Split out from https://reviews.llvm.org/D66782, use `Optional<MemoryBufferRef>`
in `line_iterator` so you don't need access to a `MemoryBuffer*`. Follow up
patches in `clang/` will leverage this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89280
As preparation for changing `LineIterator` to work with `MemoryBufferRef`:
- Add an `operator==` that uses buffer pointer identity to ensure two buffers
are equivalent.
- Split out `MemoryBufferRef.h`, to avoid polluting `LineIterator.h` includers
with everything from `MemoryBuffer.h`. This also means moving the
`MemoryBuffer` constructor to a source file.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89279
If the known shift amount is bigger than or equal to the bitwidth of the type of the value to be shifted,
the result is target dependent, so don't try to infer any bits.
This fixes a crash we've seen in one of our internal test suites.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89232
Currently the idiom for mapping optional fields is:
ObjectMapper O(Val, P);
if (!O.map("required1", Out.R1) || !O.map("required2", Out.R2))
return false;
O.map("optional1", Out.O1); // ignore result
return true;
If `optional1` is present but malformed, then we won't detect/report
that error. We may even leave `Out` in an incomplete state while returning true.
Instead, we'd often prefer to ignore `optional1` if it is absent, but otherwise
behave just like map().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89128
This patch adds support for DWARF attribute DW_AT_rank.
Summary:
Fortran assumed rank arrays have dynamic rank. DWARF attribute
DW_AT_rank is needed to support that.
Testing:
unit test cases added (hand-written)
check llvm
check debug-info
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89141
We already offer zextOrTrunc and it seems natural to offer the
same capability for sign extension.
This patch is a preparatory addition useful for future computeKnownBits
developments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88937
This patch refactors the logic in ValueTracking.cpp so that
computeKnownBitsForMul now uses a helper function from KnownBits.
NFC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88935
These tests make sure that the range information is properly
understood during computeKnownBits analysis.
NFC
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88934
The initial version of the patch was reverted because it missed the check that
the predicate being proved is actually guarded by this check on 1st iteration.
If it was not executed on 1st iteration (but possibly executes after that), then
it is incorrect to use reasoning about IV start to prove it.
Added the test where the miscompile was seen. Unfortunately, my attempts
to reduce it with bugpoint did not succeed; it can further be reduced when
we understand how to do it without losing the initial bug's notion.
Returning assuming the miscompiles are now gone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88208
This removes "VerifyEachPass" parameters from a lot of functions which is nice.
Don't verify after special passes or VerifierPass.
This introduces verification on loop and cgscc passes, verifying the corresponding function/module.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88764
(Based on D87170 by dsanders)
I recently had need to call out to an external API to emit a JSON object as part
of one an LLVM tool was emitting. However, our JSON support didn't provide a way
to delegate part of the JSON output to that API.
Add rawValueBegin() and rawValueEnd() to maintain and check the internal state
while something else is writing to the stream. It's the users responsibility to
ensure that the resulting JSON output is still valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88902
This allows overload sets containing function_ref arguments to work correctly
Otherwise they're ambiguous as anything "could be" converted to a function_ref.
This matches proposed std::function_ref, absl::function_ref, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88901
`LLVM-Unit :: Support/./SupportTests/ConvertUTFTest.ConvertUTF16LittleEndianToUTF8String`
`FAIL`s on Solaris/sparcv9:
In `llvm/lib/Support/ConvertUTFWrapper.cpp` (`convertUTF16ToUTF8String`)
the `SrcBytes` arg is reinterpreted/accessed as `UTF16` (`unsigned short`,
which requires 2-byte alignment on strict-alignment targets like Sparc)
without anything guaranteeing the alignment, so the access yields a
`SIGBUS`.
This patch avoids this by enforcing the required alignment in the callers.
Tested on `sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88824
If a CSEMIRBuilder query hits the instruction at the current insert point,
move insert point ahead one so that subsequent uses of the builder don't end up with
uses before defs.
This fix also shows that AMDGPU was also affected by this bug often, but got away
with it because it was using a G_IMPLICIT_DEF before the use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88605
Update the code responsible for deleting VPBBs and recipes to properly
update users and release operands.
This is another preparation for D84680 & following patches towards
enabling modeling def-use chains in VPlan.
This adds a helper to convert a VPRecipeBase pointer to a VPUser, for
recipes that inherit from VPUser. Once VPRecipeBase directly inherits
from VPUser this helper can be removed.
When updating operands of a VPUser, we also have to adjust the list of
users for the new and old VPValues. This is required once we start
transitioning recipes to become VPValues.
This adds support for -mcpu=cortex-r82. Some more information about this
core can be found here:
https://www.arm.com/products/silicon-ip-cpu/cortex-r/cortex-r82
One note about the system register: that is a bit of a refactoring because of
small differences between v8.4-A AArch64 and v8-R AArch64.
This is based on patches from Mark Murray and Mikhail Maltsev.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88660
When we know that a particular type is always going to be fixed
width we have so far been writing code like this:
getSizeInBits().getFixedSize()
Since we are doing this in quite a few places now it seems to make
sense to add a new helper function that allows us to replace
these calls with a single getFixedSizeInBits() call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88649
The logic there only considers `SLT/SGT` predicates. We can use the same logic
for proving `ULT/UGT` predicates if all involved values are non-negative.
Adding full-scale support for unsigned might be challenging because of code amount,
so we can consider this in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88087
Reviewed By: reames
This is an alternate fix (see D87835) for a bug where a NaN constant
gets wrongly transformed into Infinity via truncation.
In this patch, we uniformly convert any SNaN to QNaN while raising
'invalid op'.
But we don't have a way to directly specify a 32-bit SNaN value in LLVM IR,
so those are always encoded/decoded by calling convert from/to 64-bit hex.
See D88664 for a clang fix needed to allow this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88238
If we know that some predicate is true for AddRec and an invariant
(w.r.t. this AddRec's loop), this fact is, in particular, true on the first
iteration. We can try to prove the facts we need using the start value.
The motivating example is proving things like
```
isImpliedCondOperands(>=, X, 0, {X,+,-1}, 0}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88208
Reviewed By: reames
Patch IEEEFloat::isSignificandAllZeros and IEEEFloat::isSignificandAllOnes to behave correctly in the case that the size of the significand is a multiple of the width of the integerParts making up the significand.
The patch to IEEEFloat::isSignificandAllOnes fixes bug 34579, and the patch to IEEE:Float:isSignificandAllZeros fixes the unit test "APFloatTest.x87Next" I added here. I have included both in this diff since the changes are very similar.
