During deserialization clang is currently missing the merging of
protocols into the canonical interface for the class extension.
This merging only currently happens during parsing and should also
be considered during deserialization.
rdar://problem/38724303
llvm-svn: 331063
The idea is to have a pass which performs the same transformation as GuardWidening, but can be run within a loop pass manager without disrupting the pass manager structure. As demonstrated by the test case, this doesn't quite get there because of issues with post dom, but it gives a good step in the right direction. the motivation is purely to reduce compile time since we can now preserve locality during the loop walk.
This patch only includes a legacy pass. A follow up will add a new style pass as well.
llvm-svn: 331060
Now that getSectionPiece is fast (uses a hash) it is probably OK to
split merge sections early.
The reason I want to do this is to split eh_frame sections in the same
place.
This does mean that we have to decompress early. Given that the only
compressed sections are debug info, I don't think we are missing much.
It is a small improvement: 0.5% on the geometric mean.
llvm-svn: 331058
These branches were previously unanalyzable and unselectable. Add them and
recognize how to generate their inverses.
Reviewers: smaksimovic, atanasyan, abeserminji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46113
llvm-svn: 331050
Always normalizing lldb_private::FileSpec paths will help us get a consistent results from comparisons when setting breakpoints and when looking for source files. This also removes a lot of complexity from the comparison routines. Modified the DWARF line table parser to use the normalized compile unit directory if needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45977
llvm-svn: 331049
PPC64 V2 ABI describes two entry points to a function. The global entry point
sets up the TOC base pointer. When calling a local function, the call should
branch to the local entry point rather than the global entry point.
Section 3.4.1 describes using the 3 most significant bits of the st_other
field to find out how many instructions there are between the local and global
entry point. This patch adds the correct offset required to branch to the local
entry point of a function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45729
llvm-svn: 331046
Put the first ldp at the end, so that the load-store optimizer can run
and merge the ldp and the add into a post-index ldp.
This didn't work in case no frame was needed and resulted in code size
regressions.
llvm-svn: 331044
Summary:
`HandleLLVMOptions` adds `-w` to the cflags if `LLVM_ENABLE_WARNINGS` is not on.
With `-w`, `check_cxx_compiler_flag` doesn't error out for unsupported flags
(for example `-mcrc` on x86_64), and those flags end up being detected as
working - and really they aren't.
I am not entirely sure what the best way to solve this is, but setting
`LLVM_ENABLE_WARNINGS` prior to including `HandleLLVMOptions` does the job.
Reviewers: phosek, beanz
Reviewed By: phosek
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46079
llvm-svn: 331042
As discussed in the post-commit thread for:
rL330437 ( http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20180423/545906.html )
We need a way to opt-out of a float-to-int-to-float cast optimization because too much
existing code relies on the platform-specific undefined result of those casts when the
float-to-int overflows.
The LLVM changes associated with adding this function attribute are here:
rL330947
rL330950
rL330951
Also as suggested, I changed the LLVM doc to mention the specific sanitizer flag that
catches this problem:
rL330958
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46135
llvm-svn: 331041
If the MachineInstr uses a custom inserter and is then erased after
instruction selection, there is no use for mapping it to a sched class.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 331040
The ACLE spec which describes these intrinsics hasn't been published yet, but
this is based on the final draft which will be published soon, and these have
already been implemented by GCC.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46109
llvm-svn: 331039
This adds a pre-defined macro to test if the compiler has support for the
v8.2-A dot rpoduct intrinsics in AArch32 mode.
The AAcrh64 equivalent has already been added by rL330229.
The ACLE spec which describes this macro hasn't been published yet, but this is
based on the final internal draft, and GCC has already implemented this.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46108
llvm-svn: 331038
We currently support LCSSA PHI nodes in the outer loop exit, if their
incoming values do not come from the outer loop latch or if the
outer loop latch has a single predecessor. In that case, the outer loop latch
will be executed only if the inner loop gets executed. If we have multiple
predecessors for the outer loop latch, it may be executed even if the inner
loop does not get executed.
This is a first step to support the case described in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=30472
Reviewers: efriedma, karthikthecool, mcrosier
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43237
llvm-svn: 331037
This adds IR intrinsics for the AArch64 dot-product instructions introduced in
v8.2-A.
Differential revisioon: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46107
llvm-svn: 331036
Since PTX has grown a <2 x half> datatype vectorization has become more
important. The late LoadStoreVectorizer intentionally only does loads
and stores, but now arithmetic has to be vectorized for optimal
throughput too.
This is still very limited, SLP vectorization happily creates <2 x half>
if it's a legal type but there's still a lot of register moving
happening to get that fed into a vectorized store. Overall it's a small
performance win by reducing the amount of arithmetic instructions.
I haven't really checked what the loop vectorizer does to PTX code, the
cost model there might need some more tweaks. I didn't see it causing
harm though.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46130
llvm-svn: 331035
This patch makes compiler does not fuse fmul and fadd/fsub into
fmadd/fmsub by default. Instead, -fp-contract=fast option can
be used when such behavior is desired.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46057
llvm-svn: 331033
This adds IR intrinsics for the ARM dot-product instructions introduced in
v8.2-A.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46106
llvm-svn: 331032
Summary:
The Language Server Protocol unfortunately mandates that locations in files
be represented by line/column pairs, where the "column" is actually an index
into the UTF-16-encoded text of the line.
(This is because VSCode is written in JavaScript, which is UTF-16-native).
