Removes `CrossTranslationUnitContext::getImportedFromSourceLocation`
Removes the corresponding unit-test segment.
Introduces the `CrossTranslationUnitContext::getMacroExpansionContextForSourceLocation`
which will return the macro expansion context for an imported TU. Also adds a
few implementation FIXME notes where applicable, since this feature is
not implemented yet. This fact is also noted as Doxygen comments.
Uplifts a few CTU LIT test to match the current **incomplete** behavior.
It is a regression to some extent since now we don't expand any
macros in imported TUs. At least we don't crash anymore.
Note that the introduced function is already covered by LIT tests.
Eg.: Analysis/plist-macros-with-expansion-ctu.c
Reviewed By: balazske, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94673
Removes the obsolete ad-hoc macro expansions during bugreport constructions.
It will skip the macro expansion if the expansion happened in an imported TU.
Also removes the expected plist file, while expanding matching context for
the tests.
Adds a previously crashing `plist-macros-with-expansion.c` testfile.
Temporarily marks `plist-macros-with-expansion-ctu.c ` to `XFAIL`.
Reviewed By: xazax.hun, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93224
Adds a `MacroExpansionContext` member to the `AnalysisConsumer` class.
Tracks macro expansions only if the `ShouldDisplayMacroExpansions` is set.
Passes a reference down the pipeline letting AnalysisConsumers query macro
expansions during bugreport construction.
Reviewed By: martong, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93223
Introduce `MacroExpansionContext` to track what and how macros in a translation
unit expand. This is the first element of the patch-stack in this direction.
The main goal is to substitute the current macro expansion generator in the
`PlistsDiagnostics`, but all the other `DiagnosticsConsumer` could benefit from
this.
`getExpandedText` and `getOriginalText` are the primary functions of this class.
The former can provide you the text that was the result of the macro expansion
chain starting from a `SourceLocation`.
While the latter will tell you **what text** was in the original source code
replaced by the macro expansion chain from that location.
Here is an example:
void bar();
#define retArg(x) x
#define retArgUnclosed retArg(bar()
#define BB CC
#define applyInt BB(int)
#define CC(x) retArgUnclosed
void unbalancedMacros() {
applyInt );
//^~~~~~~~~~^ is the substituted range
// Original text is "applyInt )"
// Expanded text is "bar()"
}
#define expandArgUnclosedCommaExpr(x) (x, bar(), 1
#define f expandArgUnclosedCommaExpr
void unbalancedMacros2() {
int x = f(f(1)) )); // Look at the parenthesis!
// ^~~~~~^ is the substituted range
// Original text is "f(f(1))"
// Expanded text is "((1,bar(),1,bar(),1"
}
Might worth investigating how to provide a reusable component, which could be
used for example by a standalone tool eg. expanding all macros to their
definitions.
I borrowed the main idea from the `PrintPreprocessedOutput.cpp` Frontend
component, providing a `PPCallbacks` instance hooking the preprocessor events.
I'm using that for calculating the source range where tokens will be expanded
to. I'm also using the `Preprocessor`'s `OnToken` callback, via the
`Preprocessor::setTokenWatcher` to reconstruct the expanded text.
Unfortunately, I concatenate the token's string representation without any
whitespaces except if the token is an identifier when I emit an extra space
to produce valid code for `int var` token sequences.
This could be improved later if needed.
Patch-stack:
1) D93222 (this one) Introduces the MacroExpansionContext class and unittests
2) D93223 Create MacroExpansionContext member in AnalysisConsumer and pass
down to the diagnostics consumers
3) D93224 Use the MacroExpansionContext for macro expansions in plists
It replaces the 'old' macro expansion mechanism.
4) D94673 API for CTU macro expansions
You should be able to get a `MacroExpansionContext` for each imported TU.
Right now it will just return `llvm::None` as this is not implemented yet.
5) FIXME: Implement macro expansion tracking for imported TUs as well.
It would also relieve us from bugs like:
- [fixed] D86135
- [confirmed] The `__VA_ARGS__` and other macro nitty-gritty, such as how to
stringify macro parameters, where to put or swallow commas, etc. are not
handled correctly.
- [confirmed] Unbalanced parenthesis are not well handled - resulting in
incorrect expansions or even crashes.
- [confirmed][crashing] https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48358
Reviewed By: martong, Szelethus
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93222
This patch extends VPWidenPHIRecipe to manage pairs of incoming
(VPValue, VPBasicBlock) in the VPlan native path. This is made possible
because we now directly manage defined VPValues for recipes.
By keeping both the incoming value and block in the recipe directly,
code-generation in the VPlan native path becomes independent of the
predecessor ordering when fixing up non-induction phis, which currently
can cause crashes in the VPlan native path.
This fixes PR45958.
Reviewed By: sguggill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96773
This removes the existing patterns for inserting two lanes into an
f16/i16 vector register using VINS, instead using a DAG combine to
pattern match the same code sequences. The tablegen patterns were
already on the large side (foreach LANE = [0, 2, 4, 6]) and were not
handling all the cases they could. Moving that to a DAG combine, whilst
not less code, allows us to better control and expand the selection of
VINSs. Additionally this allows us to remove the AddedComplexity on
VCVTT.
