I've no idea why I decided to handle TMxx differently from all the other
high/low logic operations, but it was a stupid thing to do. The high
registers aren't available as separate 32-bit registers on z10,
so subreg_h32 can't be used on a GR64 there.
I've normally been testing with z196 and with -O3 and so hadn't noticed
this until now.
llvm-svn: 195473
Also refactor the logic into a helper function. This is an important improvement
on mingw where the linker complains about mixed weak and strong symbols.
Converting to weak ensures that the symbol is not dropped, but keeps in a
comdat, making the linker happy.
llvm-svn: 195470
The legalizer can now do this type of expansion for more
type combinations without loading and storing to and
from the stack.
NOTE: This is a candidate for the 3.4 branch.
llvm-svn: 195398
section use the form DW_FORM_data4 whilst in Dwarf 4 and later they
use the form DW_FORM_sec_offset.
This patch updates the places where such attributes are generated to
use the appropriate form depending on the Dwarf version. The DIE entries
affected have the following tags:
DW_AT_stmt_list, DW_AT_ranges, DW_AT_location, DW_AT_GNU_pubnames,
DW_AT_GNU_pubtypes, DW_AT_GNU_addr_base, DW_AT_GNU_ranges_base
It also adds a hidden command line option "--dwarf-version=<uint>"
to llc which allows the version of Dwarf to be generated to override
what is specified in the metadata; this makes it possible to update
existing tests to check the debugging information generated for both
Dwarf 4 (the default) and Dwarf 3 using the same metadata.
Patch (slightly modified) by Keith Walker!
llvm-svn: 195391
AMD's processors family K7, K8, K10, K12, K15 and K16 are known to have SHLD/SHRD instructions with very poor latency. Optimization guides for these processors recommend using an alternative sequence of instructions. For these AMD's processors, I disabled folding (or (x << c) | (y >> (64 - c))) when we are not optimizing for size.
It might be beneficial to disable this folding for some of the Intel's processors. However, since I couldn't find specific recommendations regarding using SHLD/SHRD instructions on Intel's processors, I haven't disabled this peephole for Intel.
llvm-svn: 195383
The new command line flags are -dfsan-ignore-pointer-label-on-store and -dfsan-ignore-pointer-label-on-load. Their default value matches the current labelling scheme.
Additionally, the function __dfsan_union_load is marked as readonly.
Patch by Lorenzo Martignoni!
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2187
llvm-svn: 195382
Mask == ~InvMask asserts if the width of Mask and InvMask differ.
The combine isn't valid (with two exceptions, see below) if the widths differ
so test for this before testing Mask == ~InvMask.
In the specific cases of Mask=~0 and InvMask=0, as well as Mask=0 and
InvMask=~0, the combine is still valid. However, there are more appropriate
combines that could be used in these cases such as folding x & 0 to 0, or
x & ~0 to x.
llvm-svn: 195364
Summary:
LegalizeSetCCCondCode can now legalize SETEQ and SETNE by returning the inverse
condition and requesting that the caller invert the result of the condition.
The caller of LegalizeSetCCCondCode must handle the inverted CC, and they do
so as follows:
SETCC, BR_CC:
Invert the result of the SETCC with SelectionDAG::getNOT()
SELECT_CC:
Swap the true/false operands.
This is necessary for MSA which lacks an integer SETNE instruction.
Reviewers: resistor
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2229
llvm-svn: 195355
It broke, at least, i686 target. It is reproducible with "llc -mtriple=i686-unknown".
FYI, it didn't appear to add either "-O0" or "-fast-isel".
llvm-svn: 195339
clang optimizes tail calls, as in this example:
int foo(void);
int bar(void) {
return foo();
}
where the call is transformed to:
calll .L0$pb
.L0$pb:
popl %eax
.Ltmp0:
addl $_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_+(.Ltmp0-.L0$pb), %eax
movl foo@GOT(%eax), %eax
popl %ebp
jmpl *%eax # TAILCALL
However, the GOT references must all be resolved at dlopen() time, and so this
approach cannot be used with lazy dynamic linking (e.g. using RTLD_LAZY), which
usually populates the PLT with stubs that perform the actual resolving.
