Our support for building for baremetal was conditional on a default
off arg and would have failed to build if you had somehow arranged
to pass the correct --target flag; presumably nobody noticed because
nobody was turning it on. A better approach is to model baremetal
as a separate "OS" called "baremetal" and build it in the same way
as we cross-compile for other targets. That's what this patch does.
I only hooked up the arm64 target but others can be added.
Relanding after fixing Mac build breakage in D123244.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122862
When cross-compiling from Mac to non-Mac, we need to use the just-built
llvm-ar instead of libtool. We're currently doing the right thing
when determining which archiver command to use, but the path to ar
and the toolchain dependencies were being set based on the host OS
(current_os evaluated in host OS toolchain), instead of the target
OS. Fix the problem by looking up current_os inside toolchain_args.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123244
Adds `mlirBlockDetach` to the CAPI to remove a block from its parent
region. Use it in the Python bindings to implement
`Block.append_to(region)`.
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123165
The demangler has a utility class 'SwapAndRestore'. That name is
confusing. It's not swapping anything, and the restore part happens at
the object's destruction. What it's actually doing is allowing a
override of some value that is dynamically accessible within the
lifetime of a lexical scope. Thus rename it to ScopedOverride, and
tweak it's member variable names.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122606
There are no such markings left - all of them have been fixed or
analyzed.
This closes llvm.org/PR32730 (github issue #32077).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123145
In COFF, the immediates in IMAGE_REL_ARM64_PAGEBASE_REL21 relocations
are limited to 21 bit signed, i.e. the offset has to be less than
(1 << 20). The previous limit did intend to cover for this case, but
had missed that the 21 bit field was signed.
This fixes issue https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/54753.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123160
This matches how another similar warning is silenced in
Host/posix/ProcessLauncherPosixFork.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123205
This silences warnings like this:
lldb/source/Core/DebuggerEvents.cpp: In member function ‘llvm::StringRef lldb_private::DiagnosticEventData::GetPrefix() const’:
lldb/source/Core/DebuggerEvents.cpp:55:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function [-Wreturn-type]
55 | }
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123203
If testing for a warning option like -Wno-<foo> with GCC, GCC won't
print any diagnostic at all, leading to the options being accepted
incorrectly. However later, if compiling a file that actually prints
another warning, GCC will also print warnings about these -Wno-<foo>
options being unrecognized.
This avoids warning spam like this, for every lldb source file that
produces build warnings with GCC:
At global scope:
cc1plus: warning: unrecognized command line option ‘-Wno-vla-extension’
cc1plus: warning: unrecognized command line option ‘-Wno-deprecated-register’
This matches how such warning options are detected and added in
llvm/cmake/modules/HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, e.g. like this:
check_cxx_compiler_flag("-Wclass-memaccess" CXX_SUPPORTS_CLASS_MEMACCESS_FLAG)
append_if(CXX_SUPPORTS_CLASS_MEMACCESS_FLAG "-Wno-class-memaccess" CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123202
Motivated by pr43326 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43326), where a slightly
modified case is as follows.
void f(int e[10][10][10], int f[10][10][10]) {
for (int a = 0; a < 10; a++)
for (int b = 0; b < 10; b++)
for (int c = 0; c < 10; c++)
f[c][b][a] = e[c][b][a];
}
The ideal optimal access pattern after running interchange is supposed to be the following
void f(int e[10][10][10], int f[10][10][10]) {
for (int c = 0; c < 10; c++)
for (int b = 0; b < 10; b++)
for (int a = 0; a < 10; a++)
f[c][b][a] = e[c][b][a];
}
Currently loop interchange is limited to picking up the innermost loop and finding an order
that is locally optimal for it. However, the pass failed to produce the globally optimal
loop access order. For more complex examples what we get could be quite far from the
globally optimal ordering.
What is proposed in this patch is to do a "bubble-sort" fashion when doing interchange.
By comparing neighbors in `LoopList` in each iteration, we would be able to move each loop
onto a most appropriate place, hence this is an approach that tries to achieve the
globally optimal ordering.
The motivating example above is added as a test case.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120386
In order to support quick arbitrary access to instructions in the trace, we need
each instruction to have an id. It could be an index or any other value that the
trace plugin defines.
This will be useful for reverse debugging or for creating callstacks, as each
frame will need an instruction id associated with them.
I've updated the `thread trace dump instructions` command accordingly. It now
prints the instruction id instead of relative offset. I've also added a new --id
argument that allows starting the dump from an arbitrary position.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122254
Add (partial) support for Objective-C category records in ExtractAPI.
The current ExtractAPI collects everything for an Objective-C category,
but not fully serialized in the SymbolGraphSerializer. Categories
extending external interfaces are disgarded during serialization, and
categories extending known interfaces are merged (all members surfaced)
into the interfaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122774
Typedef records consist of the symbol associated with the underlying
TypedefDecl and a SymbolReference to the underlying type. Additionally
typedefs for anonymous TagTypes use the typedef'd name as the symbol
name in their respective records and USRs. As a result the declaration
fragments for the anonymous TagType are those for the associated
typedef. This means that when the user is defining a typedef to a
typedef to a anonymous type, we use a reference the anonymous TagType
itself and do not emit the typedef to the anonymous type in the
generated symbol graph, including in the type destination of further
typedef symbol records.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123019
Note that the mangling has changed and the demangler's learnt a new
trick. Obviously dependent upon the mangler and demangler patches.
