Commit Graph

69 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justin Lebar 9d94397859 [attrs] Handle convergent CallSites.
Summary:
Previously we had a notion of convergent functions but not of convergent
calls.  This is insufficient to correctly analyze calls where the target
is unknown, e.g. indirect calls.

Now a call is convergent if it targets a known-convergent function, or
if it's explicitly marked as convergent.  As usual, we can remove
convergent where we can prove that no convergent operations are
performed in the call.

Originally landed as r261544, then reverted in r261544 for (incidental)
build breakage.  Re-landed here with no changes.

Reviewers: chandlerc, jingyue

Subscribers: llvm-commits, tra, jhen, hfinkel

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17739

llvm-svn: 263481
2016-03-14 20:18:54 +00:00
Justin Lebar ccbd8f5a02 Revert "[attrs] Handle convergent CallSites."
This reverts r261544, which was causing a test failure in
Transforms/FunctionAttrs/readattrs.ll.

llvm-svn: 261549
2016-02-22 18:24:43 +00:00
Justin Lebar 7bf9187abb [attrs] Handle convergent CallSites.
Summary:
Previously we had a notion of convergent functions but not of convergent
calls.  This is insufficient to correctly analyze calls where the target
is unknown, e.g. indirect calls.

Now a call is convergent if it targets a known-convergent function, or
if it's explicitly marked as convergent.  As usual, we can remove
convergent where we can prove that no convergent operations are
performed in the call.

Reviewers: chandlerc, jingyue

Subscribers: hfinkel, jhen, tra, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17317

llvm-svn: 261544
2016-02-22 17:51:35 +00:00
Philip Reames 36706852d3 [CaptureTracking] Add a test case for pointer cmpxchg
This test builds on 261250 (IR support for cmpxchg of pointers) and 261245 (capture tracking support for cmpxchg) to show that correctly analyze the capturing of pointers in a cmpxchg of pointer type.

llvm-svn: 261284
2016-02-19 00:13:09 +00:00
Philip Reames bd09e86f82 [CaptureTracking] Support atomicrmw and cmpxchg
These atomic operations are conceptually both a load and store from the same location. As such, we can treat them as the most conservative of those two components which in practice, means we can treat them like stores. An cmpxchg or atomicrmw captures the values, but not the locations accessed.

Note: We can probably be more aggressive about the comparison value in an cmpxhg since to have it be in memory, it must already be captured, but I figured it was better to avoid that for the moment.

Note 2: It turns out that since we don't actually support cmpxchg of pointer type, writing a negative test is impossible.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17400

llvm-svn: 261245
2016-02-18 19:23:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9c4ed175c2 [PM] Port the PostOrderFunctionAttrs pass to the new pass manager and
convert one test to use this.

This is a particularly significant milestone because it required
a working per-function AA framework which can be queried over each
function from within a CGSCC transform pass (and additionally a module
analysis to be accessible). This is essentially *the* point of the
entire pass manager rewrite. A CGSCC transform is able to query for
multiple different function's analysis results. It works. The whole
thing appears to actually work and accomplish the original goal. While
we were able to hack function attrs and basic-aa to "work" in the old
pass manager, this port doesn't use any of that, it directly leverages
the new fundamental functionality.

For this to work, the CGSCC framework also has to support SCC-based
behavior analysis, etc. The only part of the CGSCC pass infrastructure
not sorted out at this point are the updates in the face of inlining and
running function passes that mutate the call graph.

The changes are pretty boring and boiler-plate. Most of the work was
factored into more focused preperatory patches. But this is what wires
it all together.

llvm-svn: 261203
2016-02-18 11:03:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 632d208c78 [attrs] Move the norecurse deduction to operate on the node set rather
than the SCC object, and have it scan the instruction stream directly
rather than relying on call records.

