inter-analysis dependencies) to use the new invalidation infrastructure.
This teaches it to invalidate itself when any of the peer function
AA results that it uses become invalid. We do this by just tracking the
originating IDs. I've kept it in a somewhat clunky API since some users
of AAResults are outside the new PM right now. We can clean this API up
if/when those users go away.
Secondly, it uses the registration on the outer analysis manager proxy
to trigger deferred invalidation when a module analysis result becomes
invalid.
I've included test cases that specifically try to trigger use-after-free
in both of these cases and they would crash or hang pretty horribly for
me even without ASan. Now they work nicely.
The `InvalidateAnalysis` utility pass required some tweaking to be
useful in this context and it still is pretty garbage. I'd like to
switch it back to the previous implementation and teach the explicit
invalidate method on the AnalysisManager to take care of correctly
triggering indirect invalidation, but I wanted to go ahead and send this
out so folks could see how all of this stuff works together in practice.
And, you know, that it does actually work. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27205
llvm-svn: 290595
that require deferred invalidation.
This handles the other real-world invalidation scenario that we have
cases of: a function analysis which caches references to a module
analysis. We currently do this in the AA aggregation layer and might
well do this in other places as well.
Since this is relative rare, the technique is somewhat more cumbersome.
Analyses need to register themselves when accessing the outer analysis
manager's proxy. This proxy is already necessarily present to allow
access to the outer IR unit's analyses. By registering here we can track
and trigger invalidation when that outer analysis goes away.
To make this work we need to enhance the PreservedAnalyses
infrastructure to support a (slightly) more explicit model for "sets" of
analyses, and allow abandoning a single specific analyses even when
a set covering that analysis is preserved. That allows us to describe
the scenario of preserving all Function analyses *except* for the one
where deferred invalidation has triggered.
We also need to teach the invalidator API to support direct ID calls
instead of always going through a template to dispatch so that we can
just record the ID mapping.
I've introduced testing of all of this both for simple module<->function
cases as well as for more complex cases involving a CGSCC layer.
Much like the previous patch I've not tried to fully update the loop
pass management layer because that layer is due to be heavily reworked
to use similar techniques to the CGSCC to handle updates. As that
happens, we'll have a better testing basis for adding support like this.
Many thanks to both Justin and Sean for the extensive reviews on this to
help bring the API design and documentation into a better state.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27198
llvm-svn: 290594
specialized than the primary template. (Put another way, if we imagine there
were a partial specialization matching the primary template, we should never
select it if some other partial specialization also matches.)
llvm-svn: 290593
most of the inliner test cases.
The inliner involves a bunch of interesting code and tends to be where
most of the issues I've seen experimenting with the new PM lie. All of
these test cases pass, but I'd like to keep some more thorough coverage
here so doing a fairly blanket enabling.
There are a handful of interesting tests I've not enabled yet because
they're focused on the always inliner, or on functionality that doesn't
(yet) exist in the inliner.
llvm-svn: 290592
skipping indirectly recursive inline chains.
To do this, we implicitly build an inline stack for each callsite and
check prior to inlining that doing so would not form a cycle. This uses
the exact same technique and even shares some code with the legacy PM
inliner.
This solution remains deeply unsatisfying to me because it means we
cannot actually iterate the inliner externally. Doing so would not be
able to easily detect and avoid such cycles. Some day I would very much
like to have a solution that works without this internal state to detect
cycles, but this is not that day.
llvm-svn: 290590
Nothing really interesting here, but I had to improve the test to use
variables rather than hard coding value names as we happen to end up
with different value names in the new PM.
llvm-svn: 290589
We currently ignore the `allocsize` attribute on functions calls with
the `nobuiltin` attribute when trying to lower `@llvm.objectsize`. We
shouldn't care about `nobuiltin` here: `allocsize` is explicitly added
by the user, not inferred based on a function's symbol.
llvm-svn: 290588
template parameters of reference type basically doesn't work, because we're
always deducing from an argument expression of non-reference type, so the type
of the deduced expression never matches. Instead, compare the type of an
expression naming the parameter to the type of the argument.
llvm-svn: 290586
This also makes us no longer check for `allocsize` on intrinsic calls.