The extra trick that this has learned in the process is to move two
adjacent lanes using a single f32 vmov, allowing some extra
inefficiencies to be removed.
Differenial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96876
If the reference-types feature is enabled, call_indirect will explicitly
reference its corresponding function table via `TABLE_NUMBER`
relocations against a table symbol.
Also, as before, address-taken functions can also cause the function
table to be created, only with reference-types they additionally cause a
symbol table entry to be emitted.
We abuse the used-in-reloc flag on symbols to indicate which tables
should end up in the symbol table. We do this because unfortunately
older wasm-ld will carp if it see a table symbol.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90948
This patch moves the creation of the '-Wspir-compat' argument from cc1 to the driver.
Without this change, generating command line arguments from `CompilerInvocation` cannot be done reliably: there's no way to distinguish whether '-Wspir-compat' was passed to cc1 on the command line (should be generated), or if it was created within `CompilerInvocation::CreateFromArgs` (should not be generated).
This is also in line with how other '-W' flags are handled.
(This was introduced in D21567.)
Reviewed By: Anastasia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97041
This patch stops creating the '-Wno-stdlibcxx-not-found' argument in `CompilerInvocation::CreateFromArgs`.
The code was added in 2e7ab55e65 (a follow-up to D48297). However, D61963 removes relevant tests and starts explicitly passing '-Wno-stdlibcxx-not-found' to the driver. I think it's fair to assume this is a dead code.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97042
Small optimization of the code -- No need to calculate any stats
for NULL nodes, and also no need to call the collectStatsForDie()
if it is the CU itself.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96871
Simple jupyter kernel using mlir-opt and reproducer to run passes.
Useful for local experimentation & generating examples. The export to
markdown from here is not immediately useful nor did I define a
CodeMirror synax to make the HTML output prettier. It only supports one
level of history (e.g., `_`) as I was mostly using with expanding a
pipeline one pass at a time and so was all I needed.
I placed this in utils directory next to editor & debugger utils.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95742
__start_/__stop_ references retain C identifier name sections such as
__llvm_prf_*. Putting these into a section group disables this logic.
The ELF section group semantics ensures that group members are retained
or discarded as a unit. When a function symbol is discarded, this allows
allows linker to discard counters, data and values associated with that
function symbol as well.
Note that `noduplicates` COMDAT is lowered to zero-flag section group in
ELF. We only set this for functions that aren't already in a COMDAT and
for those that don't have available_externally linkage since we already
use regular COMDAT groups for those.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96757
The result must be less than or equal to the LHS side, so any
leading zeros in the left hand side must also exist in the result.
This is stronger than the previous behavior where we only considered
the sign bit being 0.
The affected test case used the sign bit being known 0 to change
a sign extend to a zero extend pre type legalization. After type
legalization the types were promoted to i64, but we no longer
knew bit 31 was zero. This shifts are are the equivalent of an
AND with 0xffffffff or zext_inreg X, i32. This patch allows us to
see that bit 31 is zero and remove the shifts.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97124
* It was decided that this was the end of the line for the existing custom tc parser/generator, and this is the first step to replacing it with a declarative format that maps well to mathy source languages.
* One such source language is implemented here: https://github.com/stellaraccident/mlir-linalgpy/blob/main/samples/mm.py
* In fact, this is the exact source of the declarative `polymorphic_matmul` in this change.
* I am working separately to clean this python implementation up and add it to MLIR (probably as `mlir.tools.linalg_opgen` or equiv). The scope of the python side is greater than just generating named ops: the ops are callable and directly emit `linalg.generic` ops fully dynamically, and this is intended to be a feature for frontends like npcomp to define custom linear algebra ops at runtime.
* There is more work required to handle full type polymorphism, especially with respect to integer formulations, since they require more specificity wrt types.
* Followups to this change will bring the new generator to feature parity with the current one and delete the current. Roughly, this involves adding support for interface declarations and attribute symbol bindings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97135
This reapplies 7df4eaaa93/D96202, which was reverted due to issues on
windows. These were caused by problems in the computation of the liblldb
directory, which was fixed by D96779.
The original commit message was:
Our test configuration logic assumes that the tests can be run either
with debugserver or with lldb-server. This is not entirely correct,
since lldb server has two "personalities" (platform server and debug
server) and debugserver is only a replacement for the latter.
A consequence of this is that it's not possible to test the platform
behavior of lldb-server on macos, as it is not possible to get a hold of
the lldb-server binary.
One solution to that would be to duplicate the server configuration
logic to be able to specify both executables. However, that seems
excessively redundant.
A well-behaved lldb should be able to find the debug server on its own,
and testing lldb with a different (lldb-|debug)server does not seem very
useful (even in the out-of-tree debugserver setup, we copy the server
into the build tree to make it appear "real").
