Commit Graph

417 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chandler Carruth 69c5cc69ed [PM] Actually commit the test update that was supposed to accompany
r290644. Sorry for this.

llvm-svn: 290646
2016-12-28 02:31:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aa35167578 [PM] Teach BasicAA how to invalidate its result object.
This requires custom handling because BasicAA caches handles to other
analyses and so it needs to trigger indirect invalidation.

This fixes one of the common crashes when using the new PM in real
pipelines. I've also tweaked a regression test to check that we are at
least handling the most immediate case.

I'm going to work at re-structuring this test some to both scale better
(rather than all being in one file) and check more invalidation paths in
a follow-up commit, but I wanted to get the basic bug fix in place.

llvm-svn: 290603
2016-12-27 10:30:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 81c8edaf5c [PM] Disable more of the loop passes -- LCSSA and LoopSimplify are also
not really wired into the loop pass manager in a way that will let us
productively use these passes yet.

This lets the new PM get farther in basic testing which is useful for
establishing a good baseline of "doesn't explode". There are still
plenty of crashers in basic testing though, this just gets rid of some
noise that is well understood and not representing a specific or narrow
bug.

llvm-svn: 290601
2016-12-27 10:16:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 17c630a09c [PM] Teach the AAManager and AAResults layer (the worst offender for
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
2016-12-27 08:44:39 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 060ad61fbe [PM] Add support for building a default AA pipeline to the PassBuilder.
Pretty boring and lame as-is but necessary. This is definitely a place
we'll end up with extension hooks longer term. =]

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28076

llvm-svn: 290449
2016-12-23 20:38:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0d1d49507b [PM] Loosen the check ever so slightly -- MSVC appears to not include
a space after the comma in template arguments with our hacky type name
system.

llvm-svn: 290331
2016-12-22 07:53:20 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ee6865f425 [PM] Make a couple of CHECK lines a bit more precise, NFC.
I was staring at these and didn't realize these were module-layer
proxies as opposed to some other layer. Justin and I have a plan to
rename things to make the names themselves much easier to reason about,
but I at least want the CHECK lines to be precise for now.

llvm-svn: 290328
2016-12-22 07:14:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e3f5064b72 [PM] Introduce a reasonable port of the main per-module pass pipeline
from the old pass manager in the new one.

I'm not trying to support (initially) the numerous options that are
currently available to customize the pass pipeline. If we end up really
wanting them, we can add them later, but I suspect many are no longer
interesting. The simplicity of omitting them will help a lot as we sort
out what the pipeline should look like in the new PM.

I've also documented to the best of my ability *why* each pass or group
of passes is used so that reading the pipeline is more helpful. In many
cases I think we have some questionable choices of ordering and I've
left FIXME comments in place so we know what to come back and revisit
going forward. But for now, I've left it as similar to the current
pipeline as I could.

Lastly, I've had to comment out several places where passes are not
ported to the new pass manager or where the loop pass infrastructure is
not yet ready. I did at least fix a few bugs in the loop pass
infrastructure uncovered by running the full pipeline, but I didn't want
to go too far in this patch -- I'll come back and re-enable these as the
infrastructure comes online. But I'd like to keep the comments in place
because I don't want to lose track of which passes need to be enabled
and where they go.

One thing that seemed like a significant API improvement was to require
that we don't build pipelines for O0. It seems to have no real benefit.

I've also switched back to returning pass managers by value as at this
API layer it feels much more natural to me for composition. But if
others disagree, I'm happy to go back to an output parameter.

I'm not 100% happy with the testing strategy currently, but it seems at
least OK. I may come back and try to refactor or otherwise improve this
in subsequent patches but I wanted to at least get a good starting point
in place.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28042

llvm-svn: 290325
2016-12-22 06:59:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth cef2482875 [PM] Further broaden this test's regex as both the CGSCC and Function
inner AM proxies are now being rendered differently.

llvm-svn: 289319
2016-12-10 07:59:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d8aecb0e5c [PM] Try to support the new spelling of one of the proxy names that are
showing up on the build bots.

llvm-svn: 289318
2016-12-10 07:46:51 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6b9816477b [PM] Support invalidation of inner analysis managers from a pass over the outer IR unit.
Summary:
This never really got implemented, and was very hard to test before
a lot of the refactoring changes to make things more robust. But now we
can test it thoroughly and cleanly, especially at the CGSCC level.

The core idea is that when an inner analysis manager proxy receives the
invalidation event for the outer IR unit, it needs to walk the inner IR
units and propagate it to the inner analysis manager for each of those
units. For example, each function in the SCC needs to get an
invalidation event when the SCC gets one.

The function / module interaction is somewhat boring here. This really
becomes interesting in the face of analysis-backed IR units. This patch
effectively handles all of the CGSCC layer's needs -- both invalidating
SCC analysis and invalidating function analysis when an SCC gets
invalidated.

However, this second aspect doesn't really handle the
LoopAnalysisManager well at this point. That one will need some change
of design in order to fully integrate, because unlike the call graph,
the entire function behind a LoopAnalysis's results can vanish out from
under us, and we won't even have a cached API to access. I'd like to try
to separate solving the loop problems into a subsequent patch though in
order to keep this more focused so I've adapted them to the API and
updated the tests that immediately fail, but I've not added the level of
testing and validation at that layer that I have at the CGSCC layer.

An important aspect of this change is that the proxy for the
FunctionAnalysisManager at the SCC pass layer doesn't work like the
other proxies for an inner IR unit as it doesn't directly manage the
FunctionAnalysisManager and invalidation or clearing of it. This would
create an ever worsening problem of dual ownership of this
responsibility, split between the module-level FAM proxy and this
SCC-level FAM proxy. Instead, this patch changes the SCC-level FAM proxy
to work in terms of the module-level proxy and defer to it to handle
much of the updates. It only does SCC-specific invalidation. This will
become more important in subsequent patches that support more complex
invalidaiton scenarios.

Reviewers: jlebar

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mcrosier, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27197

llvm-svn: 289317
2016-12-10 06:34:44 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 0a4fc46321 Analysis: gep inbounds (gep inbounds (...)) is inbounds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26441

llvm-svn: 287604
2016-11-22 01:03:40 +00:00
Matthias Braun db39fd6c53 Statistic/Timer: Include timers in PrintStatisticsJSON().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25588

llvm-svn: 287370
2016-11-18 19:43:24 +00:00
Dehao Chen 947dbe1254 Enable Loop Sink pass for functions that has profile.
Summary: For functions with profile data, we are confident that loop sink will be optimal in sinking code.

Reviewers: davidxl, hfinkel

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26155

llvm-svn: 286325
2016-11-09 00:58:19 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 4500f74858 [lit] Work around Windows MSys command line tokenization bug
Summary:
This will allow us to revert LLD r284768, which added spaces to get MSys
echo to print what we want.

Reviewers: ruiu, inglorion, rafael

Subscribers: modocache, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26009

llvm-svn: 285237
2016-10-26 20:29:27 +00:00
Sriraman Tallam 06a67ba57d [PM] Port CFGViewer and CFGPrinter to the new Pass Manager
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24592

llvm-svn: 281640
2016-09-15 18:35:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8882346842 [PM] Introduce basic update capabilities to the new PM's CGSCC pass
manager, including both plumbing and logic to handle function pass
updates.

There are three fundamentally tied changes here:
1) Plumbing *some* mechanism for updating the CGSCC pass manager as the
   CG changes while passes are running.
2) Changing the CGSCC pass manager infrastructure to have support for
   the underlying graph to mutate mid-pass run.
3) Actually updating the CG after function passes run.

I can separate them if necessary, but I think its really useful to have
them together as the needs of #3 drove #2, and that in turn drove #1.

The plumbing technique is to extend the "run" method signature with
extra arguments. We provide the call graph that intrinsically is
available as it is the basis of the pass manager's IR units, and an
output parameter that records the results of updating the call graph
during an SCC passes's run. Note that "...UpdateResult" isn't a *great*
name here... suggestions very welcome.

I tried a pretty frustrating number of different data structures and such
for the innards of the update result. Every other one failed for one
reason or another. Sometimes I just couldn't keep the layers of
complexity right in my head. The thing that really worked was to just
directly provide access to the underlying structures used to walk the
call graph so that their updates could be informed by the *particular*
nature of the change to the graph.

The technique for how to make the pass management infrastructure cope
with mutating graphs was also something that took a really, really large
number of iterations to get to a place where I was happy. Here are some
of the considerations that drove the design:

- We operate at three levels within the infrastructure: RefSCC, SCC, and
  Node. In each case, we are working bottom up and so we want to
  continue to iterate on the "lowest" node as the graph changes. Look at
  how we iterate over nodes in an SCC running function passes as those
  function passes mutate the CG. We continue to iterate on the "lowest"
  SCC, which is the one that continues to contain the function just
  processed.

- The call graph structure re-uses SCCs (and RefSCCs) during mutation
  events for the *highest* entry in the resulting new subgraph, not the
  lowest. This means that it is necessary to continually update the
  current SCC or RefSCC as it shifts. This is really surprising and
  subtle, and took a long time for me to work out. I actually tried
  changing the call graph to provide the opposite behavior, and it
  breaks *EVERYTHING*. The graph update algorithms are really deeply
  tied to this particualr pattern.

- When SCCs or RefSCCs are split apart and refined and we continually
  re-pin our processing to the bottom one in the subgraph, we need to
  enqueue the newly formed SCCs and RefSCCs for subsequent processing.
  Queuing them presents a few challenges:
  1) SCCs and RefSCCs use wildly different iteration strategies at
     a high level. We end up needing to converge them on worklist
     approaches that can be extended in order to be able to handle the
     mutations.
  2) The order of the enqueuing need to remain bottom-up post-order so
     that we don't get surprising order of visitation for things like
     the inliner.
  3) We need the worklists to have set semantics so we don't duplicate
     things endlessly. We don't need a *persistent* set though because
     we always keep processing the bottom node!!!! This is super, super
     surprising to me and took a long time to convince myself this is
     correct, but I'm pretty sure it is... Once we sink down to the
     bottom node, we can't re-split out the same node in any way, and
     the postorder of the current queue is fixed and unchanging.
  4) We need to make sure that the "current" SCC or RefSCC actually gets
     enqueued here such that we re-visit it because we continue
     processing a *new*, *bottom* SCC/RefSCC.

- We also need the ability to *skip* SCCs and RefSCCs that get merged
  into a larger component. We even need the ability to skip *nodes* from
  an SCC that are no longer part of that SCC.

This led to the design you see in the patch which uses SetVector-based
worklists. The RefSCC worklist is always empty until an update occurs
and is just used to handle those RefSCCs created by updates as the
others don't even exist yet and are formed on-demand during the
bottom-up walk. The SCC worklist is pre-populated from the RefSCC, and
we push new SCCs onto it and blacklist existing SCCs on it to get the
desired processing.

We then *directly* update these when updating the call graph as I was
never able to find a satisfactory abstraction around the update
strategy.

Finally, we need to compute the updates for function passes. This is
mostly used as an initial customer of all the update mechanisms to drive
their design to at least cover some real set of use cases. There are
a bunch of interesting things that came out of doing this:

- It is really nice to do this a function at a time because that
  function is likely hot in the cache. This means we want even the
  function pass adaptor to support online updates to the call graph!

