These include:
* Several functions for creating an LLVMDIBuilder,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateCompileUnit,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateFile,
* LLVMDIBuilderCreateDebugLocation.
Patch by Harlan Haskins.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32368
llvm-svn: 317135
This patch is to rewrite FileOutputBuffer as two separate classes;
one for file-backed output buffer and the other for memory-backed
output buffer. I think the new code is easier to follow because two
different implementations are now actually separated as different
classes.
Unlike the previous implementation, the class that does not replace the
final output file using rename(2) does not create a temporary file at
all. Instead, it allocates memory using mmap(2) and use it. I think
this is an improvement because it is now guaranteed that the temporary
memory region doesn't trigger any I/O and there's now zero chance to
leave a temporary file behind. Also, it shouldn't impose new restrictions
because were using mmap IO too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39449
llvm-svn: 317127
Summary: In the compile phase of SamplePGO+ThinLTO, ICP is not invoked. Instead, indirect call targets will be included as function metadata for ThinIndex to buidl the call graph. This should not only include functions defined in other modules, but also functions defined in the same module, otherwise ThinIndex may find the callee dead and eliminate it, while ICP in backend will revive the symbol, which leads to undefined symbol.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39480
llvm-svn: 317118
The importer will now accept nested instructions in the result pattern such as
(ADDWrr $a, (SUBWrr $b, $c)). This is only valid when the nested instruction
def's a single vreg and the parent instruction consumes a single vreg where a
nested instruction is specified. The importer will automatically create a vreg
to connect the two using the type information from the pattern. This vreg will
be constrained to the register classes given in the instruction definitions*.
* REG_SEQUENCE is explicitly rejected because of this. The definition doesn't
constrain to a register class and it therefore needs special handling.
llvm-svn: 317117
This patch aims to provide correct dwarf unwind information in function
epilogue for X86.
It consists of two parts. The first part inserts CFI instructions that set
appropriate cfa offset and cfa register in emitEpilogue() in
X86FrameLowering. This part is X86 specific.
The second part is platform independent and ensures that:
- CFI instructions do not affect code generation
- Unwind information remains correct when a function is modified by
different passes. This is done in a late pass by analyzing information
about cfa offset and cfa register in BBs and inserting additional CFI
directives where necessary.
Changed CFI instructions so that they:
- are duplicable
- are not counted as instructions when tail duplicating or tail merging
- can be compared as equal
Added CFIInstrInserter pass:
- analyzes each basic block to determine cfa offset and register valid at
its entry and exit
- verifies that outgoing cfa offset and register of predecessor blocks match
incoming values of their successors
- inserts additional CFI directives at basic block beginning to correct the
rule for calculating CFA
Having CFI instructions in function epilogue can cause incorrect CFA
calculation rule for some basic blocks. This can happen if, due to basic
block reordering, or the existence of multiple epilogue blocks, some of the
blocks have wrong cfa offset and register values set by the epilogue block
above them.
CFIInstrInserter is currently run only on X86, but can be used by any target
that implements support for adding CFI instructions in epilogue.
Patch by Violeta Vukobrat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35844
llvm-svn: 317100
Summary:
Compute the strongly connected components of the CFG and fall back to
use these for blocks that are in loops that are not detected by
LoopInfo when computing loop back-edge and exit branch probabilities.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, davidxl
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39385
llvm-svn: 317094
Summary:
Use 64 instead of 32 bits of the module hash as the suffix when renaming
after promotion to reduce the likelihood of a collision (which we
observed in a binary when using 32 bits).
