The status function is already using a syscall that returns the file size.
Remember it and implement file_size as a simple wrapper.
No functionally change, but clients that already use status now can avoid
calling file_size.
llvm-svn: 186016
A special case list can now specify categories for specific globals,
which can be used to instruct an instrumentation pass to treat certain
functions or global variables in a specific way, such as by omitting
certain aspects of instrumentation while keeping others, or informing
the instrumentation pass that a specific uninstrumentable function
has certain semantics, thus allowing the pass to instrument callers
according to those semantics.
For example, AddressSanitizer now uses the "init" category instead of
global-init prefixes for globals whose initializers should not be
instrumented, but which in all other respects should be instrumented.
The motivating use case is DataFlowSanitizer, which will have a
number of different categories for uninstrumentable functions, such
as "functional" which specifies that a function has pure functional
semantics, or "discard" which indicates that a function's return
value should not be labelled.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1092
llvm-svn: 185978
Change the informal convention of DBG_VALUE machine instructions so that
we can express a register-indirect address with an offset of 0.
The old convention was that a DBG_VALUE is a register-indirect value if
the offset (operand 1) is nonzero. The new convention is that a DBG_VALUE
is register-indirect if the first operand is a register and the second
operand is an immediate. For plain register values the combination reg,
reg is used. MachineInstrBuilder::BuildMI knows how to build the new
DBG_VALUES.
rdar://problem/13658587
llvm-svn: 185966
in-tree implementations of TargetLoweringBase::isFMAFasterThanMulAndAdd in
order to resolve the following issues with fmuladd (i.e. optional FMA)
intrinsics:
1. On X86(-64) targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed when lowering fmuladd
intrinsics even if the subtarget does not support FMA instructions, leading
to laughably bad code generation in some situations.
2. On AArch64 targets, ISD::FMA nodes are formed for operations on fp128,
resulting in a call to a software fp128 FMA implementation.
3. On PowerPC targets, FMAs are not generated from fmuladd intrinsics on types
like v2f32, v8f32, v4f64, etc., even though they promote, split, scalarize,
etc. to types that support hardware FMAs.
The function has also been slightly renamed for consistency and to force a
merge/build conflict for any out-of-tree target implementing it. To resolve,
see comments and fixed in-tree examples.
llvm-svn: 185956
In the commit message to r185476 I wrote:
>The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
>correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
>This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
>is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.
>
>To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
>modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout. (The only
>drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
>while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
>But this is just a cosmetic issue.)
This was unfortunately incorrect, there is is fact another,
serious drawback to using the default VK_TLSLD/VK_TLSGD
variant kinds: using these causes ELFObjectWriter::RelocNeedsGOT
to return true, which in turn causes the ELFObjectWriter to emit
an undefined reference to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.
This is a problem on powerpc64, because it uses the TOC instead
of the GOT, and the linker does not provide _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_,
so the symbol remains undefined. This means shared libraries
using TLS built with the integrated assembler are currently
broken.
While the whole RelocNeedsGOT / _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ situation
probably ought to be properly fixed at some point, for now I'm
simply reverting the r185476 commit. Now this in turn exposes
the breakage of handling @tlsgd/@tlsld in the asm parser that
this check-in was originally intended to fix.
To avoid this regression, I'm also adding a different fix for
this problem: while common code now parses @tlsgd as VK_TLSGD,
a special hack in the asm parser translates this code to the
platform-specific VK_PPC_TLSGD that the back-end now expects.
While this is not really pretty, it's self-contained and
shouldn't hurt anything else for now. One the underlying
problem is fixed, this hack can be reverted again.
llvm-svn: 185945
Remove the implementation in include/llvm/Support/YAMLTraits.h.
Added a DenseMap type DITypeHashMap in DebugInfo.h:
DenseMap<std::pair<StringRef, unsigned>, MDNode*>
llvm-svn: 185852
This reverts r185841 and relands r185831 without using
__has_attribute(const).
Clang prior to r161767 (between 3.1 and 3.2) does not accept
__has_attribute(const) due to rdar://10253857. __const and __const__
are both keyword aliases of const, so they don't work either.
