to re-export anything that it imports. This opt-in feature makes a
module behave more like a header, because it can be used to re-export
the transitive closure of a (sub)module's dependencies.
llvm-svn: 145811
- Calling getUser in a loop is much more expensive than iterating over a few instructions.
- Use it instead of the open-coded loop in AddrModeMatcher.
- 5% speedup on ARMDisassembler.cpp Release builds.
llvm-svn: 145810
and fixes we did. Now that objective C classes are represented by symbols with
their own type, there were a few more places in the objective C code that needed
to be fixed when searching for dynamic types.
Cleaned up the objective C runtime plug-in a bit to not keep having to create
constant strings and make one less memory access when we find an "isa" in the
objective C cache.
llvm-svn: 145799
We forgot to include the unistd.h header file that defines the
functions mentioned above. This was not a problem with gnu C++ library,
however it did not work for libc++.
llvm-svn: 145790
add them to a fast lookup map. lldb_private::Symtab now export the following
public typedefs:
namespace lldb_private {
class Symtab {
typedef std::vector<uint32_t> IndexCollection;
typedef UniqueCStringMap<uint32_t> NameToIndexMap;
};
}
Clients can then find symbols by name and or type and end up with a
Symtab::IndexCollection that is filled with indexes. These indexes can then
be put into a name to index lookup map and control if the mangled and
demangled names get added to the map:
bool add_demangled = true;
bool add_mangled = true;
Symtab::NameToIndexMap name_to_index;
symtab->AppendSymbolNamesToMap (indexes, add_demangled, add_mangled, name_to_index).
This can be repeated as many times as needed to get a lookup table that
you are happy with, and then this can be sorted:
name_to_index.Sort();
Now name lookups can be done using a subset of the symbols you extracted from
the symbol table. This is currently being used to extract objective C types
from object files when there is no debug info in SymbolFileSymtab.
Cleaned up how the objective C types were being vended to be more efficient
and fixed some errors in the regular expression that was being used.
llvm-svn: 145777
Basically typo correction will try to offer a correction instead of looking into type dependent base classes.
I found this problem while parsing Microsoft ATL code with clang.
llvm-svn: 145772
-15% on ARMDisassembler.cpp (Release build). It's not that great to add another
layer of caching to the caching-heavy LVI but I don't see a better way.
llvm-svn: 145770
libgcc sets the stack limit field in TCB to 256 bytes above the actual
allocated stack limit. This means if the function's stack frame needs
less than 256 bytes, we can just compare the stack pointer with the
stack limit. This should result in lesser calls to __morestack.
llvm-svn: 145766
Currently LLVM pads the call to __morestack with a add and sub of 8
bytes to esp. This isn't correct since __morestack expects the call
to be followed directly by a ret.
This commit also adjusts the relevant test-case.
llvm-svn: 145765
class. The thing with Objective C classes is the debug info might have a
definition that isn't just a forward decl, but it is incomplete. So we need to
look and see if we can find the complete definition and avoid recursing a lot
due to the fact that our accelerator tables will have many versions of the
type, but only one complete one. We might not also have the complete type
and we need to deal with this correctly.
llvm-svn: 145759
Objective-C, making symbol lookups for various raw
Objective-C symbols work correctly. The IR interpreter
makes these lookups because Clang has emitted raw
symbol references for ivars and classes.
Also improved performance in SymbolFiles, caching the
result of asking for SymbolFile abilities.
llvm-svn: 145758
when deserialized, fixing random crashes in libclang.
Also simplifies how OpaqueValueExprs are [de]serialized.
The reader/writer automatically retains pointer equality of sub-statements (when a
statement node is referenced in multiple nodes), so no need to manually handle it.
llvm-svn: 145752
for all our external AST sources that lets us associate
arbitrary flags with the types we put into the AST
contexts. Also added an API on ClangASTContext that
allows access to these flags given only an ASTContext
and a type.
Because we don't have access to RTTI, and because at
some point in the future we might encounter external
AST sources that we didn't make (so they don't subclass
ClangExternalASTSourceCommon) I added a magic number
that we check before doing anything else, so that we
can catch that problem as soon as it appears.
llvm-svn: 145748
the same value) to this variable. This code could be refactored, but it doesn't
matter since the old JIT is going away. Add tsan annotations to ignore the
race.
llvm-svn: 145745
object file can correctly make these symbols which will abstract us from the
file format and ABI and we can then ask for the objective C class symbol for
a class and find out which object file it was defined in.
llvm-svn: 145744
the function it is being asked to step through, so that even if we get the trampoline
target wrong (for instance) we will still not lose control.
The other fix here is to tighten up the handling of the case where the current plan
doesn't explain the stop, but a plan above us does. In that case, if the plan that
does explain the stop says it is done, we need to clean up the plans below it and
continue on with our processing.
llvm-svn: 145740