that allows the
frontend to pre-select the set of explicit null checks that will be
considered for transformation into implicit null checks.
The reason for not using profiling data instead of !make.implicit is
explained in the change to `FaultMaps.rst`.
Reviewers: atrick, reames, pgavlin, JosephTremoulet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10824
llvm-svn: 241116
This is part of an effort to pack the average MCSymbol down to 24 bytes.
The HasName bit was pushing the size of the bitfield over to another word,
so this change uses a PointerIntPair to fit in it to unused bits of a
PointerUnion.
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola
llvm-svn: 241115
Previously, the order of adding symbols to the symbol table was simple.
We have a list of all input files. We read each file from beginning of
the list and add all symbols in it to the symbol table.
This patch changes that order. Now all archive files are added to the
symbol table first, and then all the other object files are added.
This shouldn't change the behavior in single-threading, and make room
to parallelize in multi-threading.
In the first step, only lazy symbols are added to the symbol table
because archives contain only Lazy symbols. Member object files
found to be necessary are queued. In the second step, defined and
undefined symbols are added from object files. Adding an undefined
symbol to the symbol table may cause more member files to be added
to the queue. We simply continue reading all object files until the
queue is empty.
Finally, new archive or object files may be added to the queues by
object files' directive sections (which contain new command line
options).
The above process is repeated until we get no new files.
Symbols defined both in object files and in archives can make results
undeterministic. If an archive is read before an object, a new member
file gets linked, while in the other way, no new file would be added.
That is the most popular cause of an undeterministic result or linking
failure as I observed. Separating phases of adding lazy symbols and
undefined symbols makes that deterministic. Adding symbols in each
phase should be parallelizable.
llvm-svn: 241107
It is mandatory to specify a comdat in order to receive comdat semantics
for a symbol. We were previously getting this wrong in -function-sections
mode; linker-weak symbols were being emitted in a selectany comdat. This
change causes such symbols to use a noduplicates comdat instead, fixing
the inconsistency.
Also correct an inaccuracy in the docs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10828
llvm-svn: 241103
Previously we were not assigning a comdat to thunks in the Microsoft ABI,
which would have required us to emit these functions outside of a comdat.
(Due to an inconsistency in how we were emitting objects, we were getting this
right most of the time, but only when compiling with function sections.) This
code generator change causes us to create a comdat for each thunk.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10829
llvm-svn: 241102
IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(BB, BB::iterator) is an older version of
IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(Instruction). However, the latter updates
the current debug location of emitted instruction, while the former
doesn't, which is confusing.
Unify the behavior of these methods: now they both set current debug
location to the debug location of instruction at insertion point.
The callers of IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(BB, BB::iterator) doesn't
seem to depend on the old behavior (keeping the original debug info
location). On the contrary, sometimes they (e.g. SCEV) *should* be
updating debug info location, but don't. I'll look at gdb bots after
the commit to check that we don't regress on debug info somewhere.
This change may make line table more fine-grained, thus increasing
debug info size. I haven't observed significant increase, though:
it varies from negligible to 0.3% on several binaries and self-hosted
Clang.
This is yet another change targeted at resolving PR23837.
llvm-svn: 241101
Summary:
Really check if %SP is not used in other places, instead of checking only exact
one non-dbg use.
Patched by Xuetian Weng.
Test Plan:
@foo4 in test/CodeGen/NVPTX/local-stack-frame.ll, create a case that
SP will appear twice.
Reviewers: jholewinski, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sfantao, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10844
llvm-svn: 241099
This commit implements serialization of the machine basic block successors. It
uses a YAML flow sequence that contains strings that have the MBB references.
The MBB references in those strings use the same syntax as the MBB machine
operands in the machine instruction strings.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10699
llvm-svn: 241093
This commit extracts the code that reports an error that's produced by the
machine instruction parser into a new method that can be reused in other places.
llvm-svn: 241086
This commit refactors the interface for machine instruction parser. It adopts
the pattern of returning a bool and passing in the result in the first argument
that is used by the other parsing methods for the the method 'parse' and the
function 'parseMachineInstr'.
llvm-svn: 241085
This allows a module-aware debugger such as LLDB to import the currently
visible modules before dropping into the expression evaluator.
rdar://problem/20965932
llvm-svn: 241084
POSIX states that "It shall be safe to destroy an initialized condition
variable upon which no threads are currently blocked", and later clarifies
"A condition variable can be destroyed immediately after all the threads
that are blocked on it are awakened) (in examples section). Tsan reported
such destruction as a data race.
Fixes https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23616
Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D10693
llvm-svn: 241082
generated by the Autoconf/Makefile build system relocatable.
Previously the generated CMake files contained hardcoded paths which
prevented a binary installation from being relocated to a different
place in the file system. This problem was most noticeable in LLVM's
official binary releases which were completely unusable by a downstream
project trying to import the CMake targets.
Package maintainers who choose to modify the install location of the
CMake directory without using the ``PROJ_cmake`` Makefile variable
override will need to patch the generated``LLVMConfig.cmake`` so that
``LLVM_INSTALL_PREFIX`` and ``_LLVM_CMAKE_DIR`` variables are set
correctly.
llvm-svn: 241080
Summary:
This changes PtraceWrapper to return an Error, while the actual result is in an pointer parameter
(instead of the other way around). Also made a couple of PtraceWrapper arguments default to zero.
This arrangement makes a lot of the code much simpler.
Test Plan: Tests pass on linux. It compiles on android arm64/mips64.
Reviewers: chaoren, mohit.bhakkad
Subscribers: tberghammer, aemerson, lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10808
llvm-svn: 241079
This commit refactors the machine instruction lexer so that the lexing
functions use the 'maybeLex...' pattern, where they determine if they
can lex the current token by themselves.
Reviewers: Sean Silva
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10817
llvm-svn: 241078
The main effect of this change is that /arch:IA32 will use i386 as the
CPU, while clang-cl will continue to default to pentium4 (aka SSE2 plus
the usual other features).
/arch:AVX and /arch:AVX2 will also now enable the other features
available in sandybridge and haswell respectively, which is consistent
with MSDN.
llvm-svn: 241077