This patch changes X86TargetLowering::LowerCall() to skip tail call
optimization, if the called function is a global or external symbol.
Patch by Dimitry Andric!
PR15086
llvm-svn: 195318
The instruction definitions incorrectly specified that popcntd and popcntw have
record forms; they do not. This mistake was causing invalid code generation.
llvm-svn: 195272
We now only allow breaking source order if the exit block frequency is
significantly higher than the other exit block. The actual bias is
currently under a flag so the best cut-off can be found; the flag
defaults to the old behavior. The idea is to get some benchmark coverage
over different values for the flag and pick the best one.
When we require the new frequency to be at least 20% higher than the old
frequency I see a 5% speedup on zlib's deflate when compressing a random
file on x86_64/westmere. Hal reported a small speedup on Fhourstones on
a BG/Q and no regressions in the test suite.
The test case is the full long_match function from zlib's deflate. I was
reluctant to add it for previous tweaks to branch probabilities because
it's large and potentially fragile, but changed my mind since it's an
important use case and more likely to break with all the current work
going into the PGO infrastructure.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2202
llvm-svn: 195265
Summary:
Directives are being ignored, when they occur between a partial-word false
match and any match on another prefix.
For example, with FOO and BAR prefixes:
_FOO
FOO: foo
BAR: bar
FileCheck incorrectly matches:
fog
bar
This happens because FOO falsely matched as a partial word at '_FOO' and was
ignored while BAR matched at 'BAR:'. The match of BAR is incorrectly returned
as the 'first match' causing the FOO directive to be discarded.
Fixed this the same way as r194565 (D2166) did for a similar test case.
The partial-word false match should be counted as a match for the purposes of
finding the first match of a prefix, but should be returned as a false match
using CheckTy::CheckNone so that it isn't treated as a directive.
Fixes PR17995
Reviewers: samsonov, arsenm
Reviewed By: samsonov
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2228
llvm-svn: 195248
Instead of permanently outputting "MVLL" as the file checksum, clang
will create gcno and gcda checksums by hashing the destination block
numbers of every arc. This allows for llvm-cov to check if the two gcov
files are synchronized.
Regenerated the test files so they contain the checksum. Also added
negative test to ensure error when the checksums don't match.
llvm-svn: 195191
Masking operations (where only some number of the low bits are being kept) are
selected to rldicl(x, 0, mb). If x is a logical right shift (which would become
rldicl(y, 64-n, n)), we might be able to fold the two instructions together:
rldicl(rldicl(x, 64-n, n), 0, mb) -> rldicl(x, 64-n, mb) for n <= mb
The right shift is really a left rotate followed by a mask, and if the explicit
mask is a more-restrictive sub-mask of the mask implied by the shift, only one
rldicl is needed.
llvm-svn: 195185
Emit DW_TAG_type_units into the debug_info section using compile unit
headers. This is bogus/unusable by debuggers, but testable and provides
more isolated review.
Subsequent patches will include support for type unit headers and
emission into the debug_types section, as well as comdat grouping the
types based on their hash. Also the CompileUnit type will be renamed
'Unit' and relevant portions pulled out into respective CompileUnit and
TypeUnit types.
llvm-svn: 195166
We are slicing an array of Value pointers and process those slices in a loop.
The problem is that we might invalidate a later slice by vectorizing a former
slice.
Use a WeakVH to track the pointer. If the pointer is deleted or RAUW'ed we can
tell.
The test case will only fail when running with libgmalloc.
radar://15498655
llvm-svn: 195162
Instead of processing relocation for branch to stubs right away, emit a
modified relocation and add it to queue to be resolved later when final load
address is known.
This resolves seven MIPS MCJIT issues that were caused by missing relocation
fixups at the end.
llvm-svn: 195157
The object files we support use null terminated strings, so there is no way to
support these.
This patch adds an assert to catch bad API use and an error check in the .ll
parser.
llvm-svn: 195155
This is the first step to fix pr17918.
It extends the .section directive a bit, inspired by what the ELF one looks
like. The problem with using linkonce is that given
.section foo
.linkonce....