I was able to repro the buildbot failure using clang 3.1 and this patch
fixes it. Various important versions of XCode use clang 2.9-ish, so
this workaround is necessary.
llvm-svn: 185850
The symptom is seg-fault, and the root cause is that a SCEV contains a SCEVUnknown
which has null-pointer to a llvm::Value.
This is how the problem take place:
===================================
1). In the pristine input IR, there are two relevant instrutions Op1 and Op2,
Op1's corresponding SCEV (denoted as SCEV(op1)) is a SCEVUnknown, and
SCEV(Op2) contains SCEV(Op1). None of these instructions are dead.
Op1 : V1 = ...
...
Op2 : V2 = ... // directly or indirectly (data-flow) depends on Op1
2) Optimizer (LSR in my case) generates an instruction holding the equivalent
value of Op1, making Op1 dead.
Op1': V1' = ...
Op1: V1 = ... ; now dead)
Op2 : V2 = ... //Now deps on Op1', but the SCEV(Op2) still contains SCEV(Op1)
3) Op1 is deleted, and call-back function is called to reset
SCEV(Op1) to indicate it is invalid. However, SCEV(Op2) is not
invalidated as well.
4) Following pass get the cached, invalid SCEV(Op2), and try to manipulate it,
and cause segfault.
The fix:
========
It seems there is no clean yet inexpensive fix. I write to dev-list
soliciting good solution, unforunately no ack. So, I decide to fix this
problem in a brute-force way:
When ScalarEvolution::getSCEV is called, check if the cached SCEV
contains a invalid SCEVUnknow, if yes, remove the cached SCEV, and
re-evaluate the SCEV from scratch.
I compile buch of big *.c and *.cpp, fortunately, I don't see any increase
in compile time.
Misc:
=====
The reduced test-case has 2357 lines of code+other-stuff, too big to commit.
rdar://14283433
llvm-svn: 185843
I tested r185831 by self-hosting clang with a recent clang, and got no
warnings. I haven't been able to reproduce the problem locally.
llvm-svn: 185833
When targetting Windows, clang does not define __GNUC__, and as a result
we don't use our attributes with it. This leads to warnings about
unused functions that are already annotated with LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_UNUSED.
Rather than testing for __clang__, we can use its __has_attribute and
__has_builtin macros directlty.
While I'm here, conditionally define and use __GNUC_PREREQ for gcc
version checks. Spelling the check out with three comparisons is
verbose and error prone.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1080
llvm-svn: 185831
This function is complementary to createTemporaryFile. It handles the case were
the unique file is *not* temporary: we will rename it in the end. Since we
will rename it, the file has to be in the same filesystem as the final
destination and we don't prepend the system temporary directory.
This has a small semantic difference from unique_file: the default mode is 0666.
This matches the behavior of most unix tools. For example, with this change
lld now produces files with the same permissions as ld. I will add a test
of this change when I port clang over to createUniqueFile (next commit).
llvm-svn: 185726
This function is inspired by clang's Driver::GetTemporaryPath. It hides the
pattern used for uniquing and requires simple file names that are always
placed in the system temporary directory.
llvm-svn: 185716
The stack coloring pass has code to delete stores and loads that become
trivially dead after coloring. Extend it to cope with single instructions
that copy from one frame index to another.
The testcase happens to show an example of this kicking in at the moment.
It did occur in Real Code too though.
llvm-svn: 185705
SystemZ wants normal register scavenging slots, as close to the stack or
frame pointer as possible. The only reason it was using custom code was
because PrologEpilogInserter assumed an x86-like layout, where the frame
pointer is at the opposite end of the frame from the stack pointer.
This meant that when frame pointer elimination was disabled,
the slots ended up being as close as possible to the incoming
stack pointer, which is the opposite of what we want on SystemZ.
This patch adds a new knob to say which layout is used and converts
SystemZ to use target-independent scavenging slots. It's one of the pieces
needed to support frame-to-frame MVCs, where two slots might be required.
