We should apply fastcc whenever profitable. We can expand this list,
but there are lots of conventions with performance implications that we
don't want to change.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2705
llvm-svn: 202293
COFF object files with 0 as string table size are currently rejected. This
prevents us from reading object files written by tools like cvtres that
violate the PECOFF spec and write 0 instead of 4 for the size of an empty
string table.
llvm-svn: 202292
This includes instructions with aggregate operands (insert/extract), instructions with vector operands (insert/extract/shuffle), binary arithmetic and bitwise instructions, conversion instructions and terminators.
Work was done by lama.saba@intel.com.
llvm-svn: 202262
The table argument is always 128-bit (and interpreted as <16 x i8>) so the
extra specifier for it is just clutter.
No user-visible behaviour change, so no tests.
llvm-svn: 202258
Summary:
Fixes an issue where a test attempts to use -mcpu=cortex-a15 on non-ARM targets.
This triggers an assertion on MIPS since it doesn't know what ABI to use by default for
unrecognized processors.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
CC: llvm-commits, aemerson, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2876
llvm-svn: 202256
the default.
Based on the patch by Matt Arsenault, D1764!
I switched one place to use the more direct pointer type to compute the
desired address space, and I reworked the memcpy rewriting section to
reflect significant refactorings that this patch helped inspire.
Thanks to several of the folks who helped review and improve the patch
as well.
llvm-svn: 202247
to work independently for the slice side and the other side.
This allows us to only compute the minimum of the two when we actually
rewrite to a memcpy that needs to take the minimum, and preserve higher
alignment for one side or the other when rewriting to loads and stores.
This fix was inspired by seeing the result of some refactoring that
makes addrspace handling better.
llvm-svn: 202242
checking in SROA.
The primary change is to just rely on uge for checking that the offset
is within the allocation size. This removes the explicit checks against
isNegative which were terribly error prone (including the reversed logic
that led to PR18615) and prevented us from supporting stack allocations
larger than half the address space.... Ok, so maybe the latter isn't
*common* but it's a silly restriction to have.
Also, we used to try to support a PHI node which loaded from before the
start of the allocation if any of the loaded bytes were within the
allocation. This doesn't make any sense, we have never really supported
loading or storing *before* the allocation starts. The simplified logic
just doesn't care.
We continue to allow loading past the end of the allocation in part to
support cases where there is a PHI and some loads are larger than others
and the larger ones reach past the end of the allocation. We could solve
this a different and more conservative way, but I'm still somewhat
paranoid about this.
llvm-svn: 202224
We need to abort the formation of counter-register-based loops where there are
128-bit integer operations that might become function calls.
llvm-svn: 202192
Now that DataLayout is not a pass, store one in Module.
Since the C API expects to be able to get a char* to the datalayout description,
we have to keep a std::string somewhere. This patch keeps it in Module and also
uses it to represent modules without a DataLayout.
Once DataLayout is mandatory, we should probably move the string to DataLayout
itself since it won't be necessary anymore to represent the special case of a
module without a DataLayout.
llvm-svn: 202190
Variadic functions have an unspecified parameter tag after the last
argument. In IR this is represented as an unspecified parameter in the
subroutine type.
Paired commit with CFE r202185.
rdar://problem/13690847
This re-applies r202184 + a bugfix in DwarfDebug's argument handling.
llvm-svn: 202188
Variadic functions have an unspecified parameter tag after the last
argument. In IR this is represented as an unspecified parameter in the
subroutine type.
Paired commit with CFE.
rdar://problem/13690847
llvm-svn: 202184
The function with uwtable attribute might be visited by the
stack unwinder, thus the link register should be considered
as clobbered after the execution of the branch and link
instruction (i.e. the definition of the machine instruction
can't be ignored) even when the callee function are marked
with noreturn.
llvm-svn: 202165
The behaviour of the XCore's instruction buffer means that the performance
of the same code sequence can differ depending on whether it starts at a 4
byte aligned address or not. Since we don't model the instruction buffer
in the backend we have no way of knowing for sure if it is beneficial to
word align a specific function. However, in the absence of precise
modelling, it is better on balance to word align functions because:
* It makes a fetch-nop while executing the prologue slightly less likely.