.section foo
.linkonce
we would already have switched sections when getting to .linkonce. The cleanest
solution seems to be to add the comdat information in the .section itself.
llvm-svn: 195148
Hard float for mips16 means essentially to compile as soft float but to
use a runtime library for soft float that is written with native mips32
floating point instructions (those runtime routines run in mips32 hard
float mode).
The patch reviewed by Reed Kotler.
llvm-svn: 195123
order of slices of the alloca which have exactly the same size and other
properties. This was found by a perniciously unstable sort
implementation used to flush out buggy uses of the algorithm.
The fundamental idea is that findCommonType should return the best
common type it can find across all of the slices in the range. There
were two bugs here previously:
1) We would accept an integer type smaller than a byte-width multiple,
and if there were different bit-width integer types, we would accept
the first one. This caused an actual failure in the testcase updated
here when the sort order changed.
2) If we found a bad combination of types or a non-load, non-store use
before an integer typed load or store we would bail, but if we found
the integere typed load or store, we would use it. The correct
behavior is to always use an integer typed operation which covers the
partition if one exists.
While a clever debugging sort algorithm found problem #1 in our existing
test cases, I have no useful test case ideas for #2. I spotted in by
inspection when looking at this code.
llvm-svn: 195118
A column limit in the test folder can lead to trouble as the RUN, CHECK,
etc. comments can potentially be broken over multiple lines changing
their meaning. Without column limit, clang-format will simply keep the
test author's line breaks.
llvm-svn: 195100
No true functional changes.
Change the "hack" name of emitMipsHackSTOCG to emitSymSTO.
Remove demonstration code in AsmParser for emitMipsHackSTOCG and
emitMipsHackELFFlags. The STO field is in an ELF symbol and is not
an explicit directive. That said, we are missing the compliment call
in AsmParser and that will need to be addressed soon.
XFAIL dummy tests for emitMipsHackELFFlags and emitMipsHackELFFlags.
These will built out with following patches.
llvm-svn: 195067
This reverts commit r190888, to fix PR17967. The original change wasn't
the right way to get @feat.00 into the object file. The right fix is to
make @feat.00 be a global symbol.
llvm-svn: 195053
lowering only for load/stores to scalar allocas. The resulting values
confuse the backend and don't add anything because we can describe
array-allocas with a dbg.declare intrinsic just fine.
rdar://problem/15464571
llvm-svn: 195052
(except functions marked always_inline).
Functions with 'optnone' must also have 'noinline' so they don't get
inlined into any other function.
Based on work by Andrea Di Biagio.
llvm-svn: 195046
In some case the loop exit count computation can overflow. Extend the type to
prevent most of those cases.
The problem is loops like:
int main ()
{
int a = 1;
char b = 0;
lbl:
a &= 4;
b--;
if (b) goto lbl;
return a;
}
The backedge count is 255. The induction variable type is i8. If we add one to
255 to get the exit count we overflow to zero.
To work around this issue we extend the type of the induction variable to i32 in
the case of i8 and i16.
PR17532
llvm-svn: 195008
Fixed an inappropriate use of BuildPairF64 when compiling for MIPS32 with FP64
which resulted in an impossible constraint on the register allocation. It now
uses BuildPairF64_64.
llvm-svn: 195007
Generally speaking, control flow paths with error reporting calls are cold.
So far, error reporting calls are calls to perror and calls to fprintf,
fwrite, etc. with stderr as the stream. This can be extended in the future.
The primary motivation is to improve block placement (the cold attribute
affects the static branch prediction heuristics).
llvm-svn: 194943
Implementing this on bigendian platforms could get strange. I added a
target hook, getStackSlotRange, per Jakob's recommendation to make
this as explicit as possible.
llvm-svn: 194942
This adds a loop rerolling pass: the opposite of (partial) loop unrolling. The
transformation aims to take loops like this:
for (int i = 0; i < 3200; i += 5) {
a[i] += alpha * b[i];
a[i + 1] += alpha * b[i + 1];
a[i + 2] += alpha * b[i + 2];
a[i + 3] += alpha * b[i + 3];
a[i + 4] += alpha * b[i + 4];
}
and turn them into this:
for (int i = 0; i < 3200; ++i) {
a[i] += alpha * b[i];
}
and loops like this:
for (int i = 0; i < 500; ++i) {
x[3*i] = foo(0);
x[3*i+1] = foo(0);
x[3*i+2] = foo(0);
}
and turn them into this:
for (int i = 0; i < 1500; ++i) {
x[i] = foo(0);
}
There are two motivations for this transformation:
1. Code-size reduction (especially relevant, obviously, when compiling for
code size).
