Applications often need the current thread id when making
system calls, and some operating systems provide the notion
of a thread name, which can be useful in enabling better
diagnostics when debugging or logging.
This patch adds an accessor for the thread id, and "best effort"
getters and setters for the thread name. Since this is
non critical functionality, no error is returned to indicate
that a platform doesn't support thread names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30526
llvm-svn: 296887
After several smaller patches to get most of the core improvements
finished up, this patch is a straight move and header fixup of
the source.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30266
llvm-svn: 296810
Original commit message:
"Allow externally dlopen-ed libraries to be registered as permanent libraries.
This is also useful in cases when llvm is in a shared library. First we dlopen
the llvm shared library and then we register it as a permanent library in order
to keep the JIT and other services working.
Patch reviewed by Vedant Kumar (D29955)!"
llvm-svn: 296774
Summary:
This patch moves the clearUnusedBits calls into the two different initialization paths for APInt from a uint64_t. This allows the compiler to better optimize the clearing of the unused bits for the single word case. And it puts the clearing for the multi word case into the initSlowCase function to save code. In the common case of initializing with 0 this allows the clearing to be completely optimized out for the single word case.
On my local x86 build this is showing a ~45kb reduction in the size of the opt binary.
Reviewers: RKSimon, hans, majnemer, davide, MatzeB
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30486
llvm-svn: 296677
Windows does not treat `~` as a reference to home directory, so the call
to `llvm::sys::path::native` on, say, `~/somedir` produces `~\somedir`,
which has different meaning than the original path. With this change
tilde is expanded on Windows to user profile directory. Such behavior
keeps original meaning of the path and is consistent with the algorithm
of `llvm::sys::path::home_directory`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27527
llvm-svn: 296590
Requesting DWARF v5 will now get you the new compile-unit and
type-unit headers. llvm-dwarfdump will also recognize them.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30206
llvm-svn: 296514
Summary:
This will allow future patches to inspect the details of the LLT. The implementation is now split between
the Support and CodeGen libraries to allow TableGen to use this class without introducing layering concerns.
Thanks to Ahmed Bougacha for finding a reasonable way to avoid the layering issue and providing the version of this patch without that problem.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, ab, javed.absar
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, dberris, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30046
llvm-svn: 296474
This is also useful in cases when llvm is in a shared library. First we dlopen
the llvm shared library and then we register it as a permanent library in order
to keep the JIT and other services working.
Patch reviewed by Vedant Kumar (D29955)!
llvm-svn: 296442
The current pattern for extract bits in range is typically:
Mask.lshr(BitOffset).trunc(SubSizeInBits);
Which can be particularly slow for large APInts (MaskSizeInBits > 64) as they require the allocation of memory for the temporary variable.
This is another of the compile time issues identified in PR32037 (see also D30265).
This patch adds the APInt::extractBits() helper method which avoids the temporary memory allocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30336
llvm-svn: 296272
The current pattern for extract bits in range is typically:
Mask.lshr(BitOffset).trunc(SubSizeInBits);
Which can be particularly slow for large APInts (MaskSizeInBits > 64) as they require the allocation of memory for the temporary variable.
This is another of the compile time issues identified in PR32037 (see also D30265).
This patch adds the APInt::extractBits() helper method which avoids the temporary memory allocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30336
llvm-svn: 296147
The current pattern for extract bits in range is typically:
Mask.lshr(BitOffset).trunc(SubSizeInBits);
Which can be particularly slow for large APInts (MaskSizeInBits > 64) as they require the allocation of memory for the temporary variable.
This is another of the compile time issues identified in PR32037 (see also D30265).
This patch adds the APInt::extractBits() helper method which avoids the temporary memory allocation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30336
llvm-svn: 296141
The current pattern for setting bits in range is typically:
Mask |= APInt::getBitsSet(MaskSizeInBits, LoPos, HiPos);
Which can be particularly slow for large APInts (MaskSizeInBits > 64) as they require the allocation memory for the temporary variable.
This is one of the key compile time issues identified in PR32037.
This patch adds the APInt::setBits() helper method which avoids the temporary memory allocation completely, this first implementation uses setBit() internally instead but already significantly reduces the regression in PR32037 (~10% drop). Additional optimization may be possible.
I investigated whether there is need for APInt::clearBits() and APInt::flipBits() equivalents but haven't seen these patterns to be particularly common, but reusing the code would be trivial.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30265
llvm-svn: 296102
The function for distinguishing local and remote files added in r295768
unconditionally uses linux/magic.h header to provide necessary
filesystem magic numbers. However, in kernel headers predating 2.6.18
the magic numbers are spread throughout multiple include files.
Furthermore, LLVM did not require kernel headers being installed so far.
To increase the portability across different versions of Linux kernel
and different Linux systems, add CMake header checks for linux/magic.h
and -- if it is missing -- the linux/nfs_fs.h and linux/smb.h headers
which contained the numbers previously.
Furthermore, since the numbers are static and the feature does not seem
critical enough to make LLVM require kernel headers at all, add fallback
constants for the case when none of the necessary headers is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30261
llvm-svn: 295854
Since I'm only seeing failures on OSX, and it's saying
permission denied, I'm suspecting this is due to the addition
of the MAP_RESILIENT_CODESIGN and/or MAP_RESILIENT_MEDIA flags.
Speculatively trying to remove those to get the bots working.
llvm-svn: 295770
There are still over 3400 files remaining with this property set, but there are tens of thousands more with the property not set. Until we decide what to do on a global scale, this at least unblocks me temporarily.
llvm-svn: 295756
Summary:
We have support for bisection, and bugpoint can reduce testcases
often to a single pass. But that doesn't help reduce it to a single
transform by a single pass. Which debug counting lets us do.
Debug counting lets you instrument a pass so that it only executes a
certain thing (rwhatever you want) after skipping it a certain time of
times, and then only does a certain number of executions before saying
"skip" again.
To make it concrete, for predicateinfo, if i instrument use renaming,
i can make it so it skips renaming the first N uses, renames the next
N, and then skips the rest.
This lets you narrow down a miscompilation to, often, a single
transformation, and then also debug it (by using the same command line
parameters).
Reviewers: chandlerc, davide, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29998
llvm-svn: 295593
This set of patches adds support for Cavium ThunderX ARM64 processors:
* ThunderX
* ThunderX T81
* ThunderX T83
* ThunderX T88
Patch by Stefan Teleman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28891
llvm-svn: 295475
TimerGroup was showing up on a leak in valigrind, and
used some pretty complex code to implement a singleton.
This patch replaces the implementation with a vastly simpler
one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28367
llvm-svn: 295370
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
Gcc supports target armv7ve which is armv7-a with virtualization
extensions. This change adds support for this in llvm for gcc
compatibility.
Also remove redundant FeatureHWDiv, FeatureHWDivARM for a few models as
this is specified automatically by FeatureVirtualization.
Patch by Manoj Gupta.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29472
llvm-svn: 294661
We only implemented it for one of the 3 HLE instructions and that instruction is also under the RTM flag. Clang only implements the RTM flag from its command line.
llvm-svn: 294562
This patch does the following.
1. Adds an Intrinsic int_x86_clzero which works with __builtin_ia32_clzero
2. Identifies clzero feature using cpuid info. (Function:8000_0008, Checks if EBX[0]=1)
3. Adds the clzero feature under znver1 architecture.
4. The custom inserter is added in Lowering.
5. A testcase is added to check the intrinsic.
6. The clzero instruction is added to assembler test.
Patch by Ganesh Gopalasubramanian with a couple formatting tweaks, a disassembler test, and using update_llc_test.py from me.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29385
llvm-svn: 294558
Summary:
The formatter has three knobs:
- the user can choose which time unit to use for formatting (default: whatever is the unit of the input)
- he can choose whether the unit gets displayed (default: yes)
- he can affect the way the number itself is formatted via standard number formatting options (default:default)
Reviewers: zturner, inglorion
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29481
llvm-svn: 294326
Summary:
Make this interface reusable similarly to std::call_once and std::once_flag interface.
This makes porting LLDB to NetBSD easier as there was in the original approach a portable way to specify a non-static once_flag. With this change translating std::once_flag to llvm::once_flag is mechanical.
Sponsored by <The NetBSD Foundation>
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, labath, joerg
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: emaste, clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29566
llvm-svn: 294143
Summary: As per title. I ran into that limitation of the API doing some other work, so I though that'd be a nice addition.
