This revision causes tests to fail under ASAN. Since the cause of the failures
is not clear (could be ASAN, could be a Clang bug, could be a bug in this
revision), the safest course of action seems to be to revert while investigating.
llvm-svn: 357667
This allows __THREW__ to be defined in the current module, although
it is still required to be a GlobalVariable.
In emscripten we want to be able to compile the source code that
defines this symbols.
Previously we were avoid this by not running this pass when building
that compiler-rt library, but I have change out to build it using the
normal compiler path:
https://github.com/emscripten-core/emscripten/pull/8391
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60232
llvm-svn: 357665
Summary:
`posix_fallocate` can fail if the underlying filesystem does not support
it; and, on AIX, such a failure is reported by a return value of
`ENOTSUP`. The existing code checks only for `EOPNOTSUPP`, which may
share the same value as `ENOTSUP`, but is not required to.
Reviewers: xingxue, sfertile, jasonliu
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: kristina, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60175
llvm-svn: 357662
Summary:
Certain classes in the subject file are expected to provide different
views of a two-byte field as a collection of various bit-fields. On AIX,
the canonical layout of bit-fields would cause these classes to span
four bytes. Applying the `pack` pragma for compilers that employ the AIX
canonical layout allows these classes to fit within the expected two
bytes. In the future, the pragma would also likely need to be applied
when building with Clang on AIX.
Reviewers: xingxue, sfertile, jasonliu
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60164
llvm-svn: 357661
Summary:
This avoids the need to talk about lib.exe or llvm-lib.exe and it does
the right thing with LLD.
Reviewers: thakis
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60155
llvm-svn: 357660
These inserters inserted some instructions to zero some registers and copied from virtual registers to physical registers.
This change instead inserts the zeros directly into the DAG at lowering time using new ISD opcodes
that take the extra zeroes as inputs. The zeros will then go through isel on their own to select
the MOV32r0 pseudo. Then we just need to mention the physical registers directly
in the isel patterns and the isel table and InstrEmitter will take care of inserting the necessary
copies to/from physical registers.
llvm-svn: 357659
Summary:
Now CVType and CVSymbol are effectively type-safe wrappers around
ArrayRef<uint8_t>. Make the kind() accessor load it from the
RecordPrefix, which is the same for types and symbols.
Reviewers: zturner, aganea
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60018
llvm-svn: 357658
Apparently it needs member initializers so that it can be constructed in
a constexpr context. I explained my investigation of this in PR41367.
llvm-svn: 357655
This allows building it even if no fuzzer is enabled. (Sadly, it only
builds on Linux at the moment.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60201
llvm-svn: 357654
This custom inserter existed so we could do a weird thing where we pretended that the instructions support
a full address mode instead of taking a pointer in EAX/RAX. I think was largely so we could be pointer
size agnostic in the isel pattern.
To make this work we would then put the address into an LEA into EAX/RAX in front of the instruction after
isel. But the LEA is overkill when we just have a base pointer. So we end up using the LEA as a slower MOV
instruction.
With this change we now just do custom selection during isel instead and just assign the incoming address
of the intrinsic into EAX/RAX based on its size. After the intrinsic is selected, we can let isel take
care of selecting an LEA or other operation to do any address computation needed in this basic block.
I've also split the instruction into a 32-bit mode version and a 64-bit mode version so the implicit
use is properly sized based on the pointer. Without this we get comments in the assembly output about
killing eax and defing rax or vice versa depending on whether we define the instruction to use EAX/RAX.
llvm-svn: 357652
This pattern would show up as a regression if we more
aggressively convert vector FP ops to scalar ops.
There's still a missed optimization for the v4f64 legal
case (AVX) because we create that h-op with an undef operand.
We should probably just duplicate the operands for that
pattern to avoid trouble.
llvm-svn: 357642
libunwind defines the _Unwind_* ABI used by libc++abi. This ABI is a
stable quasi-standard common between multiple implementations such as
LLVM and GNU. The _U* symbol name space is also safely within the symbol
name space that standard C & C++ reserve for the implementation.
Futhermore, libunwind also defines several unw_* symbols, and references
these from the _Unwind_* entry points so the standard/reserved part of
the ABI is dependent on the unw_* part of the ABI. This is not OK for a
C or C++ implementation. The unw_* symbols are reserved for C and extern
"C" used by application code.
This change renames each unw_* function to __unw* and adds a weak alias
unw_* to keep the public <libunwind.h> ABI unchanged for backwards
compatibility. Every reference to unw_* in the implementation has been
changed to use __unw* so that if other unw_* definitions are in force
because nothing uses <libunwind.h> in a particular program, no _Unwind*
code path depends on any unw_* symbol. Furthemore, __unw_* symbols are
hidden, which saves PLT overhead in the shared library case.
In the future, we should cconsider untangling the unw_* API/ABI from the
_Unwind_* API/ABI. The internal API backing the _Unwind_* ABI
implementation should not rely on any nonstandard symbols not in the
implementation-reserved name space. This would then allow separating the
_Unwind_* API/ABI from unw_* entirely, but that's a more substantial
change that's going to require more significant refactoring.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59921
llvm-svn: 357640
For some reason I had convinced myself that functions returning by
pointer or reference do not require recording their result. However,
after further considering I don't see how that could work, at least not
with the current implementation. Interestingly enough, the reproducer
instrumentation already (mostly) accounts for this, though the
lldb-instr tool did not.