2. Providing greater choice to the loop vectorizer (and generic unroller) to
choose the unrolling factor (and a better ability to vectorize). The loop
vectorizer can take vector lengths and register pressure into account when
choosing an unrolling factor, for example, and a pre-unrolled loop limits that
choice. This is especially problematic if the manual unrolling was optimized
for a machine different from the current target.
The current implementation is limited to single basic-block loops only. The
rerolling recognition should work regardless of how the loop iterations are
intermixed within the loop body (subject to dependency and side-effect
constraints), but the significant restriction is that the order of the
instructions in each iteration must be identical. This seems sufficient to
capture all current use cases.
This pass is not currently enabled by default at any optimization level.
llvm-svn: 194939
InstCombine, in visitFPTrunc, applies the following optimization to sqrt calls:
(fptrunc (sqrt (fpext x))) -> (sqrtf x)
but does not apply the same optimization to llvm.sqrt. This is a problem
because, to enable vectorization, Clang generates llvm.sqrt instead of sqrt in
fast-math mode, and because this optimization is being applied to sqrt and not
applied to llvm.sqrt, sometimes the fast-math code is slower.
This change makes InstCombine apply this optimization to llvm.sqrt as well.
This fixes the specific problem in PR17758, although the same underlying issue
(optimizations applied to libcalls are not applied to intrinsics) exists for
other optimizations in SimplifyLibCalls.
llvm-svn: 194935
The tests just hit this with a different sized
address space since I haven't figured out how
to use this to break it.
I thought I committed this a long time ago,
and I'm not sure why missing this hasn't caused
any problems.
llvm-svn: 194903
and update test cases accordingly.
This doesn't affect the output dumped using llvm-dwarfdump, but
readelf does now dump the debug_loc section.
llvm-svn: 194898
When we vectorize a scalar access with no alignment specified, we have to set
the target's abi alignment of the scalar access on the vectorized access.
Using the same alignment of zero would be wrong because most targets will have a
bigger abi alignment for vector types.
This probably fixes PR17878.
llvm-svn: 194876
We used to use std::map<IndicesVector, LoadInst*> for OriginalLoads, and when we
try to promote two arguments, they will both write to OriginalLoads causing
created loads for the two arguments to have the same original load. And the same
tbaa tag and alignment will be put to the created loads for the two arguments.
The fix is to use std::map<std::pair<Argument*, IndicesVector>, LoadInst*>
for OriginalLoads, so each Argument will write to different parts of the map.
PR17906
llvm-svn: 194846
Stop folding constant adds into GEP when the type size doesn't match.
Otherwise, the adds' operands are effectively being promoted, changing the
conditions of an overflow. Results are different when:
sext(a) + sext(b) != sext(a + b)
Problem originally found on x86-64, but also fixed issues with ARM and PPC,
which used similar code.
<rdar://problem/15292280>
Patch by Duncan Exon Smith!
llvm-svn: 194840
Now that FileCheck supports multiple check prefixes, we don't need to keep the
little and big endian versions of this test separate anymore. Merge them back
together.
llvm-svn: 194826
Summary:
When getConstant() is called for an expanded vector type, it is split into
multiple scalar constants which are then combined using appropriate build_vector
and bitcast operations.
In addition to the usual big/little endian differences, the case where the
element-order of the vector does not have the same endianness as the elements
themselves is also accounted for. For example, for v4i32 on big-endian MIPS,
the byte-order of the vector is <3210,7654,BA98,FEDC>. For little-endian, it is
<0123,4567,89AB,CDEF>.