- To update the call graph after arbitrary function pass mutations is
  quite hard. We have to build a fairly comprehensive set of
  data structures and then process them. Fortunately, some of this code
  is related to the code for building the cal graph in the first place.
  Unfortunately, very little of it makes any sense to share because the
  nature of what we're doing is so very different. I've factored out the
  one part that made sense at least.

- We need to transfer these updates into the various structures for the
  CGSCC pass manager. Once those were more sanely worked out, this
  became relatively easier. But some of those needs necessitated changes
  to the LazyCallGraph interface to make it significantly easier to
  extract the changed SCCs from an update operation.

- We also need to update the CGSCC analysis manager as the shape of the
  graph changes. When an SCC is merged away we need to clear analyses
  associated with it from the analysis manager which we didn't have
  support for in the analysis manager infrsatructure. New SCCs are easy!
  But then we have the case that the original SCC has its shape changed
  but remains in the call graph. There we need to *invalidate* the
  analyses associated with it.

- We also need to invalidate analyses after we *finish* processing an
  SCC. But the analyses we need to invalidate here are *only those for
  the newly updated SCC*!!! Because we only continue processing the
  bottom SCC, if we split SCCs apart the original one gets invalidated
  once when its shape changes and is not processed farther so its
  analyses will be correct. It is the bottom SCC which continues being
  processed and needs to have the "normal" invalidation done based on
  the preserved analyses set.

All of this is mostly background and context for the changes here.

Many thanks to all the reviewers who helped here. Especially Sanjoy who
caught several interesting bugs in the graph algorithms, David, Sean,
and others who all helped with feedback.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21464

llvm-svn: 279618
2016-08-24 09:37:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8abdf75d6b [PM] Introduce an abstraction for all the analyses over a particular IR
unit for use in the PreservedAnalyses set.

This doesn't have any important functional change yet but it cleans
things up and makes the analysis substantially more efficient by
avoiding querying through the type erasure for every analysis.

I also think it makes it much easier to reason about how analyses are
preserved when walking across pass managers and across IR unit
abstractions.

Thanks to Sean and Mehdi both for the comments and suggestions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23691

llvm-svn: 279360
2016-08-20 04:57:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a053a88df5 [PM] Change the name of the repeating utility to something less
overloaded (and simpler).

Sean rightly pointed out in code review that we've started using
"wrapper pass" as a specific part of the old pass manager, and in fact
it is more applicable there. Here, we really have a pass *template* to
build a repeated pass, so call it that.

llvm-svn: 277689
2016-08-04 03:52:53 +00:00
Matthias Braun 4dc6933d44 opt-bisect-legacy-pass-manager.ll: Test only works with default triple configured
llvm-svn: 277645
2016-08-03 20:28:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 241bf2456f [PM] Add a generic 'repeat N times' pass wrapper to the new pass
manager.

While this has some utility for debugging and testing on its own, it is
primarily intended to demonstrate the technique for adding custom
wrappers that can provide more interesting interation behavior in
a nice, orthogonal, and composable layer.

Being able to write these kinds of very dynamic and customized controls
for running passes was one of the motivating use cases of the new pass
manager design, and this gives a hint at how they might look. The actual
logic is tiny here, and most of this is just wiring in the pipeline
parsing so that this can be widely used.

I'm adding this now to show the wiring without a lot of business logic.
This is a precursor patch for showing how a "iterate up to N times as
long as we devirtualize a call" utility can be added as a separable and
composable component along side the CGSCC pass management.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22405

llvm-svn: 277581
2016-08-03 07:44:48 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6cb2ab2c60 [PM] Significantly refactor the pass pipeline parsing to be easier to
reason about and less error prone.

The core idea is to fully parse the text without trying to identify
passes or structure. This is done with a single state machine. There
were various bugs in the logic around this previously that were repeated
and scattered across the code. Having a single routine makes it much
easier to fix and get correct. For example, this routine doesn't suffer
from PR28577.

Then the actual pass construction is handled using *much* easier to read
code and simple loops, with particular pass manager construction sunk to
live with other pass construction. This is especially nice as the pass
managers *are* in fact passes.

Finally, the "implicit" pass manager synthesis is done much more simply
by forming "pre-parsed" structures rather than having to duplicate tons
of logic.

One of the bugs fixed by this was evident in the tests where we accepted
a pipeline that wasn't really well formed. Another bug is PR28577 for
which I have added a test case.

The code is less efficient than the previous code but I'm really hoping
that's not a priority. ;]

Thanks to Sean for the review!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22724

llvm-svn: 277561
2016-08-03 03:21:41 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 8b8805c94c Temporarily remove one test run line to unblock PPC bots.
llvm-svn: 274812
2016-07-08 00:32:58 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 65fa0704aa Include SelectionDAGISel in the opt-bisect process
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21143

llvm-svn: 274786
2016-07-07 18:55:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth dca834089a [PM] Improve the debugging and logging facilities of the CGSCC bits of
the new pass manager.

This adds operator<< overloads for the various bits of the
LazyCallGraph, dump methods for use from the debugger, and debug logging
using them to the CGSCC pass manager.

Having this was essential for debugging the call graph update patch, and
I've extracted what I could from that patch here to minimize the delta.

llvm-svn: 273961
2016-06-27 23:26:08 +00:00
Matthias Braun 98ea88be42 Statistic: Add machine parseable json output
- We lacked a short unique identifier for a statistics, so I renamed the
  current "Name" field that just contained the DEBUG_TYPE name of the
  current file to DebugType and added a new "Name" field that contains
  the C++ identifier of the statistic variable.
- Add the -stats-json option which outputs statistics in json format.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20995

llvm-svn: 272826
2016-06-15 20:19:16 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne 96efdd6107 IR: Introduce local_unnamed_addr attribute.
If a local_unnamed_addr attribute is attached to a global, the address
is known to be insignificant within the module. It is distinct from the
existing unnamed_addr attribute in that it only describes a local property
of the module rather than a global property of the symbol.

This attribute is intended to be used by the code generator and LTO to allow
the linker to decide whether the global needs to be in the symbol table. It is
possible to exclude a global from the symbol table if three things are true:
- This attribute is present on every instance of the global (which means that
  the normal rule that the global must have a unique address can be broken without
  being observable by the program by performing comparisons against the global's
  address)
- The global has linkonce_odr linkage (which means that each linkage unit must have
  its own copy of the global if it requires one, and the copy in each linkage unit
  must be the same)
- It is a constant or a function (which means that the program cannot observe that
  the unique-address rule has been broken by writing to the global)

Although this attribute could in principle be computed from the module
contents, LTO clients (i.e. linkers) will normally need to be able to compute
this property as part of symbol resolution, and it would be inefficient to
materialize every module just to compute it.

See:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160509/356401.html
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160516/356738.html
for earlier discussion.

Part of the fix for PR27553.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20348

llvm-svn: 272709
2016-06-14 21:01:22 +00:00
Manuel Jacob a485984c0c [PM] Schedule InstSimplify after late LICM run, to clean up LCSSA nodes.
Summary:
The module pass pipeline includes a late LICM run after loop
unrolling.  LCSSA is implicitly run as a pass dependency of LICM.  However no
cleanup pass was run after this, so the LCSSA nodes ended in the optimized output.

Reviewers: hfinkel, mehdi_amini

Subscribers: majnemer, bruno, mzolotukhin, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20606

llvm-svn: 271602
2016-06-02 22:14:26 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 04f8e06696 Update the stack coloring pass to remove lifetime intrinsics in the optnone/opt-bisect skip case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20453

llvm-svn: 271068
2016-05-27 22:56:49 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor 50271f787e Add opt-bisect support to additional passes that can be skipped
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19882

llvm-svn: 268457
2016-05-03 22:32:30 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 7f7d8be518 Move "Eliminate Available Externally" immediately after the inliner
This pass is supposed to reduce the size of the IR for compile time
purpose. We should run it ASAP, except when we prepare for LTO or
ThinLTO, and we want to keep them available for link-time inline.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19813

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 268394
2016-05-03 15:46:00 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 45c7b3ecb5 Move createReversePostOrderFunctionAttrsPass right after the inliner is done
This is where it was originally, until LoopVersioningLICM was
inserted before in r259986, I don't believe it was on purpose.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19809

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 268252
2016-05-02 16:53:16 +00:00
Nico Weber 2f1459cbb7 Try to get ResponseFile.ll passing on Windows after r267556.
llvm-svn: 267599
2016-04-26 20:32:51 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor aa641a5171 Re-commit optimization bisect support (r267022) without new pass manager support.
The original commit was reverted because of a buildbot problem with LazyCallGraph::SCC handling (not related to the OptBisect handling).

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19172

llvm-svn: 267231
2016-04-22 22:06:11 +00:00
Vedant Kumar 6013f45f92 Revert "Initial implementation of optimization bisect support."
This reverts commit r267022, due to an ASan failure:

  http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage2-cmake-RgSan_check/1549

llvm-svn: 267115
2016-04-22 06:51:37 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor f0f279291c Initial implementation of optimization bisect support.
This patch implements a optimization bisect feature, which will allow optimizations to be selectively disabled at compile time in order to track down test failures that are caused by incorrect optimizations.

The bisection is enabled using a new command line option (-opt-bisect-limit).  Individual passes that may be skipped call the OptBisect object (via an LLVMContext) to see if they should be skipped based on the bisect limit.  A finer level of control (disabling individual transformations) can be managed through an addition OptBisect method, but this is not yet used.

The skip checking in this implementation is based on (and replaces) the skipOptnoneFunction check.  Where that check was being called, a new call has been inserted in its place which checks the bisect limit and the optnone attribute.  A new function call has been added for module and SCC passes that behaves in a similar way.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19172

llvm-svn: 267022
2016-04-21 17:58:54 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4c660f7087 [CG] Add a new pass manager printer pass for the old call graph and
actually finish wiring up the old call graph.

There were bugs in the old call graph that hadn't been caught because it
wasn't being tested. It wasn't being tested because it wasn't in the
pipeline system and we didn't have a printing pass to run in tests. This
fixes all of that.

As for why I'm still keeping the old call graph alive its so that I can
port GlobalsAA to the new pass manager with out forking it to work with
the lazy call graph. That's clearly the right eventual design, but it
seems pragmatic to defer that until its necessary. The old call graph
works just fine for GlobalsAA.

llvm-svn: 263104
2016-03-10 11:24:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 61440d225b [PM] Port memdep to the new pass manager.
This is a fairly straightforward port to the new pass manager with one
exception. It removes a very questionable use of releaseMemory() in
the old pass to invalidate its caches between runs on a function.
I don't think this is really guaranteed to be safe. I've just used the
more direct port to the new PM to address this by nuking the results
object each time the pass runs. While this could cause some minor malloc
traffic increase, I don't expect the compile time performance hit to be
noticable, and it makes the correctness and other aspects of the pass
much easier to reason about. In some cases, it may make things faster by
making the sets and maps smaller with better locality. Indeed, the
measurements collected by Bruno (thanks!!!) show mostly compile time
improvements.

There is sadly very limited testing at this point as there are only two
tests of memdep, and both rely on GVN. I'll be porting GVN next and that
will exercise this heavily though.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17962

llvm-svn: 263082
2016-03-10 00:55:30 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8b5a7419b8 [PM] Wire up optimization levels and default pipeline construction APIs
in the PassBuilder.

These are really just stubs for now, but they give a nice API surface
that Clang or other tools can start learning about and enabling for
experimentation.

