Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nico Weber bdc969839a Include translation unit filename in global ctor symbol names.
This makes it easier to see where a global ctor comes from, and it also makes
ASan's init order analyzer output easier to understand.  gcc does this too,
but only in -fPIC mode for some reason.  Don't do this for constructors with
explicit init priority.

Also prepend "sub_" before the 'I', that way regular constructors stay
lexicographically after symbols with init priority (because
ord('s') > ord('I')).  gold seems to ignore the name of constructor symbols,
and ld only looks at the symbol if it includes an init priority, which this
patch doesn't change.

Before: __GLOBAL_I_a
Now: __GLOBAL_sub_I_myfile.cc
llvm-svn: 208128
2014-05-06 20:32:45 +00:00
Stephen Lin 4362261b00 CHECK-LABEL-ify some code gen tests to improve diagnostic experience when tests fail.
llvm-svn: 188447
2013-08-15 06:47:53 +00:00
John McCall 882987f30c Use the actual ABI-determined C calling convention for runtime
calls and declarations.

LLVM has a default CC determined by the target triple.  This is
not always the actual default CC for the ABI we've been asked to
target, and so we sometimes find ourselves annotating all user
functions with an explicit calling convention.  Since these
calling conventions usually agree for the simple set of argument
types passed to most runtime functions, using the LLVM-default CC
in principle has no effect.  However, the LLVM optimizer goes
into histrionics if it sees this kind of formal CC mismatch,
since it has no concept of CC compatibility.  Therefore, if this
module happens to define the "runtime" function, or got LTO'ed
with such a definition, we can miscompile;  so it's quite
important to get this right.

Defining runtime functions locally is quite common in embedded
applications.

llvm-svn: 176286
2013-02-28 19:01:20 +00:00