Handling this case turns out to be a nop since getConstant() returns a splatted
vector (so reversing the element order doesn't change the value)
This fixes a number of cases in MIPS MSA where calling getConstant() during
operation legalization introduces illegal types (e.g. to legalize v2i64 UNDEF
into a v2i64 BUILD_VECTOR of illegal i64 zeros). It should also handle bigger
differences between illegal and legal types such as legalizing v2i64 into v8i16.
lowerMSASplatImm() in the MIPS backend no longer needs to avoid calling
getConstant() so this function has been updated in the same patch.
For the sake of transparency, the steps I've taken since the review are:
* Added 'virtual' to isVectorEltOrderLittleEndian() as requested. This revealed
that the MIPS tests were falsely passing because a polymorphic function was
not actually polymorphic in the reviewed patch.
* Fixed the tests that were now failing. This involved deleting the code to
handle the MIPS MSA element-order (which was previously doing an byte-order
swap instead of an element-order swap). This left
isVectorEltOrderLittleEndian() unused and it was deleted.
* Fixed build failures caused by rebasing beyond r194467-r194472. These build
failures involved the bset, bneg, and bclr instructions added in these commits
using lowerMSASplatImm() in a way that was no longer valid after this patch.
Some of these were fixed by calling SelectionDAG::getConstant() instead,
others were fixed by a new function getBuildVectorSplat() that provided the
removed functionality of lowerMSASplatImm() in a more sensible way.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1973
llvm-svn: 194811
Summary:
This patch (correctly) breaks some MSA tests by exposing the cases when
SelectionDAG::getConstant() produces illegal types. These have been temporarily
marked XFAIL and the XFAIL flag will be removed when
SelectionDAG::getConstant() is fixed.
There are three categories of failure:
* Immediate instructions are not selected in one endian mode.
* Immediates used in ldi.[bhwd] must be different according to endianness.
(this only affects cases where the 'wrong' ldi is used to load the correct
bitpattern. E.g. (bitcast:v2i64 (build_vector:v4i32 ...)))
* Non-immediate instructions that rely on immediates affected by the
previous two categories as part of their match pattern.
For example, the bset match pattern is the vector equivalent of
'ws | (1 << wt)'.
One test needed correcting to expect different output depending on whether big
or little endian was in use. This test was
test/CodeGen/Mips/msa/basic_operations.ll and experiences the second category
of failure shown above. The little endian version of this test is named
basic_operations_little.ll and will be merged back into basic_operations.ll in
a follow up commit now that FileCheck supports multiple check prefixes.
Reviewers: bkramer, jacksprat, dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1972
llvm-svn: 194806
I was able to successfully run a bootstrapped LTO build of clang with
r194701, so this change does not seem to be the cause of our failing
buildbots.
llvm-svn: 194789
This is to avoid this transformation in some cases:
fold (conv (load x)) -> (load (conv*)x)
On architectures that don't natively support some vector
loads efficiently casting the load to a smaller vector of
larger types and loading is more efficient.
Patch by Micah Villmow.
llvm-svn: 194783
While the test would work with any compiled in target with object
emission support, it's nontrivial to formulate this condition in
lit, so a conservative restriction is used instead.
llvm-svn: 194781
This reverts commit 194701. Apple's bootstrapped LTO builds have been failing,
and this change (along with compiler-rt 194702-194704) is the only thing on
the blamelist. I will either reappy these changes or help debug the problem,
depending on whether this fixes the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 194780
This commit brings the module structure, argument order and
primitive names in Llvm_target in order with the rest of the bindings,
in preparation for adding TargetMachine API.
llvm-svn: 194773
short form. Constant islands will expand them if they are out of range.
Since there is not direct object emitter at this time, it does not
have any material affect because the assembler sorts this out. But we
need to know for the actual constant island work. We track the difference
by putting # 16 inst in the comments.
llvm-svn: 194766
The LDS output queue is accessed via the OQAP register. The OQAP
register cannot be live across clauses, so if value is written to the
output queue, it must be retrieved before the end of the clause.
With the machine scheduler, we cannot statisfy this constraint, because
it lacks proper alias analysis and it will mark some LDS accesses as
having a chain dependency on vertex fetches. Since vertex fetches
require a new clauses, the dependency may end up spiltting OQAP uses and
defs so the end up in different clauses. See the lds-output-queue.ll
test for a more detailed explanation.
