Commit Graph

1603 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Benjamin Kramer 8bcc971174 Make MemoryBuiltins aware of TargetLibraryInfo.
This disables malloc-specific optimization when -fno-builtin (or -ffreestanding)
is specified. This has been a problem for a long time but became more severe
with the recent memory builtin improvements.

Since the memory builtin functions are used everywhere, this required passing
TLI in many places. This means that functions that now have an optional TLI
argument, like RecursivelyDeleteTriviallyDeadFunctions, won't remove dead
mallocs anymore if the TLI argument is missing. I've updated most passes to do
the right thing.

Fixes PR13694 and probably others.

llvm-svn: 162841
2012-08-29 15:32:21 +00:00
Bill Wendling 8555a37c04 Move the "findUsedStructTypes" functionality outside of the Module class.
The "findUsedStructTypes" method is very expensive to run. It needs to be
optimized so that LTO can run faster. Splitting this method out of the Module
class will help this occur. For instance, it can keep a list of seen objects so
that it doesn't process them over and over again.

llvm-svn: 161228
2012-08-03 00:30:35 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 7d0f110cb3 It's not safe to blindly remove invoke instructions. This happens when we
encounter an invoke of an allocation function. This should fix the dragonegg
bootstrap. Testcase to follow, later.

llvm-svn: 160757
2012-07-25 21:19:40 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 38be931223 Don't delete one more instruction than we're allowed to. This should fix the
Darwin bootstrap. Testcase exists but isn't fully reduced, I expect to commit
the testcase this evening.

llvm-svn: 160693
2012-07-24 21:33:00 +00:00
Nick Lewycky faa9c3b035 Teach globalopt to not nuke all stores to globals. Keep them around of they
might be deliberate "one time" leaks, so that leak checkers can find them.
This is a reapply of r160602 with the fix that this time I'm committing the
code I thought I was committing last time; the I->eraseFromParent() goes
*after* the break out of the loop.

llvm-svn: 160664
2012-07-24 07:21:08 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 9669c198ba Revert r160602.
llvm-svn: 160603
2012-07-21 09:03:15 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 72b83e5eaa Teach globalopt to play nice with leak checkers. This is a reapplication of
r160529 that was subsequently reverted. The fix was to not call
GV->eraseFromParent() right before the caller does the same. The existing
testcases already caught this bug if run under valgrind.

llvm-svn: 160602
2012-07-21 08:29:45 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 7707e23429 Revert r160529 due to crashes.
llvm-svn: 160532
2012-07-19 23:59:21 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 0fa6a28141 Don't wipe out global variables that are probably storing pointers to heap
memory. This makes clang play nice with leak checkers.

llvm-svn: 160529
2012-07-19 22:35:28 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer f364a63c3e Replace some explicit compare loops with std::equal.
No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 160501
2012-07-19 10:46:05 +00:00
Bill Wendling ea6397f67b Remove tabs.
llvm-svn: 160477
2012-07-19 00:11:40 +00:00
Duncan Sands e8ce94fcd7 GlobalOpt forgot to handle bitcast when analyzing globals. Found by inspection.
llvm-svn: 159546
2012-07-02 18:55:39 +00:00
Chandler Carruth aafe0918bc Move llvm/Support/IRBuilder.h -> llvm/IRBuilder.h
This was always part of the VMCore library out of necessity -- it deals
entirely in the IR. The .cpp file in fact was already part of the VMCore
library. This is just a mechanical move.

I've tried to go through and re-apply the coding standard's preferred
header sort, but at 40-ish files, I may have gotten some wrong. Please
let me know if so.

I'll be committing the corresponding updates to Clang and Polly, and
Duncan has DragonEgg.

Thanks to Bill and Eric for giving the green light for this bit of cleanup.

llvm-svn: 159421
2012-06-29 12:38:19 +00:00
Bill Wendling e38859dc8e Move lib/Analysis/DebugInfo.cpp to lib/VMCore/DebugInfo.cpp and
include/llvm/Analysis/DebugInfo.h to include/llvm/DebugInfo.h.