Reviewers: jroelofs, compnerd, majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29503
llvm-svn: 294063
Committing after fixing suggested changes and tested release/debug builds on
x86_64-linux and arm/aarch64 builds.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29042
llvm-svn: 293850
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
Summary: This is an attempt to reduce the verbose manual dispatching code in APFloat. This doesn't handle multiple dispatch on single discriminator (e.g. APFloat::add(const APFloat&)), nor handles multiple dispatch on multiple discriminators (e.g. APFloat::convert()).
Reviewers: hfinkel, echristo, jlebar
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29161
llvm-svn: 293255
Summary:
Use the O_CLOEXEC flag only when it is available. Some old systems (e.g.
SLES10) do not support this flag. POSIX explicitly guarantees that this
flag can be checked for using #if, so there is no need for a CMake
check.
In case O_CLOEXEC is not supported, fall back to fcntl(FD_CLOEXEC)
instead.
Reviewers: rnk, rafael, mgorny
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28894
llvm-svn: 292912
Summary:
This adds a cross-platform way of setting the current working directory
analogous to the existing current_path() function used for retrieving
it. The function will be used in lldb.
Reviewers: rafael, silvas, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29035
llvm-svn: 292907
Summary:
There's a comment in XorSlowCase that says "0^0==1" which isn't true. 0 xored with 0 is still 0. So I don't think we need to clear any unused bits here.
Now there is no difference between XorSlowCase and AndSlowCase/OrSlowCase other than the operation being performed
Reviewers: majnemer, MatzeB, chandlerc, bkramer
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: chfast, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28986
llvm-svn: 292873
Summary:
This patch changes the layout of DoubleAPFloat, and adjust all
operations to do either:
1) (IEEEdouble, IEEEdouble) -> (uint64_t, uint64_t) -> PPCDoubleDoubleImpl,
then run the old algorithm.
2) Do the right thing directly.
1) includes multiply, divide, remainder, mod, fusedMultiplyAdd, roundToIntegral,
convertFromString, next, convertToInteger, convertFromAPInt,
convertFromSignExtendedInteger, convertFromZeroExtendedInteger,
convertToHexString, toString, getExactInverse.
2) includes makeZero, makeLargest, makeSmallest, makeSmallestNormalized,
compare, bitwiseIsEqual, bitcastToAPInt, isDenormal, isSmallest,
isLargest, isInteger, ilogb, scalbn, frexp, hash_value, Profile.
I could split this into two patches, e.g. use
1) for all operatoins first, then incrementally change some of them to
2). I didn't do that, because 1) involves code that converts data between
PPCDoubleDoubleImpl and (IEEEdouble, IEEEdouble) back and forth, and may
pessimize the compiler. Instead, I find easy functions and use
approach 2) for them directly.
Next step is to implement move multiply and divide from 1) to 2). I don't
have plans for other functions in 1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27872
llvm-svn: 292839
Summary:
This makes the file descriptors on unix platform non-inheritable (O_CLOEXEC).
There is no change in behavior on windows, as the handles were already
non-inheritable there.
Reviewers: rnk, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28854
llvm-svn: 292401
Enable an ELFObjectFile to read the its arm build attributes to
produce a target triple with a specific ARM architecture.
llvm-objdump now uses this functionality to automatically produce
a more accurate target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28769
llvm-svn: 292366
No any changes, will follow up with D28807 commit containing APLi change for clang
to fix build issues happened.
Original commit message:
[Support/Compression] - Change zlib API to return Error instead of custom status.
Previously API returned custom enum values.
Patch changes it to return Error with string description.
That should help users to report errors in universal way.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28684
llvm-svn: 292226
Previously API returned custom enum values.
Patch changes it to return Error with string description.
That should help users to report errors in universal way.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28684
llvm-svn: 292214
Summary:
Revert [ARM] Fix ubig32_t read in ARMAttributeParser
Now using support functions to read data instead of trying to
perform casts.
===========================================================
Revert [ARM] Enable objdump to construct triple for ARM
Now that The ARMAttributeParser has been moved into the library,
it has been modified so that it can parse the attributes without
printing them and stores them in a map. ELFObjectFile now queries
the attributes to fill out the architecture details of a provided
triple for 'arm' and 'thumb' targets. llvm-objdump uses this new
functionality.
Subscribers: llvm-commits, samparker, aemerson, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28683
llvm-svn: 291911
Now that The ARMAttributeParser has been moved into the library,
it has been modified so that it can parse the attributes without
printing them and stores them in a map. ELFObjectFile now queries
the attributes to fill out the architecture details of a provided
triple for 'arm' and 'thumb' targets. llvm-objdump uses this new
functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28281
llvm-svn: 291898
Summary:
This patch enables the following
1. AMD family 17h architecture using "znver1" tune flag (-march, -mcpu).
2. ISAs that are enabled for "znver1" architecture.
3. Checks ADX isa from cpuid to identify "znver1" flag when -march=native is used.
4. ISAs FMA4, XOP are disabled as they are dropped from amdfam17.
5. For the time being, it uses the btver2 scheduler model.
6. Test file is updated to check this flag.
This item is linked to clang review item https://reviews.llvm.org/D28018
Patch by Ganesh Gopalasubramanian
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper
Subscribers: vprasad, RKSimon, ashutosh.nema, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28017
llvm-svn: 291543
If we split a filename into `Name` and `Prefix`, `Prefix` is at most
145 bytes. We had a bug that didn't split a path correctly. This bug
was pointed out by Rafael in the post commit review.
This patch adds a unit test for TarWriter to verify the fix.
llvm-svn: 291494
When writing to a non regular file we cannot rename to it. Since we
have to write, we may as well create a temporary file to avoid trying
to create an unique file in /dev when trying to write to /dev/null.
llvm-svn: 291485
Most (maybe all?) tar commands can handle tar archives with blank
version fields, but POSIX requires "00" to be set to the field, so
doing it is good for compliance.
llvm-svn: 291479
Tar's Ustar header has the "prefix" field to store a directory
part of a filename. It is not as flexible as the PAX-extended
filename because there's still a limitation on the maximum filename
size, but it mitigates the situation.
This patch should unbreak some Windows buildbots that uses very
old tar command.
llvm-svn: 291340
This usage of strcpy and snprintf was certainly safe, but using them
sets off various deprecation and lint warnings. Easier to just write the
belt and suspenders version.
llvm-svn: 291256
We use PAX headers to store long filenames (>= 100 bytes).
It is not needed to emit PAX headers if filenames fit in the
Ustar header. This patch implements that optimization.
llvm-svn: 291215
In LLD, we create cpio archive files for --reproduce command.
cpio was not a bad choice because it is very easy to create, but
it was sometimes hard to use because people are not familiar with
cpio command.
I noticed that creating a tar archive isn't as hard as I thought.
So I implemented it in this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28091
llvm-svn: 291209
This reverts commit 63165f6ae3bac1623be36d4b3ce63afa1d51a30a.
After making this change, I discovered that _Unwind_Backtrace is
unable to unwind past a signal handler after an assertion failure.
I filed a bug report about that issue in rdar://29866587 but even if
we get a fix soon, it will be awhile before it get released.
llvm-svn: 291207
Summary:
Intel's i5-6300U CPU is reporting to have a model id of 78 (4e).
The Host detection assumes that to be Skylake Xeon (with AVX512 support),
instead of a normal Skylake machine.
Patch by: Valentin Churavy
Reviewers: nalimilan, craig.topper
Subscribers: hfinkel, tkelman, craig.topper, nalimilan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28221
llvm-svn: 291084
This CPU type was not previously recognized by LLVM which led to emitting
poor (and sometimes incorrect) code in some JIT workloads on such a machine.
llvm-svn: 290961
Provide a distinct contents for semBogus and semPPCDoubleDouble in order
to prevent compilers from collapsing them to a single memory address,
while we heavily rely on every semantic having distinct address.
This happens if insecure optimization collapsing identical values is
enabled. As a result, APFloats of semBogus are indistinguishable from
semPPCDoubleDouble -- and whenever the move constructor is used, the old
value beings being incorrectly recognized as a semPPCDoubleDouble.