To work around this issue, we now combine the LDS read and the OQAP
copy into one instruction and expand it after register allocation.
This patch also adds some checks to the EmitClauseMarker pass, so that
it doesn't end a clause with a value still in the output queue and
removes AR.X and OQAP handling from the scheduler (AR.X uses and defs
were already being expanded post-RA, so the scheduler will never see
them).
Reviewed-by: Vincent Lejeune <vljn at ovi.com>
llvm-svn: 194755
Summary:
Some machine-type-neutral object files containing only undefined symbols
actually do exist in the Windows standard library. Need to recognize them
as COFF files.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2164
llvm-svn: 194734
In ELF and COFF an alias is just another offset in a section. There is no way
to represent an alias to something in another file.
In MachO, the spec has the N_INDR type which should allow for exactly that, but
is not currently implemented. Given that it is specified but not implemented,
we error in codegen to avoid miscompiling but don't reject aliases to
declarations in the verifier to leave the option open of implementing it.
In the past we have used alias to declarations as a way of implementing
weakref, which is why it exists in some old tests which this patch updates.
llvm-svn: 194705
Indirect call wrapping helps MSanDR (dynamic instrumentation companion tool
for MSan) to catch all cases where execution leaves a compiler-instrumented
module by allowing the tool to rewrite targets of indirect calls.
This change is an optimization that skips wrapping for calls when target is
inside the current module. This relies on the linker providing symbols at the
begin and end of the module code (or code + data, does not really matter).
Gold linker provides such symbols by default. GNU (BFD) linker needs a link
flag: -Wl,--defsym=__executable_start=0.
More info:
https://code.google.com/p/memory-sanitizer/wiki/MSanDR#Native_exec
llvm-svn: 194697
If a null call target is provided, don't emit a dummy call. This
allows the runtime to reserve as little nop space as it needs without
the requirement of emitting a call.
llvm-svn: 194676
There is nothing special about quotes and newlines from the object
file point of view, only the assembler has to worry about expanding
the \n and \".
This patch then removes the special handling from the Mangler.
llvm-svn: 194667
with and without -g.
Adding a test case to make sure that the threshold used in the memory
dependence analysis is respected. The test case also checks that debug
intrinsics are not counted towards this threshold.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2141
llvm-svn: 194646
According to the hazy gcov documentation, it appeared to be technically
possible for lines within a block to belong to different source files.
However, upon further investigation, gcov does not actually support
multiple source files for a single block.
This change removes a level of separation between blocks and lines by
replacing the StringMap of GCOVLines with a SmallVector of ints
representing line numbers. This also means that the GCOVLines class is
no longer needed.
This paves the way for supporting the "-a" option, which will output
block information.
llvm-svn: 194637
Unified the interface for read functions. They all return a boolean
indicating if the read from file succeeded. Functions that previously
returned the read value now store it into a variable that is passed in
by reference instead. Callers will need to check the return value to
detect if an error occurred.
Also added a new test which ensures that no assertions occur when file
contains invalid data. llvm-cov should return with error code 1 upon
failure.
llvm-svn: 194635
All shift operations will be selected as SALU instructions and then
if necessary lowered to VALU instructions in the SIFixSGPRCopies pass.
This allows us to do more operations on the SALU which will improve
performance and is also required for implementing private memory
using indirect addressing, since the private memory pointers must stay
in the scalar registers.
This patch includes some fixes from Matt Arsenault.
llvm-svn: 194625
This test compares the output of llvm-cov against a coverage file
generated by gcov. Currently, llvm-cov does not work on certain
platforms (namely big-endian architectures such as PowerPC, among
others). These platforms are marked as XFAIL for now, but will be fixed
later.
llvm-svn: 194616
instructions. This patch does not include the shift right and accumulate
instructions. A number of non-overloaded intrinsics have been remove in favor
of their overloaded counterparts.
llvm-svn: 194598
By default, the behavior of IT block generation will be determinated
dynamically base on the arch (armv8 vs armv7). This patch adds backend
options: -arm-restrict-it and -arm-no-restrict-it. The former one
restricts the generation of IT blocks (the same behavior as thumbv8) for
both arches. The later one allows the generation of legacy IT block (the
same behavior as ARMv7 Thumb2) for both arches.