I've also wired up parsing various synthetic module pass names to
generate these set pipelines. This allows the pipelines to be combined
with other passes and have their order controlled, with clear separation
between the *kind* of canned pipeline, and the *level* of optimization
to be used within that canned pipeline.

The most interesting part of this patch is almost certainly the spec for
the different optimization levels. I don't think we can ever have hard
and fast rules that would make it easy to determine whether a particular
optimization makes sense at a particular level -- it will always be in
large part a judgement call. But hopefully this will outline the
expected rationale that should be used, and the direction that the
pipelines should be taken. Much of this was based on a long llvm-dev
discussion I started years ago to try and crystalize the intent behind
these pipelines, and now, at long long last I'm returning to the task of
actually writing it down somewhere that we can cite and try to be
consistent with.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12826

llvm-svn: 262196
2016-02-28 22:16:03 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 30811a4dde [PM] Loosen the regex for the proxy template name even further to cope
with 'class' keywords in the template arguments and other silliness.

llvm-svn: 262130
2016-02-27 11:07:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 08a25ce0e3 [PM] Use a boring regex instead of explicitly naming the analysis
manager as some compilers print the typedef name and others print the
"canonical" name of the underlying class template.

This isn't really an important artifact of the test anyways so it seems
fine to just loosen the test assertions here.

llvm-svn: 262129
2016-02-27 10:48:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2a54094d40 [PM] Provide two templates for the two directionalities of analysis
manager proxies and use those rather than repeating their definition
four times.

There are real differences between the two directions: outer AMs are
const and don't need to have invalidation tracked. But every proxy in
a particular direction is identical except for the analysis manager type
and the IR unit they proxy into. This makes them prime candidates for
nice templates.

I've started introducing explicit template instantiation declarations
and definitions as well because we really shouldn't be emitting all this
everywhere. I'm going to go back and add the same for the other
templates like this in a follow-up patch.

I've left the analysis manager as an opaque type rather than using two
IR units and requiring it to be an AnalysisManager template
specialization. I think its important that users retain the ability to
provide their own custom analysis management layer and provided it has
the appropriate API everything should Just Work.

llvm-svn: 262127
2016-02-27 10:38:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3a63435551 [PM] Introduce CRTP mixin base classes to help define passes and
analyses in the new pass manager.

These just handle really basic stuff: turning a type name into a string
statically that is nice to print in logs, and getting a static unique ID
for each analysis.

Sadly, the format of passes in anonymous namespaces makes using their
names in tests really annoying so I've customized the names of the no-op
passes to keep tests sane to read.

This is the first of a few simplifying refactorings for the new pass
manager that should reduce boilerplate and confusion.

llvm-svn: 262004
2016-02-26 11:44:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 395fe57374 [PM] Add the IR unit type to the pass manager's logging and make all of
the testing more more explicit.

This will currently fail on platforms without support for getTypeName.
While an assert failure seems too harsh, I'm hoping we're OK with the
regression test failure, and I'd like to find out about what platforms
actually exist in this state if there are any so we can get
implementations in place for them.

But if we just can't fix all the host compilers to have a reasonably
portable variant of getTypeName and are worried about xfailing this test
on those platforms, I can add the horrible regular expression magic to
make the tests support "unknown" here as well.

llvm-svn: 261853
2016-02-25 10:27:39 +00:00
Justin Bogner eecc3c826a PM: Implement a basic loop pass manager
This creates the new-style LoopPassManager and wires it up with dummy
and print passes.

This version doesn't support modifying the loop nest at all. It will
be far easier to discuss and evaluate the approaches to that with this
in place so that the boilerplate is out of the way.

llvm-svn: 261831
2016-02-25 07:23:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 31088a9d58 [LPM] Factor all of the loop analysis usage updates into a common helper
routine.

We were getting this wrong in small ways and generally being very
inconsistent about it across loop passes. Instead, let's have a common
place where we do this. One minor downside is that this will require
some analyses like SCEV in more places than they are strictly needed.
However, this seems benign as these analyses are complete no-ops, and
without this consistency we can in many cases end up with the legacy
pass manager scheduling deciding to split up a loop pass pipeline in
order to run the function analysis half-way through. It is very, very
annoying to fix these without just being very pedantic across the board.

The only loop passes I've not updated here are ones that use
AU.setPreservesAll() such as IVUsers (an analysis) and the pass printer.
They seemed less relevant.

With this patch, almost all of the problems in PR24804 around loop pass
pipelines are fixed. The one remaining issue is that we run simplify-cfg
and instcombine in the middle of the loop pass pipeline. We've recently
added some loop variants of these passes that would seem substantially
cleaner to use, but this at least gets us much closer to the previous
state. Notably, the seven loop pass managers is down to three.

I've not updated the loop passes using LoopAccessAnalysis because that
analysis hasn't been fully wired into LoopSimplify/LCSSA, and it isn't
clear that those transforms want to support those forms anyways. They
all run late anyways, so this is harmless. Similarly, LSR is left alone
because it already carefully manages its forms and doesn't need to get
fused into a single loop pass manager with a bunch of other loop passes.

LoopReroll didn't use loop simplified form previously, and I've updated
the test case to match the trivially different output.

Finally, I've also factored all the pass initialization for the passes
that use this technique as well, so that should be done regularly and
reliably.

Thanks to James for the help reviewing and thinking about this stuff,
and Ben for help thinking about it as well!

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17435

llvm-svn: 261316
2016-02-19 10:45:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1aff022c9b [LPM] Actually test what the O2 pass pipeline consists of in key places,
especially the *structure* of it with respect to various pass managers.

This uncovers an absolute horror show of problems. This test shows just
how bad PR24804 is: we have a totaly of *seven* loop pass managers in
the main optimization pipeline.

I've tried to comment the various bits to the best of my knowledge, but
more enhancements here would be great.

Also great would be folks adding various test for other pipelines, I'm
focused on trying to fix the O2 pipeline. I just wanted a test to show
what I'm changing.

llvm-svn: 261305
2016-02-19 04:09:40 +00:00
Chandler Carruth edf5996b06 [PM/AA] Teach the new pass manager to use pass-by-lambda for registering
analysis passes, support pre-registering analyses, and use that to
implement parsing and pre-registering a custom alias analysis pipeline.

With this its possible to configure the particular alias analysis
pipeline used by the AAManager from the commandline of opt. I've updated
the test to show this effectively in use to build a pipeline including
basic-aa as part of it.

My big question for reviewers are around the APIs that are used to
expose this functionality. Are folks happy with pass-by-lambda to do
pass registration? Are folks happy with pre-registering analyses as
a way to inject customized instances of an analysis while still using
the registry for the general case?

Other thoughts of course welcome. The next round of patches will be to
add the rest of the alias analyses into the new pass manager and wire
them up here so that they can be used from opt. This will require
extending the (somewhate limited) functionality of AAManager w.r.t.
module passes.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17259

llvm-svn: 261197
2016-02-18 09:45:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth bece8d517d [PM/AA] Wire BasicAA's new pass manager class up to the pass registry.
This ensures that all of the various pieces are working. The next patch
will wire up commandline-driven alias analysis chain building and allow
BasicAA to work with the AAManager.

llvm-svn: 260838
2016-02-13 23:46:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6f5770b10f [PM/AA] Actually wire the AAManager I built for the new pass manager
into the new pass manager and fix the latent bugs there.

This lets everything live together nicely, but it isn't really useful
yet. I never finished wiring the AA layer up for the new pass manager,
and so subsequent patches will change this to do that wiring and get AA
stuff more fully integrated into the new pass manager. Turns out this is
necessary even to get functionattrs ported over. =]

llvm-svn: 260836
2016-02-13 23:32:00 +00:00
Weiming Zhao 0f1762caf9 Recommit r256952 "Filtering IR printing for print-after-all/print-before-all"
Fix lit test fail due to outputting an extra line.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15776

llvm-svn: 256987
2016-01-06 22:55:03 +00:00
Weiming Zhao b243c95c6a Revert r256952 due to lit test fails.
llvm-svn: 256954
2016-01-06 18:31:44 +00:00
Weiming Zhao eac0636805 Filtering IR printing for print-after-all/print-before-all
Summary:
This patch implements "-print-funcs" option to support function filtering for IR printing like -print-after-all, -print-before etc.
Examples:
  -print-after-all -print-funcs=foo,bar

Reviewers: mcrosier, joker.eph

Subscribers: tejohnson, joker.eph, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15776

llvm-svn: 256952
2016-01-06 18:20:25 +00:00
Keno Fischer 04464cf731 [llc/opt] Add an option to run all passes twice
Summary: Lately, I have submitted a number of patches to fix bugs that
only occurred when using the same pass manager to compile multiple
modules (generally these bugs are failure to reset some persistent
state). Unfortunately I don't think there is currently a way to test
that from the command line. This adds a very simple flag to both llc
and opt, under which the tools will simply re-run their respective
pass pipelines using the same pass manager on (a clone of the same
module). Additionally, we verify that both outputs are bitwise the
same.

Reviewers: yaron.keren

Subscribers: loladiro, yaron.keren, kcc, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14965

llvm-svn: 254774
2015-12-04 21:56:46 +00:00
Pete Cooper 67cf9a723b Revert "Change memcpy/memset/memmove to have dest and source alignments."
This reverts commit r253511.

This likely broke the bots in
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-ppc64-elf-linux2/builds/20202
http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/clang-3stage-i686-linux/builds/3787

llvm-svn: 253543
2015-11-19 05:56:52 +00:00
Pete Cooper 72bc23ef02 Change memcpy/memset/memmove to have dest and source alignments.
Note, this was reviewed (and more details are in) http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html

These intrinsics currently have an explicit alignment argument which is
required to be a constant integer.  It represents the alignment of the
source and dest, and so must be the minimum of those.

This change allows source and dest to each have their own alignments
by using the alignment attribute on their arguments.  The alignment
argument itself is removed.

There are a few places in the code for which the code needs to be
checked by an expert as to whether using only src/dest alignment is
safe.  For those places, they currently take the minimum of src/dest
alignments which matches the current behaviour.

For example, code which used to read:
  call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* %dest, i8* %src, i32 500, i32 8, i1 false)
will now read:
  call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8* align 8 %dest, i8* align 8 %src, i32 500, i1 false)

For out of tree owners, I was able to strip alignment from calls using sed by replacing:
  (call.*llvm\.memset.*)i32\ [0-9]*\,\ i1 false\)
with:
  $1i1 false)

and similarly for memmove and memcpy.

I then added back in alignment to test cases which needed it.

A similar commit will be made to clang which actually has many differences in alignment as now
IRBuilder can generate different source/dest alignments on calls.

In IRBuilder itself, a new argument was added.  Instead of calling:
  CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)
you now call
  CreateMemCpy(Dst, Src, getInt64(Size), DstAlign, SrcAlign, /* isVolatile */ false)

There is a temporary class (IntegerAlignment) which takes the source alignment and rejects
implicit conversion from bool.  This is to prevent isVolatile here from passing its default
parameter to the source alignment.

Note, changes in future can now be made to codegen.  I didn't change anything here, but this
change should enable better memcpy code sequences.

Reviewed by Hal Finkel.

llvm-svn: 253511
2015-11-18 22:17:24 +00:00
Mehdi Amini d178f4fc89 Make the default triple optional by allowing an empty string
When building LLVM as a (potentially dynamic) library that can be linked against
by multiple compilers, the default triple is not really meaningful.
We allow to explicitely set it to an empty string when configuring LLVM.
In this case, said "target independent" tests in the test suite that are using
the default triple are disabled by matching the newly available feature
"default_triple".