* If we don't word align functions then a small perturbation in one
function can have a dramatic knock on effect. If the size of the function
changes it might change the alignment and therefore the performance of
all the functions that happen to follow it in the binary. This butterfly
effect makes it harder to reason about and measure the performance of
code.
llvm-svn: 202163
ordering.
The fundamental problem that we're hitting here is that the use-def
chain ordering is *itself* not a stable thing to be relying on in the
rewriting for SROA. Further, we use a non-stable sort over the slices to
arrange them based on the section of the alloca they're operating on.
With a debugging STL implementation (or different implementations in
stage2 and stage3) this can cause stage2 != stage3.
The specific aspect of this problem fixed in this commit deals with the
rewriting and load-speculation around PHIs and Selects. This, like many
other aspects of the use-rewriting in SROA, is really part of the
"strong SSA-formation" that is doen by SROA where it works very hard to
canonicalize loads and stores in *just* the right way to satisfy the
needs of mem2reg[1]. When we have a select (or a PHI) with 2 uses of the
same alloca, we test that loads downstream of the select are
speculatable around it twice. If only one of the operands to the select
needs to be rewritten, then if we get lucky we rewrite that one first
and the select is immediately speculatable. This can cause the order of
operand visitation, and thus the order of slices to be rewritten, to
change an alloca from promotable to non-promotable and vice versa.
The fix is to defer all of the speculation until *after* the rewrite
phase is done. Once we've rewritten everything, we can accurately test
for whether speculation will work (once, instead of twice!) and the
order ceases to matter.
This also happens to simplify the other subtlety of speculation -- we
need to *not* speculate anything unless the result of speculating will
make the alloca fully promotable by mem2reg. I had a previous attempt at
simplifying this, but it was still pretty horrible.
There is actually already a *really* nice test case for this in
basictest.ll, but on multiple STL implementations and inputs, we just
got "lucky". Fortunately, the test case is very small and we can
essentially build it in exactly the opposite way to get reasonable
coverage in both directions even from normal STL implementations.
llvm-svn: 202092
boundaries.
It is possible to create an ELF executable where symbol from say .text
section 'points' to the address outside the section boundaries. It does
not have a sense to disassemble something outside the section.
Without this fix llvm-objdump prints finite or infinite (depends on
the executable file architecture) number of 'invalid instruction
encoding' warnings.
llvm-svn: 202083
The .error directive is similar to .err in that it will halt assembly if it is
evaluated for assembly. However, it permits a user supplied message to be
rendered.
llvm-svn: 201999
The .ifeqs directive assembles the following code if the quoted string
parameters are equal. The strings must be quoted using double quotes.
llvm-svn: 201998
.align is handled specially on certain targets. .align without any parameters
on ARM indicates a default alignment (4). Handle the special case in the target
parser, but fall back to the generic parser for the normal version.
llvm-svn: 201988
The .ifne directive assembles the following section of code if the argument
expression is non-zero. Effectively, it is equivalent to if.
llvm-svn: 201986
If the strings are not quoted, the first string stops at the first comma, and
the second string stops at the end of the line. Strings which contain
whitespace should be quoted. Unquoted space is to be discarded.
llvm-svn: 201985
The .err directive produces an error whenever it is assembled. This can be
useful for preventing assembly when an unexpected condition occurs.
llvm-svn: 201984
This adds support for the .short and its alias .hword for adding literal values
into the object file. This is similar to the .word directive, however, rather
than inserting a value of 4 bytes, adds a 2-byte value.
llvm-svn: 201968
Offsets past the range of single-slash encoding are encoded as base64,
padded to 6 characters, and prefixed with two slashes. This encoding is
undocumented but used by MSVC.
llvm-svn: 201940
For targeting pecoff, ".def foo" appears before ".short 32".
