This is like MemoryBuffer (read-only) and WritableMemoryBuffer
(writable private), but where the underlying file can be modified
after writing. This is useful when you want to open a file, make
some targeted edits, and then write it back out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44230
llvm-svn: 327057
Summary:
Most of the time, compiler statistics can be obtained using a process that
performs a single compilation and terminates such as llc. However, this isn't
always the case. JITs for example, perform multiple compilations over their
lifetime and STATISTIC() will record cumulative values across all of them.
Provide tools like this with the facilities needed to measure individual
compilations by allowing them to reset the STATISTIC() values back to zero using
llvm::ResetStatistics(). It's still the tools responsibility to ensure that they
perform compilations in such a way that the results are meaningful to their
intended use.
Reviewers: qcolombet, rtereshin, bogner, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44181
llvm-svn: 326981
I think most of the Intel Core CPUs and recent AMD CPUs are unaffected. All the CPUs that have a "subtype" should work. The ones that were broken are the ones that are a "type" with no subtypes.
Fixes PR36619.
llvm-svn: 326840
These two functions iterate over the list of statistics but don't take the lock
that protects the iterators from being invalidated by
StatisticInfo::addStatistic().
So far, this hasn't been an issue since (in-tree at least) these functions are
called by the StatisticInfo destructor so addStatistic() shouldn't be called
anymore. However, we do expose them in the public API.
Note that this only protects against iterator invalidation and does not protect
against ordering issues caused by statistic updates that race with
PrintStatistics()/PrintStatisticsJSON().
Thanks to Roman Tereshin for spotting it
llvm-svn: 326834
Summary:
It can be useful for tools to be able to retrieve the values of variables
declared via STATISTIC() directly without having to emit them and parse
them back. Use cases include:
* Needing to report specific statistics to a test harness
* Wanting to post-process statistics. For example, to produce a percentage of
functions that were fully selected by GlobalISel
Make this possible by adding llvm::GetStatistics() which returns an
iterator_range that can be used to inspect the statistics that have been
touched during execution. When statistics are disabled (NDEBUG and not
LLVM_ENABLE_STATISTICS) this method will return an empty range.
This patch doesn't address the effect of multiple compilations within the same
process. In such situations, the statistics will be cumulative for all
compilations up to the GetStatistics() call.
Reviewers: qcolombet, rtereshin, aditya_nandakumar, bogner
Reviewed By: rtereshin, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43901
This re-commit fixes a missing include of <vector> which it seems clang didn't
mind but G++ and MSVC objected to. It seems that, clang was ok with std::vector
only being forward declared at the point of use since it was fully defined
eventually but G++/MSVC both rejected it at the point of use.
llvm-svn: 326738
Despite building cleanly on my machine in three separate configs, it's failing on pretty much all bots due to missing includes among other things. Investigating.
llvm-svn: 326726
Summary:
It can be useful for tools to be able to retrieve the values of variables
declared via STATISTIC() directly without having to emit them and parse
them back. Use cases include:
* Needing to report specific statistics to a test harness
* Wanting to post-process statistics. For example, to produce a percentage of
functions that were fully selected by GlobalISel
Make this possible by adding llvm::GetStatistics() which returns an
iterator_range that can be used to inspect the statistics that have been
touched during execution. When statistics are disabled (NDEBUG and not
LLVM_ENABLE_STATISTICS) this method will return an empty range.
This patch doesn't address the effect of multiple compilations within the same
process. In such situations, the statistics will be cumulative for all
compilations up to the GetStatistics() call.
Reviewers: qcolombet, rtereshin, aditya_nandakumar, bogner
Reviewed By: rtereshin, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43901
llvm-svn: 326723
Summary:
For various reasons, CMake's detection mechanism for `backtrace()`
returns an absolute path `/usr/lib/libexecinfo.so` on FreeBSD and
NetBSD.
Since `tools/llvm-config/CMakeLists.txt` only checks if system
libraries start with `-`, this causes `llvm-config --system-libs` to
produce the following incorrect output:
```
-lrt -l/usr/lib/libexecinfo.so -ltinfo -lpthread -lz -lm
```
Fix it by removing the path and the `lib` prefix, to make it look like a
regular short library name, suitable for appending to a `-l` link flag.
This also fixes the `Bindings/Go/go.test` test case, since that always
died with "unable to find library -l/usr/lib/libexecinfo.so".
Reviewers: chandlerc, emaste, joerg, krytarowski
Reviewed By: krytarowski
Subscribers: hans, bdrewery, mgorny, hintonda, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42702
llvm-svn: 326358
Until this patch, only `powerpc` and `ppc32` were recognized as valid
PowerPC 32-bit architectures in a target triple. This was incompatible
with the triple `ppc-apple-darwin` as returned for libObject. I found
out about this when working on a test case using a binary generated on
an old PowerBook G4.
We had the choice of either fix this in the Mach-O object parser or
in the Triple implementation. I chose the latter because it feels like
the most canonical place.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43760
llvm-svn: 326182
This patch removes the HashString function from StringExtraces and
replaces its uses with calls to djbHash from DJB.h.
This change is *almost* NFC. While the algorithm is identical, the
djbHash implementation in StringExtras used 0 as its default seed while
the implementation in DJB uses 5381. The latter has been shown to result
in less collisions and improved avalanching and is used by the DWARF
accelerator tables.
Because some test were implicitly relying on the hash order, I've
reverted to using zero as a seed for the following two files:
lld/include/lld/Core/SymbolTable.h
llvm/lib/Support/StringMap.cpp
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43615
llvm-svn: 326091
It looks like some of our tests depend on the ordering of hashed values.
I'm reverting my changes while I try to reproduce and fix this locally.
Failing builds:
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/lld-x86_64-darwin13/builds/18388
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-cmake-x86_64-sde-avx512-linux/builds/6743
lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast/builds/15607
llvm-svn: 326082
This removes the HashString function from StringExtraces and replaces
its uses with calls to djbHash from DJB.h
This is *almost* NFC. While the algorithm is identical, the djbHash
implementation in StringExtras used 0 as its seed while the
implementation in DJB uses 5381. The latter has been shown to result in
less collisions and improved avalanching.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43615
(cherry picked from commit 77f7f965bc9499a9ae768a296ca5a1f7347d1d2c)
llvm-svn: 326081
The issue was that the has function was generating different results depending
on the signedness of char on the host platform. This commit fixes the issue by
explicitly using an unsigned char type to prevent sign extension and
adds some extra tests.
The original commit message was:
This patch implements a variant of the DJB hash function which folds the
input according to the algorithm in the Dwarf 5 specification (Section
6.1.1.4.5), which in turn references the Unicode Standard (Section 5.18,
"Case Mappings").