Reviewers: probinson, echristo
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12660

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 247775
2015-09-16 05:34:32 +00:00
David Blaikie 2f40830dde [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter for global aliases
update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

alias_match_prefix = r"(.*(?:=|:|^)\s*(?:external |)(?:(?:private|internal|linkonce|linkonce_odr|weak|weak_odr|common|appending|extern_weak|available_externally) )?(?:default |hidden |protected )?(?:dllimport |dllexport )?(?:unnamed_addr |)(?:thread_local(?:\([a-z]*\))? )?alias"
plain = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r" (.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|addrspacecast|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")
cast  = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r") ((?:bitcast|inttoptr|addrspacecast)\s*\(.* to (.*?)(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*\)\s*(?:;.*)?$)")
gep   = re.compile(alias_match_prefix + r") ((?:getelementptr)\s*(?:inbounds)?\s*\((?P<type>.*), (?P=type)(?:\s*addrspace\(\d+\)\s*)?\* .*\)\s*(?:;.*)?$)")

def conv(line):
  m = re.match(cast, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + " " + m.group(3) + ", " + m.group(2)
  m = re.match(gep, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + " " + m.group(3) + ", " + m.group(2)
  m = re.match(plain, line)
  if m:
    return m.group(1) + ", " + m.group(2) + m.group(3) + "*" + m.group(4) + "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(conv(line))

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

llvm-svn: 247378
2015-09-11 03:22:04 +00:00
Mehdi Amini c8d5783114 Update test suite to make "ninja check" succeed without native backend builtin
Requires "native" feature in most places that were failing.

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 243960
2015-08-04 06:32:54 +00:00
Reid Kleckner fc0f93832b [llvm-extract] Drop comdats from declarations
The verifier rejects comdats on declarations.

llvm-svn: 241483
2015-07-06 18:48:02 +00:00
David Majnemer 7fddeccb8b Move the personality function from LandingPadInst to Function
The personality routine currently lives in the LandingPadInst.

This isn't desirable because:
- All LandingPadInsts in the same function must have the same
  personality routine.  This means that each LandingPadInst beyond the
  first has an operand which produces no additional information.

- There is ongoing work to introduce EH IR constructs other than
  LandingPadInst.  Moving the personality routine off of any one
  particular Instruction and onto the parent function seems a lot better
  than have N different places a personality function can sneak onto an
  exceptional function.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10429

llvm-svn: 239940
2015-06-17 20:52:32 +00:00
Akira Hatanaka 3058d0f080 Let llc and opt override "-target-cpu" and "-target-features" via command line
options.

This commit fixes a bug in llc and opt where "-mcpu" and "-mattr" wouldn't
override function attributes "-target-cpu" and "-target-features" in the IR.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9537

llvm-svn: 236677
2015-05-06 23:54:14 +00:00
David Blaikie 23af64846f [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to the call instruction
See r230786 and r230794 for similar changes to gep and load
respectively.

Call is a bit different because it often doesn't have a single explicit
type - usually the type is deduced from the arguments, and just the
return type is explicit. In those cases there's no need to change the
IR.

When that's not the case, the IR usually contains the pointer type of
the first operand - but since typed pointers are going away, that
representation is insufficient so I'm just stripping the "pointerness"
of the explicit type away.

This does make the IR a bit weird - it /sort of/ reads like the type of
the first operand: "call void () %x(" but %x is actually of type "void
()*" and will eventually be just of type "ptr". But this seems not too
bad and I don't think it would benefit from repeating the type
("void (), void () * %x(" and then eventually "void (), ptr %x(") as has
been done with gep and load.

This also has a side benefit: since the explicit type is no longer a
pointer, there's no ambiguity between an explicit type and a function
that returns a function pointer. Previously this case needed an explicit
type (eg: a function returning a void() function was written as
"call void () () * @x(" rather than "call void () * @x(" because of the
ambiguity between a function returning a pointer to a void() function
and a function returning void).

No ambiguity means even function pointer return types can just be
written alone, without writing the whole function's type.

This leaves /only/ the varargs case where the explicit type is required.

Given the special type syntax in call instructions, the regex-fu used
for migration was a bit more involved in its own unique way (as every
one of these is) so here it is. Use it in conjunction with the apply.sh
script and associated find/xargs commands I've provided in rr230786 to
migrate your out of tree tests. Do let me know if any of this doesn't
cover your cases & we can iterate on a more general script/regexes to
help others with out of tree tests.

About 9 test cases couldn't be automatically migrated - half of those
were functions returning function pointers, where I just had to manually
delete the function argument types now that we didn't need an explicit
function type there. The other half were typedefs of function types used
in calls - just had to manually drop the * from those.

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r'((?:=|:|^|\s)call\s(?:[^@]*?))(\s*$|\s*(?:(?:\[\[[a-zA-Z0-9_]+\]\]|[@%](?:(")?[\\\?@a-zA-Z0-9_.]*?(?(3)"|)|{{.*}}))(?:\(|$)|undef|inttoptr|bitcast|null|asm).*$)')
addrspace_end = re.compile(r"addrspace\(\d+\)\s*\*$")
func_end = re.compile("(?:void.*|\)\s*)\*$")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match or re.search(addrspace_end, match.group(1)) or not re.search(func_end, match.group(1)):
    return line
  return line[:match.start()] + match.group(1)[:match.group(1).rfind('*')].rstrip() + match.group(2) + line[match.end():]

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(conv(re.search(pat, line), line))

llvm-svn: 235145
2015-04-16 23:24:18 +00:00
David Blaikie f72d05bc7b [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to gep operator
Similar to gep (r230786) and load (r230794) changes.

Similar migration script can be used to update test cases, which
successfully migrated all of LLVM and Polly, but about 4 test cases
needed manually changes in Clang.

(this script will read the contents of stdin and massage it into stdout
- wrap it in the 'apply.sh' script shown in previous commits + xargs to
apply it over a large set of test cases)

import fileinput
import sys
import re

rep = re.compile(r"(getelementptr(?:\s+inbounds)?\s*\()((<\d*\s+x\s+)?([^@]*?)(|\s*addrspace\(\d+\))\s*\*(?(3)>)\s*)(?=$|%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|zeroinitializer|<|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{)", re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL)

def conv(match):
  line = match.group(1)
  line += match.group(4)
  line += ", "
  line += match.group(2)
  return line

line = sys.stdin.read()
off = 0
for match in re.finditer(rep, line):
  sys.stdout.write(line[off:match.start()])
  sys.stdout.write(conv(match))
  off = match.end()
sys.stdout.write(line[off:])

llvm-svn: 232184
2015-03-13 18:20:45 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 46a43556db Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.

As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().

Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module

The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.

Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module

Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.

Reviewers: echristo

Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
2015-03-04 18:43:29 +00:00
David Blaikie a79ac14fa6 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to load instruction
Essentially the same as the GEP change in r230786.

A similar migration script can be used to update test cases, though a few more
test case improvements/changes were required this time around: (r229269-r229278)

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r"((?:=|:|^)\s*load (?:atomic )?(?:volatile )?(.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(re.sub(pat, r"\1, \2\3*\4", line))

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7649

llvm-svn: 230794
2015-02-27 21:17:42 +00:00
David Blaikie 79e6c74981 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to getelementptr instruction
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.

This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.

* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
  handled separately)

* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
  in-memory representation will be in separate changes.

* geps of vectors are transformed as:
    getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
  ->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
  Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
  like:
    getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
  with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.

* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
    getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
  ->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
  Then, eventually:
    getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x

Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.

update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile(       r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match:
    return line
  line = match.groups()[0]
  if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
    line += match.groups()[2]
  line += match.groups()[3]
  line += ", "
  line += match.groups()[1]
  line += "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
    if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
      line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
  elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
    line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
  sys.stdout.write(line)

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).

The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636

llvm-svn: 230786
2015-02-27 19:29:02 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 96d011315a Don't promote asynch EH invokes of nounwind functions to calls
If the landingpad of the invoke is using a personality function that
catches asynch exceptions, then it can catch a trap.

Also add some landingpads to invalid LLVM IR test cases that lack them.

Over-the-shoulder reviewed by David Majnemer.

llvm-svn: 228782
2015-02-11 01:23:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9f8d9b613c [PM] Teach the module-to-function adaptor to not run function passes
over declarations.

This is both quite unproductive and causes things to crash, for example
domtree would just assert.

I've added a declaration and a domtree run to the basic high-level tests
for the new pass manager.

llvm-svn: 227724
2015-02-01 10:47:25 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e038552c8a [PM] Port TTI to the new pass manager, introducing a TargetIRAnalysis to
produce it.

This adds a function to the TargetMachine that produces this analysis
via a callback for each function. This in turn faves the way to produce
a *different* TTI per-function with the correct subtarget cached.

I've also done the necessary wiring in the opt tool to thread the target
machine down and make it available to the pass registry so that we can
construct this analysis from a target machine when available.

llvm-svn: 227721
2015-02-01 10:11:22 +00:00
Yunzhong Gao a8cf495a15 If we see UTF-8 BOM sequence at the beginning of a response file, we shall
remove these bytes before parsing.

Phabricator Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7156

llvm-svn: 226988
2015-01-24 04:23:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8ca43224db [PM] Port TargetLibraryInfo to the new pass manager, provided by the
TargetLibraryAnalysis pass.

There are actually no direct tests of this already in the tree. I've
added the most basic test that the pass manager bits themselves work,
and the TLI object produced will be tested by an upcoming patches as
they port passes which rely on TLI.

This is starting to point out the awkwardness of the invalidate API --
it seems poorly fitting on the *result* object. I suspect I will change
it to live on the analysis instead, but that's not for this change, and
I'd rather have a few more passes ported in order to have more
experience with how this plays out.

I believe there is only one more analysis required in order to start
porting instcombine. =]

llvm-svn: 226160
2015-01-15 11:39:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 703378f156 [PM] Remove the defunt CGSCC-specific debug flag.
Even before I sunk the debug flag into the opt tool this had been made
obsolete by factoring the pass and analysis managers into a single set
of templates that all used the core flag. No functionality changed here.

llvm-svn: 225842
2015-01-13 22:45:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 816702ffe0 [PM] Refactor the new pass manager to use a single template to implement
the generic functionality of the pass managers themselves.

In the new infrastructure, the pass "manager" isn't actually interesting
at all. It just pipelines a single chunk of IR through N passes. We
don't need to know anything about the IR or the passes to do this really
and we can replace the 3 implementations of the exact same functionality
with a single generic PassManager template, complementing the single
generic AnalysisManager template.

I've left typedefs in place to give convenient names to the various
obvious instantiations of the template.

With this, I think I've nuked almost all of the redundant logic in the
managers, and I think the overall design is actually simpler for having
single templates that clearly indicate there is no special logic here.
The logging is made somewhat more annoying by this change, but I don't
think the difference is worth having heavy-weight traits to help log
things.

llvm-svn: 225783
2015-01-13 11:13:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7ad6d620b7 [PM] Fold all three analysis managers into a single AnalysisManager
template.

This consolidates three copies of nearly the same core logic. It adds
"complexity" to the ModuleAnalysisManager in that it makes it possible
to share a ModuleAnalysisManager across multiple modules... But it does
so by deleting *all of the code*, so I'm OK with that. This will
naturally make fixing bugs in this code much simpler, etc.