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39443
llvm-svn: 316996
The optimisation remarks for loop unrolling with an unrolled remainder looks something like:
test.c:7:18: remark: completely unrolled loop with 3 iterations [-Rpass=loop-unroll]
C[i] += A[i*N+j];
^
test.c:6:9: remark: unrolled loop by a factor of 4 with run-time trip count [-Rpass=loop-unroll]
for(int j = 0; j < N; j++)
^
This removes the first of the two messages.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38725
llvm-svn: 316986
This patch fixes the miscompile that happens when PRE hoists loads across guards and
other instructions that don't always pass control flow to their successors. PRE is now prohibited
to hoist across such instructions because there is no guarantee that the load standing after such
instruction is still valid before such instruction. For example, a load from under a guard may be
invalid before the guard in the following case:
int array[LEN];
...
guard(0 <= index && index < LEN);
use(array[index]);
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37460
llvm-svn: 316975
Summary:
For reference, see: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/116589.html
This patch fleshes out the instruction class hierarchy with respect to atomic and
non-atomic memory intrinsics. With this change, the relevant part of the class
hierarchy becomes:
IntrinsicInst
-> MemIntrinsicBase (methods-only class)
-> MemIntrinsic (non-atomic intrinsics)
-> MemSetInst
-> MemTransferInst
-> MemCpyInst
-> MemMoveInst
-> AtomicMemIntrinsic (atomic intrinsics)
-> AtomicMemSetInst
-> AtomicMemTransferInst
-> AtomicMemCpyInst
-> AtomicMemMoveInst
-> AnyMemIntrinsic (both atomicities)
-> AnyMemSetInst
-> AnyMemTransferInst
-> AnyMemCpyInst
-> AnyMemMoveInst
This involves some class renaming:
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemCpyInst -> AtomicMemCpyInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemMoveInst -> AtomicMemMoveInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemSetInst -> AtomicMemSetInst
A script for doing this renaming in downstream trees is included below.
An example of where the Any* classes should be used in LLVM is when reasoning
about the effects of an instruction (ex: aliasing).
---
Script for renaming AtomicMem* classes:
PREFIXES="[<,([:space:]]"
CLASSES="MemIntrinsic|MemTransferInst|MemSetInst|MemMoveInst|MemCpyInst"
SUFFIXES="[;)>,[:space:]]"
REGEX="(${PREFIXES})ElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})(${SUFFIXES})"
REGEX2="visitElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})"
FILES=$( grep -E "(${REGEX}|${REGEX2})" -r . | tr ':' ' ' | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq )
SED_SCRIPT="s~${REGEX}~\1Atomic\2\3~g"
SED_SCRIPT2="s~${REGEX2}~visitAtomic\1~g"
for f in $FILES; do
echo "Processing: $f"
sed -i ".bak" -E "${SED_SCRIPT};${SED_SCRIPT2};${EA_SED_SCRIPT};${EA_SED_SCRIPT2}" $f
done
Reviewers: sanjoy, deadalnix, apilipenko, anna, skatkov, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: hfinkel, jholewinski, arsenm, sdardis, nhaehnle, JDevlieghere, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38419
llvm-svn: 316950
- Targets that want to support memcmp expansions now return the list of
supported load sizes.
- Expansion codegen does not assume that all power-of-two load sizes
smaller than the max load size are valid. For examples, this is not the
case for x86(32bit)+sse2.
Fixes PR34887.
llvm-svn: 316905
The old PM sets the options of what used to be known as "latesimplifycfg" on the
instantiation after the vectorizers have run, so that's what we'redoing here.
FWIW, there's a later SimplifyCFGPass instantiation in both PMs where we do not
set the "late" options. I'm not sure if that's intentional or not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39407
llvm-svn: 316869
This is no-functional-change-intended.
This is repackaging the functionality of D30333 (defer switch-to-lookup-tables) and
D35411 (defer folding unconditional branches) with pass parameters rather than a named
"latesimplifycfg" pass. Now that we have individual options to control the functionality,
we could decouple when these fire (but that's an independent patch if desired).
The next planned step would be to add another option bit to disable the sinking transform
mentioned in D38566. This should also make it clear that the new pass manager needs to
be updated to limit simplifycfg in the same way as the old pass manager.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38631
llvm-svn: 316835
Patch by Robert Widmann.