To achieve this, I have added a llvm::sys::unicode::foldCharSimple
function, which performs this mapping. The implementation of this
function was generated from the CaseMatching.txt file from the Unicode
spec using a python script (which is also included in this patch). The
script tries to optimize the function by coalescing adjecant mappings
with the same shift and stride (terms I made up). Theoretically, it
could be made a bit smarter and merge adjecant blocks that were
interrupted by only one or two characters with exceptional mapping, but
this would save only a couple of branches, while it would greatly
complicate the implementation, so I deemed it was not worth it.
Since we assume that the vast majority of the input characters will be
US-ASCII, the folding hash function has a fast-path for handling these,
and only whips out the full decode+fold+encode logic if we encounter a
character outside of this range. It might be possible to implement the
folding directly on utf8 sequences, but this would also bring a lot of
complexity for the few cases where we will actually need to process
non-ascii characters.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: mgorny, hintonda, echristo, clayborg, vleschuk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42740
llvm-svn: 325732
This is the second part of recommit of r325224. The previous part was
committed in r325426, which deals with C++ memory allocation. Solution
for C memory allocation involved functions `llvm::malloc` and similar.
This was a fragile solution because it caused ambiguity errors in some
cases. In this commit the new functions have names like `llvm::safe_malloc`.
The relevant part of original comment is below, updated for new function
names.
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.
In some cases memory is allocated by a call to some of C allocation
functions, malloc, calloc and realloc. They are used for interoperability
with C code, when allocated object has variable size and when it is
necessary to avoid call of constructors. In many calls the result is not
checked for null pointer. To simplify checks, new functions are defined
in the namespace 'llvm': `safe_malloc`, `safe_calloc` and `safe_realloc`.
They behave as corresponding standard functions but produce fatal error if
allocation fails. This change replaces the standard functions like 'malloc'
in the cases when the result of the allocation function is not checked
for null pointer.
Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statement is added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010
llvm-svn: 325551
Summary: We probably mostly get this right due to family/model/stepping mapping to CPU names. But we should detect it explicitly.
Reviewers: RKSimon, echristo, dim, spatel
Reviewed By: dim
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43418
llvm-svn: 325439
This is partial recommit of r325224, reverted in 325227. The relevant
part of original comment is below.
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.
Usual programming practice does not require checking result of 'operator
new' because it throws 'std::bad_alloc' in the case of allocation error.
However, LLVM is usually built with exceptions turned off, so 'new' can
return null pointer. This change installs custom new handler, which causes
fatal error in the case of out of memory. The handler is installed
automatically prior to call to 'main' during construction of a static
object defined in 'lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp'. If the application does
not use this file, the handler may be installed manually by a call to
'llvm::install_out_of_memory_new_handler', declared in
'include/llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010
llvm-svn: 325426
Summary: extractBits assumes that `!this->isSingleWord() implies !Result.isSingleWord()`, which may not necessarily be true. Handle both cases.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43363
llvm-svn: 325311
There is a latent Windows kernel bug, the exact trigger
conditions are not well understood, which can cause a file
to be correctly written, but unable to be correctly read.
The workaround appears to be simply calling FlushFileBuffers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42925
llvm-svn: 325274
Analysis of fails in the case of out of memory errors can be tricky on
Windows. Such error emerges at the point where memory allocation function
fails, but manifests itself when null pointer is used. These two points
may be distant from each other. Besides, next runs may not exhibit
allocation error.
Usual programming practice does not require checking result of 'operator
new' because it throws 'std::bad_alloc' in the case of allocation error.
However, LLVM is usually built with exceptions turned off, so 'new' can
return null pointer. This change installs custom new handler, which causes
fatal error in the case of out of memory. The handler is installed
automatically prior to call to 'main' during construction of a static
object defined in 'lib/Support/ErrorHandling.cpp'. If the application does
not use this file, the handler may be installed manually by a call to
'llvm::install_out_of_memory_new_handler', declared in
'include/llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h".
There are calls to C allocation functions, malloc, calloc and realloc.
They are used for interoperability with C code, when allocated object has
variable size and when it is necessary to avoid call of constructors. In
many calls the result is not checked against null pointer. To simplify
checks, new functions are defined in the namespace 'llvm' with the
same names as these C function. These functions produce fatal error if
allocation fails. User should use 'llvm::malloc' instead of 'std::malloc'
in order to use the safe variant. This change replaces 'std::malloc'
in the cases when the result of allocation function is not checked against
null pointer.
Finally, there are plain C code, that uses malloc and similar functions. If
the result is not checked, assert statements are added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43010
llvm-svn: 325224
Summary:
This patch implements a variant of the DJB hash function which folds the
input according to the algorithm in the Dwarf 5 specification (Section
6.1.1.4.5), which in turn references the Unicode Standard (Section 5.18,
"Case Mappings").
To achieve this, I have added a llvm::sys::unicode::foldCharSimple
function, which performs this mapping. The implementation of this
function was generated from the CaseMatching.txt file from the Unicode
spec using a python script (which is also included in this patch). The
script tries to optimize the function by coalescing adjecant mappings
with the same shift and stride (terms I made up). Theoretically, it
could be made a bit smarter and merge adjecant blocks that were
interrupted by only one or two characters with exceptional mapping, but
this would save only a couple of branches, while it would greatly
complicate the implementation, so I deemed it was not worth it.
Since we assume that the vast majority of the input characters will be
US-ASCII, the folding hash function has a fast-path for handling these,
and only whips out the full decode+fold+encode logic if we encounter a
character outside of this range. It might be possible to implement the
folding directly on utf8 sequences, but this would also bring a lot of
complexity for the few cases where we will actually need to process
non-ascii characters.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: mgorny, hintonda, echristo, clayborg, vleschuk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42740
llvm-svn: 325107
Currently, each LLVM timer can be only printed once, as the act of
printing clears the timer.
Moreover, the current printing mechanism implicitly assumes that the
timer is stopped -- and prints zero otherwise.
This patch relaxes this assumption and makes printing statistics
multiple time a possibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43136
llvm-svn: 324788
This is a support change for a CFE change (https://reviews.llvm.org/D42978)
that allows march and -target-cpu to list the valid targets in a note. The changes
are limited to the ARM/AArch64, since this is the only target that gets the CPU
list from LLVM.
llvm-svn: 324623
This is a bit faster in theory, in practice it's cold code that's only
active in !NDEBUG, so it probably doesn't make a difference. This is one
of the last users of our homegrown Atomic.h.
llvm-svn: 323999
This patch moves the DJB hash to support. This is consistent with other
hashing algorithms living there. The hash is used by the DWARF
accelerator tables. We're doing this now because the hashing function is
needed by dsymutil and we don't want to link against libBinaryFormat.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42594
llvm-svn: 323616
This makes wasm32-unknown-unknown-wasm the default, which supports
the .o file writer and the new linking ABI. To enable s2wasm-compatible
output, use the wasm32-unknown-unknown-elf triple.
llvm-svn: 323220
The original change was made based on a misunderstanding that
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebugInfo would produce the same executable
as -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release modulo debug info. Turned out that's not
true -- it at least disables some optimizations such as function inlining.
llvm-svn: 323161
Try to detect the terminal color support by checking the value of the
TERM environment variable. This is not great, but it's better than
nothing when terminfo library isn't available, which may still be the
case on some Linux distributions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42055
llvm-svn: 322962
This adds a new instrinsic to support the rdpid instruction. The implementation is a bit weird because the intrinsic is defined as always returning 32-bits, but the assembler support thinks the instruction produces a 64-bit register in 64-bit mode. But really it zeros the upper 32 bits. So I had to add separate patterns where 64-bit mode uses an extract_subreg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42205
llvm-svn: 322910
We seem to be (logically) returning ArchExtKinds here in all cases, so
the return type should reflect that.