The only down side here is that we have to use 'typename' and 'this->'
in various places, and the implementation is lifted into the header.
I'll take that for the code size reduction.

The convenient names are still typedef-ed and used throughout so that
users can largely ignore this aspect of the implementation.

The follow-up change to this will do the exact same refactoring for the
PassManagers. =D

It turns out that the interesting different code is almost entirely in
the adaptors. At the end, that should be essentially all that is left.

llvm-svn: 225757
2015-01-13 02:51:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e5b0a9cf3d [PM] Give slightly less horrible names to the utility pass templates for
requiring and invalidating specific analyses. Also make their printed
names match their class names. Writing these out as prose really doesn't
make sense to me any more.

llvm-svn: 225346
2015-01-07 11:14:51 +00:00
Chandler Carruth fdb4180514 [PM] Fix a pretty nasty bug where the new pass manager would invalidate
passes too many time.

I think this is actually the issue that someone raised with me at the
developer's meeting and in an email, but that we never really got to the
bottom of. Having all the testing utilities made it much easier to dig
down and uncover the core issue.

When a pass manager is running many passes over a single function, we
need it to invalidate the analyses between each run so that they can be
re-computed as needed. We also need to track the intersection of
preserved higher-level analyses across all the passes that we run (for
example, if there is one module analysis which all the function analyses
preserve, we want to track that and propagate it). Unfortunately, this
interacted poorly with any enclosing pass adaptor between two IR units.
It would see the intersection of preserved analyses, and need to
invalidate any other analyses, but some of the un-preserved analyses
might have already been invalidated *and recomputed*! We would fail to
propagate the fact that the analysis had already been invalidated.

The solution to this struck me as really strange at first, but the more
I thought about it, the more natural it seemed. After a nice discussion
with Duncan about it on IRC, it seemed even nicer. The idea is that
invalidating an analysis *causes* it to be preserved! Preserving the
lack of result is trivial. If it is recomputed, great. Until something
*else* invalidates it again, we're good.

The consequence of this is that the invalidate methods on the analysis
manager which operate over many passes now consume their
PreservedAnalyses object, update it to "preserve" every analysis pass to
which it delivers an invalidation (regardless of whether the pass
chooses to be removed, or handles the invalidation itself by updating
itself). Then we return this augmented set from the invalidate routine,
letting the pass manager take the result and use the intersection of
*that* across each pass run to compute the final preserved set. This
accounts for all the places where the early invalidation of an analysis
has already "preserved" it for a future run.

I've beefed up the testing and adjusted the assertions to show that we
no longer repeatedly invalidate or compute the analyses across nested
pass managers.

llvm-svn: 225333
2015-01-07 01:58:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4e107caf2e [PM] Introduce a utility pass that preserves no analyses.
Use this to test that path of invalidation. This test actually shows
redundant invalidation here that is really bad. I'm going to work on
fixing that next, but wanted to commit the test harness now that its all
working.

llvm-svn: 225257
2015-01-06 09:06:35 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ea368f1ee4 [PM] Simplify how we parse the outer layer of the pass pipeline text and
remove an extra, redundant pass manager wrapping every run.

I had kept seeing these when manually testing, but it was getting really
annoying and was going to cause problems with overly eager invalidation.
The root cause was an overly complex and unnecessary pile of code for
parsing the outer layer of the pass pipeline. We can instead delegate
most of this to the recursive pipeline parsing.

I've added some somewhat more basic and precise tests to catch this.

llvm-svn: 225253
2015-01-06 08:37:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3472ffb37e [PM] Add a utility pass template that synthesizes the invalidation of
a specific analysis result.

This is quite handy to test things, and will also likely be very useful
for debugging issues. You could narrow down pass validation failures by
walking these invalidate pass runs up and down the pass pipeline, etc.
I've added support to the pass pipeline parsing to be able to create one
of these for any analysis pass desired.

Just adding this class uncovered one latent bug where the
AnalysisManager CRTP base class had a hard-coded Module type rather than
using IRUnitT.

I've also added tests for invalidation and caching of analyses in
a basic way across all the pass managers. These in turn uncovered two
more bugs where we failed to correctly invalidate an analysis -- its
results were invalidated but the key for re-running the pass was never
cleared and so it was never re-run. Quite nasty. I'm very glad to debug
this here rather than with a full system.

Also, yes, the naming here is horrid. I'm going to update some of the
names to be slightly less awful shortly. But really, I've no "good"
ideas for naming. I'll be satisfied if I can get it to "not bad".

llvm-svn: 225246
2015-01-06 04:49:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0b576b377f [PM] Add a collection of no-op analysis passes and switch the new pass
manager tests to use them and be significantly more comprehensive.

This, naturally, uncovered a bug where the CGSCC pass manager wasn't
printing analyses when they were run.

The only remaining core manipulator is I think an invalidate pass
similar to the require pass. That'll be next. =]

llvm-svn: 225240
2015-01-06 02:50:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 628503e4d4 [PM] Add a utility to the new pass manager for generating a pass which
is a no-op other than requiring some analysis results be available.

This can be used in real pass pipelines to force the usually lazy
analysis running to eagerly compute something at a specific point, and
it can be used to test the pass manager infrastructure (my primary use
at the moment).

I've also added bit of pipeline parsing magic to support generating
these directly from the opt command so that you can directly use these
when debugging your analysis. The syntax is:

  require<analysis-name>

This can be used at any level of the pass manager. For example:

  cgscc(function(require<my-analysis>,no-op-function))

This would produce a no-op function pass requiring my-analysis, followed
by a fully no-op function pass, both of these in a function pass manager
which is nested inside of a bottom-up CGSCC pass manager which is in the
top-level (implicit) module pass manager.

I have zero attachment to the particular syntax I'm using here. Consider
it a straw man for use while I'm testing and fleshing things out.
Suggestions for better syntax welcome, and I'll update everything based
on any consensus that develops.

I've used this new functionality to more directly test the analysis
printing rather than relying on the cgscc pass manager running an
analysis for me. This is still minimally tested because I need to have
analyses to run first! ;] That patch is next, but wanted to keep this
one separate for easier review and discussion.

llvm-svn: 225236
2015-01-06 02:10:51 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 539dc4b9d5 [PM] Don't run the machinery of invalidating all the analysis passes
when all are being preserved.

We want to short-circuit this for a couple of reasons. One, I don't
really want passes to grow a dependency on actually receiving their
invalidate call when they've been preserved. I'm thinking about removing
this entirely. But more importantly, preserving everything is likely to
be the common case in a lot of scenarios, and it would be really good to
bypass all of the invalidation and preservation machinery there.
Avoiding calling N opaque functions to try to invalidate things that are
by definition still valid seems important. =]

This wasn't really inpsired by much other than seeing the spam in the
logging for analyses, but it seems better ot get it checked in rather
than forgetting about it.

llvm-svn: 225163
2015-01-05 12:32:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e5e8fb3bf6 [PM] Add names and debug logging for analysis passes to the new pass
manager.

This starts to allow us to test analyses more easily, but it's really
only the beginning. Some of the code here is still untestable without
manual changes to create analysis passes, but I wanted to factor it into
a small of chunks as possible.

Next up in order to be able to test things are, in no particular order:
- No-op analyses passes so we don't have to use real ones to exercise
  the pass maneger itself.
- Automatic way of generating dummy passes that require an analysis be
  run, including a variant that calls a 'print' method on a pass to make
  it even easier to print out the results of an analysis.
- Dummy passes that invalidate all analyses for their IR unit so we can
  test invalidation and re-runs.
- Automatic way to print each analysis pass as it is re-run.
- Automatic but optional verification of analysis passes everywhere
  possible.

I'm not claiming I'll get to all of these immediately, but that's what
is in the pipeline at some stage. I'm fleshing out exactly what I need
and what to prioritize by working on converting analyses and then trying
to test the conversion. =]

llvm-svn: 225162
2015-01-05 12:21:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9c31db4f94 [PM] Wire up support for explicitly running the verifier pass.
The required functionality has been there for some time, but I never
managed to actually wire it into the command line registry of passes.
Let's do that.

llvm-svn: 225144
2015-01-05 00:08:53 +00:00
Jordan Rose ef78038775 [lit] Parse all strings as UTF-8 rather than ASCII.
As far as I can tell UTF-8 has been supported since the beginning of Python's
codec support, and it's the de facto standard for text these days, at least
for primarily-English text. This allows us to put Unicode into lit RUN lines.

rdar://problem/18311663

llvm-svn: 217688
2014-09-12 16:46:05 +00:00
Jordan Rose 88eb534517 Teach llvm-bcanalyzer to use one stream's BLOCKINFO to read another stream.
This allows streams that only use BLOCKINFO for debugging purposes to omit
the block entirely. As long as another stream is available with the correct
BLOCKINFO, the first stream can still be analyzed and dumped.

As part of this commit, BitstreamReader gets a move constructor and move
assignment operator, as well as a takeBlockInfo method.

llvm-svn: 216826
2014-08-30 17:07:55 +00:00
Rafael Espindola f9e52cf015 Don't internalize all but main by default.
This is mostly a cleanup, but it changes a fairly old behavior.

Every "real" LTO user was already disabling the silly internalize pass
and creating the internalize pass itself. The difference with this
patch is for "opt -std-link-opts" and the C api.

Now to get a usable behavior out of opt one doesn't need the funny
looking command line:

opt -internalize -disable-internalize -internalize-public-api-list=foo,bar -std-link-opts

llvm-svn: 214919
2014-08-05 20:10:38 +00:00
David Majnemer d1bea693e2 IR: Fold away compares between GV GEPs and GVs
A GEP of a non-weak global variable will not be equivalent to another
non-weak global variable or a GEP of such a variable.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4238

llvm-svn: 212360
2014-07-04 22:05:26 +00:00
Kevin Enderby 4fc2edb023 Change the default input for llvm-nm to be a.out instead of standard input
to match llvm-size and other UNIX systems for their nm(1).

Tweak test cases that used llvm-nm with standard input to add a "-" to
indicate that and add a test case to check the default of a.out for llvm-nm.

llvm-svn: 211529
2014-06-23 20:27:53 +00:00
Jingyue Wu baabe5091c Canonicalize addrspacecast ConstExpr between different pointer types
As a follow-up to r210375 which canonicalizes addrspacecast
instructions, this patch canonicalizes addrspacecast constant
expressions.

Given clang uses ConstantExpr::getAddrSpaceCast to emit addrspacecast
cosntant expressions, this patch is also a step towards having the
frontend emit canonicalized addrspacecasts.

Piggyback a minor refactor in InstCombineCasts.cpp

Update three affected tests in addrspacecast-alias.ll,
access-non-generic.ll and constant-fold-gep.ll and added one new test in
constant-fold-address-space-pointer.ll

llvm-svn: 211004
2014-06-15 21:40:57 +00:00
Alp Toker d3d017cf00 Reduce verbiage of lit.local.cfg files
We can just split targets_to_build in one place and make it immutable.

llvm-svn: 210496
2014-06-09 22:42:55 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 6b238633b7 Fix most of PR10367.
This patch changes the design of GlobalAlias so that it doesn't take a
ConstantExpr anymore. It now points directly to a GlobalObject, but its type is
independent of the aliasee type.

To avoid changing all alias related tests in this patches, I kept the common
syntax

@foo = alias i32* @bar

to mean the same as now. The cases that used to use cast now use the more
general syntax

@foo = alias i16, i32* @bar.

