The 'Kind' member used in RTTI for InstructionPredicateMatcher was not
initialized but went undetected since I always ended up with the correct value.
llvm-svn: 296126
Summary:
This makes more important rules have priority over less important rules.
For example, '%a = G_ADD $b:s64, $c:s64' has priority over
'%a = G_ADD $b:s32, $c:s32'. Previously these rules were emitted in the
correct order by chance.
NFC in this patch but it is required to make the next patch work correctly.
Depends on D29710
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, rovka
Reviewed By: ab, rovka
Subscribers: javed.absar, dberris, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29711
llvm-svn: 296121
clang will generate IR like this for input using packed bitfields;
very simple semantically, but it's a bit tricky to actually
generate good code.
llvm-svn: 296080
Summary:
Each OperandPredicateMatcher shouldn't need to know how to generate the expression
to reference a MachineOperand. The OperandMatcher should provide it.
In addition to separating responsibilities, this also lays some groundwork for
decoupling source patterns from destination patterns to allow invented operands
or operands provided by GlobalISel's equivalent to the ComplexPattern<> class.
Depends on D29709
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29710
llvm-svn: 295668
Summary:
In the near future the rules will be sorted between these two steps to
ensure that more important rules are not prevented by less important ones.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29709
llvm-svn: 295661
Add WIG value to all of AVX instructions which ignore the W-bit in their encoding, instead of giving them the default value of 0.
This patch is needed for a follow up work on EVEX2VEX pass (replacing EVEX encoded instructions with their corresponding VEX version when possible).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29876
llvm-svn: 295643
Syntax highlighting has been done line-at-a-time. Done this way, the lexer
resets the context at each line, distorting the formatting.
This change will render the whole file at once and feed the highlighted text
line-at-a-time to be wrapped by the SourceFileRenderer.
Leading/trailing newlines were being ignored by Pygments but since each line
was rendered in its own row, it didn't matter. This bug was masked by the
line-at-a-time algorithm. So now we need to add "stripnl=False" to the
CppLexer to change its behavior to match the expectation.
llvm-svn: 295546
To help assist in debugging ISEL or to prioritize GlobalISel backend
work, this patch adds two more tables to <Target>GenISelDAGISel.inc -
one which contains the patterns that are used during selection and the
other containing include source location of the patterns
Enabled through CMake varialbe LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV
llvm-svn: 295081
This allows for nicer backtrace and debugging when -j1 is passed:
$ opt-viewer.py CMakeFiles/LLVMScalarOpts.dir/LoopVersioningLICM.cpp.opt.yaml html
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 405, in <module>
generate_report(pmap, all_remarks, file_remarks, args.source_dir, args.output_dir)
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 362, in generate_report
pmap(_render_file_bound, file_remarks.items())
File "/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/multiprocessing/pool.py", line 251, in map
return self.map_async(func, iterable, chunksize).get()
File "/System/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/lib/python2.7/multiprocessing/pool.py", line 567, in get
raise self._value
Exception: blah
$ opt-viewer.py -j 1 CMakeFiles/LLVMScalarOpts.dir/LoopVersioningLICM.cpp.opt.yaml html
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 405, in <module>
generate_report(pmap, all_remarks, file_remarks, args.source_dir, args.output_dir)
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 362, in generate_report
pmap(_render_file_bound, file_remarks.items())
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 317, in _render_file
SourceFileRenderer(source_dir, output_dir, filename).render(remarks)
File "/org/llvm/utils/opt-viewer/opt-viewer.py", line 168, in __init__
raise Exception("blah")
Exception: blah
llvm-svn: 295080
Summary: Small fix to HtmlFormatter, defaults to ascii encoding, so utf-8 output may get `UnicodeEncodeError: 'ascii' codec can't encode character ... ordinal not in range(128)` during write.
Patch by Brian Cain!
Reviewers: anemet, fhahn
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29802
llvm-svn: 294710
Instead of emitting the matcher code directly, return the rule matcher
and the skip reason as an Expected<RuleMatcher>.
This will let us record all matchers and process them before emission.
It's a somewhat unconventional use of Error, but it's nicer than, say,
std::pair, because of the bool conversions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29743
llvm-svn: 294706
Inside an alias group, when ordering instruction aliases, we rely
on the priority field to sort them.
When the priority is not set or more generally when there is a tie between
two aliases, we used to rely on the lexicographic order. However, this
order can change for the anonymous records when more instruction, intrinsic,
etc. are inserted.