This makes the behavior of this routine consistent between libc routines
and LLVM intrinsics for libc routines. We can go and start teaching it
about those being norecurse, but we should behave the same for the
intrinsic and the libc routine rather than differently. I chatted with
James Molloy and the inconsistency doesn't seem intentional and likely
is due to intrinsic calls not being modelled in the call graph analyses.

This also fixes a bug where we would deduce norecurse on optnone
functions, when generally we try to handle optnone functions as-if they
were replaceable and thus unanalyzable.

llvm-svn: 260813
2016-02-13 08:47:51 +00:00
Justin Lebar 260854bfaf Add convergent-removing bits to FunctionAttrs pass.
Summary:
Remove the convergent attribute on any functions which provably do not
contain or invoke any convergent functions.

After this change, we'll be able to modify clang to conservatively add
'convergent' to all functions when compiling CUDA.

Reviewers:  jingyue, joker.eph

Subscribers: llvm-commits, tra, jhen, hfinkel, resistor, chandlerc, arsenm

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17013

llvm-svn: 260319
2016-02-09 23:03:22 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 10c8a04b80 [FunctionAttrs] Fix SCC logic around operand bundles
FunctionAttrs does an "optimistic" analysis of SCCs as a unit, which
means normally it is able to disregard calls from an SCC into itself.
However, calls and invokes with operand bundles are allowed to have
memory effects not fully described by the memory effects on the call
target, so we can't be optimistic around operand-bundled calls from an
SCC into itself.

llvm-svn: 260244
2016-02-09 18:40:40 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 1926b70e37 [attrs] Split the late-revisit pattern for deducing norecurse in
a top-down manner into a true top-down or RPO pass over the call graph.

There are specific patterns of function attributes, notably the
norecurse attribute, which are most effectively propagated top-down
because all they us caller information.

Walk in RPO over the call graph SCCs takes the form of a module pass run
immediately after the CGSCC pass managers postorder walk of the SCCs,
trying again to deduce norerucrse for each singular SCC in the call
graph.

This removes a very legacy pass manager specific trick of using a lazy
revisit list traversed during finalization of the CGSCC pass. There is
no analogous finalization step in the new pass manager, and a lazy
revisit list is just trying to produce an RPO iteration of the call
graph. We can do that more directly if more expensively. It seems
unlikely that this will be the expensive part of any compilation though
as we never examine the function bodies here. Even in an LTO run over
a very large module, this should be a reasonable fast set of operations
over a reasonably small working set -- the function call graph itself.

In the future, if this really is a compile time performance issue, we
can look at building support for both post order and RPO traversals
directly into a pass manager that builds and maintains the PO list of
SCCs.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15785

llvm-svn: 257163
2016-01-08 10:55:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 3a040e6d47 [attrs] Extract the pure inference of function attributes into
a standalone pass.

There is no call graph or even interesting analysis for this part of
function attributes -- it is literally inferring attributes based on the
target library identification. As such, we can do it using a much
simpler module pass that just walks the declarations. This can also
happen much earlier in the pass pipeline which has benefits for any
number of other passes.

In the process, I've cleaned up one particular aspect of the logic which
was necessary in order to separate the two passes cleanly. It now counts
inferred attributes independently rather than just counting all the
inferred attributes as one, and the counts are more clearly explained.

The two test cases we had for this code path are both ... woefully
inadequate and copies of each other. I've kept the superset test and
updated it. We need more testing here, but I had to pick somewhere to
stop fixing everything broken I saw here.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15676

llvm-svn: 256466
2015-12-27 08:41:34 +00:00
Chandler Carruth f49f1a87ef [attrs] Split off the forced attributes utility into its own pass that
is (by default) run much earlier than FuncitonAttrs proper.

This allows forcing optnone or other widely impactful attributes. It is
also a bit simpler as the force attribute behavior needs no specific
iteration order.

