David added the JamCRC implementation in r246590. More recently, Eugene
added a CRC-32 implementation in r357901, which falls back to zlib's
crc32 function if present.
These checksums are essentially the same, so having multiple
implementations seems unnecessary. This replaces the CRC-32
implementation with the simpler one from JamCRC, and implements the
JamCRC interface in terms of CRC-32 since this means it can use zlib's
implementation when available, saving a few bytes and potentially making
it faster.
JamCRC took an ArrayRef<char> argument, and CRC-32 took a StringRef.
This patch changes it to ArrayRef<uint8_t> which I think is the best
choice, and simplifies a few of the callers nicely.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68570
llvm-svn: 374148
Summary:
Fix initialization style of objects allocated on the stack and member
objects in unit test to use the "Type Var(init list)" and
"Type Member{init list}" convention. The latter fixes the buildbot
breakage.
Reviewers: jhenderson, probinson, arichardson, grimar, jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68425
llvm-svn: 373755
Summary:
Fix initialization style of objects allocated on the stack in unit test
to use the "Type Var(init list)" convention.
Reviewers: jhenderson, probinson, arichardson, grimar, jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68425
llvm-svn: 373717
Summary:
Most of the class definition in llvm/include/llvm/Support/FileCheck.h
are actually implementation details that should not be relied upon. This
commit moves all of it in a new header file under
llvm/lib/Support/FileCheck. It also takes advantage of the code movement
to put the code into a new llvm::filecheck namespace.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67649
llvm-svn: 373395
Summary:
Commit r366897 introduced the possibility to set a variable from an
expression, such as [[#VAR2:VAR1+3]]. While introducing this feature, it
introduced extra logic to allow using such a variable on the same line
later on. Unfortunately that extra logic is flawed as it relies on a
mapping from variable to expression defining it when the mapping is from
variable definition to expression. This flaw causes among other issues
PR42896.
This commit avoids the problem by forbidding all use of a variable
defined on the same line, and removes the now useless logic. Redesign
will be done in a later commit because it will require some amount of
refactoring first for the solution to be clean. One example is the need
for some sort of transaction mechanism to set a variable temporarily and
from an expression and rollback if the CHECK pattern does not match so
that diagnostics show the right variable values.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66141
llvm-svn: 370663
Summary:
This is motivated by D63591, where we realized that there isn't a really
good way of telling whether a DataExtractor is reading actual data, or
is it just returning default values because it reached the end of the
buffer.
This patch resolves that by providing a new "Cursor" class. A Cursor
object encapsulates two things:
- the current position/offset in the DataExtractor
- an error object
Storing the error object inside the Cursor enables one to use the same
pattern as the std::{io}stream API, where one can blindly perform a
sequence of reads and only check for errors once at the end of the
operation. Similarly to the stream API, as soon as we encounter one
error, all of the subsequent operations are skipped (return default
values) too, even if the would suceed with clear error state. Unlike the
std::stream API (but in line with other llvm APIs), we force the error
state to be checked through usage of llvm::Error.
Reviewers: probinson, dblaikie, JDevlieghere, aprantl, echristo
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63713
llvm-svn: 370042
Summary:
There was a subtle, but pretty important difference between the Slice
and regular versions of this function. The Slice function was
zero-initializing the rest of the buffer when the read syscall returned
less bytes than expected, while the regular function did not.
This patch removes the inconsistency by making both functions *not*
zero-initialize the buffer. The zeroing code is moved to the
MemoryBuffer class, which is currently the only user of this code. This
makes the API more consistent, and the code shorter.
While in there, I also refactor the functions to return the number of
bytes through the regular return value (via Expected<size_t>) instead of
a separate by-ref argument.
Reviewers: aganea, rnk
Subscribers: kristina, Bigcheese, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66471
llvm-svn: 369627
This recommits r368977, which was reverted in r369027 due to test
failures in lldb. The cause of this was different behavior of
readNativeFileSlice on windows and unix. These have been addressed in
r369269.
The original commit message was:
In case the function was called with a desired read size *and* the file
was not an "mmap()" candidate, the function was falling back to a
"pread()", but it was failing to check the result of that system call.
This meant that the function would return "success" even though the read
operation failed, and it returned a buffer full of uninitialized memory.
Reviewers: rnk, dblaikie
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66224
llvm-svn: 369370
Summary:
The windows version implementation of readNativeFileSlice, was trying to
match the POSIX behavior of not treating EOF as an error, but it was
only handling the case of reading from a pipe. Attempting to read past
the end of a regular file returns a slightly different error code, which
needs to be handled too. This patch adds ERROR_HANDLE_EOF to the list of
error codes to be treated as an end of file, and adds some unit tests
for the API.
This issue was found while attempting to land D66224, which caused a bunch of
lldb tests to start failing on windows.
Reviewers: rnk, aganea
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66344
llvm-svn: 369269
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
llvm-svn: 369013
Summary:
In case the function was called with a desired read size *and* the file
was not an "mmap()" candidate, the function was falling back to a
"pread()", but it was failing to check the result of that system call.
This meant that the function would return "success" even though the read
operation failed, and it returned a buffer full of uninitialized memory.
Reviewers: rnk, dblaikie
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66224
llvm-svn: 368977
This reverts commit r368849, because it breaks some bots (e.g.
llvm-clang-x86_64-win-fast).
It turns out this is not as NFC as we had hoped, because operator== will
consider two std::error_codes to be distinct even though they both hold
"success" values if they have different categories.
llvm-svn: 368854
Summary:
The main motivation for this is unit tests, which contain a large macro
for pretty-printing std::error_code, and this macro is duplicated in
every file that needs to do this. However, the functionality may be
useful elsewhere too.
In this patch I have reimplemented the existing ASSERT_NO_ERROR macros
to reuse the new functionality, but I have kept the macro (as a
one-liner) as it is slightly more readable than ASSERT_EQ(...,
std::error_code()).
Reviewers: sammccall, ilya-biryukov
Subscribers: zturner, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65643
llvm-svn: 368849
This fixes a bug for making path with a //net style root absolute. I
discovered the bug while writing a test case for the VFS, which uses
these paths because they're both legal absolute paths on Windows and
Unix.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65675
llvm-svn: 368053
This updates all libraries and tools in LLVM Core to use 64-bit offsets
which directly or indirectly come to DataExtractor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65638
llvm-svn: 368014
Using 64-bit offsets is required to fully implement 64-bit DWARF.
As these classes are used in many different libraries they should
temporarily support both 32- and 64-bit offsets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64006
llvm-svn: 368013
Added AddOverflow, SubOverflow and MulOverflow to compute truncated results and return a flag indicating whether overflow occured.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65494
llvm-svn: 367470
Summary:
This patch introduces a type to straighten LLVM's alignment management.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
The next step is to use this type throughout LLVM
Reviewers: jfb, jakehehrlich
Subscribers: mgorny, mgrang, dexonsmith, llvm-commits, courbet
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
llvm-svn: 367393
Summary: The minimum compilers support all have alignas, and we don't use LLVM_ALIGNAS anywhere anymore. This also removes an MSVC diagnostic which, according to the comment above, isn't relevant anymore.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: mgorny, jkorous, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65458
llvm-svn: 367383
I removed all uses of AlignedCharArray since the minimum MSVC version can handle
alignas on char arrays correctly. We can therefore remove AlignedCharArray.
This patch also updates AlignedCharArrayUnion to use C++11.
llvm-svn: 367282
Looks like one of the entries isn't found on windows. I'm investigating why.
In the meantime, I'll disable this part of the test on windows.
llvm-svn: 367280
This patch adds a VFS that can be overlaid on top of another VFS
to record file system accesses using the FileCollector.
This can help to gather files that are needed for reproducers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65411
llvm-svn: 367278
Summary:
The bitperm feature flag is now prefixed with SVE2, as it is for all other SVE2
extensions
Patch by Maciej Gabka.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, rovka, chill, SjoerdMeijer, rengolin
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65327
llvm-svn: 367124
The file collector class is useful for constructing reproducers by
creating a snapshot of the files that are accessed. Sometimes it might
also be important to construct directories that don't necessarily have files,
but are still accessed by some tool that we want to make a reproducer for.
This is useful for instance for modeling the behavior of Clang's header search,
which scans through a number of directories it doesn't actually access when
looking for framework headers. This commit extends the file collector to allow
it to work with paths that are just directories, by constructing them as the
files are copied over.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65297
llvm-svn: 367061
The file collector class is useful for creating reproducers,
not just for LLDB, but for other tools as well in LLVM/Clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65237
llvm-svn: 366956
Summary:
A number of EXPECT statements in FileCheck's unit tests are dependent
from results of other values being tested. This commit changes those
earlier test to use ASSERT instead of EXPECT to avoid cascade errors
when they are all related to the same issue.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64921
> llvm-svn: 366862
llvm-svn: 366899
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch lift the restriction for a
numeric expression to either be a variable definition or a numeric
expression to try to match.
This commit allows a numeric variable to be set to the result of the
evaluation of a numeric expression after it has been matched
successfully. When it happens, the variable is allowed to be used on
the same line since its value is known at match time.
It also makes use of this possibility to reuse the parsing code to
parse a command-line definition by crafting a mirror string of the
-D option with the equal sign replaced by a colon sign, e.g. for option
'-D#NUMVAL=10' it creates the string
'-D#NUMVAL=10 (parsed as [[#NUMVAL:10]])' where the numeric expression
is parsed to define NUMVAL. This result in a few tests needing updating
for the location diagnostics on top of the tests for the new feature.
It also enables empty numeric expression which match any number without
defining a variable. This is done here rather than in commit #5 of the
patch series because it requires to dissociate automatic regex insertion
in RegExStr from variable definition which would make commit #5 even
bigger than it already is.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60388
> llvm-svn: 366860
llvm-svn: 366897
Summary:
A number of EXPECT statements in FileCheck's unit tests are dependent
from results of other values being tested. This commit changes those
earlier test to use ASSERT instead of EXPECT to avoid cascade errors
when they are all related to the same issue.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64921
llvm-svn: 366862
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch lift the restriction for a
numeric expression to either be a variable definition or a numeric
expression to try to match.
This commit allows a numeric variable to be set to the result of the
evaluation of a numeric expression after it has been matched
successfully. When it happens, the variable is allowed to be used on
the same line since its value is known at match time.
It also makes use of this possibility to reuse the parsing code to
parse a command-line definition by crafting a mirror string of the
-D option with the equal sign replaced by a colon sign, e.g. for option
'-D#NUMVAL=10' it creates the string
'-D#NUMVAL=10 (parsed as [[#NUMVAL:10]])' where the numeric expression
is parsed to define NUMVAL. This result in a few tests needing updating
for the location diagnostics on top of the tests for the new feature.