.def foo;
...
.LCPI0_0:
.short 32
foo:
CHECK-LABEL seeks not from ".short 32" but from the top of the input.
llvm-svn: 201931
shifted mask rather than masking and shifting separately.
The patch adds this transformation to the DAGCombiner:
(shl (and (setcc:i8v16 ...) N01C) N1C) -> (and (setcc:i8v16 ...) N01C<<N1C)
<rdar://problem/16054492>
Patch by Adam Nemet <anemet@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 201906
This interface allows IRObjectFile to be implemented without having dummy
methods for all section and segment related methods.
Both llvm-ar and llvm-nm are changed to use it. Unfortunately the mangler is
still not plugged in since it requires some refactoring to make a Module hold
a DataLayout.
llvm-svn: 201881
The va_start macro for AArch64 must set va_list.__stack to the address
following the last named argument on the stack, rounded up to an alignment
of 8 bytes.
llvm-svn: 201797
Summary:
This removes the need to coerce UnknownABI to the default ABI (O32 for
MIPS32, N64 for MIPS64 [*]) in both MipsSubtarget and MipsAsmParser.
Clang has been updated to disable both possible default ABI's before enabling
the ABI it intends to use.
[*] N64 being the default for MIPS64 is not actually correct.
However N32 is not fully implemented/tested yet.
Depends on: D2830
Reviewers: jacksprat, matheusalmeida
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2832
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2846
llvm-svn: 201792
Summary:
This is consistent with the integrated assembler.
All mips64 codegen tests previously passed -mcpu. Removed -mcpu from
blez_bgez.ll and const-mult.ll to cover the default case.
Ideally, the two implementations of selectMipsCPU() will be merged but it's
proven difficult to find a home for the function that doesn't cause link errors.
For now, we'll hoist the common functionality into a function and mark it with
FIXME's.
Reviewers: jacksprat, matheusalmeida
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2830
llvm-svn: 201782
passing down an AsmPrinter instance so we could compute the size of
the block which could be target specific. All of the test cases in
the unittest don't have any target specific data so we can use a NULL
AsmPrinter there. This also depends upon block data being added as
integers.
We can now hash the entire fission-cu.ll compile unit so turn the
flag on there with the hash value.
llvm-svn: 201752
r201608 made llvm corretly handle private globals with MachO. r201622 fixed
a bug in it and r201624 and r201625 were changes for using private linkage,
assuming that llvm would do the right thing.
They all got reverted because r201608 introduced a crash in LTO. This patch
includes a fix for that. The issue was that TargetLoweringObjectFile now has
to be initialized before we can mangle names of private globals. This is
trivially true during the normal codegen pipeline (the asm printer does it),
but LTO has to do it manually.
llvm-svn: 201700
On x86, shifting a vector by a scalar is significantly cheaper than shifting a
vector by another fully general vector. Unfortunately, because SelectionDAG
operates on just one basic block at a time, the shufflevector instruction that
reveals whether the right-hand side of a shift *is* really a scalar is often
not visible to CodeGen when it's needed.
This adds another handler to CodeGenPrepare, to sink any useful shufflevector
instructions down to the basic block where they're used, predicated on a target
hook (since on other architectures, doing so will often just introduce extra
real work).
rdar://problem/16063505
llvm-svn: 201655
Load Configuration Table may contain a pointer to SEH table. This patch is to
print the offset to the table. Printing SEH table contents is a TODO.
The layout of Layout Configuration Table is described in Microsoft PE/COFF
Object File Format Spec, but the table's offset/size descriptions seems to be
totally wrong, at least in revision 8.3 of the spec. I believe the table in
this patch is the correct one.
llvm-svn: 201638
This enhances the macro parser to parse and handle parameter qualifications,
which is needed to support required formal parameters in macro definitions. A
required parameter may not be defaulted (though providing a default value is
accepted with a warning). This improves GAS compatibility.