Internally clangd treats source files at UTF-8, the One True Encoding, and
generally deals with byte offsets (though there are exceptions).
Before this patch, conversions between offsets and LSP Position pretended
that Position.character was UTF-8 bytes, which is only true for ASCII lines.
Now we examine the text to convert correctly (but don't actually need to
transcode it, due to some nice details of the encodings).
The updated functions in SourceCode are the blessed way to interact with
the Position.character field, and anything else is likely to be wrong.
So I also updated the other accesses:
- CodeComplete needs a "clang-style" line/column, with column in utf-8 bytes.
This is now converted via Position -> offset -> clang line/column
(a new function is added to SourceCode.h for the second conversion).
- getBeginningOfIdentifier skipped backwards in UTF-16 space, which is will
behave badly when it splits a surrogate pair. Skipping backwards in UTF-8
coordinates gives the lexer a fighting chance of getting this right.
While here, I clarified(?) the logic comments, fixed a bug with identifiers
containing digits, simplified the signature slightly and added a test.
This seems likely to cause problems with editors that have the same bug, and
treat the protocol as if columns are UTF-8 bytes. But we can find and fix those.
Reviewers: hokein
Subscribers: klimek, ilya-biryukov, ioeric, MaskRay, jkorous, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46035
llvm-svn: 331029
Back when the R52 schedule was added in rL286949, there was no way
to enable machine schedules in ARM for specific cores. Since then a
target feature has been added. This enables the feature for R52,
removing the need to manually specify compiler flags.
llvm-svn: 331027
SPIR-V encodes the read_only and write_only access qualifiers of pipes,
so separate LLVM IR types are required to target SPIR-V. Other backends
may also find this useful.
These new types are `opencl.pipe_ro_t` and `opencl.pipe_wo_t`, which
replace `opencl.pipe_t`.
This replaces __get_pipe_num_packets(...) and __get_pipe_max_packets(...)
which took a read_only pipe with separate versions for read_only and
write_only pipes, namely:
* __get_pipe_num_packets_ro(...)
* __get_pipe_num_packets_wo(...)
* __get_pipe_max_packets_ro(...)
* __get_pipe_max_packets_wo(...)
These separate versions exist to avoid needing a bitcast to one of the
two qualified pipe types.
Patch by Stuart Brady.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46015
llvm-svn: 331026
Summary:
The value tracking analysis uses function alignment to infer that the
least significant bits of function pointers are known to be zero.
Unfortunately, this is not correct for ARM targets: the least
significant bit of a function pointer stores the ARM/Thumb state
information (i.e., the LSB is set for Thumb functions and cleared for
ARM functions).
The original approach (https://reviews.llvm.org/D44781) introduced a
new field for function pointer alignment in the DataLayout structure
to address this. But it seems unlikely that optimizations based on
function pointer alignment would bring much benefit in practice to
justify the additional maintenance burden, so this patch simply
assumes that function pointer alignment is always unknown.
Reviewers: javed.absar, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, hfinkel, rogfer01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46110
llvm-svn: 331025
1. Allow to suppress by current stack.
We generally allow to suppress by all main stacks.
Current is probably the stack one wants to use to
suppress such reports.
2. Fix last lock stack restoration.
We trimmed shadow value by storing it in u32.
This magically worked for the test that provoked
the report on the main thread. But this breaks
for locks in any other threads.
llvm-svn: 331023
Summary:
This patch moves the MultiplexASTDeserializationListener declaration into a public header.
We're currently using this multiplexer in the cling interpreter to attach another
ASTDeserializationListener during the execution (so, after the MultiplexConsumer is already
attached which prevents us from attaching more). So far we're doing this by patching clang
and making this class public, but it makes things easier if we make this instead just public in
upstream.
Reviewers: thakis, v.g.vassilev, rsmith, bruno
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: llvm-commits, cfe-commits, v.g.vassilev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37475
llvm-svn: 331021
function if a function delegates to another function.
Fix a bug introduced in r328731, which caused a struct with ObjC __weak
fields that was passed to a function to be destructed twice, once in the
callee function and once in another function the callee function
delegates to. To prevent this, keep track of the callee-destructed
structs passed to a function and disable their cleanups at the point of
the call to the delegated function.
This reapplies r331016, which was reverted in r331019 because it caused
an assertion to fail in EmitDelegateCallArg on a windows bot. I made
changes to EmitDelegateCallArg so that it doesn't try to deactivate
cleanups for structs that have trivial destructors (cleanups for those
structs are never pushed to the cleanup stack in EmitParmDecl).
rdar://problem/39194693
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45382
llvm-svn: 331020
function if a function delegates to another function.
Fix a bug introduced in r328731, which caused a struct with ObjC __weak
fields that was passed to a function to be destructed twice, once in the
callee function and once in another function the callee function
delegates to. To prevent this, keep track of the callee-destructed
structs passed to a function and disable their cleanups at the point of
the call to the delegated function.
rdar://problem/39194693
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45382
llvm-svn: 331016
Add new umin creation method which accepts a list of operands.
SCEV does not represents umin which is required in getExact, so
it transforms umin to umax with not. As a result the transformation of
tree of max to max with several operands does not work.
We just use the new introduced method for creation umin from several operands.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46047
llvm-svn: 331015
Avoid crash when the sub-expression of operator delete[] is of array type.
This is not the same as simply using a delete[] syntax.
We're still not properly calling destructors in this case in the analyzer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46146
llvm-svn: 331014