The reasoning is because the DebugInfo module is simply an interface to the
debug info MDNodes and has nothing to do with analysis.

llvm-svn: 159312
2012-06-28 00:05:13 +00:00
Matt Beaumont-Gay a58862310c Revert r159136 due to PR13124.
Original commit message:

If a constant or a function has linkonce_odr linkage and unnamed_addr, mark it
hidden. Being linkonce_odr guarantees that it is available in every dso that
needs it. Being a constant/function with unnamed_addr guarantees that the
copies don't have to be merged.

llvm-svn: 159272
2012-06-27 17:10:33 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 540c3d23df If a constant or a function has linkonce_odr linkage and unnamed_addr, mark it
hidden. Being linkonce_odr guarantees that it is available in every dso that
needs it. Being a constant/function with unnamed_addr guarantees that the
copies don't have to be merged.

llvm-svn: 159136
2012-06-25 14:30:31 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi 704de074b8 llvm/lib: [CMake] Add explicit dependency to intrinsics_gen.
llvm-svn: 159112
2012-06-24 13:32:01 +00:00
Nick Lewycky b74ae9c5b2 Tab to spaces. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 159104
2012-06-24 04:07:14 +00:00
Hans Wennborg cbe34b4cc9 Extend the IL for selecting TLS models (PR9788)
This allows the user/front-end to specify a model that is better
than what LLVM would choose by default. For example, a variable
might be declared as

  @x = thread_local(initialexec) global i32 42

if it will not be used in a shared library that is dlopen'ed.

If the specified model isn't supported by the target, or if LLVM can
make a better choice, a different model may be used.

llvm-svn: 159077
2012-06-23 11:37:03 +00:00
Nuno Lopes 0b60ebbf79 fix whitespace in my last commit.
sorry for the churn :S  enough for today; going to sleep.

llvm-svn: 158953
2012-06-22 00:29:58 +00:00
Nuno Lopes 9792d68381 remove extractMallocCallFromBitCast, since it was tailor maded for its sole user. Update GlobalOpt accordingly.
llvm-svn: 158952
2012-06-22 00:25:01 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 1821c6c3b0 Some optimizations done by globalopt are safe only for internal linkage, not
linkonce linkage. For example, it is not valid to add unnamed_addr.

This also fixes a crash in g++.dg/opt/static5.C.

llvm-svn: 158528
2012-06-15 18:00:24 +00:00
Rafael Espindola def1b09be2 Implement the isSafeToDiscardIfUnused predicate and use it in globalopt and
globaldce. Globaldce was already removing linkonce globals, but globalopt was
not.

llvm-svn: 158476
2012-06-14 22:48:13 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer bde9176663 Fix typos found by http://github.com/lyda/misspell-check
llvm-svn: 157885
2012-06-02 10:20:22 +00:00
Chris Lattner 3cb6f83ebb switch AttrListPtr::get to take an ArrayRef, simplifying a lot of clients.
llvm-svn: 157556
2012-05-28 01:47:44 +00:00
Patrik Hägglund 8a1e316c15 Fix the inliner so that the optsize function attribute don't alter the
inline threshold if the global inline threshold is lower (as for -Oz).

Reviewed by Chandler Carruth and Bill Wendling.

llvm-svn: 157323
2012-05-23 13:42:57 +00:00
Jay Foad ca0c499609 Teach Function::hasAddressTaken that BlockAddress doesn't really take
the address of a function.

llvm-svn: 156703
2012-05-12 08:30:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0fde00150d Move the CodeExtractor utility to a dedicated header file / source file,
and expose it as a utility class rather than as free function wrappers.

The simple free-function interface works well for the bugpoint-specific
pass's uses of code extraction, but in an upcoming patch for more
advanced code extraction, they simply don't expose a rich enough
interface. I need to expose various stages of the process of doing the
code extraction and query information to decide whether or not to
actually complete the extraction or give up.

Rather than build up a new predicate model and pass that into these
functions, just take the class that was actually implementing the
functions and lift it up into a proper interface that can be used to
perform code extraction. The interface is cleaned up and re-documented
to work better in a header. It also is now setup to accept the blocks to
be extracted in the constructor rather than in a method.