Since the values in semPPCDoubleDouble are not used anywhere,
we can easily solve this issue via altering the value of one of the
fields and therefore ensuring that the collapse can not occur.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28112
llvm-svn: 290896
This was originally motivated by a compile time problem I've since figured out how to solve differently, but the cleanup seemed useful. We had the same logic - which essentially implemented find - in several places. By commoning them out, I can implement find and allow erase to be inlined at the call sites if profitable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28183
llvm-svn: 290779
Summary:
This class is unnecessary.
Its comment indicated that it was a compile error to allocate an
instance of a class that inherits from RefCountedBaseVPTR on the stack.
This may have been true at one point, but it's not today.
Moreover you really do not want to allocate *any* refcounted object on
the stack, vptrs or not, so if we did have a way to prevent these
objects from being stack-allocated, we'd want to apply it to regular
RefCountedBase too, obviating the need for a separate RefCountedBaseVPTR
class.
It seems that the main way RefCountedBaseVPTR provides safety is by
making its subclass's destructor virtual. This may have been helpful at
one point, but these days clang will emit an error if you define a class
with virtual functions that inherits from RefCountedBase but doesn't
have a virtual destructor.
Reviewers: compnerd, dblaikie
Subscribers: cfe-commits, klimek, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28162
llvm-svn: 290717
GlobPattern is a class to handle glob pattern matching. Currently
only LLD is using that, but technically that feature is not specific
to linkers, so in this patch I move that file to LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27969
llvm-svn: 290212
This patch fixes the linkage for __crashtracer_info__, making it have the proper mangling (extern "C") and linkage (private extern).
It also adds a new PrettyStackTrace type, allowing LLDB to adopt this instead of Host::SetCrashDescriptionWithFormat().
Without this patch, CrashTracer on macOS won't pick up pretty stack traces from any LLVM client.
An LLDB commit adopting this API will follow shortly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27683
llvm-svn: 289689
At least the plugin used by the LibreOffice build
(<https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Development/Clang_plugins>) indirectly
uses those members (through inline functions in LLVM/Clang include files in turn
using them), but they are not exported by utils/extract_symbols.py on Windows,
and accessing data across DLL/EXE boundaries on Windows is generally
problematic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26671
llvm-svn: 289647
Summary:
The motivation is to support better the -object_path_lto option on
Darwin. The linker needs to write down the generate object files on
disk for later use by lldb or dsymutil (debug info are not present
in the final binary). We're moving this into libLTO so that we can
be smarter when a cache is enabled and hard-link when possible
instead of duplicating the files.
Reviewers: tejohnson, deadalnix, pcc
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27507
llvm-svn: 289631
Bots are broken and needs to be fixed before having this on by default.
The feature was committed in r289619.
I tried to disable it in r289624 and failed because it was initialized in two places.
llvm-svn: 289626
Summary:
Given a flag (-mllvm -reverse-iterate) this patch will enable iteration of SmallPtrSet in reverse order.
The idea is to compile the same source with and without this flag and expect the code to not change.
If there is a difference in codegen then it would mean that the codegen is sensitive to the iteration order of SmallPtrSet.
This is enabled only with LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dexonsmith, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: mgorny, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26718
llvm-svn: 289619
Summary:
I looked at libgcc's implementation (which is based on the paper,
Software for Doubled-Precision Floating-Point Computations", by Seppo Linnainmaa,
ACM TOMS vol 7 no 3, September 1981, pages 272-283.) and made it generic to
arbitrary IEEE floats.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26817
llvm-svn: 289472
iteration.
Instead, load the byte at the needle length, compare it directly, and
save it to use in the lookup table of lengths we can skip forward.
I also added an annotation to expect that the comparison fails so that
the loop gets laid out contiguously without the call to memcpy (and the
substantial register shuffling that the ABI requires of that call).
Finally, because this behaves especially badly with a needle length of
one (by calling memcmp with a zero length) special case that to directly
call memchr, which is what we should have been doing anyways.
This was motivated by the fact that there are a large number of test
cases in 'check-llvm' where FileCheck's performance is dominated by
calls to StringRef::find (in a release, no-asserts build). I'm working
on patches to generally improve matters there, but this alone was worth
a 12.5% improvement in one test case where FileCheck spent 92% of its
time in this routine.
I experimented a bunch with different minor variations on this theme,
for example setting the pointer *at* the last byte and indexing
backwards for the call to memcmp. That didn't improve anything on this
version and seemed more complex. I also tried other things to make the
loop flow more nicely and none worked. =/ It is a bit unfortunate, the
generated code here remains pretty gross, but I don't see any obvious
ways to improve it. At this point, most of my ideas would be really
elaborate:
1) While the remainder of the string is long enough, we could load
a 16-byte or 32-byte vector at the address of the last byte and use
palignr to rotate that and check the first 15- or 31-bytes at the
front of the next segment, essentially pre-loading the first several
bytes of the next iteration so we could quickly detect a mismatch in
those bytes without an additional memory access. Down side would be
the code complexity, having a fallback loop, and likely misaligned
vector load. Plus it would make the common case of the last byte not
matching somewhat slower (need some extraction from a vector).
2) While we have space, we could do an aligned load of a 16- or 32-byte
vector that *contains* the end byte, and use any peceding bytes to
have a more precise "no" test, and any subsequent bytes could be
saved for the next iteration. This remove any unaligned load penalty,
but still requires us to pay the overhead of vector extraction for
the cases where we didn't need to do anything other than load and
compare the last byte.
3) Try to walk from the last byte in a way that is more friendly to
cache and/or memory pre-fetcher considering we have to poke the last
byte anyways.
No idea if any of these are really worth pursuing though. They all seem
somewhat unlikely to yield big wins in practice and to be a lot of work
and complexity. So I settled here, which at least seems like a strict
improvement over the previous version.
llvm-svn: 289373
so we can stop using DW_OP_bit_piece with the wrong semantics.
The entire back story can be found here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20161114/405934.html
The gist is that in LLVM we've been misinterpreting DW_OP_bit_piece's
offset field to mean the offset into the source variable rather than
the offset into the location at the top the DWARF expression stack. In
order to be able to fix this in a subsequent patch, this patch
introduces a dedicated DW_OP_LLVM_fragment operation with the
semantics that we used to apply to DW_OP_bit_piece, which is what we
actually need while inside of LLVM. This patch is complete with a
bitcode upgrade for expressions using the old format. It does not yet
fix the DWARF backend to use DW_OP_bit_piece correctly.
Implementation note: We discussed several options for implementing
this, including reserving a dedicated field in DIExpression for the
fragment size and offset, but using an custom operator at the end of
the expression works just fine and is more efficient because we then
only pay for it when we need it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27361
rdar://problem/29335809
llvm-svn: 288683
Summary:
This is a follow up to r288303, where I have introduced TrigramIndex
to speed up SpecialCaseList for the cases when all rules are
simple wildcards, like *hello*wor.d*.
Here, I add support for escaping, so that it's possible to
specify rules like *c\+\+abi*.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27318
llvm-svn: 288553
Summary:
it's often the case when the rules in the SpecialCaseList
are of the form hel.o*bar. That gives us a chance to build
trigram index to quickly discard 99% of inputs without
running a full regex. A similar idea was used in Google Code Search
as described in the blog post:
https://swtch.com/~rsc/regexp/regexp4.html
The check is defeated, if there's at least one regex
more complicated than that. In this case, all inputs
will go through the regex. That said, the real-world
rules are often simple or can be simplied. That considerably
speeds up compiling Chromium with CFI and UBSan.
As measured on Chromium's content_message_generator.cc:
before, CFI: 44 s
after, CFI: 23 s
after, CFI, no blacklist: 23 s (~1% slower, but 3 runs were unable to show the difference)
after, regular compilation to bitcode: 23 s
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27188
llvm-svn: 288303
This is the first part of an effort to add wasm binary
support across all llvm tools.
Patch by Sam Clegg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26172
llvm-svn: 288251
Summary:
The usage was previously guarded by HAVE_DLFCN. This breaks on Android with
LLVM_BUILD_STATIC as the platform does not provide a static version of libdl.
Using HAVE_DLOPEN fixes it as the code will only get used if we are actually able
to link an executable using dlopen.
Reviewers: rafael, beanz
Subscribers: tberghammer, danalbert, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26504
llvm-svn: 288246
The macro LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS is moved to a new header
abi-breaking.h, from llvm-config.h. Only headers that are using the
macro are including this new header.
