The 64-bit MIPS ELF archive file format is used by MIPS64 targets.
The main difference from a regular archive file is the symbol table format:
1. ar_name is equal to "/SYM64/"
2. number of symbols and offsets are 64-bit integers
http://techpubs.sgi.com/library/manuals/4000/007-4658-001/pdf/007-4658-001.pdf
Page 96
The patch allows reading of such archive files by llvm-nm, llvm-objdump
and other tools. But it does not support archive files with number of symbols
and/or offsets exceed 2^32. I think it is a rather rare case requires more
significant modification of `Archive` class code.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7546
llvm-svn: 229520
This is a follow-on patch to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7093
That patch canonicalized constant splats as build_vectors,
and this patch removes the constant check so we can canonicalize
all splats as build_vectors.
This fixes the 2nd test case in PR22283:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22283
The unfortunate code duplication between SelectionDAG and DAGCombiner
is discussed in the earlier patch review. At least this patch is just
removing code...
This improves an existing x86 AVX test and changes codegen in an ARM test.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7389
llvm-svn: 229511
The problem was in store-sink barrier check.
Store sink barrier should be checked for ModRef (read-write) mode.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22613
llvm-svn: 229495
GCC 4.8 reported two new warnings due to comparisons
between signed and unsigned integer expressions. The new warnings were
accidentally introduced by revision 229480.
Added explicit casts to silence the warnings. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 229488
This added API to the InstrProfWriter to write to a string so I could
write unittests without using temp files. This doesn't really work,
since the format has tighter alignment requirements than a char.
This reverts r229478 and its follow-up, r229481.
llvm-svn: 229483
- added mask types v8i1 and v16i1 to possible function parameters
- enabled passing 512-bit vectors in standard CC
- added a test for KNL intel_ocl_bi conventions
llvm-svn: 229482
Vector zext tends to get legalized into a vector anyext, represented as a vector shuffle with an undef vector + a bitcast, that gets ANDed with a mask that zeroes the undef elements.
Combine this into an explicit shuffle with a zero vector instead. This allows shuffle lowering to match it as a zext, instead of matching it as an anyext and emitting an explicit AND.
This combine only covers a subset of the cases, but it's a start.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7666
llvm-svn: 229480
initialization. Initialize the subtarget once per function and
migrate EmitStartOfAsmFile to either use attributes on the
TargetMachine or get information from all of the various
subtargets.
llvm-svn: 229475
This allows it to match still more places where previously we would have
to fall back on floating point shuffles or other more complex lowering
strategies.
I'm hoping to replace some of the hand-rolled unpack matching with this
routine is it gets more and more clever.
llvm-svn: 229463
BDCE is a bit-tracking dead code elimination pass. It is based on ADCE (the
"aggressive DCE" pass), with the added capability to track dead bits of integer
valued instructions and remove those instructions when all of the bits are
dead.
Currently, it does not actually do this all-bits-dead removal, but rather
replaces the instruction's uses with a constant zero, and lets instcombine (and
the later run of ADCE) do the rest. Because we essentially get a run of ADCE
"for free" while tracking the dead bits, we also do what ADCE does and removes
actually-dead instructions as well (this includes instructions newly trivially
dead because all bits were dead, but not all such instructions can be removed).
The motivation for this is a case like:
int __attribute__((const)) foo(int i);
int bar(int x) {
x |= (4 & foo(5));
x |= (8 & foo(3));
x |= (16 & foo(2));
x |= (32 & foo(1));
x |= (64 & foo(0));
x |= (128& foo(4));
return x >> 4;
}
As it turns out, if you order the bit-field insertions so that all of the dead
ones come last, then instcombine will remove them. However, if you pick some
other order (such as the one above), the fact that some of the calls to foo()
are useless is not locally obvious, and we don't remove them (without this
pass).
I did a quick compile-time overhead check using sqlite from the test suite
(Release+Asserts). BDCE took ~0.4% of the compilation time (making it about
twice as expensive as ADCE).
I've not looked at why yet, but we eliminate instructions due to having
all-dead bits in:
External/SPEC/CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII
External/SPEC/CINT2006/400.perlbench/400.perlbench
External/SPEC/CINT2006/403.gcc/403.gcc
MultiSource/Applications/ClamAV/clamscan
MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip/7zip-benchmark
llvm-svn: 229462
This patch replaces most of the Orc indirection utils API with a new class:
JITCompileCallbackManager, which creates and manages JIT callbacks.
Exposing this functionality directly allows the user to create callbacks that
are associated with user supplied compilation actions. For example, you can
create a callback to lazyily IR-gen something from an AST. (A kaleidoscope
example demonstrating this will be committed shortly).
This patch also refactors the CompileOnDemand layer to use the
JITCompileCallbackManager API.
llvm-svn: 229461
While looking at a heap profile of a clang LTO bootstrap with -g, I
noticed that 2.2% of memory in an `llvm-lto` of clang is from calling
`DebugLoc::get()` in `collectVariableInfo()` (accounting for ~40% of
memory used for `MDLocation`s).