Expose getters for MetadataType and TokenType publicly in the C API.
Discovered a need for these while trying to wrap the intrinsics API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38809
llvm-svn: 316762
Not having the subclass data on an MemIntrinsicSDNodes means it was possible
to try to fold 2 nodes with the same operands but differing MMO flags. This
would trip an assertion when trying to refine the alignment between the 2
MachineMemOperands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38898
llvm-svn: 316737
Pointer traits require a full definition of a type to function
correctly, so the header must be included rather than only a forward
declaration.
llvm-svn: 316714
Currently we do not represent runtime preemption in the IR, which has several
drawbacks:
1) The semantics of GlobalValues differ depending on the object file format
you are targeting (as well as the relocation-model and -fPIE value).
2) We have no way of disabling inlining of run time interposable functions,
since in the IR we only know if a function is link-time interposable.
Because of this llvm cannot support elf-interposition semantics.
3) In LTO builds of executables we will have extra knowledge that a symbol
resolved to a local definition and can't be preemptable, but have no way to
propagate that knowledge through the compiler.
This patch adds preemptability specifiers to the IR with the following meaning:
dso_local --> means the compiler may assume the symbol will resolve to a
definition within the current linkage unit and the symbol may be accessed
directly even if the definition is not within this compilation unit.
dso_preemptable --> means that the compiler must assume the GlobalValue may be
replaced with a definition from outside the current linkage unit at runtime.
To ease transitioning dso_preemptable is treated as a 'default' in that
low-level codegen will still do the same checks it did previously to see if a
symbol should be accessed indirectly. Eventually when IR producers emit the
specifiers on all Globalvalues we can change dso_preemptable to mean 'always
access indirectly', and remove the current logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20217
llvm-svn: 316668
Add the option to lookup an address in the debug information and print
out the file, function, block and line table details.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38409
llvm-svn: 316619
Summary: Make sure shifts are legal/specified by the legalizerinfo before creating it
Reviewers: qcolombet, dsanders, rovka, t.p.northover
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39264
llvm-svn: 316602
This patch adds a new pass for attaching !callees metadata to indirect call
sites. The pass propagates values to call sites by performing an IPSCCP-like
analysis using the generic sparse propagation solver. For indirect call sites
having a small set of possible callees, the attached metadata indicates what
those callees are. The metadata can be used to facilitate optimizations like
intersecting the function attributes of the possible callees, refining the call
graph, performing indirect call promotion, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37355
llvm-svn: 316576
In a case when number of output constraint operands that has matched input operands
doesn't fit to signed char, TargetLowering::ParseConstraints() can try to access
ConstraintOperands (that is std::vector) with negative index.
Reviewers: rampitec, arsenm
Differential Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39125
llvm-svn: 316574
This fixes possible out of bound access in
DWARFDie::getFirstChild()
which might happen when .debug_info section is corrupted,
like shown in testcase.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39185
llvm-svn: 316566
This is in preparation for testing lld's upcoming relocation packing
feature (D39152). I have verified that this implementation correctly
unpacks the relocations from a Chromium DSO built with gold and the
Android relocation packer for ARM32 and ARM64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39272
llvm-svn: 316543
Similar to how llvm::salvagDebugInfo hooks into InstCombine, this adds
a hook that can be invoked before an SDNode that is associated with an
SDDbgValue is erased to capture the effect of the deleted node in a
DIExpression.
The motivating example is an SDDebugValue attached to an ADD operation
that gets folded into a LOAD+OFFSET operation.
rdar://problem/32121503
llvm-svn: 316525
If particular target supports volatile memory access operations, we can
avoid AS casting to generic AS. Currently it's only enabled in NVPTX for
loads and stores that access global & shared AS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39026
llvm-svn: 316495
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316477
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316476
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316475
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316474
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316473
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline
function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316472
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another inline
function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate definitions.
llvm-svn: 316471
This creates ODR violations if the function is called from another
inline function in a header and also creates binary bloat from duplicate
definitions.
llvm-svn: 316470
Summary:
Kill the thread if operand 0 == false.
llvm.amdgcn.wqm.vote can be applied to the operand.
