The ARM assembler allows register alias redefinitions as long as it
targets the same register. r222319 broke that. In the AArch64 case
it would just produce a new warning, but in the ARM case it would
error out on previously accepted assembler.
llvm-svn: 228109
update_llc_test_checks.py.
The exact format of the checks has changed over time. This includes
different indenting rules, new shuffle comments that have been added,
and more operand hiding behind regular expressions.
No functional change to the tests are expected here, but this will make
subsequent patches have a clean diff as they change shuffle lowering.
llvm-svn: 228097
update_llc_test_checks.py script uses, and refresh the checks in this
test.
No functionality changed here, just bringing this test up to work with
automated updates using the python script.
llvm-svn: 228096
This will make it easy to update as I change some parts of the X86
backend, makes it more clear what instruction differences are
introduced, and I find it makes it a bit easier to read as well.
llvm-svn: 228095
This pass is responsible for figuring out where to place call safepoints and safepoint polls. It doesn't actually make the relocations explicit; that's the job of the RewriteStatepointsForGC pass (http://reviews.llvm.org/D6975).
Note that this code is not yet finalized. Its moving in tree for incremental development, but further cleanup is needed and will happen over the next few days. It is not yet part of the standard pass order.
Planned changes in the near future:
- I plan on restructuring the statepoint rewrite to use the functions add to the IRBuilder a while back.
- In the current pass, the function "gc.safepoint_poll" is treated specially but is not an intrinsic. I plan to make identifying the poll function a property of the GCStrategy at some point in the near future.
- As follow on patches, I will be separating a collection of test cases we have out of tree and submitting them upstream.
- It's not explicit in the code, but these two patches are introducing a new state for a statepoint which looks a lot like a patchpoint. There's no a transient form which doesn't yet have the relocations explicitly represented, but does prevent reordering of memory operations. Once this is in, I need to update actually make this explicit by reserving the 'unused' argument of the statepoint as a flag, updating the docs, and making the code explicitly check for such a thing. This wasn't really planned, but once I split the two passes - which was done for other reasons - the intermediate state fell out. Just reminds us once again that we need to merge statepoints and patchpoints at some point in the not that distant future.
Future directions planned:
- Identifying more cases where a backedge safepoint isn't required to ensure timely execution of a safepoint poll.
- Tweaking the insertion process to generate easier to optimize IR. (For example, investigating making SplitBackedge) the default.
- Adding opt-in flags for a GCStrategy to use this pass. Once done, add this pass to the actual pass ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6981
llvm-svn: 228090
Previously, when the following piece of code was compiled, clang would
incorrectly warn that the size of "wide_two" does not match register size
specified by the constraint and modifier":
long wide_two = two;
asm ("%w0 %1" : "+r" (one), "+r"(wide_two));
This was caused by a miscalculation of ConstraintIdx in Sema::ActOnGCCAsmStmt.
This commit fixes PR21270 and rdar://problem/18668354.
llvm-svn: 228089
The llvm-level tests for coverage mapping need a binary input file,
which means they're hard to understand, hard to update, and it's
difficult to add new ones. By adding some unit tests that build up the
coverage data structures in C++, we can write more meaningful and
targeted tests.
llvm-svn: 228084
This preserves the handy functionality of force-enabling the MachineVerifier, without the need to embed usage of environment variables in LLVM client applications.
llvm-svn: 228079
This may be a little bit inefficient than the original code
but that should be okay as this is not really in a performance
critical pass.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7393
llvm-svn: 228077
number of bytes to write into the inferior process, the "default byte size" will be 1.
In that case, we want to copy the entire file into memory. The code was looking for
a default byte size of 0 to indicate that the user had not provided a specific # of
bytes to copy; adjust that to 1 to match the actual default value.
<rdar://problem/18074973>
llvm-svn: 228067
Patch by: Igor Laevsky
"This change generalizes statepoint verification to use ImmutableCallSite instead of CallInst. This will allow to easily implement invoke statepoint verification (in a following change)."
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7308
llvm-svn: 228064
We would synthesize memcpy intrinsics when emitting calls to trivial C++
constructors but we wouldn't take into account the alignment of the
destination.
llvm-svn: 228061
INPUT directive is a variant of GROUP in the sense that that specifies
a list of input files. The only difference is whether the entire file
list is wrapped with a --start-group/--end-group or not.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7390
llvm-svn: 228060
There are four major kinds of declarations that cause code generation:
- FunctionDecl (includes CXXMethodDecl etc)
- ObjCMethodDecl
- BlockDecl
- CapturedDecl
This patch tracks __try usage on FunctionDecls and diagnoses __try usage
in other decls. If someone wants to use __try from ObjC, they can use it
from a free function, since the ObjC code will need an ObjC-style EH
personality.
Eventually we will want to look through CapturedDecls and track SEH
usage on the parent FunctionDecl, if present.
llvm-svn: 228058
Summary:
The Android dynamic linker reports only the basename of each SO entry, so for
the above check to be successful, we need to compare it to the basename of the
main executable.
This also has a nasty side-effect when working with older version of
Android (verified on platform version 16), and debugging PIE
executables: the dynamic linker has a bug and reports the load address
of the main executable (which is a shared object, because PIE) to be 0.
We then try to update the list of loaded sections for all shared
objects, including the main executable, and set the load address to 0,
which breaks everything that relies on resolving addresses in the main
executable (breakpoints, stepping, etc). This commit also fixes that broken
behavior when debugging on older Androids. This bug doesn't happen on newer
Android versions (verified for Android L).
Test Plan: Run test suite on linux.
Reviewers: clayborg, tfiala, richard.mitton
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7188
llvm-svn: 228057
I've noticed this while trying to move addRuntimeCheck to LoopAccessAnalysis.
I think that the intention was to early exit from the overflow checking before
the code for the memchecks. This is the entire reason why we compute
FirstCheckInst but then we don't use that as the splitting instruction but the
final check. Looks like an oversight.
llvm-svn: 228056