In passing this essentially reverts my previous commit here exposing
a block-level query for eligibility of extraction. That is no longer
necessary with the more rich interface as clients can query the
extraction object for eligibility directly. This will reduce the number
of walks of the input basic block sequence by quite a bit which is
useful if this enters the normal optimization pipeline.

llvm-svn: 156163
2012-05-04 10:18:49 +00:00
Bill Wendling 82b90a3804 Add a Fixme.
llvm-svn: 154793
2012-04-16 04:23:52 +00:00
Hal Finkel 204bf5352a By default, use Early-CSE instead of GVN for vectorization cleanup.
As has been suggested by Duncan and others, Early-CSE and GVN should
do similar redundancy elimination, but Early-CSE is much less expensive.
Most of my autovectorization benchmarks show a performance regresion, but
all of these are < 0.1%, and so I think that it is still worth using
the less expensive pass.

llvm-svn: 154673
2012-04-13 17:15:33 +00:00
Bill Wendling 585583c8dd Code-gen may inject code into the IR before it emits the ASM. The linker
obviously cannot know that this code is present, let alone used. So prevent the
internalize pass from internalizing those global values which code-gen may
insert.

llvm-svn: 154645
2012-04-13 01:06:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 7ae90d4d2d Add two statistics to help track how we are computing the inline cost.
Yea, 'NumCallerCallersAnalyzed' isn't a great name, suggestions welcome.

llvm-svn: 154492
2012-04-11 10:15:10 +00:00
Bill Wendling 932b992888 Add an option to turn off the expensive GVN load PRE part of GVN.
llvm-svn: 153902
2012-04-02 22:16:50 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 45ae88f5fc Belatedly address some code review from Chris.
As a side note, I really dislike array_pod_sort... Do we really still
care about any STL implementations that get this so wrong? Does libc++?

llvm-svn: 153834
2012-04-01 10:41:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c5bfb3c0f5 Fix a pretty scary bug I introduced into the always inliner with
a single missing character. Somehow, this had gone untested. I've added
tests for returns-twice logic specifically with the always-inliner that
would have caught this, and fixed the bug.

Thanks to Matt for the careful review and spotting this!!! =D

llvm-svn: 153832
2012-04-01 10:21:05 +00:00
Chandler Carruth a88a0faaa3 Give the always-inliner its own custom filter. It shouldn't have to pay
the very high overhead of the complex inline cost analysis when all it
wants to do is detect three patterns which must not be inlined. Comment
the code, clean it up, and leave some hints about possible performance
improvements if this ever shows up on a profile.

Moving this off of the (now more expensive) inline cost analysis is
particularly important because we have to run this inliner even at -O0.

llvm-svn: 153814
2012-03-31 13:17:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth edd2826f3e Remove a bunch of empty, dead, and no-op methods from all of these
interfaces. These methods were used in the old inline cost system where
there was a persistent cache that had to be updated, invalidated, and
cleared. We're now doing more direct computations that don't require
this intricate dance. Even if we resume some level of caching, it would
almost certainly have a simpler and more narrow interface than this.

llvm-svn: 153813
2012-03-31 12:48:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0539c071ea Initial commit for the rewrite of the inline cost analysis to operate
on a per-callsite walk of the called function's instructions, in
breadth-first order over the potentially reachable set of basic blocks.

This is a major shift in how inline cost analysis works to improve the
accuracy and rationality of inlining decisions. A brief outline of the
algorithm this moves to:

- Build a simplification mapping based on the callsite arguments to the
  function arguments.
- Push the entry block onto a worklist of potentially-live basic blocks.
- Pop the first block off of the *front* of the worklist (for
  breadth-first ordering) and walk its instructions using a custom
  InstVisitor.
- For each instruction's operands, re-map them based on the
  simplification mappings available for the given callsite.
- Compute any simplification possible of the instruction after
  re-mapping, and store that back int othe simplification mapping.
- Compute any bonuses, costs, or other impacts of the instruction on the
  cost metric.
- When the terminator is reached, replace any conditional value in the
  terminator with any simplifications from the mapping we have, and add
  any successors which are not proven to be dead from these
  simplifications to the worklist.
- Pop the next block off of the front of the worklist, and repeat.
- As soon as the cost of inlining exceeds the threshold for the
  callsite, stop analyzing the function in order to bound cost.

The primary goal of this algorithm is to perfectly handle dead code
paths. We do not want any code in trivially dead code paths to impact
inlining decisions. The previous metric was *extremely* flawed here, and
would always subtract the average cost of two successors of
a conditional branch when it was proven to become an unconditional
branch at the callsite. There was no handling of wildly different costs
between the two successors, which would cause inlining when the path
actually taken was too large, and no inlining when the path actually
taken was trivially simple. There was also no handling of the code
*path*, only the immediate successors. These problems vanish completely
now. See the added regression tests for the shiny new features -- we
skip recursive function calls, SROA-killing instructions, and high cost
complex CFG structures when dead at the callsite being analyzed.