LLVM will define a symbol, either EnableABIBreakingChecks or
DisableABIBreakingChecks depending on the configuration setting for
LLVM_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.
The abi-breaking.h header will add weak references to these symbols in
every clients that includes this header. This should ensure that
a mismatch triggers a link failure (or a load time failure for DSO).
On MSVC, the pragma "detect_mismatch" is used instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26876
llvm-svn: 288082
Some scanner errors were not checked and reported by the parser.
Fix PR30934. Recommit r288014 after fixing unittest.
Patch by: Serge Guelton <serge.guelton@telecom-bretagne.eu>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26419
llvm-svn: 288071
Some scanner errors were not checked and reported by the parser.
Fix PR30934
Patch by: Serge Guelton <serge.guelton@telecom-bretagne.eu>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26419
llvm-svn: 288014
This reverts commit r287684
Objections on the review thread had not been addressed to
prior to commit. I asked the committer to revert, but i expect they
are gone for the US holiday or something.
llvm-svn: 287798
In many sitautions, you just want to compute a hash for one chunk
of data. This patch adds convenient functions for that purpose.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26988
llvm-svn: 287726
If a response file in construct `@file` was specified by relative name,
constructs `@file` nested within it were resolved incorrectly if the
flag RelativeNames in call to ExpandResponseFile was set to true.
This feature is used in configuration files, tests for it are in
respective change (see D24933).
llvm-svn: 287482
The previously used "names" are rather descriptions (they use multiple
words and contain spaces), use short programming language identifier
like strings for the "names" which should be used when exporting to
machine parseable formats.
Also removed a unused TimerGroup from Hexxagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25583
llvm-svn: 287369
Summary:
LLVM will define a symbol, either EnableABIBreakingChecks or
DisableABIBreakingChecks depending on the configuration setting for
LLVM_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.
The llvm-config.h header will add weak references to these symbols in
every clients that includes this header. This should ensure that
a mismatch triggers a link failure (or a load time failure for DSO).
On MSVC, the pragma "detect_mismatch" is used instead.
Reviewers: rnk, jroelofs
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26841
llvm-svn: 287352
Summary:
All uses have been replaced by appropriate std::chrono types, and the class is
now unused.
Reviewers: zturner, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26447
llvm-svn: 287094
This patch makes it possible to identify object files created by CL.exe
with /GL option. Such file contains Microsoft proprietary intermediate
code instead of target machine code to do LTO.
I need this to print out user-friendly error message from LLD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26645
llvm-svn: 286919
Darwin's backtrace() function does not work with sigaltstack (which was
enabled when available with r270395) — it does a sanity check to make
sure that the current frame pointer is within the expected stack area
(which it is not when using an alternate stack) and gives up otherwise.
The alternative of _Unwind_Backtrace seems to work fine on macOS, so use
that when backtrace() fails. Note that we then use backtrace_symbols_fd()
with the addresses from _Unwind_Backtrace, but I’ve tested that and it
also seems to work fine. rdar://problem/28646552
llvm-svn: 286851
This introduces a new type-safe general purpose formatting
library. It provides compile-time type safety, does not require
a format specifier (since the type is deduced), and provides
mechanisms for extending the format capability to user defined
types, and overriding the formatting behavior for existing types.
This patch additionally adds documentation for the API to the
LLVM programmer's manual.
Mailing List Thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/105836.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25587
llvm-svn: 286682
The NamedRegionTimer initializer without a group name puts the Timer
into the "Misc" group and is (nearly) unused. Remove it.
The only user of this constructor appears to be the HexagonGenInsert pass,
which creates a counter without group to count the complete execution
time of that pass, however since every pass gets a counter by the
PassManager anyway this should be unnecessary. Also removed the
pointless TimerGroup there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25582
llvm-svn: 286524
This makes it possible to indent a binary blob by a certain
number of bytes, and also makes some things more idiomatic.
Finally, it integrates this binary blob formatter into ScopedPrinter
which used to have its own implementation of this algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26477
llvm-svn: 286495
Summary:
Fixes PR30869.
In D25977 I meant to change all functions that care about lifetime. I
changed constructors, factory functions, but I missed member/free
functions that return new instances. This patch changes them.
Reviewers: hfinkel, kbarton, echristo, joerg
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26269
llvm-svn: 286060
If a response file included by construct @file itself includes a response file
and that file is specified by relative file name, current behavior is to resolve
the name relative to the current working directory. The change adds additional
flag to ExpandResponseFiles that may be used to resolve nested response file
names relative to including file. With the new mode a set of related response
files may be kept together and reference each other with short position
independent names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24917
llvm-svn: 285675
This resubmits r284436 and r284437, which were reverted in
r284462 as they were breaking the AArch64 buildbot.
The breakage on AArch64 turned out to be a miscompile which is
still not fixed, but is actively tracked at llvm.org/pr30748.
This resubmission re-writes the code in a way so as to make the
miscompile not happen.
llvm-svn: 285483
Summary:
This patch adds DoubleAPFloat mode to APFloat.
Now, an APFloat with semantics PPCDoubleDouble will have DoubleAPFloat layout
(APFloat.U.Double), which contains two underlying APFloats as
PPCDoubleDoubleImpl and IEEEdouble semantics. Currently the IEEEdouble APFloat
is not used, and the first APFloat behaves exactly the same before this change.
This patch consists of three kinds of logics:
1) Construction and destruction of APFloat. Now the ctors, dtor, assign
opertors and factory functions construct different underlying layout
based on the semantics passed in.
2) s/IEEE/getIEEE()/ for normal, lifetime-unrelated computation functions.
These functions only access Floats[0] in DoubleAPFloat, which is the
same as today's semantic.
3) A "Double dispatch" function, APFloat::convert. Converting between two
different layouts requires appropriate logic.
Neither of these change the external behavior.
Reviewers: hfinkel, kbarton, echristo, iteratee
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25977
llvm-svn: 285351
* Assume that clang passes non-zero alignment value to DIBuilder
only in case when it was forced by C++11 'alignas', C11 '_Alignas'
or compiler attribute '__attribute__((aligned (N)))'.
* Emit DW_AT_alignment if alignment is specified for type/object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24425
llvm-svn: 285189
* Assume that clang passes non-zero alignment value to DIBuilder
only in case when it was forced by C++11 'alignas', C11 '_Alignas'
or compiler attribute '__attribute__((aligned (N)))'.
* Emit DW_AT_alignment if alignment is specified for type/object.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24425
llvm-svn: 285181
Summary:
The intention is to make APFloat an interface class, so that later I can add a second implementation class DoubleAPFloat to correctly implement PPCDoubleDouble semantic. The interface of IEEEFloat is not public, and can be simplified (currently it's exactly the same as the old APFloat), but that belongs to a separate patch.
DoubleAPFloat should look like:
class DoubleAPFloat {
const fltSemantics *Semantics;
std::unique_ptr<APFloat> APFloats; // Two heap-allocated APFloats.
};
There is no functional change, nor public interface change.
Reviewers: hfinkel, chandlerc, iteratee, echristo, kbarton
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25536
llvm-svn: 285105
If we don't have futimens(), we fall back to futimes(), which only supports
microsecond timestamps. In that case, we need to explicitly cast away the extra
precision in setLastModificationAndAccessTime().
llvm-svn: 284977
Summary:
This is a follow-up to D25416. It removes all usages of TimeValue from
llvm/Support library (except for the actual TimeValue declaration), and replaces
them with appropriate usages of std::chrono. To facilitate this, I have added
small utility functions for converting time points and durations into appropriate
OS-specific types (FILETIME, struct timespec, ...).
Reviewers: zturner, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25730
llvm-svn: 284966
All of these existed because MSVC 2013 was unable to synthesize default
move ctors. We recently dropped support for it so all that error-prone
boilerplate can go.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 284721
This is a resubmission of r284590. The mingw build should be fixed now. The
problem was we were matching time_t with _localtime_64s, which was incorrect on
_USE_32BIT_TIME_T systems. Instead I use localtime_s, which should always
evaluate to the correct function.
llvm-svn: 284720
This reverts commit r284590 as it fails on the mingw buildbot. I think I know the
fix, but I cannot test it right now. Will reapply when I verify it works ok.
This reverts r284590.
llvm-svn: 284615
Summary:
std::chrono mostly covers the functionality of llvm::sys::TimeValue and
lldb_private::TimeValue. This header adds a bit of utility functions and
typedefs, which make the usage of the library and porting code from TimeValues
easier.