Note that GlobalAlias now behaves a bit more like GlobalVariable. We
know that its type is always a pointer, so we omit the '*'.

For the bitcode, a nice surprise is that we were writing both identical types
already, so the format change is minimal. Auto upgrade is handled by looking
through the casts and no new fields are needed for now. New bitcode will
simply have different types for Alias and Aliasee.

One last interesting point in the patch is that replaceAllUsesWith becomes
smart enough to avoid putting a ConstantExpr in the aliasee. This seems better
than checking and updating every caller.

A followup patch will delete getAliasedGlobal now that it is redundant. Another
patch will add support for an explicit offset.

llvm-svn: 209007
2014-05-16 19:35:39 +00:00
Diego Novillo dd49157db1 Do not make -pass-remarks additive.
Summary:
When I initially introduced -pass-remarks, I thought it would be a
neat idea to make it additive. So, if one used it as:

$ llc -pass-remarks=inliner --pass-remarks=loop.*

the compiler would build the regular expression '(inliner)|(loop.*)'.

The more I think about it, the more I regret it. This is not how
other flags work. The standard semantics are right-to-left overrides.

This is how clang interprets -Rpass. And I think the two should be
compatible in this respect.

Reviewers: qcolombet

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3614

llvm-svn: 208122
2014-05-06 19:14:00 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 572e3407c3 [PM] Add a new-PM-style CGSCC pass manager using the newly added
LazyCallGraph analysis framework. Wire it up all the way through the opt
driver and add some very basic testing that we can build pass pipelines
including these components. Still a lot more to do in terms of testing
that all of this works, but the basic pieces are here.

There is a *lot* of boiler plate here. It's something I'm going to
actively look at reducing, but I don't have any immediate ideas that
don't end up making the code terribly complex in order to fold away the
boilerplate. Until I figure out something to minimize the boilerplate,
almost all of this is based on the code for the existing pass managers,
copied and heavily adjusted to suit the needs of the CGSCC pass
management layer.

The actual CG management still has a bunch of FIXMEs in it. Notably, we
don't do *any* updating of the CG as it is potentially invalidated.
I wanted to get this in place to motivate the new analysis, and add
update APIs to the analysis and the pass management layers in concert to
make sure that the *right* APIs are present.

llvm-svn: 206745
2014-04-21 11:12:00 +00:00
Diego Novillo c6574c1aa3 Add -pass-remarks flag to 'opt'.
Summary:
This adds support in 'opt' to filter pass remarks emitted by
optimization passes. A new flag -pass-remarks specifies which
passes should emit a diagnostic when LLVMContext::emitOptimizationRemark
is invoked.

This will allow the front end to simply pass along the regular
expression from its own -Rpass flag when launching the backend.

Depends on D3227.

Reviewers: qcolombet

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3291

llvm-svn: 205775
2014-04-08 16:42:38 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4d35631a6c [PM] Wire up the Verifier for the new pass manager and connect it to the
various opt verifier commandline options.

Mostly mechanical wiring of the verifier to the new pass manager.
Exercises one of the more unusual aspects of it -- a pass can be either
a module or function pass interchangably. If this is ever problematic,
we can make things more constrained, but for things like the verifier
where there is an "obvious" applicability at both levels, it seems
convenient.

This is the next-to-last piece of basic functionality left to make the
opt commandline driving of the new pass manager minimally functional for
testing and further development. There is still a lot to be done there
(notably the factoring into .def files to kill the current boilerplate
code) but it is relatively uninteresting. The only interesting bit left
for minimal functionality is supporting the registration of analyses.
I'm planning on doing that on top of the .def file switch mostly because
the boilerplate for the analyses would be significantly worse.

llvm-svn: 199646
2014-01-20 11:34:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b7bdfd65ac [PM] Wire up support for writing bitcode with new PM.
This moves the old pass creation functionality to its own header and
updates the callers of that routine. Then it adds a new PM supporting
bitcode writer to the header file, and wires that up in the opt tool.
A test is added that round-trips code into bitcode and back out using
the new pass manager.

llvm-svn: 199078
2014-01-13 07:38:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b353c3f7f2 [PM] Wire up support for printing assembly output from the opt command.
This lets us round-trip IR in the expected manner with the opt tool.

llvm-svn: 199075
2014-01-13 05:16:45 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 52eef8876e [PM] Add module and function printing passes for the new pass manager.
This implements the legacy passes in terms of the new ones. It adds
basic testing using explicit runs of the passes. Next up will be wiring
the basic output mechanism of opt up when the new pass manager is
engaged unless bitcode writing is requested.

llvm-svn: 199049
2014-01-12 12:15:39 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 6546cb6313 [PM] Fix a bunch of bugs I spotted by inspection when working on this
code. Copious tests added to cover these cases.

llvm-svn: 199039
2014-01-12 10:02:02 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d833098d17 [PM] Add support for parsing function passes and function pass manager
nests to the opt commandline support. This also showcases the
implicit-initial-manager support which will be most useful for testing.
There are several bugs that I spotted by inspection here that I'll fix
with test cases in subsequent commits.

llvm-svn: 199038
2014-01-12 09:34:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 258dbb3b12 [PM] Actually nest pass managers correctly when parsing the pass
pipeline string. Add tests that cover this now that we have execution
dumping in the pass managers.

llvm-svn: 199005
2014-01-11 12:06:47 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 66445382ff [PM] Add (very skeletal) support to opt for running the new pass
manager. I cannot emphasize enough that this is a WIP. =] I expect it
to change a great deal as things stabilize, but I think its really
important to get *some* functionality here so that the infrastructure
can be tested more traditionally from the commandline.

The current design is looking something like this:

  ./bin/opt -passes='module(pass_a,pass_b,function(pass_c,pass_d))'

So rather than custom-parsed flags, there is a single flag with a string
argument that is parsed into the pass pipeline structure. This makes it
really easy to have nice structural properties that are very explicit.
There is one obvious and important shortcut. You can start off the
pipeline with a pass, and the minimal context of pass managers will be
built around the entire specified pipeline. This makes the common case
for tests super easy:

  ./bin/opt -passes=instcombine,sroa,gvn

But this won't introduce any of the complexity of the fully inferred old
system -- we only ever do this for the *entire* argument, and we only
look at the first pass. If the other passes don't fit in the pass
manager selected it is a hard error.

The other interesting aspect here is that I'm not relying on any
registration facilities. Such facilities may be unavoidable for
supporting plugins, but I have alternative ideas for plugins that I'd
like to try first. My plan is essentially to build everything without
registration until we hit an absolute requirement.

Instead of registration of pass names, there will be a library dedicated
to parsing pass names and the pass pipeline strings described above.
Currently, this is directly embedded into opt for simplicity as it is
very early, but I plan to eventually pull this into a library that opt,
bugpoint, and even Clang can depend on. It should end up as a good home
for things like the existing PassManagerBuilder as well.

There are a bunch of FIXMEs in the code for the parts of this that are
just stubbed out to make the patch more incremental. A quick list of
what's coming up directly after this:
- Support for function passes and building the structured nesting.
- Support for printing the pass structure, and FileCheck tests of all of
  this code.
- The .def-file based pass name parsing.
- IR priting passes and the corresponding tests.

Some obvious things that I'm not going to do right now, but am
definitely planning on as the pass manager work gets a bit further:
- Pull the parsing into library, including the builders.
- Thread the rest of the target stuff into the new pass manager.
- Wire support for the new pass manager up to llc.
- Plugin support.

Some things that I'd like to have, but are significantly lower on my
priority list. I'll get to these eventually, but they may also be places
where others want to contribute:
- Adding nice error reporting for broken pass pipeline descriptions.
- Typo-correction for pass names.

llvm-svn: 198998
2014-01-11 08:16:35 +00:00
Yuchen Wu 5936caa18a Removed llvm-cov.test from Other folder.
More comprehensive llvm-cov tests were added to tools/llvm-cov.

llvm-svn: 197175
2013-12-12 20:29:54 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 6597992c69 Add a fixed version of r195470 back.
The fix is simply to use CurI instead of I when handling aliases to
avoid accessing a invalid iterator.

original message:

Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong.

Also refactor the logic into a helper function. This is an important improve
on mingw where the linker complains about mixed weak and strong symbols.
Converting to weak ensures that the symbol is not dropped, but keeps in a
comdat, making the linker happy.

llvm-svn: 195477
2013-11-22 17:58:12 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 77aa674cc4 Revert "Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong."
This reverts commit r195470.
Debugging failure in some bots.

llvm-svn: 195472
2013-11-22 17:09:34 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 5574032575 Convert linkonce* to weak* instead of strong.
Also refactor the logic into a helper function. This is an important improvement
on mingw where the linker complains about mixed weak and strong symbols.
Converting to weak ensures that the symbol is not dropped, but keeps in a
comdat, making the linker happy.

llvm-svn: 195470
2013-11-22 16:14:30 +00:00
Matt Arsenault b03bd4d96b Add addrspacecast instruction.
Patch by Michele Scandale!

llvm-svn: 194760
2013-11-15 01:34:59 +00:00
Alp Toker a2f1b8d238 Provide a test input for opt
This was only working previously due to a quirk in the way lit
concatenates script commands.

llvm-svn: 194078
2013-11-05 13:57:34 +00:00
Alp Toker 0d44e49e92 Quote potential shell expansions found in tests
llvm-svn: 193558
2013-10-28 23:37:45 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 0328dfa6a4 llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Remove "XFAIL:win32". It reverts r173509.
"REQUIRES: shell" should cover if this failed.

llvm-svn: 193458
2013-10-26 02:50:14 +00:00
Bill Wendling 187d3ddc50 Update to remove the no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf flag if it was set to 'false'.
llvm-svn: 189068
2013-08-22 21:28:54 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 7a960a8455 Teach ConstantFolding about pointer address spaces
llvm-svn: 188831
2013-08-20 21:20:04 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 9efbedfd35 [tests] Cleanup initialization of test suffixes.
- Instead of setting the suffixes in a bunch of places, just set one master
   list in the top-level config. We now only modify the suffix list in a few
   suites that have one particular unique suffix (.ml, .mc, .yaml, .td, .py).

 - Aside from removing the need for a bunch of lit.local.cfg files, this enables
   4 tests that were inadvertently being skipped (one in
   Transforms/BranchFolding, a .s file each in DebugInfo/AArch64 and
   CodeGen/PowerPC, and one in CodeGen/SI which is now failing and has been
   XFAILED).

 - This commit also fixes a bunch of config files to use config.root instead of
   older copy-pasted code.

llvm-svn: 188513
2013-08-16 00:37:11 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 2a2a0973b8 Use pipefail when available.
This change makes test with RUN lines like
RUN: opt ... | FileCheck

fail if opt fails, even if it prints what FileCheck wants. Enabling this
found some interesting cases of broken tests that were not being noticed
because opt (or some other tool) was crashing late.

Pipefail is used when the shell supports it or when using the internal
python based tester.

llvm-svn: 187261
2013-07-26 22:32:58 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 8b01da4bd8 Windows/Path.inc: Introduce file_type::character_file and file_type::fifo_file in sys::fs::getStatus(HANDLE).
It fixes llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll on msys.

FIXME: Provide unittests.
llvm-svn: 186588
2013-07-18 17:00:54 +00:00
Reid Kleckner a73c7781bd [Support] Beef up and expose the response file parsing in llvm::cl
The plan is to use it for clang and lld.