The static_cast is necessary because `A.ID` is actually an `unsigned`,
presumably since we use `decltype(A)` to represent extended attributes
for both ARM and AArch64, which use distinct `ArchExtKinds`.
We can't trivially make the same change for ARM, because one of the
values it returns is the bitwise-or of two `ARM::ArchExtKind`s.
llvm-svn: 322613
Patch by Takuto Ikuta.
In chromium's component build, there are many directive sections and
commandline parsing takes much time.
This patch is for speed up of lld in RelWithDebInfo build by forcing
inline heavily called isWhitespace function.
10 times link perf stats of blink_core.dll changed like below.
master:
TotalSeconds: 9.8764878
TotalSeconds: 10.1455242
TotalSeconds: 10.075279
TotalSeconds: 10.3397347
TotalSeconds: 9.8361665
TotalSeconds: 9.9544441
TotalSeconds: 9.8960686
TotalSeconds: 9.8877865
TotalSeconds: 10.0551879
TotalSeconds: 10.0492254
Avg: 10.01159047
with this patch:
TotalSeconds: 8.8696762
TotalSeconds: 9.1021585
TotalSeconds: 9.0233893
TotalSeconds: 9.1886175
TotalSeconds: 9.156954
TotalSeconds: 9.0978564
TotalSeconds: 9.1316824
TotalSeconds: 8.8354606
TotalSeconds: 9.2549431
TotalSeconds: 9.4473085
Avg: 9.11080465
llvm-svn: 322595
This change adds the missing armv8l variant as an alias of armv8 architecture.
The issue was observed with several regressions in validation on armv8l
hardware (for instance ExecutionEngine/frem.ll failed due to lack of neon fpu).
Tested with regression testsuite passed without regression on ARM and x86_64.
Patch by Yvan Roux.
Reviewers: rengolin, rogfer01, olista01, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41859
llvm-svn: 322098
Summary:
The idea is that it would replace
(non-Writable)MemoryBuffer::getNewMemBuffer, which is quite useless
unless you const_cast its contents to write to it (which all (both)
callers of this function were doing). This patch also fixes one of the usages in
COFFWriter. After fixing the other usage in clang, I plan to delete the old
function.
Reviewers: dblaikie, Bigcheese
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41540
llvm-svn: 322094
Configuration file is read as a response file in which file names in
the nested constructs `@file` are resolved relative to the directory
where the including file resides. Lines in which the first non-whitespace
character is '#' are considered as comments and are skipped. Trailing
backslashes are used to concatenate lines in the same way as they
are used in shell scripts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24926
llvm-svn: 321586
Configuration file is read as a response file in which file names in
the nested constructs `@file` are resolved relative to the directory
where the including file resides. Lines in which the first non-whitespace
character is '#' are considered as comments and are skipped. Trailing
backslashes are used to concatenate lines in the same way as they
are used in shell scripts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24926
llvm-svn: 321580
Patcy by Takuto Ikuta.
This patch reduces lld link time of chromium's blink_core.dll in
component build.
Total size of input argument in .directives become nearly 300MB in the
build and calling many strchr and assert becomes bottleneck.
On my desktop machine, 4 times stats of the link time are like below.
Improved around 10%.
This patch
TotalSeconds : 13.4918885
TotalSeconds : 13.9474257
TotalSeconds : 13.4941082
TotalSeconds : 13.6077962
Avg : 13.63530465
master
TotalSeconds : 15.6938531
TotalSeconds : 15.7022508
TotalSeconds : 15.9567202
TotalSeconds : 14.5851505
Avg : 15.48449365
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41590
llvm-svn: 321479
In https://reviews.llvm.org/rL321077 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D41231 I fixed a regression in the c-api which prevented the pruning from being *effectively* disabled.
However this approach, helpfully recommended by @labath, is cleaner.
It is also nice to remove the weasel words about effectively disabling from the api comments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41497
llvm-svn: 321376
There is nothing useful that can be done with a read-only uninitialized
buffer without const_casting its contents to initialize it. A better
solution is to obtain a writable buffer
(WritableMemoryBuffer::getNewUninitMemBuffer), and then convert it to a
read-only buffer after initialization. All callers of this function have
already been updated to do this, so this function is now unused.
llvm-svn: 321257
Summary:
This fixes a crash when invalid -march options like `armv` are provided.
Based on a patch by Will Lovett.
Reviewers: rengolin, samparker, mcrosier
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41429
llvm-svn: 321166
borked by: rL284966 (see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25730).
Previously, Interval was unsigned (see: CachePruning.h), replacing the type with std::chrono::seconds (which is signed) causes a regression in behaviour because the c-api intends negative values to translate to large positive intervals to *effectively* disable the pruning (see comments on: setCachePruningInterval()).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41231
llvm-svn: 321077
Summary:
The motivation here is LLDB, where we need to fixup relocations in
mmapped files before their contents can be read correctly. The
MemoryBuffer class does exactly what we need, *except* that it maps the
file in read-only mode.
WritableMemoryBuffer reuses the existing machinery for opening and
mmapping a file. The only difference is in the argument to the
mapped_file_region constructor -- we create a private copy-on-write
mapping, so that we can make changes to the mapped data, but the changes
aren't carried over to the underlying file.
This patch is based on an initial version by Zachary Turner.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, rnk, rafael, dblaikie, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40291
llvm-svn: 321071
The method IEEEFloat::convertFromStringSpecials() does not recognize
the "+Inf" and "-Inf" strings but these strings are printed for
the double Infinities by the IEEEFloat::toString().
This patch adds the "+Inf" and "-Inf" strings to the list of recognized
patterns in IEEEFloat::convertFromStringSpecials().
Re-landing after fix.
Reviewers: sberg, bogner, majnemer, timshen, rnk, skatkov, gottesmm, bkramer, scanon, anna
Reviewed By: anna
Subscribers: mkazantsev, FlameTop, llvm-commits, reames, apilipenko
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38030
llvm-svn: 321054
LLVM IR function names which disable mangling start with '\01'
(https://www.llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#identifiers).