Rationale:
- TimePoint typedef - precision of system_clock is implementation defined -
using a well-defined precision helps maintain consistency between platforms,
makes it interact better with existing TimeValue classes, and avoids cases
there a time point is implicitly convertible to a specific precision on some
platforms but not on others.
- system_clock::to_time_t only accepts time_points with the default system
precision (even though time_t has only second precision on all platforms we
support). To avoid the need for explicit casts, I have added a toTimeT()
wrapper function. toTimePoint(time_t) was not strictly necessary, but I have
added it for symmetry.
Reviewers: zturner, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25416
llvm-svn: 284590
This reverts commits 284436 and 284437 because they still break AArch64 bots:
Value of: format_number(-10, IntegerStyle::Integer, 1)
Actual: "-0"
Expected: "-10"
llvm-svn: 284462
This resubmits commits 284425 and r284428, which were reverted
in r284429 due to some infinite recursion caused by an incorrect
selection of function overloads. Reproduced the failure on Linux
using GCC 4.8.4, and confirmed that with the new patch the tests
path on GCC as well as MSVC. So hopefully this fixes everything.
llvm-svn: 284436
raw_ostream has not afforded a lot of flexibility in terms of
how to format numbers when outputting. Wrap this all up into
a set of low level helper functions that can be used to output
numbers with arbitrary precision, alignment, format, etc and
then update raw_ostream to use these functions.
This will be useful for upcoming improvements to llvm's string
formatting libraries, but are still useful independently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25497
llvm-svn: 284425
Based on post-commit review for D25585/r284180, rename
hardware_physical_concurrency to heavyweight_hardware_concurrency,
to better reflect what type of tasks it should be used for and
to enable other systems to map this to something other than the
number of physical cores.
llvm-svn: 284390
/../foo is still a proper path after removing the dotdot. This should
now finally match https://9p.io/sys/doc/lexnames.html [Cleaning names].
llvm-svn: 284384
Summary:
This will be used by ThinLTO to set the amount of backend
parallelism, which performs better when restricted to the number
of physical cores (on X86 at least, where getHostNumPhysicalCores is
currently defined). If not available this falls back to
thread::hardware_concurrency.
Note I didn't add to the thread class since that is a typedef to
std::thread where available.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: beanz, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25585
llvm-svn: 284180
Summary:
For now I have only added support for x86_64 Linux, but other systems
can be added incrementally.
This is to be used for setting the default parallelism for ThinLTO
backends (instead of thread::hardware_concurrency which includes
hyperthreading and is too aggressive). I'll send this as a follow-on
patch, and it will fall back to hardware_concurrency when the new
getHostNumPhysicalCores returns -1 (when not supported for a given
host system).
I also added an interface to MemoryBuffer to force reading a file
as a stream - this is required for /proc/cpuinfo which is a special
file that looks like a normal file but appears to have 0 size.
The existing readers of this file in Host.cpp are reading the first
1024 or so bytes from it, because the necessary info is near the top.
But for the new functionality we need to be able to read the entire
file. I can go back and change the other readers to use the new
getFileAsStream as a follow-on patch since it seems much more robust.
Added a unittest.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini
Subscribers: beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25564
llvm-svn: 284138
subcommands
This commit fixes a bug where the help output doesn't display subcommands when
a tool has less than 3 subcommands.
This change doesn't include a corresponding unittest as there is no viable way
to provide a unittest for it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25463
llvm-svn: 283998
Low level functionality to format numbers were embedded in the
implementation of raw_ostream. I have need to use these through
an interface other than the overloaded stream operators, so they
need to be raised to a level that they can be used from either
raw_ostream operators or other code.
llvm-svn: 283921
This has existed pretty much forever AFAICT, but the code was
never being exercised because nobody was using the class. A
user of this class surfaced, and now we're breaking with UB.
The code was obviously wrong, so it's fixed here.
llvm-svn: 283912
Previously we would print
USAGE: <exe> [subcommand] [options]
Even if no subcommands were present. This changes the output
format to only print "[subcommand]" if there is at least one
subcommand.
Fixes llvm.org/pr30598
Patch by Serge Guelton
llvm-svn: 283892
LLVM's RandomNumberGenerator wasn't compatible with
the random distribution from <random>.
Fixes PR25105
Patch by: Serge Guelton <serge.guelton@telecom-bretagne.eu>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25443
llvm-svn: 283854
This should allow users of the library to get a range to iterate through
all the subcommands that are registered to the global parser. This
allows users to define subcommands in libraries that self-register to
have dispatch done at a different stage (like main). It allows for
writing code like the following:
for (auto *S : cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()) {
if (*S) {
// Dispatch on S->getName().
}
}
This change also contains tests that show this usage pattern.
Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24489
llvm-svn: 283296
Summary:
Attempting to fix PR30384.
Take the same approach as in compiler_rt and add a simplified version of __get_cpuid_max.
Including cpuid.h is no longer needed.
Reviewers: echristo, joerg
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24597
llvm-svn: 283265
Summary:
This lets people link against LLVM and their own version of the UTF
library.
I determined this only affects llvm, clang, lld, and lldb by running
$ git grep -wl 'UTF[0-9]\+\|\bConvertUTF\bisLegalUTF\|getNumBytesFor' | cut -f 1 -d '/' | sort | uniq
clang
lld
lldb
llvm
Tested with
ninja lldb
ninja check-clang check-llvm check-lld
(ninja check-lldb doesn't complete for me with or without this patch.)
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: klimek, beanz, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24996
llvm-svn: 282822
Turns out several external projects relied on llvm printing statistics
on exit. Let's go back to this behaviour by default and have an optional
parameter to disable it.
llvm-svn: 282532
Previously enabling the statistics with EnableStatistics() would lead to
them getting printed to stderr/-info-output-file on exit. However
frontends may want a way to enable statistics and do the printing on
their own instead of the forced printing on exit.
This changes the code so that only the -stats option enables printing on
exit, EnableStatistics() only enables the tracking but requires invoking
one of the PrintStatistics() variants.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24819
llvm-svn: 282425
Summary:
For AMDGPU, we have been using the operating system component of the triple
for specifying the low-level runtime that is being used. The rationale for
this is that the host operating system (e.g. Linux) is irrelevant for GPU code,
since its execution enviroment will be mostly controled by the low-level runtime
being used to execute the code.
In most cases, higher level languages have their own runtime which is
implemented on top of the low-level runtime. The kernel ABIs of each
language mostly depend on the low-level runtime, but there may be some
slight differences between languages. OpenCL for example, may append
additional arguments to the kernel in order to pass values like global
offsets or buffers for printf. OpenMP, HCC, or other languages may want
to add their own values which differ from OpenCL.
The reason for adding a new opencl environment type is to make it possible for the backend
to distinguish between the ABIs of the higher-level languages and handle them correctly.
It seems cleaner to use the enviroment component for this rather than creating a new
OS type for every combination of low-level runtime / high-level language.
Reviewers: Anastasia, chandlerc
Subscribers: whchung, pekka.jaaskelainen, wdng, yaxunl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24735
llvm-svn: 282218
A recent patch added support for consumeInteger() and made
getAsInteger delegate to this function. A few buildbots are
failing as a result with an assertion failure. On a hunch,
I tested what happens if I call getAsInteger() on an empty
string, and sure enough it crashes the same way that the
buildbots are crashing.
I confirmed that getAsInteger() on an empty string did not
crash before my patch, so I suspect this to be the cause.
I also added a unit test for the empty string.
llvm-svn: 282170
StringRef::getInteger() exists and treats the entire string as
an integer of the specified radix, failing if any invalid characters
are encountered or the number overflows.
Sometimes you might have something like "123456foo" and you want
to get the number 123456 and leave the string "foo" remaining.
This is similar to what would be possible by using the standard
runtime library functions strtoul et al and specifying an end
pointer.
This patch adds consumeInteger(), which does exactly that. It
consumes as much as possible until an invalid character is found,
and modifies the StringRef in place so that upon return only
the portion of the StringRef after the number remains.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24778
llvm-svn: 282164
This should allow users of the library to get a range to iterate through
all the subcommands that are registered to the global parser. This
allows users to define subcommands in libraries that self-register to
have dispatch done at a different stage (like main). It allows for
writing code like the following:
for (auto *S : cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()) {
if (*S) {
// Dispatch on S->getName().
