The Use argument was used to compute the operand number for a fast
path when replacing only one operand. However we always have to go
through all the operands. So the argument number can be recomputed
locally anyway.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 260454
Summary:
GEPOperator: provide getResultElementType alongside getSourceElementType.
This is made possible by adding a result element type field to GetElementPtrConstantExpr, which GetElementPtrInst already has.
GEP: replace get(Pointer)ElementType uses with get{Source,Result}ElementType.
Reviewers: mjacob, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16275
llvm-svn: 258145
I believe in one place we were always casting to ExtractValueConstantExpr when we were trying to choose between ExtractValueConstantExpr and InsertValueConstantExpr because of this. But since they have identical layouts this didn't cause any observable problems.
llvm-svn: 255624
The ConstantDataArray::getFP(LLVMContext &, ArrayRef<uint16_t>)
overload has had a typo in it since it was written, where it will
create a Vector instead of an Array. This obviously doesn't work at
all, but it turns out that until r254991 there weren't actually any
callers of this overload. Fix the typo and add some test coverage.
llvm-svn: 255157
Currently, vectors of halfs end up as ConstantVectors, but there isn't
a good reason they can't be ConstantDataVectors. This should save some
memory.
llvm-svn: 254991
ConstantDataArray::getImpl and ConstantDataVector::getImpl had a lot
of copy pasta in how they handled sequences of constants. Break that
out into a couple of simple functions.
llvm-svn: 254456
Terrifyingly, one of them is a mishandling of floating point vectors
in Constant::isZero(). How exactly this issue survived this long
is beyond me.
llvm-svn: 253655
The way prelink used to work was
* The compiler decides if a given section only has relocations that
are know to point to the same DSO. If so, it names it
.data.rel.ro.local<something>.
* The static linker puts all of these together.
* The prelinker program assigns addresses to each library and resolves
the local relocations.
There are many problems with this:
* It is incompatible with address space randomization.
* The information passed by the compiler is redundant. The linker
knows if a given relocation is in the same DSO or not. If could sort
by that if so desired.
* There are newer ways of speeding up DSO (gnu hash for example).
* Even if we want to implement this again in the compiler, the previous
implementation is pretty broken. It talks about relocations that are
"resolved by the static linker". If they are resolved, there are none
left for the prelinker. What one needs to track is if an expression
will require only dynamic relocations that point to the same DSO.
At this point it looks like the prelinker is an historical curiosity.
For example, fedora has retired it because it failed to build for two
releases
(http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/prelink.git/commit/?id=eb43100a8331d91c801ee3dcdb0a0bb9babfdc1f)
This patch removes support for it. That is, it stops printing the
".local" sections.
llvm-svn: 253280
When working with tokens, it is often the case that one has instructions
which consume a token and produce a new token. Currently, we have no
mechanism to represent an initial token state.
Instead, we can create a notional "empty token" by inventing a new
constant which captures the semantics we would like. This new constant
is called ConstantTokenNone and is written textually as "token none".
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14581
llvm-svn: 252811
Gets a bit tricky in the ValueMapper, of course - not sure if we should
just expose a list of explicit types for each Value so that the
ValueMapper can be neutral to these special cases (it's OK for things
like load, where the explicit type is the result type - but when that's
not the case, it means plumbing through another "special" type... )
llvm-svn: 245728
This is part of the work to devirtualize Value.
The old pattern was to call replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant which was overridden by
subclasses. Those could then call replaceUsesOfWithOnConstantImpl on Constant
to handle deleting the current value.
To be consistent with other parts of the code, this has been changed so that we
call the method on Constant, and that dispatches to an Impl on subclasses.
As part of this, it made sense to rename the methods to be more descriptive. The
new name is Constant::handleOperandChange, and it requires that all subclasses of
Constant implement handleOperandChangeImpl, even if they just throw an error if
they shouldn't be called.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 240567
This reorganizes destroyConstant and destroyConstantImpl.
Now there is only destroyConstant in Constant itself, while
subclasses are required to implement destroyConstantImpl.
destroyConstantImpl no longer calls delete but is instead only
responsible for removing the constant from any maps in which it
is contained.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 240471
We don't want anyone to access OperandList directly as its going to be removed
and computed instead. This uses getter's and setter's instead in which we
can later change the underlying implementation of OperandList.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 239620
The raw non-instruction/constant form of this is still relying on being
able to access the pointee type from a pointer type - those will be
cleaned up later. For now, just focus on the cases where the pointee
type is easily accessible.
llvm-svn: 237958
Clang regressions were caused by more stringent assertion checking
introduced by this change. Small fix needed to clang has been committed
in r236751.
llvm-svn: 236752
Require the pointee type to be passed explicitly and assert that it is
correct. For now it's possible to pass nullptr here (and I've done so in
a few places in this patch) but eventually that will be disallowed once
all clients have been updated or removed. It'll be a long road to get
all the way there... but if you have the cahnce to update your callers
to pass the type explicitly without depending on a pointer's element
type, that would be a good thing to do soon and a necessary thing to do
eventually.
llvm-svn: 233938
This pushes the use of PointerType::getElementType up into several
callers - I'll essentially just have to keep pushing that up the stack
until I can eliminate every call to it...
llvm-svn: 233604
I'm just going to migrate these in a pretty ad-hoc & incremental way -
providing the backwards compatible API for now, then locally removing
it, fixing a few callers, adding it back in and commiting those callers.
Rinse, repeat.
The assertions should ensure that if I get this wrong we'll find out
about it and not just have one giant patch to revert, recommit, revert,
recommit, etc.
llvm-svn: 232240
We didn't properly handle the out-of-bounds case for
ConstantAggregateZero and UndefValue. This would manifest as a crash
when the constant folder was asked to fold a load of a constant global
whose struct type has no operands.
This fixes PR22595.
llvm-svn: 229352
Required some APInt massaging to get proper empty/tombstone values. Apart
from making the code a bit simpler this also reduces the bucket size of
the ConstantInt map from 32 to 24 bytes.
llvm-svn: 223478
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.
This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...
llvm-svn: 222334
Having two ways to do this doesn't seem terribly helpful and
consistently using the insert version (which we already has) seems like
it'll make the code easier to understand to anyone working with standard
data structures. (I also updated many references to the Entry's
key and value to use first() and second instead of getKey{Data,Length,}
and get/setValue - for similar consistency)
Also removes the GetOrCreateValue functions so there's less surface area
to StringMap to fix/improve/change/accommodate move semantics, etc.
llvm-svn: 222319
Windows defines NULL to 0, which when used as an argument to a variadic
function, is not a null pointer constant. As a result, Clang's
-Wsentinel fires on this code. Using '0' would be wrong on most 64-bit
platforms, but both MSVC and Clang make it work on Windows. Sidestep the
issue with nullptr.
llvm-svn: 221940
Change `ConstantExpr` to follow the model the other constants are using:
only malloc a replacement if it's going to be used. This fixes a subtle
bug where if an API user had used `ConstantExpr::get()` already to
create the replacement but hadn't given it any users, we'd delete the
replacement.
This relies on r216015 to thread `OnlyIfReduced` through
`ConstantExpr::getWithOperands()`.
llvm-svn: 216016
In order to change `ConstantExpr::replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant()` to work
like other constants (e.g., using `ConstantArray::getImpl()`), thread
`OnlyIfReduced` through as necessary. When `OnlyIfReduced` is false,
there's no functionality change. When it's true, if there's no constant
folding or type changes `nullptr` is returned instead of the new
constant.
`ConstantExpr::replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant()` will be updated to use the
"true" version in a follow-up commit.
llvm-svn: 216015