It also enables empty numeric expression which match any number without
defining a variable. This is done here rather than in commit #5 of the
patch series because it requires to dissociate automatic regex insertion
in RegExStr from variable definition which would make commit #5 even
bigger than it already is.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60388
llvm-svn: 366860
Summary:
Commit r365249 changed usage of FileCheckNumericVariable to have one
instance of that class per variable as opposed to one instance per
definition of a given variable as was done before. However, it retained
the safety check in setValue that it should only be called with the
variable unset, even after r365625.
However this causes assert failure when a non-pseudo variable is being
redefined. And while redefinition of @LINE at each CHECK line work in
the general case, it caused problem when a substitution failed (fixed in
r365624) and still causes problem when a CHECK line does not match since
@LINE's value is cleared after substitutions in match() happened but
printSubstitutions also attempts a substitution.
This commit solves the root of the problem by changing setValue to set a
new value regardless of whether a value was set or not, thus fixing all
the aforementioned issues.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64882
llvm-svn: 366434
Summary:
Processing of command-line definition of variable and logic around
implicit not directives both reuse parsing code that expects a line
number to be defined. So far, a special line number of 0 was used for
those users of the parsing code where a line number does not make sense.
This commit instead represents line numbers as Optional values so that
they can be None for those cases.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64639
llvm-svn: 366109
When processing the command line options march, mcpu and mfpu, we store
the implied target features on a vector. The change D62998 introduced a
temporary vector, where the processed features get accumulated. When
calling DecodeARMFeaturesFromCPU, which sets the default features for
the specified CPU, we certainly don't want to override the features
that have been explicitly specified on the command line. Therefore, the
default features should appear first in the final vector. This problem
became evident once I added the missing (unhandled) target features in
ARM::getExtensionFeatures.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63936
llvm-svn: 366027
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch extend numeric expression to
support an arbitrary number of operands, either variable or literals.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60387
llvm-svn: 366001
llvm::yaml::Output::paddedKey unconditionally outputs spaces, which
are superfluous if the value to be dumped is a sequence or map.
Change `bool NeedsNewLine` to `StringRef Padding` so that it can be
overridden to `\n` if the value is a sequence or map.
An empty map/sequence is special. It is printed as `{}` or `[]` without
a newline, while a non-empty map/sequence follows a newline. To handle
this distinction, add another variable `PaddingBeforeContainer` and does
the special handling in endMapping/endSequence.
Reviewed By: grimar, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64566
llvm-svn: 365869
There is currently an EPERM error when a regular user executes `llvm-objcopy a.o /dev/null`.
Worse, root can even change the mode bits of /dev/null.
Fix it by checking if the output file is special.
A new overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions with FD as the parameter
is added. Users should provide `perm & ~umask` as the parameter if they
intend to respect umask.
The existing overload of llvm::sys::fs::setPermissions may be deleted if
we can find an implementation of fchmod() on Windows. fchmod() is
usually better than chmod() because it saves syscalls and can avoid race
condition.
Reviewed By: jakehehrlich, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64236
llvm-svn: 365753
Previously reverted in 364141 due to buildbot breakage, and fixed here
by making GeneralCategory global a ManagedStatic.
Summary:
This change processes `OptionCategory`s and `SubCommand`s as they
are seen instead of caching them in the Option class and processing
them later. Doing so simplifies the work needed to be done by the Global
parser and significantly reduces the size of the Option class to a mere 64
bytes.
Removing the `OptionCategory` cache saved 24 bytes, and removing
the `SubCommand` cache saved an additional 48 bytes, for a total of a
72 byte reduction.
Reviewed By: serge-sans-paille
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62105
llvm-svn: 365675
Use bool() consistently to get boolean value of Error, Optional and
Expected types in EXPECT calls. While static_cast is used in all cases
but one, bool provides more clarity and makes more sense as a new
default.
llvm-svn: 365644
Summary:
This patch simplifies 2 aspects in the FileCheckNumericVariable code.
First, setValue() method is turned into a void function since being
called only on undefined variable is an invariant and is now asserted
rather than returned. This remove the assert from the callers.
Second, clearValue() method is also turned into a void function since
the only caller does not check its return value since it may be trying
to clear the value of variable that is already cleared without this
being noteworthy.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64231
> llvm-svn: 365249
llvm-svn: 365625
Summary:
The value of the FileCheckNumericVariable class instance representing
the @LINE numeric variable is set and cleared respectively before and
after substitutions are made, if any. However, when a substitution
fails, the value is not cleared. This causes the next substitution of
@LINE later on to give the wrong value since setValue is a nop if the
value is already set. This is what caused failures after commit r365249.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64449
llvm-svn: 365624
Summary:
On Windows, Posix integer file descriptors are a compatibility layer
over native file handles provided by the C runtime. There is a hard
limit on the maximum number of file descriptors that a process can open,
and the limit is 8192. LLD typically doesn't run into this limit because
it opens input files, maps them into memory, and then immediately closes
the file descriptor. This prevents it from running out of FDs.
For various reasons, I'd like to open handles to every input file and
keep them open during linking. That requires migrating MemoryBuffer over
to taking open native file handles instead of integer FDs.
Reviewers: aganea, Bigcheese
Reviewed By: aganea
Subscribers: smeenai, silvas, mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits, zturner
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63453
llvm-svn: 365588
Summary:
This patch simplifies 2 aspects in the FileCheckNumericVariable code.
First, setValue() method is turned into a void function since being
called only on undefined variable is an invariant and is now asserted
rather than returned. This remove the assert from the callers.
Second, clearValue() method is also turned into a void function since
the only caller does not check its return value since it may be trying
to clear the value of variable that is already cleared without this
being noteworthy.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64231
llvm-svn: 365249
Summary:
This patch changes expression support to use one instance of
FileCheckNumericVariable per numeric variable rather than one per
variable and per definition. The current system was only necessary for
the last patch of the numeric expression support patch series in order
to handle a line using a variable defined earlier on the same line from
the input text. However this can be dealt more efficiently.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64229
llvm-svn: 365220
Summary:
Diagnosing use of undefined variables takes place in
parseNumericVariableUse() and printSubstitutions() for numeric variables
but only takes place in printSubstitutions() for string variables. The
reason for the split location of diagnostics is that parsing is not
aware of the clearing of variables due to --enable-var-scope and thus
use of variables cleared in this way can only be catched by
printSubstitutions().
Beyond the code level inconsistency, there is also a user facing
inconsistency since diagnostics look different between the two
functions. While the diagnostic in printSubstitutions is more verbose,
doing the diagnostic there allows to diagnose all undefined variables
rather than just the first one and error out.
This patch create dummy variable definition when encountering a use of
undefined variable so that parsing can proceed and be diagnosed by
printSubstitutions() later. Tests that were testing whether parsing
fails in such case are thus modified accordingly.
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: JonChesterfield, rogfer01, hfinkel, kristina, rnk, tra, arichardson, grimar, dblaikie, probinson, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64228
llvm-svn: 365219
Add a reverse iterator to the overlay file system. This makes it
possible to take overlays from one OverlayFileSystem, and add them to
another.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64113
llvm-svn: 364986
LLVM-Unit :: Support/./SupportTests/FileSystemTest.permissions currently
FAILs on Solaris:
FAIL: LLVM-Unit :: Support/./SupportTests/FileSystemTest.permissions (2940 of 51555)
******************** TEST 'LLVM-Unit :: Support/./SupportTests/FileSystemTest.permissions' FAILED ********************
Note: Google Test filter = FileSystemTest.permissions
[==========] Running 1 test from 1 test case.
[----------] Global test environment set-up.
[----------] 1 test from FileSystemTest
[ RUN ] FileSystemTest.permissions
/opt/llvm-buildbot/obj/llvm/llvm.src/unittests/Support/Path.cpp:1705: Failure
Value of: CheckPermissions(fs::sticky_bit)
Actual: false
Expected: true
/opt/llvm-buildbot/obj/llvm/llvm.src/unittests/Support/Path.cpp:1712: Failure
Value of: CheckPermissions(fs::set_uid_on_exe | fs::set_gid_on_exe | fs::sticky_bit)
Actual: false
Expected: true
/opt/llvm-buildbot/obj/llvm/llvm.src/unittests/Support/Path.cpp:1719: Failure
Value of: CheckPermissions(fs::all_read | fs::set_uid_on_exe | fs::set_gid_on_exe | fs::sticky_bit)
Actual: false
Expected: true
/opt/llvm-buildbot/obj/llvm/llvm.src/unittests/Support/Path.cpp:1722: Failure
Value of: CheckPermissions(fs::all_perms)
Actual: false
Expected: true
[ FAILED ] FileSystemTest.permissions (0 ms)
[----------] 1 test from FileSystemTest (0 ms total)
[----------] Global test environment tear-down
[==========] 1 test from 1 test case ran. (1 ms total)
[ PASSED ] 0 tests.
[ FAILED ] 1 test, listed below:
[ FAILED ] FileSystemTest.permissions
1 FAILED TEST
Checking with truss reveals that this is the same issue as on AIX and
documented in chmod(2):
If the process is not a privileged process and the file is not a direc-
tory, mode bit 01000 (S_ISVTX, the sticky bit) is cleared.
The following patch fixes this in the same way. Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63598
llvm-svn: 364671
Summary: This patch changes fs::setPermissions to optionally set permissions while respecting the umask. It also adds the function fs::getUmask() which returns the current umask.
Reviewers: jhenderson, rupprecht, aprantl, lhames
Reviewed By: jhenderson, rupprecht
Subscribers: sanaanajjar231288, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63583
llvm-svn: 364621
Summary:
These functions are documented as not modifying the offset argument if
the extraction fails (just like other DataExtractor functions). However,
while reviewing D63591 we discovered that this is not the case -- if the
function reaches the end of the data buffer, it will just return the
value parsed until that point and set offset to point to the end of the
buffer.
This fixes the functions to act as advertised, and adds a regression
test.
Reviewers: dblaikie, probinson, bkramer
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63645
llvm-svn: 364169
This reverts r364134 (git commit a5b83bc9e3)
Caused errors in the asan bot, so the GeneralCategory global needs to
be changed to ManagedStatic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62105
llvm-svn: 364141
Summary:
This change processes `OptionCategory`s and `SubCommand`s as they
are seen instead of caching them in the Option class and processing
them later. Doing so simplifies the work needed to be done by the Global
parser and significantly reduces the size of the Option class to a mere 64
bytes.
Removing the `OptionCategory` cache saved 24 bytes, and removing
the `SubCommand` cache saved an additional 48 bytes, for a total of a
72 byte reduction.
Reviewers: beanz, zturner, MaskRay, serge-sans-paille
Reviewed By: serge-sans-paille
Subscribers: serge-sans-paille, tstellar, zturner, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62105
llvm-svn: 364134
Nothing of these tests made much sense. Loops were iterating too much, and I
also don't think it was actually testing anything. I think we simply want to
check that AEK_SOME_EXT returns "+some_ext".
I've given the AArch64 tests the same treatment as they very similarly didn't
made any sense either.