Switching to this algorithm required refactoring the inline cost
interface to accept the actual threshold rather than simply returning
a single cost. The resulting interface is pretty bad, and I'm planning
to do lots of interface cleanup after this patch.

Several other refactorings fell out of this, but I've tried to minimize
them for this patch. =/ There is still more cleanup that can be done
here. Please point out anything that you see in review.

I've worked really hard to try to mirror at least the spirit of all of
the previous heuristics in the new model. It's not clear that they are
all correct any more, but I wanted to minimize the change in this single
patch, it's already a bit ridiculous. One heuristic that is *not* yet
mirrored is to allow inlining of functions with a dynamic alloca *if*
the caller has a dynamic alloca. I will add this back, but I think the
most reasonable way requires changes to the inliner itself rather than
just the cost metric, and so I've deferred this for a subsequent patch.
The test case is XFAIL-ed until then.

As mentioned in the review mail, this seems to make Clang run about 1%
to 2% faster in -O0, but makes its binary size grow by just under 4%.
I've looked into the 4% growth, and it can be fixed, but requires
changes to other parts of the inliner.

llvm-svn: 153812
2012-03-31 12:42:41 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 53dc873342 Internalize: Remove reference of @llvm.noinline, it was replaced with the noinline attribute a long time ago.
llvm-svn: 153806
2012-03-31 11:03:47 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer aa9e4a5e59 GlobalOpt: If we have an inbounds GEP from a ConstantAggregateZero global that we just determined to be constant, replace all loads from it with a zero value.
llvm-svn: 153576
2012-03-28 14:50:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b9e35fbc1e Make a seemingly tiny change to the inliner and fix the generated code
size bloat. Unfortunately, I expect this to disable the majority of the
benefit from r152737. I'm hopeful at least that it will fix PR12345. To
explain this requires... quite a bit of backstory I'm afraid.

TL;DR: The change in r152737 actually did The Wrong Thing for
linkonce-odr functions. This change makes it do the right thing. The
benefits we saw were simple luck, not any actual strategy. Benchmark
numbers after a mini-blog-post so that I've written down my thoughts on
why all of this works and doesn't work...

To understand what's going on here, you have to understand how the
"bottom-up" inliner actually works. There are two fundamental modes to
the inliner:

1) Standard fixed-cost bottom-up inlining. This is the mode we usually
   think about. It walks from the bottom of the CFG up to the top,
   looking at callsites, taking information about the callsite and the
   called function and computing th expected cost of inlining into that
   callsite. If the cost is under a fixed threshold, it inlines. It's
   a touch more complicated than that due to all the bonuses, weights,
   etc. Inlining the last callsite to an internal function gets higher
   weighth, etc. But essentially, this is the mode of operation.

2) Deferred bottom-up inlining (a term I just made up). This is the
   interesting mode for this patch an r152737. Initially, this works
   just like mode #1, but once we have the cost of inlining into the
   callsite, we don't just compare it with a fixed threshold. First, we
   check something else. Let's give some names to the entities at this
   point, or we'll end up hopelessly confused. We're considering
   inlining a function 'A' into its callsite within a function 'B'. We
   want to check whether 'B' has any callers, and whether it might be
   inlined into those callers. If so, we also check whether inlining 'A'
   into 'B' would block any of the opportunities for inlining 'B' into
   its callers. We take the sum of the costs of inlining 'B' into its
   callers where that inlining would be blocked by inlining 'A' into
   'B', and if that cost is less than the cost of inlining 'A' into 'B',
   then we skip inlining 'A' into 'B'.

Now, in order for #2 to make sense, we have to have some confidence that
we will actually have the opportunity to inline 'B' into its callers
when cheaper, *and* that we'll be able to revisit the decision and
inline 'A' into 'B' if that ever becomes the correct tradeoff. This
often isn't true for external functions -- we can see very few of their
callers, and we won't be able to re-consider inlining 'A' into 'B' if
'B' is external when we finally see more callers of 'B'. There are two
cases where we believe this to be true for C/C++ code: functions local
to a translation unit, and functions with an inline definition in every
translation unit which uses them. These are represented as internal
linkage and linkonce-odr (resp.) in LLVM. I enabled this logic for
linkonce-odr in r152737.