}
}
This change also contains tests that show this usage pattern.
Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24489
llvm-svn: 281290
- Add AllocatorList, a non-intrusive list that owns an LLVM-style
allocator and provides a std::list-like interface (trivially built on
top of simple_ilist),
- add a typedef (and unit tests) for BumpPtrList, and
- use BumpPtrList for the list of llvm::yaml::Token (i.e., TokenQueueT).
TokenQueueT has no need for the complexity of an intrusive list. The
only reason to inherit from ilist was to customize the allocator.
TokenQueueT was the only example in-tree of using ilist<> in a truly
non-intrusive way.
Moreover, this removes the final use of the non-intrusive
ilist_traits<>::createNode (after r280573, r281177, and r281181). I
have a WIP patch that removes this customization point (and the API that
relies on it) that I plan to commit soon.
Note: AllocatorList owns the allocator, which limits the viable API
(e.g., splicing must be on the same list). For now I've left out
any problematic API. It wouldn't be hard to split AllocatorList into
two layers: an Impl class that calls DerivedT::getAlloc (via CRTP), and
derived classes that handle Allocator ownership/reference/etc semantics;
and then implement splice with appropriate assertions; but TBH we should
probably just customize the std::list allocators at that point.
llvm-svn: 281182
SmallVectors are convenient, but they don't cover every use case.
In particular, they are fairly large (3 pointers + one element) and
there is no way to take ownership of the buffer to put it somewhere
else. This patch then adds a lower lever interface that works with
any buffer.
llvm-svn: 281082
This adds a copy of the demangler in libcxxabi.
The code also has no dependencies on anything else in LLVM. To enforce
that I added it as another library. That way a BUILD_SHARED_LIBS will
fail if anyone adds an use of StringRef for example.
The no llvm dependency combined with the fact that this has to build
on linux, OS X and Windows required a few changes to the code. In
particular:
No constexpr.
No alignas
On OS X at least this library has only one global symbol:
__ZN4llvm16itanium_demangleEPKcPcPmPi
My current plan is:
Commit something like this
Change lld to use it
Change lldb to use it as the fallback
Add a few #ifdefs so that exactly the same file can be used in
libcxxabi to export abi::__cxa_demangle.
Once the fast demangler in lldb can handle any names this
implementation can be replaced with it and we will have the one true
demangler.
llvm-svn: 280732
Crash was possible if match() method
was called on object that was moved or object
created with empty constructor.
Testcases updated.
DIfferential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24123
llvm-svn: 280473
If we failed to commit the buffer but did not die to a signal, the temp
file would remain on disk on Windows. Having an open file mapping and
file handle prevents the file from being deleted. I am choosing not to
add an assertion of success on the temp file removal, since virus
scanners and other environmental things can often cause removal to fail
in real world tools.
Also fix more temp file leaks in unit tests.
llvm-svn: 280445
initializers not being in the same order as the members.
Specifically, 'preg' is the first member followed by 'error', so they
will be initialized in that order and should be written in the member
initializer list in that order.
For the constructor in question, there is no change in behavior.
llvm-svn: 280345
This is useful when need to defer the construction,
e.g. using Regex as a member of class.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24101
llvm-svn: 280339
Many lists want to override only allocation semantics, or callbacks for
iplist. Split these up to prevent code duplication.
- Specialize ilist_alloc_traits to change the implementations of
deleteNode() and createNode().
- One common desire is to do nothing deleteNode() and disable
createNode(). Specialize ilist_alloc_traits to inherit from
ilist_noalloc_traits for that behaviour.
- Specialize ilist_callback_traits to use the addNodeToList(),
removeNodeFromList(), and transferNodesFromList() callbacks.
As a drive-by, add some coverage to the callback-related unit tests.
llvm-svn: 280128
This function allows getting arbitrary sized block of random bytes.
Primary motivation is support for --build-id=uuid in lld.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23671
llvm-svn: 279807
This patch changes LLVM_CONSTEXPR variable declarations to const
variable declarations, since LLVM_CONSTEXPR expands to nothing if the
current compiler doesn't support constexpr. In all of the changed
cases, it looks like the code intended the variable to be const instead
of sometimes-constexpr sometimes-not.
llvm-svn: 279696
Remove all the dead code around ilist_*sentinel_traits. This is a
follow-up to gutting them as part of r279314 (originally r278974),
staged to prevent broken builds in sub-projects.
Uses were removed from clang in r279457 and lld in r279458.
llvm-svn: 279473
Xcode and MSVC list the headers and source files for each library.
LLVMSupport lists included the source files for ADT but not the headers. This
add the ADT headers so that they are browsable by the UI.
llvm-svn: 279470
This is used to mark functions with the C++11 [[ noreturn ]] or C11 _Noreturn
attributes.
Patch by Victor Leschuk!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23167
llvm-svn: 278940
The struct LineNoCacheTy is in SourceMgr.cpp inside anonymous namespace.
This diff changes the order of fields and removes the excessive padding
(8 bytes).
Patch by Alexander Shaposhnikov!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23546
llvm-svn: 278838
Share code for the (mostly problematic) embedded sentinel traits.
- Move the LLVM_NO_SANITIZE("object-size") attribute to
ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits and ilist_embedded_sentinel_traits
(previously it spread throughout the code duplication).
- Add an ilist_full_embedded_sentinel_traits which has no UB (but has
the downside of storing the complete node).
- Replace all the custom sentinel traits in LLVM with a declaration of
ilist_sentinel_traits that inherits from one of the embedded sentinel
traits classes.
There are still custom sentinel traits in other LLVM subprojects. I'll
remove those in a follow-up.
Nothing at all should be changing here, this is just rearranging code.
Note that the final goal here is to remove the sentinel traits
altogether, settling on the memory layout of
ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits without the UB. This intermediate
step moves the logic into ilist.h.
llvm-svn: 278513
Add unittest to {ARM | AArch64}TargetParser,and by the way correct problems as below:
1.Correct a incorrect indexing problem in AArch64TargetParser. The architecture enumeration
is shared across ARM and AArch64 in original implementation.But In the code,I just used the
index which was offset by the ARM, and this would index into the array incorrectly. To make
AArch64 has its own arch enum,or we will do a lot of slowly iterating.
2.Correct a spelling error. The parameter of llvm::AArch64::getArchExtName.
3.Correct a writing mistake, in llvm::ARM::parseArchISA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21785
llvm-svn: 276957
Process::GetEnv does the right thing across our platforms.
CommandLine.cpp had, more or less, the same logic. Let's remove the
duplication.
No functional change is intended.
llvm-svn: 276572
This adds versions of operator + and - which are optimized for the LHS/RHS of the
operator being RValue's. When an RValue is available, we can use its storage space
instead of allocating new space.
On code such as ConstantRange which makes heavy use of APInt's over 64-bits in size,
this results in significant numbers of saved allocations.
Thanks to David Blaikie for all the review and most of the code here.
llvm-svn: 276470
Summary:
When giving the following command:
% llvm-cov report -instr-profile=default.profraw
llvm-cov will give the following error message:
>llvm-cov report: Not enough positional command line arguments specified!
>Must specify at least 1 positional arguments: See: orbis-llvm-cov report -help
This patch changes the error message from '1 positional arguments'
to '1 positional argument'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22621
llvm-svn: 276404
Summary:
Mirroring most cleanup changed from compiler-rt/lib/builtins/cpu_model.
x86 methods are still returning a bool.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, echristo, craig.topper, sanjoy
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22480
llvm-svn: 276149
Summary: substr doesn't modify the string, so this line has no effect.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22540
llvm-svn: 276057
This makes sure that space is actually available. With this change
running lld on a full file system causes it to exit with
failed to open foo: No space left on device
instead of crashing with a sigbus.
llvm-svn: 276017
Summary:
The triple used for this distribution is mips64el-linux-gnuabi64.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22406
llvm-svn: 275966
This adds Clang-specific DWARF constants for nullability and ObjC
class properties that are already generated by clang. This patch adds
dwarfdump support and a more comprehensive testcase.
<rdar://problem/27335745>
llvm-svn: 275354
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D22079
Changes the Archive::child_begin and Archive::children to require a reference
to an Error. If iterator increment fails (because the archive header is
damaged) the iterator will be set to 'end()', and the error stored in the
given Error&. The Error value should be checked by the user immediately after
the loop. E.g.:
Error Err;
for (auto &C : A->children(Err)) {
// Do something with archive child C.
