Summary:
The test introduced by rL288448 is currently failing because
unimportant but unexpected errors appear as output from a test compile
line. This patch looks for a more specific error message, in order to
avoid false positives.
Reviewers: jlebar
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27328
Switch to more specific error
llvm-svn: 288453
In r266692, we made it possible to emit linkage names for just inlined
functions, putting the attribute on the abstract origin. Make sure we
don't think the linkage-name was already emitted on a declaration.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D27320
llvm-svn: 288450
We try to include the headers of the module textually in this case, still
enforcing the modules semantic rules. In order to make that work, we need to
still track that we're entering and leaving the module. Also, if the module was
also marked as unavailable (perhaps because it was missing a file), we
shouldn't mark the module unavailable -- we don't need the module to be
complete if we're going to enter it textually.
llvm-svn: 288449
This fixes a bug that was introduced in rL287285. The bug made it
illegal to pass -fsanitize=address during CUDA compilation because the
CudaToolChain class was switched from deriving from the Linux toolchain
class to deriving directly from the ToolChain toolchain class. When
CudaToolChain derived from Linux, it used Linux's getSupportedSanitizers
method, and that method allowed ASAN, but when it switched to deriving
directly from ToolChain, it inherited a getSupportedSanitizers method
that didn't allow for ASAN.
This patch fixes that bug by creating a getSupportedSanitizers method
for CudaToolChain that supports ASAN.
This patch also fixes the test that checks that -fsanitize=address is
passed correctly for CUDA builds. That test didn't used to notice if an
error message was emitted, and that's why it didn't catch this bug when
it was first introduced. With the fix from this patch, that test will
now catch any similar bug in the future.
llvm-svn: 288448
Summary:
We were doing an optimization in the ThinLTO backends of importing
constant unnamed_addr globals unconditionally as a local copy (regardless
of whether the thin link decided to import them). This should be done in
the thin link instead, so that resulting exported references are marked
and promoted appropriately, but will need a summary enhancement to mark
these variables as constant unnamed_addr.
The function import logic during the thin link was trying to handle
this proactively, by conservatively marking all values referenced in
the initializer lists of exported global variables as also exported.
However, this only handled values referenced directly from the
initializer list of an exported global variable. If the value is itself
a constant unnamed_addr variable, we could end up exporting its
references as well. This caused multiple issues. The first is that the
transitively exported references weren't promoted. Secondly, some could
not be promoted/renamed (e.g. they had a section or other constraint).
recursively, instead of just adding the first level of initializer list
references to the ExportList directly.
Remove this optimization and the associated handling in the function
import backend. SPEC measurements indicate we weren't getting much
from it in any case.
Fixes PR31052.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: krasin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26880
llvm-svn: 288446
Since the spill is for the whole wave, these
don't have the swizzling problems that vector stores do
and a single 4-byte allocation is enough to spill a 64 element
register. This should reduce the number of spill instructions and
put all the spills for a register in the same cacheline.
This should save allocated private size, but for now it doesn't.
The extra slots are allocated for each component, but never used
because the frame layout is essentially finalized before frame
indices are replaced. For always using the scalar store path,
this should probably be moved into processFunctionBeforeFrameFinalized.
llvm-svn: 288445
After r256463, both the LHS and RHS now refer to the same variable. Before,
they referred to the member, the parameter respectively. Now GCC6's
-Wtautological-compare complains.
llvm-svn: 288444
This prevents erratic stepping behavior as well as incorrect source attribution
for sample profiling.
Reviewers: dblakie
Subscribers: llvm-commit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27290
llvm-svn: 288442
This SmallVector is using up 128 bytes on the stack every time despite
almost always being empty[1], and since this function can recurse quite
deeply that adds up to a lot of overhead. We've seen this run afoul of
ulimits in some cases with ASAN on.
Replacing the SmallVector with a std::vector trades an occasional heap
allocation for vastly less stack usage.
[1]: I gathered some stats on an internal test suite and the vector
was non-empty in only 45,000 of 10,000,000 calls to this function.
llvm-svn: 288441
Summary:
Make AArch64InstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl more general by folding all
full COPYs between register classes of the same size that are either
spilled or refilled.
Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27271
llvm-svn: 288439
Move the cast<MCSymbolELF> inside emitELFSize, so that:
- it's done in one place instead of at each call
- it's more consistent with similar functions like EmitCOFFSafeSEH
- ambiguity between cast<> and dyn_cast<> is avoided (which also
eliminates an unnecessary dyn_cast call)
This also makes it easier to experiment with using ".size" directives on
non-ELF targets.
llvm-svn: 288437
In bigger projects like an Operating System, the same source code is
often compiled in slightly different ways. This could be the difference
between PIC and non-PIC code for static vs dynamic libraries, it could
also be the difference between size optimised versions of tools for
ramdisk images. At the moment, the compilation database has no way to
distinguish such cases. As first step, add a field in the JSON format
for it and process it accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27138
llvm-svn: 288436
Summary:
This patch fixes comparison of 64-bit atomic with its expected value in CMP_SWAP_64 expansion.
Currently, the low words are compared with CMP, while the high words are compared with SBC. SBC expects the carry flag to be set if CMP detects a difference. CMP might leave the carry unset for unequal arguments though if the first one is >= than the second. This might cause the comparison logic to detect false equality.
Example of the broken C++ code:
```
std::atomic<long long> at(2);
long long ll = 1;
std::atomic_compare_exchange_strong(&at, &ll, 3);
```
Even though the atomic `at` and the expected value `ll` are not equal and `atomic_compare_exchange_strong` returns `false`, `at` is changed to 3.
The patch replaces SBC with CMPEQ.