This fixes PR42316.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63569
llvm-svn: 363913
Summary:
Stop referring to "numeric expression", using simply the term
"expression" instead. Likewise for numeric operation since operations
are only used in numeric expressions.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63500
llvm-svn: 363901
Summary:
Make use of Error and Expected to bubble up diagnostics and force
checking of errors in the callers.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63125
llvm-svn: 363900
r363780 fixes extreme memory growth by using a new std::vector every loop iteration, but causes runtime to go up (and occasionally timeout in certain situations) because of constructor cost every loop iteration. Fix this by moving the constructor back out, but clearing contents in the loop.
Also apply this to the AArch64 features test case, which seems to use the same pattern.
llvm-svn: 363851
When moving a temp file, explicitly set the file descriptor to -1 so we
can never accidentally close the moved-from TempFile.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63087
llvm-svn: 363083
Previous detection relied upon an arbitrary hard coded limit of 21
response files, which some code bases were running up against.
The new detection maintains a stack of processing response files and
explicitly checks if a newly encountered file is in the current stack.
Some bookkeeping data is necessary in order to detect when to pop the
stack.
Patch by Chris Glover.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62798
llvm-svn: 363005
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces support for defining
numeric variable in a CHECK directive.
This commit introduces support for defining numeric variable from a
litteral value in the input text. Numeric expressions can then use the
variable provided it is on a later line.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60386
llvm-svn: 362705
This adds:
- LLVM subtarget features to make all the new instructions conditional on,
- CPU and FPU names for use on clang's command line, with default FPUs set
so that "armv8.1-m.main+fp" and "armv8.1-m.main+fp.dp" will select the right
FPU features,
- architecture extension names "mve" and "mve.fp",
- ABI build attribute support for v8.1-M (a new value for Tag_CPU_arch) and MVE
(a new actual tag).
Patch mostly by Simon Tatham.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60698
llvm-svn: 362090
Summary:
With now a clear distinction between string and numeric substitutions,
this patch introduces separate classes to represent them with a parent
class implementing the common interface. Diagnostics in
printSubstitutions() are also adapted to not require knowing which
substitution is being looked at since it does not hinder clarity and
makes the implementation simpler.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, probinson, arichardson, hiraditya
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62241
llvm-svn: 361446
Summary:
Terminology introduced by [[#]] blocks is confusing and does not
integrate well with existing terminology.
First, variables referred by [[]] blocks are called "pattern variables"
while the text a CHECK directive needs to match is called a "CHECK
pattern". This is inconsistent with variables in [[#]] blocks since
[[#]] blocks are also found in CHECK pattern yet those variables are
called "numeric variable".
Second, the replacing of both [[]] and [[#]] blocks by the value of the
variable or expression they contain is represented by a
FileCheckPatternSubstitution class. The naming refers to being a
substitution in a CHECK pattern but could be wrongly understood as being
a substitution of a pattern variable.
Third and lastly, comments use "numeric expression" to refer both to the
[[#]] blocks as well as to the numeric expressions these blocks contain
which get evaluated at match time.
This patch solves these confusions by
- calling variables in [[]] and [[#]] blocks as string and numeric
variables respectively;
- referring to [[]] and [[#]] as substitution *blocks*, with the former
being a string substitution block and the latter a numeric
substitution block;
- calling [[]] and [[#]] blocks to be replaced by the value of a
variable or expression they contain a substitution (as opposed to
definition when these blocks are used to defined a variable), with the
former being a string substitution and the latter a numeric
substitution;
- renaming the FileCheckPatternSubstitution as a FileCheckSubstitution
class with FileCheckStringSubstitution and
FileCheckNumericSubstitution subclasses;
- restricting the use of "numeric expression" to refer to the expression
that is evaluated in a numeric substitution.
While numeric substitution blocks only support numeric substitutions of
numeric expressions at the moment there are plans to augment numeric
substitution blocks to support numeric definitions as well as both a
numeric definition and numeric substitution in the same numeric
substitution block.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: hiraditya, arichardson, probinson, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62146
llvm-svn: 361445
Rename member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in order to provide a hint that the
allocated size may be different than the requested size. Comments are added to
clarify this point. Updated the InMemoryBuffer in FileOutputBuffer.cpp to track
the requested buffer size.
Patch by Machiel van Hooren. Thanks Machiel!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D61599
llvm-svn: 361195
Summary:
This is a fix to D61574, r360179, that allowed duplicate
OptionCategory's. This change adds a check to make sure a category can
only be added once even if the user passes it twice.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61972
llvm-svn: 360913
This reinstates r360578 (git e47362c1ec),
reverted in r360653 (git 004393681c),
with a fix for the list added in FileCheck.rst to build without error.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar,
arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar,
arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60385
llvm-svn: 360665
stdout may be buffered, and may not flush on every write. Explicitly flushing
before redirecting the output ensures that the captured output does not contain
output from other tests.
llvm-svn: 360617
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces regular numeric
variables which can be set on the command-line.
This commit introduces regular numeric variable that can be set on the
command-line with the -D option to a numeric value. They can then be
used in CHECK patterns in numeric expression with the same shape as
@LINE numeric expression, ie. VAR, VAR+offset or VAR-offset where offset
is an integer literal.
The commit also enable strict whitespace in the verbose.txt testcase to
check that the position or the location diagnostics. It fixes one of the
existing CHECK in the process which was not accurately testing a
location diagnostic (ie. the diagnostic was correct, not the CHECK).
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60385
llvm-svn: 360578
Summary:
This patch adds the following features defined by Arm SVE2 architecture
extension:
sve2, sve2-aes, sve2-sm4, sve2-sha3, bitperm
For existing CPUs these features are declared as unsupported to prevent
scheduler errors.
The specification can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0602/latest
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, sdesmalen, ostannard, rovka
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer, rovka
Subscribers: rovka, javed.absar, tschuett, kristof.beyls, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61513
llvm-svn: 360573
Summary:
If passed, the long option flag makes the CommandLine parser
mimic the behavior or GNU getopt_long. Short options are a single
character prefixed by a single dash, and long options are multiple
characters prefixed by a double dash.
This patch was motivated by the discussion in the following thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131786.html
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61294
llvm-svn: 360532
Close the temporary file after the test is done using it.
If it is not closed and the file was created on NFS, it will cause the test
to fail. The problem happens in the cleanup process afterwards. It first
tries to delete the file but it is not really deleted. Afterwards, the
program fails to delete the directory containing the file, causing the whole
test to fail.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
llvm-svn: 360259
This patch changes the return type of sys::Process::getPageSize to
Expected<unsigned> to account for the fact that the underlying syscalls used to
obtain the page size may fail (see below).
For clients who use the page size as an optimization only this patch adds a new
method, getPageSizeEstimate, which calls through to getPageSize but discards
any error returned and substitues a "reasonable" page size estimate estimate
instead. All existing LLVM clients are updated to call getPageSizeEstimate
rather than getPageSize.
On Unix, sys::Process::getPageSize is implemented in terms of getpagesize or
sysconf, depending on which macros are set. The sysconf call is documented to
return -1 on failure. On Darwin getpagesize is implemented in terms of sysconf
and may also fail (though the manpage documentation does not mention this).
These failures have been observed in practice when highly restrictive sandbox
permissions have been applied. Without this patch, the result is that
getPageSize returns -1, which wreaks havoc on any subsequent code that was
assuming a sane page size value.
<rdar://problem/41654857>
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59107
llvm-svn: 360221
Summary:
It's not uncommon for separate components to share common
Options, e.g., it's common for related Passes to share Options in
addition to the Pass specific ones.
With this change, components can use OptionCategory's to simply help
output even if some of the options are shared.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61574
llvm-svn: 360179
Summary:
By default, `parseCommandLineOptions()` will accept either a
`-` or `--` prefix for long options -- options with names longer than
a single character.
While this change does not affect behavior, it will be helpful with a
subsequent change that requires long options use the `--` prefix.
Reviewers: rnk, thopre
Reviewed By: thopre
Subscribers: thopre, cfe-commits, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61269
llvm-svn: 359909
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces the @LINE numeric
expressions.
This commit introduces a new syntax to express a relation a numeric
value in the input text must have with the line number of a given CHECK
pattern: [[#<@LINE numeric expression>]]. Further commits build on that
to express relations between several numeric values in the input text.
To help with naming, regular variables are renamed into pattern
variables and old @LINE expression syntax is referred to as legacy
numeric expression.
Compared to existing @LINE expressions, this new syntax allow arbitrary
spacing between the component of the expression. It offers otherwise the
same functionality but the commit serves to introduce some of the data
structure needed to support more general numeric expressions.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60384
llvm-svn: 359741
Summary:
With this change, cl::ResetAllOptionOccurrences() clears
cl::list just like cl::opt, allowing users to call
cl::ParseCommandLineOptions() multiple times without interference from
previous calls.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61234
llvm-svn: 359522
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch gives earlier and better
diagnostics for the @LINE expressions.
Rather than detect parsing errors at matching time, this commit adds
enhance parsing to detect issues with @LINE expressions at parse time
and diagnose them more accurately.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60383
llvm-svn: 359475
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch gives earlier and better
diagnostics for the -D option.
Prior to this change, parsing of -D option was very loose: it assumed
that there is an equal sign (which to be fair is now checked by the
FileCheck executable) and that the part on the left of the equal sign
was a valid variable name. This commit adds logic to ensure that this
is the case and gives diagnostic when it is not, making it clear that
the issue came from a command-line option error. This is achieved by
sharing the variable parsing code into a new function ParseVariable.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60382
llvm-svn: 359447
Summary:
There's still a little bit of constant factor that could be trimmed (e.g.
more overloads to avoid round-tripping primitives through json::Value).
But this solves the memory scaling problem, and greatly improves the performance
constant factor, and the API should leave room for optimization if needed.
Adapt TimeProfiler to use it, eliminating almost all the performance regression
from r358476.
Performance test on my machine:
perf stat -r 5 ~/llvmbuild-opt/bin/clang++ -w -S -ftime-trace -mllvm -time-trace-granularity=0 spirit.cpp
Handcrafted JSON (HEAD=r358532 with r358476 reverted): 2480ms
json::Value (HEAD): 2757ms (+11%)
After this patch: 2520 ms (+1.6%)
Reviewers: anton-afanasyev, lebedev.ri
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60804
llvm-svn: 359186
Summary:
Annotations allow writing nice-looking unit test code when one needs
access to locations from the source code, e.g. running code completion
at particular offsets in a file. See comments in Annotations.cpp for
more details on the API.
Also got rid of a duplicate annotations parsing code in clang's code
complete tests.
Reviewers: gribozavr, sammccall
Reviewed By: gribozavr
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, ioeric, MaskRay, jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59814
llvm-svn: 359179
Summary:
This test was added to verify that createUniqueEntity() does
not enter an infinite loop when all possible names are taken. However,
it also checked that all possible names are generated, which is flaky
(because the names are generated randomly). This change increases the
number of attempts we make to make flakes exceedingly
unlikely (3.88e-62).
