Summary:
When handling exports from the command line or from .def files, the
linker does a "fuzzy" string lookup to allow finding mangled symbols.
However, when the symbol is re-exported under a new name, the linker has
to transfer the decorations from the exported symbol over to the new
name. This is implemented by taking the mangled symbol that was found in
the object and replacing the original symbol name with the export name.
Before this patch, LLD implemented the fuzzy search by adding an
undefined symbol with the unmangled name, and then during symbol
resolution, checking if similar mangled symbols had been added after the
last round of symbol resolution. If so, LLD makes the original symbol a
weak alias of the mangled symbol. Later, to get the original symbol
name, LLD would look through the weak alias and forward it on to the
import library writer, which copies the symbol decorations. This
approach doesn't work when bar is itself a weak alias, as is the case in
asan. It's especially bad when the aliasee of bar contains the string
"bar", consider "bar_default". In this case, we would end up exporting
the symbol "foo_default" when we should've exported just "foo".
To fix this, don't look through weak aliases to find the mangled name.
Save the mangled name earlier during fuzzy symbol lookup.
Fixes PR42074
Reviewers: mstorsjo, ruiu
Subscribers: thakis, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62984
llvm-svn: 362849
rather than two callbacks.
The asynchronous lookup API (which the synchronous lookup API wraps for
convenience) used to take two callbacks: OnResolved (called once all requested
symbols had an address assigned) and OnReady to be called once all requested
symbols were safe to access). This patch updates the asynchronous lookup API to
take a single 'OnComplete' callback and a required state (SymbolState) to
determine when the callback should be made. This simplifies the common use case
(where the client is interested in a specific state) and will generalize neatly
as new states are introduced to track runtime initialization of symbols.
Clients who were making use of both callbacks in a single query will now need to
issue two queries (one for SymbolState::Resolved and another for
SymbolState::Ready). Synchronous lookup API clients who were explicitly passing
the WaitOnReady argument will now need neeed to pass a SymbolState instead (for
'WaitOnReady == true' use SymbolState::Ready, for 'WaitOnReady == false' use
SymbolState::Resolved). Synchronous lookup API clients who were using default
arugment values should see no change.
llvm-svn: 362832
This implements the functionality described in
https://lld.llvm.org/Partitions.html. It works as follows:
- Reads the section headers using the ELF header at file offset 0;
- If extracting a loadable partition:
- Finds the section containing the required partition ELF header by looking it up in the section table;
- Reads the ELF and program headers from the section.
- If extracting the main partition:
- Reads the ELF and program headers from file offset 0.
- Filters the section table according to which sections are in the program headers that it read:
- If ParentSegment != nullptr or section is not SHF_ALLOC, then it goes in.
- Sections containing partition ELF headers or program headers are excluded as there are no headers for these in ordinary ELF files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62364
llvm-svn: 362818
Patch which introduces a target-independent framework for generating
hardware loops at the IR level. Most of the code has been taken from
PowerPC CTRLoops and PowerPC has been ported over to use this generic
pass. The target dependent parts have been moved into
TargetTransformInfo, via isHardwareLoopProfitable, with
HardwareLoopInfo introduced to transfer information from the backend.
Three generic intrinsics have been introduced:
- void @llvm.set_loop_iterations
Takes as a single operand, the number of iterations to be executed.
- i1 @llvm.loop_decrement(anyint)
Takes the maximum number of elements processed in an iteration of
the loop body and subtracts this from the total count. Returns
false when the loop should exit.
- anyint @llvm.loop_decrement_reg(anyint, anyint)
Takes the number of elements remaining to be processed as well as
the maximum numbe of elements processed in an iteration of the loop
body. Returns the updated number of elements remaining.
llvm-svn: 362774
A function for loop vectorization illegality reporting has been
introduced:
void LoopVectorizationLegality::reportVectorizationFailure(
const StringRef DebugMsg, const StringRef OREMsg,
const StringRef ORETag, Instruction * const I) const;
The function prints a debug message when the debug for the compilation
unit is enabled as well as invokes the optimization report emitter to
generate a message with a specified tag. The function doesn't cover any
complicated logic when a custom lambda should be passed to the emitter,
only generating a message with a tag is supported.
The function always prints the instruction `I` after the debug message
whenever the instruction is specified, otherwise the debug message
ends with a dot: 'LV: Not vectorizing: Disabled/already vectorized.'