Therefore, this patch deletes the configuration altogether and changes
the low-level server retrieval functions to be able to both lldb-server
and debugserver paths. They do this by consulting the "support
executable" directory of the lldb under test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96202
This also removes a pattern from RISCV that is no longer needed
since the sexti32 on the LHS of the srem in the pattern implies
the result is sign extended so the sign_extend_inreg should be
removed in DAG combine now.
Reviewed By: luismarques, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97133
In conjunction with the 'vperm2x128(bitcast(x),bitcast(y),c) -> bitcast(vperm2x128(x,y,c))' fold in combineTargetShuffle, this should remove any unnecessary bitcasts around vperm2x128 lane shuffles.
VSCode was not being informed whenever a location had been resolved (after being initated as non-resolved), so even though it was actually resolved, the IDE would show a hollow dot (instead of a red dot) because it didn't know about the change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96680
FindAvailableLoadedValue() accepts an iterator by reference. If no
available value is found, then the iterator will either be left
at a clobbering instruction or the beginning of the basic block.
This allows using FindAvailableLoadedValue() across multiple blocks.
If this functionality is not needed, as is the case in InstCombine,
then we can use a much more efficient implementation: First try
to find an available value, and only perform clobber checks if
we actually found one. As this function only looks at a very small
number of instructions (6 by default) and usually doesn't find an
available value, this saves many expensive alias analysis queries.
The arguments in all cases should be vectors of exactly one of integer or FP.
All of the tests currently pass the verifier because we check for any vector
type regardless of the type of reduction.
This obviously can't work if we mix up integer and FP, and based on current
LangRef text it was not intended to work for pointers either.
The pointer case from https://llvm.org/PR49215 is what led me here. That
example was avoided with 5b250a27ec.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96904
This issue was introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D92187.
The guard I'm changing were is supposed to act when linux is loading the linker for the second time (due to differences in paths like symlinks).
This is done by checking `module_sp != m_interpreter_module.lock()` however this will be true when `m_interpreter_module` wasn't initialized, making linux unload the linker module (the most visible result here is that lldb will stop getting notified about new modules loaded by the process, because it can't set the rendezvous breakpoint again after the stepping over it once).
The `m_interpreter_module` is not getting initialize when it goes through this path: dbfdb139f7/lldb/source/Plugins/DynamicLoader/POSIX-DYLD/DynamicLoaderPOSIXDYLD.cpp (L332), which happens when lldb was able to read the address from the dynamic section of the executable.
What I'm not sure about though, is if when we go through this path if we still load the linker twice on linux. If that's the case then it means we need to somehow set the m_interpreter_module instead of the fix I provide here. I've only tested this on Android.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96637
Currently, if there is a module that contains a strong definition of
a global variable and a module that has both a weak definition for
the same global and a reference to it, it may result in an undefined symbol error
while linking with ThinLTO.
It happens because:
* the strong definition become internal because it is read-only and can be imported;
* the weak definition gets replaced by a declaration because it's non-prevailing;
* the strong definition failed to be imported because the destination module
already contains another definition of the global yet this def is non-prevailing.
The patch adds a check to computeImportForReferencedGlobals() that allows
considering a global variable for being imported even if the module contains
a definition of it in the case this def has an interposable linkage type.
Note that currently the check is based only on the linkage type
(and this seems to be enough at the moment), but it might be worth to account
the information whether the def is prevailing or not.
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95943
This patch handles usubsat patterns hidden through zext/trunc and uses the getTruncatedUSUBSAT helper to determine if the USUBSAT can be correctly performed in the truncated form:
zext(x) >= y ? x - trunc(y) : 0 --> usubsat(x,trunc(umin(y,SatLimit)))
zext(x) > y ? x - trunc(y) : 0 --> usubsat(x,trunc(umin(y,SatLimit)))
Based on original examples:
void foo(unsigned short *p, int max, int n) {
int i;
unsigned m;
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
m = *--p;
*p = (unsigned short)(m >= max ? m-max : 0);
}
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25987
Extend the existing combine that handles bitcasting for fp-logic ops to also help remove logic ops across bitcasts to/from the same integer types.
This helps improve AVX512 predicate handling for D/Q logic ops and also allows DAGCombine's scalarizeExtractedBinop to remove some annoying gpr->simd->gpr transfers.
The concat_vectors regression in pr40891.ll will be addressed in a followup commit on this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96206
The special root semantics for identifier-named sections is meant
specifically for the metadata sections. In the context of group
semantics, where group members are always retained or discarded as a
unit, it's natural not to have this semantics apply to a section in a
group, otherwise we would never discard the group defeating the purpose
of using the group in the first place.
This change modifies the GC behavior so that __start_/__stop_ references
don't retain C identifier named sections in section groups which allows
for these groups to be collected. This matches the behavior of BFD ld.
The only kind of existing case that might break is interdependent
metadata sections that are all in a group together, but that group
doesn't contain any other sections referenced by anything except
implicit inclusion in a `__start_` and/or `__stop_`-referenced
identifier-named section, but such cases should be unlikely.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96753