The assertion here was more expensive then it needed to be. We're only inserting allocas in the entry block, so we only need to consider ones in the entry block.
llvm-svn: 233362
This was discussed a while back and I left it optional for migration. Since it's been far more than the 'week or two' that was discussed, time to actually make this manditory.
llvm-svn: 233357
This patch adds support for explicitly provided spill slots in the GC arguments of a gc.statepoint. This is somewhat analogous to gcroot, but leverages the STATEPOINT MI node and StackMap infrastructure. The motivation for this is:
1) The stack spilling code for gc.statepoints hasn't advanced as fast as I'd like. One major option is to give up on doing spilling in the backend and do it at the IR level instead. We'd give up the ability to have gc values in registers, but that's a minor cost in practice. We are not neccessarily moving in that direction, but having the ability to prototype such a thing cheaply is interesting.
2) I want to port the gcroot lowering to use the statepoint infastructure. Given the metadata printers for gcroot expect a fixed set of stack roots, it's easiest to just reuse the explicit stack slots and pass them directly to the underlying statepoint.
I'm holding off on the documentation for the new feature until I'm reasonable sure this is going to stick around.
llvm-svn: 233356
This test returns nonnative integer types which aren't supported on all targets.
The real issue with the SelectionDAG scheduler is with x86 EFLAGS.
llvm-svn: 233355
We don't have any logic to emit those tables yet, so the SDAG lowering
of this intrinsic is just a stub. We can see the intrinsic in the
prepared IR, though.
llvm-svn: 233354
It can happen (by line CurSU->isPending = true; // This SU is not in
AvailableQueue right now.) that a SUnit is mark as available but is
not in the AvailableQueue. For SUnit being selected for scheduling
both conditions must be met.
This patch mainly defensively protects from invalid removing a node
from a queue. Sometimes nodes are marked isAvailable but are not in
the queue because they have been defered due to some hazard.
Patch by Pawel Bylica!
llvm-svn: 233351
Fix testcases whose variables are invalid. I'm working on a patch that
adds `Verifier` checks for `MDLocalVariable` (and `MDGlobalVariable`),
and these failed because:
- `scope:` fields need to point at `MDLocalScope` and can't be null.
- `file:` fields need to point at `MDFile`.
- `inlinedAt:` fields need to point at `MDLocation`.
llvm-svn: 233349
declaration name so that we mark declarations for emission in
a deterministic order (and in turn give them deterministic IDs).
This is the last for loop or data structure I can find by inspection of
the AST writer which doesn't use a deterministic order.
Found by inspection, no test case.
llvm-svn: 233348
Previously, if the expr list parsed fine but the expr to the left of the
open parenthesis was invalid (when parsing the suffix of a
postfix-expression), the parsed expr list was just ignored.
Fixes PR23005.
llvm-svn: 233347
order based on order of insertion.
This should cause both our warnings about these and the modules
serialization to be deterministic as a consequence.
Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 233343
Change `getNonCompileUnitScope()` to return `MDScope` and
`getConstantAsMetadata()` to return `ConstantAsMetadata`. This will
make it easier to start requiring more type safety in the debug info
hierarchy.
llvm-svn: 233340
DeclIDs so that in addition to be grouped by file, the order of these
groups is stable.
Found by inspection, no test case. Not sure this can be observed without
a randomized seed for the hash table, but we shouldn't be relying on the
hash table layout under any circumstances.
llvm-svn: 233339
Move all the `MDNode` field helper methods into a new class,
`MDFieldPrinter`, and add helpers for integers, bools, and `DW_*`
symbolic constants. This reduces a ton of code duplication, and makes
it more mechanical to update `AsmWriter` to print broken code in the
context of stricter accessors (like in r233322).
llvm-svn: 233337
Summary:
This is similar to the change introduced for variable DIEs in r233098. If the
linkage names of functions are missing in the DWARF, then their fully qualified
names (similar to the name that would be got by demangling their linkage name)
is generated using the decl context.
This change fixes TestNamespace when the test case is compiled with GCC, hence
it is enabled for GCC. The test and the test case are also enhanced to cover
variadic functions.
Test Plan: dotest.py -C <clang|gcc> -p TestNamespace
Reviewers: clayborg
Reviewed By: clayborg
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8623
llvm-svn: 233336
rewritten decls for Objective-C modules.
Found by inspection and completely obvious, so no test case. Many of the
remaining determinism fixes won't have precise test cases at this point,
but these are the kinds of things we wouldn't ask for a specific test of
during code review but ask authors to fix. The functionality isn't
changing, and should (he he!) already be tested.
llvm-svn: 233333
traversing the identifier table.
