Currently, -save-temp will cause ObjCARC optimization to be dropped,
sanitizer pass to run early in the pipeline, and profiling
instrumentation to run twice.
Fix the issue by properly disable all passes in the optimization
pipeline when generating bitcode output and parse some of the Language
Options even when the input is bitcode so the passes can be setup
correctly.
llvm-svn: 242565
Some const-correctness changes snuck in here too, since they were in the
area of code I was modifying.
This seems to make Clang actually work without Bus Error on
32bit-sparc.
Follow-up patches will factor out a trailing-object helper class, to
make classes using the idiom of appending objects to other objects
easier to understand, and to ensure (with static_assert) that required
alignment guarantees continue to hold.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10272
llvm-svn: 242554
This -warn-error flag invariably gets into release tarballs
and breaks builds on distributions that run tests as a part
of release process. The OCaml binding tests are especially
critical, since they often expose lingering toolchain bugs,
and so it is replaced with -w +A (equivalent to -Wall).
llvm-svn: 242550
The is so that we can avoid using libgcc and use compiler-rt with
mingw-w64.
Related driver patch
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11077
I have tested this with mingw-w64 and everything seems to be in order.
I also sent this patch to the mingw-w64 mailing list for them to look at.
Patch by Martell Malone.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11085
llvm-svn: 242539
For open_memstream() files, buffer pointer is only valid immediately after
fflush() or fclose(). Fix the fclose() interceptor to unpoison after the
REAL(fclose) call, not before it.
llvm-svn: 242535
Individual matchers might not be convertible to each other's kind, but
they might still all be convertible to the target kind.
All the callers already know the target kind, so just pass it down.
llvm-svn: 242534
- Changed the default FPU of cortex-m4.
- Removed "cortex-m4f" entry. Currently not supported.
Change-Id: I73121e358aa9e7ba68eb001c2143df390ff2352a
Phabricator: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11100
llvm-svn: 242528
This is mainly for the benefit of GlobalMerge, so that an alias into a
MergedGlobals variable has the same size as the original non-merged
variable.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10837
llvm-svn: 242520
Don't chane the CFI information when a conditional instruction
is emulated (eg.: popeq {r0, pc}) because the CFI for the next
instruction should be the same as the CFI for the current instruction.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11258
llvm-svn: 242519
Summary:
Adds '--svn-path BRANCH' that causes the script to export the specified path
from each project. Otherwise the tag specified by -release, -rc, etc. will be
used. The version portion of the package name will be 'test-$path' (any forward
slashes in the branch name are replaced with underscores), for example:
-svn-path trunk => clang+llvm-test-trunk-mips-linux-gnu.tar.xz
-svn-path branches/release_35 => clang+llvm-test-branches_release_35-mips-linux-gnu.tar.xz
This is primarily useful for bringing new release packages up to standard
without needing to create and maintain a tag for the purpose.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, hans
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6563
llvm-svn: 242518
Summary:
It seems that reading of register data is the biggest bottleneck in LLGS at the moment. Sending
four registers instead of the full GPR set increases the jThreadsInfo processing time about
6-fold. Until we figure out where is this time going, this commit limits the amount of data we
send to provide a more fluid debugging experience.
Reviewers: tberghammer, ovyalov
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11264
llvm-svn: 242517
Upon connection termination the waitable handle of an IOObject gets reset to an invalid handle.
This caused a problem since we used the object->GetWaitableHandle as a key to the set of
registered events. The fix is to use something more immutable as a key: we make a copy of the
original waitable handle, instead of holding onto the IOObject.
llvm-svn: 242515
for extracting target specific information.
-Patches commit r241343: case 'armv7l' was unhandled in
ARMTargetInfo::getCPUAttr(), and thus it was returning invalid
characters for macro definition.
Change-Id: I1a0972e5ff5529cd17376c6562047bab8b4da32c
Phabricator: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10839
llvm-svn: 242514
Summary:
This diff is to support Debian packaging,
which sets various hardening-rleated flags
in CFLAGS. They don't make sense for Go,
so we just ignore them.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, axw
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11288
llvm-svn: 242513
basic changes to the IR such as folding pointers through PHIs, Selects,
integer casts, store/load pairs, or outlining.
This leaves the feature available behind a flag. This flag's default
could be flipped if necessary, but the real-world performance impact of
this particular feature of GMR may not be sufficiently significant for
many folks to want to run the risk.
Currently, the risk here is somewhat mitigated by half-hearted attempts
to update GlobalsModRef when the rest of the optimizer changes
something. However, I am currently trying to remove that update
mechanism as it makes migrating the AA infrastructure to a form that can
be readily shared between new and old pass managers very challenging.
Without this update mechanism, it is possible that this still unlikely
failure mode will start to trip people, and so I wanted to try to
proactively avoid that.
There is a lengthy discussion on the mailing list about why the core
approach here is flawed, and likely would need to look totally different
to be both reasonably effective and resilient to basic IR changes
occuring. This patch is essentially the first of two which will enact
the result of that discussion. The next patch will remove the current
update mechanism.
Thanks to lots of folks that helped look at this from different angles.
Especial thanks to Michael Zolotukhin for doing some very prelimanary
benchmarking of LTO without GlobalsModRef to get a rough idea of the
impact we could be facing here. So far, it looks very small, but there
are some concerns lingering from other benchmarking. The default here
may get flipped if performance results end up pointing at this as a more
significant issue.
Also thanks to Pete and Gerolf for reviewing!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11213
llvm-svn: 242512
In particular, it's much easier to read, as it doesn't expand all
the way on wide-screen displays.
CSS committed under LLVM license with explicit permission from
Daniel Bünzli <daniel.buenzli@erratique.ch>.
llvm-svn: 242511
Since r230724 ("Skip promotable allocas to improve performance at -O0"), there is a regression in the generated debug info for those non-instrumented variables. When inspecting such a variable's value in LLDB, you often get garbage instead of the actual value. ASan instrumentation is inserted before the creation of the non-instrumented alloca. The only allocas that are considered standard stack variables are the ones declared in the first basic-block, but the initial instrumentation setup in the function breaks that invariant.
This patch makes sure uninstrumented allocas stay in the first BB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11179
llvm-svn: 242510
We shouldn't crash despite the AMD64 ABI not giving clear guidance as to
how to pass around vector types <= 32 bits. Instead, classify such
vectors as INTEGER to be compatible with GCC.
This fixes PR24162.
llvm-svn: 242508