Reviewers: fedor.sergeev, rsmith
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56336
llvm-svn: 358914
Summary:
This patch adds support for ULEB128 and SLEB128 encoding and decoding to
BinaryStreamWriter and BinaryStreamReader respectively.
Support for ULEB128/SLEB128 will be used for eh-frame parsing in the JITLink
library currently under development (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D58704).
Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60810
llvm-svn: 358584
The test in the dependent revision has been fixed for Windows.
Original commit message:
Response file expansion limits the amount of expansion to prevent
potential infinite recursion. However, the current logic assumes that
any argument beginning with @ is a response file, which is not true for
e.g. `-Xlinker -rpath -Xlinker @executable_path/../lib` on Darwin.
Having too many of these non-response file arguments beginning with @
prevents actual response files from being expanded. Instead, limit based
on the number of successful response file expansions, which should still
prevent infinite recursion but also avoid false positives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60631
> llvm-svn: 358452
llvm-svn: 358466
Use the appropriate tokenizer to fix the test on Windows.
Original commit message:
I'm going to be modifying the logic to avoid infinitely recursing on
self-referential response files, so add a unit test to verify the
expected behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60630
> llvm-svn: 358451
llvm-svn: 358465
Response file expansion limits the amount of expansion to prevent
potential infinite recursion. However, the current logic assumes that
any argument beginning with @ is a response file, which is not true for
e.g. `-Xlinker -rpath -Xlinker @executable_path/../lib` on Darwin.
Having too many of these non-response file arguments beginning with @
prevents actual response files from being expanded. Instead, limit based
on the number of successful response file expansions, which should still
prevent infinite recursion but also avoid false positives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60631
llvm-svn: 358452
I'm going to be modifying the logic to avoid infinitely recursing on
self-referential response files, so add a unit test to verify the
expected behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60630
llvm-svn: 358451
Summary: Add DefaultOption flag to CommandLineParser which provides a
default option or alias, but allows users to override it for some
other purpose as needed.
Also, add `-h` as a default alias to `-help`, which can be seamlessly
overridden by applications like llvm-objdump and llvm-readobj which
use `-h` as an alias for other options.
(relanding after revert, r358414)
Added DefaultOptions.clear() to reset().
Reviewers: alexfh, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: kristina, MaskRay, mehdi_amini, inglorion, dexonsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, jhenderson, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59746
llvm-svn: 358428
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch adds a new class to hold
pattern matching global state.
The table holding the values of FileCheck variable constitutes some sort
of global state for the matching phase, yet is passed as parameters of
all functions using it. This commit create a new FileCheckPatternContext
class pointed at from FileCheckPattern. While it increases the line
count, it separates local data from global state. Later commits build
on that to add numeric expression global state to that class.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60381
llvm-svn: 358390
Summary:
The Linux kernel uses PC-relative mode, so allow that when the code model is
"kernel".
Reviewers: craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kees, nickdesaulniers
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60643
llvm-svn: 358343
Summary: Add DefaultOption flag to CommandLineParser which provides a
default option or alias, but allows users to override it for some
other purpose as needed.
Also, add `-h` as a default alias to `-help`, which can be seamlessly
overridden by applications like llvm-objdump and llvm-readobj which
use `-h` as an alias for other options.
Reviewers: alexfh, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: MaskRay, mehdi_amini, inglorion, dexonsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, jhenderson, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59746
llvm-svn: 358337
This is for D60460. computeForAddSub() essentially already supports
carries because it has to deal with subtractions. This revision
extracts a lower-level computeForAddCarry() function, which allows
computing the known bits for add (carry known zero), sub (carry known
one) and addcarry (carry unknown).
As we don't seem to have any yet, I've added a unit test file for
KnownBits and exhaustive tests for the new computeForAddCarry()
functionality, as well the existing computeForAddSub() function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60522
llvm-svn: 358297
Summary:
A bug/typo in Output::scalarString caused us to round-trip a StringRef
through a const char *. This meant that any strings with embedded nuls
were unintentionally cut short at the first such character. (It also
could have caused accidental buffer overruns, but it seems that all
StringRefs coming into this functions were formed from null-terminated
strings.)
This patch fixes the bug and adds an appropriate test.
Reviewers: sammccall, jhenderson
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60505
llvm-svn: 358176
Summary:
Add new ``isa_and_nonnull<>`` operator that works just like
the ``isa<>`` operator, except that it allows for a null pointer as an
argument (which it then returns false).
Reviewers: lattner, aaron.ballman, greened
Reviewed By: lattner
Subscribers: hubert.reinterpretcast, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60291
llvm-svn: 357761
Summary:
On AIX, we can determine whether a filesystem is remote using `mntctl`.
If the information is not found, then claim that the file is remote
(since that is the more restrictive case). Testing for the associated
interface is restored with a modified version of the unit test from
rL295768.
Reviewers: jasonliu, xingxue
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: jsji, apaprocki, Hahnfeld, zturner, krytarowski, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58801
llvm-svn: 357333
Summary:
Now that endian types support enumerations (D59141), the existing yaml
support for them is somewhat insufficient. The current solution was to
define the ScalarTraits class for these types, which always forwards to
the ScalarTraits of the underlying type. However, the enum types will
usually have ScalarEnumerationTraits of ScalarBitsetTraits.
In this patch I add the two extra Traits types to the endian types. In
order to properly SFINAE-ize them, I've also added an extra "Enable"
template argument to the Traits template classes.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: kristina, Bigcheese, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59289
llvm-svn: 356269
Windows command line argument processing treats consecutive double quotes
as a single double-quote. This patch implements this functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58662
llvm-svn: 356193
Summary:
The way c++ template argument deduction works, both arguments are used
to deduce the template type in the three-argument overload of
mapOptional. This is a problem if the types are slightly different, even
if they are implicitly convertible. This is fairly easy to trigger with
integral types, as the default type of most integral constants is int,
which then requires casting the constant to the type of the other
argument.
This patch fixes that by using a separate template type for the default
value, which is then cast to the type of the first argument. To avoid
this conversion triggerring conversions marged as explicit, we use
static_assert to check that the types are implicitly convertible.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: kristina, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59142
llvm-svn: 356157
Summary:
AIX compilers define macros based on the version of the operating
system.
This patch implements updating of versionless AIX triples to include the
host AIX version. Also, the host triple detection in the build system is
adjusted to strip the AIX version information so that the run-time
detection is preferred.
Reviewers: xingxue, stefanp, nemanjai, jasonliu
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: mgorny, kristina, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58798
llvm-svn: 355995
Summary:
Binary formats often include various enumerations or bitsets, but using
endian-specific types for accessing them is tricky because they
currently only support integral types. This is particularly true for
scoped enums (enum class), as these are not implicitly convertible to
integral types, and so one has to perform two casts just to read the
enum value.
This fixes that support by adding first-class support for enumeration
types to endian-specific types. The support for them was already almost
working -- all I needed to do was overload getSwappedBytes for
enumeration types (which casts the enum to its underlying type and performs the
conversion there). I also add some convenience template aliases to simplify
declaring endian-specific enums.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, zturner
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59141
llvm-svn: 355812
This patch allows all forms of values for options to be used at the end
of a group. With the fix, it is possible to follow the way GNU binutils
tools handle grouping options better. For example, the -j option can be
used with objdump in any of the following ways:
$ objdump -d -j .text a.o
$ objdump -d -j.text a.o
$ objdump -dj .text a.o
$ objdump -dj.text a.o
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58711
llvm-svn: 355185
If an option, which requires a value, has a `cl::Grouping` formatting
modifier, it works well as far as it is used at the end of a group,
or as a separate argument. However, if the option appears accidentally
in the middle of a group, the program just crashes. This patch prints
an error message instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58499
llvm-svn: 355184
This patch introduces Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT which indicates that allocateMappedMemory() shall return a pointer to a large memory page.
However the flag is a hint because we're not guaranteed in any way that we will get back a large memory page. There are several restrictions:
- Large/huge memory pages aren't enabled by default on modern OSes (Windows 10 and Linux at least), and should be manually enabled/reserved.
- Once enabled, it should be kept in mind that large pages are physical only, they can't be swapped.
- Memory fragmentation can affect the availability of large pages, especially after running the OS for a long time and/or running along many other applications.
Memory::allocateMappedMemory() will fallback to 4KB pages if it can't allocate 2MB large pages (if Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT is provided)
Currently, Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT only works on Windows. The hint will be ignored on Linux, 4KB pages will always be returned.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58718
llvm-svn: 355065
This reverts commit r351091.
The original mac breakages are addressed by ensuring the root directory
we're working from is fully symlink-resolved before starting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58169
llvm-svn: 354026
Summary:
Add support for options that always prefix their value, giving an error
if the value is in the next argument or if the option is given a value
assignment (ie. opt=val). This is the desired behavior for the -D option
of FileCheck for instance.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes in version 2 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions and introduced when creating
D56549)
Reviewers: jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits, probinson, kristina, hiraditya,
JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56549
llvm-svn: 353172
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
attribute and an empty-named value are required. Prior to this change,
this empty-named value appears in the command-line help text:
-some-option - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
= -
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
-some-option - some help text
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2
=<empty> - description
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
This is mostly a reland of r353048 which in turn was a reland of
r352750.
Reviewed by: ruiu, thopre, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 353053
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
attribute and an empty-named value are required. Prior to this change,
this empty-named value appears in the command-line help text:
-some-option - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
= -
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
-some-option - some help text
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2
=<empty> - description
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
This is mostly a reland of r352750.
Reviewed by: ruiu, thopre, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 353048
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
and an empty-named value are required. This empty-named value appears in
the command-line help text, which is not ideal.
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
Reviewed by: thopre, ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 352750
Patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D56329 caused build failures for me when
building on Windows because of the use of cmake operator
'VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL' which isn't supported in older versions of cmake. The
llvm website states that minimum required version of cmake for building llvm is
3.4.3 https://llvm.org/docs/CMake.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57326
llvm-svn: 352378
As noted in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36651, the specialization for
isPodLike<std::pair<...>> did not match the expectation of
std::is_trivially_copyable which makes the memcpy optimization invalid.
This patch renames the llvm::isPodLike trait into llvm::is_trivially_copyable.
Unfortunately std::is_trivially_copyable is not portable across compiler / STL
versions. So a portable version is provided too.
Note that the following specialization were invalid:
std::pair<T0, T1>
llvm::Optional<T>
Tests have been added to assert that former specialization are respected by the
standard usage of llvm::is_trivially_copyable, and that when a decent version
of std::is_trivially_copyable is available, llvm::is_trivially_copyable is
compared to std::is_trivially_copyable.