Patch by Andrew Briand
Now that VPUser is not inheriting from VPValue, we can take the next
step and turn the recipes that already manage their operands via VPUser
into VPUsers directly. This is another small step towards traversing
def-use chains in VPlan.
This is NFC with respect to the generated code, but makes the interface
more powerful.
Added unittests. In the process, separated core construction - which just
needs the hits, order, and 'HardHints' values - from construction from
current register allocation state, to simplify testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88455
Fix creation of illegal unmerge when widen was requested to a type which
is not a multiple of the destination type. E.g. when trying to widen
an s48 unmerge to s64 the existing code would create an illegal unmerge
from s64 to s48.
Instead, create further unmerges to a GCD type, then use this to remerge
these intermediate results to the actual destinations.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88422
We need to preserve the LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable when
spawning a child process (certain setups rely on non-standard paths
for e.g. libstdc++). In order to achieve this, set
LLVM_CRC_UNIXCRCRETURNCODE in the parent process instead of creating
the child's environment from scratch.
Reviewed By: aganea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88308
It was mentioned that D88276 that when a phi node is visited, terminators at their incoming edges should be used for CtxI.
This is a patch that makes two functions (ComputeNumSignBitsImpl, isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison) to do so.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88360
After some recent upstream discussion we decided that it was best
to avoid having the / operator for both ElementCount and TypeSize,
since this could give the impression that these classes can be used
in the same way as basic integer integer types. However, division
for scalable types is a bit odd because we are only dividing the
minimum quantity by a value, as opposed to something like:
(MinSize * Vscale) / SomeValue
This is why when performing division it's important the caller
first establishes whether the operation makes sense, perhaps by
calling isKnownMultipleOf() prior to division. The caller must now
explictly call divideCoefficientBy() on the class to perform the
operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87700
This is a patch that allows isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison to return more precise result
when an argument is given, by looking through its uses at the entry block (and following blocks as well, if it is checking poison only).
This is useful when there is a function call with noundef arguments at the entry block.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88207
Introduce a helper which can be used to update the debug location of an
Instruction after the instruction is hoisted. This can be used to safely
drop a source location as recommended by the docs.
For more context, see the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60913.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85670
I have long complained that while we have exhaustive tests
for ConstantRange, they are, uh, not good.
The approach of groking our own constant range
via exhaustive enumeration is, mysterious.
It neither tells us without doubt that the result is
conservatively correct, nor the precise match to the ConstantRange
result tells us that the result is precise.
But yeah, it's fast, i give it that.
In short, there are three things that we need to check:
1. That ConstantRange result is conservatively correct
2. That ConstantRange range is reasonable
3. That ConstantRange result is reasonably precise
So let's not just check the middle one, but all three.
This provides precision test coverage for D88178.
We shift the significand right on a truncation, but that needs to be made NaN-safe:
always set at least 1 bit in the significand.
https://llvm.org/PR43907
See D88238 for the likely follow-up (but needs some plumbing fixes before it can proceed).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87835
Before this patch, the CrashRecoveryContext was returning -2 upon a signal, like ExecuteAndWait does. This didn't match the behavior on Windows, where the the exception code was returned.
We now return the signal's code, which optionally allows for re-throwing the signal later. Doing so requires all custom handlers to be removed first, through llvm::sys::unregisterHandlers() which we made a public API.
This is part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D70378
Before this patch, the CrashRecoveryContext would only catch the first abort(). Any further calls to abort() inside subsquent CrashRecoveryContexts would not be catched. This is because the Windows CRT removes the abort() handler before calling it.
This is part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D70378
For some expressions, we can use information from loop guards when
we are looking for a maximum. This patch applies information from
loop guards to the expression used to compute the maximum backedge
taken count in howFarToZero. It currently replaces an unknown
expression X with UMin(X, Y), if the loop is guarded by
X ult Y.
This patch is minimal in what conditions it applies, and there
are a few TODOs to generalize.
This partly addresses PR40961. We will also need an update to
LV to address it completely.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67178
My toolchain stopped working (LLVM 8.0, libstdc++ 5.4.0) after 577adda:
06:25:37 ../unittests/Support/Path.cpp:91:7: error: chosen constructor is explicit in copy-initialization
06:25:37 {"", false, false}, {"/", true, true}, {"/foo", true, true},
06:25:37 ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
06:25:37 /proj/flexasic/app/llvm/8.0/bin/../lib/gcc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/5.4.0/../../../../include/c++/5.4.0/tuple:479:19: note: explicit constructor declared here
06:25:37 constexpr tuple(_UElements&&... __elements)
06:25:37 ^
This commit adds explicit calls to std::make_tuple to work around
the problem.
This takes the mapped instructions from the IRInstructionMapper, and
passes it to the Suffix Tree to find the repeated substrings. Within
each set of repeated substrings, the IRSimilarityCandidates are compared
against one another for structure, and ensuring that the operands in the
instructions are used in the same way. Each of these structurally
similarity IRSimilarityCandidates are contained in a SimilarityGroup.
Tests checking for identifying identity of structure, different
isomorphic structure, and different
nonisomoprhic structure are found in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86972
Just because sequences of instructions are similar to one another,
doesn't mean they are doing the same thing.
This introduces a structural check for the IRSimilarityCandidate that
compares two IRSimilarityCandidates against one another, and in each
instruction creates a mapping between the operands and results, or
checks that the existing mapping is valid. If this check passes, it
means we have structurally similar IRSimilarityCandidates.
Tests for whether the candidates are found in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp.
Recommit of: b27db2bb68 for Differential
URL.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86971
Just because sequences of instructions are similar to one another,
doesn't mean they are doing the same thing.
This introduces a structural check for the IRSimilarityCandidate that
compares two IRSimilarityCandidates against one another, and in each
instruction creates a mapping between the operands and results, or
checks that the existing mapping is valid. If this check passes, it
means we have structurally similar IRSimilarityCandidates.
Tests for whether the candidates are found in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp.
Translating between JSON objects and C++ strutctures is common.
From experience in clangd, fromJSON/ObjectMapper work well and save a lot of
code, but aren't adopted elsewhere at least partly due to total lack of error
reporting beyond "ok"/"bad".
The recently-added error model should be rich enough for most applications.
It requires tracking the path within the root object and reporting local
errors at appropriate places.
To do this, we exploit the fact that the call graph of recursive
parse functions mirror the structure of the JSON itself.