I suspect this was introduced by r226736, whose goal was to prevent
uniquing of `DebugLoc`s (goal achieved, if so).
There's no reason we need a `DebugLoc` here at all -- it was just being
used for (in)convenient API -- so the fix is to pass the scope and
inlined-at directly to `LexicalScopes::findInlinedScope()`.
llvm-svn: 229459
Our register allocation has become better recently, it seems, and is now
starting to generate cross-block copies into inflated register classes. These
copies are not transformed into subregister insertions/extractions by the
PPCVSXCopy class, and so need to be handled directly by
PPCInstrInfo::copyPhysReg. The code to do this was *almost* there, but not
quite (it was unnecessarily restricting itself to only the direct
sub/super-register-class case (not copying between, for example, something in
VRRC and the lower-half of VSRC which are super-registers of F8RC).
Triggering this behavior manually is difficult; I'm including two
bugpoint-reduced test cases from the test suite.
llvm-svn: 229457
This required some minor API to be added to these types to avoid
needing temp files.
Also, I've used initializer lists in the tests, as MSVC 2013 claims to
support them. I'll redo this without them if the bots complain.
llvm-svn: 229455
We cannot simply rematerialize instructions which only defining a
subregister, as the final value also depends on the previous
instructions.
This fixes test/CodeGen/R600/subreg-coalescer-bug.ll with subreg
liveness enabled.
llvm-svn: 229444
IMPLICIT_DEF is a generic instruction and has no (fixed) output register
class defined. The rematerialization code of the register coalescer
should not scan the instruction description for a register class.
This fixes a problem showing up in
test/CodeGen/R600/subreg-coalescer-crash.ll with subregister liveness
enabled.
llvm-svn: 229443
Patch to explicitly add the SSE MOVQ (rr,mr,rm) instructions to SSEPackedInt domain - prevents a number of costly domain switches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7600
llvm-svn: 229439
The previous fix in r225503 was needlessly complicated. The problem goes
away as well if the arguments to MergeValueNumberInto are supplied in the
correct order.
This was previously missed because the existing code already had the
wrong order but an additional later Merge was hiding the bug for the
main liverange VNI.
llvm-svn: 229424
The metadata/value split introduced a major regression reading large
bitcode files that contain debug info (or other cyclic (non-self
reference) metadata graphs). For the first time in a while, I dropped
from libLTO.dylib down to `llvm-lto` with a non-trivial bitcode file
(~350MB), and I hit this when reading the result of ld64's `-save-temps`
in `llvm-lto`.
Here's pseudo-code for what was going on:
read-main-metadata-block:
for each md:
if has-fwd-ref: // Only true for cyclic graphs.
any-fwd-refs <- true
if any-fwd-refs:
foreach md:
resolve-cycles(md) // Handle cycles.
foreach function:
read-function-metadata-block: // Such as !alias, !loop
if any-fwd-refs:
foreach md: // (all metadata, not just this block)
resolve-cycles(md) // A no-op, but the loop is expensive!!
This commit resets the `AnyFwdRefs` flag to `false`. This on its own
was enough to change my Release+Asserts `llvm-lto` time for reading this
bitcode from over 20 minutes (I gave up on it) to 20 seconds. I've gone
further by tracking the min/max metadata forward-references in a
metadata block. This protects against a schema that has lots of
functions that each reference their own metadata cycle.
Unfortunately, this regression is in the 3.6 branch as well.
llvm-svn: 229421
This adds a safe interface to the machine independent InputArg struct
for accessing the index of the original (IR-level) argument. When a
non-native return type is lowered, we generate the hidden
machine-level sret argument on-the-fly. Before this fix, we were
representing this argument as OrigArgIndex == 0, which is an outright
lie. In particular this crashed in the AArch64 backend where we
actually try to access the type of the original argument.
Now we use a sentinel value for machine arguments that have no
original argument index. AArch64, ARM, Mips, and PPC now check for this
case before accessing the original argument.
Fixes <rdar://19792160> Null pointer assertion in AArch64TargetLowering
llvm-svn: 229413
We won't find a root with index zero in any loop that we are able to reroll.
However, we may find one in a non-rerollable loop, so bail gracefully instead
of failing hard.
llvm-svn: 229406
If a PHI has no users, don't crash; bail gracefully. This shouldn't
happen often, but we can make no guarantees that previous passes didn't leave
dead code around.
llvm-svn: 229405
to generically lower blends and is particularly nice because it is
available frome SSE2 onward. This removes a lot of the remaining domain
crossing blends in SSE2 code.
I'm hoping to replace some of the "interleaved" lowering hacks with
something closer to this which should be more principled. First, this
needs to learn how to detect and use other interleavings besides that of
the natural type provided. That will be a follow-up patch though.
llvm-svn: 229378