Summary:
Rewrite the in-tree build to be a clearer tl;dr like we have for the
out-of-tree build.
Reviewers: EricWF, mclow.lists, ldionne
Reviewed By: ldionne
Subscribers: dexonsmith, christof, ldionne, enh, libcxx-commits
Tags: #libc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69917
Summary:
Clean up the code that does GV promotion in the ThinLTO backends.
Specifically, we don't need to check whether we are importing since that
is already checked and handled correctly in shouldPromoteLocalToGlobal.
Simply call shouldPromoteLocalToGlobal, and if it returns true we are
guaranteed that we are promoting, whether or not we are importing (or in
the exporting module). This also makes the handling in getName()
consistent with that in getLinkage(), which checks the DoPromote parameter
regardless of whether we are importing or exporting.
Reviewers: steven_wu, pcc, evgeny777
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70327
__attribute__((objc_direct)) is an attribute on methods declaration, and
__attribute__((objc_direct_members)) on implementation, categories or
extensions.
A `direct` property specifier is added (@property(direct) type name)
These attributes / specifiers cause the method to have no associated
Objective-C metadata (for the property or the method itself), and the
calling convention to be a direct C function call.
The symbol for the method has enforced hidden visibility and such direct
calls are hence unreachable cross image. An explicit C function must be
made if so desired to wrap them.
The implicit `self` and `_cmd` arguments are preserved, however to
maintain compatibility with the usual `objc_msgSend` semantics,
3 fundamental precautions are taken:
1) for instance methods, `self` is nil-checked. On arm64 backends this
typically adds a single instruction (cbz x0, <closest-ret>) to the
codegen, for the vast majority of the cases when the return type is a
scalar.
2) for class methods, because the class may not be realized/initialized
yet, a call to `[self self]` is emitted. When the proper deployment
target is used, this is optimized to `objc_opt_self(self)`.
However, long term we might want to emit something better that the
optimizer can reason about. When inlining kicks in, these calls
aren't optimized away as the optimizer has no idea that a single call
is really necessary.
3) the calling convention for the `_cmd` argument is changed: the caller
leaves the second argument to the call undefined, and the selector is
loaded inside the body when it's referenced only.
As far as error reporting goes, the compiler refuses:
- making any overloads direct,
- making an overload of a direct method,
- implementations marked as direct when the declaration in the
interface isn't (the other way around is allowed, as the direct
attribute is inherited from the declaration),
- marking methods required for protocol conformance as direct,
- messaging an unqualified `id` with a direct method,
- forming any @selector() expression with only direct selectors.
As warnings:
- any inconsistency of direct-related calling convention when
@selector() or messaging is used,
- forming any @selector() expression with a possibly direct selector.
Lastly an `objc_direct_members` attribute is added that can decorate
`@implementation` blocks and causes methods only declared there (and in
no `@interface`) to be automatically direct. When decorating an
`@interface` then all methods and properties declared in this block are
marked direct.
Radar-ID: rdar://problem/2684889
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69991
Reviewed-By: John McCall
Previously we mutated the node and then converted it to a libcall. But this loses the chain information.
This patch keeps the chain, but unfortunately breaks tail call optimization as the functions involved in deciding if a node is in tail call position can't handle the chain. But correct ordering seems more important to be right.
Somehow the SystemZ tests improved. I looked at one of them and it seemed that we're handling the split vector elements in a different order and that made the copies work better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70334
This implements a version of the predicateLoopExits transform from IndVarSimplify extended to exploit widenable conditions - and thus be much wider in scope of legality. The code structure ends up being almost entirely different, so I chose to duplicate this into the LoopPredication pass instead of trying to reuse the code in the IndVars.
The core notions of the transform are as follows:
If we have a widenable condition which controls entry into the loop, we're allowed to widen it arbitrarily. Given that, it's simply a *profitability* question as to what conditions to fold into the widenable branch.
To avoid pass ordering issues, we want to avoid widening cases that would otherwise be dischargeable. Or... widen in a form which can still be discharged. Thus, we phrase the transform as selecting one analyzeable exit from the set of analyzeable exits to keep. This avoids creating pass ordering complexities.
Since none of the above proves that we actually exit through our analyzeable exits - we might exit through something else entirely - we limit ourselves to cases where a) the latch is analyzeable and b) the latch is predicted taken, and c) the exit being removed is statically cold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69830
When the driver is targeting multiple architectures at once, for things
like Universal Mach-Os, we need to emit different remark files for each
cc1 invocation to avoid overwriting the files from a different
invocation.
For example:
$ clang -c -o foo.o -fsave-optimization-record -arch x86_64 -arch x86_64h
will create two remark files:
* foo-x86_64.opt.yaml
* foo-x86_64h.opt.yaml
Test case to verify that the expected code is generated for a
vector float gather based on the patterns in tablegen for big
and little endian cases.
Patch by: Kamau Bridgeman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69443
and a follow-up NFC rearrangement as it's causing a crash on valid. Testcase is on the original review thread.
This reverts commits af57dbf12e and e6584b2b7b
When the driver is targeting multiple architectures at once, for things
like Universal Mach-Os, we need to emit different remark files for each
cc1 invocation to avoid overwriting the files from a different
invocation.
For example:
$ clang -c -o foo.o -fsave-optimization-record -arch x86_64 -arch x86_64h
will create two remark files:
* foo-x86_64.opt.yaml
* foo-x86_64h.opt.yaml
Allow clients of the llvm library to opt-in to one-shot SIGPIPE
handling, instead of forcing them to undo llvm's SIGPIPE handler
registration (which is brittle).