Patch by Pavel Samolysov <samolisov@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 362736
Summary:
(1) Function descriptor on AIX
On AIX, a called routine may have 2 distinct symbols associated with it:
* A function descriptor (Name)
* A function entry point (.Name)
The descriptor structure on AIX is the same as those in the ELF V1 ABI:
* The address of the entry point of the function.
* The TOC base address for the function.
* The environment pointer.
The descriptor symbol uses the same name as the source level function in C.
The function entry point is analogous to the symbol we would generate for a
function in a non-descriptor-based ABI, except that it is renamed by
prepending a ".".
Which symbol gets referenced depends on the context:
* Taking the address of the function references the descriptor symbol.
* Calling the function references the entry point symbol.
(2) Speaking of implementation on AIX, for direct function call target, we
create proper MCSymbol SDNode(e.g . ".foo") while constructing SDAG to
replace original TargetGlobalAddress SDNode. Then down the path, we can
take advantage of this MCSymbol.
Patch by: Xiangling_L
Reviewed by: sfertile, hubert.reinterpretcast, jasonliu, syzaara
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62532
llvm-svn: 362735
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces support for defining
numeric variable in a CHECK directive.
This commit introduces support for defining numeric variable from a
litteral value in the input text. Numeric expressions can then use the
variable provided it is on a later line.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60386
llvm-svn: 362705
If the given SCEVExpr has no (un)signed flags attached to it, transfer
these to the resulting instruction or use them to find an existing
instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61934
llvm-svn: 362687
The ISD::STRICT_ nodes used to implement the constrained floating-point
intrinsics are currently never passed to the target back-end, which makes
it impossible to handle them correctly (e.g. mark instructions are depending
on a floating-point status and control register, or mark instructions as
possibly trapping).
This patch allows the target to use setOperationAction to switch the action
on ISD::STRICT_ nodes to Legal. If this is done, the SelectionDAG common code
will stop converting the STRICT nodes to regular floating-point nodes, but
instead pass the STRICT nodes to the target using normal SelectionDAG
matching rules.
To avoid having the back-end duplicate all the floating-point instruction
patterns to handle both strict and non-strict variants, we make the MI
codegen explicitly aware of the floating-point exceptions by introducing
two new concepts:
- A new MCID flag "mayRaiseFPException" that the target should set on any
instruction that possibly can raise FP exception according to the
architecture definition.
- A new MI flag FPExcept that CodeGen/SelectionDAG will set on any MI
instruction resulting from expansion of any constrained FP intrinsic.
Any MI instruction that is *both* marked as mayRaiseFPException *and*
FPExcept then needs to be considered as raising exceptions by MI-level
codegen (e.g. scheduling).
Setting those two new flags is straightforward. The mayRaiseFPException
flag is simply set via TableGen by marking all relevant instruction
patterns in the .td files.
The FPExcept flag is set in SDNodeFlags when creating the STRICT_ nodes
in the SelectionDAG, and gets inherited in the MachineSDNode nodes created
from it during instruction selection. The flag is then transfered to an
MIFlag when creating the MI from the MachineSDNode. This is handled just
like fast-math flags like no-nans are handled today.
This patch includes both common code changes required to implement the
new features, and the SystemZ implementation.
Reviewed By: andrew.w.kaylor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55506
llvm-svn: 362663
Summary:
This change only unifies the API previous API pair accepting
CallInst and InvokeInst, thus making it easier to refactor
inliner pass ode to CallBase. The implementation of the unified
API still relies on the CallSite implementation.
Reviewers: eraman, chandlerc, jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: jdoerfert, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62283
llvm-svn: 362656
Most parts of LLVM don't care whether the byval type is derived from an
explicit Attribute or from the parameter's pointee type, so it makes
sense for the main access function to just return the right value.
The very few users who do care (only BitcodeReader so far) can find out
how it's specified by accessing the Attribute directly.
llvm-svn: 362642
Instead of passing around fast-math-flags as a parameter, we can set those
using an IRBuilder guard object. This is no-functional-change-intended.