The ABI requires us to allocate 160 bytes for calls, so one approach
would be to use that area as temporary spill space instead. It would need
some surgery to make sure that the slot isn't live across a call though.
I stuck to the "isFPCloseToIncomingSP - ..." style comment on the
"do what the surrounding code does" principle. The FP case is already
covered by several Systemz/frame-* tests, which fail without the
PrologueEpilogueInserter change, so no new ones are needed.
No behavioural change intended.
llvm-svn: 185696
Stop using the ISD::EXCEPTIONADDR and ISD::EHSELECTION when lowering
landing pad arguments. These nodes were previously legalized into
CopyFromReg nodes, but that never worked properly because the
CopyFromReg node weren't guaranteed to be scheduled at the top of the
basic block.
This meant the exception pointer and selector registers could be
clobbered before being copied to a virtual register.
This patch copies the two physical registers to virtual registers at
the beginning of the basic block, and lowers the landingpad instruction
directly to two CopyFromReg nodes reading the *virtual* registers. This
is safe because virtual registers don't get clobbered.
A future patch will remove the ISD::EXCEPTIONADDR and ISD::EHSELECTION
nodes.
llvm-svn: 185617
Stop using the ISD::EXCEPTIONADDR and ISD::EHSELECTION when lowering
landing pad arguments. These nodes were previously legalized into
CopyFromReg nodes, but that never worked properly because the
CopyFromReg node weren't guaranteed to be scheduled at the top of the
basic block.
This meant the exception pointer and selector registers could be
clobbered before being copied to a virtual register.
This patch copies the two physical registers to virtual registers at
the beginning of the basic block, and lowers the landingpad instruction
directly to two CopyFromReg nodes reading the *virtual* registers. This
is safe because virtual registers don't get clobbered.
A future patch will remove the ISD::EXCEPTIONADDR and ISD::EHSELECTION
nodes.
llvm-svn: 185595
*NOTE* In a recent version of posix, they added the restrict keyword to the
arguments for this function. From some spelunking it seems that on some
platforms, the call has restrict on its arguments and others it does not. Thus I
left off the restrict keyword from the function prototype in the comment.
llvm-svn: 185501
Correctly handles ref_addr depending on the Dwarf version. Emit Dwarf with
version from module flag.
TODO: turn on/off features depending on the Dwarf version.
llvm-svn: 185484
The PowerPC-specific modifiers VK_PPC_TLSGD and VK_PPC_TLSLD
correspond exactly to the generic modifiers VK_TLSGD and VK_TLSLD.
This causes some confusion with the asm parser, since VK_PPC_TLSGD
is output as @tlsgd, which is then read back in as VK_TLSGD.
To avoid this confusion, this patch removes the PowerPC-specific
modifiers and uses the generic modifiers throughout. (The only
drawback is that the generic modifiers are printed in upper case
while the usual convention on PowerPC is to use lower-case modifiers.
But this is just a cosmetic issue.)
llvm-svn: 185476
This allows getDebugThreadLocalSymbol to return a generic MCExpr
instead of just a MCSymbolRefExpr.
This is in preparation for supporting debug info for TLS variables
on PowerPC, where we need to describe the variable location using
a more complex expression than just MCSymbolRefExpr.
llvm-svn: 185460
This is dead code since PIC16 was removed in 2010. The result was an odd mix,
where some parts would carefully pass it along and others would assert it was
zero (most of the object streamer for example).
llvm-svn: 185436
This adds support for TLS data relocations and modifiers:
.quad target@dtpmod
.quad target@tprel
.quad target@dtprel
Currently exploited by the asm parser only.
llvm-svn: 185394
Patch by Benjamin Kramer!
Use the BlockFrequency class instead of floats in the Hopfield network
computations. This rescales the node Bias field from a [-2;2] float
range to two block frequencies BiasN and BiasP pulling in opposite
directions. This construct has a more predictable behavior when block
frequencies saturate.