Clang will support -mrestrict-it and -mno-restrict-it, which is
compatible with GCC.
llvm-svn: 194592
Summary:
Fix a case when "FileCheck --check-prefix=CHECK --check-prefix=CHECKER"
would silently ignore check-lines of the form:
CHECKER: foo
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2168
llvm-svn: 194577
Accepting quotes is a property of an assembler, not of an object file. For
example, ELF can support any names for sections and symbols, but the gnu
assembler only accepts quotes in some contexts and llvm-mc in a few more.
LLVM should not produce different symbols based on a guess about which assembler
will be reading the code it is printing.
llvm-svn: 194575
This adds a new scalar pass that reads a file with samples generated
by 'perf' during runtime. The samples read from the profile are
incorporated and emmited as IR metadata reflecting that profile.
The profile file is assumed to have been generated by an external
profile source. The profile information is converted into IR metadata,
which is later used by the analysis routines to estimate block
frequencies, edge weights and other related data.
External profile information files have no fixed format, each profiler
is free to define its own. This includes both the on-disk representation
of the profile and the kind of profile information stored in the file.
A common kind of profile is based on sampling (e.g., perf), which
essentially counts how many times each line of the program has been
executed during the run.
The SampleProfileLoader pass is organized as a scalar transformation.
On startup, it reads the file given in -sample-profile-file to
determine what kind of profile it contains. This file is assumed to
contain profile information for the whole application. The profile
data in the file is read and incorporated into the internal state of
the corresponding profiler.
To facilitate testing, I've organized the profilers to support two file
formats: text and native. The native format is whatever on-disk
representation the profiler wants to support, I think this will mostly
be bitcode files, but it could be anything the profiler wants to
support. To do this, every profiler must implement the
SampleProfile::loadNative() function.
The text format is mostly meant for debugging. Records are separated by
newlines, but each profiler is free to interpret records as it sees fit.
Profilers must implement the SampleProfile::loadText() function.
Finally, the pass will call SampleProfile::emitAnnotations() for each
function in the current translation unit. This function needs to
translate the loaded profile into IR metadata, which the analyzer will
later be able to use.
This patch implements the first steps towards the above design. I've
implemented a sample-based flat profiler. The format of the profile is
fairly simplistic. Each sampled function contains a list of relative
line locations (from the start of the function) together with a count
representing how many samples were collected at that line during
execution. I generate this profile using perf and a separate converter
tool.
Currently, I have only implemented a text format for these profiles. I
am interested in initial feedback to the whole approach before I send
the other parts of the implementation for review.
This patch implements:
- The SampleProfileLoader pass.
- The base ExternalProfile class with the core interface.
- A SampleProfile sub-class using the above interface. The profiler
generates branch weight metadata on every branch instructions that
matches the profiles.
- A text loader class to assist the implementation of
SampleProfile::loadText().
- Basic unit tests for the pass.
Additionally, the patch uses profile information to compute branch
weights based on instruction samples.
This patch converts instruction samples into branch weights. It
does a fairly simplistic conversion:
Given a multi-way branch instruction, it calculates the weight of
each branch based on the maximum sample count gathered from each
target basic block.
Note that this assignment of branch weights is somewhat lossy and can be
misleading. If a basic block has more than one incoming branch, all the
incoming branches will get the same weight. In reality, it may be that
only one of them is the most heavily taken branch.
I will adjust this assignment in subsequent patches.
llvm-svn: 194566
Summary:
This fixes a subtle bug in new FileCheck feature added
in r194343. When we search for the first satisfying check-prefix,
we should actually return the first encounter of some check-prefix as a
substring, even if it's not a part of valid check-line. Otherwise
"FileCheck --check-prefix=FOO --check-prefix=BAR" with check file:
FOO not a vaild check-line
FOO: foo
BAR: bar
incorrectly accepted file:
fog
bar
as it skipped the first two encounters of FOO, matching only BAR: line.
Reviewers: arsenm, dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2166
llvm-svn: 194565