chains, again. The prior implementation was very linked-list oriented, and
the list-splicing logic was both fairly convoluted (when loading from
multiple modules) and failed to preserve a reasonable ordering for the
redeclaration chains.
This new implementation uses a simpler strategy, where we store the
ordered redeclaration chains in an array-like structure (indexed based
on the first declaration), and use that ordering to add individual
deserialized declarations to the end of the existing chain. That way,
the chain mimics the ordering from its modules, and a bug somewhere is
far less likely to result in a broken linked list.
llvm-svn: 148222
Message for r148132:
LoopUnswitch: All helper data that is collected during loop-unswitch iterations was moved to separated class (LUAnalysisCache).
llvm-svn: 148215
re-computed rather than the variables be re-used just after the assert.
Just use the variables since we have them already. Fixes an unused
variable warning.
Also fix an 80-column violation.
llvm-svn: 148212
or Clang is using this, and it would be hard to use it correctly given
the thread hostility of the function. Also, it never checked the return
which is rather dangerous with chdir. If someone was in fact using this,
please let me know, as well as what the usecase actually is so that
I can add it back and make it more correct and secure to use. (That
said, it's never going to be "safe" per-se, but we could at least
document the risks...)
llvm-svn: 148211
not integer constant expressions. In passing, fix the 'folding is an extension'
diagnostic to not claim we're accepting the code, since that's not true in
-pedantic-errors mode, and add this diagnostic to -Wgnu.
llvm-svn: 148209
Fixed two double "int close(int fd)" issues found by our file descriptor
interposing library on darwin:
The first is in SBDebugger::SetInputFileHandle (FILE *file, bool transfer_ownership)
where we would give our FILE * to a lldb_private::File object member variable and tell
it that it owned the file descriptor if "transfer_ownership" was true, and then we
would also give it to the communication plug-in that waits for stdin to come in and
tell it that it owned the FILE *. They would both try and close the file.
The seconds was when we use a file descriptor through ConnectionFileDescriptor
where someone else is creating a connection with ConnectionFileDescriptor and a URL
like: "fd://123". We were always taking ownwership of the fd 123, when we shouldn't
be. There is a TODO in the comments that says we should allow URL options to be passed
to be able to specify this later (something like: "fd://123?transer_ownership=1"), but
we can get to this later.
llvm-svn: 148201
we have a redeclarable type, and only use the new virtual versions
(getPreviousDeclImpl() and getMostRecentDeclImpl()) when we don't have
that type information. This keeps us from penalizing users with strict
type information (and is the moral equivalent of a "final" method).
Plus, settle on the names getPreviousDecl() and getMostRecentDecl()
throughout.
llvm-svn: 148187
To avoid malloc thrashing give OverloadCandidateSet an inline capacity for conversion sequences.
We use the fact that OverloadCandidates never outlive the OverloadCandidateSet and have a fixed
amount of conversion sequences.
This eliminates the oversized SmallVector from OverloadCandidate shrinking it from 752 to 208 bytes.
On the test case from the "Why is CLANG++ so freaking slow" thread on llvmdev this avoids one gig
of vector reallocation (including memcpy) which translates into 5-10% speedup on Lion/x86_64.
Overload candidate computation is still the biggest malloc contributor when compiling templated
c++ code.
llvm-svn: 148186
virtual functions that provide previous/most recent redeclaration
information for any declaration. Use this to eliminate the redundant,
less efficient getPreviousDecl() functions.
llvm-svn: 148184
Redeclarable<RedeclarableTemplateDecl>, eliminating a bunch of
redeclaration-chain logic both in RedeclarableTemplateDecl and
especially in its (de-)serialization.
As part of this, eliminate the RedeclarableTemplate<> class template,
which was an abstraction that didn't actually save anything.
llvm-svn: 148181
APValue::Array and APValue::MemberPointer. All APValue values can now be emitted
as constants.
Add new CGCXXABI entry point for emitting an APValue MemberPointer. The other
entrypoints dealing with constant member pointers are no longer necessary and
will be removed in a later change.
Switch codegen from using EvaluateAsRValue/EvaluateAsLValue to
VarDecl::evaluateValue. This performs caching and deals with the nasty cases in
C++11 where a non-const object's initializer can refer indirectly to
previously-initialized fields within the same object.
Building the intermediate APValue object incurs a measurable performance hit on
pathological testcases with huge initializer lists, so we continue to build IR
directly from the Expr nodes for array and record types outside of C++11.
llvm-svn: 148178