As of this patch, llvm::Optional is no longer considered trivially copyable,
even if T is. This is to be fixed in a later patch, as it has impact on a
long-running bug (see r347004)
Note that GCC warns about this UB, but this got silented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D50296.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54472
llvm-svn: 351701
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
Summary:
The version of make_absolute which accepted a specific directory to use
as the "base" for the computation could never fail, even though it
returned a std::error_code. The reason for that seems to be historical
-- the CWD flavour (which can fail due to failure to retrieve CWD) was
there first, and the new version was implemented by extending that.
This removes the error return value from the non-CWD overload and
reimplements the CWD version on top of that. This enables us to remove
some dead code where people were pessimistically trying to handle the
errors returned from this function.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: hiraditya, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56599
llvm-svn: 351317
Summary:
Previously only one RealFileSystem instance was available, and its working
directory is shared with the process. This doesn't work well for multithreaded
programs that want to work with relative paths - the vfs::FileSystem is assumed
to provide the working directory, but a thread cannot control this exclusively.
The new vfs::createPhysicalFileSystem() factory copies the process's working
directory initially, and then allows it to be independently modified.
This implementation records the working directory path, and glues it to relative
paths to provide the correct absolute path to the sys::fs:: functions.
This will give different results in unusual situations (e.g. the CWD is moved).
The main alternative is the use of openat(), fstatat(), etc to ask the OS to
resolve paths relative to a directory handle which can be kept open. This is
more robust. There are two reasons not to do this initially:
1. these functions are not available on all supported Unixes, and are somewhere
between difficult and unavailable on Windows. So we need a path-based
fallback anyway.
2. this would mean also adding support at the llvm::sys::fs level, which is a
larger project. My clearest idea is an OS-specific `BaseDirectory` object
that can be optionally passed to functions there. Eventually this could be
backed by either paths or a fd where openat() is supported.
This is a large project, and demonstrating here that a path-based fallback
works is a useful prerequisite.
There is some subtlety to the path-manipulation mechanism:
- when setting the working directory, both Specified=makeAbsolute(path) and
Resolved=realpath(path) are recorded. These may differ in the presence of
symlinks.
- getCurrentWorkingDirectory() and makeAbsolute() use Specified - this is
similar to the behavior of $PWD and sys::path::current_path
- IO operations like openFileForRead use Resolved. This is similar to the
behavior of an openat() based implementation, that doesn't see changes
in symlinks.
There may still be combinations of operations and FS states that yield unhelpful
behavior. This is hard to avoid with symlinks and FS abstractions :(
The caching behavior of the current working directory is removed in this patch.
getRealFileSystem() is now specified to link to the process CWD, so the caching
is incorrect.
The user who needed this so far is clangd, which will immediately switch to
createPhysicalFileSystem().
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, bkramer, labath
Subscribers: ioeric, kadircet, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56545
llvm-svn: 351050
Summary:
Add support for options that always prefix their value, giving an error
if the value is in the next argument or if the option is given a value
assignment (ie. opt=val). This is the desired behavior for the -D option
of FileCheck for instance.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes in version 2 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions and introduced when creating
D56549)
Reviewers: jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits, probinson, kristina, hiraditya,
JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56549
llvm-svn: 351038
On AIX, attempting (without root) to set the sticky bit on a file with
the `chmod` utility will give:
```
chmod: not all requested changes were made to <file>
```
The same occurs when modifying other permission bits on a file with the
sticky bit already set.
It seems that the `chmod` function will report success despite failing
to set the sticky bit.
llvm-svn: 350735
Prediction control instructions are only
mandatory from v8.5a onwards but is optional
from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable it by it's own.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56007
llvm-svn: 350385
SB (Speculative Barrier) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable SB, as it was previously only possible to
enable by selecting -march=armv8.5-a.
This patch also renames FeatureSpecRestrict to FeatureSB.
Reviewed By: olista01, LukeCheeseman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55990
llvm-svn: 350299
SB (Speculative Barrier) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable SB, as it was previously only possible to
enable by selecting -march=armv8.5-a.
This patch also moves to FeatureSB the old FeatureSpecRestrict.
Reviewers: pbarrio, olista01, t.p.northover, LukeCheeseman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55921
llvm-svn: 350126
The list generated in the target parser tests is the
same as the one in the AArch64 target parser.
Use that one instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55509
llvm-svn: 348757
Summary:
SSBS (Speculative Store Bypass Safe) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable SSBS, as it was previously only possible to
enable by selecting -march=armv8.5-a.
Similar patch upstream in GNU binutils:
https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2018-09/msg00274.html
Reviewers: olista01, samparker, aemerson
Reviewed By: samparker
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54629
llvm-svn: 348137
extract_symbols.py (introduced in D18826) expects all of its library arguments
to be in the same directory - typically <config>/lib. DynamicLibraryLib.lib is
instead to be found in lib/<config>.
This patch intended to make DynamicLibraryLib.lib be created in <config>/lib
alongside most of the other libraries.
I previously tried passing absolute paths to extract_symbols.py but this
generated command lines that were too long for Visual Studio 2015: D54587
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54701
llvm-svn: 347764
separate files to enable future changes.
This moves ARM and AArch64 target parsing into their
own files. They are still accessible through
TargetParser.h as before.
Several functions in AArch64 which were just forwarders to ARM
have been removed. All except AArch64::getFPUName were unused,
and that was only used in a test. Which itself was overlapping
one in ARM, so it has also been removed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53980
llvm-svn: 347741
The `expandTildeExpr` routine just replaces a tilde by a home dir path.
If the home dir has a trailing slash, the result of substitution will
contain double slashes. For example, `HOME=/foo/ ~/bar` gives `/foo//bar`.
That corresponds to (at least) Bash behaviour because the following
command `$HOME=/foo/ echo ~/bar` prints `/foo//bar`.
The `ExpandTilde` test constructs a path expected as the `fs::expand_tilde`
call result by calling `path::append` and the expected path has a single
slash. This patch fixes that and allows to pass the unittest on hosts where
the `HOME` is `/`.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D54752
llvm-svn: 347346
Skip all MappedMemoryTest variants that rely on memory pages being
mapped for MF_WRITE|MF_EXEC when MPROTECT is enabled on NetBSD. W^X
protection causes all those mmap() calls to fail, causing the tests
to fail.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54080
llvm-svn: 347337
It fixes the case when Objective-C framework is added as a subframework
through a symlink. When parent framework infers a module map and fails
to detect a symlink, it would add a subframework as a submodule. And
when we parse module map for the subframework, we would encounter an
error like
> error: umbrella for module 'WithSubframework.Foo' already covers this directory
By implementing `getRealPath` "an egregious but useful hack" in
`ModuleMap::inferFrameworkModule` works as expected.
rdar://problem/45821279
Reviewers: bruno, benlangmuir, erik.pilkington
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: hiraditya, dexonsmith, JDevlieghere, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54245
llvm-svn: 347009
Add support for "polymorphic" types to YAMLIO.
PolymorphicTraits can dynamically switch between other traits (Scalar, Map, or
Sequence). When inputting, the PolymorphicTraits type is told which type to
become, and when outputting the PolymorphicTraits type is asked which type it
currently is.
Also add support for TaggedScalarTraits to allow dynamically differentiating
between multiple scalar types using YAML tags.
Serialize empty maps as "{}" and empty sequences as "[]", so that types
are preserved when round-tripping PolymorphicTraits. This change has
equivalent semantics, but may break e.g. tests which compare output
verbatim.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48144
llvm-svn: 346884
In D54435 there was some discussion about the expand_tilde flag for
real_path that I wanted to expose through the VFS. The consensus is that
these two things should be separate functions. Since we already have the
code for this I went ahead and added a function expand_tilde that does
just that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54448
llvm-svn: 346776
In a lot of places an empty string was passed as the ErrorBanner to
logAllUnhandledErrors. This patch makes that argument optional to
simplify the call sites.
llvm-svn: 346604
The "regular" file system has a useful feature that makes it possible to
stop recursing when using the recursive directory iterators. This
functionality was missing for the VFS recursive iterator and this patch
adds that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53465
llvm-svn: 345793
Default property value 'true' preserves current behavior. Value 'false' can be
used to create VFS "root", file system that gives better control over which
files compiler can use during compilation as there are no unpredictable
accesses to real file system.
Non-fallthrough use case changes how we treat multiple VFS overlay
files. Instead of all of them being at the same level just above a real
file system, now they are nested and subsequent overlays can refer to
files in previous overlays.
rdar://problem/39465552
Reviewers: bruno, benlangmuir
Reviewed By: bruno
Subscribers: dexonsmith, cfe-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50539
llvm-svn: 345431
If you have the string /usr/bin, prior to this patch it would not
be quoted by our YAML serializer. But a string like C:\src would
be, due to the presence of a backslash. This makes the quoting
rules of basically every single file path different depending on
the path syntax (posix vs. Windows).
While technically not required by the YAML specification to quote
forward slashes, when the behavior of paths is inconsistent it
makes it difficult to portably write FileCheck lines that will
work with either kind of path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53169
llvm-svn: 344359
This reverts commit b86c16ad8c97dadc1f529da72a5bb74e9eaed344.
This is being reverted because I forgot to write a useful
commit message, so I'm going to resubmit it with an actual
commit message.
llvm-svn: 344358
This patch moves the virtual file system form clang to llvm so it can be
used by more projects.
Concretely the patch:
- Moves VirtualFileSystem.{h|cpp} from clang/Basic to llvm/Support.
- Moves the corresponding unit test from clang to llvm.
- Moves the vfs namespace from clang::vfs to llvm::vfs.
- Formats the lines affected by this change, mostly this is the result of
the added llvm namespace.
RFC on the mailing list:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-October/126657.html
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52783
llvm-svn: 344140
This small patch updates the CPU detection for Cavium processors when
-mcpu=native is passed on compile-line.
Patch by Stefan Teleman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51939
llvm-svn: 343897
This adds the memory tagging extension, which is an optional extension
introduced in v8.5A. The new instructions and registers will be added by
subsequent patches.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52486
llvm-svn: 343563
Summary:
Reporting this as an error required stat()ing every file, as well as seeming
semantically questionable.
Reviewers: vsk, bkramer
Subscribers: mgrang, kristina, llvm-commits, liaoyuke
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52648
llvm-svn: 343460
The ARMTargetParser.def contains an entry for arm1176j-s which is the
default for the ArmV6K architecture. This cpu does not exist, there are
only arm1176jz-s and arm1176jzf-s and they are both architecture ArmV6KZ.
The only CPUs that are actually ArmV6K are the mpcore, mpcore_nofpu and
later revisions of the arm1136 family r1px (which we don't have a table
entry for).
This patch removes the arm1176j-s and makes mpcore the default for armv6k.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52594
llvm-svn: 343303
This adds two new system registers, used to generate random numbers.