Reviewed By: bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123141
Normally, we place fields serving for debug purpose declarations
under `#if LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS`. For `SDNode::PersistentId` and
`SelectionDAG::NextPersistentId`, we do not want to do so because it adds
unneeded complexity without noticeable benefits (see discussion with @thakis
in D120714). This patch adds comments describing why we don't place those
fields under `#if` not to confuse anyone more.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123238
Our support for building for baremetal was conditional on a default
off arg and would have failed to build if you had somehow arranged
to pass the correct --target flag; presumably nobody noticed because
nobody was turning it on. A better approach is to model baremetal
as a separate "OS" called "baremetal" and build it in the same way
as we cross-compile for other targets. That's what this patch does.
I only hooked up the arm64 target but others can be added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122862
The VP path was using the split source VTs instead of the split
destination VTs. This may not be a problem today because the VP
nodes going through this have the same source and dest VTs.
It will be a problem when we start using this function for legalizing
VP cast operations.
This flag is present in MSVC's ml.exe to suppress copyright info output.
LLVM doesn't output copyright info, so this flag does nothing in
llvm-ml. We still add this flag though so that when llvm-ml is used as a
drop-in replacement for MSVC ml.exe, we don't get any extra warnings.
Furthermore, this behavior is also consistent with other llvm binaries
for Windows (e.g. clang-cl, llvm-mt, lld-link, etc.)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123068
This includes:
- replacing "relationhips" with "relationships"
- emitting the "pathComponents" property on symbols
- emitting the "accessLevel" property on symbols
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123045
GCC emits [some] static symbols with an 'L' mangling, which we attempt
to demangle. But the module mangling changes have exposed that we
were doing so at the wrong level. Such manglings are outside of the
ABI as they are internal-linkage, so a bit of reverse engineering was
needed. This adjusts the demangler along the same lines as the
existing gcc demangler (which is not yet module-aware). 'L' is part
of an unqualified name. As before we merely parse the 'L', and then
ignore it.
Reviewed By: iains
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123138
I saw the TODOs while reading this file and figured I'd do them.
I haven't seen these happen in practice.
No expected behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123215
STABS information consists of a list of records in the linked binary
that look like this:
OSO: path/to/some.o
SO: path/to/some.c
FUN: sym1
FUN: sym2
...
The linked binary has one such set of records for every .o file linked
into it.
When dsymutil processes the binary's STABS information, it:
1. Reads the .o file mentioned in the OSO line
2. For each FUN entry after it in the main executable's STABS info:
a) it looks up that symbol in the symbol of that .o file
b) if it doesn't find it there, it goes through all symbols in the
main binary at the same address and sees if any of those match
With ICF, ld64.lld's STABS output claims that all identical functions
that were folded are in the .o file of the one that's deemed the
canonical one. Many small functions might be folded into a single
function, so there are .o OSO entries that end up with many FUN lines,
but almost none of them exist in the .o file's symbol table.
Previously, dsymutil would do a full scan of all symbols in the main
executable _for every of these entries_.
This patch instead scans all aliases once and remembers them per name.
This reduces the alias resolution complexity from
O(number_of_aliases_in_o_file * number_of_symbols_in_main_executable) to
O(number_of_aliases_in_o_file * log(number_of_aliases_in_o_file)).
In practice, it reduces the time spent to run dsymutil on
Chromium Framework from 26 min (after https://reviews.llvm.org/D89444)
or 12 min (before https://reviews.llvm.org/D89444) to ~8m30s.
We probably want to change how ld64.lld writes STABS entries when ICF
is enabled, but making dsymutil not have pathological performance for
this input seems like a good change as well.
No expected behavior change (other than it's faster). I verified that
for Chromium Framework, the generated .dSYM is identical with and
without this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123218
This patch adds the minimum required to successfully lower vp.icmp via
the new ISD::VP_SETCC node to RVV instructions.
Regular ISD::SETCC goes through a lot of canonicalization which targets
may rely on which has not hereto been ported to VP_SETCC. It also
supports expansion of individual condition codes and a non-boolean
return type. Support for all of that will follow in later patches.
In the case of RVV this largely isn't a problem as the vector integer
comparison instructions are plentiful enough that it can lower all
VP_SETCC nodes on legal integer vectors except for boolean vectors,
which regular SETCC folds away immediately into logical operations.
Floating-point VP_SETCC operations aren't as well supported in RVV and
the backend relies on condition code expansion, so support for those
operations will come in later patches.
Portions of this code were taken from the VP reference patches.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122743
The is a followup of D116965 to split the calendar header. This is a
preparation to add the formatters for the chrono header.
The code is only moved no other changes have been made.
Reviewed By: ldionne, #libc, philnik
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122995