When an identifier like "\01@abc@" gets dumped to MIR, it is quoted, but
only with single quotes.
http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2770814:
"The allowed character range explicitly excludes the C0 control block
allowed), the surrogate block #xD800-#xDFFF, #xFFFE, and #xFFFF."
http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2776092:
"All non-printable characters must be escaped.
[...]
Note that escape sequences are only interpreted in double-quoted scalars."
This patch adds support for printing escaped non-printable characters
between double quotes if needed.
Should also fix PR31743.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41290
llvm-svn: 320996
Most of the -Wsign-compare warnings are due to the fact that
enums are signed by default in the MS ABI, while the
tautological comparison warnings trigger on x86 builds where
sizeof(size_t) is 4 bytes, so N > numeric_limits<unsigned>::max()
is always false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41256
llvm-svn: 320750
Without this when lld failed to replace the output file it would leave
the temporary behind. The problem is that the existing logic is
- cancel the delete flag
- rename
We have to cancel first to avoid renaming and then crashing and
deleting the old version. What is missing then is deleting the
temporary file if the rename fails.
This can be an issue on both unix and windows, but I am not sure how
to cause the rename to fail reliably on unix. I think it can be done
on ZFS since it has an ACL system similar to what windows uses, but
adding support for checking that in llvm-lit is probably not worth it.
llvm-svn: 319786
This recommits r319533 which was broken llvm-config --system-libs
output. The reason was that I used find_libraries for searching for the
z library. This returns absolute paths, and when these paths made it
into llvm-config, it made it produce nonsensical flags. To fix this, I
hand-roll a search for the library in the same way that we search for
the terminfo library a couple of lines below.
This is a bit less flexible than the find_library option, as it does not
allow the user to specify the path to the library at configure time
(which is important on windows, as zlib is unlikely to be found in any
of the standard places cmake searches), but I was able to guide the
build to find it with appropriate values of LIB and INCLUDE environment
variables.
Reviewers: compnerd, rnk, beanz, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40779
llvm-svn: 319751
This is for PR35460.
Currently when LLD adds files to TarWriter it may pass the same file
multiple times. For example it happens for clang reproduce file which specifies
archive (.a) files more than once in command line.
Patch makes TarWriter to ignore files with the same path, so it will
add only the first one to archive.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40606
llvm-svn: 319750
This reverts commit r319533 as it broke llvm-config --system-libs output
and everything that depends on it (which is mostly out of tree or
downstream folks, but includes a couple of llvm buildbots as well).
I think I have a fix for this in D40779, but I want someone to look
review it first. In the mean time, I am reverting this change, as it
seems to break a lot of people.
llvm-svn: 319663
Summary:
zlib support was hard-wired to off for (non-cygwin) windows targets.
This disables some features, such as reading debug info from compressed
dwarf sections.
This has been this way since zlib support was added in 2013 (r180083),
but there is no obvious reason for that. Zlib is perfectly capable of
being compiled for windows (it even has a cmake file that works out of
the box).
This enables one to turn on zlib support on windows, if one has zlib
avaliable.
Reviewers: rnk, beanz
Subscribers: mgorny, aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40655
llvm-svn: 319533
These command line options are not intended for public use, and often
don't even make sense in the context of a particular tool anyway. About
90% of them are already hidden, but when people add new options they
forget to hide them, so if you were to make a brand new tool today, link
against one of LLVM's libraries, and run tool -help you would get a
bunch of junk that doesn't make sense for the tool you're writing.
This patch hides these options. The real solution is to not have
libraries defining command line options, but that's a much larger effort
and not something I'm prepared to take on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40674
llvm-svn: 319505
Certain ARM implementations treat icache clear instruction as a memory read,
and CPU segfaults on trying to clear cache on !PROT_READ page.
We workaround this in Memory::protectMappedMemory by adding
PROT_READ to affected pages, clearing the cache, and then setting
desired protection.
This fixes "AllocationTests/MappedMemoryTest.***/3" unit-tests on
affected hardware.
Reviewers: psmith, zatrazz, kristof.beyls, lhames
Reviewed By: lhames
Subscribers: llvm-commits, krytarowski, peter.smith, jgreenhalgh, aemerson,
rengolin
Patch by maxim-kuvrykov!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40423
llvm-svn: 319166
The existing library assumed that a stream's length would never
change. This makes some things simpler, but it's not flexible
enough for what we need, especially for writable streams where
what you really want is for each call to write to actually append.
llvm-svn: 319070
Shadow stack solution introduces a new stack for return addresses only.
The HW has a Shadow Stack Pointer (SSP) that points to the next return address.
If we return to a different address, an exception is triggered.
The shadow stack is managed using a series of intrinsics that are introduced in this patch as well as the new register (SSP).
The intrinsics are mapped to new instruction set that implements CET mechanism.
The patch also includes initial infrastructure support for IBT.
For more information, please see the following:
https://software.intel.com/sites/default/files/managed/4d/2a/control-flow-enforcement-technology-preview.pdf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40223
Change-Id: I4daa1f27e88176be79a4ac3b4cd26a459e88fed4
llvm-svn: 318996
The previous commit had the condition in the do/while backwards.
Debug builds currently print out low level details of the Knuth division algorithm when -debug is used. This information isn't useful in most cases and just adds noise to the log.
This adds a new preprocessor flag to enable the prints in the knuth division code in APInt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40404
llvm-svn: 318966
Debug builds currently print out low level details of the Knuth division algorithm when -debug is used. This information isn't useful in most cases and just adds noise to the log.
This adds a new preprocessor flag to enable the prints in the knuth division code in APInt.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40404
llvm-svn: 318963
We already allowed keep+discard. It is important to be able to discard
a temporary if a rename fail. It is also convenient as it allows the
use of RAII for discarding.
Allow discarding twice for similar reasons.
llvm-svn: 318867
The default limit is 1000000 but it can be configured with a cache
policy. The motivation is that some filesystems (notably ext4) have
a limit on the number of files that can be contained in a directory
(separate from the inode limit).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40327
llvm-svn: 318857
The CodeGenCoverage.h header is installed, but it references
the build-only header "llvm/Config/config.h". This breaks use
of the CodeGenCoverage.h header once it is installed, because config.h isn't
available.
This patch fixes the error by moving the config.h include from
the CodeGenCoverage.h header (where it's not needed), to the
CodeGenCoverage.cpp source file.
llvm-svn: 318602
This move some of the complexity over to the lower level TempFile.
It also makes it a bit more explicit where errors are ignored since we
now have a call to consumeError.
llvm-svn: 318550
Fixed broken comparison.
borked by: rL284966 (see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25730).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40119
This is a second attempt to commit this.
