declaration. GCC 4.7 appears to get hopelessly confused by declaring
this function within a member function of a class template. Go figure.
llvm-svn: 206152
abstract interface. The only user of this functionality is the JIT
memory manager and it is quite happy to have a custom type here. This
removes a virtual function call and a lot of unnecessary abstraction
from the common case where this is just a *very* thin vaneer around
a call to malloc.
Hopefully still no functionality changed here. =]
llvm-svn: 206149
slabs rather than embedding a singly linked list in the slabs
themselves. This has a few advantages:
- Better utilization of the slab's memory by not wasting 16-bytes at the
front.
- Simpler allocation strategy by not having a struct packed at the
front.
- Avoids paging every allocated slab in just to traverse them for
deallocating or dumping stats.
The latter is the really nice part. Folks have complained from time to
time bitterly that tearing down a BumpPtrAllocator, even if it doesn't
run any destructors, pages in all of the memory allocated. Now it won't.
=]
Also resolves a FIXME with the scaling of the slab sizes. The scaling
now disregards specially sized slabs for allocations larger than the
threshold.
llvm-svn: 206147
parameters rather than runtime parameters.
There is only one user of these parameters and they are compile time for
that user. Making these compile time seems to better reflect their
intended usage as well.
llvm-svn: 205143
BumpPtrAllocator significantly less strange by making it a simple
function of the number of slabs allocated rather than by making it
a recurrance. I *think* the previous behavior was essentially that the
size of the slabs would be doubled after the first 128 were allocated,
and then doubled again each time 64 more were allocated, but only if
every allocation packed perfectly into the slab size. If not, the wasted
space wouldn't be counted toward increasing the size, but allocations
over the size threshold *would*. And since the allocations over the size
threshold might be much larger than the slab size, this could have
somewhat surprising consequences where we rapidly grow the slab size.
This currently requires adding state to the allocator to track the
number of slabs currently allocated, but that isn't too bad. I'm
planning further changes to the allocator that will make this state fall
out even more naturally.
It still doesn't fully decouple the growth rate from the allocations
which are over the size threshold. That fix is coming later.
This specific fix will allow making the entire thing into a more
stateless device and lifting the parameters into template parameters
rather than runtime parameters.
llvm-svn: 204993
The problem with having DefaultSlabAllocator being a global static is that it is undefined if BumpPtrAllocator
will be usable during global initialization because it is not guaranteed that DefaultSlabAllocator will be
initialized before BumpPtrAllocator is created and used.
llvm-svn: 189433
This change lets us bootstrap LLVM/Clang under ASan and MSan. It contains
fixes for 2 issues:
- X86JIT reads return address from stack, which MSan does not know is
initialized.
- bugpoint tests run binaries with RLIMIT_AS. This does not work with certain
Sanitizers.
We are no longer including config.h in Compiler.h with this change.
llvm-svn: 174306
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.
Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]
llvm-svn: 169131
We have some code in llvm and clang where a BumpPtrAllocator is declared in a
class but never used in the common case. Stop wasting memory there.
llvm-svn: 101130
on all objects it has allocated, if they are all of the same size and alignment.
Use this to destruct all VNInfos allocated in LiveIntervalAnalysis (PR6653).
valnos is not reliable for this purpose, as seen in r99400
(which still leaked, and sometimes caused double frees).
llvm-svn: 99881
malloc, so there should be no functional changes to other code.
These changes are necessary since I have plans to use this allocator in the JIT
memory manager, and it needs a special allocator.
I also added some tests which helped me pinpoint some bugs.
llvm-svn: 76825
a new ilist_node class, and remove them. Unlike alist_node,
ilist_node doesn't attempt to manage storage itself, so it avoids
the associated problems, including being opaque in gdb.
Adjust the Recycler class so that it doesn't depend on alist_node.
Also, change it to use explicit Size and Align parameters, allowing
it to work when the largest-sized node doesn't have the greatest
alignment requirement.
Change MachineInstr's MachineMemOperand list from a pool-backed
alist to a std::list for now.
llvm-svn: 54146
for handling bookkeeping for deleted objects, as well as the alist class
template, for keeping lists of objects allocated from Recyclers, and some
related utilities.
llvm-svn: 53210