For instance, given two anonymous records r1 and r2 with respective name
A_999 and A_1000, their lexicography order will be r2 then r1. Now, if
an instruction is added before them, their name will become respectively
A_1000 and A_1001, thus the lexicography order will be r1 then r2, i.e.,
it changed.
If that happens in an alias group, the assembly output would prefer a
different alias for no apparent good reasons.
A way to fix that is to use proper priority for all aliases, but we
can also make the tie breaker comparison smarter and use a deterministic
ordering. This is what this patch does.
llvm-svn: 294695
LLVM defines `PTHREAD_LIB` which is used by AddLLVM.cmake and various projects
to correctly link the threading library when needed. Unfortunately
`PTHREAD_LIB` is defined by LLVM's `config-ix.cmake` file which isn't installed
and therefore can't be used when configuring out-of-tree builds. This causes
such builds to fail since `pthread` isn't being correctly linked.
This patch attempts to fix that problem by renaming and exporting
`LLVM_PTHREAD_LIB` as part of`LLVMConfig.cmake`. I renamed `PTHREAD_LIB`
because It seemed likely to cause collisions with downstream users of
`LLVMConfig.cmake`.
llvm-svn: 294690
Passing the --restrict flag to the coverage prep script before other
positional arguments is wrong, because it prevents the argparse module
from telling apart arguments to --restrict versus positional arguments.
Pointed out by Sean Callanan!
llvm-svn: 294616
In r293373 we switched the build to linking dynamically against the
Universal CRT and include the redistributables in the installer.
However, clang-format.exe is copied into the vsix and needs to be
statically linked. This commit makes us build the plugin in a separate
step that uses static linking.
llvm-svn: 294513
This patch checks the number of operands in the resulting
instruction instead of just the alias, then skips over
tied operands when generating the printing method.
This allows us to generate the preferred assembly syntax
for the AArch64 'ins' instruction, which should always be
displayed as 'mov' according to the ARMARM.
Several unit tests have changed as a result, but only to
reflect the preferred disassembly.
Some other InstAlias patterns (movk/bic/orr) needed a
slight adjustment to stop them becoming the default
and breaking other unit tests.
Patch by Graham Hunter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29219
llvm-svn: 294437
Summary:
The Mips target is the only user of mnemonicIsValid. This patch
moves this method from AsmMatcherEmitter.cpp to MipsAsmParser.cpp,
getting rid of the method in all other targets where it generated
warnings about an unused function.
Patch by Gonsolo.
Reviewers: craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: sdardis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28748
llvm-svn: 294400
Refactor a helper function, FactorNodes, to search for a push node in constant space. This resolves a problem in a not-yet-upstreamed backend where a recursive pattern blew the call stack (at a depth of 255) under a debug build of tablegen. No functional change so no new test coverage. The change is minimal to avoid disturbing existing behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29080
llvm-svn: 294230
Building lld is enabled by default, but it can be disabled using the
-no-lld option.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, rengolin, hans
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: grosser, wdng, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29539
llvm-svn: 294102
This lets us split out PatternToMatch from the top-level RuleMatcher,
where it doesn't really belong. That, in turn, lets us eventually
generate RuleMatchers from non-SelectionDAG sources.
llvm-svn: 294076
Use the qualified name for StringLiteral (llvm::StringLiteral) when
generating the sources. This is needed as the generated files may be
used out-of-tree (e.g. swift) where you may not have a
`using namespace llvm;` resulting in an undefined lookup.
llvm-svn: 293577
Tablegen emitted a warning when the fast isel emitter created dead
code by emitting a pattern that has no predicate before a pattern
that has one.
This should be an error but was originally only a warning because the X86
backend had a buggy definition that unintentionally caused this to be hit
(PR21575). That has been fixed a while ago (r222094), so it's safe to
upgrade the warning to an error.
llvm-svn: 293534
Summary:
AMDGPU has two register classes with the same set of registers, and this
was causing this tablegen backend would get stuck in infinite recursion.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: tpr, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29049
llvm-svn: 293483
In order to make sure that LLVM continues to work on machines that do not have the Universal CRT yet,
we'll need to ship a copy of UCRT in the Windows installation package. Fortunately, CMake 3.6+ already
supports app-local deployment of UCRT dlls, we just need to turn this on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29146
llvm-svn: 293373
We had various variants of defining dump() functions in LLVM. Normalize
them (this should just consistently implement the things discussed in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-January/034323.html
For reference:
- Public headers should just declare the dump() method but not use
LLVM_DUMP_METHOD or #if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
- The definition of a dump method should look like this:
#if !defined(NDEBUG) || defined(LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP)
LLVM_DUMP_METHOD void MyClass::dump() {
// print stuff to dbgs()...