I've added the pass into the default module pass pipeline and LTO pass
pipeline which mirrors where function attrs itself was being run.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15668

llvm-svn: 256465
2015-12-27 08:13:45 +00:00
James Molloy 0ecdbe7d6b [FunctionAttrs] Provide a mechanism for adding function attributes from the command line
This provides a way to force a function to have certain attributes from the command line. This can be useful when debugging or doing workload exploration, where manually editing IR is tedious or not possible (due to build systems etc).

The syntax is -force-attribute=function_name:attribute_name

All function attributes are parsed except alignstack as it requires an argument.

llvm-svn: 253550
2015-11-19 08:49:57 +00:00
Elena Demikhovsky 3ec9e15ad4 Vector of pointers in function attributes calculation
While setting function attributes we check all instructions that may access memory. For a call instruction we check all arguments. The special check is required for pointers.
I added vector-of-pointers to the call arguments types that should be checked.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14693

llvm-svn: 253363
2015-11-17 19:30:51 +00:00
James Molloy 7e9bdd5d01 Revert "Revert "[FunctionAttrs] Identify norecurse functions""
This reapplies this patch, with test fixes.

llvm-svn: 252871
2015-11-12 10:55:20 +00:00
James Molloy 9a32da74f7 Revert "[FunctionAttrs] Identify norecurse functions"
This reverts commit r252862. This introduced test failures and I'm reverting while I investigate how this happened.

llvm-svn: 252863
2015-11-12 09:05:43 +00:00
James Molloy b14994e752 [FunctionAttrs] Identify norecurse functions
A function can be marked as norecurse if:
  * The SCC to which it belongs has cardinality 1; and either
    a) It does not call any non-norecurse function. This includes self-recursion; or
    b) It only has one callsite and the function that callsite is within is marked norecurse.

a) is best propagated bottom-up and b) is best propagated top-down.

We build up the norecurse attributes bottom-up using the existing SCC pass, and mark functions with no obvious recursion (but not provably norecurse) to sweep later, top-down.

llvm-svn: 252862
2015-11-12 08:53:04 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 436e2397f8 [FunctionAttrs] Fix an iterator wraparound bug
Summary:
This change fixes an iterator wraparound bug in
`determinePointerReadAttrs`.

Ideally, ++'ing off the `end()` of an iplist should result in a failed
assert, but currently iplist seems to silently wrap to the head of the
list on `end()++`.  This is why the bad behavior is difficult to
demonstrate.

Reviewers: chandlerc, reames

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14350

llvm-svn: 252386
2015-11-07 01:55:53 +00:00
Philip Reames a88caeab6c [FunctionAttr] Infer nonnull attributes on returns
Teach FunctionAttr to infer the nonnull attribute on return values of functions which never return a potentially null value. This is done both via a conservative local analysis for the function itself and a optimistic per-SCC analysis. If no function in the SCC returns anything which could be null (other than values from other functions in the SCC), we can conclude no function returned a null pointer. Even if some function within the SCC returns a null pointer, we may be able to locally conclude that some don't.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9688

llvm-svn: 246476
2015-08-31 19:44:38 +00:00
David Majnemer 7fddeccb8b Move the personality function from LandingPadInst to Function
The personality routine currently lives in the LandingPadInst.

This isn't desirable because:
- All LandingPadInsts in the same function must have the same
  personality routine.  This means that each LandingPadInst beyond the
  first has an operand which produces no additional information.

- There is ongoing work to introduce EH IR constructs other than
  LandingPadInst.  Moving the personality routine off of any one
  particular Instruction and onto the parent function seems a lot better
  than have N different places a personality function can sneak onto an
  exceptional function.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10429

llvm-svn: 239940
2015-06-17 20:52:32 +00:00
Bjorn Steinbrink 236446cd4c Remove conflicting attributes before adding deduced readonly/readnone
Summary:
In case of functions that have a pointer argument and only pass it to
each other, the function attributes pass deduces that the pointer should
get the readnone attribute, but fails to remove a readonly attribute
that may already have been present.