Unfortunately, when I did that, I also introduced a subtle bug. There
was an implicit assumption that the last caller of the function within
the TU was the last caller of the function in the program. We want to
bonus the last caller of the function in the program by a huge amount
for inlining because inlining that callsite has very little cost.
Unfortunately, the last caller in the TU of a linkonce-odr function is
*not* the last caller in the program, and so we don't want to apply this
bonus. If we do, we can apply it to one callsite *per-TU*. Because of
the way deferred inlining works, when it sees this bonus applied to one
callsite in the TU for 'B', it decides that inlining 'B' is of the
*utmost* importance just so we can get that final bonus. It then
proceeds to essentially force deferred inlining regardless of the actual
cost tradeoff.

The result? PR12345: code bloat, code bloat, code bloat. Another result
is getting *damn* lucky on a few benchmarks, and the over-inlining
exposing critically important optimizations. I would very much like
a list of benchmarks that regress after this change goes in, with
bitcode before and after. This will help me greatly understand what
opportunities the current cost analysis is missing.

Initial benchmark numbers look very good. WebKit files that exhibited
the worst of PR12345 went from growing to shrinking compared to Clang
with r152737 reverted.

- Bootstrapped Clang is 3% smaller with this change.
- Bootstrapped Clang -O0 over a single-source-file of lib/Lex is 4%
  faster with this change.

Please let me know about any other performance impact you see. Thanks to
Nico for reporting and urging me to actually fix, Richard Smith, Duncan
Sands, Manuel Klimek, and Benjamin Kramer for talking through the issues
today.

llvm-svn: 153506
2012-03-27 10:48:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2121199241 Move the instruction simplification of callsite arguments in the inliner
to instead rely on much more generic and powerful instruction
simplification in the function cloner (and thus inliner).

This teaches the pruning function cloner to use instsimplify rather than
just the constant folder to fold values during cloning. This can
simplify a large number of things that constant folding alone cannot
begin to touch. For example, it will realize that 'or' and 'and'
instructions with certain constant operands actually become constants
regardless of what their other operand is. It also can thread back
through the caller to perform simplifications that are only possible by
looking up a few levels. In particular, GEPs and pointer testing tend to
fold much more heavily with this change.

This should (in some cases) have a positive impact on compile times with
optimizations on because the inliner itself will simply avoid cloning
a great deal of code. It already attempted to prune proven-dead code,
but now it will be use the stronger simplifications to prove more code
dead.

llvm-svn: 153403
2012-03-25 04:03:40 +00:00
Kostya Serebryany e505a5abe9 add EP_OptimizerLast extension point
llvm-svn: 153353
2012-03-23 23:22:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b37fc13a36 Rip out support for 'llvm.noinline'. This thing has a strange history...
It was added in 2007 as the first cut at supporting no-inline
attributes, but we didn't have function attributes of any form at the
time. However, it was added without any mention in the LangRef or other
documentation.

Later on, in 2008, Devang added function notes for 'inline=never' and
then turned them into proper function attributes. From that point
onward, as far as I can tell, the world moved on, and no one has touched
'llvm.noinline' in any meaningful way since.

It's time has now come. We have had better mechanisms for doing this for
a long time, all the frontends I'm aware of use them, and this is just
holding back progress. Given that it was never a documented feature of
the IR, I've provided no auto-upgrade support. If people know of real,
in-the-wild bitcode that relies on this, yell at me and I'll add it, but
I *seriously* doubt anyone cares.

llvm-svn: 152904
2012-03-16 06:10:15 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d7a5f2adb0 Start removing the use of an ad-hoc 'never inline' set and instead
directly query the function information which this set was representing.
This simplifies the interface of the inline cost analysis, and makes the
always-inline pass significantly more efficient.

Previously, always-inline would first make a single set of every
function in the module *except* those marked with the always-inline
attribute. It would then query this set at every call site to see if the
function was a member of the set, and if so, refuse to inline it. This
is quite wasteful. Instead, simply check the function attribute directly
when looking at the callsite.

