string to avoid possible later crashes.
Modified the locations that do set the crash description to NULL out the
string when they are done doing their tasks.
llvm-svn: 144297
This does not work reliable and is probably not needed. I accidentally changed
this in this recent commit:
commit a0bcd63c6ffa81616cf8c6663a87588803f7d91c
Author: grosser <grosser@91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8>
Date: Thu Nov 10 12:47:21 2011 +0000
ScopDetect: Use INVALID macro to fail in case of aliasing
This simplifies the code and also makes the error message available to the
graphviz scop viewer.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/polly/trunk@144284
llvm-svn: 144286
address is part of the access function. Also remove unused special cases that
were necessery when the base address was still contained in the access function
llvm-svn: 144280
Previously we allowed in access functions only a single SCEVUnknown, which later
became the base address. We now use getPointerBase() to derive the base address
and all remaining unknowns are handled as parameters. This allows us to handle
cases like A[b+c];
llvm-svn: 144278
need to provide a 'dominating IP' which is guaranteed to
dominate the (de)activation point but which cannot be avoided
along any execution path from the (de)activation point to
the push-point of the cleanup. Using the entry block is
bad mojo.
llvm-svn: 144276
a previously-inactive cleanup, not only do we need a
flag variable, but we should also force the cleanup to
query the flag variable. However, we only need to do
this when we're activating in a context that's
conditionally executed; otherwise, we may safely
assume that the cleanup is dominated by the activation
point.
llvm-svn: 144271
full-expression. Naturally they're inactive before we enter
the block literal expression. This restores the intended
behavior that blocks belong to their enclosing scope.
There's a useful -O0 / compile-time optimization that we're
missing here with activating cleanups following straight-line
code from their inactive beginnings.
llvm-svn: 144268
instruction lower optimization" in the pre-RA scheduler.
The optimization, rather the hack, was done before MI use-list was available.
Now we should be able to implement it in a better way, perhaps in the
two-address pass until a MI scheduler is available.
Now that the scheduler has to backtrack to handle call sequences. Adding
artificial scheduling constraints is just not safe. Furthermore, the hack
is not taking all the other scheduling decisions into consideration so it's just
as likely to pessimize code. So I view disabling this optimization goodness
regardless of PR11314.
llvm-svn: 144267
is currently too inefficient to allow us to use it for array initializers, but
fortunately we usually don't yet need to evaluate such initializers.
llvm-svn: 144260
Fixed an issue where if you had an initialized global variable, we would not
link it up correctly in the debug info if the .o file had the symbols as
UNDF + EXT (undefined external). We now properly link the globals.
llvm-svn: 144259
handle defining the "magic" target related components (like native,
nativecodegen, and engine).
- We still require these components to be in the project (currently in
lib/Target) so that we have a place to document them and hopefully make it
more obvious that they are "magic".
llvm-svn: 144253
change the generated library .a file name once we fully switch over, but
simplifies how we treat these targets without requiring more special casing
(since their library group name and the codegen library name currently map to
the same "llvm-config" style component name).
llvm-svn: 144251
The TII.foldMemoryOperand hook preserves implicit operands from the
original instruction. This is not what we want when those implicit
operands refer to the register being spilled.
Implicit operands referring to other registers are preserved.
This fixes PR11347.
llvm-svn: 144247