a previously-computed linkage as an unsupportable error condition.
Per discussion on cfe-commits, this appears to be a
difficult-to-resolve flaw in our implementation approach;
we may pursue this as a language defect, but for now it's
better to diagnose it as unsupported than to produce
inconsistent results (or assertions). Anything that we can
do to limit how often this diagnostic fires, such as the
changes in r200380, is probably for the best, though.
llvm-svn: 200438
When converting from "or + br" to two branches, or converting from
"and + br" to two branches, we correctly update the edge weights of
the two branches.
llvm-svn: 200431
PyTuple_SetItem steals a reference to the item it inserts in the tuple
This, plus the Py_XDECREF of the tuple a few lines below, causes our session dictionary to go away after the first time a SWIG layer function is called - with disastrous effects for the first subsequent attempt to use any functionality in ScriptInterpreterPython
This fixes it
llvm-svn: 200429
This commit only handles IfConvertTriangle. To update edge weights
of a successor, one interface is added to MachineBasicBlock:
/// Set successor weight of a given iterator.
setSuccWeight(succ_iterator I, uint32_t weight)
An existing testing case test/CodeGen/Thumb2/v8_IT_5.ll is updated,
since we now correctly update the edge weights, the cold block
is placed at the end of the function and we jump to the cold block.
llvm-svn: 200428
There does not seem to be a reason that we can not support PHI nodes outside of
the scop that reference values within the SCoP. Or at least, the attached test
case seems to do the right thing. We remove the assert for now.
llvm-svn: 200427
We would previously allow inappropriate inheritance keywords to appear
on class declarations. We would also allow inheritance keywords on
templates which were not fully specialized; this was divergent from
MSVC.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2585
llvm-svn: 200423
module since there's no range guarantee that we could make given
output order. This also fixes up the testcases that have multiple
CUs to have the correct range offset.
llvm-svn: 200422
This is a bit imperfect, as these options don't show up in the help as
is and single dash variants are accepted, which differs from gcov.
Unfortunately, this seems to be as good as it gets with the cl::opt
machinery, so it'll do as an incremental step.
llvm-svn: 200419
This Properly capitalizes and clarifies the help output from
llvm-cov. It also puts the llvm-only / non-gcov-compatible options in
their own category.
llvm-svn: 200418
Currently, llvm-cov isn't command-line compatible with gcov, which
accepts a source file name as its first parameter and infers the gcno
and gcda file names from that. This change keeps our -gcda and -gcno
options available for convenience in overriding this behaviour, but
adds the required parameter and inference behaviour as a compatible
default.
llvm-svn: 200417
We use ${DESTDIR} syntax now instead of $(DESTDIR) because that syntax
works both is the shell (at least it does for bash) and for make (at
least it does for GNU Make)
Patch By: Dan Liew
llvm-svn: 200414
In rare cases, a region R which is itself not valid has an indirect child region
that is valid. When R becomes part of a valid region by expansion of another
region, then all children of R have to be erased from the set of valid regions.
This patch ensures that indirect children are erased in addition to direct
children.
Contributed-by: Armin Groesslinger <armin.groesslinger@uni-passau.de>
Tobias: I added a reduced test case and adjusted the logic of the patch to
only recurse until the first child is found.
llvm-svn: 200411
The linux kernel makes uses of a GAS `feature' which substitutes nothing
for macro arguments which aren't specified.
Proper support for these kind of macro arguments necessitated a cleanup of
differences between `GAS' and `Darwin' dialect macro processing.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2634
llvm-svn: 200409
This can still be overridden by explicitly setting a value requirement on the
alias option, but by default it should be the same.
PR18649
llvm-svn: 200407
preserve loop simplify of enclosing loops.
The problem here starts with LoopRotation which ends up cloning code out
of the latch into the new preheader it is buidling. This can create
a new edge from the preheader into the exit block of the loop which
breaks LoopSimplify form. The code tries to fix this by splitting the
critical edge between the latch and the exit block to get a new exit
block that only the latch dominates. This sadly isn't sufficient.
The exit block may be an exit block for multiple nested loops. When we
clone an edge from the latch of the inner loop to the new preheader
being built in the outer loop, we create an exiting edge from the outer
loop to this exit block. Despite breaking the LoopSimplify form for the
inner loop, this is fine for the outer loop. However, when we split the
edge from the inner loop to the exit block, we create a new block which
is in neither the inner nor outer loop as the new exit block. This is
a predecessor to the old exit block, and so the split itself takes the
outer loop out of LoopSimplify form. We need to split every edge
entering the exit block from inside a loop nested more deeply than the
exit block in order to preserve all of the loop simplify constraints.
Once we try to do that, a problem with splitting critical edges
surfaces. Previously, we tried a very brute force to update LoopSimplify
form by re-computing it for all exit blocks. We don't need to do this,
and doing this much will sometimes but not always overlap with the
LoopRotate bug fix. Instead, the code needs to specifically handle the
cases which can start to violate LoopSimplify -- they aren't that
common. We need to see if the destination of the split edge was a loop
exit block in simplified form for the loop of the source of the edge.
For this to be true, all the predecessors need to be in the exact same
loop as the source of the edge being split. If the dest block was
originally in this form, we have to split all of the deges back into
this loop to recover it. The old mechanism of doing this was
conservatively correct because at least *one* of the exiting blocks it
rewrote was the DestBB and so the DestBB's predecessors were fixed. But
this is a much more targeted way of doing it. Making it targeted is
important, because ballooning the set of edges touched prevents
LoopRotate from being able to split edges *it* needs to split to
preserve loop simplify in a coherent way -- the critical edge splitting
would sometimes find the other edges in need of splitting but not
others.
Many, *many* thanks for help from Nick reducing these test cases
mightily. And helping lots with the analysis here as this one was quite
tricky to track down.
llvm-svn: 200393