This is an optional extension to v8.5-A, and will be controlled by the
"+rng" modifier of the -march= and -mcpu= options.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52481
llvm-svn: 343217
This patch allows targeting Armv8.5-A, adding the architecture to
tablegen and setting the options to be identical to Armv8.4-A for the
time being. Subsequent patches will add support for the different
features included in the Armv8.5-A Reference Manual.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52470
llvm-svn: 343102
Summary:
The hash computed for an ArrayType was different when first constructed
versus when later profiled due to the constructor default argument, and
we were not tracking constructor / destructor variant as part of the
mangled name AST, leading to incorrect equivalences.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51463
llvm-svn: 342166
FileError is meant to encapsulate both an Error and a file name/path. It should be used in cases where an Error occurs deep down the call chain, and we want to return it to the caller along with the file name.
StringError was updated to display the error messages in different ways. These can be:
1. display the error_code message, and convert to the same error_code (ECError behavior)
2. display an arbitrary string, and convert to a provided error_code (current StringError behavior)
3. display both an error_code message and a string, in this order; and convert to the same error_code
These behaviors can be triggered depending on the constructor. The goal is to use StringError as a base class, when a library needs to provide a explicit Error type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50807
llvm-svn: 341064
Previously, the DebugCounterTest was failing because CommandLineTest.GetCommandLineArguments was clearing all the global singletons.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51423
llvm-svn: 340935
vectors, and move this test code into an anonymous namespace.
Hoping that this will avoid hitting an MSVC bug that causes it to crash
and burn pretty spectacularly. Also, this degree of clever use of
initializer lists seems somewhat questionable in general. ;]
llvm-svn: 340702
demangling process when it does.
Use this to support a "lookup" query for the mangling canonicalizer that
does not create new nodes. This could also be used to implement
demangling with a fixed-size temporary storage buffer.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51003
llvm-svn: 340670
Summary:
Given a set of equivalent name fragments, this mechanism determines whether two
mangled names are equivalent. The intent is to use this for fuzzy matching of
profile data against the program after certain refactorings are performed.
Reviewers: erik.pilkington, dlj
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50935
llvm-svn: 340663
This patch significantly improves performance of the YAML serializer by
optimizing `YAML::isNumeric` function. This function is called on the
most strings and is highly inefficient for two reasons:
* It uses `Regex`, which is parsed and compiled each time this
function is called
* It uses multiple passes which are not necessary
This patch introduces stateful ad hoc YAML number parser which does not
rely on `Regex`. It also fixes YAML number format inconsistency: current
implementation supports C-stile octal number format (`01234567`) which
was present in YAML 1.0 specialization (http://yaml.org/spec/1.0/),
[Section 2.4. Tags, Example 2.19] but was deprecated and is no longer
present in latest YAML 1.2 specification
(http://yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html), see [Section 10.3.2. Tag
Resolution]. Since the rest of the rest of the implementation does not
support other deprecated YAML 1.0 numeric features such as sexagecimal
numbers, commas as delimiters it is treated as inconsistency and not
longer supported. This patch also adds unit tests to ensure the validity
of proposed implementation.
This performance bottleneck was identified while profiling Clangd's
global-symbol-builder tool with my colleague @ilya-biryukov. The
substantial part of the runtime was spent during a single-thread Reduce
phase, which concludes with YAML serialization of collected symbol
collection. Regex matching was accountable for approximately 45% of the
whole runtime (which involves sharded Map phase), now it is reduced to
18% (which is spent in `clang::clangd::CanonicalIncludes` and can be
also optimized because all used regexes are in fact either suffix
matches or exact matches).
`llvm-yaml-numeric-parser-fuzzer` was used to ensure the validity of the
proposed regex replacement. Fuzzing for ~60 hours using 10 threads did
not expose any bugs.
Benchmarking `global-symbol-builder` (using `hyperfine --warmup 2
--min-runs 5 'command 1' 'command 2'`) tool by processing a reasonable
amount of code (26 source files matched by
`clang-tools-extra/clangd/*.cpp` with all transitive includes) confirmed
our understanding of the performance bottleneck nature as it speeds up
the command by the factor of 1.6x:
| Command | Mean [s] | Min…Max [s] |
| this patch (D50839) | 84.7 ± 0.6 | 83.3…84.7 |
| master (rL339849) | 133.1 ± 0.8 | 132.4…134.6 |
Using smaller samples (e.g. by collecting symbols from
`clang-tools-extra/clangd/AST.cpp` only) yields even better performance
improvement, which is expected because Map phase takes less time
compared to Reduce and is 2.05x faster and therefore would significantly
improve the performance of standalone YAML serializations.
| Command | Mean [ms] | Min…Max [ms] |
| this patch (D50839) | 3702.2 ± 48.7 | 3635.1…3752.3 |
| master (rL339849) | 7607.6 ± 109.5 | 7533.3…7796.4 |
Reviewed by: zturner, ilya-biryukov
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50839
llvm-svn: 340154
Add +fp16fml feature for new FP16 instructions, which are a
mandatory part of FP16 from v8.4-A and an optional part of FP16
from v8.2-A. It doesn't seem to be possible to model this in
LLVM, but the relationship between the options is handled by
the related clang patch.
In keeping with what I think is the usual practice, the fp16fml
extension is accepted regardless of base architecture version.
Builds on/replaces Sjoerd Meijer's patch to add these instructions at
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49839.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50228
llvm-svn: 340013
Adds some missing tests for the FP16 extension,
fixes an existing test that misnames it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50227
llvm-svn: 340012
Summary:
The C-API supports consuming errors, converting an error to a string error
message, and querying an error's type. Other LLVM C APIs that wish to use
llvm::Error can supply error-type-id checkers and custom
error-to-structured-type converters for any custom errors they provide.
Reviewers: bogner, zturner, labath, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50716
llvm-svn: 339802
Summary:
Add an overload to sys::fs::setLastModificationAndAccessTime that allows setting last access and modification times separately. This will allow tools to use this API when they want to preserve both the access and modification times from an input file, which may be different.
Also note that both the POSIX (futimens/futimes) and Windows (SetFileTime) APIs take the two timestamps in the order of (1) access (2) modification time, so this renames the method to "setLastAccessAndModificationTime" to make it clear which timestamp is which.
For existing callers, the 1-arg overload just sets both timestamps to the same thing.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50521
llvm-svn: 339628
This change allows users pass compression level that was not listed
in the enum. Also, I think using different values than zlib's
compression levels was just confusing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50196
llvm-svn: 338939
Summary:
On Windows, TempFile::create() was prone to failing with permission
denied errors when a process created many tempfiles without providing
a model large enough to accommodate them. There was also a problem
with createUniqueEntity getting into an infinite loop when all names
permitted by the model are in use. This change fixes both of these
problems and adds a unit test for them.
Reviewers: pcc, rnk, zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: inglorion, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50126
llvm-svn: 338745
The function in question is copy-pasted lots of times in DWARF-related classes.
Thus it will make sense to place its implementation into the Support library.
Reviewed by: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49824
llvm-svn: 337995
This patch makes debug counters keep track of the total number of times
we've called `shouldExecute` for each counter, so it's easier to build
automated tooling on top of these.
A patch to print these counts is coming soon.
Patch by Zhizhou Yang!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49560
llvm-svn: 337748
Summary:
Someone must be responsible for handling an Error. When formatv takes
ownership of an Error, the formatv_object destructor must take care of this.
Passing an error by value to formatv() is not considered explicit enough to mark
the error as handled (see D49013), so we require callers to use a format adapter
to confirm this intent.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49170
llvm-svn: 336888
Parsing invalid UTF-8 input is now a parse error.
Creating JSON values from invalid UTF-8 now triggers an assertion, and
(in no-assert builds) substitutes the unicode replacement character.
Strings retrieved from json::Value are always valid UTF-8.
llvm-svn: 336657
Summary:
This patch adds a new "integer" ValueType, and renames Number -> Double.
This allows us to preserve the full precision of int64_t when parsing integers
from the wire, or constructing from an integer.
The API is unchanged, other than giving asInteger() a clearer contract.
In addition, always output doubles with enough precision that parsing will
reconstruct the same double.
Reviewers: simon_tatham
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46209
llvm-svn: 336541
Summary:
This consists of four main parts:
- an type json::Expr representing JSON values of dynamic kind, which can be
composed, inspected, and modified
- a JSON parser from string -> json::Expr
- a JSON printer from json::Expr -> string, with optional pretty-printing
- a convention for mapping json::Expr <=> native types (fromJSON/toJSON)
Mapping functions are provided for primitives (e.g. int, vector) and the
ObjectMapper helper helps implement fromJSON for struct/object types.
Based on clangd's usage, a couple of places I'd appreciate review attention:
- fromJSON returns only bool. A richer error-signaling mechanism may be useful
to provide useful messages, or let recursive fromJSONs (containers/structs)
do careful error recovery.
- should json::obj be always explicitly written (like json::ary)
- there's no streaming parse API. I suspect there are some simple wins like
a callback API where the document is a long array, and each element is small.
But this can probably be bolted on easily when we see the need.
Reviewers: bkramer, labath
Subscribers: mgorny, ilya-biryukov, ioeric, MaskRay, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45753
llvm-svn: 336534
For certain APIs, the return value of the function does not distinguish
between failure (which populates errno) and other non-error conditions
(which do not set errno).
For example, `fgets` returns `NULL` both when an error has occurred, or
upon EOF. If `errno` is already `EINTR` for whatever reason, then
```
RetryAfterSignal(nullptr, fgets, ...);
```
on a stream that has reached EOF would infinite loop.
Fix this by setting `errno` to `0` before each attempt in
`RetryAfterSignal`.
Patch by Ricky Zhou!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48755
llvm-svn: 336479
Summary:
Error's new operator<< is the first way to print an error without consuming it.
formatv() can now print objects with an operator<< that works with raw_ostream.
Reviewers: bkramer
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48966
llvm-svn: 336412
of libstdc++, not just certain versions of GCC. The original macros
broke when using Clang + libstdc++4.9 sadly.
Sadly, testing for versions of libstdc++ has been extremely problematic
in the past, so I'm just narrowing this down to Windows and when using
libc++ as that seems at least very unlikely to keep build bots broken.
llvm-svn: 336174
introducing llvm::trivially_{copy,move}_constructible type traits.
This uses a completely portable implementation of these traits provided
by Richard Smith. You can see it on compiler explorer in all its glory:
https://godbolt.org/g/QEDZjW
I have transcribed it, clang-formatted it, added some comments, and made
the tests fit into a unittest file.
I have also switched llvm::unique_function over to use these new, much
more portable traits. =D
Hopefully this will fix the build bot breakage from my prior commit.
llvm-svn: 336161
The format string for formatv allows to specify a custom padding
character instead of the default space. This custom character was
parsed correctly, but not passed on to the formatter.