}
#endif
llvm-svn: 293359
This is causing problems because the rendering of the text will depend on
varying global state to show relative hotness or a link in the inlining
context.
llvm-svn: 293265
Summary:
Put opt-viewer critical items in parallel
Patch by Brian Cain!
Requires features from Python 2.7
**Performance**
Below are performance results across various configurations. These were taken on an i5-5200U (dual core + HT). They were taken with a small subset of the YAML output of building Python 3.6.0b3 with LTO+PGO. 60 YAML files.
"multiprocessing" is the current submission contents. "baseline" is as of 544f14c6b2a07a94168df31833dba9dc35fd8289 (I think this is aka r287505).
"ImportError" vs "class<...CLoader>" below are just confirming the expected configuration (with/without CLoader).
The below was measured on AMD A8-5500B (4 cores) with 224 input YAML files, showing a ~1.75x speed increase over the baseline with libYAML. I suspect it would scale well on high-end servers.
```
**************************************** MULTIPROCESSING ****************************************
PyYAML:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: cannot import name CLoader
Python 2.7.10
489.42user 5.53system 2:38.03elapsed 313%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 400308maxresident)k
0inputs+31392outputs (0major+473540minor)pagefaults 0swaps
PyYAML+libYAML:
<class 'yaml.cyaml.CLoader'>
Python 2.7.10
78.69user 5.45system 0:32.63elapsed 257%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 398560maxresident)k
0inputs+31392outputs (0major+542022minor)pagefaults 0swaps
PyPy/PyYAML:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<builtin>/app_main.py", line 75, in run_toplevel
File "<builtin>/app_main.py", line 601, in run_it
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: cannot import name 'CLoader'
Python 2.7.9 (2.6.0+dfsg-3, Jul 04 2015, 05:43:17)
[PyPy 2.6.0 with GCC 4.9.3]
154.27user 8.12system 0:53.83elapsed 301%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 627960maxresident)k
808inputs+30376outputs (0major+727994minor)pagefaults 0swaps
**************************************** BASELINE ****************************************
PyYAML:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: cannot import name CLoader
Python 2.7.10
358.08user 4.05system 6:08.37elapsed 98%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 315004maxresident)k
0inputs+31392outputs (0major+85252minor)pagefaults 0swaps
PyYAML+libYAML:
<class 'yaml.cyaml.CLoader'>
Python 2.7.10
50.32user 3.30system 0:56.59elapsed 94%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 307296maxresident)k
0inputs+31392outputs (0major+79335minor)pagefaults 0swaps
PyPy/PyYAML:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<builtin>/app_main.py", line 75, in run_toplevel
File "<builtin>/app_main.py", line 601, in run_it
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: cannot import name 'CLoader'
Python 2.7.9 (2.6.0+dfsg-3, Jul 04 2015, 05:43:17)
[PyPy 2.6.0 with GCC 4.9.3]
72.94user 5.18system 1:23.41elapsed 93%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 455312maxresident)k
0inputs+30392outputs (0major+110280minor)pagefaults 0swaps
```
Reviewers: fhahn, anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26967
llvm-svn: 293261
I think the initial version of r293172 was trying:
std::forward<Args...>(args)...
which doesn't compile. This seems like the correct way:
std::forward<Args>(args)...
llvm-svn: 293214
Summary:
This should make it possible to easily add everything needed to import all
the existing SelectionDAG rules. It should also serve the likely
kinds of GlobalISel rules (some of which are not currently representable
in SelectionDAG) once we've nailed down the tablegen definition for that.
The hierarchy is as follows:
MatcherRule - A matching rule. Currently used to emit C++ ISel code but will
| also be used to emit test cases and tablegen definitions in the
| near future.
|- Instruction(s) - Represents the instruction to be matched.
|- Instruction Predicate(s) - Test the opcode, arithmetic flags, etc. of an
| instruction.
\- Operand(s) - Represents a particular operand of the instruction. In the
| future, there may be subclasses to test the same predicates
| on multiple operands (including for variadic instructions).
\ Operand Predicate(s) - Test the type, register bank, etc. of an operand.