The first attempt broke lld and gold tests that had been written against
the incorrect behaivour.
llvm-svn: 318524
It turns out this #include isn't used from Host.h anyway,
but by having it it causes circular include dependencies.
This issues only surfaced while I was working on a separate
patch, so I'm submitting this first so that it's independent
of the other, unrelated patch.
llvm-svn: 318489
Removes AllocateRWX, setWritable and setExecutable from sys::Memory and
standardizes on allocateMappedMemory / protectMappedMemory. The
allocateMappedMemory method is updated to request full permissions for memory
blocks so that they can be marked executable later.
llvm-svn: 318464
Summary:
This change fixes a bug where `obj2yaml` can in some cases produce YAML that
causes `yaml2obj` to error.
The ELF YAML document structure has a `Sections` mapping, which contains three
mappings, all of which are optional: `Local`, `Global`, and `Weak.` Any one of
these can be missing, but if all three are missing, then `yaml2obj` errors. This
change allows YAML input for cases like this one.
I have tested this with check-llvm and check-lld, and all tests passed.
This change is the result of test failures while working on D39582, which
introduces a `DynamicSymbols` mapping, which will be empty at times.
Reviewers: compnerd, jakehehrlich, silvas, kledzik, mehdi_amini, pcc
Reviewed By: compnerd
Subscribers: silvas, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39908
llvm-svn: 318428
Summary:
This patch adds a LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV which, like LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV,
causes TableGen to instrument the generated table to collect rule coverage
information. However, LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV goes a bit further than
LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV. The information is written to files
(${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/gisel-coverage-* by default). These files can then be
concatenated into ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all after which TableGen will
read this information and use it to emit warnings about untested rules.
This technique could also be used by SelectionDAG and can be further
extended to detect hot rules and give them priority over colder rules.
Usage:
* Enable LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV in CMake
* Build the compiler and run some tests
* cat gisel-coverage-[0-9]* > gisel-coverage-all
* Delete lib/Target/*/*GenGlobalISel.inc*
* Build the compiler
Known issues:
* ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all must be generated as a manual
step due to a lack of a portable 'cat' command. It should be the
concatenation of all ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-[0-9]* files.
* There's no mechanism to discard coverage information when the ruleset
changes
Depends on D39742
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, aditya_nandakumar, rovka
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: vsk, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39747
llvm-svn: 318356
Summary:
Make it possible to feed runtime information back to tablegen to enable
profile-guided tablegen-eration, detection of untested tablegen definitions, etc.
Being a cross-compiler by nature, LLVM will potentially collect data for multiple
architectures (e.g. when running 'ninja check'). We therefore need a way for
TableGen to figure out what data applies to the backend it is generating at the
time. This patch achieves that by including the name of the 'def X : Target ...'
for the backend in the TargetRegistry.
Reviewers: qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, jyknight, aditya_nandakumar, sdardis, nemanjai, ab, nhaehnle, t.p.northover, javed.absar, qcolombet, llvm-commits, fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39742
llvm-svn: 318352
This requires a small change to TempFile: allowing a discard after a
failed keep.
With this the cache now handles signals and reuses a fd instead of
reopening the file.
llvm-svn: 318322
std::error_code can represent success, so we don't need a
Optional<std::error_code>.
Rename the variable to avoid confusion with the type Error.
llvm-svn: 318111
This just adds a TempFile class and replaces the use in
FileOutputBuffer with it.
The only difference for now is better error handling. Followup work includes:
- Convert other user of temporary files to it.
- Add support for automatically deleting on windows.
- Add a createUnnamed method that returns a potentially unnamed
file. It would be actually unnamed on modern linux and have a
unknown name on windows.
llvm-svn: 318069
Summary:
I want to leverage this to clean up some of the code in clang. This will allow us to simplify D39521 which was trying to do some of the same.
If we accurately keep the code in Host.cpp synced with new CPUs added to compile-rt/libgcc we should be able to use this file as a proxy for what's implemented in the libraries.
The entries for the CPUs recognized by the libraries use separate macros that define additional parameters like the name for __builtin_cpu_is and an alias string for the couple cases where __builtin_cpu_is accepts two different names.
All of the macros contain an ARCHNAME that is usually the same as the __builtin_cpu_is string, but sometimes isn't. This represents the name recognized by X86.td and -march.
I'm following the precedent set by ARM and AArch64 and adding this information to lib/Support/TargetParser.cpp
Reviewers: erichkeane, echristo, asbirlea
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39782
llvm-svn: 317900
Summary:
zturner suggested that mapped_file_region::init() on Windows seems to
create mappings that are larger than they need to be: Offset+Size
instead of Size. Indeed, that appears to be the case. I confirmed that
tests pass with mappings of just Size bytes, and fail with Size-1
bytes, suggesting that Size is indeed the correct value.
Reviewers: amccarth, zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39876
llvm-svn: 317850
Whenever LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS is enabled, which
is usually the case for example when asserts are enabled,
Error's destructor does some additional checking to make sure
that that it does not represent an error condition and that it
was checked.
However, this is -- by definition -- not the likely codepath.
Some profiling shows that at least with some compilers, simply
calling assertIsChecked -- in a release build with full
optimizations -- can account for up to 15% of the entire
runtime of the program, even though this function should almost
literally be a no-op.
The problem is that the assertIsChecked function can be considered
too big to inline depending on the compiler's inliner. Since it's
unlikely to ever need to failure path though, we can move it out
of line and force it to not be inlined, so that the fast path
can be inlined.
In my test (using lld to link clang with CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
and LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=ON), this reduces link time from 27
seconds to 23.5 seconds, which is a solid 15% gain.
llvm-svn: 317824
InMemoryBuffer and OnDiskBuffer classes have both factory methods and
public constructors, and that looks a bit odd. This patch makes factory
methods non-member function to fix it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39693
llvm-svn: 317739
Summary:
Extends SCL functionality to allow users to find the line number in the file the SCL is built from through SpecialCaseList::inSectionBlame(...).
Also removes the need to compile the SCL before use. As the matcher now contains a list of regexes to test against instead of a single regex, the regexes can be individually built on each insertion rather than one large compilation at the end of construction.
This change also fixes a bug where blank lines would cause the parser to become out-of-sync with the line number. An error on line `k` was being reported as being on line `k - num_blank_lines_before_k`.
Note: This change has a cyclical dependency on D39486. Both these changes must be submitted at the same time to avoid a build breakage.
Reviewers: vlad.tsyrklevich
Reviewed By: vlad.tsyrklevich
Subscribers: kcc, pcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39485
llvm-svn: 317617
This changes the interface of how targets describe how to legalize, see
the below description.
1. Interface for targets to describe how to legalize.
In GlobalISel, the API in the LegalizerInfo class is the main interface
for targets to specify which types are legal for which operations, and
what to do to turn illegal type/operation combinations into legal ones.
