"Allow LanguageRuntimes to return an error if they fail in the course of dynamic type discovery
This is not meant to report that a value doesn't have a dynamic type - it is only meant as a mechanism to propagate actual type discovery issues (e.g. malformed type metadata for languages that have such a notion)
This information is used by ValueObjectDynamic to set its own m_error, which is a fairly sharp and heavyweight tool to begin with
For the time being, this is an architectural improvement but a practical no-op as no existing runtimes are actually setting errors"
I need to think about what I want to do in this space more carefully - this attempt might be too heavy of a hammer for the nail I am trying to fix, and I don't want to leave it in while I ponder
llvm-svn: 268686
This reverts commit r268658.
I incorrectly diagnose this as the source of an assertion during an
LTO bootstrap of clang.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 268680
Summary: We need to clean up CFG before assigning discriminator to minimize the impact of optimization on debug info.
Reviewers: davidxl, dblaikie, dnovillo
Subscribers: dnovillo, danielcdh, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19926
llvm-svn: 268675
The assertions were assuming that the linker will not ask to preserve
a global that is internal or available_externally, as it does not
really make sense. In practice this break the bootstrap of clang,
I degrade to a warning for now.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 268671
Summary:
As per the discussion on LLVM-dev this patch proposes removing LLVM_ENABLE_TIMESTAMPS.
The only complicated bit of this patch is the Windows support. On windows we used to log an error if /INCREMENTAL was passed to the linker when timestamps were disabled.
With this change since timestamps in code are always disabled we will always compile on windows with /Brepro unless /INCREMENTAL is specified, and we will log a warning when /INCREMENTAL is specified to notify the user that the build will be non-deterministic.
See: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-May/098990.html
Reviewers: bogner, silvas, rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19892
llvm-svn: 268670
We were creating the copy relocations just fine, but then thinking that
the .bss position could be preempted and creating a dynamic relocation
to it, which would crash at runtime since that memory is read only.
llvm-svn: 268668
Given something like:
ldr r0, .LCPI0_0 (== pc-rel var)
add r0, pc
ldr r1, .LCPI0_1 (== pc-rel var)
add r1, pc
we cannot combine the 2 ldr instructions and litpools because they get added to
a different pc to form the correct address. I think the original logic came
from a time when we fused the LDRpci/PICADD instructions into one
pseudo-instruction so the PC was always immediately at-hand. That's no longer
the case.
Should fix general-dynamic TLS access on Linux, and quite possibly other -fPIC
code that relies on litpools (e.g. v6m and -Oz compilations) though trivial
tweaks of the .ll test didn't provoke anything.
llvm-svn: 268662
This change addresses a hang/segfault in TestEvents.py. The threads that
run the listener loops now do an SBListener.Clear() before they wrap up
their work. This prevents the test from trying to clean up the
SBListener too late.
There is a separate issue here which is that we should prevent this
clean-up time lock-up, but that is out of scope for this particular
change. I'd like to get these tests back and running the normal flow
rather than skipping them.
This addresses:
llvm.org/pr25924 (at least, the OS X side, although I suspect this will
also address Linux)
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19983
reviewed by: Jim Ingham
llvm-svn: 268653
load commands.
The existing test case in test/Object/macho-invalid.test for
macho-invalid-too-small-segment-load-command has a cmdsize of 55, while
being too small also it is not a multiple of 4. So when that check is added
this test case will produce a different error. So I constructed a new test case
that will trigger the intended error.
I also changed the error message to be consistent with the other malformed Mach-O
file error messages which prints the load command index. I also removed both
object_error::macho_load_segment_too_small and
object_error::macho_load_segment_too_many_sections from Object/Error.h
as they are not needed and can just use object_error::parse_failed and let the
error message string distinguish the specific error.
llvm-svn: 268652
Summary:
Discovered by Dave Airlie, fixes an assertion in Khronos OpenGL CTS
GL43-CTS.shader_storage_buffer_object.advanced-matrix.
In this particular case, the buffer load intrinsic fed into a uniform
conditional branch, and led the brcond lowering down the wrong path.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19931
llvm-svn: 268650
This allows the combined LTO object to provide a definition with the same
name as a symbol that was internalized without causing a duplicate symbol
error. This normally happens during parallel codegen which externalizes
originally-internal symbols, for example.
In order to make this work, I needed to relax the undefined symbol error to
only report an error for symbols that are used in regular objects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19954
llvm-svn: 268649
Summary:
Now that LLVM is emitting version 2 of the AMD code object, we can
start using lld again for linking instead of our custom tool.
Reviewers: arsenm, kzhuravl
Subscribers: rafael, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19952
llvm-svn: 268648
Summary:
Version 2 is now the default. If you want to emit version 1, use
the amdgcn--amdhsa-amdcov1 triple.
Reviewers: arsenm, kzhuravl
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19283
llvm-svn: 268647
ThinLTO is using the Module Identifier to find the corresponding entry
in the index. However when reproducing part of the flow from temporary
files generated from the linker, you'd like to process a file and
force llvm-lto to use another module identifier than the current
filename. The alternative would be to tweak the index, which would be
more involved.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 268643
This change removes the current timers with ones that partition time properly.
The current timers are nested, so that if a new timer, B, starts when the
current timer, A, is already timing, A's time will include B's. To eliminate
this problem, the partitioned timers are designed to stop the current timer (A),
let the new timer run (B), and when the new timer is finished, restart the
previously running timer (A). With this partitioning of time, a threads' timers
all sum up to the OMP_worker_thread_life time and can now easily show the
percentage of time a thread is spending in different parts of the runtime or
user code.
There is also a new state variable associated with each thread which tells where
it is executing a task. This corresponds with the timers: OMP_task_*, e.g., if
time is spent in OMP_task_taskwait, then that thread executed tasks inside a
#pragma omp taskwait construct.
The changes are mostly changing the MACROs to use the new PARITIONED_* macros,
the new partitionedTimers class and its methods, and new state logic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19229
llvm-svn: 268640