Also allow kill in all shader stages.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38544
llvm-svn: 316427
Summary:
Support formatv of TimePoint with strftime-style formats.
Extensions for millis/micros/nanos are added.
Inital use case is HH:MM:SS.MMM timestamps in clangd logs.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: labath, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38992
llvm-svn: 316419
Besides all the goodness from modularizing a header, this is necessary
to compile ToT with modules with the clang host compiler from Xcode 9 in
macOS 10.13, which our bots don't use yet.
rdar://problem/35038151
llvm-svn: 316414
Infrastructure designed for padding code with nop instructions in key places such that preformance improvement will be achieved.
The infrastructure is implemented such that the padding is done in the Assembler after the layout is done and all IPs and alignments are known.
This patch by itself in a NFC. Future patches will make use of this infrastructure to implement required policies for code padding.
Reviewers:
aaboud
zvi
craig.topper
gadi.haber
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34393
Change-Id: I92110d0c0a757080a8405636914a93ef6f8ad00e
llvm-svn: 316413
Summary:
Previously, we would emit error messages like "IO failure on output
stream". This change causes use to include information about what
actually went wrong, e.g. "No space left on device".
Reviewers: sunfish, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39203
llvm-svn: 316404
This adds type index discovery and dumper support for symbol record kind
0x1168, which is a list of inlined function ids. This symbol kind is
undocumented, but S_INLINEES is consistent with the existing
nomenclature.
Fixes PR34222
llvm-svn: 316398
Apple's iOS, tvOS and watchOS simulator platforms have never been clearly
distinguished in the target triples. Even though they are intended to
behave similarly to the corresponding device platforms, they have separate
SDKs and are really separate platforms from the compiler's perspective.
Clang now defines a macro when building for one of these simulator platforms
(r297866) but that relies on the very indirect mechanism of checking to see
which option was used to specify the minimum deployment target. That is not
so great. Swift would also like to distinguish these simulator platforms in
a similar way, but unlike Clang, Swift does not use a separate option to
specify the minimum deployment target -- it uses a -target option to
specify the target triple directly, including the OS version number.
Using a different target triple for the simulator platforms is a much
more direct and obvious way to specify this. Putting the "simulator" in
the environment component of the triple means the OS values can stay the
same and existing code the looks at the OS field will not be affected.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D39143
rdar://problem/34729432
llvm-svn: 316380
This patch enables the import of stores. Unfortunately, doing so by itself,
loses an optimization where storing 0 to memory makes use of WZR/XZR.
To mitigate this, this patch also introduces a new feature that allows register
operands to nominate a zero register. When this is done, GlobalISel will
substitute (G_CONSTANT 0) with the nominated register automatically. This
is currently configured to only apply to the stores.
Applying it to GPR32/GPR64 register classes in general will be done after
review see (https://reviews.llvm.org/D39150).
llvm-svn: 316360
Summary:
Support formatting formatv_objects.
While here, fix documentation about member-formatters, and attempted
perfect-forwarding (I think).
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38997
llvm-svn: 316330
As discussed in D39011:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D39011
...replacing constants with a variable is inverting the transform done
by other IR passes, so we definitely don't want to do this early.