This patch adds the missing macros and updates the lldb-instr tool.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60178
llvm-svn: 357639
Create method `optForNone()` testing for the function level equivalent of
`-O0` and refactor appropriately.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59852
llvm-svn: 357638
This change is similar to r356150, with the same motivation. The
only difference is that the method used to merge libunwind.a and
libc++abi.a had to be changed to use the same approach as libc++
since we no longer produce object libraries that could be linked
together as we did before. We reuse the libc++ script for merging
archives to avoid duplication between the two projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60173
llvm-svn: 357635
Relying on no spill or other code being inserted before this was
precarious. It relied on code diligently checking isBasicBlockPrologue
which is likely to be forgotten.
Ideally this could be done earlier, but this doesn't work because of
phis. Any other instruction can't be placed before them, so we have to
accept the position being incorrect during SSA.
This avoids regressions in the fast register allocator rewrite from
inverting the direction.
llvm-svn: 357634
Summary:
After https://reviews.llvm.org/D59828 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D59849,
I believe the problems with these tests hanging have been solved.
I tried enabling all of them on my machine, and got two failures:
- One of them was spawning a child process that lives for 5 seconds, waited
for 5 seconds to attach to the child, and failed because the child wasn't
there.
- The other one was a legit failure because shell expansion of arguments doesn't
work on Linux.
This tests enables all lldb-vscode tests on Linux except for "launch process
with shell expansion of args" (which doesn't work), and fixes the other broken
test by reducing the time it waits before attaching to its child process.
Reviewers: zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60153
llvm-svn: 357633
The standard doesn't require a DW_TAG_variable, DW_TAG_formal_parameter
or DW_TAG_constant to A DW_AT_type attribute describing the type of the
variable. It only specifies that it *can* have one.
llvm-svn: 357628
Summary: Currently ProfileSummaryBuilder doesn't count into callsite samples when computing total samples. Considering that ProfileSummaryInfo is used to checked the hotness of not only body samples but also callsite samples (from SampleProfileLoader), I think the callsite sample counts should be considered when computing total samples.
Reviewers: eraman, danielcdh, wmi
Subscribers: hiraditya, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59835
llvm-svn: 357627
Spotted some problems in the Driver's PrepareCommandsForSourcing while
helping a colleague track another problem.
1. One error case was not handled because there was no else clause.
Fixed by switching to llvm's early-out style instead of nested
`if (succes) { } else { }` cases. This keeps error handling close
to the actual error.
2. One call-site failed to call the clean-up function. I solved this
by simplifying the API. PrepareCommandsForSourcing no longer requires
the caller to provide a buffer for the pipe's file descriptors and to
call a separate clean-up function later. PrepareCommandsForSourcing
now ensures the file descriptors are handled before returning.
(The read end of the pipe is held open by the returned FILE * as
before.)
I also eliminated an unnecessary local, shorted the lifetime of another,
and tried to improve the comments.
I wrapped the call to open the pipe to get the `#ifdef`s out of the
mainline. I replaced the `close`/`_close` calls with a platform-neutral
helper from `llvm::sys` for the same reason. Per discussion on the
review, I'm leaving the `fdopen` call to use the spelling that Windows
has officially deprecated because it still works it avoids more `#ifdef`s.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60152
llvm-svn: 357626
None of check-clang-tools's tests run this, but the CMake
check-clang-tools depends on the binary, so add it for consistency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60222
llvm-svn: 357624
The distribute clause needs an explicit push of a timer. The teams
clause needs a timer added and also, similarly to parallel, exchanged
with the serial timer when encountered so that serial regions are
counted properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59801
llvm-svn: 357621
This builds on the work done in r342808 and adds _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT
to 37 more functions, namely:
adjacent_find, all_of, any_of, binary_search, clamp, count_if, count,
equal_range, equal, find_end, find_first_not_of, find_first_of, find_if,
find, includes, is_heap_until, is_heap, is_partitioned, is_permutation,
is_sorted_until, is_sorted, lexicographical_compare, lower_bound,
max_element, max, min_element, min, minmax_element, minmax, mismatch,
none_of, remove_if, remove, search_n, search, unique, upper_bound
The motivation here is that we noticed that find_if is nodiscard with
Visual Studio's standard library, and we deemed that useful
(https://crbug.com/948122).
https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/c17-progress-in-vs-2017-15-5-and-15-6/
says "Our criteria for emitting the warning are: discarding the return
value is a guaranteed leak [...], discarding the return value is
near-guaranteed to be incorrect (e.g. remove()/remove_if()/unique()), or
the function is essentially a pure observer (e.g. vector::empty() and
std::is_sorted())." so I went through algorithm and tried to apply these
criteria.
Some of these, like vector::empty() are already nodiscard per C++
standard and didn't need changing.
I didn't (yet?) go over std::string::find* methods which should probably
have _LIBCPP_NODISCARD_EXT too (but not as part of this change).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60145
llvm-svn: 357619
On most platforms, certain compiler and linker flags have to be passed
when using pthreads, otherwise linking against libomp.so might fail with
undefined references to several pthread functions.
Use CMake's `find_package(Threads)` to determine these for standalone
builds, or take them (and optionally modify them) from the top-level
LLVM cmake files.
Also, On FreeBSD, ensure that libomp.so is linked against libm.so,
similar to NetBSD.
Adjust test cases with hardcoded `-lpthread` flag to use the common
build flags, which should now have the required pthread flags.
Reviewers: emaste, jlpeyton, krytarowski, mgorny, protze.joachim, Hahnfeld
Reviewed By: Hahnfeld
Subscribers: AndreyChurbanov, tra, EricWF, Hahnfeld, jfb, jdoerfert, openmp-commits
Tags: #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59451
llvm-svn: 357618