The current behavior is preserved for all llvm-derived tools (except
lldb) by means of a default-`true` flag in the InitLLVM constructor.
This prevents "IO error" crashes in long-lived processes (lldb is the
motivating example) which both a) load llvm as a dynamic library and b)
*really* need to ignore SIGPIPE.
As llvm signal handlers can be installed when calling into libclang
(say, via RemoveFileOnSignal), thereby overriding a previous SIG_IGN for
SIGPIPE, there is no clean way to opt-out of "exit-on-SIGPIPE" in the
current model.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70277
Summary:
[libomptarget][nfc] Move some source into common from nvptx
Moves some source that compiles cleanly under amdgcn into a common subdirectory
Includes some non-trivial files and some headers. Keeps the cuda file extension.
The build systems for different architectures seem unlikely to have much in
common. The idea is therefore to set include paths such that files under
common/src compile as if they were under arch/src as the mechanism for sharing.
In particular, files under common/src need to be able to include target_impl.h.
The corresponding -Icommon is left out in favour of explicit includes on the
basis that the it makes it clearer which files under common are used by a given
architecture.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, ABataev, grokos
Reviewed By: ABataev
Subscribers: jfb, mgorny, openmp-commits
Tags: #openmp
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70328
Due to alginment and packing using separate members takes up the same
amount of space, but makes it far less cumbersome to deal with it in
constructors etc.
Bump default value for `-miphoneos-version-min=x` to 9.0 (from 8.0).
TSan tests that use thread local storage `__thread` (e.g., tls_race.cpp)
are failing to link for the iOS simulator (arch=x86_64 and
-miphoneos-version-min=8.0) on internal/master (will be submitted to
Glacier train):
```
ld: targeted OS version does not support use of thread local variables in _main for architecture x86_64
```
iOS 9.0 was released 2015.
Bump default value for `SANITIZER_MIN_OSX_VERSION` to 10.10 (from 10.9).
TSan does not work on macOS 10.9 and a nice error message is preferable
to an "unreferenced symbol" error when loading the TSan runtime.
We could try to only bump the deployment target for TSan, but we would
have to invest into adding support for this to our CMake build and it
does not seem worth it. macOS 10.10 was released in 2014.
rdar://31335781
This adds a page named Caveats with a section on some of the things to
be aware of related to Python. It's a question we've seen more than once
pop up and I think it's good to have it documentation on the website.
Even though some of it might be useful to users, I still put it under
"development" because it requires some understanding of how LLDB is
built.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70252
Create COFF/, ELF/, and Minidump and move tests there.
Also
* Rename `*.test` to `*.yaml`
* For yaml2obj RUN lines, use `-o %t` instead of `> %t` for consistency.
We still have tests that check stdout is the default output, e.g.
multi-doc.test
* Update tests to consistently use `##` for comments.
`#` is for RUN and CHECK lines.
* Merge symboless-relocation.yaml and invalid-symboless-relocation.yaml to ELF/relocation-implicit-symbol-index.test
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70264
Without this fix, the tests introduced here produce the following
assert fail:
```
clang: /home/jdenny/llvm/clang/include/clang/Basic/AttributeCommonInfo.h:163: unsigned int clang::AttributeCommonInfo::getAttributeSpellingListIndex() const: Assertion `(isAttributeSpellingListCalculated() || AttrName) && "Spelling cannot be found"' failed.
```
The bug was introduced by D67368, which caused `AsmLabelAttr`'s
spelling index to be set to `SpellingNotCalculated`.
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70349
coverage-fork.cpp uses `fork()` which requires additional permissions
in the iOS simulator sandbox. We cannot use `sandbox-exec` to grant
these permissions since this is a Posix (not Darwin) test.
This patch adds the cross references for Macros in the MainFile.
We add references for the main file to the ParsedAST. We query the
references from it using the SymbolID.
Xref outside main file will be added to the index in a separate patch.
This patch replaces the tabs by spaces and avoid the need for a
debug_str section by moving all strings inline. It also removes the
hardcoded DIE offsets in the test, which will simplify a follow-up
patch.
This reapplies c0f6ad7d1f with an
additional fix in test/DebugInfo/X86/constant-loclist.ll, which had a
slightly different output on windows targets. The test now accounts for
this difference.
The original commit message follows.
Summary:
As discussed in D70081, this adds the ability to dump section
names/indices to the location list dumper. It does this by moving the
range specific logic from DWARFDie.cpp:dumpRanges into the
DWARFAddressRange class.
The trickiest part of this patch is the backflip in the meanings of the
two dump flags for the location list sections.
The dumping of "raw" location list data is now controlled by
"DisplayRawContents" flag. This frees up the "Verbose" flag to be used
to control whether we print the section index. Additionally, the
DisplayRawContents flag is set for section-based dumps whenever the
--verbose option is passed, but this is not done for the "inline" dumps.
Also note that the index dumping currently does not work for the DWARF
v5 location lists, as the parser does not fill out the appropriate
fields. This will be done in a separate patch.
Reviewers: dblaikie, probinson, JDevlieghere, SouraVX
Subscribers: sdardis, hiraditya, jrtc27, atanasyan, arphaman, aprantl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70227
The tool provides TSAN annotations for OpenMP synchronization. The tool
is activated if no other OMPT tool is loaded.
The tool detects whether the application was built with TSan and rejects
activation according to the OMPT protocol if there is no TSan-rt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45890