Patch by Marcel Köppe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48140
llvm-svn: 335915
FileOutputBuffer creates a temp file and on commit atomically
renames the temp file to the destination file. Sometimes we
want to modify an existing file in place, but still have the
atomicity guarantee. To do this we can initialize the contents
of the temp file from the destination file (if it exists), that
way the resulting FileOutputBuffer can have only selective
bytes modified. Committing will then atomically replace the
destination file as desired.
llvm-svn: 335902
We have ThreadPool, which can execute work asynchronously on N
background threads, but sometimes you need to make sure the work
is executed asynchronously but also serially. That is, if task
B is enqueued after task A, then task B should not begin until
task A has completed. This patch adds such a class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48240
llvm-svn: 335440
This is failing to compile when LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS is false,
and the fix is not immediately obvious, so reverting while I look
into it.
llvm-svn: 334658
Previously ThreadPool could only queue async "jobs", i.e. work
that was done for its side effects and not for its result. It's
useful occasionally to queue async work that returns a value.
From an API perspective, this is very intuitive. The previous
API just returned a shared_future<void>, so all we need to do is
make it return a shared_future<T>, where T is the type of value
that the operation returns.
Making this work required a little magic, but ultimately it's not
too bad. Instead of keeping a shared queue<packaged_task<void()>>
we just keep a shared queue<unique_ptr<TaskBase>>, where TaskBase
is a class with a pure virtual execute() method, then have a
templated derived class that stores a packaged_task<T()>. Everything
else works out pretty cleanly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48115
llvm-svn: 334643
Returning optional is much safer.
The previous API had potential to cause use of undefined variables, if
the value passed by pointer was accidentally read afterwards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48137
llvm-svn: 334634
Even if we support no-canonical-prefix on
clang-cl(https://reviews.llvm.org/D47480), argv0 becomes absolute path
in clang-cl and that embeds absolute path in /showIncludes.
This patch removes such full path normalization from InitLLVM on
windows, and that removes absolute path from clang-cl output
(obj/stdout/stderr) when debug flag is disabled.
Patch by Takuto Ikuta!
Differential Revision https://reviews.llvm.org/D47578
llvm-svn: 334602
This simplifies some code which had StringRefs to begin with, and
makes other code more complicated which had const char* to begin
with.
In the end, I think this makes for a more idiomatic and platform
agnostic API. Not all platforms launch process with null terminated
c-string arrays for the environment pointer and argv, but the api
was designed that way because it allowed easy pass-through for
posix-based platforms. There's a little additional overhead now
since on posix based platforms we'll be takign StringRefs which
were constructed from null terminated strings and then copying
them to null terminate them again, but from a readability and
usability standpoint of the API user, I think this API signature
is strictly better.
llvm-svn: 334518
Summary:
This kind of functionality is useful to other project apart from clang.
LLDB works with version numbers a lot, but it does not have a convenient
abstraction for this. Moving this class to a lower level library allows
it to be freely used within LLDB.
Since this class is used in a lot of places in clang, and it used to be
in the clang namespace, it seemed appropriate to add it to the list of
adopted classes in LLVM.h to avoid prefixing all uses with "llvm::".
Also, I didn't find any tests specific for this class, so I wrote a
couple of quick ones for the more interesting bits of functionality.
Reviewers: zturner, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47887
llvm-svn: 334399
A recent change https://reviews.llvm.org/D46898 which had no intended
behavior change, actually modified the linker flags used when linking
the dynamic libraries used by the DynamicLibraryTests unit test. This
made the test fail in our testing environment which runs the tests
from an NFS share. Prior to D46898 the two libraries used by the test
were different (because the library name used to be embedded into the
binary), and after the change they became bit-to-bit identical. This
causes dlopen to return the same handle when these two libraries are
loaded from an NFS share, and the test expects two different handles.
This patch reverts the part of D46898 that is responsible for
changing the linker flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47469
llvm-svn: 334394
This breaks the OpenFlags enumeration into two separate
enumerations: OpenFlags and CreationDisposition. The first
controls the behavior of the API depending on whether or not
the target file already exists, and is not a flags-based
enum. The second controls more flags-like values.
This yields a more easy to understand API, while also allowing
flags to be passed to the openForRead api, where most of the
values didn't make sense before. This also makes the apis more
testable as it becomes easy to enumerate all the configurations
which make sense, so I've added many new tests to exercise all
the different values.
llvm-svn: 334221
Summary:
Otherwise, the YAML parser breaks when trying to read them back in
'key: multiline_string_value' cases.
This patch fixes a problem when serializing structs which contain multi-line strings.
E.g., if we try to serialize the following struct
```
{ "key1": "first line\nsecond line",
"key2": "another string" }`
```
Before this patch, we got the YAML output that failed to parse:
```
key1: first line
second line
key2: another string
```
After the patch, we get:
```
key1: 'first line
second line'
key2: another string
```
Reviewers: sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47468
llvm-svn: 333527
Provide some free functions to reduce verbosity of endian-writing
a single value, and replace the endianness template parameter with
a field.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47032
llvm-svn: 332757
As far as I can tell from revision history, there's no good reason to call
these files .so instead of .dll in Windows, so use the normal extension.
Also change PipSquak from SHARED to MODULE -- it's never passed to
target_link_libraries() and only loaded via dlopen(), so MODULE is more
appropriate. This makes it possible to delete a workaround for SHARED ldflags
being not quite right as well.
No intended behavior change.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46898
llvm-svn: 332487
LLVM uses cpp as its C++ file extension, these are the only three cxx file in
the monorepo. These files apparently were called to escape a CMake check -- use
the LLVM_OPTIONAL_SOURCES mechanism that's meant as an escape for this case
instead.
No intended behavior change.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46843
llvm-svn: 332368
The asan failures were caught in google internal asan tests after r332311
o Make StackOption support cl::list
o Rememeber to removeArguments for cl::alias in tests.
llvm-svn: 332354
Summary:
bugpoint has several options specified as `PositionalEatArgs` to pass
options through to the underlying tool, e.g. `-tool-args`. The `-help`
message suggests the usage is: `-tool-args=<string>`. However, this is
misleading, because that's not how these arguments work. Rather than taking
a value, the option consumes all positional arguments until the next
recognized option (or all arguments if `--` is specified at some point).
To make this slightly clearer, instead print the help as:
```
-tool-args <string>... - <tool arguments>...
```
Additionally, add an error if the user attempts to use a `PositionalEatArgs`
argument with a value, instead of silently ignoring it. Example:
```
./bin/bugpoint -tool-args=-mpcu=skylake-avx512
bugpoint: for the -tool-args option: This argument does not take a value.
Instead, it consumes any positional arguments until the next recognized option.
```
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46787
llvm-svn: 332311
Summary:
Various path functions were not treating paths consisting of slashes
alone consistently. For example, the iterator-based accessors decomposed the
path "///" into two elements: "/" and ".". This is not too bad, but it
is different from the behavior specified by posix:
```
A pathname that contains ***at least one non-slash character*** and that
ends with one or more trailing slashes shall be resolved as if a single
dot character ( '.' ) were appended to the pathname.
```
More importantly, this was different from how we treated the same path
in the filename+parent_path functions, which decomposed this path into
"." and "". This was completely wrong as it lost the information that
this was an absolute path which referred to the root directory.
This patch fixes this behavior by making sure all functions treat paths
consisting of (back)slashes alone the same way as "/". I.e., the
iterator-based functions will just report one component ("/"), and the
filename+parent_path will decompose them into "/" and "".
A slightly controversial topic here may be the treatment of "//". Posix
says that paths beginning with "//" may have special meaning and indeed
we have code which parses paths like "//net/foo/bar" specially. However,
as we were already not being consistent in parsing the "//" string
alone, and any special parsing for it would complicate the code further,
I chose to treat it the same way as longer sequences of slashes (which
are guaranteed to be the same as "/").
Another slight change of behavior is in the parsing of paths like
"//net//". Previously the last component of this path was ".". However,
as in our parsing the "//net" part in this path was the same as the
"drive" part in "c:\" and the next slash was the "root directory", it
made sense to treat "//net//" the same way as "//net/" (i.e., not to add
the extra "." component at the end).
Reviewers: zturner, rnk, dblaikie, Bigcheese
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45942
llvm-svn: 331876
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
See r331124 for how I made a list of files missing the include.
I then ran this Python script:
for f in open('filelist.txt'):
f = f.strip()
fl = open(f).readlines()
found = False
for i in xrange(len(fl)):
p = '#include "llvm/'
if not fl[i].startswith(p):
continue
if fl[i][len(p):] > 'Config':
fl.insert(i, '#include "llvm/Config/llvm-config.h"\n')
found = True
break
if not found:
print 'not found', f
else:
open(f, 'w').write(''.join(fl))
and then looked through everything with `svn diff | diffstat -l | xargs -n 1000 gvim -p`
and tried to fix include ordering and whatnot.
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 331184
LLVM_ON_WIN32 is set exactly with MSVC and MinGW (but not Cygwin) in
HandleLLVMOptions.cmake, which is where _WIN32 defined too. Just use the
default macro instead of a reinvented one.
See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.
No intended behavior change.
This moves over all uses of the macro, but doesn't remove the definition
of it in (llvm-)config.h yet.
llvm-svn: 331127
Summary:
I am preparing a patch to the path function. While working on it, I
noticed that some of the areas are lacking test coverage (e.g. filename
and parent_path functions), so I add more tests to guard against
regressions there.
I have also found the failure messages hard to understand, so I rewrote
some existing test to give more actionable messages when they fail:
- for tests which run over multiple inputs, I use SCOPED_TRACE, to show
which of the inputs caused the actual failure.
- for comparisons of vectors, I use gmock's container matchers, which
will print out the full container contents (and the elements that
differ) when they fail to match.
Reviewers: zturner, espindola
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45941
llvm-svn: 330691
Failed<ErrorInfoBase>() did not compile, because it was attempting to
create a copy of the Error object when passing it to the nested matcher,
which was not possible because ErrorInfoBase is abstract.
This commit fixes the problem by making sure we pass the ErrorInfo
object by reference, which also improves the handling of non-abstract
objects, as we avoid potentially slicing an object during the copy.
llvm-svn: 329703
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to
llvm::sort. Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the
required patches.
llvm-svn: 329475
Summary:
The LLVM SourceMgr class (which is used indirectly by Swift, though not Clang)
has a routine for looking up line numbers of SMLocs. This routine uses a
shared, special-purpose cache that handles exactly one access pattern
efficiently: looking up the line number of an SMLoc that points into the same
buffer as the last query made to the SourceMgr, at a location in the buffer at
or ahead of the last query.
When this works it's fine, but when it fails it's catastrophic for performancer:
one recent out-of-order access from a Swift utility routine ran for tens of
seconds, spending 99% of its time repeatedly scanning buffers for '\n'.
This change removes the shared cache from the SourceMgr and installs a new
cache in each SrcBuffer. The per-SrcBuffer caches are also "full", in the sense
that rather than caching a single last-query pointer, they cache _all_ the
line-ending offsets, in a binary-searchable array, such that once it's
populated (on first access), all subsequent access patterns run at the same
speed.