Reviewers: nlewycky

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9995

llvm-svn: 238152
2015-05-25 19:46:38 +00:00
David Blaikie 23af64846f [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to the call instruction
See r230786 and r230794 for similar changes to gep and load
respectively.

Call is a bit different because it often doesn't have a single explicit
type - usually the type is deduced from the arguments, and just the
return type is explicit. In those cases there's no need to change the
IR.

When that's not the case, the IR usually contains the pointer type of
the first operand - but since typed pointers are going away, that
representation is insufficient so I'm just stripping the "pointerness"
of the explicit type away.

This does make the IR a bit weird - it /sort of/ reads like the type of
the first operand: "call void () %x(" but %x is actually of type "void
()*" and will eventually be just of type "ptr". But this seems not too
bad and I don't think it would benefit from repeating the type
("void (), void () * %x(" and then eventually "void (), ptr %x(") as has
been done with gep and load.

This also has a side benefit: since the explicit type is no longer a
pointer, there's no ambiguity between an explicit type and a function
that returns a function pointer. Previously this case needed an explicit
type (eg: a function returning a void() function was written as
"call void () () * @x(" rather than "call void () * @x(" because of the
ambiguity between a function returning a pointer to a void() function
and a function returning void).

No ambiguity means even function pointer return types can just be
written alone, without writing the whole function's type.

This leaves /only/ the varargs case where the explicit type is required.

Given the special type syntax in call instructions, the regex-fu used
for migration was a bit more involved in its own unique way (as every
one of these is) so here it is. Use it in conjunction with the apply.sh
script and associated find/xargs commands I've provided in rr230786 to
migrate your out of tree tests. Do let me know if any of this doesn't
cover your cases & we can iterate on a more general script/regexes to
help others with out of tree tests.

About 9 test cases couldn't be automatically migrated - half of those
were functions returning function pointers, where I just had to manually
delete the function argument types now that we didn't need an explicit
function type there. The other half were typedefs of function types used
in calls - just had to manually drop the * from those.

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r'((?:=|:|^|\s)call\s(?:[^@]*?))(\s*$|\s*(?:(?:\[\[[a-zA-Z0-9_]+\]\]|[@%](?:(")?[\\\?@a-zA-Z0-9_.]*?(?(3)"|)|{{.*}}))(?:\(|$)|undef|inttoptr|bitcast|null|asm).*$)')
addrspace_end = re.compile(r"addrspace\(\d+\)\s*\*$")
func_end = re.compile("(?:void.*|\)\s*)\*$")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match or re.search(addrspace_end, match.group(1)) or not re.search(func_end, match.group(1)):
    return line
  return line[:match.start()] + match.group(1)[:match.group(1).rfind('*')].rstrip() + match.group(2) + line[match.end():]

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(conv(re.search(pat, line), line))

llvm-svn: 235145
2015-04-16 23:24:18 +00:00
David Blaikie a79ac14fa6 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to load instruction
Essentially the same as the GEP change in r230786.

A similar migration script can be used to update test cases, though a few more
test case improvements/changes were required this time around: (r229269-r229278)

import fileinput
import sys
import re

pat = re.compile(r"((?:=|:|^)\s*load (?:atomic )?(?:volatile )?(.*?))(| addrspace\(\d+\) *)\*($| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$)")

for line in sys.stdin:
  sys.stdout.write(re.sub(pat, r"\1, \2\3*\4", line))

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7649

llvm-svn: 230794
2015-02-27 21:17:42 +00:00
David Blaikie 79e6c74981 [opaque pointer type] Add textual IR support for explicit type parameter to getelementptr instruction
One of several parallel first steps to remove the target type of pointers,
replacing them with a single opaque pointer type.

This adds an explicit type parameter to the gep instruction so that when the
first parameter becomes an opaque pointer type, the type to gep through is
still available to the instructions.