For each operation the type sizes that can be legalized without having
to change the size of the type are specified with a call to setAction.
This isn't different to how GlobalISel worked before. For example, for a
target that supports 32 and 64 bit adds natively:
for (auto Ty : {s32, s64})
setAction({G_ADD, 0, s32}, Legal);
or for a target that needs a library call for a 32 bit division:
setAction({G_SDIV, s32}, Libcall);
The main conceptual change to the LegalizerInfo API, is in specifying
how to legalize the type sizes for which a change of size is needed. For
example, in the above example, how to specify how all types from i1 to
i8388607 (apart from s32 and s64 which are legal) need to be legalized
and expressed in terms of operations on the available legal sizes
(again, i32 and i64 in this case). Before, the implementation only
allowed specifying power-of-2-sized types (e.g. setAction({G_ADD, 0,
s128}, NarrowScalar). A worse limitation was that if you'd wanted to
specify how to legalize all the sized types as allowed by the LLVM-IR
LangRef, i1 to i8388607, you'd have to call setAction 8388607-3 times
and probably would need a lot of memory to store all of these
specifications.
Instead, the legalization actions that need to change the size of the
type are specified now using a "SizeChangeStrategy". For example:
setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(
G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerAndNarrowToLargest);
This example indicates that for type sizes for which there is a larger
size that can be legalized towards, do it by Widening the size.
For example, G_ADD on s17 will be legalized by first doing WidenScalar
to make it s32, after which it's legal.
The "NarrowToLargest" indicates what to do if there is no larger size
that can be legalized towards. E.g. G_ADD on s92 will be legalized by
doing NarrowScalar to s64.
Another example, taken from the ARM backend is:
for (unsigned Op : {G_SDIV, G_UDIV}) {
setLegalizeScalarToDifferentSizeStrategy(Op, 0,
widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);
if (ST.hasDivideInARMMode())
setAction({Op, s32}, Legal);
else
setAction({Op, s32}, Libcall);
}
For this example, G_SDIV on s8, on a target without a divide
instruction, would be legalized by first doing action (WidenScalar,
s32), followed by (Libcall, s32).
The same principle is also followed for when the number of vector lanes
on vector data types need to be changed, e.g.:
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(16, 8)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(8, 16)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(2, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(4, 32)}, LegalizerInfo::Legal);
setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy(
G_ADD, 0, widenToLargerTypesUnsupportedOtherwise);
As currently implemented here, vector types are legalized by first
making the vector element size legal, followed by then making the number
of lanes legal. The strategy to follow in the first step is set by a
call to setLegalizeVectorElementToDifferentSizeStrategy, see example
above. The strategy followed in the second step
"moreToWiderTypesAndLessToWidest" (see code for its definition),
indicating that vectors are widened to more elements so they map to
natively supported vector widths, or when there isn't a legal wider
vector, split the vector to map it to the widest vector supported.
Therefore, for the above specification, some example legalizations are:
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 3)})
returns {WidenScalar, LLT::vector(3, 8)}
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(3, 8)})
then returns {MoreElements, LLT::vector(8, 8)}
* getAction({G_ADD, LLT::vector(20, 8)})
returns {FewerElements, LLT::vector(16, 8)}
2. Key implementation aspects.
How to legalize a specific (operation, type index, size) tuple is
represented by mapping intervals of integers representing a range of
size types to an action to take, e.g.:
setScalarAction({G_ADD, LLT:scalar(1)},
{{1, WidenScalar}, // bit sizes [ 1, 31[
{32, Legal}, // bit sizes [32, 33[
{33, WidenScalar}, // bit sizes [33, 64[
{64, Legal}, // bit sizes [64, 65[
{65, NarrowScalar} // bit sizes [65, +inf[
});
Please note that most of the code to do the actual lowering of
non-power-of-2 sized types is currently missing, this is just trying to
make it possible for targets to specify what is legal, and how non-legal
types should be legalized. Probably quite a bit of further work is
needed in the actual legalizing and the other passes in GlobalISel to
support non-power-of-2 sized types.
I hope the documentation in LegalizerInfo.h and the examples provided in the
various {Target}LegalizerInfo.cpp and LegalizerInfoTest.cpp explains well
enough how this is meant to be used.
This drops the need for LLT::{half,double}...Size().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30529
llvm-svn: 317560
According to the docs on opegroup.org, the function can return
EINVAL if:
The len argument is less than zero, or the offset argument is less
than zero, or the underlying file system does not support this
operation.
I'd say it's a peculiar choice (when EONOTSUPP is right there), but
let's keep POSIX happy for now. This was independently discovered
by Mark Millard (on FreeBSD/ZFS).
Quickly ack'ed by Rui on IRC.
llvm-svn: 317535
rL316419 exposed a platform specific issue where the type of the values
passed to llvm::format could be different to the format string.
Debian unstable for mips uses long long int for std::chrono:duration,
while x86_64 uses long int.
For mips, this resulted in the value being corrupted when rendered to a
string. Address this by explicitly casting the result of the duration_cast
to the type specified in the format string.
Reviewers: sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39597
llvm-svn: 317523
This removes the athlon type and simplifies the string decoding. We only really need these type/subtype breaks where we need to match libgcc/compiler-rt and these CPUs aren't part of that.
I'm looking into moving some of this information to a .def file to share with clang's __builtin_cpu_is handling. And while these CPUs aren't part of that the less lines I have to deal with in the .def file the better.
llvm-svn: 317354
'x86-64' has started to reflect a sort of generic tuning flag for more modern 64-bit CPUs. We probably shouldn't be using it as the name of an unidentifiable pentium4. So use nocona for all 64-bit pentium4s instead.
llvm-svn: 317230
We know that's the earliest CPU with 64-bit support. x86-64 has taken on a role of representing a more modern 64-bit CPU so we probably shouldn't be using that when we can't identify things.
llvm-svn: 317229
Rather than looking at model numbers just check for the mmx feature flag. While there promote INTEL_PENTIUM_MMX to a CPU type instead of a subtype so that we don't have weird type with only one subtype.
llvm-svn: 317184
This patch is to rewrite FileOutputBuffer as two separate classes;
one for file-backed output buffer and the other for memory-backed
output buffer. I think the new code is easier to follow because two
different implementations are now actually separated as different
classes.
Unlike the previous implementation, the class that does not replace the
final output file using rename(2) does not create a temporary file at
all. Instead, it allocates memory using mmap(2) and use it. I think
this is an improvement because it is now guaranteed that the temporary
memory region doesn't trigger any I/O and there's now zero chance to
leave a temporary file behind. Also, it shouldn't impose new restrictions
because were using mmap IO too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39449
llvm-svn: 317127
fmod specification requires the sign of the remainder is
the same as numerator in case remainder is zero.