Performance measurements I've done show this is actually a little bit faster on
real codebases (though only a couple fractions of a percent). Memory usage is
up by a few tens to hundreds of bytes per SrcBuffer that has a line lookup done
on it; I've attempted to minimize this by using dynamic selection of integer
sized when storing offset arrays. But the main motive here is to
make-impossible the cases we don't always see, that show up by surprise when
there is an out-of-order access pattern.
Reviewers: jordan_rose
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
Subscribers: probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45003
llvm-svn: 329470
Summary:
Previous code hangs indefinitely when trying to iterate through a
symbol link file that points to an non-exist directory. This change
fixes the bug to make the addCollectedPath function exit ealier and
print out correct warning messages.
Patch by Yuke Liao (@liaoyuke).
Reviewers: Dor1s, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: bruno, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44960
llvm-svn: 329338
Summary:
The existing Failed() matcher only allowed asserting that the operation
failed, but it was not possible to verify any details of the returned
error.
This patch adds two new matchers, which make this possible:
- Failed<InfoT>() verifies that the operation failed with a single error
of a given type.
- Failed<InfoT>(M) additionally check that the contained error info
object is matched by the nested matcher M.
To make these work, I've changed the implementation of the ErrorHolder
class. Now, instead of just storing the string representation of the
Error, it fetches the ErrorInfo objects and stores then as a list of
shared pointers. This way, ErrorHolder remains copyable, while still
retaining the full information contained in the Error object.
In case the Error object contains two or more errors, the new matchers
will fail to match, instead of trying to match all (or any) of the
individual ErrorInfo objects. This seemed to be the most sensible
behavior for when one wants to match exact error details, but I could be
convinced otherwise...
Reviewers: zturner, lhames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44925
llvm-svn: 329288
The existing YAML Output::scalarString code path includes a partial and
incorrect implementation of YAML escaping logic. In particular, the logic put
in place in rL321283 escapes non-printable bytes only if they are not part of a
multibyte UTF8 sequence; implicitly this means that all multibyte UTF8
sequences -- printable and non -- are passed through verbatim.
The simplest solution to this is to direct the Output::scalarString method to
use the standalone yaml::escape function, and this _almost_ works, except that
the existing code in that function _over_ escapes: any multibyte UTF8 sequence
is escaped, even printable ones. While this is permitted for YAML, it is also
more aggressive (and hard to read for non-English locales) than necessary,
and the entire point of rL321283 was to back off such aggressive over-escaping.
So in this change, I have both redirected Output::scalarString to use
yaml::escape _and_ modified yaml::escape to optionally restrict its escaping to
non-printables. This preserves behaviour of any existing clients while giving
them a path to more moderate escaping should they desire.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, thegameg, MatzeB, vladimir.plyashkun
Reviewed By: thegameg
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44863
llvm-svn: 328661
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
Provide checkedAdd and checkedMul functions, providing checked
arithmetic on signed integers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43704
llvm-svn: 326516
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
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
'size' of a vector is unsigned, and I accidentially compared
it to an int through GTEST. I switched it to unsigned, which
is the template parameter type anyway.
llvm-svn: 324625
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
Summary:
Discovered when clangd loads YAML symbols, some symbol documentations
start with indicators (e.g. "-"), but YAML prints them as plain scalars
(no quotes), which make the YAML parser fail to parse.
For these kind of strings, we need quotes.
Reviewers: sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: ilya-biryukov, ioeric, llvm-commits, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42362
llvm-svn: 323097
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
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
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
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
Summary:
This makes it possible to run an arbitrary matcher on the value
contained within the Expected<T> object.
To do this, I've needed to fully spell out the matcher, instead of using
the shorthand MATCHER_P macro.
The slight gotcha here is that standard template deduction will fail if
one tries to match HasValue(47) against an Expected<int &> -- the
workaround is to use HasValue(testing::Eq(47)).
The explanations produced by this matcher have changed a bit, since now
we delegate to the nested matcher to print the value. Since these don't
put quotes around the value, I've changed our PrintTo methods to match.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41065
llvm-svn: 320561
Summary:
This did not work because the ExpectedHolder was trying to hold the
value in an Optional<T*>. Instead of trying to mimic the behavior of
Expected and try to make ExpectedHolder work with references and
non-references, I simply store the reference to the Expected object in
the holder.
I also add a bunch of tests for these matchers, which have helped me
flesh out some problems in my initial implementation of this patch, and
uncovered the fact that we are not consistent in quoting our values in
the matcher output (which I also fix).
Reviewers: zturner, chandlerc
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40904
llvm-svn: 320025
We currently use target_link_libraries without an explicit scope
specifier (INTERFACE, PRIVATE or PUBLIC) when linking executables.
Dependencies added in this way apply to both the target and its
dependencies, i.e. they become part of the executable's link interface
and are transitive.
Transitive dependencies generally don't make sense for executables,
since you wouldn't normally be linking against an executable. This also
causes issues for generating install export files when using
LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS. For example, clang has a lot of LLVM
library dependencies, which are currently added as interface
dependencies. If clang is in the distribution components but the LLVM
libraries it depends on aren't (which is a perfectly legitimate use case
if the LLVM libraries are being built static and there are therefore no
run-time dependencies on them), CMake will complain about the LLVM
libraries not being in export set when attempting to generate the
install export file for clang. This is reasonable behavior on CMake's
part, and the right thing is for LLVM's build system to explicitly use
PRIVATE dependencies for executables.
Unfortunately, CMake doesn't allow you to mix and match the keyword and
non-keyword target_link_libraries signatures for a single target; i.e.,
if a single call to target_link_libraries for a particular target uses
one of the INTERFACE, PRIVATE, or PUBLIC keywords, all other calls must
also be updated to use those keywords. This means we must do this change
in a single shot. I also fully expect to have missed some instances; I
tested by enabling all the projects in the monorepo (except dragonegg),
and configuring both with and without shared libraries, on both Darwin
and Linux, but I'm planning to rely on the buildbots for other
configurations (since it should be pretty easy to fix those).
Even after this change, we still have a lot of target_link_libraries
calls that don't specify a scope keyword, mostly for shared libraries.
I'm thinking about addressing those in a follow-up, but that's a
separate change IMO.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40823
llvm-svn: 319840
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
Prevent unloading shared libraries on Linux when dlclose() is called.
This is necessary since command-line option parsing API relies on
registering the global option instances in the option parser instance
which can be loaded in a different shared library.
Given that we can't reliably remove those options when a library is
unloaded, the parser ends up containing dangling references. Since glibc
has relatively complex library unloading rules, some of the LLVM
libraries can be unloaded while others (including the Support library)
stay loaded causing quite a mayhem. To reliably prevent that, just
forbid unloading all libraries -- it's a very bad idea anyway.
While the issue arguably happens only with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS, it may
affect any library reusing llvm::cl interface.
Based on patch provided Ross Hayward on https://bugs.gentoo.org/617154.
Previously hit by Fedora back in Feb 2016:
https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/mesa-dev/2016-February/107242.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40459
llvm-svn: 319105
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
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
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
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
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:
Support formatting formatv_objects.
While here, fix documentation about member-formatters, and attempted
perfect-forwarding (I think).
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38997
llvm-svn: 316330
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
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
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
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
Previously the 'Padding' argument was the number of padding
bytes to add. However most callers that use 'Padding' know
how many overall bytes they need to write. With the previous
code this would mean encoding the LEB once to find out how
many bytes it would occupy and then using this to calulate
the 'Padding' value.
See: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36595
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37494
llvm-svn: 313393
This returns "cortex-a73" for second-generation Kryo; not precisely
correct, but close enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37724
llvm-svn: 313200
Summary:
Change the type of the Redirects parameter of llvm::sys::ExecuteAndWait,
ExecuteNoWait and other APIs that wrap them from `const StringRef **` to
`ArrayRef<Optional<StringRef>>`, which is safer and simplifies the use of these
APIs (no more local StringRef variables just to get a pointer to).
Corresponding clang changes will be posted as a separate patch.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: vsk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37563
llvm-svn: 313155
cantFail is the moral equivalent of an assertion that the wrapped call must
return a success value. This patch allows clients to include an associated
error message (the same way they would for an assertion for llvm_unreachable).
If the error message is not specified it will default to: "Failure value
returned from cantFail wrapped call".
llvm-svn: 312066
Add abstract virtual method setDefault() to class Option and implement it in its inheritors in order to be able to set all the options to its default values in user's code without actually knowing all these options. For instance:
for (auto &OM : cl::getRegisteredOptions(*cl::TopLevelSubCommand)) {
cl::Option *O = OM.second;
O->setDefault();
}
Reviewed by: rampitec, Eugene.Zelenko, kasaurov
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D36877
llvm-svn: 311887
handleExpected is similar to handleErrors, but takes an Expected<T> as its first
input value and a fallback functor as its second, followed by an arbitary list
of error handlers (equivalent to the handler list of handleErrors). If the first
input value is a success value then it is returned from handleErrors
unmodified. Otherwise the contained error(s) are passed to handleErrors, along
with the handlers. If handleErrors returns success (indicating that all errors
have been handled) then handleExpected runs the fallback functor and returns its
result. If handleErrors returns a failure value then the failure value is
returned and the fallback functor is never run.
This simplifies the process of re-trying operations that return Expected values.
Without this utility such retry logic is cumbersome as the internal Error must
be explicitly extracted from the Expected value, inspected to see if its
handleable and then consumed:
enum FooStrategy { Aggressive, Conservative };
Expected<Foo> tryFoo(FooStrategy S);
Expected<Foo> Result;
(void)!!Result; // "Check" Result so that it can be safely overwritten.
if (auto ValOrErr = tryFoo(Aggressive))
Result = std::move(ValOrErr);
else {
auto Err = ValOrErr.takeError();
if (Err.isA<HandleableError>()) {
consumeError(std::move(Err));
Result = tryFoo(Conservative);
} else
return std::move(Err);
}
with handleExpected, this can be re-written as:
auto Result =
handleExpected(
tryFoo(Aggressive),
[]() { return tryFoo(Conservative); },
[](HandleableError&) { /* discard to handle */ });
llvm-svn: 311870
Summary: The expected order of pointer-like keys is hash-function-dependent which in turn depends on the platform/environment. Need to come up with a better way to test reverse iteration of containers with pointer-like keys.
Reviewers: dblaikie, mehdi_amini, efriedma, mgrang
Reviewed By: mgrang
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37128
llvm-svn: 311741
Summary:
If assertions are disabled, but LLVM_ABI_BREAKING_CHANGES is enabled,
this will cause an issue with an unchecked Success. Switching to
consumeError() is the correct way to bypass the check. This patch also
includes disabling 2 tests that can't work without assertions enabled,
since llvm_unreachable() with NDEBUG won't crash.
Reviewers: llvm-commits, lhames
Reviewed By: lhames
Subscribers: lhames, pirama
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36729
llvm-svn: 311739
This just switches handleAllErrors from using custom assertions that all errors
have been handled to using cantFail. This change involves moving some of the
class and function definitions around though.
llvm-svn: 311631