This restores commit r278330, with fixes for a few bot failures:
- Fix a late change I had made to the save temps output file that I
missed due to existing files sitting on my disk
- Fix a bunch of Windows bot failures with "ambiguous call to overloaded
function" due to confusion between llvm::make_unique vs
std::make_unique (preface the new make_unique calls with "llvm::")
- Attempt to fix a modules bot failure by adding a missing include
to LTO/Config.h.
Original change:
Resolution-based LTO API.
Summary:
This introduces a resolution-based LTO API. The main advantage of this API over
existing APIs is that it allows the linker to supply a resolution for each
symbol in each object, rather than the combined object as a whole. This will
become increasingly important for use cases such as ThinLTO which require us
to process symbol resolutions in a more complicated way than just adjusting
linkage.
Patch by Peter Collingbourne.
Reviewers: rafael, tejohnson, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: lhames, tejohnson, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20268
llvm-svn: 278338
This reverts commit r278330.
I made a change to the save temps output that is causing issues with the
bots. Didn't realize this because I had older output files sitting on
disk in my test output directory.
llvm-svn: 278331
Summary:
This introduces a resolution-based LTO API. The main advantage of this API over
existing APIs is that it allows the linker to supply a resolution for each
symbol in each object, rather than the combined object as a whole. This will
become increasingly important for use cases such as ThinLTO which require us
to process symbol resolutions in a more complicated way than just adjusting
linkage.
Patch by Peter Collingbourne.
Reviewers: rafael, tejohnson, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: lhames, tejohnson, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20268
Address review comments
llvm-svn: 278330
The export table is not considered part of the object file symbol table,
so we have to look through it separately.
Reviewers: kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23321
llvm-svn: 278284
In the coverage report, the line and count columns have been swapped to make it more readable.
A follow-up commit in compiler-rt is needed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23281
llvm-svn: 278152
The DebugDirectory contains a pointer to the CodeView info structure which is a
derivative of the OMF debug directory. The structure has evolved a bit over
time, and PDB 2.0 used a slightly different definition from PDB 7.0. Both of
these are specific to CodeView and not COFF. Reflect this by moving the
structure definitions into the DebugInfo/CodeView headers. Define a generic
DebugInfo union type that can be used to pass around a reference to the
DebugInfo irrespective of the versioning. NFC.
llvm-svn: 278075
Summary:
They are now lexed as a single token on targets where
MCAsmInfo::HasMipsExpressions is true and then parsed in a similar way to
the '~' operator as part of MCExpr::parseExpression.
As a result:
* expressions and immediates no longer have different parsing rules. The
difference is now solely down to whether evaluateAsAbsolute() succeeds.
* %hi(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) are no longer parsed as a single operator and
decomposed into the three MipsMCExpr nodes. They are parsed directly as
three MipsMCExpr nodes.
* parseMemOperand no longer needs to eat all the surrounding parenthesis
to get at the outermost operator to make this work
* %hi(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) and %lo(%neg(%gp_rel(x))) are no longer the only
3-in-1 relocs that parse for N64. They're still the only combinations that
are permitted in relocatable expressions though. Fixing that should be a
later patch.
* We no longer need to list all the tokens that can occur as the first token of
an expression or immediate.
test/MC/Mips/expr1.s:
This change also prevents the incorrect lowering of %lo(2*4)+foo to
%lo(8+foo) which is not an equivalent expression (the difference is
whether foo is truncated to 16-bit or not) and the test has been
updated to account for the macro expansion the correct expression requires.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23110
llvm-svn: 277988
It breaks ExecutionEngine/OrcLazy/weak-function.ll on most bots.
Script:
--
...
--
Exit Code: 1
Command Output (stderr):
--
Could not find main function.
llvm-svn: 277907
This adds partial support for weak functions to the CompileOnDemandLayer by
modifying the addLogicalModule method to check for existing stub definitions
before building a new stub for a weak function. This scheme is sufficient to
support ODR definitions, but fails for general weak definitions if strong
definition is encountered after the first weak definition. (A more extensive
refactor will be required to fully support weak symbols).
This patch does *not* add weak symbol support to RuntimeDyld: I hope to add
that in the near future.
llvm-svn: 277896
This resubmits a3770391c5fb64108d565e12f61dd77ce71b5b4f,
which was reverted due to breakages on non-Windows machines.
Due to differences in template instantiation rules on Microsoft
and non-Microsoft platforms, a member access restriction was
triggering on non-Microsoft compilers. Previously, a friend
declaration for std::vector<> had been introduced into the
DebugMap class to make the member access restriction pass,
but the introduction of support for SmallVector<> meant that
an additional friend declaration would need to be added.