No easy test case as this table is somewhere between hard and impossible
to observe as non-deterministically ordered. The table is a hash table
but we hash the string contents and never remove entries from the table
so the growth pattern, etc, is all completely fixed. However, relying on
the hash function being deterministic is specifically against the
long-term direction of LLVM's hashing datastructures, which are intended
to provide *no* ordering guarantees. As such, this defends against these
things by sorting the identifiers. Sorting identifiers right before we
emit them to a serialized form seems a low cost for predictability here.
llvm-svn: 233332
logic removed.
This logic was both inserting all builtins into the identifier table and
ensuring they would get serialized. The first happens unconditionally
now, and we always write out the entire identifier table. This code can
simply go away.
llvm-svn: 233331
We used to mark a bunch of libm nodes as Expand for f16. There are no
libcalls we can use for those, so we eventually just hit an unhelpful
llvm_unreachable in ExpandFPLibCall.
Instead, just ignore them altogether. If nothing else changes, we'll
then get the more descriptive and pleasant "Cannot select" fatal error.
There's an argument to be made for consistency, but f16 is already
special in all the good ways, and as long as there's no f16 support in
the ops expander (this patch), as well as the Soften/Expand float
legalizers (which, when hit, will currently segfault), I think there's
no point in even pretending we can legalize any of this.
This shouldn't affect anything that's not already broken.
llvm-svn: 233328
constructors in the current lexical context even though name lookup
found them via some other context merged into the redecl chain.
This can only happen for implicit constructors which can only have the
name of the type of the current context, so we can fix this by simply
*always* merging those names first. This also has the advantage of
removing the walk of the current lexical context from the common case
when this is the only constructor name we need to deal with (implicit or
otherwise).
I've enhanced the tests to cover this case (and uncovered an unrelated
bug which I fixed in r233325).
llvm-svn: 233327
deserializing an inherited constructor.
This is the exact same logic we use when deserializing method overrides
for the same reason: the canonical decl may end up pinned to a different
decl when we are improting modules, we need to re-pin to the canonical
one during reading.
My test case for this will come in a subsequent commit. I was trying to
test a more tricky bug fix and the test case happened to tickle this bug
as well.
llvm-svn: 233325
Summary:
The ARM backend can use a loop to implement copying byval parameters before
a call. In non-thumb2 mode it uses a constant pool load to materialize the
trip count. For targets that need movt instead (e.g. Native Client), use
the same code as in thumb2 mode to materialize the trip count.
Reviewers: jfb, t.p.northover
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8442
llvm-svn: 233324
Check accessors of `MDLocation`, and change them to `cast<>` down to the
right types. Also add type-safe factory functions.
All the callers that handle broken code need to use the new versions of
the accessors (`getRawScope()` instead of `getScope()`) that still
return `Metadata*`. This is also necessary for things like
`MDNodeKeyImpl<MDLocation>` (in LLVMContextImpl.h) that need to unique
the nodes when their operands might still be forward references of the
wrong type.
In the `Value` hierarchy, consumers that handle broken code use
`getOperand()` directly. However, debug info nodes have a ton of
operands, and their order (even their existence) isn't stable yet. It's
safer and more maintainable to add an explicit "raw" accessor on the
class itself.
llvm-svn: 233322
Summary:
When the arch is given as "arm" clang uses the default target CPU from
LLVM to determine what the real arch should be (i.e. "arm" becomes
"armv4t" because LLVM's getARMCPUForArch falls back to "arm7tdmi").
Default to "cortex-a8" so that we end up with "armv7" in clang.
the nacl-direct.c test in clang also covers this case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8589
llvm-svn: 233321
There is something in link.exe that requires a relocation to use a
global symbol. Not doing so breaks the chrome build on windows.
This patch sets isWeak for that to work. To compensate,
we then need to look past those symbols when not creating relocations.
This patch includes an ELF test that matches GNU as behaviour.
I am still reducing the chrome build issue and will add a test
once that is done.
llvm-svn: 233318
When no hijack listener is set up, the global event listener will
try to pull events off the queue, racing with the event thread.
By always forcing a hijack listener, even when one was not given,
we guarantee that the listener always gets all events.
This was causing problems in synchronous mode with the process
stop event sometimes never being picked up and causing the debugger
to hang while processing a .lldbinit file.
Reviewed by: Jim Ingham
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8562
llvm-svn: 233315