The current path is represented as a linked list of segments, each of which is
on the stack as a parameter. Concretely, fromJSON now looks like:
bool fromJSON(const Value&, T&, Path);
Beyond the signature change, this is reasonably unobtrusive: building
the path segments is mostly handled by ObjectMapper and the vector<T> fromJSON.
However the root caller of fromJSON must now create a Root object to
store the errors, which is a little clunky.
I've added high-level parse<T>(StringRef) -> Expected<T>, but it's not
general enough to be the primary interface I think (at least, not usable in
clangd).
All existing users (mostly just clangd) are updated in this patch,
making this change backwards-compatible is a bit hairy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103
When an error occurs processing a JSON object, seeing the actual
surrounding data helps. Dumping just the node where the problem
was identified can be too much or too little information.
printErrorContext() shows the error message in its context, as a comment.
JSON values along the path to the broken place are shown in some detail,
the rest of the document is elided. For example:
```
{
"credentials": [
{
"username": /* error: expected string */ 42,
"password": "secret"
},
{ ... }
]
"backups": { ... }
}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103
This is in preparation for supporting -debugify-each, which adds a debug
info pass before and after each pass.
Switch VerifyEach to use this.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88107
This seems to fit the CGSCC updates model better than calling
addNewFunctionInto{Ref,}SCC() on newly created/outlined functions.
Now addNewFunctionInto{Ref,}SCC() are no longer necessary.
However, this doesn't work on newly outlined functions that aren't
referenced by the original function. e.g. if a() was outlined into b()
and c(), but c() is only referenced by b() and not by a(), this will
trigger an assert.
This also fixes an issue I was seeing with newly created functions not
having passes run on them.
Ran check-llvm with expensive checks.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87798
This error model should be rich enough for most applications. It comprises:
- a name for the root object, so the user knows what we're parsing
- a path from the root object to the JSON node most associated with the error
- a local error message
This can be presented as an llvm::Error e.g.
"expected string at ConfigFile.credentials[0].username"
It's designed to be cheap: Paths are a linked list of lightweight
objects on the stack. No heap allocations unless errors are encountered.
A subsequent commit will make use of this in the JSON-to-object
translation facilities: fromJSON and ObjectMapper.
However it's independent of these and can be used for e.g. validation alone.
Another subsequent commit will support showing the error in its context
within the parsed value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103
This isn't standard JSON, but is a popular extension.
It will be used to show errors in context, rendering pseudo-json for humans.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88103
The IRSimilarityCandidate is a container to hold a region of
IRInstructions and offer interfaces for the starting instruction, ending
instruction, parent function, length. It also assigns a global value
number for each unique instance of a value in the region.
It also contains an interface to compare two IRSimilarity as to whether
they have the same sequence of similar instructions.
Tests for whether the instructions are similar are found in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp.
Recommit of: 4944bb190f
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86970
Implements IS_ABSOLUTE_PATH from GNU tools.
C++17 is_absolute behavior is different the from the behavior defined by GNU
tools.
According to cppreference.com, C++17 states: "An absolute path is a path
that unambiguously identifies the location of a file without reference
to an additional starting location."
In other words, the rules are:
1. POSIX style paths with nonempty root directory are absolute.
2. Windows style paths with nonempty root name and root directory are
absolute.
3. No other paths are absolute.
GNU rules are:
1. Paths starting with a path separator are absolute.
2. Windows style paths are also absolute if they start with a character
followed by ':'.
3. No other paths are absolute.
On Windows style the path "C:\Users\Default" has "C:" as root name and "\"
as root directory.
Hence "C:" on Windows is absolute under GNU rules and not absolute under
C++17 because it has no root directory. Likewise "/" and "\" on Windows are
absolute under GNU and are not absolute under C++17 due to empty root name.
Related to PR46368.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87667
The IRSimilarityCandidate is a container to hold a region of
IRInstructions and offer interfaces for the starting instruction, ending
instruction, parent function, length. It also assigns a global value
number for each unique instance of a value in the region.
It also contains an interface to compare two IRSimilarity as to whether
they have the same sequence of similar instructions.
Tests for whether the instructions are similar are found in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86970
Similar to the ConstantRange::getActiveBits(), and to similarly-named
methods in APInt, returns the bitwidth needed to represent
the given signed constant range
Much like APInt::getActiveBits(), computes how many bits are needed
to be able to represent every value in this constant range,
treating the values as unsigned.
Use the fact that `~X` is equivalent to `-1 - X`, which gives us
fully-precise answer, and we only need to special-handle the wrapped case.
This fires ~16k times for vanilla llvm test-suite + RawSpeed.
Currently SCEVExpander creates inttoptr for non-integral pointers if the
base is a null constant for example. This results in invalid IR.
This patch changes InsertNoopCastOfTo to emit a GEP & bitcast to convert
to a non-integral pointer. First, a GEP of i8* null is generated and the
integral value is used as index. The GEP is then bitcasted to the target
type.
This was exposed by D71539.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87827
Currently newer clang-format options cannot be included in .clang-format files, if not all users can be forced to use an updated version.
This patch tries to solve this by adding an option to clang-format, enabling to ignore unknown (newer) options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86137
The IRInstructionData structs are a different representation of the
program. This list treats the program as if it was "flattened" and
the only parent is this list. This lets us easily create ranges of
instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86969
This patch extends SCEVParameterRewriter to support rewriting unknown
epxressions to arbitrary SCEV expressions. It will be used by further
patches.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67176
This introduces the IRInstructionMapper, and the associated wrapper for
instructions, IRInstructionData, that maps IR level Instructions to
unsigned integers.
Mapping is done mainly by using the "isSameOperationAs" comparison
between two instructions. If they return true, the opcode, result type,
and operand types of the instruction are used to hash the instruction
with an unsigned integer. The mapper accepts instruction ranges, and
adds each resulting integer to a list, and each wrapped instruction to
a separate list.
At present, branches, phi nodes are not mapping and exception handling
is illegal. Debug instructions are not considered.
The different mapping schemes are tested in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp
Recommit of: b04c1a9d31
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86968
An AsmPrinter should always be provided to the method because some forms
depend on its parameters. The only place in the codebase which passed
a nullptr value was found in the unit tests, so the patch updates it to
use some dummy AsmPrinter instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85293
This introduces the IRInstructionMapper, and the associated wrapper for
instructions, IRInstructionData, that maps IR level Instructions to
unsigned integers.
Mapping is done mainly by using the "isSameOperationAs" comparison
between two instructions. If they return true, the opcode, result type,
and operand types of the instruction are used to hash the instruction
with an unsigned integer. The mapper accepts instruction ranges, and
adds each resulting integer to a list, and each wrapped instruction to
a separate list.