The per-node scaling factors are no longer necessary, assuming the block
frequencies around a bundle are consistent.
This patch can cause the register allocator to make different spilling
decisions. The differences should be small.
llvm-svn: 185393
Restrict the current TLS support to X86 ELF for now. Test that we don't
produce it on PPC & we can flesh that test case out with the right thing
once someone implements it.
llvm-svn: 185389
Change assert("text") to assert(0 && "text"). The first case is a const char *
to bool conversion, which always evaluates to true, never triggering the
assert. The second case will always trigger the assert.
llvm-svn: 185227
Based on GCC's output for TLS variables (OP_constNu, x@dtpoff,
OP_lo_user), this implements debug info support for TLS in ELF. Verified
that this output is correct/sufficient on Linux (using gold - if you're
using binutils-ld, you'll need something with the fix for
http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=15685 in it).
Support on non-ELF is sort of "arbitrary" at the moment - if Apple folks
want to discuss (or just go ahead & implement) how this should work in
MachO, etc, I'm open.
llvm-svn: 185203
- Build debug metadata for 'bare' Modules using DIBuilder
- DebugIR can be constructed to generate an IR file (to be seen by a debugger)
or not in cases where the user already has an IR file on disk.
llvm-svn: 185193
Allow a BlockFrequency to be divided by a non-zero BranchProbability
with saturating arithmetic. This will be used to compute the frequency
of a loop header given the probability of leaving the loop.
Our long division algorithm already saturates on overflow, so that was a
freebie.
llvm-svn: 185184
a zero-argument createNullPtrType function for creating the canonical
nullptr type.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1050
llvm-svn: 185114
This reverts commit r185099.
Looks like both the ppc-64 and mips bots are still failing after I reverted this
change.
Since:
1. The mips bot always performs a clean build,
2. The ppc64-bot failed again after a clean build (I asked the ppc-64
maintainers to clean the bot which they did... Thanks Will!),
I think it is safe to assume that this change was not the cause of the failures
that said builders were seeing. Thus I am recomitting.
llvm-svn: 185111
This reverts commit r185095. This is causing a FileCheck failure on
the 3dnow intrinsics on at least the mips/ppc bots but not on the x86
bots.
Reverting while I figure out what is going on.
llvm-svn: 185099
The category which an APFloat belongs to should be dependent on the
actual value that the APFloat has, not be arbitrarily passed in by the
user. This will prevent inconsistency bugs where the category and the
actual value in APFloat differ.
I also fixed up all of the references to this constructor (which were
only in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 185095
algorithm when assigning EnumValues to the synthesized registers.
The current algorithm, LessRecord, uses the StringRef compare_numeric
function. This function compares strings, while handling embedded numbers.
For example, the R600 backend registers are sorted as follows:
T1
T1_W
T1_X
T1_XYZW
T1_Y
T1_Z
T2
T2_W
T2_X
T2_XYZW
T2_Y
T2_Z
In this example, the 'scaling factor' is dEnum/dN = 6 because T0, T1, T2
have an EnumValue offset of 6 from one another. However, in other parts
of the register bank, the scaling factors are different:
dEnum/dN = 5:
KC0_128_W
KC0_128_X
KC0_128_XYZW
KC0_128_Y
KC0_128_Z
KC0_129_W
KC0_129_X
KC0_129_XYZW
KC0_129_Y
KC0_129_Z
The diff lists do not work correctly because different kinds of registers have
different 'scaling factors'. This new algorithm, LessRecordRegister, tries to
enforce a scaling factor of 1. For example, the registers are now sorted as
follows:
T1
T2
T3
...
T0_W
T1_W
T2_W
...
T0_X
T1_X
T2_X
...
KC0_128_W
KC0_129_W
KC0_130_W
...
For the Mips and R600 I see a 19% and 6% reduction in size, respectively. I
did see a few small regressions, but the differences were on the order of a
few bytes (e.g., AArch64 was 16 bytes). I suspect there will be even
greater wins for targets with larger register files.
