This reverts r374268 (git commit c34385d07c)
I think I reverted this by mistake, so I'm relanding it. While my bisect
found this revision, I think the crashes I'm seeing locally must be
environmental. Maybe the version of clang I'm using miscompiles tot
clang.
llvm-svn: 374269
Summary:
Visual Studio doesn't like it while stepping. It kicks you out of the
source view of the file being stepped through and tries to fall back to
the disassembly view.
Fixes PR43530
The fix is incomplete, because it's possible to have a basic block with
no source locations at all. In this case, we don't emit a .cv_loc, but
that will result in wrong stepping behavior in the debugger if the
layout predecessor of the location-less BB has an unrelated source
location. We could try harder to find a valid location that dominates or
post-dominates the current BB, but in general it's a dataflow problem,
and one still might not exist. I left a FIXME about this.
As an alternative, we might want to consider having the middle-end check
if its emitting codeview and get it to stop using line zero.
Reviewers: akhuang
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68747
llvm-svn: 374267
Dereferences with addresses above the 48-bit hardware addressable range
produce "invalid instruction" (instead of "invalid access") hardware
exceptions (there is no hardware address decoding logic for those bits),
and the address provided by this exception is the address of the
instruction (not the faulting address). The kernel maps the "invalid
instruction" to SEGV, but fails to provide the real fault address.
Because of this ASan lies and says that those cases are null
dereferences. This downgrades the severity of a found bug in terms of
security. In the ASan signal handler, we can not provide the real
faulting address, but at least we can try not to lie.
rdar://50366151
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68676
llvm-svn: 374265
debugserver had been using an instruction that would work
for armv7 or aarch64 processes, but we don't have armv7 code
running on arm64 devices any more so this is unnecessary.
<rdar://problem/56133118>
llvm-svn: 374264
CUDA/HIP program may be compiled with -fopenmp. In this case, -fopenmp is only passed to host compilation
to take advantages of multi-threads computation.
CUDA/HIP and OpenMP both use Sema::DeviceCallGraph to store functions to be analyzed and remove them
once they decide the function is sure to be emitted. CUDA/HIP and OpenMP have different functions to determine
if a function is sure to be emitted.
To check host/device correctly for CUDA/HIP when -fopenmp is enabled, there needs a unified logic to determine
whether a function is to be emitted. The logic needs to be aware of both CUDA and OpenMP logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67837
llvm-svn: 374263
As background, starting in D66309, I'm working on support unordered atomics analogous to volatile flags on normal LoadSDNode/StoreSDNodes for X86.
As part of that, I spent some time going through usages of LoadSDNode and StoreSDNode looking for cases where we might have missed a volatility check or need an atomic check. I couldn't find any cases that clearly miscompile - i.e. no test cases - but a couple of pieces in code loop suspicious though I can't figure out how to exercise them.
This patch adds defensive checks and asserts in the places my manual audit found. If anyone has any ideas on how to either a) disprove any of the checks, or b) hit the bug they might be fixing, I welcome suggestions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68419
llvm-svn: 374261
In a future patch, this will help cleanup m0 handling.
The register coalescer handles copies from a register that
materializes an immediate, but doesn't handle move immediates
itself. The virtual register uses will often be allocated to the same
register, so there end up being no real copy.
llvm-svn: 374257
This old test used a completely hand-rolled Makefile. Modernize so that
it's able to cross-compile. And XFAIL the test as it fails on embedded
targets...
llvm-svn: 374256
This was ignoring the register bank of the input pointer, and
isUniformMMO seems overly aggressive.
This will now conservatively assume a VGPR in cases where the incoming
bank hasn't been determined yet (i.e. is from a loop phi).
llvm-svn: 374255
When building an executable and a shared library at the same time (yes,
Makefile.rules is setup to do this!) the executable was not codesigned.
llvm-svn: 374251
* Silence unused-local-typedef warnings: `map.cons/assign_initializer_list.pass.cpp` (and the `set.cons` variant) uses a local typedef only within `LIBCPP_ASSERT`s, so clang diagnoses it as unused when testing non-libc++.
* Add missing include: `c.math/abs.pass.cpp` uses `std::numeric_limits` but failed to `#include <limits>`.
* Don't test non-type: A "recent" change to `meta.trans.other/underlying_type.pass.cpp` unconditionally tests the type `F` which is conditionally defined.
* Use `hash<long long>` instead of `hash<short>` with `int` in `unordered_meow` deduction guide tests to avoid truncation warnings.