Reviewers: gottesmm, scanon, arsenm, davide, craig.topper
Reviewed By: scanon
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39225
llvm-svn: 317081
Previously, we call write(2) for each 32767 byte chunk. That is not
efficient because Linux can handle much larger write requests.
This patch changes the chunk size on Linux to 1 GiB.
This patch also changes the default chunks size to SSIZE_MAX. I think
that doesn't in practice change this function's behavior on any operating
system because SSIZE_MAX on 64-bit machine is unrealistically large,
and writing 2 GiB (SSIZE_MAX on 32-bit) on a 32-bit machine by a single
call of write(2) is also unrealistic, as the userspace is usually
limited to 2 GiB. That said, it is in general a good thing to do because
a write larger than SSIZE_MAX is implementation-defined in POSIX.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39444
llvm-svn: 317015
Summary:
The removed code checks that we are able to handle a 64-bit number, but
the code we're calling takes two dwords (for a total of 64 bits), so this
is always true.
Reviewers: zturner, rnk, majnemer, compnerd
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: amccarth, hiraditya, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39263
llvm-svn: 316814
Summary:
Original oss-fuzz report:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=3727#c2
The minimized test case that causes this failure:
5b 5b 5b 3d 47 53 00 5b 3d 5d 5b 5d 0a [[[=GS.[=][].
Note the string "=GS\x00". The failure happens because the code is
searching the string against an array of known collated names. "GS\x00"
is a hit, but since len takes into account an extra NUL byte, indexing
into cp->name[len] goes one byte past it's allocated memory. Fix this to
use a strlen(cp->name) comparison to account for NUL bytes in the input.
Reviewers: pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: hctim, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39380
llvm-svn: 316786
These headers have static variables in them, which would easily create
ODR violations if the header was included in another header, and the
constants were used by an inline function, for example.
llvm-svn: 316706
Summary:
On musl libc, stdin/out/err are defined as `FILE* const` globals,
and their address is not implicitly convertible to void *,
or at least gcc 6 doesn't allow it, giving errors like:
```
error: cannot initialize return object of type 'void *' with an rvalue of type 'FILE *const *' (aka '_IO_FILE *const *')
EXPLICIT_SYMBOL(stderr);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
Add an explicit cast to fix that problem.
Reviewers: marsupial, krytarowski, dim
Reviewed By: dim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39297
llvm-svn: 316672
Summary:
Support formatv of TimePoint with strftime-style formats.
Extensions for millis/micros/nanos are added.
Inital use case is HH:MM:SS.MMM timestamps in clangd logs.
Reviewers: bkramer, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: labath, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38992
llvm-svn: 316419
Summary:
Previously, we would emit error messages like "IO failure on output
stream". This change causes use to include information about what
actually went wrong, e.g. "No space left on device".
Reviewers: sunfish, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39203
llvm-svn: 316404
Apple's iOS, tvOS and watchOS simulator platforms have never been clearly
distinguished in the target triples. Even though they are intended to
behave similarly to the corresponding device platforms, they have separate
SDKs and are really separate platforms from the compiler's perspective.
Clang now defines a macro when building for one of these simulator platforms
(r297866) but that relies on the very indirect mechanism of checking to see
which option was used to specify the minimum deployment target. That is not
so great. Swift would also like to distinguish these simulator platforms in
a similar way, but unlike Clang, Swift does not use a separate option to
specify the minimum deployment target -- it uses a -target option to
specify the target triple directly, including the OS version number.
Using a different target triple for the simulator platforms is a much
more direct and obvious way to specify this. Putting the "simulator" in
the environment component of the triple means the OS values can stay the
same and existing code the looks at the OS field will not be affected.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D39143
rdar://problem/34729432
llvm-svn: 316380
The method IEEEFloat::convertFromStringSpecials() does not recognize
the "+Inf" and "-Inf" strings but these strings are printed for
the double Infinities by the IEEEFloat::toString().
This patch adds the "+Inf" and "-Inf" strings to the list of recognized
patterns in IEEEFloat::convertFromStringSpecials().
Reviewers: sberg, bogner, majnemer, timshen, rnk, skatkov, gottesmm, bkramer, scanon
Reviewed By: skatkov
Subscribers: apilipenko, reames, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38030
llvm-svn: 316156
Original commit message:
"[cmake] Use find_package to discover zlib
This allows us to use standard cmake utilities to point to non-system zlib
locations.
Patch by Oksana Shadura and me (D39002)."
The new patch brings back the old behavior in the cases where find_package
cannot find zlib.
llvm-svn: 316150
This adds Intel's Knights Mill CPU to valid CPU names for the backend. For now its an alias of "knl", but ultimately we need to support AVX5124FMAPS and AVX5124VNNIW instruction sets for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38811
llvm-svn: 315722
In r315079 I added a check for the ERROR_CALL_NOT_IMPLEMENTED error
code, but it turns out earlier versions of Wine just returned false
without setting any error code.
This patch handles the unset error code case.
llvm-svn: 315597
Summary:
Add LLVM_FORCE_ENABLE_DUMP cmake option, and use it along with
LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS to set LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP.
Remove NDEBUG and only use LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP to enable dump methods.
Move definition of LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP from config.h to llvm-config.h so
it'll be picked up by public headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38406
llvm-svn: 315590
This reverts commit 4e4ee1c507e2707bb3c208e1e1b6551c3015cbf5.
This is failing due to some code that isn't built on MSVC
so I didn't catch. Not immediately obvious how to fix this
at first glance, so I'm reverting for now.
llvm-svn: 315536
There's a lot of misuse of Twine scattered around LLVM. This
ranges in severity from benign (returning a Twine from a function
by value that is just a string literal) to pretty sketchy (storing
a Twine by value in a class). While there are some uses for
copying Twines, most of the very compelling ones are confined
to the Twine class implementation itself, and other uses are
either dubious or easily worked around.
This patch makes Twine's copy constructor private, and fixes up
all callsites.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38767
llvm-svn: 315530
- Use HSA metadata streamer directly from AMDGPUAsmPrinter
- Make naming consistent with PAL metadata
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38746
llvm-svn: 315526
- Move PAL metadata definitions to AMDGPUMetadata
- Make naming consistent with HSA metadata
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38745
llvm-svn: 315523
- Rename AMDGPUCodeObjectMetadata to AMDGPUMetadata (PAL metadata will be included in this file in the follow up change)
- Rename AMDGPUCodeObjectMetadataStreamer to AMDGPUHSAMetadataStreamer
- Introduce HSAMD namespace
- Other minor name changes in function and test names
llvm-svn: 315522
In r315079, fs::rename was reimplemented in terms of CreateFile and
SetFileInformationByHandle. Unfortunately, the latter isn't supported by
Wine. This adds a fallback to MoveFileEx for that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38817
llvm-svn: 315520
Previously we would only look in the current directory for a
resource, which might not be the same as the directory of the
rc file. Furthermore, MSVC rc supports a /I option, and can
also look in the system environment. This patch adds support
for this search algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38740
llvm-svn: 315499
This allows clients to avoid an unnecessary fs::status() call on each
directory entry. Because the information returned by FindFirstFileEx
is a subset of the information returned by a regular status() call,
I needed to extract a base class from file_status that contains only
that information.