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, asl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27315
llvm-svn: 288433
The coalescer eliminates copies from reserved registers of the form:
%vregX = COPY %rY
in the case where %rY is a reserved register. However this turns out to
be invalid if only some of the subregisters are reserved (see also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D26648).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26687
llvm-svn: 288428
The previous change for enabling MinGW did not preserve the Win32 check and
added the EABI specific routines to a Windows build which does not use the EABI
routines. Correct the conditional check for that.
llvm-svn: 288422
This change fixes a regression in r279537 and
makes getRawSubclassData behave like r279536.
Without this change, the fp128-g.ll test case will have an
infinite loop involving SoftenFloatRes_LOAD.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D26942
llvm-svn: 288420
This time the issue is fortunately just a simple mistake rather than a horrible
design spectre. I thought SUBS/SBCS provided sufficient NZCV flags for
comparing two 64-bit values, but they don't.
The fix is slightly clunkier in AArch64 because we can't use conditional
execution to emit a pair of CMPs. Traditionally an "icmp ne i128" would map to
an EOR/EOR/ORR/CBNZ, but that uses more registers so it's easier to go with a
CSET/CINC/CBNZ combination. Slightly less efficient, but this is -O0 anyway.
Thanks to Anton Korobeynikov for pointing out the issue.
llvm-svn: 288418
The instcombine code which folds loads and stores into their use types can trip up if the use is a bitcast to a type which we can't directly load or store in the IR. In principle, such types shouldn't exist, but in practice they do today. This is a workaround to avoid a bug while we work towards the long term goal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24365
llvm-svn: 288415
This just extracts out the transfer rules for constant ranges into a single shared point. As it happens, neither bit of code actually overlaps in terms of the handled operators, but with this change that could easily be tweaked in the future.
I also want to have this separated out to make experimenting with a eager value info implementation and possibly a ValueTracking-like fixed depth recursion peephole version. There's no reason all four of these can't share a common implementation which reduces the chances of bugs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27294
llvm-svn: 288413
When trying to vectorize trees that start at insertelement instructions
function tryToVectorizeList() uses vectorization factor calculated as
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize. But sometimes it does not work as tree
cost for this fixed vectorization factor is too high.
Patch tries to improve the situation. It tries different vectorization
factors from max(PowerOf2Floor(NumberOfVectorizedValues),
MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize) to MinVecRegSize/ScalarTypeSize and tries
to choose the best one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27215
llvm-svn: 288412
Tablegen's -gen-instr-info pass has a bug in its emitEnums() routine.
The function intends for values in a vector to be deduplicated, but it
accidentally skips over elements after performing a deletion.
I think there are smarter ways of doing this deduplication, but we can
do that in a follow-up commit if there's interest. See the thread:
[PATCH] TableGen InstrMapping Bug fix.
Patch by Tyler Kenney!
llvm-svn: 288408
Recommitting r288293 with some extra fixes for GlobalISel code.
Most of the exception handling members in MachineModuleInfo is actually
per function data (talks about the "current function") so it is better
to keep it at the function instead of the module.
This is a necessary step to have machine module passes work properly.
Also:
- Rename TidyLandingPads() to tidyLandingPads()
- Use doxygen member groups instead of "//===- EH ---"... so it is clear
where a group ends.
- I had to add an ugly const_cast at two places in the AsmPrinter
because the available MachineFunction pointers are const, but the code
wants to call tidyLandingPads() in between
(markFunctionEnd()/endFunction()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27227
llvm-svn: 288405
have the same size.
This fixes an asset that is triggered when an address of a boolean
variable is passed to __builtin_arm_ldrex or __builtin_arm_strex.
rdar://problem/29269006
llvm-svn: 288404
A client of a header that relies on ABI breaking should get the macro
exported there.
Before this, the unittest for Support/Error including Support/Error.h
didn't get the macro exported by the Support module, because the
latter only re-export its submodules and included module, not
textual headers.
Hopefully, it'll also fix the build with local submodule visibility,
since the LLVM_Utils contains two submodules: ADT and Support. They
both include abi-breaking.h that defines a symbol. The textual
inclusion lead to a double definition of the symbol which broke
the parent module.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27273
llvm-svn: 288400
The DIEUnit class represents a compile or type unit and it owns the unit DIE as an instance variable. This allows anyone with a DIE, to get the unit DIE, and then get back to its DIEUnit without adding any new ivars to the DIE class. Why was this needed? The DIE class has an Offset that is always the CU relative DIE offset, not the "offset in debug info section" as was commented in the header file (the comment has been corrected). This is great for performance because most DIE references are compile unit relative and this means most code that accessed the DIE's offset didn't need to make it into a compile unit relative offset because it already was. When we needed to emit a DW_FORM_ref_addr though, we needed to find the absolute offset of the DIE by finding the DIE's compile/type unit. This class did have the absolute debug info/type offset and could be added to the CU relative offset to compute the absolute offset. With this change we can easily get back to a DIE's DIEUnit which will have this needed offset. Prior to this is required having a DwarfDebug and required calling:
DwarfCompileUnit *DwarfDebug::lookupUnit(const DIE *CU) const;
Now we can use the DIEUnit class to do so without needing DwarfDebug. All clients now use DIEUnit objects (the DwarfDebug stack and the DwarfLinker). A follow on patch for the DWARF generator will also take advantage of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27170
llvm-svn: 288399
Currently when cost of scalar operations is evaluated the vector type is
used for scalar operations. Patch fixes this issue and fixes evaluation
of the vector operations cost.
Several test showed that vector cost model is too optimistic. It
allowed vectorization of 8 or less add/fadd operations, though scalar
code is faster. Actually, only for 16 or more operations vector code
provides better performance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26277
llvm-svn: 288398