Patch reviewed by Jakob.
rdar://14006013
llvm-svn: 185094
There are a few valid situation where we care about the structure inside a
directory, but not about the directory itself. A simple example is for unit
testing directory traversal.
PathV1 had a function like this, add one to V2 and port existing users of the
created temp file and delete it hack to using it.
llvm-svn: 185059
The Builtin attribute is an attribute that can be placed on function call site that signal that even though a function is declared as being a builtin,
rdar://problem/13727199
llvm-svn: 185049
This patch modifies TableGen to generate a function in
${TARGET}GenInstrInfo.inc called getNamedOperandIdx(), which can be used
to look up indices for operands based on their names.
In order to activate this feature for an instruction, you must set the
UseNamedOperandTable bit.
For example, if you have an instruction like:
def ADD : TargetInstr <(outs GPR:$dst), (ins GPR:$src0, GPR:$src1)>;
You can look up the operand indices using the new function, like this:
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::dst) => 0
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src0) => 1
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src1) => 2
The operand names are case sensitive, so $dst and $DST are considered
different operands.
This change is useful for R600 which has instructions with a large number
of operands, many of which model single bit instruction configuration
values. These configuration bits are common across most instructions,
but may have a different operand index depending on the instruction type.
It is useful to have a convenient way to look up the operand indices,
so these bits can be generically set on any instruction.
llvm-svn: 184879
This is a band-aid to fix the most severe regressions we're seeing from basing
spill decisions on block frequencies, until we have a better solution.
llvm-svn: 184835
Representing enumerators by int64 instead of uint64 for now. At some
point we need to address the underlying issue of representation
depending on the specific enumeration.
llvm-svn: 184761
CGSCC pass manager. This should insulate the inlining decisions from the
vectorization decisions, however it may have both compile time and code
size problems so it is just an experimental option right now.
Adding this based on a discussion with Arnold and it seems at least
worth having this flag for us to both run some experiments to see if
this strategy is workable. It may solve some of the regressions seen
with the loop vectorizer.
llvm-svn: 184698
exponent_t is only used internally in APFloat and no exponent_t values are
exposed via the APFloat API. In light of such conditions it does not make any
sense to gum up the llvm namespace with said type. Plus it makes it clearer that
exponent_t is associated with APFloat.
llvm-svn: 184686
Although in reality the symbol table in ELF resides in a section, the
standard requires that there be no more than one SHT_SYMTAB. To enforce
this constraint, it is cleaner to group all the symbols under a
top-level `Symbols` key on the object file.
llvm-svn: 184627
Zero is used by BlockFrequencyInfo as a special "don't know" value. It also
causes a sink for frequencies as you can't ever get off a zero frequency with
more multiplies.
This recovers a 10% regression on MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip. A zero frequency
was propagated into an inner loop causing excessive spilling.
PR16402.
llvm-svn: 184584
Live intervals for dead physregs may be created during coalescing. We
need to update these in the event that their instruction goes away.
crash.ll is the unit test that catches it when MI sched is enabled on
X86.
llvm-svn: 184572
The GNU assembler supports (as extension to the ABI) use of PC-relative
relocations in half16 fields, which allows writing code like:
li 1, base-.
This patch adds support for those relocation types in the assembler.
llvm-svn: 184552
The current code base only supports the minimum set of tls-related
relocations and @modifiers that are necessary to support compiler-
generated code. This patch extends this to the full set defined
in the ABI (and supported by the GNU assembler) for the benefit
of the assembler parser.
llvm-svn: 184551
This adds necessary infrastructure to support the @h modifier.
Note that all required relocation types were already present
(and unused).
This patch provides support for using @h in the assembler;
it would also be possible to now use this feature in code
generated by the compiler, but this is not done yet.
llvm-svn: 184548
This renames more VK_PPC_ enums, to make them more closely reflect
the @modifier string they represent. This also prepares for adding
a bunch of new VK_PPC_ enums in upcoming patches.
For consistency, some MO_ flags related to VK_PPC_ enums are
likewise renamed.