}
// Check the error immediately after the loop.
if (Err)
return Err;
Failure to check the Error will result in an abort() when the Error goes out of
scope (as guaranteed by the Error class).
llvm-svn: 275316
Since these are named nvvm_* rather than nvptx_*, we also need to
update getArchTypePrefix. It's a bit unusual for getArchTypePrefix not
to match the backend name, but I think this fits the intent of the
function in this case.
llvm-svn: 274890
Summary:
Add renderscript32 and renderscript64 ArchTypes. This is to configure
the ABI requirement on 32-bit RenderScript that 'long' types have 64-bit
size and alignment. 64-bit RenderScript is the same as AArch64, but is
added here for completeness.
Reviewers: echristo, rsmith
Subscribers: aemerson, jfb, rampitec, dschuff, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21333
llvm-svn: 274412
This fixes an issue where occurrence counts would be unexpectedly
reset when parsing different parts of a command line multiple
times.
**ORIGINAL COMMIT MESSAGE**
This allows command line tools to use syntaxes like the following:
llvm-foo.exe command1 -o1 -o2
llvm-foo.exe command2 -p1 -p2
Where command1 and command2 contain completely different sets of
valid options. This is backwards compatible with previous uses
of llvm cl which did not support subcommands, as any option
which specifies no optional subcommand (e.g. all existing
code) goes into a special "top level" subcommand that expects
dashed options to appear immediately after the program name.
For example, code which is subcommand unaware would generate
a command line such as the following, where no subcommand
is specified:
llvm-foo.exe -q1 -q2
The top level subcommand can co-exist with actual subcommands,
as it is implemented as an actual subcommand which is searched
if no explicit subcommand is specified. So llvm-foo.exe as
specified above could be written so as to support all three
aforementioned command lines simultaneously.
There is one additional "special" subcommand called AllSubCommands,
which can be used to inject an option into every subcommand.
This is useful to support things like help, so that commands
such as:
llvm-foo.exe --help
llvm-foo.exe command1 --help
llvm-foo.exe command2 --help
All work and display the help for the selected subcommand
without having to explicitly go and write code to handle each
one separately.
This patch is submitted without an example of anything actually
using subcommands, but a followup patch will convert the
llvm-pdbdump tool to use subcommands.
Reviewed By: beanz
llvm-svn: 274171
This gets rid of the memory fence in the hot path (dereferencing the
ManagedStatic), trading for an extra mutex lock in the cold path (when
the ManagedStatic was uninitialized). Since this only happens on the
first accesses it shouldn't matter much. On strict architectures like
x86 this removes any atomic instructions from the hot path.
Also remove the tsan annotations, tsan knows how standard atomics work
so they should be unnecessary now.
llvm-svn: 274131
This allows us to query about the endianness without having to
look at DataLayout. The API will be used (and tested) in lld,
in order to find out the endianness of BitcodeFiles.
Briefly discussed with Rafael.
llvm-svn: 274090
Our existing yaml::Output code writes tags immediately when mapTag is called, without any state handling. This results in tags on sequence elements being written before the element itself. For example, we see this:
SomeArray: !elem_type
- key1: 1
key2: 2 !elem_type2
- key3: 3
key4: 4
We should instead see:
SomeArray:
- !elem_type
key1: 1
key2: 2
- !elem_type2
key3: 3
key4: 4
Our reader handles reading properly, so this bug only impacts writing yaml sequences with tagged elements.
As a test for this I've modified the Mach-O yaml encoding to allways apply the !mach-o tag when encoding MachOYAML::Object entries. This results in the !mach-o tag appearing as expected in dumped fat files.
llvm-svn: 274067
This allows command line tools to use syntaxes like the following:
llvm-foo.exe command1 -o1 -o2
llvm-foo.exe command2 -p1 -p2
Where command1 and command2 contain completely different sets of
valid options. This is backwards compatible with previous uses
of llvm cl which did not support subcommands, as any option
which specifies no optional subcommand (e.g. all existing
code) goes into a special "top level" subcommand that expects
dashed options to appear immediately after the program name.
For example, code which is subcommand unaware would generate
a command line such as the following, where no subcommand
is specified:
llvm-foo.exe -q1 -q2
The top level subcommand can co-exist with actual subcommands,
as it is implemented as an actual subcommand which is searched
if no explicit subcommand is specified. So llvm-foo.exe as
specified above could be written so as to support all three
aforementioned command lines simultaneously.
There is one additional "special" subcommand called AllSubCommands,
which can be used to inject an option into every subcommand.
This is useful to support things like help, so that commands
such as:
llvm-foo.exe --help
llvm-foo.exe command1 --help
llvm-foo.exe command2 --help
All work and display the help for the selected subcommand
without having to explicitly go and write code to handle each
one separately.
This patch is submitted without an example of anything actually
using subcommands, but a followup patch will convert the
llvm-pdbdump tool to use subcommands.
Reviewed By: beanz
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21485
llvm-svn: 274054
Summary: Actually the list of cached files is sorted by file size, not by last accessed time. Also remove unused file access time param for a helper function.
Reviewers: joker-eph, chandlerc, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21639
llvm-svn: 273852
Darwin added support in its Xcode 8.0 tools (released in the beta) for universal
files where offsets and sizes for the objects are 64-bits to allow support for
objects contained in universal files to be larger then 4gb. The change is very
straight forward. There is a new magic number that differs by one bit, much
like the 64-bit Mach-O files. Then there is a new structure that follow the
fat_header that has the same layout but with the offset and size fields using
64-bit values instead of 32-bit values.
rdar://26899493
llvm-svn: 273207
Trying to expand short names with a relative path doesn't work, so this
first gets the module name to get a full path (which can still have short
names).
llvm-svn: 273171
Some build systems use the short (8.3) file names on Windows, especially if the path has spaces in it. The shortening made it impossible for clang to distinguish between clang.exe, clang++.exe, and clang-cl.exe. So this expands short names in the first argument and does wildcard expansion for the rest.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21420
llvm-svn: 272967
- We lacked a short unique identifier for a statistics, so I renamed the
current "Name" field that just contained the DEBUG_TYPE name of the
current file to DebugType and added a new "Name" field that contains
the C++ identifier of the statistic variable.
- Add the -stats-json option which outputs statistics in json format.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20995
llvm-svn: 272826
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19842
Corresponding clang patch: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19843
Re-commit after addressing issues with of generating too many warnings for Windows and asan test failures
Patch by Eric Niebler
llvm-svn: 272555
[cpu-detection] [amdfam10] Return barcelona, and amdfam10 for all other
subtypes. Address Bug 28067.
Along with the refactoring of Host.cpp, getHostCPUName() was modified to
return more precise types for CPUs in amdfam10.
However, callers of getHostCPUName() do string matching on type, so this
cannot be modified.
Currently there is support in the x86 backend for barcelona.
For all other subtypes the assumed return value is amdfam10.
Fix: getHostCPUName() returns barcelona subtype and amdfam10 for all
others. This can be extended further when support for the other subtypes
is added.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21193
llvm-svn: 272333
Summary: Remove architecture subtype from the string returned by getHostCPUName(). String matching done on type.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, echristo
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21193
llvm-svn: 272328
looking for it along $PATH. This allows installs of LLVM tools outside of
$PATH to find the symbolizer and produce pretty backtraces if they crash.
llvm-svn: 272232
Summary:
Break on all switch cases for outer and inner switches.
No functionality changed.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, sanjoy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21158
llvm-svn: 272228
Summary:
Now DISubroutineType has a 'cc' field which should be a DW_CC_ enum. If
it is present and non-zero, the backend will emit it as a
DW_AT_calling_convention attribute. On the CodeView side, we translate
it to the appropriate enum for the LF_PROCEDURE record.
I added a new LLVM vendor specific enum to the list of DWARF calling
conventions. DWARF does not appear to attempt to standardize these, so I
assume it's OK to do this until we coordinate with GCC on how to emit
vectorcall convention functions.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, majnemer, aaboud, amccarth
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21114
llvm-svn: 272197
The architecture enumeration is shared across ARM and AArch64. However, the
data is not. The code incorrectly would index into the array using the
architecture index which was offset by the ARMv7 architecture enumeration. We
do not have a marker for indicating the architectural family to which the
enumeration belongs so we cannot be clever about offsetting the index (at least
it is not immediately apparent to me). Instead, fall back to the tried-and-true
method of slowly iterating the array (its not a large array, so the impact of
this is not too high).