The normal inliner also had similar redundancy. It added every function
in the module with the noinline attribute to its set to ignore, even
though inside the cost analysis function we *already tested* the
noinline attribute and produced the same result.

The only tricky part of removing this is that we have to be able to
correctly remove only the functions inlined by the always-inline pass
when finalizing, which requires a bit of a hack. Still, much less of
a hack than the set of all non-always-inline functions was. While I was
touching this function, I switched a heavy-weight set to a vector with
sort+unique. The algorithm already had a two-phase insert and removal
pattern, we were just needlessly paying the uniquing cost on every
insert.

This probably speeds up some compiles by a small amount (-O0 compiles
with lots of always-inline, so potentially heavy libc++ users), but I've
not tried to measure it.

I believe there is no functional change here, but yell if you spot one.
None are intended.

Finally, the direction this is going in is to greatly simplify the
inline cost query interface so that we can replace its implementation
with a much more clever one. Along the way, all the APIs get simplified,
so it seems incrementally good.

llvm-svn: 152903
2012-03-16 06:10:13 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 30b8416d2c Change where we enable the heuristic that delays inlining into functions
which are small enough to themselves be inlined. Delaying in this manner
can be harmful if the function is inelligible for inlining in some (or
many) contexts as it pessimizes the code of the function itself in the
event that inlining does not eventually happen.

Previously the check was written to only do this delaying of inlining
for static functions in the hope that they could be entirely deleted and
in the knowledge that all callers of static functions will have the
opportunity to inline if it is in fact profitable. However, with C++ we
get two other important sources of functions where the definition is
always available for inlining: inline functions and templated functions.
This patch generalizes the inliner to allow linkonce-ODR (the linkage
such C++ routines receive) to also qualify for this delay-based
inlining.

Benchmarking across a range of large real-world applications shows
roughly 2% size increase across the board, but an average speedup of
about 0.5%. Some benhcmarks improved over 2%, and the 'clang' binary
itself (when bootstrapped with this feature) shows a 1% -O0 performance
improvement when run over all Sema, Lex, and Parse source code smashed
into a single file. A clean re-build of Clang+LLVM with a bootstrapped
Clang shows approximately 2% improvement, but that measurement is often
noisy.

llvm-svn: 152737
2012-03-14 20:16:41 +00:00
Dan Gohman eab06fa3c9 Teach globalopt how to evaluate an invoke with a non-void return type.
llvm-svn: 152634
2012-03-13 18:01:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 595fda8466 When inlining a function and adding its inner call sites to the
candidate set for subsequent inlining, try to simplify the arguments to
the inner call site now that inlining has been performed.

The goal here is to propagate and fold constants through deeply nested
call chains. Without doing this, we loose the inliner bonus that should
be applied because the arguments don't match the exact pattern the cost
estimator uses.

Reviewed on IRC by Benjamin Kramer.

llvm-svn: 152556
2012-03-12 11:19:33 +00:00
Stepan Dyatkovskiy 5b648afb4d Taken into account Duncan's comments for r149481 dated by 2nd Feb 2012:
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20120130/136146.html

Implemented CaseIterator and it solves almost all described issues: we don't need to mix operand/case/successor indexing anymore. Base iterator class is implemented as a template since it may be initialized either from "const SwitchInst*" or from "SwitchInst*".

ConstCaseIt is just a read-only iterator.
CaseIt is read-write iterator; it allows to change case successor and case value.

Usage of iterator allows totally remove resolveXXXX methods. All indexing convertions done automatically inside the iterator's getters.

Main way of iterator usage looks like this:
SwitchInst *SI = ... // intialize it somehow

for (SwitchInst::CaseIt i = SI->caseBegin(), e = SI->caseEnd(); i != e; ++i) {
  BasicBlock *BB = i.getCaseSuccessor();
  ConstantInt *V = i.getCaseValue();
  // Do something.
}

If you want to convert case number to TerminatorInst successor index, just use getSuccessorIndex iterator's method.
If you want initialize iterator from TerminatorInst successor index, use CaseIt::fromSuccessorIndex(...) method.

There are also related changes in llvm-clients: klee and clang.

llvm-svn: 152297
2012-03-08 07:06:20 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer 93887631d9 Plog a memleak in GlobalOpt.
Found by valgrind.

llvm-svn: 151525
2012-02-27 12:48:24 +00:00