This is where the ComplexPattern equivalent
will be represented. It's also
nested-instruction matching will live as a
predicate that follows the DefUse chain to the
Def and tests a MatcherRule from that position.
Support for multiple instruction matchers in a rule has been retained from
the existing code but has been adjusted to assert when it is used.
Previously it would silently drop all but the first instruction matcher.
The tablegen-erated file is not functionally changed but has more
parentheses and no longer attempts to format the if-statements since
keeping track of the indentation is tricky in the presence of the matcher
hierarchy. It would be nice to have CMakes tablegen() run the output
through clang-format (when available) so we don't have to complicate
TableGen with pretty-printing.
It's also worth mentioning that this hierarchy will also be able to emit
TableGen definitions and test cases in the near future. This is the reason
for favouring explicit emit*() calls rather than the << operator.
Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar, rovka, t.p.northover, qcolombet, ab
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: igorb, dberris, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28942
llvm-svn: 293172
and UNSUPPORTED"
After r292904 llvm-lit fails to emit the test results in the XML format for
Apple's internal buildbots.
rdar://30164800
llvm-svn: 292942
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions.
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run.
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run.
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed.
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.
Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows
Syntax:
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier.
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED
and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185
llvm-svn: 292904
A `lit` condition line is now a comma-separated list of boolean expressions.
Comma-separated expressions act as if each expression were on its own
condition line:
For REQUIRES, if every expression is true then the test will run.
For UNSUPPORTED, if every expression is false then the test will run.
For XFAIL, if every expression is false then the test is expected to succeed.
As a special case "XFAIL: *" expects the test to fail.
Examples:
# Test is expected fail on 64-bit Apple simulators and pass everywhere else
XFAIL: x86_64 && apple && !macosx
# Test is unsupported on Windows and on non-Ubuntu Linux
# and supported everywhere else
UNSUPPORTED: linux && !ubuntu, system-windows
Syntax:
* '&&', '||', '!', '(', ')'. 'true' is true. 'false' is false.
* Each test feature is a true identifier.
* Substrings of the target triple are true identifiers for UNSUPPORTED
and XFAIL, but not for REQUIRES. (This matches the current behavior.)
* All other identifiers are false.
* Identifiers are [-+=._a-zA-Z0-9]+
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D18185
llvm-svn: 292896
Running lit tests and unit tests of ASan and TSan on macOS has very bad performance when running with a high number of threads. This is caused by xnu (the macOS kernel), which currently doesn't handle mapping and unmapping of sanitizer shadow regions (reserved VM which are several terabytes large) very well. The situation is so bad that increasing the number of threads actually makes the total testing time larger. The macOS buildbots are affected by this. Note that we can't easily limit the number of sanitizer testing threads without affecting the rest of the tests.
This patch adds a special "group" into lit, and limits the number of concurrently running tests in this group. This helps solve the contention problem, while still allowing other tests to run in full, that means running lit with -j8 will still with 8 threads, and parallelism is only limited in sanitizer tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28420
llvm-svn: 292548
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Changes since first commit attempt:
* Added missing guards
* Added more missing guards
* Found and fixed a use-after-free bug involving Twine locals
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292478
Summary:
This change equips lit.py with two new options, --num-shards=M and
--run-shard=N (set by default from env vars LIT_NUM_SHARDS and LIT_RUN_SHARD).
The options must be used together, and N must be in 1..M.
Together these options effect only test selection: they partition the testsuite
into M equal-sized "shards", then select only the Nth shard. They can be used
in a cluster of test machines to achieve a very crude (static) form of
parallelism, with minimal configuration work.
Reviewers: modocache, ddunbar
Reviewed By: ddunbar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28789
llvm-svn: 292417
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Changes since last commit:
The new tablegen pass is now correctly guarded by LLVM_BUILD_GLOBAL_ISEL and
this should fix the buildbots however it may not be the whole fix. The previous
buildbot failures suggest there may be a memory bug lurking that I'm unable to
reproduce (including when using asan) or spot in the source. If they re-occur
on this commit then I'll need assistance from the bot owners to track it down.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292367
This patch fixes bugzilla 31576 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=31576).
"data32" instruction prefix was not defined in the llvm.
An exception had to be added to the X86 tablegen and AsmPrinter because both "data16" and "data32" are encoded to 0x66 (but in different modes).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28468
llvm-svn: 292352
Summary: The parameter `input` to `subprocess.Popen.communicate(...)` must be an object of type `bytes` . This is strictly enforced in python3. This patch (1) allows `to_bytes` to be safely called redundantly. (2) Explicitly convert `input` within `executeCommand`. This allows for usages like `executeCommand(['clang++', '-'], input='int main() {}\n')`.