This shouldn't matter, since intrinsics should provide the information
we get from `allocsize` on their own.
llvm-svn: 290585
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
This builds on r290554 which added supported for 128 and 256-bit.
llvm-svn: 290582
constant expression and to correctly form function reference edges
through them without crashing because one of the operands (the
`BasicBlock` isn't actually a constant despite being an operand of
a constant).
llvm-svn: 290581
The 128 and 256 bit masked intrinsics are currently unused by clang. The sse and avx2 unmasked intrinsics are used instead. The new 512-bit intrinsic will be used to do the same. Then all masked versions will removed and autoupgraded.
llvm-svn: 290573
Use some new substitutions to avoid duplicating the tests for just
dropped flags. -fPIC/-fPIE/-fpic/-fpie do not make sense on Windows as
they can cause ELF-style PIC. Substitute away the flag on Windows.
This should repair the windows buildbots.
llvm-svn: 290571
This mostly involved converting from grep to FileCheck and tidying up
the IR used.
In one case (invoke_test-3.ll) the test had become completely pointless
as we use 'resume' rather than 'unwind' now, and even then it did not
occur at the end of the line.
llvm-svn: 290570
Windows uses PE/COFF which is inherently position independent. The use
of the PIC model is unnecessary. In fact, we would generate invalid
code using the ELF PIC model when PIC was enabled previously. Now that
we no longer accept -fPIC and -fpoc, this switches the internal
representation to the static model to permit us to make PIC modules
invalid when targeting Windows. This should not change the code
generation, only the internal state management.
llvm-svn: 290569
dependent contexts when processing the template in C++11 and C++14, just like
we do in C++98 and C++1z. This allows us to diagnose invalid templates earlier.
llvm-svn: 290567
An earlier commit added support for unmasked scalar operations. At that time isel wouldn't generate an optimal sequence for masked operations, but that has now been fixed.
llvm-svn: 290566
These particular sequences will be generated after a future change to teach InstCombine to turn masked scalar arithmetic intrinsics into native IR.
llvm-svn: 290563
inside of `InlineFunction`. Prior to this, call instructions are
specifically being rewritten and replaced within the inlined region,
invalidating some of the call sites.
Several of these regions are using the same technique to walk the
inlined region so this seems clearly safe up to this point.
I've also added a short circuit to the scan for call sites based on what
other code is doing.
With this, the most common crash I've found in the new inliner code is
fixed. I've turned it on for another test case that covers this
scenario.
I'll make my way through most of the other inliner test cases
just to get some easy coverage next.
llvm-svn: 290562
Improved doxygen comments for the following intrinsics headers: __wmmintrin_pclmul.h, bmiintrin.h, emmintrin.h, f16cintrin.h, immintrin.h, mmintrin.h, pmmintrin.h, tmmintrin.h
Added \n commands to insert a line breaks where necessary, since one long line of documentation is nearly unreadable.
Formatted comments to fit into 80 chars.
In some cases added \a command in front of the parameter names to display them in italics.
llvm-svn: 290561
This is kind of funny because I specifically did work to make this easy
and then it didn't actually get implemented.
I've also ported a set of tests that rely on this functionality to run
with the new PM as well as the old PM so that we don't mess this up in
the future.
llvm-svn: 290558
removing fully-dead comdats without removing dead entries in comdats
with live members.
This factors the core logic out of the current inliner's internals to
a reusable utility and leverages that in both places. The factored out
code should also be (minorly) more efficient in cases where we have very
few dead functions or dead comdats to consider.
I've added a test case to cover this behavior of the always inliner.
This is the last significant bug in the new PM's always inliner I've
found (so far).
llvm-svn: 290557
PMULDQ/PMULUDQ vXi64 instructions only use the even numbered v2Xi32 input elements which SimplifyDemandedVectorElts should try and use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28119
llvm-svn: 290554
Mostly use a bit more idiomatic C++ where we can,
so we can combine some things later.
Reviewers: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28111
llvm-svn: 290550