At present, branches, phi nodes are not mapping and exception handling
is illegal. Debug instructions are not considered.
The different mapping schemes are tested in
unittests/Analysis/IRSimilarityIdentifierTest.cpp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86968
Most clients only need CVType and CVSymbol, not structs for every type
and symbol. Move CVSymbol and CVType to CVRecord.h to accomplish this.
Update some of the common headers that need CVSymbol and CVType to use
the new location.
Modify the unit test to inspect all MVE instructions and mark the
load/store/move of vpr/p0 as valid, as well as the remaining scalar
shifts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87753
GlobPattern::isTrivialMatchAll() returns true for the GlobPattern "*"
which will match all inputs.
This can be used to avoid performing expensive preparation of the input
for match() when the result of the match will always be true.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87468
When adding a new function via addNewFunctionIntoRefSCC(), it creates a
new node and immediately populates the edges. Since populateSlow() calls
G->get() on all referenced functions, it will create a node (but not
populate it) for functions that haven't yet been added. If we add two
mutually recursive functions, the assert that the node should never have
been created will fire when the second function is added. So here we
remove that assert since the node may have already been created (but not
yet populated).
createNode() is only called from addNewFunctionInto{,Ref}SCC().
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47502
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87623
~~D65060 uncovered that trying to use BFI in loop passes can lead to non-deterministic behavior when blocks are re-used while retaining old BFI data.~~
~~To make sure BFI is preserved through loop passes a Value Handle (VH) callback is registered on blocks themselves. When a block is freed it now also wipes out the accompanying BFI entry such that stale BFI data can no longer persist resolving the determinism issue. ~~
~~An optimistic approach would be to incrementally update BFI information throughout the loop passes rather than only invalidating them on removed blocks. The issues with that are:~~
~~1. It is not clear how BFI information should be incrementally updated: If a block is duplicated does its BFI information come with? How about if it's split/modified/moved around? ~~
~~2. Assuming we can address these problems the implementation here will be a massive undertaking. ~~
~~There's a known need of BFI in LICM analysis which requires correct but not incrementally updated BFI data. A follow-up change can register BFI in all loop passes so this preserved but potentially lossy data is available to any loop pass that wants it.~~
See: D75341 for an identical implementation of preserving BFI via VH callbacks. The previous statements do still apply but this change no longer has to be in this diff because it's already upstream 😄 .
This diff also moves BFI to be a part of LoopStandardAnalysisResults since the previous method using getCachedResults now (correctly!) statically asserts (D72893) that this data isn't static through the loop passes.
Testing
Ninja check
Reviewed By: asbirlea, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86156
This patch adds a isConditionImplied function that
takes a constraint and returns true if the constraint
is implied by the current constraints in the system.
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84545
This patch recommits "[ConstraintSystem] Add helpers to deal with linear constraints."
(it reverts the revert commit 8da6ae4ce1).
The reason for the revert was using __builtin_multiply_overflow, which
is not available for all compilers. The patch has been updated to use
MulOverflow from MathExtras.h
In the case of LTO, several DWARF units can be emitted in one section.
For an extremely large application, they may exceed the limit of 4GiB
for 32-bit offsets. As it is now possible to emit 64-bit debugging info,
the patch enables storing the larger offsets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87026
This is mostly an NFC patch because the involved methods are used when
emitting DWO files, which is incompatible with DWARFv3, or for platforms
where DWARF64 is not supported yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87015
The patch also adds a method to choose an appropriate DWARF form
to represent section offsets according to the version and the format
of producing debug info.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87014
DW_FORM_sec_offset and DW_FORM_strp imply values of different sizes with
DWARF32 and DWARF64. The patch fixes DIE value classes to use correct
sizes when emitting their values. For DIELocList it ensures that the
requested DWARF form matches the current DWARF format because that class
uses a method that selects the size automatically.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87009
These methods are used to emit values which are 32-bit in DWARF32 and
64-bit in DWARF64. The patch fixes them so that they choose the length
automatically, depending on the DWARF format set in the Context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87008
NOTE: There is a mailing list discussion on this: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-December/137632.html
Complemantary to the assumption outliner prototype in D71692, this patch
shows how we could simplify the code emitted for an alignemnt
assumption. The generated code is smaller, less fragile, and it makes it
easier to recognize the additional use as a "assumption use".
As mentioned in D71692 and on the mailing list, we could adopt this
scheme, and similar schemes for other patterns, without adopting the
assumption outlining.
This patch introduces a new ConstraintSystem class, that maintains a set
of linear constraints and uses Fourier–Motzkin elimination to eliminate
constraints to check if there are solutions for the system.
It also adds a convert-constraint-log-to-z3.py script, which can parse
the debug output of the constraint system and convert it to a python
script that feeds the constraints into Z3 and checks if it produces the
same result as the LLVM implementation. This is for verification
purposes.
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84544
Halide users reported this here: https://llvm.org/pr46176
I reported the issue to MSVC here:
https://developercommunity.visualstudio.com/content/problem/1179643/msvc-copies-overaligned-non-trivially-copyable-par.html
This codepath is apparently not covered by LLVM's unit tests, so I added
coverage in a unit test.
If we want to support this configuration going forward, it means that is
in general not safe to pass a SmallVector<T, N> by value if alignof(T)
is greater than 4. This doesn't appear to come up often because passing
a SmallVector by value is inefficient and not idiomatic: it copies the
inline storage. In this case, the SmallVector<LLT,4> is captured by
value by a lambda, and the lambda is passed by value into std::function,
and that's how we hit the bug.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87475
Making MaterializationResponsibility instances immovable allows their
associated VModuleKeys to be updated by the ExecutionSession while the
responsibility is still in-flight. This will be used in the upcoming
removable code feature to enable safe merging of resource keys even if
there are active compiles using the keys being merged.
This will allow non-copyable function objects (e.g. lambdas that capture
unique_ptrs) to be used with ThreadPool.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D87467
This implements support for isKnownNonZero, computeKnownBits when freeze is involved.
```
br (x != 0), BB1, BB2
BB1:
y = freeze x
```
In the above program, we can say that y is non-zero. The reason is as follows:
(1) If x was poison, `br (x != 0)` raised UB
(2) If x was fully undef, the branch again raised UB
(3) If x was non-zero partially undef, say `undef | 1`, `freeze x` will return a nondeterministic value which is also non-zero.