No change in behaviour.
llvm-svn: 184547
Instead, just have 3 sub-lists, one for each of
{STB_LOCAL,STB_GLOBAL,STB_WEAK}.
This allows us to be a lot more explicit w.r.t. the symbol ordering in
the object file, because if we allowed explicitly setting the STB_*
`Binding` key for the symbol, then we might have ended up having to
shuffle STB_LOCAL symbols to the front of the list, which is likely to
cause confusion and potential for error.
Also, this new approach is simpler ;)
llvm-svn: 184506
This is another minor cleanup; to bring enum names in line
with the corresponding @modifier names, this renames:
VK_PPC_TOC -> VK_PPC_TOCBASE
VK_PPC_TOC_ENTRY -> VK_PPC_TOC16
No code change intended.
llvm-svn: 184491
After this patch, the ELF file produced by
`yaml2obj-elf-symbol-basic.yaml`, when linked and executed on x86_64
(under SysV ABI, obviously; I tested on Linux), produces a working
executable that goes into an infinite loop!
llvm-svn: 184469
This commit completely removes what is left of the simplify-libcalls
pass. All of the functionality has now been migrated to the instcombine
and functionattrs passes. The following C API functions are now NOPs:
1. LLVMAddSimplifyLibCallsPass
2. LLVMPassManagerBuilderSetDisableSimplifyLibCalls
llvm-svn: 184459
The old isNormal is already functionally replaced by the method isFiniteNonZero
in r184350 and all references to said method were replaced in LLVM/clang in
r184356/134366.
llvm-svn: 184449
We had been papering over a problem with location info for non-trivial
types passed by value by emitting their type as references (this caused
the debugger to interpret the location information correctly, but broke
the type of the function). r183329 corrected the type information but
lead to the debugger interpreting the pointer parameter as the value -
the debug info describing the location needed an extra dereference.
Use a new flag in DIVariable to add the extra indirection (either by
promoting an existing DW_OP_reg (parameter passed in a register) to
DW_OP_breg + 0 or by adding DW_OP_deref to an existing DW_OP_breg + n
(parameter passed on the stack).
llvm-svn: 184368
This is a precursor to fix a regression caused by PR14763/r183329 where
the location of a non-trivial pass-by-value parameter ends up
incorrectly referring directly to the parameter (a pointer) rather than
the object pointed to by the pointer.
llvm-svn: 184365
This is a basic implementation - we still don't have any support (that I
know of) for dumping DWARF expressions in a meaningful way, so the
location information itself is just printed as a sequence of bytes as we
do elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 184361
The compiler occasionally generates multiple .loc directives in a row
(at the same instruction address). These need to be transformed into
multple actual .debug_line table entries, since they are used to signal
certain information to the debugger (e.g. if the opening brace of a
function body is on the same line as the declaration).
The MCAsmStreamer version of EmitDwarfLocDirective handles this
correctly by emitting a .loc directive every time it is called.
However, the MCObjectStream version simply defaults to recording
the information and emitting only a single table entry later,
e.g. when EmitInstruction is called.
This patch introduces a MCAsmStreamer::EmitDwarfLocDirective
version that emits a line table entry for a .loc directive
that may already be pending before recording the new directive.
(This is similar to how this is handled in GNU as.)
With this patch (and the code alignment factor patch) applied,
I'm now getting identical DWARF .debug sections for all test-suite
object files on PowerPC for the internal and the external assembler.
llvm-svn: 184357
This is the first patch in a series of patches to rename isNormal =>
isFiniteNonZero and isIEEENormal => isNormal. In order to prevent careless
errors on my part the overall plan is:
1. Add the isFiniteNonZero predicate with tests. I can do this in a method
independent of isNormal. (This step is this patch).
2. Convert all references to isNormal with isFiniteNonZero. My plan is to
comment out isNormal locally and continually convert isNormal references =>
isFiniteNonZero until llvm/clang compiles.
