We need the compiler generated variable to override the weak symbol of
the same name inside the profile runtime, but using LinkOnceODRLinkage
results in weak symbol being emitted which leads to an issue where the
linker might choose either of the weak symbols potentially disabling the
runtime counter relocation.
This change replaces the use of weak definition inside the runtime with
an external weak reference to address the issue. We also place the
compiler generated symbol inside a COMDAT group so dead definition can
be garbage collected by the linker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105176
The context can be created with threading disabled, to avoid creating a thread pool
that may be destroyed when injecting another one later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105302
This patch includes the following changes to address a few issues when
using hidden helper task.
- Assertion is triggered when there are inadvertent calls to hidden
helper functions on non-Linux OS
- Added deinit code in __kmp_internal_end_library function to fix random
shutdown crashes
- Moved task data access into the lock-guarded region in __kmp_push_task
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105308
This is the cause of the miscompile in:
https://llvm.org/PR50944
The problem has likely existed for some time, but it was made visible with:
5af8bacc94 ( D104661 )
handleOtherCmpSelSimplifications() assumed it can convert select of
constants to bool logic ops, but that does not work with poison.
We had a very similar construct in InstCombine, so the fix here
mimics the fix there.
The bug is in instsimplify, but I'm not sure how to reproduce it outside of
instcombine. The reason this is visible in instcombine is because we have a
hack (FIXME) to bypass simplification of a select when it has an icmp user:
955f125899/llvm/lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineSelect.cpp (L2632)
So we get to an unusual case where we are trying to simplify an instruction
that has an operand that would have already simplified if we had processed
it in normal order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105298
A README file with procedure for building/testing LLVM libc on Windows
has also been added.
Reviewed By: sivachandra, aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105231
`llvm-strip` does not support `-l`. Apple's `strip` supports `-l`, but
it is not documented, and the latest code doesn't seem to do anything
meaningful. From the old source code drops it seems that `-l` was added
around version 795 of cctools and removed before 898. The code around
the flag usage in 795 talks about problems with kext and forcing the
execution of `ld -r`, which seems a behaviour that is not enforceable in
latest versions of cctools.
The `-l` flag was added in https://reviews.llvm.org/D15133 without a lot
of explanation.
Since the flag is not active, removing it should not modify the
behaviour for most people (except if someone is trying to compile LLVM
with a really old version of `strip`).
Additionally, break the invocation into two different flags, since
`llvm-strip` doesn't at the moment support grouped flags, and other
`strip` implementations should work the same no matter if grouped or
not.
Test Plan:
Using `strip` from Xcode 12.5 in Big Sur to strip the same binary (a
simple Hello World), using both `-Sxl` and `-Sx` produces exactly the
same binary.
Repeating the same process with `clang` results also in the same binary.
Reviewed By: smeenai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105243
GNU and Apple `strip` implementations seems to support grouped options.
Enable the support for grouped options introduced in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D83639 for `llvm-strip` invocations.
Includes test that checks that both the grouped and non grouped
invocations produces the same result.
Reviewed By: alexander-shaposhnikov, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105249
D104868 removed an (incorrect) fold for distributing BFI instructions in
a chain, combining them into a single instruction. BFIs like that are
hard to test, as the patterns are often destroyed before they become
BFIs. But it can come up in places, with chains of BFIs that can be
combined.
This patch adds a replacement, which reassociates BFI instructions with
non-overlapping insertion masks so that low bits are inserted first.
This can end up sorting the nodes so that adjacent inserts are next to
one another, allowing the existing folds to combine into a single BFI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105096
If we get here from reallocate, BlockEnd is tagged. Then we
will storeTag(UntaggedEnd) into the header of the next chunk.
Luckily header tag is 0 so unpatched code still works.
Reviewed By: pcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105261
The new documentation entry gives an example use case from
libomptarget.
Reviewed By: yln, jhenderson, davezarzycki
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105208
Affine scalar replacement (and other affine passes, though not fixed here) don't properly handle operations with nested regions. This patch fixes the pass and two affine utilities to function properly given a non-affine internal region
This patch prevents the pass from throwing an internal compiler error when running on the added test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105058
Everything (including test) modified from ELF/COFF. Using the same syntax
(--lto-O3, etc) as ELF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105223
Synchronizing multiple custom targets requires not only target but also
file dependencies. Building Linalg involves running yaml-gen followed by
tablegen. Currently, these custom targets are only synchronized using a
target dependency resulting in issues in specific incremental build
setups (https://llvm.discourse.group/t/missing-build-cmake-tblgen-dependency/3727/10).