(4) If x was just a concrete value, it is trivial
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75808
This patch adds isGuaranteedNotToBePoison and programUndefinedIfUndefOrPoison.
isGuaranteedNotToBePoison will be used at D75808. The latter function is used at isGuaranteedNotToBePoison.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84242
The TempDir.path() member function returns a StringRef. We've been
calling the data() method on that StringRef, which does not guarantee
to return a null-terminated string (required by chdir and other POSIX
functions).
Introduce the c_str() method in the TempDir class, which returns the
proper string without the need to create a copy of the path at use site.
This is the split part of D86269, which add a new ELF machine flag called EM_CSKY and related relocations.
Some target-specific flags and tests for csky can be added in follow-up patches later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86610
Use forward declarations and move the include down to dependent files that actually use it.
This also exposes a number of implicit dependencies on KnownBits.h
Before upstream a new target called CSKY, make a new triple of that called Triple::csky.
For now, it's a 32-bit little endian target and the detail can be referred at D86269.
This is the split part of D86269, which add a new target called CSKY.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86505
Some LLVM unit tests forget to clean up temporary files and
directories. Introduce RAII classes for cleaning them up.
Refactor the tests to use those classes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83228
This patch adds an initial, incomeplete and unsound implementation of
canReplacePointersIfEqual to check if a pointer value A can be replaced
by another pointer value B, that are deemed to be equivalent through
some means (e.g. information from conditions).
Note that is in general not sound to blindly replace pointers based on
equality, for example if they are based on different underlying objects.
LLVM's memory model is not completely settled as of now; see
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34548 for a more detailed
discussion.
The initial version of canReplacePointersIfEqual only rejects a very
specific case: replacing a pointer with a constant expression that is
not dereferenceable. Such a replacement is problematic and can be
restricted relatively easily without impacting most code. Using it to
limit replacements in GVN/SCCP/CVP only results in small differences in
7 programs out of MultiSource/SPEC2000/SPEC2006 on X86 with -O3 -flto.
This patch is supposed to be an initial step to improve the current
situation and the helper should be made stricter in the future. But this
will require careful analysis of the impact on performance.
Reviewed By: aqjune
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85524
This relands e9a3d1a401 which was originally
missing linking LLVMSupport into LLMVFileCheck which broke the SHARED_LIBS build.
Original summary:
The actual FileCheck logic seems to be implemented in LLVMSupport. I don't see a
good reason for having FileCheck implemented there as it has a very specific use
while LLVMSupport is a dependency of pretty much every LLVM tool there is. In
fact, the only use of FileCheck I could find (outside the FileCheck tool and the
FileCheck unit test) is a single call in GISelMITest.h.
This moves the FileCheck logic to its own LLVMFileCheck library. This way only
FileCheck and the GlobalISelTests now have a dependency on this code.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86344
The actual FileCheck logic seems to be implemented in LLVMSupport. I don't see a
good reason for having FileCheck implemented there as it has a very specific use
while LLVMSupport is a dependency of pretty much every LLVM tool there is. In
fact, the only use of FileCheck I could find (outside the FileCheck tool and the
FileCheck unit test) is a single call in GISelMITest.h.
This moves the FileCheck logic to its own LLVMFileCheck library. This way only
FileCheck and the GlobalISelTests now have a dependency on this code.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86344
The Length, AbbrOffset and Values fields of the debug_info section are
optional. This patch helps remove them and simplify test cases.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86857
Add printf-style precision specifier to pad numbers to a given number of
digits when matching them if the value is smaller than the given
precision. This works on both empty numeric expression (e.g. variable
definition from input) and when matching a numeric expression. The
syntax is as follows:
[[#%.<precision><format specifier>, ...]
where <format specifier> is optional and ... can be a variable
definition or not with an empty expression or not. In the absence of a
precision specifier, a variable definition will accept leading zeros.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81667
DFS and Reverse-DFS linkage orders are used to order execution of
deinitializers and initializers respectively.
This patch replaces uses of special purpose DFS order functions in
MachOPlatform and LLJIT with uses of the new methods.
This patch helps make the debug_abbrev_offset field optional. We don't
need to calculate the value of this field in the future.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86614
This patch changes ElementCount so that the Min and Scalable
members are now private and can only be accessed via the get
functions getKnownMinValue() and isScalable(). In addition I've
added some other member functions for more commonly used operations.
Hopefully this makes the class more useful and will reduce the
need for calling getKnownMinValue().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86065
This adds all missing format values that are defined in
ELFObjectFile<ELFT>::getFileFormatName().
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86625
For StackLifetime after finding alloca we need to check that
values ponting to the begining of alloca.
Reviewed By: eugenis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86692
This patch optionally replaces the CRT allocator (i.e., malloc and free) with rpmalloc (mixed public domain licence/MIT licence) or snmalloc (MIT licence) or mimalloc (MIT licence). Please note that the source code for these allocators must be available outside of LLVM's tree.
To enable, use `cmake ... -DLLVM_INTEGRATED_CRT_ALLOC=D:/git/rpmalloc -DLLVM_USE_CRT_RELEASE=MT` where `D:/git/rpmalloc` has already been git clone'd from `https://github.com/mjansson/rpmalloc`. The same applies to snmalloc and mimalloc.
When enabled, the allocator will be embeded (statically linked) into the LLVM tools & libraries. This currently only works with the static CRT (/MT), although using the dynamic CRT (/MD) could potentially work as well in the future.
When enabled, this changes the memory stack from:
new/delete -> MS VC++ CRT malloc/free -> HeapAlloc -> VirtualAlloc
to:
new/delete -> {rpmalloc|snmalloc|mimalloc} -> VirtualAlloc
The goal of this patch is to bypass the application's global heap - which is thread-safe thus inducing locking - and instead take advantage of a modern lock-free, thread cache, allocator. On a 6-core Xeon Skylake we observe a 2.5x decrease in execution time when linking a large scale application with LLD and ThinLTO (12 min 20 sec -> 5 min 34 sec), when all hardware threads are being used (using LLD's flag /opt:lldltojobs=all). On a dual 36-core Xeon Skylake with all hardware threads used, we observe a 24x decrease in execution time (1 h 2 min -> 2 min 38 sec) when linking a large application with LLD and ThinLTO. Clang build times also see a decrease in the range 5-10% depending on the configuration.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71786
As discussed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-July/143801.html.
Currently no users outside of unit tests.
Replace all instances in tests of -constprop with -instsimplify.
Notable changes in tests:
* vscale.ll - @llvm.sadd.sat.nxv16i8 is evaluated by instsimplify, use a fake intrinsic instead
* InsertElement.ll - insertelement undef is removed by instsimplify in @insertelement_undef
llvm/test/Transforms/ConstProp moved to llvm/test/Transforms/InstSimplify/ConstProp
Reviewed By: lattner, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85159
and indirect call promotion candidate.