Reviewers: ddunbar, BinaryKhaos, modocache, dim, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28736
llvm-svn: 292308
Running lit tests and unit tests of ASan and TSan on macOS has very bad performance when running with a high number of threads. This is caused by xnu (the macOS kernel), which currently doesn't handle mapping and unmapping of sanitizer shadow regions (reserved VM which are several terabytes large) very well. The situation is so bad that increasing the number of threads actually makes the total testing time larger. The macOS buildbots are affected by this. Note that we can't easily limit the number of sanitizer testing threads without affecting the rest of the tests.
This patch adds a special "group" into lit, and limits the number of concurrently running tests in this group. This helps solve the contention problem, while still allowing other tests to run in full, that means running lit with -j8 will still with 8 threads, and parallelism is only limited in sanitizer tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28420
llvm-svn: 292231
This allows us to use bin/llvm-lit to run individual libc++ and
libc++abi tests without having to explicitly specify the site config
paths, similar to other projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28733
llvm-svn: 292203
Summary:
Adds a RegisterBank tablegen class that can be used to declare the register
banks and an associated tablegen pass to generate the necessary code.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, ab, rovka, qcolombet
Subscribers: aditya_nandakumar, rengolin, kristof.beyls, vkalintiris, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, rovka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27338
llvm-svn: 292132
We were frequently checking for a list of types and the different types
conveyed no real information. So lump them together explicitly.
llvm-svn: 292095
Correct handling of the following FileCheck options is implemented in
update_llc_test_checks.py and update_test_checks.py scripts:
1) -check-prefix (with a single dash)
2) -check-prefixes (with multiple prefixes)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28572
llvm-svn: 292008
Summary:
libstdc++ has some undefined behavior in bits/stl_tree.h that
has recently became excercised by some of the LLVM code.
Given that fixing libstdc++ will take years, adding the file
into a blacklist to fix bots seems like a necessity.
Reviewers: vitalybuka
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28686
llvm-svn: 291918
handle generic ranges by using std::begin and std::end rather than
requiring things to look exactly like an STL container.
Much of the credit for this goes to Dave Blaikie who helped me figure
out the right incantations.
This will probably be re-designed when I send this to the maintainers of
gmock, so I've instead structured it to change is little as possible
while it is a local patch. That makes it somewhat ugly, but I think a focused
change is better for getting this to work for LLVM today and letting the
upstream maintainers figure out the correct long-term pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28288
llvm-svn: 291623
I have two immediate motivations for adding this:
1) It makes writing expectations in tests *dramatically* easier. A
quick example that is a taste of what is possible:
std::vector<int> v = ...;
EXPECT_THAT(v, UnorderedElementsAre(1, 2, 3));
This checks that v contains '1', '2', and '3' in some order. There
are a wealth of other helpful matchers like this. They tend to be
highly generic and STL-friendly so they will in almost all cases work
out of the box even on custom LLVM data structures.
I actually find the matcher syntax substantially easier to read even
for simple assertions:
EXPECT_THAT(a, Eq(b));
EXPECT_THAT(b, Ne(c));
Both of these make it clear what is being *tested* and what is being
*expected*. With `EXPECT_EQ` this is implicit (the LHS is expected,
the RHS is tested) and often confusing. With `EXPECT_NE` it is just
not clear. Even the failure error messages are superior with the
matcher based expectations.
2) When testing any kind of generic code, you are continually defining
dummy types with interfaces and then trying to check that the
interfaces are manipulated in a particular way. This is actually what
mocks are *good* for -- testing *interface interactions*. With
generic code, there is often no "fake" or other object that can be
used.
For a concrete example of where this is currently causing significant
pain, look at the pass manager unittests which are riddled with
counters incremented when methods are called. All of these could be
replaced with mocks. The result would be more effective at testing
the code by having tighter constraints. It would be substantially
more readable and maintainable when updating the code. And the error
messages on failure would have substantially more information as
mocks automatically record stack traces and other information *when
the API is misused* instead of trying to diagnose it after the fact.
I expect that #1 will be the overwhelming majority of the uses of gmock,
but I think that is sufficient to justify having it. I would actually
like to update the coding standards to encourage the use of matchers
rather than any other form of `EXPECT_...` macros as they are IMO
a strict superset in terms of functionality and readability.