This didn't really make a lot of sense since the user of the
macro is probably only using one type (SmallVector<>, vector<>,
etc) and we could in theory add support for even more types
to this macro in the future (e.g. std::deque), so rather than
add another friend declaration, I just made the type being
referenced a public nested typedef instead of a private nested
typedef.
llvm-svn: 277888
Until now, our use case for the visitor has been to take a stream of bytes
representing a type stream, deserialize the records in sequence, and do
something with them, where "something" is determined by how the user
implements a particular set of callbacks on an abstract class.
For actually writing PDBs, however, we want to do the reverse. We have
some kind of description of the list of records in their in-memory format,
and we want to process each one. Perhaps by serializing them to a byte
stream, or perhaps by converting them from one description format (Yaml)
to another (in-memory representation).
This was difficult in the current model because deserialization and
invoking the callbacks were tightly coupled.
With this patch we change this so that TypeDeserializer is itself an
implementation of the particular set of callbacks. This decouples
deserialization from the iteration over a list of records and invocation
of the callbacks. TypeDeserializer is initialized with another
implementation of the callback interface, so that upon deserialization it
can pass the deserialized record through to the next set of callbacks. In
a sense this is like an implementation of the Decorator design pattern,
where the Deserializer is a decorator.
This will be useful for writing Pdbs from yaml, where we have a
description of the type records in Yaml format. In this case, the visitor
implementation would have each visitation callback method implemented in
such a way as to extract the proper set of fields from the Yaml, and it
could maintain state that builds up a list of these records. Finally at
the end we can pass this information through to another set of callbacks
which serializes them into a byte stream.
Reviewed By: majnemer, ruiu, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23177
llvm-svn: 277871
This is where an LC_SEGMENT load command has a fileoff field that
extends past the end of the file.
Also fix llvm-nm and llvm-size to remove the errorToErrorCode() call so error messages are printed.
And needed to update a few test cases now that they do print the error messages just a
bit differently.
llvm-svn: 277845
Summary:
Having -O0 in opt allows testing that -O0 optimization
pipeline is built correctly.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23208
llvm-svn: 277829
Since the string table being read from the MachO is a properly bounded StringRef including null strings is safe and reasonable.
This occurs frequently with stripped binaries where the string table has been modified.
llvm-svn: 277753
When using orbis-llvm-cov.exe to generate the HTML report, the HTML report
can look quite different to the source file if it includes tabs.The default
tab size is 2 spaces instead of 8 spaces. A command line switch is
be added to set the tab size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23087
llvm-svn: 277715
changing them to Expected<> to allow them to pass through llvm Errors.
No functional change.
This commit by itself will break the next lld builds. I’ll be committing the
matching change for lld immediately next.
llvm-svn: 277656
This reverts commit the revert commit r277627. The build errors
mentioned in r277627 were likely caused by an unclean build directory.
Sorry for the noise.
llvm-svn: 277630
This reverts commit r277540. It breaks the build with:
../lib/Object/Archive.cpp:264:41: error: return type of out-of-line definition of 'llvm::object::ArchiveMemberHeader::getUID' differs from that in the declaration
Expected<unsigned> ArchiveMemberHeader::getUID() const {
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^
include/llvm/Object/Archive.h:53:12: note: previous declaration is here
unsigned getUID() const;
~~~~~~~~ ^
llvm-svn: 277627
MappedBlockSTream can work with any sequence of block data where
the ordering is specified by a list of block numbers. So rather
than manually stitch them together in the case of the FPM, reuse
this functionality so that we can treat the FPM as if it were
contiguous.
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23066
llvm-svn: 277609
Move those two options to llc:
The options in CommandFlags.h are shared by dsymutil, gold, llc,
llvm-dwp, llvm-lto, llvm-mc, lto, opt.
-stop-after/-start-after only affect codegen passes however only gold and llc
actually create codegen passes and I believe these flags to be only
useful for users of llc. For the other tools they are just highly
confusing: -stop-after claims to "Stop compilation after a specific
pass" which is not true in the context of the "opt" tool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23050
llvm-svn: 277551
I examined a few PDBs and all of them treated pages for stream 0
are unused, thus they were unmarked in their free page bitmap.
I think we should do the same thing for compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23047
llvm-svn: 277545
LLI already supported passing multiple input modules to MCJIT via the
-extra-module option. This patch adds the plumbing to pass these modules to
the OrcLazy JIT too.
This functionality will be used in an upcoming test case for weak symbol
handling.
llvm-svn: 277521
The FPM is split at regular intervals across the MSF file, as the MS code
suggests. It turns out that the value of the interval is precisely the
block size. If the block size is 4096, then there are two Fpm pages every
4096 blocks.
So here we teach the PDBFile class to parse a split FPM, and also add more
options when dumping the FPM to display some additional information such
as orphaned pages (pages which the FPM says are allocated, but which
nothing appears to use), use after free pages (pages which the FPM says
are not allocated, but which are referenced by a stream), and multiple use
pages (pages which the FPM says are allocated but are used more than
once).