Major behavior changes:
- We can now parse UTF-16 files that have a byte order mark.
- PR16209: Don't drop backslashes on the floor if they don't escape
  anything.

The actual parsing loop was based on code from Clang's driver.cpp,
although it's been rewritten to track its state with control flow rather
than state variables.

Reviewers: hans

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1170

llvm-svn: 186587
2013-07-18 16:52:05 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 047435e0bf llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Mark this as XFAIL on msys, since r186560.
sys::fs::status() doesn't work on pipes. Investigating.

llvm-svn: 186586
2013-07-18 15:38:50 +00:00
Rafael Espindola b4f7831320 XFAIL this test on mingw.
llvm-svn: 186444
2013-07-16 19:20:29 +00:00
Rafael Espindola e08b59f81d Create files with mode 666. This matches the behavior of other unix tools.
llvm-svn: 186414
2013-07-16 14:10:07 +00:00
Hal Finkel 94383e542b Move r186044 tests into CodeGen/X86
I had thought that these tests could be target-neutral, but in practice this is
not the case (on some targets, like Hexagon and Darwin), they trigger an assert
(a different assert than the one that r186044 fixes).

llvm-svn: 186051
2013-07-11 01:55:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel a2aeb8e8e1 Set REQUIRES shell on the test cases for r186044
Trying to fix the i686-mingw32 build.

llvm-svn: 186046
2013-07-10 23:25:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel 31ffcec999 XFAIL the test cases for r186044 on Hexagon
For some reason, the Hexagon backend does not reject these invalid static
initializer expressions, but instead crashes in AsmPrinter::EmitGlobalConstant.

llvm-svn: 186045
2013-07-10 23:11:14 +00:00
Hal Finkel b31366da82 Don't assert if we can't constant fold extract/insertvalue
A non-constant-foldable static initializer expression containing insertvalue or
extractvalue had been causing an assert:

  Constants.cpp:1971: Assertion `FC && "ExtractValue constant expr couldn't be
                                 folded!"' failed.

Now we report a more-sensible "Unsupported expression in static initializer"
error instead.

Fixes PR15417.

llvm-svn: 186044
2013-07-10 22:51:01 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 1be81b4d1c llvm/test/Other/llvm-cov.test: It requires +Asserts to let XFAILed.
llvm-svn: 185799
2013-07-08 08:44:24 +00:00
Matt Beaumont-Gay 8b30c13e12 (1) Add ".test" to test/Other/lit.local.cfg, so llvm-cov.test is actually run.
(2) Rename llvm-cov test inputs so the string "llvm-cov" doesn't get
substituted by lit within the input filenames on the RUN line.
(3) XFAIL llvm-cov.test because it asserts:
include/llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h:140: reference llvm::SmallVectorTemplateCommon<llvm::GCOVBlock *, void>::operator[](unsigned int) [T = llvm::GCOVBlock *]: Assertion `begin() + idx < end()' failed.

llvm-svn: 185358
2013-07-01 18:58:53 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 1c9de1f078 Suppress llvm/test/Other/can-execute.txt on msys bash.
llvm-svn: 184932
2013-06-26 10:56:44 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 81955cbcf5 Add a testcase for r184074.
llvm-svn: 184080
2013-06-17 14:00:41 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 0baf8f4279 Attributes: Don't print trailing whitespace on the function attribute comment.
llvm-svn: 179849
2013-04-19 11:43:21 +00:00
Lang Hames 30be8a30cc Check isDiscardableIfUnused, rather than hasLocalLinkage, when bumping
GlobalValue linkage up to ExternalLinkage in the ExtractGV pass. This
prevents linkonce and linkonce_odr symbols from being DCE'd.

llvm-svn: 176459
2013-03-04 22:40:44 +00:00
Meador Inge 9b47f6414b IR: Don't constant fold GEP bitcasts between different address spaces
PR15262 reported a bug where the following instruction:

  i8 getelementptr inbounds i8* bitcast ([4 x i8] addrspace(12)* @buf to i8*),
                                i32 2

was getting folded into:

  addrspace(12)* getelementptr inbounds ([4 x i8] addrspace(12)* @buf, i32 0,
                                        i32 2)

This caused instcombine to crash because the original instruction and
the folded instruction have different types.  The issue was fixed by
disallowing bitcasts between different address spaces to be folded away.

llvm-svn: 176156
2013-02-27 02:26:42 +00:00
Bill Wendling 90bc19cd91 Modify the LLVM assembly output so that it uses references to represent function attributes.
This makes the LLVM assembly look better. E.g.:

     define void @foo() #0 { ret void }
     attributes #0 = { nounwind noinline ssp }

llvm-svn: 175605
2013-02-20 07:21:42 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 1aa3784960 XFAIL close-stderr on win32
The test runner does not rewrite instances of /dev/null inside the
quoted sh command.  /dev/null does not exist, so opt will fail to open
it, and return a non-zero exit code.

llvm-svn: 173509
2013-01-25 22:12:54 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 619ca0dc40 llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Mark this as XFAIL:valgrind. We got 127 instead of 1 here.
llvm-svn: 172956
2013-01-20 03:35:39 +00:00
Rafael Espindola ff571cce2f Using "not grep" is brittle as the test passes if llvm-as fails.
Fix the testcase to be valid IL and uses FileCheck.
Thanks to NAKAMURA Takumi for noticing it.

llvm-svn: 168427
2012-11-21 14:17:23 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 472264c6b4 Revert r167836, "llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Mark it as XFAIL:mingw32 for now.", corresponding to r167849.
llvm-svn: 167876
2012-11-13 21:57:42 +00:00
Chad Rosier 379574fd20 Revert 167755/167760. We don't want to emit crash diagnostics on command-line syntax errors.
llvm-svn: 167849
2012-11-13 16:42:19 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 4fa2bd8c7a llvm/test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Mark it as XFAIL:mingw32 for now.
On MSYS, 70 is not seen, but 1.

r127726 should be reworked. Candidate options are;

  1) Use not exit(70), but _exit(70), in report_fatal_error().
  2) Return with _exit(70) in ~raw_ostream().

llvm-svn: 167836
2012-11-13 15:03:33 +00:00
Chad Rosier a458d88b21 Update test case for r167754/r167755.
llvm-svn: 167760
2012-11-12 21:51:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7ec5085e01 Revert the series of commits starting with r166578 which introduced the
getIntPtrType support for multiple address spaces via a pointer type,
and also introduced a crasher bug in the constant folder reported in
PR14233.

These commits also contained several problems that should really be
addressed before they are re-committed. I have avoided reverting various
cleanups to the DataLayout APIs that are reasonable to have moving
forward in order to reduce the amount of churn, and minimize the number
of commits that were reverted. I've also manually updated merge
conflicts and manually arranged for the getIntPtrType function to stay
in DataLayout and to be defined in a plausible way after this revert.

Thanks to Duncan for working through this exact strategy with me, and
Nick Lewycky for tracking down the really annoying crasher this
triggered. (Test case to follow in its own commit.)

After discussing with Duncan extensively, and based on a note from
Micah, I'm going to continue to back out some more of the more
problematic patches in this series in order to ensure we go into the
LLVM 3.2 branch with a reasonable story here. I'll send a note to
llvmdev explaining what's going on and why.

Summary of reverted revisions:

r166634: Fix a compiler warning with an unused variable.
r166607: Add some cleanup to the DataLayout changes requested by
         Chandler.
r166596: Revert "Back out r166591, not sure why this made it through
         since I cancelled the command. Bleh, sorry about this!
r166591: Delete a directory that wasn't supposed to be checked in yet.
r166578: Add in support for getIntPtrType to get the pointer type based
         on the address space.
llvm-svn: 167221
2012-11-01 08:07:29 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 7043858a5b Add -alias and -ralias options to match what we have for functions and
globals.

llvm-svn: 166909
2012-10-29 02:23:07 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 56183fbe78 llvm-extract changes linkages so that functions on both sides of the
split module can see each other. If it is keeping a symbol that already has
a non local linkage, it doesn't need to change it.

llvm-svn: 166908
2012-10-29 01:59:03 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 9d30d0fc67 llvm-extract was unable to handle aliases. It would leave a copy on the
output of both

llvm-extract foo.ll -func=bar
and
llvm-extract foo.ll -func=bar -delete

so the two new files could not be linked together anymore. With this change
alias are handled almost like functions and global variables. Almost because
with alias we cannot just clear the initializer/body, we have to create a new
declaration and replace the alias with it.

The net result is that now the output of the above commands can be linked
even if foo.ll has aliases.

llvm-svn: 166907
2012-10-29 00:27:55 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 4253bd8faf Change the internalize pass to internalize all symbols when given an empty
list of externals. This makes sense since a shared library with no symbols
can still be useful if it has static constructors.

llvm-svn: 166795
2012-10-26 18:47:48 +00:00
Micah Villmow 12d9127833 Add in support for getIntPtrType to get the pointer type based on the address space.
This checkin also adds in some tests that utilize these paths and updates some of the
clients.

llvm-svn: 166578
2012-10-24 15:52:52 +00:00
Rafael Espindola be5613c0a7 Enable response files in all tools. Patch by Liu, Yaxun (Sam). I have simplified
the test.

llvm-svn: 165535
2012-10-09 19:52:10 +00:00
Micah Villmow f611fcf2c3 Forgot the SPIR test case.
llvm-svn: 164949
2012-10-01 17:07:51 +00:00
Duncan Sands 5e561bbd5d Ignore apparent buffer overruns on external or weak globals. This is a major
source of false positives due to globals being declared in a header with some
kind of incomplete (small) type, but the actual definition being bigger.

llvm-svn: 164912
2012-09-30 07:30:10 +00:00
Duncan Sands a221eea7db Teach the 'lint' sanity checking pass to detect simple buffer overflows.
llvm-svn: 164671
2012-09-26 07:45:36 +00:00
Duncan Sands 3f4d0b1724 Change the way the lint sanity checking pass detects misaligned memory accesses.
Previously it was only be able to detect problems if the pointer was a numerical
value (eg inttoptr i32 1 to i32*), but not if it was an alloca or globa.  The
reason was the use of ComputeMaskedBits: imagine you have "alloca i8, align 2",
and ask ComputeMaskedBits what it knows about the bits of the alloca pointer.
It can tell you that the bottom bit is known zero (due to align 2) but it can't
tell you that bit 1 is known one.  That's because the address could be an even
multiple of 2 rather than an odd multiple, eg it might be a multiple of 4.  Thus
trying to use KnownOne is ineffective in the case of an alloca as it will never
have any bits set.  Instead look explicitly for constant offsets from allocas
and globals.

llvm-svn: 164595
2012-09-25 10:00:49 +00:00
Nick Lewycky c6b4f0310c Don't do actual work inside an assert statement. Fixes PR11760!
llvm-svn: 164474
2012-09-23 03:58:21 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer ef878a832b FileCheck: Fix off-by-one bug that made CHECK-NOT: ignore the next character after the colon.
llvm-svn: 164165
2012-09-18 20:51:39 +00:00
Jan Sjödin 4d0c299f39 Add hidden flag to exclude aliases from output.
llvm-svn: 164158
2012-09-18 18:47:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ff123d5c63 Fix the remaining TCL-style quotes found in the testsuite. This is
another mechanical change accomplished though the power of terrible Perl
scripts.

I have manually switched some "s to 's to make escaping simpler.