I think that #2 is relatively rarely useful, but there *are* cases where
it is useful. Historically, I think misuse of actual mocking as
described in #2 has led to resistance towards this framework. I am
actually sympathetic to this -- mocking can easily be overused. However
I think this is not a significant concern in LLVM. First and foremost,
LLVM has very careful and rare exposure of abstract interfaces or
dependency injection, which are the most prone to abuse with mocks. So
there are few opportunities to abuse them. Second, a large fraction of
LLVM's unittests are testing *generic code* where mocks actually make
tremendous sense. And gmock is well suited to building interfaces that
exercise generic libraries. Finally, I still think we should be willing
to have testing utilities in tree even if they should be used rarely. We
can use code review to help guide the usage here.
For a longer and more complete discussion of this, see the llvm-dev
thread here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-January/108672.html
The general consensus seems that this is a reasonable direction to start
down, but that doesn't mean we should race ahead and use this
everywhere. I have one test that is blocked on this to land and that was
specifically used as an example. Before widespread adoption, I'm going
to work up some (brief) guidelines as some of these facilities should be
used sparingly and carefully.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28156
llvm-svn: 291606
Summary:
Prior to this change, phi nodes were never considered defs, and so we ended up with undefined variables for any loop. Now, instead of trying to find just defs, we iterate over each actual IR value in the line, and replace them one by one with either a definition or a use.
We also don't try to match anything in the comment portions of the line.
I've tested it even on things like function pointer calls, etc, and against existing test cases uses update_test_checks
With this change, we are able to use update_tests on the cyclic cases in newgvn.
The only case i'm aware of that will misfire is if you have a string with which contains a valid token.
However, this is the same as it is now, with a slightly larger set of strings that may misfire.
Prior to this change, a test with the string " %a =" would be replaced.
Reviewers: spatel, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28384
llvm-svn: 291357
Some GCC versions will accept any warning flag name after a '-Wno-',
which would cause us to try to disable warnings with names GCC didn't
understand. This will silently succeed unless there is some other output
from GCC in which case we get weird cc1plus warnings about the warning
name being bogus.
There is still the issue that gtest sets warning flags for building
gtest-all.cc using weird 'add_definitions' and the fact that there is
a GCC version which warns on the variadic macro usage in gtest under
-pedantic, but has no flag analogous to Clang's
-Wgnu-zero-variadic-macro-argumnets to suppress this warning. I haven't
been able to come up with any good solution here. The closest is to turn
off -pedantic for those versions of GCC, but that seems really nasty.
For now, those versinos of GCC aren't warning clean. If anyone is broken
by this, I'll work on CMake logic to detect and disable -pedantic in
these cases.
llvm-svn: 291299
a cxxabi.h in the include search paths.
This comes up when libc++ is installed with some other abi library. At
some points in time in history we have had CMake hackery to try and get
a cxxabi.h installed that would work, but there are lots of examples
lacking this. Also, the just-built tree with libc++ seems to not quite
get this right.
To let folks make progress, we can easily work around this by detecting
that the header is missing and disabling the relevant parts of gtest.
This should fix the last remainging build bot failures. While these
failures are typically indicative of a questionable install, I don't
think gtest should be the thing that surfaces those issues and I don't
want folks blocked on this.
llvm-svn: 291063
This required re-working the streaming support and lit's support for
'--gtest_list_tests' but otherwise seems to be a clean upgrade.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28154
llvm-svn: 291029
This adds a basic tablegen backend that analyzes the SelectionDAG
patterns to find simple ones that are eligible for GlobalISel-emission.
That's similar to FastISel, with one notable difference: we're not fed
ISD opcodes, so we need to map the SDNode operators to generic opcodes.
That's done using GINodeEquiv in TargetGlobalISel.td.
Otherwise, this is mostly boilerplate, and lots of filtering of any kind
of "complicated" pattern. On AArch64, this is sufficient to match G_ADD
up to s64 (to ADDWrr/ADDXrr) and G_BR (to B).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26878
llvm-svn: 290284
The usual method, and the one employed before my change, of displaying strings in natvis is to make use of the "<variable>,s" format specifier; however, this method only works for null-terminated strings. My fix here is to use the "<pointer>,[size]" format specifier to display a bounded array, and then cast it to "const char*", which in the MSVC debugger has the desired effect of rendering the character array as a string.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27972
llvm-svn: 290224