Profile remapping is a feature to match a function in the module with its
profile in sample profile if the function name and the name in profile look
different but are equivalent using given remapping rules. This is a useful
feature to keep the performance stable by specifying some remapping rules
when sampleFDO targets are going through some large scale function signature
change.
However, currently profile remapping support is only valid for outline
function profile in SampleFDO. It cannot match a callee with an inline
instance profile if they have different but equivalent names. We found
that without the support for inline instance profile, remapping is less
effective for some large scale change.
To add that support, before any remapping lookup happens, all the names
in the profile will be inserted into remapper and the Key to the name
mapping will be recorded in a map called NameMap in the remapper. During
name lookup, a Key will be returned for the given name and it will be used
to extract an equivalent name in the profile from NameMap. So with the help
of the NameMap, we can translate any given name to an equivalent name in
the profile if it exists. Whenever we try to match a name in the module to
a name in the profile, we will try the match with the original name first,
and if it doesn't match, we will use the equivalent name got from remapper
to try the match for another time. In this way, the patch can enhance the
profile remapping support for searching inline instance and searching
indirect call promotion candidate.
In a planned large scale change of int64 type (long long) to int64_t (long),
we found the performance of a google internal benchmark degraded by 2% if
nothing was done. If existing profile remapping was enabled, the performance
degradation dropped to 1.2%. If the profile remapping with the current patch
was enabled, the performance degradation further dropped to 0.14% (Note the
experiment was done before searching indirect call promotion candidate was
added. We hope with the remapping support of searching indirect call promotion
candidate, the degradation can drop to 0% in the end. It will be evaluated
post commit).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86332
This patch makes the unit_length and header_length fields of line tables
optional. yaml2obj is able to infer them for us.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86590
Currently, `dyn_cast<XCOFFObjectFile>` always does cast and returns a pointer,
even when we pass `ELF`/`Wasm`/`Mach-O` or `COFF` instead of `XCOFF`.
It happens because `XCOFFObjectFile` class does not implement `classof`.
I've fixed it and added a unit test.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86542
We only need the C++ type and the corresponding TF Enum. The other
parameter was used for the output spec json file, but we can just
standardize on the C++ type name there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86549
This patch makes the 'Attributes' field optional. We don't need to
explicitly specify the 'Attributes' field in the future.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86537
When trying to enable -debug-info-kind=constructor there was an assert
that occurs during debug info cloning ("mismatched subprogram between
llvm.dbg.value variable and !dbg attachment").
It appears that during llvm::CloneFunctionInto, a DISubprogram could be
duplicated when MapMetadata is called, and then added to the MD map again
when DIFinder gets a list of subprograms. This results in two different
versions of the DISubprogram.
This patch switches the order so that the DIFinder subprograms are
added before MapMetadata is called.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46784
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86185
The original commit (7ff0ace96db9164dcde232c36cab6519ea4fce8) was causing
build failure and was reverted in 6d242a7326
==================== Original Commit Message ====================
This patch adds support for referencing different abbrev tables. We use
'ID' to distinguish abbrev tables and use 'AbbrevTableID' to explicitly
assign an abbrev table to compilation units.
The syntax is:
```
debug_abbrev:
- ID: 0
Table:
...
- ID: 1
Table:
...
debug_info:
- ...
AbbrevTableID: 1 ## Reference the second abbrev table.
- ...
AbbrevTableID: 0 ## Reference the first abbrev table.
```
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83116
Both AfterPass and AfterPassInvalidated pass instrumentation
callbacks get additional parameter of type PreservedAnalyses.
This patch was created by @fedor.sergeev. I have just slightly
changed it.
Reviewers: fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81555
This patch adds support for referencing different abbrev tables. We use
'ID' to distinguish abbrev tables and use 'AbbrevTableID' to explicitly
assign an abbrev table to compilation units.
The syntax is:
```
debug_abbrev:
- ID: 0
Table:
...
- ID: 1
Table:
...
debug_info:
- ...
AbbrevTableID: 1 ## Reference the second abbrev table.
- ...
AbbrevTableID: 0 ## Reference the first abbrev table.
```
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83116
This patch adds support for emitting multiple abbrev tables. Currently,
compilation units will always reference the first abbrev table.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86194
Known bits for G_ANYEXT was incorrectly using KnownBits::zext, causing
us to treat the high bits as zero even though they're (by definition)
unknown.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86323
This patch moves FixedPointSemantics and APFixedPoint
from Clang to LLVM ADT.
This will make it easier to use the fixed-point
classes in LLVM for constructing an IR builder for
fixed-point and for reusing the APFixedPoint class
for constant evaluation purposes.
RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-August/144025.html
Reviewed By: leonardchan, rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85312
VLD2/4 instructions cannot be predicated, so we cannot tail predicate
them from autovec. From intrinsics though, they should be valid as they
will just end up loading extra values into off vector lanes, not
effecting the on lanes. The same is true for loads in general where so
long as we are not using the other vector lanes, an unpredicated load
can be converted to a predicated one.
This marks VLD2 and VLD4 instructions as validForTailPredication and
allows any unpredicated load in tail predication loop, which seems to be
valid given the other checks we have.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86022
SUMMARY:
1. This patch provided API for decoding the traceback table info and unit test for the these API.
2. Another patchs will do the following things:
2.1 added a new option --traceback-table to decode the trace back table information for xcoff object file when
using llvm-objdump to disassemble the xcoff objfile.
2.2 print out the traceback table information for llvm-objdump.
Reviewers: Jason liu, Hubert Tong, James Henderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81585
The current demand propagator for addition will mark all input bits at and right of the alive output bit as alive. But carry won't propagate beyond a bit for which both operands are zero (or one/zero in the case of subtraction) so a more accurate answer is possible given known bits.
I derived a propagator by working through truth tables and using a bit-reversed addition to make demand ripple to the right, but I'm not sure how to make a convincing argument for its correctness in the comments yet. Nevertheless, here's a minimal implementation and test to get feedback.
This would help in a situation where, for example, four bytes (<128) packed into an int are added with four others SIMD-style but only one of the four results is actually read.
Known A: 0_______0_______0_______0_______
Known B: 0_______0_______0_______0_______
AOut: 00000000001000000000000000000000
AB, current: 00000000001111111111111111111111
AB, patch: 00000000001111111000000000000000
Committed on behalf of: @rrika (Erika)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72423
This patch implements initial backend support for a -mtune CPU controlled by a "tune-cpu" function attribute. If the attribute is not present X86 will use the resolved CPU from target-cpu attribute or command line.