* This doesn't modify gep operators, only instructions (operators will be
  handled separately)

* Textual IR changes only. Bitcode (including upgrade) and changing the
  in-memory representation will be in separate changes.

* geps of vectors are transformed as:
    getelementptr <4 x float*> %x, ...
  ->getelementptr float, <4 x float*> %x, ...
  Then, once the opaque pointer type is introduced, this will ultimately look
  like:
    getelementptr float, <4 x ptr> %x
  with the unambiguous interpretation that it is a vector of pointers to float.

* address spaces remain on the pointer, not the type:
    getelementptr float addrspace(1)* %x
  ->getelementptr float, float addrspace(1)* %x
  Then, eventually:
    getelementptr float, ptr addrspace(1) %x

Importantly, the massive amount of test case churn has been automated by
same crappy python code. I had to manually update a few test cases that
wouldn't fit the script's model (r228970,r229196,r229197,r229198). The
python script just massages stdin and writes the result to stdout, I
then wrapped that in a shell script to handle replacing files, then
using the usual find+xargs to migrate all the files.

update.py:
import fileinput
import sys
import re

ibrep = re.compile(r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr inbounds )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")
normrep = re.compile(       r"(^.*?[^%\w]getelementptr )(((?:<\d* x )?)(.*?)(| addrspace\(\d\)) *\*(|>)(?:$| *(?:%|@|null|undef|blockaddress|getelementptr|addrspacecast|bitcast|inttoptr|\[\[[a-zA-Z]|\{\{).*$))")

def conv(match, line):
  if not match:
    return line
  line = match.groups()[0]
  if len(match.groups()[5]) == 0:
    line += match.groups()[2]
  line += match.groups()[3]
  line += ", "
  line += match.groups()[1]
  line += "\n"
  return line

for line in sys.stdin:
  if line.find("getelementptr ") == line.find("getelementptr inbounds"):
    if line.find("getelementptr inbounds") != line.find("getelementptr inbounds ("):
      line = conv(re.match(ibrep, line), line)
  elif line.find("getelementptr ") != line.find("getelementptr ("):
    line = conv(re.match(normrep, line), line)
  sys.stdout.write(line)

apply.sh:
for name in "$@"
do
  python3 `dirname "$0"`/update.py < "$name" > "$name.tmp" && mv "$name.tmp" "$name"
  rm -f "$name.tmp"
done

The actual commands:
From llvm/src:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh
From llvm/src/tools/clang:
find test/ -name *.mm -o -name *.m -o -name *.cpp -o -name *.c | xargs -I '{}' ../../apply.sh "{}"
From llvm/src/tools/polly:
find test/ -name *.ll | xargs ./apply.sh

After that, check-all (with llvm, clang, clang-tools-extra, lld,
compiler-rt, and polly all checked out).

The extra 'rm' in the apply.sh script is due to a few files in clang's test
suite using interesting unicode stuff that my python script was throwing
exceptions on. None of those files needed to be migrated, so it seemed
sufficient to ignore those cases.

Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith, grosser

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7636

llvm-svn: 230786
2015-02-27 19:29:02 +00:00
Paul Robinson ad06e430ce Normally an 'optnone' function goes through fast-isel, which does not
call DAGCombiner. But we ran into a case (on Windows) where the
calling convention causes argument lowering to bail out of fast-isel,
and we end up in CodeGenAndEmitDAG() which does run DAGCombiner.
So, we need to make DAGCombiner check for 'optnone' after all.

Commit includes the test that found this, plus another one that got
missed in the original optnone work.

llvm-svn: 221168
2014-11-03 18:19:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0fb998110a [optnone] Make the optnone attribute effective at suppressing function
attribute and function argument attribute synthesizing and propagating.

