that says "unconditional loads from this argument are safe", we now keep track
of the safety per set of indices from which loads happen. This prevents
ArgPromotion from promoting loads that aren't really valid. As an added effect,
this will now disregard the the type of the indices passed to a GEP, so
"load GEP %A, i32 1" and "load GEP %A, i64 1" will result in a single argument,
not two.
This fixes PR2598, for which a testcase has been added as well.
llvm-svn: 54159
get away with it, which exposes opportunities to eliminate the memory
objects entirely. For example, we now compile byval.ll to:
define internal void @f1(i32 %b.0, i64 %b.1) {
entry:
%tmp2 = add i32 %b.0, 1 ; <i32> [#uses=0]
ret void
}
define i32 @main() nounwind {
entry:
call void @f1( i32 1, i64 2 )
ret i32 0
}
This seems like it would trigger a lot for code that passes around small
structs (e.g. SDOperand's or _Complex)...
llvm-svn: 45886
global variables that needed to be passed in. This makes it possible to
add new global variables with only a couple changes (Makefile and llvm-dg.exp)
instead of touching every single dg.exp file.
llvm-svn: 35918