Partially addresses PR9248.
llvm-svn: 201630
When outputting an object we check its section to find its name, but when
looking for the section with -ffunction-section we look for the symbol name.
Break the loop by requesting a name with the private prefix when constructing
the section name. This matches the behavior before r201608.
llvm-svn: 201622
The IR
@foo = private constant i32 42
is valid, but before this patch we would produce an invalid MachO from it. It
was invalid because it would use an L label in a section where the liker needs
the labels in order to atomize it.
One way of fixing it would be to just reject this IR in the backend, but that
would not be very front end friendly.
What this patch does is use an 'l' prefix in sections that we know the linker
requires symbols for atomizing them. This allows frontends to just use
private and not worry about which sections they go to or how the linker handles
them.
One small issue with this strategy is that now a symbol name depends on the
section, which is not available before codegen. This is not a problem in
practice. The reason is that it only happens with private linkage, which will
be ignored by the non codegen users (llvm-nm and llvm-ar).
llvm-svn: 201608
In gcov, the -o flag can accept either a directory or a file name.
When given a directory, the gcda and gcno files are expected to be in
that directory. When given a file, the gcda and gcno files are
expected to be named based on the stem of that file. Non-existent
paths are treated as files.
This implements compatible behaviour.
llvm-svn: 201555
Introducing llvm-profdata, a tool for merging profile data generated by
PGO instrumentation in clang.
- The name indicates a file extension of <name>.profdata. Eventually
profile data output by clang should be changed to that extension.
- llvm-profdata merges two profiles. However, the name is more general,
since it will likely pick up more tasks (such as summarizing a single
profile).
- llvm-profdata parses the current text-based format, but will be
updated once we settle on a binary format.
<rdar://problem/15949645>
llvm-svn: 201535
ldrd r6, r7 [r2, #15]
simply gives an error and does not triggers an assertion.
As Jim points out, the diagnostic is really strange here,
but fixing that would be more complicated. The missing
comma results in the parser expecting a construct like r2[2],
which is the vector index thing the error message is talking
about. That's not what the user intended, though, and there's
nothing else in the instruction that looks at all like a vector.
Yet more fallout from not having a real parser here and trying
to do context-free generic matching for addressing modes.
rdar://15097243
llvm-svn: 201531
This is implemented by handling assignments to the '.' pseudo symbol
as ".org" directives.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2625
llvm-svn: 201530
Until this point only macro definition with named parameters were parsed but the
names were ignored. This adds support for using that information for named
parameter instantiation.
In order to support the full semantics of the keyword arguments, the arguments
are no longer lazily initialised since the keyword arguments can be specified
out of order and partially if they are defaulted. Prepopulate the arguments
with the default value for any defaulted parameters, and then parse the
specified arguments.
This simplies some of the handling of the arguments in the inner loop since
empty arguments simply increment the parameter index and move on.
Note that keyword and positional arguments cannot be mixed.
llvm-svn: 201499
NaCl's ARM ABI uses 16 byte stack alignment, so set that in
ARMSubtarget.cpp.
Using 16 byte alignment exposes an issue in code generation in which a
varargs function leaves a 4 byte gap between the values of r1-r3 saved
to the stack and the following arguments that were passed on the
stack. (Previously, this code only needed to support 4 byte and 8
byte alignment.)