As with the other uses of this attribute, the goal remains a best-effort
(no guarantees) attempt to not optimize the function or assume things
about the function when optimizing. This is particularly useful for
compiler testing, bisecting miscompiles, triaging things, etc. I was
hitting specific issues using optnone to isolate test code from a test
driver for my fuzz testing, and this is one step of fixing that.

llvm-svn: 215538
2014-08-13 10:49:33 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 59633cb478 When analyzing params/args for readnone/readonly, don't forget to consider that a pointer argument may be passed through a callsite to the return, and that we may need to analyze it. Fixes a bug reported on llvm-dev: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-May/073098.html
llvm-svn: 209870
2014-05-30 02:31:27 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 26af2cae05 Update optimization passes to handle inalloca arguments
Summary:
I searched Transforms/ and Analysis/ for 'ByVal' and updated those call
sites to check for inalloca if appropriate.

I added tests for any change that would allow an optimization to fire on
inalloca.

Reviewers: nlewycky

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2449

llvm-svn: 200281
2014-01-28 02:38:36 +00:00
Matt Arsenault e55a2c2e6b Make nocapture analysis work with addrspacecast
llvm-svn: 199246
2014-01-14 19:11:52 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 9efbedfd35 [tests] Cleanup initialization of test suffixes.
- Instead of setting the suffixes in a bunch of places, just set one master
   list in the top-level config. We now only modify the suffix list in a few
   suites that have one particular unique suffix (.ml, .mc, .yaml, .td, .py).

 - Aside from removing the need for a bunch of lit.local.cfg files, this enables
   4 tests that were inadvertently being skipped (one in
   Transforms/BranchFolding, a .s file each in DebugInfo/AArch64 and
   CodeGen/PowerPC, and one in CodeGen/SI which is now failing and has been
   XFAILED).

 - This commit also fixes a bunch of config files to use config.root instead of
   older copy-pasted code.

llvm-svn: 188513
2013-08-16 00:37:11 +00:00
Tim Northover 501977eb7a Fix FileCheck --check-prefix lines.
Various tests had sprung up over the years which had --check-prefix=ABC on the
RUN line, but "CHECK-ABC:" later on. This happened to work before, but was
strictly incorrect. FileCheck is getting stricter soon though.

Patch by Ron Ofir.

llvm-svn: 188173
2013-08-12 12:43:26 +00:00
Stephen Lin c1c7a1309c Update Transforms tests to use CHECK-LABEL for easier debugging. No functionality change.
This update was done with the following bash script:

  find test/Transforms -name "*.ll" | \
  while read NAME; do
    echo "$NAME"
    if ! grep -q "^; *RUN: *llc" $NAME; then
      TEMP=`mktemp -t temp`
      cp $NAME $TEMP
      sed -n "s/^define [^@]*@\([A-Za-z0-9_]*\)(.*$/\1/p" < $NAME | \
      while read FUNC; do
        sed -i '' "s/;\(.*\)\([A-Za-z0-9_]*\):\( *\)@$FUNC\([( ]*\)\$/;\1\2-LABEL:\3@$FUNC(/g" $TEMP
      done
      mv $TEMP $NAME
    fi
  done

llvm-svn: 186268
2013-07-14 01:42:54 +00:00
Nick Lewycky c2ec0725ce Extend 'readonly' and 'readnone' to work on function arguments as well as
functions. Make the function attributes pass add it to known library functions
and when it can deduce it.

llvm-svn: 185735
2013-07-06 00:29:58 +00:00
Michael Gottesman bed2e82501 Change the gettimeofday test to only test on a posix platform.
llvm-svn: 185503
2013-07-03 04:15:22 +00:00
Michael Gottesman 2db11161a8 Added support in FunctionAttrs for adding relevant function/argument attributes for the posix call gettimeofday.
This implies annotating it as nounwind and its arguments as nocapture. To be
conservative, we do not annotate the arguments with noalias since some platforms
do not have restrict on the declaration for gettimeofday.