* Convert `3.14` explicitly in `midpoint.float.pass` since MSVC incorrectly diagnoses `float meow = 3.14;` as truncating.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68681
llvm-svn: 374248
Stack unwinding was sometimes failing when trying to unwind stacks in 32 bit ARM. I discovered this was because the EH frame register numbers were not set. This patch fixes this issue and adds a unit test to verify this doesn't regress.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68088
llvm-svn: 374246
Summary: The PlaceholderObjectFile has an assert in SetLoadAddress that fires if "m_base == value" is not true. To avoid this, we create check that the base address matches, and if it doesn't we clear the module that was found using the UUID so that we create a new PlaceholderObjectFile. Added a test to cover this issue.
Reviewers: labath, aadsm, dvlahovski
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68106
llvm-svn: 374242
If original instruction did not have source modifiers they were
not added to the new DPP instruction as well, even if needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68729
llvm-svn: 374241
Summary:
There a a few call sites that use FILE* which are easy to
fix without disrupting anything else.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68444
llvm-svn: 374239
Summary:
It's really annoying and confusing to have to keep referring
back to earlier versions of this SBFile work to find the
tests that need to be added for each patch, and not duplicate
them with new tests.
This patch just imports all my tests. A bunch of them don't
work yet, so they are marked to be skipped. They'll be
unmarked as I fix them.
One of these tests will actually trip an assert in the SWIG
code now instead of just failing, so I'm fixing that here too.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere, labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68433
llvm-svn: 374237
Summary:
This is necessary and sufficient to get simple cases of multiple
return working with multivalue enabled. More complex cases will
require block and loop signatures to be generalized to potentially be
type indices as well.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68684
llvm-svn: 374235
in ExtBinary format
Currently for Text, Binary and ExtBinary format profiles, when we compile a
module with samplefdo, even if there is no function showing up in the profile,
we have to load all the function profiles from the profile input. That is a
waste of compile time.
CompactBinary format profile has already had the support of loading function
profiles on demand. In this patch, we add the support to load profile on
demand for ExtBinary format. It will work no matter the sections in ExtBinary
format profile are compressed or not. Experiment shows it reduces the time to
compile a server benchmark by 30%.
When profile remapping and loading function profiles on demand are both used,
extra work needs to be done so that the loading on demand process will take
the name remapping into consideration. It will be addressed in a follow-up
patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68601
llvm-svn: 374233
When building standalone, since llvm-strip is a symlink, it is created
using add_custom_command/add_custom_target which cannot be exported, and
thus cannot be depended on by lldb.
Patch by: Gwen Mittertreiner
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68614
llvm-svn: 374229
This reverts commit 958091c209.
This commit incorrectly sets the _lldb.so symlink (at least it does when
building in Stefans' two build directory mode, where you build llvm with
cmake/ninja and lldb with cmake/Xcode, using a cmake generated project.
The _lldb.so link is SUPPOSED to point to:
bin/LLDB.framework/Versions/A/LLDB
but instead it points to
bin/LLDB
which is where LLDB was staged to before constructing the framework. This
causes all sorts of problems when we then build the lldb driver into bin -
remember that MacOS is a case-preserving but case insensitive filesystem -
so when we later go to dlopen _lldb.so, we dlopen the main executable instead.
llvm-svn: 374226
Summary:
This patch adds SWIG typemaps that can convert arbitrary python
file objects into lldb_private::File.
A SBFile may be initialized from a python file using the
constructor. There are also alternate, tagged constructors
that allow python files to be borrowed, and for the caller
to control whether or not the python I/O methods will be
called even when a file descriptor is available.I
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, jasonmolenda, labath
Reviewed By: labath
Subscribers: zturner, amccarth, lldb-commits
Tags: #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68188
llvm-svn: 374225
This patch removes the remaining part of the OpenMP offload linker scripts which was used for inserting device binaries into the output linked binary. Device binaries are now inserted into the host binary with a help of the wrapper bit-code file which contains device binaries as data. Wrapper bit-code file is dynamically created by the clang driver with a help of new tool clang-offload-wrapper which takes device binaries as input and produces bit-code file with required contents. Wrapper bit-code is then compiled to an object and resulting object is appended to the host linking by the clang driver.
This is the second part of the patch for eliminating OpenMP linker script (please see https://reviews.llvm.org/D64943).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68166
llvm-svn: 374219