With this issue, llc generated:
varargs_func:
sub sp, sp, #16
push {lr}
sub sp, sp, #12
add r0, sp, #16 // Should be 20
stm r0, {r1, r2, r3}
ldr r0, .LCPI0_0 // Address of va_list
add r1, sp, #16
str r1, [r0]
bl external_func
Fix the bug by checking for "Align > 4". Also simplify the code by
using OffsetToAlignment(), and update comments.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2677
llvm-svn: 201497
During LSR of one loop we can run into a situation where we have to expand the
start of a recurrence of a loop induction variable in this loop. This start
value is a value derived of the induction variable of a preceeding loop. SCEV
has cannonicalized this value to a different recurrence than the recurrence of
the preceeding loop's induction variable (the type and/or step direction) has
changed). When we come to instantiate this SCEV we created a second induction
variable in this preceeding loop. This patch tries to base such derived
induction variables of the preceeding loop's induction variable.
This helps twolf on arm and seems to help scimark2 on x86.
Reapply with a fix for the case of a value derived from a pointer.
radar://15970709
llvm-svn: 201496
alongside DIEBlock and replace uses accordingly. Use DW_FORM_exprloc
in DWARF4 and later code. Update testcases.
Adding a DIELoc instead of using extra forms inside DIEBlock so
that we can keep location expressions separate from other uses. No
direct use at the moment, however, it's not a lot of code and
using a separately named class keeps it somewhat more obvious
what's going on in various locations.
llvm-svn: 201481
The Linux kernel defines empty macros for compatibility with ARM UAL syntax.
The comma after the name is optional, and if present can be safely lexed. This
improves compatibility with the GNU assembler.
llvm-svn: 201474
This adds a partial implementation of the .arch_extension directive to the
integrated ARM assembler. There are a number of limitations to this
implementation arising from the target backend support rather than the
implementation itself. Namely, iWMMXT (v1 and v2), Maverick, and XScale support
is not present in the ARM backend. Currently, there is no check for A-class
only (needed for virt), and no ARMv6k detection (needed for os and sec). The
remainder of the extensions are fully supported.
llvm-svn: 201471
This broke in r185459 while TLS support was being generalized to handle
non-symbol TLS representations.
I thought about/tried having an enum rather than a bool to track the
TLS-ness of the address table entry, but namespaces and naming seemed
more hassle than it was worth for only one caller that needed to specify
this.
llvm-svn: 201469
During LSR of one loop we can run into a situation where we have to expand the
start of a recurrence of a loop induction variable in this loop. This start
value is a value derived of the induction variable of a preceeding loop. SCEV
has cannonicalized this value to a different recurrence than the recurrence of
the preceeding loop's induction variable (the type and/or step direction) has
changed). When we come to instantiate this SCEV we created a second induction
variable in this preceeding loop. This patch tries to base such derived
induction variables of the preceeding loop's induction variable.
This helps twolf on arm and seems to help scimark2 on x86.
radar://15970709
llvm-svn: 201465
Type units will share the statement list of their defining compile unit.
This is a tradeoff that reduces .o debug info size at the cost of some
linked debug info size (since the contents of those string tables won't
be deduplicated along with the type unit) which seems right for now.
llvm-svn: 201445
Recommitting r201380 (reverted in r201389)
Recommitting r201351 and r201355 (reverted in r201351 and r201355)
We weren't emitting the an empty (header only) line table when the line
table was empty - this made the DWARF invalid (the compile unit would
point to the zero-size debug_lines section where there should've been an
empty line table but there was nothing at all). Fix that, and as a
consequence this works around/addresses PR18809.
Also, we emit a non-empty line table to workaround a darwin linker bug,
so XFAILing on darwin too.
Also, mark the test as 'REQUIRES: object-emission' because it does.
llvm-svn: 201429
Summary:
This adds support for emitting DWARF path discriminator values in
the object streamer. It also changes the DWARF dumper to show
discriminator values in the line table output.