llvm-svn: 185502
2013-07-03 04:00:54 +00:00
Meador Inge 6b6a161ccf Move library call prototype attribute inference to functionattrs
The simplify-libcalls pass implemented a doInitialization hook to infer
function prototype attributes for well-known functions.  Given that the
simplify-libcalls pass is going away *and* that the functionattrs pass
is already in place to deduce function attributes, I am moving this logic
to the functionattrs pass.  This approach was discussed during patch
review:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20121126/157465.html.

llvm-svn: 177619
2013-03-21 00:55:59 +00:00
Bill Wendling 90bc19cd91 Modify the LLVM assembly output so that it uses references to represent function attributes.
This makes the LLVM assembly look better. E.g.:

     define void @foo() #0 { ret void }
     attributes #0 = { nounwind noinline ssp }

llvm-svn: 175605
2013-02-20 07:21:42 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 0186347c4c Fix a bug in mayHaveSideEffects. Functions that do not return are now considered as instructions with side effects.
rdar://13227456

llvm-svn: 175553
2013-02-19 20:02:09 +00:00
Bill Wendling 84ba97698e FileCheck-ize the tests.
llvm-svn: 174865
2013-02-11 08:34:57 +00:00
Bill Wendling f2955aa3f2 Convert getAttributes() to return an AttributeSetNode.
The AttributeSetNode contains all of the attributes. This removes one (hopefully
last) use of the Attribute class as a container of multiple attributes.

llvm-svn: 173761
2013-01-29 03:20:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a5a29f970e Convert all tests using TCL-style quoting to use shell-style quoting.
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.

If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.

Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.

Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s

llvm-svn: 159525
2012-07-02 12:47:22 +00:00
Eli Bendersky 924f9a671d Replace all instances of dg.exp file with lit.local.cfg, since all tests are run with LIT now and now Dejagnu. dg.exp is no longer needed.
Patch reviewed by Daniel Dunbar. It will be followed by additional cleanup patches.

llvm-svn: 150664
2012-02-16 06:28:33 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 4c378a4453 Change CaptureTracking to pass a Use* instead of a Value* when a value is
captured. This allows the tracker to look at the specific use, which may be
especially interesting for function calls.

Use this to fix 'nocapture' deduction in FunctionAttrs. The existing one does
not iterate until a fixpoint and does not guarantee that it produces the same
result regardless of iteration order. The new implementation builds up a graph
of how arguments are passed from function to function, and uses a bottom-up walk
on the argument-SCCs to assign nocapture. This gets us nocapture more often, and
does so rather efficiently and independent of iteration order.

llvm-svn: 147327
2011-12-28 23:24:21 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 854c869c36 Move this test from date-name to feature-name, and port it to FileCheck.
llvm-svn: 147223
2011-12-23 18:41:31 +00:00
Chris Lattner 6a144a2227 Upgrade syntax of tests using volatile instructions to use 'load volatile' instead of 'volatile load', which is archaic.
llvm-svn: 145171
2011-11-27 06:54:59 +00:00
Bill Wendling e88632d667 Update some tests to the new EH scheme.
llvm-svn: 138925
2011-09-01 00:58:03 +00:00
Eli Friedman ac992afd93 Fix test.
llvm-svn: 137703
2011-08-16 01:42:56 +00:00
Eli Friedman a917d4f9b4 Revert a bit of r137667; the logic in question can safely handle atomic load/store.
llvm-svn: 137702
2011-08-16 01:28:22 +00:00
Chris Lattner 80ed9dc9e5 rip out a ton of intrinsic modernization logic from AutoUpgrade.cpp, which is
for pre-2.9 bitcode files.  We keep x86 unaligned loads, movnt, crc32, and the
target indep prefetch change.

As usual, updating the testsuite is a PITA.

llvm-svn: 133337
2011-06-18 06:05:24 +00:00
Chris Lattner b90ed2233c manually upgrade a bunch of tests to modern syntax, and remove some that
are either unreduced or only test old syntax.

llvm-svn: 133228
2011-06-17 03:14:27 +00:00