abilities of INSERTPS which are really powerful and come up in very
important contexts such as forming diagonal matrices, etc.
With this I ended up being able to remove the somewhat weird helper
I added for INSERTPS because we can collapse the entire state to a no-op
mask. Added a bunch of tests for inserting into a zero-ish vector.
llvm-svn: 217117
The basic idea is similar to the existing cross compilation support. A directory must be configured to build host versions of tablegen tools and llvm-config. This directory can be user provided (and configured), or it can be created during the build. During a build the native build directory will be configured and built to supply the tablegen tools used during the build. A user could also explicitly provide the tablegen executables to run on the CMake command line.
llvm-svn: 217105
LinearFunctionTestReplace tries to use the *next* indvar to compare
against when possible. However, it may be the case that the calculation
for the next indvar has NUW/NSW flags and that it may only be safely
used inside the loop. Using it in a comparison to calculate the exit
condition could result in observing poison.
This fixes PR20680.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5174
llvm-svn: 217102
'insertps' patterns.
This replaces two shuffles with a single insertps in very common cases.
My next patch will extend this to leverage the zeroing capabilities of
insertps which will allow it to be used in a much wider set of cases.
llvm-svn: 217100
an immediate operand when we don't have instruction-specific comments.
This ensures that instruction-specific comments are attached to the same
line as the instruction which is important for using them to write
readable and maintainable tests. My next commit will just such a test.
llvm-svn: 217099
lldb's internal memory cache chunks that are read from the remote
system. For a remote connection that is especially slow, a user may
need to reduce it; reading a 512 byte chunk of memory whenever a
4-byte region is requested may not be the right decision in these
kinds of environments.
<rdar://problem/18175117>
llvm-svn: 217083
I'm not sure this is a particularly helpful API (to pass ownership and
then return it unconditionally) rather than just pass the underlying
object by non-const reference, but this was the original API so I'll
just make it more safe/stable and anyone else is free to adjust that at
their whim, of course.
llvm-svn: 217081
Summary:
Split shouldExpandAtomicInIR() into different versions for Stores/Loads/RMWs/CmpXchgs.
Makes runOnFunction cleaner (no more redundant checking/casting), and will help moving
the X86 backend to this pass.
This requires a way of easily detecting which instructions are atomic.
I followed the pattern of mayReadFromMemory, mayWriteOrReadMemory, etc.. in making
isAtomic() a method of Instruction implemented by a switch on the opcodes.
Test Plan: make check
Reviewers: jfb
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5035
llvm-svn: 217080
The use of default: was disabling the warning about unused enumerators. Fix
that, then fix the one enumerator that was not handled. Add coverage for
it in test suite.
llvm-svn: 217078
Fixes two latent bugs:
- There was no fence inserted before expanded seq_cst load (unsound on Power)
- There was only a fence release before seq_cst stores (again unsound, in particular on Power)
It is not even clear if this is correct on ARM swift processors (where release fences are
DMB ishst instead of DMB ish). This behaviour is currently preserved on ARM Swift
as it is not clear whether it is incorrect. I would love to get documentation stating
whether it is correct or not.
These two bugs were not triggered because Power is not (yet) using this pass, and these
behaviours happen to be (mostly?) working on ARM
(although they completely butchered the semantics of the llvm IR).
See:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-August/075821.html
for an example of the problems that can be caused by the second of these bugs.
I couldn't see a way of fixing these in a completely target-independent way without
adding lots of unnecessary fences on ARM, hence the target-dependent parts of this
patch.
This patch implements the new target-dependent parts only for ARM (the default
of not doing anything is enough for AArch64), other architectures will use this
infrastructure in later patches.
llvm-svn: 217076
This is the final round of renaming. This changes tblgen to emit lower-case
function names for FastEmitInst_* and FastEmit_*, and updates all its uses
in the source code.
Reviewed by Eric
llvm-svn: 217075
JITEventListener. This used to be in the old JIT (last line of the file)
and everyone just "happened" to pick it up from there. =/ Doh.
llvm-svn: 217073
This patch adds to LLVMSupport the capability of writing files with
international characters encoded in the current system encoding. This
is relevant for Windows, where we can either use UTF16 or the current
code page (the legacy Windows international characters). On UNIX, the
file is always saved in UTF8.
This will be used in a patch for clang to thoroughly support response
files creation when calling other tools, addressing PR15171. On
Windows, to correctly support internationalization, we need the
ability to write response files both in UTF16 or the current code
page, depending on the tool we will call. GCC for mingw, for instance,
requires files to be encoded in the current code page. MSVC tools
requires files to be encoded in UTF16.
Patch by Rafael Auler!
llvm-svn: 217068
On Darwin at runtime, dyld will prefer to use the export trie of a dylib instead
of the traditional symbol table (which is large and requires a binary search).
This change enables the linker to generate an export trie and to prefer it if
found in a dylib being linked against. This also simples the yaml for dylibs
because the yaml form of the trie can be reduced to just a sequence of names.
llvm-svn: 217066
Things got a little bit messy over the years and it is time for a little bit
spring cleaning.
This first commit is focused on the FastISel base class itself. It doxyfies all
comments, C++11fies the code where it makes sense, renames internal methods to
adhere to the coding standard, and clang-formats the files.
Reviewed by Eric
llvm-svn: 217060