While I started this to fix tests that aren't run in all configurations,
the massive number of tests is due to a really frustrating fragility of
our testing infrastructure: things like 'grep -v', 'not grep', and
'expected failures' can mask broken tests all too easily.

Essentially, I'm deeply disturbed that I can change the testsuite so
radically without causing any change in results for most platforms. =/

llvm-svn: 159547
2012-07-02 19:09:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5da53436d5 Convert the uses of '|&' to use '2>&1 |' instead, which works on old
versions of Bash. In addition, I can back out the change to the lit
built-in shell test runner to support this.

This should fix the majority of fallout on Darwin, but I suspect there
will be a few straggling issues.

llvm-svn: 159544
2012-07-02 18:37:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 665c76bc52 The built-in shell test runner for some reason doesn't like the quoting
and multi-line nature of this test. I don't really feel like bugging
this kind of edge-case, so just put it on one line and use single
quotes. With this, every test *really* passes with the built-in shell
test runner.

llvm-svn: 159530
2012-07-02 13:35:01 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a5a29f970e Convert all tests using TCL-style quoting to use shell-style quoting.
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.

If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.

Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.

Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s

llvm-svn: 159525
2012-07-02 12:47:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d8c08c2111 Teach the 'opt' tool about '-Os' and '-Oz', corresponding to the Clang
options, to enable easier testing of the innards of LLVM that are
enabled by such optimization strategies.

Note that this doesn't provide the (much needed) function attribute
support for -Oz (as opposed to -Os), but still seems like a positive
step to better test the logic that Clang currently relies on.

Patch by Patrik Hägglund.

llvm-svn: 156913
2012-05-16 08:32:49 +00:00
Dan Gohman 1ccecdb2fd Reapply r155682, making constant folding more consistent, with a fix to work
properly with how the code handles all-undef PHI nodes.

llvm-svn: 155721
2012-04-27 17:50:22 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 6008dfdb70 Revert r155682, "Use ConstantExpr::getExtractElement when constant-folding vectors"
It broke stage2 build. stage1/clang sometimes crashed.

llvm-svn: 155699
2012-04-27 07:59:20 +00:00
Dan Gohman 90f3798f26 Use ConstantExpr::getExtractElement when constant-folding vectors
instead of getAggregateElement. This has the advantage of being
more consistent and allowing higher-level constant folding to
procede even if an inner extract element cannot be folded.

Make ConstantFoldInstruction call ConstantFoldConstantExpression
on the instruction's operands, making it more consistent with 
ConstantFoldConstantExpression itself. This makes sure that
ConstantExprs get TargetData-aware folding before being handed
off as operands for further folding.

This causes more expressions to be folded, but due to a known
shortcoming in constant folding, this currently has the side effect
of stripping a few more nuw and inbounds flags in the non-targetdata
side of constant-fold-gep.ll. This is mostly harmless.

This fixes rdar://11324230.

llvm-svn: 155682
2012-04-27 00:54:36 +00:00
Eli Bendersky f33086052d Continue cleanup of LIT, getting rid of the remaining artifacts from dejagnu
* Removed test/lib/llvm.exp - it is no longer needed 
* Deleted the dg.exp reading code from test/lit.cfg. There are no dg.exp files
  left in the test suite so this code is no longer required. test/lit.cfg is
  now much shorter and clearer 
* Removed a lot of duplicate code in lit.local.cfg files that need access to
  the root configuration, by adding a "root" attribute to the TestingConfig
  object. This attribute is dynamically computed to provide the same
  information as was previously provided by the custom getRoot functions. 
* Documented the config.root attribute in docs/CommandGuide/lit.pod

llvm-svn: 153408
2012-03-25 09:02:19 +00:00
Eli Bendersky 924f9a671d Replace all instances of dg.exp file with lit.local.cfg, since all tests are run with LIT now and now Dejagnu. dg.exp is no longer needed.
Patch reviewed by Daniel Dunbar. It will be followed by additional cleanup patches.

llvm-svn: 150664
2012-02-16 06:28:33 +00:00
Bill Wendling eb4adf3a27 Update test to new EH model.
llvm-svn: 149332
2012-01-31 02:04:20 +00:00
Manuel Klimek 3c2848ea31 Deleting the json-bench-test until I understand why it is flaky.
llvm-svn: 146821
2011-12-17 06:29:32 +00:00
Manuel Klimek 2c899a181c Adds a JSON parser and a benchmark (json-bench) to catch performance regressions.
llvm-svn: 146735
2011-12-16 13:09:10 +00:00
Eli Friedman ef7b2f2532 Fix test.
llvm-svn: 146642
2011-12-15 04:52:47 +00:00
Eli Friedman a45ab503f6 Make constant folding for GEPs a bit more aggressive.
llvm-svn: 146639
2011-12-15 04:33:48 +00:00
Chris Lattner 6a144a2227 Upgrade syntax of tests using volatile instructions to use 'load volatile' instead of 'volatile load', which is archaic.
llvm-svn: 145171
2011-11-27 06:54:59 +00:00
Bill Wendling e336599f6d Update to new EH scheme.
llvm-svn: 138906
2011-08-31 21:44:24 +00:00
Chris Lattner b1ed91f397 Land the long talked about "type system rewrite" patch. This
patch brings numerous advantages to LLVM.  One way to look at it
is through diffstat:
 109 files changed, 3005 insertions(+), 5906 deletions(-)

Removing almost 3K lines of code is a good thing.  Other advantages
include:

1. Value::getType() is a simple load that can be CSE'd, not a mutating
   union-find operation.
2. Types a uniqued and never move once created, defining away PATypeHolder.
3. Structs can be "named" now, and their name is part of the identity that
   uniques them.  This means that the compiler doesn't merge them structurally
   which makes the IR much less confusing.
4. Now that there is no way to get a cycle in a type graph without a named
   struct type, "upreferences" go away.
5. Type refinement is completely gone, which should make LTO much MUCH faster
   in some common cases with C++ code.
6. Types are now generally immutable, so we can use "Type *" instead 
   "const Type *" everywhere.

Downsides of this patch are that it removes some functions from the C API,
so people using those will have to upgrade to (not yet added) new API.  
"LLVM 3.0" is the right time to do this.

There are still some cleanups pending after this, this patch is large enough
as-is.

llvm-svn: 134829
2011-07-09 17:41:24 +00:00
Galina Kistanova 60e17fe806 Move platform-dependent test to appropriate directory.
llvm-svn: 131302
2011-05-13 19:45:05 +00:00
Stuart Hastings 114ecbd0f4 Move this test to CodeGen/Thumb. rdar://problem/9416774
llvm-svn: 131196
2011-05-11 19:41:28 +00:00
Stuart Hastings c7c465c573 Reduced test case. rdar://problem/9416774
llvm-svn: 131191
2011-05-11 17:29:25 +00:00
Stuart Hastings e1d075f2aa And lo, I was given a testcase for 131152. rdar://problem/9416774
llvm-svn: 131184
2011-05-11 16:00:21 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 2a61f4e364 test/Other/close-stderr.ll: Require the feature 'shell'. It is not executable on Win32 but it is executable on MSYS-bash.
llvm-svn: 121105
2010-12-07 02:43:58 +00:00
Dan Gohman 02538ac4d3 Make BasicAliasAnalysis a normal AliasAnalysis implementation which
does normal initialization and normal chaining. Change the default
AliasAnalysis implementation to NoAlias.

Update StandardCompileOpts.h and friends to explicitly request
BasicAliasAnalysis.

Update tests to explicitly request -basicaa.

llvm-svn: 116720
2010-10-18 18:04:47 +00:00
Devang Patel 57da4caa85 Remove LoopIndexSplit pass. It is neither maintained nor used by anyone.
llvm-svn: 116004
2010-10-07 23:29:37 +00:00
Bob Wilson 3aecb15f0a Fix llvm-extract so that it changes the linkage of all GlobalValues to
"external" even when doing lazy bitcode loading.  This was broken because
a function that is not materialized fails the !isDeclaration() test.

llvm-svn: 114666
2010-09-23 17:25:06 +00:00
Dan Gohman 0d2c07cf58 Fix llvm-extract -delete's lazy loading to materialize the functions that
will not be deleted, rather than the ones that will.

llvm-svn: 114614
2010-09-23 00:33:13 +00:00
Jakob Stoklund Olesen 728941fabc XFAIL test under valgrind. It is not really our problem if sh is leaking.
llvm-svn: 113550
2010-09-09 22:02:13 +00:00
Chris Lattner 13ee795c42 remove unions from LLVM IR. They are severely buggy and not
being actively maintained, improved, or extended.

llvm-svn: 112356
2010-08-28 04:09:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ebf42ac831 Try to escape the '$'s in these so they reach the underlying 'sh' invocation.
I have no idea how lit did the right thing here, but other test runners don't.

llvm-svn: 111805
2010-08-23 08:54:19 +00:00
Dan Gohman 492c2ea31e Add a testcase to verify that commands don't crash when they hit
errors on stderr.

llvm-svn: 111440
2010-08-18 22:35:56 +00:00
Dan Gohman fb83b043eb Revert r111058, the lint check for indirectbr successors that aren't
address-taken. This can occur normally, if the code which took the
address got DCEd.

llvm-svn: 111121
2010-08-16 14:39:19 +00:00
Dan Gohman 21e6dc6aa3 Add a lint check for an indirectbr destination which has not
had its address taken.

llvm-svn: 111058
2010-08-13 23:56:28 +00:00
Dan Gohman d8968da2c5 Add a lint check for indirectbr with no successors.
llvm-svn: 110074
2010-08-02 23:06:43 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer d9624e2d2e Remove XFAIL, test doesn't leak anymore.
llvm-svn: 109801
2010-07-29 20:36:36 +00:00
Dan Gohman c128e70ff2 Add a lint check for mismatched return types, inspired by PR6944.
llvm-svn: 108162
2010-07-12 18:02:04 +00:00
Dan Gohman 559020df1d Don't write a file named "&1".
llvm-svn: 106269
2010-06-18 01:49:17 +00:00
Dan Gohman 0fa67e479a Add lint checks for function attributes.
llvm-svn: 105009
2010-05-28 21:43:57 +00:00
Dan Gohman c575ec61ea Fix lint's memcpy and memmove checks, and its basic block traversal.
llvm-svn: 104970
2010-05-28 17:44:00 +00:00
Dan Gohman 862f034188 Detect self-referential values.
llvm-svn: 104957
2010-05-28 16:45:33 +00:00
Dan Gohman 672393f6c7 Remove this va_arg test, which is no longer applicable.
llvm-svn: 104956
2010-05-28 16:44:04 +00:00
Dan Gohman cef9fc37f4 Eli pointed out that va_arg instruction result values don't
reference the stack.

llvm-svn: 104951
2010-05-28 16:34:49 +00:00
Dan Gohman 54d7aaa819 Teach lint how to look through simple store+load pairs and other
effective no-op constructs, to make it more effective on
unoptimized IR.

llvm-svn: 104950
2010-05-28 16:21:24 +00:00
Dan Gohman ddba4b725a Add a lint check for returning the address of stack memory.
llvm-svn: 104936
2010-05-28 04:33:42 +00:00
Gabor Greif 38303d7e3b rename test to represent meaningful date
llvm-svn: 104831
2010-05-27 09:32:38 +00:00
Dan Gohman a20a5cd24f Reinstate checking of stackrestore, with checking for both Read
and Write, and add a comment explaining this.

llvm-svn: 104756
2010-05-26 22:21:25 +00:00