This patch adds MC layer support a tune CPU. Each CPU now has two sets of features stored in their GenSubtargetInfo.inc tables . These features lists are passed separately to the Processor and ProcessorModel classes in tablegen. The tune list defaults to an empty list to avoid changes to non-X86. This annoyingly increases the size of static tables on all target as we now store 24 more bytes per CPU. I haven't quantified the overall impact, but I can if we're concerned.
One new test is added to X86 to show a few tuning features with mismatched tune-cpu and target-cpu/target-feature attributes to demonstrate independent control. Another new test is added to demonstrate that the scheduler model follows the tune CPU.
I have not added a -mtune to llc/opt or MC layer command line yet. With no attributes we'll just use the -mcpu for both. MC layer tools will always follow the normal CPU for tuning.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85165
Define the platform ID = 10, and simple mappings between platform ID & name.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, cishida
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85594
This change moves elfabi related code to llvm/InterfaceStub library
so it can be shared by multiple llvm tools without causing cyclic
dependencies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85678
This change replaces the InitialLength of pub-tables with Format and
Length. All the InitialLength fields have been removed.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85880
On z/OS, the information is stored in the Common System Data Area
(CSD). It is the number of CPs allocated to the current LPAR.
Reviewers: aganea, hubert.reinterpertcast, MaskRay
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpertcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85531
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Introduce a helper on Instruction which can be used to update the debug
location after hoisting.
Use this in GVN and LICM, where we were mistakenly introducing new line
0 locations after hoisting (the docs recommend dropping the location in
this case).
For more context, see the discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60913.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85670
Adds the binary format goff and the operating system zos to the triple
class. goff is selected as default binary format if zos is choosen as
operating system. No further functionality is added.
Reviewers: efriedma, tahonermann, hubert.reinterpertcast, MaskRay
Reviewed By: efriedma, tahonermann, hubert.reinterpertcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82081
Although the DWARF specification states that .debug_aranges entries
can't have length zero, these can occur in the wild. There's no
particular reason to enforce this part of the spec, since functionally
they have no impact. The patch removes the error and introduces a new
warning for premature terminator entries which does not stop parsing.
This is a relanding of cb3a598c87, adding the missing obj2yaml part
that was needed.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46805. See also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71932 which originally introduced the error.
Reviewed by: ikudrin, dblaikie, Higuoxing
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85313
Although the DWARF specification states that .debug_aranges entries
can't have length zero, these can occur in the wild. There's no
particular reason to enforce this part of the spec, since functionally
they have no impact. The patch removes the error and introduces a new
warning for premature terminator entries which does not stop parsing.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46805. See also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D71932 which originally introduced the error.
Reviewed by: ikudrin, dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85313
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This removes members of the DIEUnit class which were used only in unit
tests. Note also that child classes shadowed some of these methods,
namely, getDwarfVersion() was overridden in DwartfUnit and getLength()
was overridden in DwarfCompileUnit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85436
In GlobalISel, if you have a load into a small type with a range, you'll hit
an assert if you try to compute known bits on it starting at a larger type.
e.g.
```
%x:_(s8) = G_LOAD %whatever(p0) :: (load 1 ... !range !n)
...
%y:_(s32) = G_SOMETHING %x
```
When we walk through G_SOMETHING and hit the load, the width of our known bits
is 32. However, the width of the range is going to be 8. This will cause us
to hit an assert.
To fix this, make computeKnownBitsFromRangeMetadata zero extend or truncate
the range type to match the bitwidth of the known bits we're calculating.
Add a testcase in CodeGen/GlobalISel/KnownBitsTest.cpp to reflect that this
works now.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D85375
I skimmed the existing users of these matchers and don't see any problems
(eg, the caller assumes the matched value was a select instruction without checking).
So I think we can generalize the matching to allow the new intrinsics or the cmp+select idioms.
I did not find any unit tests for the matchers, so added some basics there. The instsimplify
tests are adapted from existing tests for the cmp+select pattern and cover the folds in
simplifyICmpWithMinMax().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85230
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
These were implementation detail, but become necessary for generic data
copying.
Also added const variations to them, and move assignment, since we had a
move ctor (and the move assignment helps in a subsequent patch).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85262
This quietly disabled use of zlib on Windows even when building with
-DLLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB=FORCE_ON.
> Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
> to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
> HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
> set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
> zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
> the rest of the tooling.
>
> This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
> should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This reverts commit 10b1b4a231 and follow-ups
64d99cc6ab and
f9fec0447e.
Added a mechanism to check the element type, get the total element
count, and the size of an element.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85250
DWARFYAML supports generating the .debug_loclists section. We can use it
to simplify tests.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85179
Extend the memop value profile buckets to be more flexible (could accommodate a
mix of individual values and ranges) and to cover more value ranges (from 11 to
22 buckets).
Disabled behind a flag (to be enabled separately) and the existing code to be
removed later.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81682
The strictfp attribute is required on all function calls in a function
that is itself marked with the strictfp attribute. The IRBuilder knows
this and has a method for adding the attribute to function call instructions.
If a function being called has the strictfp attribute itself then the
IRBuilder will refuse to add the attribute to the calling instruction
despite being asked to add it. Eliminate this error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84878
A JSON->TensorSpec utility we will use subsequently to specify
additional outputs needed for certain training scenarios.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84976
Use pad with undef and unmerge with unused results. This is annoyingly
similar to several other places in LegalizerHelper, but they're all
slightly different.
As discussed on D81500, this adds a more general ElementCount variant of the build helper and converts the (non-scalable) unsigned NumElts variant to use it internally.
ThinLTO is run using a single thread on Linux on Power. The
compute_thread_count() routine calls getHostNumPhysicalCores which
returns -1 by default, and so `MaxThreadCount is set to 1.
unsigned llvm::ThreadPoolStrategy::compute_thread_count() const {
int MaxThreadCount = UseHyperThreads
? computeHostNumHardwareThreads()
: sys::getHostNumPhysicalCores();
if (MaxThreadCount <= 0)
MaxThreadCount = 1;
…
}
Fix: provide custom implementation of getHostNumPhysicalCores for
Linux on Power and Linux on Z.
Reviewed By: Kai, uweigand
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84764
We need to keep track of the alloca insertion point (which we already
communicate via the callback to the user) as we place allocas as well.