In fact, it's questionable whether this transform belongs in SimplifyCFG
at all. I'll look at moving this to codegen as a follow-up step.
llvm-svn: 316298
This fixes bugzilla 26810
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=26810
This is intended to prevent sequences like:
movl %ebp, 8(%esp) # 4-byte Spill
movl %ecx, %ebp
movl %ebx, %ecx
movl %edi, %ebx
movl %edx, %edi
cltd
idivl %esi
movl %edi, %edx
movl %ebx, %edi
movl %ecx, %ebx
movl %ebp, %ecx
movl 16(%esp), %ebp # 4 - byte Reload
Such sequences are created in 2 scenarios:
Scenario #1:
vreg0 is evicted from physreg0 by vreg1
Evictee vreg0 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg0 (the reg vreg0 was evicted from)
Region splitting creates a local interval because of interference with the evictor vreg1 (normally region spliiting creates 2 interval, the "by reg" and "by stack" intervals. Local interval created when interference occurs.)
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg2 from physreg1
Evictee vreg2 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg3 from physreg2 etc.. until someone spills
Scenario #2
vreg0 is evicted from physreg0 by vreg1
vreg2 is evicted from physreg2 by vreg3 etc
Evictee vreg0 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
Region splitting creates a local interval because of interference with the evictor vreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting back original evictor vreg1 from physreg0 (the reg vreg0 was evicted from)
Another evictee vreg2 is intended for region splitting with split candidate physreg1
one of the split intervals ends up evicting vreg3 from physreg2 etc.. until someone spills
As compile time was a concern, I've added a flag to control weather we do cost calculations for local intervals we expect to be created (it's on by default for X86 target, off for the rest).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35816
Change-Id: Id9411ff7bbb845463d289ba2ae97737a1ee7cc39
llvm-svn: 316295
MergeFunctions uses (through FunctionComparator) a map of GlobalValues
to identifiers because it needs to compare functions and globals
do not have an inherent total order. Thus, FunctionComparator
(through GlobalNumberState) has a ValueMap<GlobalValue *>.
r315852 added a RAUW on globals that may have been previously
encountered by the FunctionComparator, which would replace
a GlobalValue * key with a ConstantExpr *, which is illegal.
This commit adjusts that code path to remove the function being
replaced from the ValueMap as well.
llvm-svn: 316145
LineCoverageIterator makes it easy for clients of coverage data to
determine line execution counts for a file or function. The coverage
iteration logic is tricky enough that it really pays not to have
multiple copies of it. Hopefully having just one implementation in LLVM
will make the iteration logic easier to test, reuse, and update.
This commit is NFC but I've added a unit test to go along with it just
because it's easy to do now.
llvm-svn: 316141
Summary:
If a compare instruction is same or inverse of the compare in the
branch of the loop latch, then return a constant evolution node.
Currently scope of evaluation is limited to SCEV computation for
PHI nodes.
This shall facilitate computations of loop exit counts in cases
where compare appears in the evolution chain of induction variables.
Will fix PR 34538
Reviewers: sanjoy, hfinkel, junryoungju
Reviewed By: junryoungju
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38494
llvm-svn: 316054
Summary:
std::unordered_multimap happens to be very slow when the number of elements
grows large. On one of our internal applications we observed a 17x compile time
improvement from changing it to DenseMap.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, serge-sans-paille, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38916
llvm-svn: 316045
Summary:
Make sure the map is cleared before processing a new module. Similar to what is done on `StackMaps`.
This issue is similar to D38588, though this time for FaultMaps (on x86) rather than ARM/AArch64. Other than possible mixing of information between modules, the crash is caused by the pointers values in the map that was allocated by the bump pointer allocator that is unwinded when emitting the next file. This issue has been around since 3.8.
This issue is likely much harder to write a test for since AFAICT it requires emitting something much more compilcated (and possibly real code) instead of just some random bytes.
Reviewers: skatkov, sanjoy
Reviewed By: skatkov, sanjoy
Subscribers: sanjoy, aemerson, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38924
llvm-svn: 315990
This patch reverts rL315440 because of the bug described at
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34937
The fix for the bug is on review as D38944, but not yet ready. Given this is a regression reverting until a fix is ready is called for.
Max would have done the revert himself, but is having trouble doing a build of fresh LLVM for some reason. I did the build and test to ensure the revert worked as expected on his behalf.
llvm-svn: 315974