This patch introduces a novel LLVM_TARGET_DEPENDS variable to the
TableGen.cmake file to provide a way to specify file dependencies.
Additionally, it adapts the Linalg CMakeLists.txt to introduce the
necessary file dependency between yaml-gen and tablegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105272
Address mistakenly comparing the pointer values of two C-style strings
rather than comparing their contents in the unit tests for makeVisitor,
added in 6d6f35eb7b
Now that Lit supports regular expressions inside XFAIL & friends, it is
much easier to write Lit annotations based on the triple.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104747
Summary:
If we are on c++03 mode for some reason, and __builtin_va_copy is
available, then use it instead of error out on not having va_copy
in 03 mode.
Reviewed by: ldionne
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100336
This is required to run the tests under any configuration that uses
additional_features using a from-scratch config. That is the case of
e.g. the Debug mode (which uses LIBCXX-DEBUG-FIXME) and the tests on
Windows.
This follows up to D104665 (which added umulo handling alongside the existing uaddo case), and generalizes for the remaining overflow intrinsics.
I went to add analogous handling to LVI, and discovered that LVI already had a more general implementation. Instead, we can port was LVI does to instcombine. (For context, LVI uses makeExactNoWrapRegion to constrain the value 'x' in blocks reached after a branch on the condition `op.with.overflow(x, C).overflow`.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104932
A user reported an issue to me via email that Clang was accepting some
code that GCC was rejecting. After investigation, it turned out to be a
general problem of us failing to properly reject attributes written in
the type position in C when they don't apply to types. The root cause
was a terminology issue -- we sometimes use "CXX11Attr" to mean [[]] in
C++11 mode and sometimes [[]] in general -- and this came back to bite
us because in this particular case, it really meant [[]] in C++ mode.
I fixed the issue by introducing a new function
AttributeCommonInfo::isStandardAttributeSyntax() to represent [[]] in
either C or C++ mode.
This fix pointed out that we've had the issue in some of our existing
tests, which have all been corrected. This resolves
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50954.
This results in significant deduplication of code. This patch is not expected to change any functionality, it's just some simplification in preparation for future work. Also slightly simplified some code that was being touched anyway and added some unit tests for some functions that were touched.
Reviewed By: bondhugula
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105152
`DeviceTy::getOrAllocTgtPtr` just returns a target pointer. In addition,
two bool values (`IsNew` and `IsHostPtr`) are passed by reference to make the
change in the function available in callee.
In this patch, a struct, which contains the target pointer, two flags, and an
iterator to the map table entry corresponding to the queried host pointer, will
be returned. In addition to make the logic clearer regarding the two bool values,
this paves the way for the next patch to fix the data race in `bug49334.cpp` by
attaching an event to the map table entry (and that's why we need the iterator).
Reviewed By: grokos
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104382
Rationale:
Follow-up on migrating lattice and tensor expression related methods into the new utility.
This also prepares the next step of generalizing the op kinds that are handled.
Reviewed By: gussmith23
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105219
This adds support for opaque pointers in intrinsic type checks
of IIT kind Pointer and PtrToElt.
This is less straight-forward than it might initially seem, because
we should only accept opaque pointers here in --force-opaque-pointers
mode. Otherwise, there would be more than one valid type signature
for a given intrinsic name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105155
Inserting into a smaller-than-legal scalable vector would result in an
internal compiler error. For example, inserting a <vscale x 4 x i8> into
a <vscale x 8 x i8> (both illegal vector types for SVE) would cause a
crash.
This crash was happening because there was no code to promote (legalise)
the result of an INSERT_SUBVECTOR node.
This patch implements PromoteIntRes_INSERT_SUBVECTOR, which legalises
the ISD node. This is currently done by going through memory. This is
necessary because of the requirement that the SubVec parameter of the
INSERT_SUBVECTOR node must be smaller than the Vec parameter, which
means that INSERT_SUBVECTOR cannot always have a legal result/operand
types.
Co-Authored-by: Joe Ellis <joe.ellis@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102766
This reverts b56e5f8a10 (and follow-up f6db88535c) and instead
restores the state we had before 0c96a92d8666b8: ClangdMain.cpp
includes Features.inc before including Transport.h.
This is a bit ugly, but it matches the former state and making Transport.h
include Features.h means that xpc/ needs to be able to find the generated
Features.inc, wich is also a bit ugly.
Building on rG2a1ef8784ad9a, adjust the SSE cost tables to use the legalized types based on the worst case costs from the script in D103695.
To account for different numbers of src/dst legalized type registers we must scale the cost by maximum of the src/dst, not just use src