The motivation is to eventually fix the vectorizers to use and set the
correct fast-math-flags for reductions. Examples of that not behaving as
expected are:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23116 (should be able to reduce with less than 'fast')
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35538 (possible miscompile for -0.0)
D61802 (should be able to reduce with IR-level FMF)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62272
llvm-svn: 362612
This is the LLVM part of this change, the Clang part contains the full
description in its commit message.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60697
llvm-svn: 362600
NOTE: Note that no attributes are derived yet. This patch will not go in
alone but only with others that derive attributes. The framework is
split for review purposes.
This commit introduces the Attributor pass infrastructure and fixpoint
iteration framework. Further patches will introduce abstract attributes
into this framework.
In a nutshell, the Attributor will update instances of abstract
arguments until a fixpoint, or a "timeout", is reached. Communication
between the Attributor and the abstract attributes that are derived is
restricted to the AbstractState and AbstractAttribute interfaces.
Please see the file comment in Attributor.h for detailed information
including design decisions and typical use case. Also consider the class
documentation for Attributor, AbstractState, and AbstractAttribute.
Reviewers: chandlerc, homerdin, hfinkel, fedor.sergeev, sanjoy, spatel, nlopes, nicholas, reames
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mgorny, hiraditya, bollu, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59918
llvm-svn: 362578
In glibc, DT_PPC_GOT indicates that PowerPC32 Secure PLT ABI is used.
I plan to use it in D62464.
DT_PPC_OPT currently indicates if a TLSDESC inspired TLS optimization is
enabled.
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson, rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62851
llvm-svn: 362569
Summary:
This was flagged in https://www.viva64.com/en/b/0629/ under "Snippet No.
38".
Add an assertion, since it's unlikely that this parameter is nullptr.
Reviewers: RKSimon, fhahn
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: fhahn, llvm-commits, RKSimon, srhines
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62229
llvm-svn: 362567
This patch allows current users of Value::stripPointerCasts() to force
the result of the function to have the same representation as the value
it was called on. This is useful in various cases, e.g., (non-)null
checks.
In this patch only a single call site was adjusted to fix an existing
misuse that would cause nonnull where they may be wrong. Uses in
attribute deduction and other areas, e.g., D60047, are to be expected.
For a discussion on this topic, please see [0].
[0] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-December/128423.html
Reviewers: hfinkel, arsenm, reames
Subscribers: wdng, hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61607
llvm-svn: 362545
Summary:
Following the cleanup in D48202, method foldBlockIntoPredecessor has the
same behavior. Replace its uses with MergeBlockIntoPredecessor.
Remove foldBlockIntoPredecessor.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dmgreen
Subscribers: jlebar, javed.absar, zzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62751
llvm-svn: 362538
The proposal in D62498 showed that x86 would benefit from vector
store splitting, but that may conflict with the generic DAG
combiner's store merging transforms.
Add memory type to the existing TLI hook that enables the merging
transforms, so we can limit those changes to scalars only for x86.
llvm-svn: 362507
This matches APInt's versions of these functions, and there is no need for these to be size_t.
(as well as __builtin_clzll())
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60823
llvm-svn: 362503
ELF for the 64-bit Arm Architecture defines two processor-specific dynamic
tags:
DT_AARCH64_BTI_PLT 0x70000001, d_val
DT_AARCH64_PAC_PLT 0x70000003, d_val
These presence of these tags indicate that PLT sequences have been
protected using Branch Target Identification and Pointer Authentication
respectively. The presence of both indicates that the PLT sequences have
been protected with both Branch Target Identification and Pointer
Authentication.
This patch adds the tags and tests for llvm-readobj and yaml2obj.
As some of the processor specific dynamic tags overlap, this patch splits
them up, keeping their original default value if they were not previously
mentioned explicitly in a switch case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62596
llvm-svn: 362493
ELF for the 64-bit Arm Architecture defines a processor specific property
type GNU_PROPERTY_AARCH64_FEATURE_1_AND as GNU_PROPERTY_LOPROC. This
property works in a similar way to the existing X86 processor specific
property GNU_PROPERTY_GNU_X86_FEATURE_1_AND.
Two feature bits are defined for GNU_PROPERTY_AARCH64_FEATURE_1_AND:
- GNU_PROPERTY_AARCH64_FEATURE_1_BTI 0x1
- GNU_PROPERTY_AARCH64_FEATURE_1_PAC 0x2
This patch defines the property, feature bits and implements support for
printing in llvm-readobj.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62595
llvm-svn: 362490
Includes a fix for an introduced build failure due to a post c++11 use of std::mismatch.
