typedef int functype(int, int);
functype func;
also instantiate the synthesized function parameters for the resulting
function declaration.
With this change, Boost.Wave builds and passes all of its regression
tests.
llvm-svn: 103025
instructions which have no direct register usage.
Darwin 'as' accepts:
add $0, (%rax)
but rejects
mov $0, (%rax)
for example.
Given that, only accept suffix matches which match exactly one form. We still
need to emit nice diagnostics for failures...
llvm-svn: 103015
printed in a diagnostic, similar to the limit we already have on the
depth of the template instantiation backtrace. The macro instantiation
backtrace is limited to 10 "instantiated from:" diagnostics; when it's
longer than that, we'll show the first half, then say how many were
suppressed, then show the second half. The limit can be changed with
-fmacro-instantiation-limit=N, and turned off with N=0.
This eliminates a lot of note spew with libraries making use of the
Boost.Preprocess library.
llvm-svn: 103014
- The idea is that when a match fails, we just try to match each of +'b', +'w',
+'l'. If exactly one matches, we assume this is a mnemonic prefix and accept
it. If all match, we assume it is width generic, and take the 'l' form.
- This would be a horrible hack, if it weren't so simple. Therefore it is an
elegant solution! Chris gets the credit for this particular elegant
solution. :)
- Next step to making this more robust is to have the X86 matcher generate the
mnemonic prefix information. Ideally we would also compute up-front exactly
which mnemonic to attempt to match, but this may require more custom code in
the matcher than is really worth it.
llvm-svn: 103012
implicitly-defined copy assignment operator, suppress the protected
access check. This eliminates the remaining failure in the
Boost.SmartPtr library (that was a product of the copy-assignment
generation rewrite) and, presumably, the Boost.TR1 library as well.
llvm-svn: 103010
buildbot: the debugging and non-debugging versions of getFunction were not
functionally equivalent: the non-debugging version wrongly assumed that if a
metadata operand was not metadata, then it had a non-null containing function.
This is not true, since the operand might be a global value, constant etc.
llvm-svn: 103008
RAUW of a global variable with a local variable in function F,
if function local metadata M in function G was using the global
then M would become function-local to both F and G, which is not
allowed. See the testcase for an example. Fixed by detecting
this situation and zapping the metadata operand when it occurs.
llvm-svn: 103007
not just the inner expression. This is important if the expression has any
temporaries. Fixes PR 7028.
Basically a symptom of really tragic method names.
llvm-svn: 102998
update the big red warning at the top. Most of the old content remains
and awaits revision.
Clear out the API changes section, and start it up again with a
mention of the add->fadd transition.
llvm-svn: 102977
friend function template, be sure to adjust the computed template
argument lists based on the location of the definition of the function
template: it's possible that the definition we're instantiating with
and the template declaration that we found when creating the
specialization are in different contexts, which meant that we would
end up using the wrong template arguments for instantiation.
Fixes PR7013; all Boost.DynamicBitset tests now pass.
llvm-svn: 102974
to fadd, fsub, and fmul, when used with a floating-point type. LLVM
has supported the new instructions since 2.6, so it's time to get
on board.
llvm-svn: 102971
debug output is showing machine instructions, the IR-level basic block names
aren't very meaningful, and because multiple machine basic blocks may be
derived from one IR-level BB, they're also not unique.
llvm-svn: 102960
instructions as the Mac OS X darwin assembler. Some of which like 'fcoml'
assembled to different opcodes. While some of the suffixes were just different.
llvm-svn: 102958