Reviewers: echristo
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2794
llvm-svn: 201427
1) Fix a specific bug when certain conversion functions are called in a program compiled as mips16 with hard float and
the program is linked as c++. There are two libraries that are reversed in the link order with gcc/g++ and clang/clang++ for
mips16 in this case and the proper stubs will then not be called. These stubs are normally handled in the Mips16HardFloat pass
but in this case we don't know at that time that we need to generate the stubs. This must all be handled later in code generation
and we have moved this functionality to MipsAsmPrinter. When linked as C (gcc or clang) the proper stubs are linked in from libc.
2) Set up the infrastructure to handle 90% of what is in the Mips16HardFloat pass in this new area of MipsAsmPrinter. This is a more
logical place to handle this and we have known for some time that we needed to move the code later and not implement it using
inline asm as we do now but it was not clear exactly where to do this and what mechanism should be used. Now it's clear to us
how to do this and this patch contains the infrastructure to move most of this to MipsAsmPrinter but the actual moving will be done
in a follow on patch. The same infrastructure is used to fix this current bug as described in #1. This change was requested by the list
during the original putback of the Mips16HardFloat pass but was not practical for us do at that time.
llvm-svn: 201426
As v1i1 is illegal, the type legalizer tries to scalarize such node. But if the type operands of SETCC is legal, the scalarization algorithm will cause an assertion failure.
llvm-svn: 201381
Recommitting r201351 and r201355 (reverted in r201351 and r201355)
We weren't emitting the an empty (header only) line table when the line
table was empty - this made the DWARF invalid (the compile unit would
point to the zero-size debug_lines section where there should've been an
empty line table but there was nothing at all). Fix that, and as a
consequence this works around/addresses PR18809.
llvm-svn: 201380
Summary:
There should be a space before each of these two keywords to avoid
generating invalid assembly files.
NOTE: I could not find an obvious maintainers in CODE_OWNERS.TXT, but
this seems related to debug info.
Reviewers: echristo
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2791
llvm-svn: 201359
Summary:
AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() will no longer use the EmitRawText() call for
targets with mature MC support. Such targets will always parse the inline
assembly (even when emitting assembly). Targets without mature MC support
continue to use EmitRawText() for assembly output.
The hasRawTextSupport() check in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() has been replaced
with MCAsmInfo::UseIntegratedAs which when true, causes the integrated assembler
to parse inline assembly (even when emitting assembly output). UseIntegratedAs
is set to true for targets that consider any failure to parse valid assembly
to be a bug. Target specific subclasses generally enable the integrated
assembler in their constructor. The default value can be overridden with
-no-integrated-as.
All tests that rely on inline assembly supporting invalid assembly (for example,
those that use mnemonics such as 'foo' or 'hello world') have been updated to
disable the integrated assembler.
Changes since review (and last commit attempt):
- Fixed test failures that were missed due to configuration of local build.
(fixes crash.ll and a couple others).
- Fixed tests that happened to pass because the local build was on X86
(should fix 2007-12-17-InvokeAsm.ll)
- mature-mc-support.ll's should no longer require all targets to be compiled.
(should fix ARM and PPC buildbots)
- Object output (-filetype=obj and similar) now forces the integrated assembler
to be enabled regardless of default setting or -no-integrated-as.
(should fix SystemZ buildbots)
Reviewers: rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2686
llvm-svn: 201333
This fix checks the original LLVM IR node to identify opaque constants by
looking for the bitcast-constant pattern. Originally we looked at the generated
SDNode, but this might lead to incorrect results. The SDNode could have been
generated by an constant expression that was folded to a constant.
This fixes <rdar://problem/16050719>
llvm-svn: 201291
As defined in LangRef, aliases do not have sections. However, LLVM's
GlobalAlias class inherits from GlobalValue, which means we can read and
set its section. We should probably ban that as a separate change,
since it doesn't make much sense for an alias to have a section that
differs from its aliasee.
Fixes PR18757, where the section was being lost on the global in code
from Clang like:
extern "C" {
__attribute__((used, section("CUSTOM"))) static int in_custom_section;
}
Reviewers: rafael.espindola
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2758
llvm-svn: 201286