Reviewed By: fghanim, SouraVX
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82470
This change define RAII class `FileLocker` and methods `lock` and
`tryLockFor` of the class `raw_fd_stream` to facilitate using file locks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79066
Further abstracting the specification of a tensor, to more easily
support different types and shapes of tensor, and also to perform
initialization up-front, at TFModelEvaluator construction time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84685
This reverts the revert commit dc28675768.
It includes a fix for Polly, which uses SCEVExpander on IR that is not
in LCSSA form. Set PreserveLCSSA = false in that case, to ensure we do
not introduce LCSSA phis where there were none before.
This was using invalid MIR for the test instructions. The test add was
the first instruction in the block, before the trunc inputs or copies
from physical registers which I assume was not intended.
This reverts commit 99166fd4fb, because it
breaks the polly builders.
polly/test/Isl/CodeGen/invariant_load_escaping_second_scop.ll fails
because a apparently unnecessary LCSSA phi node is introduced.
Make the bots green again, while I take a closer look.
TODO
* PrintIRInstrumentation and TimePassesHandler would be using this new callback.
* "Running pass" logging will also be moved to use this callback.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84772
It was unclear what `isa` was supposed to mean so we did not provide any
traits for this context selector. With this patch we will allow *any*
string or identifier. We use the target attribute and target info to
determine if the trait matches. In other words, we will check if the
provided value is a target feature that is available (at the call site).
Fixes PR46338
Reviewed By: ABataev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83281
This patch teaches SCEVExpander to directly preserve LCSSA.
As it is currently, SCEV does not look through PHI nodes in loops,
as it might break LCSSA form. Once SCEVExpander can preserve
LCSSA form, it should be safe for SCEV to look through PHIs.
To preserve LCSSA form, this patch uses formLCSSAForInstructions
on operands of newly created instructions, if the definition is inside
a different loop than the new instruction.
The final value we return from expandCodeFor may also need LCSSA
phis, depending on the insert point. As no user for it exists there yet,
create a temporary instruction at the insert point, which can be passed
to formLCSSAForInstructions. This temporary instruction is removed
after LCSSA construction.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71538
A list of target features is disabled when there is no hardware
floating-point support. This is the case when one of the following
options is passed to clang:
- -mfloat-abi=soft
- -mfpu=none
This option list is missing, however, the extension "+nofp" that can be
specified in -march flags, such as "-march=armv8-a+nofp".
This patch also disables unsupported target features when nofp is passed
to -march.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82948
This is recommit of f51bc4fb60, reverted in 8577595e03, because
the function `flock` is not available on Solaris. In this variant
`flock` was replaced with `fcntl`, which is a POSIX function.
New functions `lockFile`, `tryLockFile` and `unlockFile` implement
simple file locking. They lock or unlock entire file. This must be
enough to support simulataneous writes to log files in parallel builds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78896
This cleans up several CMakeLists.txt's where -Wno-suggest-override was manually specified. These test targets now inherit this flag from the gtest target.
Some unittests CMakeLists.txt's, in particular Flang and LLDB, are not touched by this patch. Flang manually adds the gtest sources itself in some configurations, rather than linking to LLVM's gtest target, so this fix would be insufficient to cover those cases. Similarly, LLDB has subdirectories that manually add the gtest headers to their include path without linking to the gtest target, so those subdirectories still need -Wno-suggest-override to be manually specified to compile without warnings.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84554
Summary:
Try not to resize vector of call records in a call graph node when
replacing call edge. That would prevent invalidation of iterators
stored in the CG SCC pass manager's scc_iterator.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84295
Adds a range-based version of `std::move`, the version that moves a range, not the one that creates r-value references.
Reviewed By: dblaikie, gamesh411
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83902
PassManager.h is one of the top headers in the ClangBuildAnalyzer frontend worst offenders list.
This exposes a large number of implicit dependencies on various forward declarations/includes in other headers that need addressing.
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
Rather than handling zlib handling manually, use find_package from CMake
to find zlib properly. Use this to normalize the LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB,
HAVE_ZLIB, HAVE_ZLIB_H. Furthermore, require zlib if LLVM_ENABLE_ZLIB is
set to YES, which requires the distributor to explicitly select whether
zlib is enabled or not. This simplifies the CMake handling and usage in
the rest of the tooling.
This is a reland of abb0075 with all followup changes and fixes that
should address issues that were reported in PR44780.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79219
This patch refactors `emitDebugInfo()` to make the length field be
inferred from its content. Besides, the `Visitor` class is removed in
this patch. The original `Visitor` class helps us determine an
appropriate length and emit the .debug_info section. These two
processes can be merged into one process. Besides, the length field
should be inferred when it's missing rather than when it's zero.
Reviewed By: jhenderson, labath
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84008
This reapplies commit d4020ef7c4, reverted in ac0edc5588 because it
broke build of LLDB. This commit contains appropriate changes for LLDB.
The original commit message is below.
Documentation on CreateProcessW states that maximal size of command line
is 32767 characters including ternimation null character. In the
function llvm::sys::commandLineFitsWithinSystemLimits this limit was set
to 32768. As a result if command line was exactly 32768 characters long,
a response file was not created and CreateProcessW was called with
too long command line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83772
add_compile_options is more sensitive to its location in the file than add_definitions--it only takes effect for sources that are added after it. This updated patch ensures that the add_compile_options is done before adding any source files that depend on it.
Using add_definitions caused the flag to be passed to rc.exe on Windows and thus broke Windows builds.
This reverts commit 4a539faf74.
There is a __llvm_profile_instrument_range related crash in PGO-instrumented clang:
```
(gdb) bt
llvm::ConstantRange const&, llvm::APInt const&, unsigned int, bool) ()
llvm::ScalarEvolution::getRangeForAffineAR(llvm::SCEV const*, llvm::SCEV
const*, llvm::SCEV const*, unsigned int) ()
```
(The body of __llvm_profile_instrument_range is inlined, so we can only find__llvm_profile_instrument_target in the trace)
```
23│ 0x000055555dba0961 <+65>: nopw %cs:0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
24│ 0x000055555dba096b <+75>: nopl 0x0(%rax,%rax,1)
25│ 0x000055555dba0970 <+80>: mov %rsi,%rbx
26│ 0x000055555dba0973 <+83>: mov 0x8(%rsi),%rsi # %rsi=-1 -> SIGSEGV
27│ 0x000055555dba0977 <+87>: cmp %r15,(%rbx)
28│ 0x000055555dba097a <+90>: je 0x55555dba0a76 <__llvm_profile_instrument_target+342>
```
- Update documentation to clarify that `}` does not need to be doubled up.
- Update `EscapedBrace` test case to test this behavior
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83888