On my machine, this reduces the time required to enumerate a ThinLTO
cache directory containing 520k files from almost 4 minutes to less
than 2 seconds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38716
llvm-svn: 315378
This patch adds a post-linking pass which replaces the function pointer of enqueued
block kernel with a global variable (runtime handle) and adds
runtime-handle attribute to the enqueued block kernel.
In LLVM CodeGen the runtime-handle metadata will be translated to
RuntimeHandle metadata in code object. Runtime allocates a global buffer
for each kernel with RuntimeHandel metadata and saves the kernel address
required for the AQL packet into the buffer. __enqueue_kernel function
in device library knows that the invoke function pointer in the block
literal is actually runtime handle and loads the kernel address from it
and puts it into AQL packet for dispatching.
This cannot be done in FE since FE cannot create a unique global variable
with external linkage across LLVM modules. The global variable with internal
linkage does not work since optimization passes will try to replace loads
of the global variable with its initialization value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38610
llvm-svn: 315352
Microsoft's debug implementation of std::copy checks if the destination is an
array and then does some bounds checking. This was causing an assertion
failure in fs::rename_internal which copies to a buffer of the appropriate
size but that's type-punned to an array of length 1 for API compatibility
reasons.
Fix is to make make the destination a pointer rather than an array.
llvm-svn: 315222
The current implementation of rename uses ReplaceFile if the
destination file already exists. According to the documentation for
ReplaceFile, the source file is opened without a sharing mode. This
means that there is a short interval of time between when ReplaceFile
renames the file and when it closes the file during which the
destination file cannot be opened.
This behaviour is not POSIX compliant because rename is supposed
to be atomic. It was also causing intermittent link failures when
linking with a ThinLTO cache; the ThinLTO cache implementation expects
all cache files to be openable.
This patch addresses that problem by re-implementing rename
using CreateFile and SetFileInformationByHandle. It is roughly a
reimplementation of ReplaceFile with a better sharing policy as well
as support for renaming in the case where the destination file does
not exist.
This implementation is still not fully POSIX. Specifically in the case
where the destination file is open at the point when rename is called,
there will be a short interval of time during which the destination
file will not exist. It isn't clear whether it is possible to avoid
this using the Windows API.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38570
llvm-svn: 315079
But now include a check for CPU_COUNT so we still build on 10 year old
versions of glibc.
Original message:
Use sched_getaffinity instead of std:🧵:hardware_concurrency.
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314931
Summary:
This reverts D38481. The change breaks systems with older versions of glibc. It
injects a use of CPU_COUNT() from sched.h without checking to ensure that the
function exists first.
Reviewers:
Subscribers:
llvm-svn: 314922
The issue with std:🧵:hardware_concurrency is that it forwards
to libc and some implementations (like glibc) don't take thread
affinity into consideration.
With this change a llvm program that can execute in only 2 cores will
use 2 threads, even if the machine has 32 cores.
This makes benchmarking a lot easier, but should also help if someone
doesn't want to use all cores for compilation for example.
llvm-svn: 314809
Summary:
This operating system type represents the AMDGPU PAL runtime, and will
be required by the AMDGPU backend in order to generate correct code for
this runtime.
Currently it generates the same code as not specifying an OS at all.
That will change in future commits.
Patch from Tim Corringham.
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37380
llvm-svn: 314500
If we do not initialize Prefix here, Prefix.data() returns a nullptr.
Later, it is passed to memcpy. memcpy's behavior is undefined if src (or
dst) is a nullptr even if a given size is 0. That's why this code
triggered UBsan.
llvm-svn: 314368
The tar format originally supported up to 99 byte filename. The two
extensions are proposed later: Ustar or PAX.
In the UStar extension, a pathanme is split at a '/' and its "prefix"
and "suffix" are stored in different locations in the tar header. Since
"prefix" can be up to 155 byte, it can represent up to 254 byte
filename (but exact limit depends on the location of '/' character in
a pathname.)
Our TarWriter first attempt to use UStar extension and then fallback to
PAX extension.
But there's a bug in UStar header creation. "Suffix" part must be a NUL-
terminated string, but we didn't handle it correctly. As a result, if
your filename just 100 characters long, the last character was droppped.
This patch fixes the issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38149
llvm-svn: 314349
FileOutputBuffer::create() attempts to remove a target file if the file
is a regular one, which results in an unexpected result in a failure
scenario.
If something goes wrong and the user of FileOutputBuffer decides to not
call commit(), it leaves nothing. An existing file is removed, and no
new file is created.
What we should do is to atomically replace an existing file with a new
file using rename(), so that it wouldn't remove an existing file without
creating a new one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38283
llvm-svn: 314345
Summary:
Found when testing stage-2 build with D38101.
```
In file included from /build/llvm/lib/Support/Path.cpp:1045:
/build/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Path.inc:648:14: error: comparison 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') > 18446744073709551615 is always false [-Werror,-Wtautological-constant-compare]
if (length > std::numeric_limits<size_t>::max()) {
~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
`size_t` is `uint64_t` here, apparently, thus any `uint64_t` value
always fits into `size_t`.
Initial patch was to use some preprocessor logic to
not check if the size is known to fit at compile time.
But Zachary Turner suggested using this approach.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, rafael, zturner, mehdi_amini
Reviewed by (via email): zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38132
llvm-svn: 314312
Summary:
Sanitizer blacklist entries currently apply to all sanitizers--there
is no way to specify that an entry should only apply to a specific
sanitizer. This is important for Control Flow Integrity since there are
several different CFI modes that can be enabled at once. For maximum
security, CFI blacklist entries should be scoped to only the specific
CFI mode(s) that entry applies to.
Adding section headers to SpecialCaseLists allows users to specify more
information about list entries, like sanitizer names or other metadata,
like so:
[section1]
fun:*fun1*
[section2|section3]
fun:*fun23*
The section headers are regular expressions. For backwards compatbility,
blacklist entries entered before a section header are put into the '[*]'
section so that blacklists without sections retain the same behavior.
SpecialCaseList has been modified to also accept a section name when
matching against the blacklist. It has also been modified so the
follow-up change to clang can define a derived class that allows
matching sections by SectionMask instead of by string.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, eugenis, vsk
Reviewed By: eugenis, vsk
Subscribers: vitalybuka, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37924
llvm-svn: 314170