This fixes some thin archive relative path issues, paths are shortened where possible and paths are output correctly when using the display table command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59491
llvm-svn: 362484
While prof branch_weights inconsistencies are being fixed patch
by patch (pass by pass) we need SwitchInstProfUpdateWrapper to
be safe with respect to inconsistent metadata that can come from
passes that have not been fixed yet. See the bug found by @nikic
in https://reviews.llvm.org/D62126.
This patch introduces one more state (called Invalid) to the
wrapper class that allows users to work with the underlying
SwitchInst ignoring the prof metadata changes.
Created a unit test for the SwitchInstProfUpdateWrapper class.
Reviewers: davidx, nikic, eraman, reames, chandlerc
Reviewed By: davidx
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62656
llvm-svn: 362473
For some reason multiple places need to do this, and the variant the
loop unroller and inliner use was not handling it.
Also, introduce a new wrapper to be slightly more precise, since on
AMDGPU some addrspacecasts are free, but not no-ops.
llvm-svn: 362436
The implementation is conceptually simple: We separate the LHS and
RHS into positive and negative components and then also compute the
positive and negative components of the result, taking into account
that e.g. only pos/pos and neg/neg will give a positive result.
However, there's one significant complication: SignedMin / -1 is UB
for sdiv, and we can't just ignore it, because the APInt result of
SignedMin would break the sign segregation. Instead we drop SignedMin
or -1 from the corresponding ranges, taking into account some edge
cases with wrapped ranges.
Because of the sign segregation, the implementation ends up being
nearly fully precise even for wrapped ranges (the remaining
imprecision is due to ranges that are both signed and unsigned
wrapping and are divided by a trivial divisor like 1). This means
that the testing cannot just check the signed envelope as we
usually do. Instead we collect all possible results in a bitvector
and construct a better sign wrapped range (than the full envelope).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61238
llvm-svn: 362430
Summary:
- Fixes inline call frame line table display in windbg.
- Improve llvm-pdbutil to dump extra file ids.
- Warn on unknown subsections so we don't have this kind of bug in the
future.
Reviewers: inglorion, akhuang, aganea
Subscribers: eraman, zturner, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62701
llvm-svn: 362429
This reverts commit r362407. It broke compilation of
llvm/lib/Object/ArchiveWriter.cpp:
error: type 'llvm::sys::path::const_iterator' does not provide a call
operator
llvm-svn: 362413
This fixes some thin archive relative path issues, paths are shortened where possible and paths are output correctly when using the display table command.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59491
llvm-svn: 362407
Add (opt-in) support for implicit truncation to isConstOrConstSplat, which allows us to match truncated 'all ones' cases in isBitwiseNot.
PR41020 compares against using ISD::isBuildVectorAllOnes() instead, but that predicate silently accepts any UNDEF elements in the build vector which might not be what we want in isBitwiseNot - so I've added an opt-in 'AllowUndefs' flag that is set to false by default but will allow us to enable it on individual cases where its safe.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62783
llvm-svn: 362323
This allows the DWARFExpression class to handle addresses without
crashing on targets with 16-bit pointers like AVR.
This is required in order to generate assembly from clang via the '-S'
flag.
This fixes an error with the following message:
clang: llvm/include/llvm/DebugInfo/DWARF/DWARFExpression.h:132: llvm::DWARFExpression::DWARFExpression(llvm::DataExtractor, uint16_t, uint8_t):
Assertion `AddressSize == 8 || AddressSize == 4' failed.
llvm-svn: 362290
CodeView has its own register map which is defined in cvconst.h. Missing this
mapping before saving register to CodeView causes debugger to show incorrect
value for all register based variables, like variables in register and local
variables addressed by register (stack pointer + offset).
This change added mapping between LLVM register and CodeView register so the
correct register number will be stored to CodeView/PDB, it aso fixed the
mapping from CodeView register number to register name based on current
CPUType but print PDB to yaml still assumes X86 CPU and needs to be fixed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62608
llvm-svn: 362280
When the object size argument is -1, no checking can be done, so calling the
_chk variant is unnecessary. We already did this for a bunch of these
functions.
rdar://50797197
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62358
llvm-svn: 362272