3. Remove old isNormal and rename isIEEENormal to isNormal.
4. Look through all of said references from patch 2 and see if we can simplify
them by using the new isNormal.
llvm-svn: 184350
This allows the compiler to see the enum and warn about it. While in here,
fix a switch to not use a default and fix style violations.
llvm-svn: 184186
The main advantages here are way better heuristics, taking into account not
just loop depth but also __builtin_expect and other static heuristics and will
eventually learn how to use profile info. Most of the work in this patch is
pushing the MachineBlockFrequencyInfo analysis into the right places.
This is good for a 5% speedup on zlib's deflate (x86_64), there were some very
unfortunate spilling decisions in its hottest loop in longest_match(). Other
benchmarks I tried were mostly neutral.
This changes register allocation in subtle ways, update the tests for it.
2012-02-20-MachineCPBug.ll was deleted as it's very fragile and the instruction
it looked for was gone already (but the FileCheck pattern picked up unrelated
stuff).
llvm-svn: 184105
llvm-objdump should provide some way of printing out the addends present in the
.rela sections for debugging purposes if nothing else.
llvm-svn: 184072
Frame index handling is now target-agnostic, so delete the target hooks
for creation & asm printing of target-specific addressing in DBG_VALUEs
and any related functions.
llvm-svn: 184067
This currently unused function appeared to be asserting in the wrong
direction - DebugValues are never definitions of registers, only uses.
Curiously we don't perform any of these checks for the more common (&
actually used) case of MachineOperand::CreateReg (or other Create
functions).
llvm-svn: 184065
Replace the ill-defined MinLatency and ILPWindow properties with
with straightforward buffer sizes:
MCSchedMode::MicroOpBufferSize
MCProcResourceDesc::BufferSize
These can be used to more precisely model instruction execution if desired.
Disabled some misched tests temporarily. They'll be reenabled in a few commits.
llvm-svn: 184032
Archive files (.a) can have a symbol table indicating which object
files in them define which symbols. The purpose of this symbol table
is to speed up linking by allowing the linker the read only the .o
files it is actually going to use instead of having to parse every
object's symbol table.
LLVM's archive library currently supports a LLVM specific format for
such table. It is hard to see any value in that now that llvm-ld is
gone:
* System linkers don't use it: GNU ar uses the same plugin as the
linker to create archive files with a regular index. The OS X ar
creates no symbol table for IL files, I assume the linker just parses
all IL files.
* It doesn't interact well with archives having both IL and native objects.
* We probably don't want to be responsible for yet another archive
format variant.
This patch then:
* Removes support for creating and reading such index from lib/Archive.
* Remove llvm-ranlib, since there is nothing left for it to do.
We should in the future add support for regular indexes to llvm-ar for
both native and IL objects. When we do that, llvm-ranlib should be
reimplemented as a symlink to llvm-ar, as it is equivalent to "ar s".
llvm-svn: 184019
It looks like clang-tools-extra/unittests/cpp11-migrate/TransformTest.cpp
depends on the behaviour of the old one on Windows. Maybe a difference
between GetCurrentDirectoryA and GetCurrentDirectoryW?
llvm-svn: 184009
in functions which call __builtin_unwind_init()
__builtin_unwind_init() is an undocumented gcc intrinsic which has this effect,
and is used in libgcc_eh.
Goes part of the way toward fixing PR8541.
llvm-svn: 183984
For consistency, change the address in the test case from 0xDEADBEEF to
0xCAFEBABE since 0xCAFEBABE that actually has a 2-byte alignment.
llvm-svn: 183962
This is in preparation for switching the clang driver over to using LLVM's
Option library. Richard Smith introduced most of these changes to the clang
driver in r167638.
Reviewers: espindola on IRC
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D970
llvm-svn: 183925
It was only used to implement ExecuteAndWait and ExecuteNoWait. Expose just
those two functions and make Execute and Wait implementations details.
llvm-svn: 183864
These records are mandatory for executables and are used by the loader.
Reviewers: rafael
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D939
llvm-svn: 183852
I've been comparing the object file output of LLVM's integrated
assembler against the external assembler on PowerPC, and one
area where differences still remain are in DWARF sections.