Reviewed By: ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23022
llvm-svn: 277388
This patch replaces RuntimeDyld::SymbolInfo with JITSymbol: A symbol class
that is capable of lazy materialization (i.e. the symbol definition needn't be
emitted until the address is requested). This can be used to support common
and weak symbols in the JIT (though this is not implemented in this patch).
For consistency, RuntimeDyld::SymbolResolver is renamed to JITSymbolResolver.
For space efficiency a new class, JITEvaluatedSymbol, is introduced that
behaves like the old RuntimeDyld::SymbolInfo - i.e. it is just a pair of an
address and symbol flags. Instances of JITEvaluatedSymbol can be used in
symbol-tables to avoid paying the space cost of the materializer.
llvm-svn: 277386
We had import_directory_table_entry and
coff_import_directory_table_entry, remove one. Also, factor out the
logic which determins if a descriptor is a terminator.
llvm-svn: 277296
Previously this change was submitted from a Windows machine, so
changes made to the case of filenames and directory names did
not survive the commit, and as a result the CMake source file
names and the on-disk file names did not match on case-sensitive
file systems.
I'm resubmitting this patch from a Linux system, which hopefully
allows the case changes to make it through unfettered.
llvm-svn: 277213
In a previous patch, it was suggested to use all caps instead of
rolling caps for initialisms, so this patch changes everything
to do this.
llvm-svn: 277190
As mentioned in commit log for r276686 this next step is adding a new
method in the ArchiveMemberHeader class to get the full name that
does proper error checking, and can be use for error messages.
To do this the name of ArchiveMemberHeader::getName() is changed to
ArchiveMemberHeader::getRawName() to be consistent with
Archive::Child::getRawName(). Then the “new” method is the addition
of a new implementation of ArchiveMemberHeader::getName() which gets
the full name and provides proper error checking. Which is mostly a rewrite
of what was Archive::Child::getName() and cleaning up incorrect uses of
llvm_unreachable() in the code which were actually just cases of errors
in the input Archives.
Then Archive::Child::getName() is changed to return Expected<> and use
the new implementation of ArchiveMemberHeader::getName() .
Also needed to change Archive::getMemoryBufferRef() with these
changes to return Expected<> as well to propagate Errors up.
As well as changing Archive::isThinMember() to return Expected<> .
llvm-svn: 277177
Summary:
Depends on D22841
We now use a much simpler CFG simplification routine for bugpoint,
because SimplifyCFG is no longer a good match for what bugpoint wants
to do.
At the same time, to make sure we don't lose anything valuable it was doing,
SimplifyCFG is now run as a per-BB reduction pass.
With this and D22841 combined, bugpoint operates both much faster on
the large testcases i have, and reduces them to pretty much minimal
testcases (in one case, bugpoint used to leave about 6000 useless blocks, and
now it leaves 3 ...)
Reviewers: chandlerc, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22845
llvm-svn: 277063
This adds boilerplate code for all coroutine passes,
the passes are no-ops for now.
Also, a small test has been added to verify that passes execute in
the expected order or not at all if coroutine support is disabled.
Patch by Gor Nishanov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22847
llvm-svn: 277033
This was a pure virtual base class whose purpose was to abstract
away the notion of how you retrieve the layout of a discontiguous
stream of blocks in an Msf file. This led to too many layers of
abstraction making it difficult to figure out what was going on
and extend things. Ultimately, a stream's layout is decided by
its length and the array of block numbers that it lives on. So
rather than have an abstract base class which can return this in
any number of ways, it's more straightforward to simply store them
as fields of a trivial struct, and also to give a more appropriate
name.
This patch does that. It renames IMsfStreamData to MsfStreamLayout,
and deletes the 2 concrete implementations, DirectoryStreamData
and IndexedStreamData. MsfStreamLayout is a trivial struct
with the necessary data.
llvm-svn: 277018
This fixes the highlighting for lines without any coverage segments. I
don't have a neat way of testing this yet, but am working on it.
llvm-svn: 276906
Summary:
Add a pass to bugpoint to make it transform conditional jumps into unconditional jumps.
Often, bugpoint generates output that has large numbers of br undef jumps, where
one side is dead.
What is happening is two fold:
1. It never tries to just pick a direction for the jump, and just see what happens
<<<< this patch
2. SimplifyCFG no longer is a good match for bugpoint's usecase. It
does too much.
Even things in SimplifyCFG, like removeUnreachableBlocks, go to great
lengths to transform undefined behavior into blocks and kill large
parts of the CFG. This is great for regular code, not so much for
bugpoint, which often generates UB on purpose (store undef is a great
example).
<<<< a followup patch that is coming, to move simplifycfg into a
separate reduction pass, and move the existing reduceCrashingBlocks
pass to use simpleSimplifyCFG.
Both of these patches significantly reduce the size and complexity of bugpoint
generated testcases.
Reviewers: chandlerc, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22841
llvm-svn: 276884