Because of the incorrect indexing, if we were lucky, we would crash, but usually
we would return an invalid StringRef. We did not have any tests for the AArch64
target parser previously;. Extend the previous tests I had added for ARM to
cover AArch64 for ensuring that we return expected StringRefs.
Take the opportunity to change some iterator types to references.
This work is needed to support parsing `.arch name` directives in the AArch64
target asm parser.
llvm-svn: 272145
Summary:
Following D20970 (committed as r271726).
This is a substantial refactoring of the host CPU detection code.
There is no functionality change intended, but the changes are extensive.
Definitions of architecture types and subtypes are by no means exhaustive or
perfectly defined, but a fair starting point.
Suggestions for futher improvements are welcome.
Reviewers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20988
llvm-svn: 271921
CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with the new
llvm::call_once facility.
Nothing changed sicne the last attempt in r271781 which I reverted in
r271788. At least one of the failures I saw was spurious, and I want to
make sure the other failures are real before I work around them -- they
appeared to only effect ppc64le and ppc64be.
Original commit message of r271781:
----
[LPM] Reinstate r271652 to replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
This reverts commit r271657 and re-applies r271652 with a fix to
actually work with arguments. In the original version, we just ended up
directly calling std::call_once via ADL because of the std::once_flag
argument. The llvm::call_once never worked with arguments. Now,
llvm::call_once is a variadic template that perfectly forwards
everything. As a part of this it had to move to the header and we use
a generic functor rather than an explict function pointer. It would be
nice to use std::invoke here but we don't have it yet. That means
pointer to members won't work here, but that seems a tolerable
compromise.
I've also tested this by forcing the fallback path, so hopefully it
sticks this time.
----
Original commit message of r271652:
----
[LPM] Replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with
the new llvm::call_once facility.
This facility matches the standard APIs and when the platform supports
it actually directly uses the standard provided functionality. This is
both more efficient on some platforms and much more TSan friendly.
The only remaining user of the cas_flag and home-rolled atomics is the
fallback implementation of call_once. I have a patch that removes them
entirely, but it needs a Windows patch to land first.
This alone substantially cleans up the macros for the legacy pass
manager, and should subsume some of the work Mehdi was doing to clear
the path for TSan testing of ThinLTO, a really important step to have
reliable upstream testing of ThinLTO in all forms.
----
llvm-svn: 271800
There appears to be a strange exception thrown and crash using call_once
on a PPC build bot, and a *really* weird windows link error for
GCMetadata.obj. Still need to investigate the cause of both problems.
Original change summary:
[LPM] Reinstate r271652 to replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
llvm-svn: 271788
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
This reverts commit r271657 and re-applies r271652 with a fix to
actually work with arguments. In the original version, we just ended up
directly calling std::call_once via ADL because of the std::once_flag
argument. The llvm::call_once never worked with arguments. Now,
llvm::call_once is a variadic template that perfectly forwards
everything. As a part of this it had to move to the header and we use
a generic functor rather than an explict function pointer. It would be
nice to use std::invoke here but we don't have it yet. That means
pointer to members won't work here, but that seems a tolerable
compromise.
I've also tested this by forcing the fallback path, so hopefully it
sticks this time.
Original commit message:
----
[LPM] Replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with
the new llvm::call_once facility.
This facility matches the standard APIs and when the platform supports
it actually directly uses the standard provided functionality. This is
both more efficient on some platforms and much more TSan friendly.
The only remaining user of the cas_flag and home-rolled atomics is the
fallback implementation of call_once. I have a patch that removes them
entirely, but it needs a Windows patch to land first.
This alone substantially cleans up the macros for the legacy pass
manager, and should subsume some of the work Mehdi was doing to clear
the path for TSan testing of ThinLTO, a really important step to have
reliable upstream testing of ThinLTO in all forms.
llvm-svn: 271781
This is currently used by clang to lock access to modules; improve the
error message so that clang can use better output messages from locking
error issues.
rdar://problem/26529101
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20942
llvm-svn: 271755
Summary:
Follow-up to D20926 (committed as r271595, r271596).
This patch is in preparation for a substantial refactoring of the code.
No functionality changed.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20970
llvm-svn: 271726
code. To make the diffs easier to read, clang-format everything first.
No functionality changed.
Patch by Alina Sbirlea!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D20926
llvm-svn: 271595
D19271.
Previous attempt was broken by NetBSD, so in this version I've made the
fallback path generic rather than Windows specific and sent both Windows
and NetBSD to it.
I've also re-formatted the code some, and used an exact clone of the
code in PassSupport.h for doing manual call-once using our atomics
rather than rolling a new one.
If this sticks, we can replace the fallback path for Windows with
a Windows-specific implementation that is more reliable.
Original commit message:
This patch adds an llvm_call_once which is a wrapper around
std::call_once on platforms where it is available and devoid
of bugs. The patch also migrates the ManagedStatic mutex to
be allocated using llvm_call_once.
These changes are philosophically equivalent to the changes
added in r219638, which were reverted due to a hang on Win32
which was the result of a bug in the Windows implementation
of std::call_once.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5922
llvm-svn: 271558
except for CompareAndSwap. That is the only one still being used
anywhere now that statistics have been moved onto std::atomic.
Also, add a warning to the header that we shouldn't introduce more uses
of these old style atomics and instead should be using C++11's
std::atomic facilities.
Really hoping that we can hammer out the last couple of users here and
replace them with something more localized and/or principled, but
figured this was a pretty good start. =]
Note that this patch will need to be reverted if r271504 needs to be
reverted as that removes the last user of these. However, the biggest
risk for that patch was MSVC 2013 and at least one bot has already
passed where it would have failed there. I've tested MSVC 2015 using
their web interfaces and other platforms seem fine, so I'm optimistic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20901
llvm-svn: 271540
warning: cast from type ‘const void*’ to type
‘llvm::PrettyStackTraceEntry*’ casts away qualifiers [-Wcast-qual]
PrettyStackTraceHead = (PrettyStackTraceEntry*)Top;
llvm-svn: 271069
This will be needed in order to consistently return an Error
to clients of the API being developed in D20268.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20550
llvm-svn: 270967
APInt::operator+(uint64_t) just forwarded to operator+(const APInt&).
Constructing the APInt for the RHS takes an allocation which isn't
required. Also, for APInt's in the slow path, operator+ would
call add() internally which iterates over both arrays of values. Instead
we can use add_1 and sub_1 which only iterate while there is something to do.
Using the memory for 'opt -O2 verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc -o opt.bc'
(see r236629 for details), this reduces the number of allocations from
23.9M to 22.7M.
llvm-svn: 270959
StringError can be used to represent Errors that aren't recoverable based on
the error type, but that have a useful error message that can be reported to
the user or logged.
llvm-svn: 270948
APInt::slt was copying the LHS and RHS in to temporaries then making
them unsigned so that it could use an unsigned comparision. It did
this even on the paths which were trivial to give results for, such
as the sign bit of the LHS being set while RHS was not set.
This changes the logic to return out immediately in the trivial cases,
and use an unsigned comparison in the remaining cases. But this time,
just use the unsigned comparison directly without creating any temporaries.
This works because, for example:
true = (-2 slt -1) = (0xFE ult 0xFF)
Also added some tests explicitly for slt with APInt's larger than 64-bits
so that this new code is tested.
Using the memory for 'opt -O2 verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc -o opt.bc'
(see r236629 for details), this reduces the number of allocations from
26.8M to 23.9M.
llvm-svn: 270881
At some point we're going to need libObject to have this dependency, but as it is now this is causing too many headaches. This commit will reduce the linkage to just llvm-objdump where it is strictly needed, and we'll cross the libObject bridge later when we need it.
llvm-svn: 270866
There's already a ARMTargetParser,now adding a similar one for aarch64.
so we can use it to do ARCH/CPU/FPU parsing in clang and llvm, instead of
string comparison.
Patch by Jojo Ma.
llvm-svn: 270687
This should fix PR27855. We have some terrible hacks in the CMake to add linking SYSTEM_LIBS to all tools. I think we need a better way to do this in the future.
llvm-svn: 270605