In particular, the GNU assembler generates .debug_frame and
.debug_line sections using a code alignment factor of 4, since
all PowerPC instructions have size 4 and must be aligned to a
multiple of 4. However, current MC code hard-codes a code
alignment factor of 1.
This patch changes this by adding a "minimum instruction alignment"
data element to MCAsmInfo and using this as code alignment factor.
This requires passing a MCContext into MCDwarfLineAddr::Encode
and MCDwarfLineAddr::EncodeAdvanceLoc. Note that one caller,
MCDwarfLineAddr::Write, didn't actually have that information
available. However, it turns out that this routine is in fact
never used in the whole code base, so the patch simply removes
it. If it turns out to be needed again at a later time, it
could be re-added with an updated interface.
llvm-svn: 183834
`typeinfo for llvm:🆑:GenericOptionValue').
Remove an "anchor" method for an abstract class. (This does not
increase the number of vtables.)
llvm-svn: 183830
COFF header is always present both in executable and in object file. PE header
is present only in executable. So the natural way to handle PE/COFF file is
treating COFF is mandatory header and PE is optional. Current data structre
does not allow it, because PE header includes COFF header. Removing COFF
header will simplify the code to handle PE/COFF files.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D952
llvm-svn: 183788
Currently, only emitting the ELF header is supported (no sections or
segments).
The ELFYAML code organization is broadly similar to the COFFYAML code.
llvm-svn: 183711
from the LC_DATA_IN_CODE load command. And when disassembling print
the data in code formatted for the kind of data it and not disassemble those
bytes.
I added the format specific functionality to the derived class MachOObjectFile
since these tables only appears in Mach-O object files. This is my first
attempt to modify the libObject stuff so if folks have better suggestions
how to fit this in or suggestions on the implementation please let me know.
rdar://11791371
llvm-svn: 183424
The TargetLoweringInfo object is owned by the TargetMachine. In the future, the
TargetMachine object may change, which may also change the TargetLoweringInfo
object.
llvm-svn: 183356
A user shouldn't care about the internal state, and these methods by
their very nature require asserting a predicate on the internal state.
As such, they cannot be used safely without introducing hidden
long-distance dependencies on the manner of construction of the
BinaryRef.
Use writeAsBinary(raw_ostream &) and writeAsHex(raw_ostream &) if you
need to access the data in a binary or hex format.
llvm-svn: 183353
Previously, yaml2coff.cpp had a writeHexData static helper function to
do this, but it is generally useful functionality.
Also, validate hex strings up-front to avoid running having to handle
errors "deep inside" the yaml2obj code (it also gives better diagnostics
than it used to).
llvm-svn: 183345
The first symbol on ELF is dummy, but it has a defined content and readelf
normally displays it. With this change llvm-readobj also displays it and we
can check that llvm-mc output is correct according to the standard.
llvm-svn: 183337
With this patch we use the SectionIndex directly, instead of counting the
number of symbol tables. This saves a DenseMap lookup every time we want to
find which symbol a relocation refers to.
Also simplify based on the fact that there is at most one SHT_SYMTAB and one
SHT_DYNSYM.
llvm-svn: 183326
In ELF (as in MachO), not all relocations point to symbols. Represent this
properly by using a symbol_iterator instead of a SymbolRef. Update llvm-readobj
ELF's dumper to handle relocatios without symbols.
llvm-svn: 183284
Specifically the following work was done:
1. If the operation was not implemented, I implemented it.
2. If the operation was already implemented, I just moved its location
in the APFloat header into the IEEE-754R 5.7.2 section. If the name was
incorrect, I put in a comment giving the true IEEE-754R name.
Also unittests have been added for all of the functions which did not
already have a unittest.
llvm-svn: 183179
This is needed in clang so one can check if the object needs the
destructor called after its memory was freed. This is useful when
creating many APInt/APFloat objects with placement new, where the
overhead of tracking the pointers for cleanup is significant.
llvm-svn: 183100