In particular, the function definition is not marked strictfp despite
containing a function marked strictfp. Also, if any function call is marked
strictfp then all function calls in that function must be marked.
This change to move the one strictfp call to a new properly marked function
meets all the new rules.
Tested with a stricter version of D68233.
Reviewed by: spatel
Approved by: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68713
llvm-svn: 374186
The changes here are based on the corresponding diffs for allowing FMF on 'select':
D61917 <https://reviews.llvm.org/D61917>
As discussed there, we want to have fast-math-flags be a property of an FP value
because the alternative (having them on things like fcmp) leads to logical
inconsistency such as:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38086
The earlier patch for select made almost no practical difference because most
unoptimized conditional code begins life as a phi (based on what I see in clang).
Similarly, I don't expect this patch to do much on its own either because
SimplifyCFG promptly drops the flags when converting to select on a minimal
example like:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39535
But once we have this plumbing in place, we should be able to wire up the FMF
propagation and start solving cases like that.
The change to RecurrenceDescriptor::AddReductionVar() is required to prevent a
regression in a LoopVectorize test. We are intersecting the FMF of any
FPMathOperator there, so if a phi is not properly annotated, new math
instructions may not be either. Once we fix the propagation in SimplifyCFG, it
may be safe to remove that hack.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67564
llvm-svn: 372878
The changes here are based on the corresponding diffs for allowing FMF on 'select':
D61917
As discussed there, we want to have fast-math-flags be a property of an FP value
because the alternative (having them on things like fcmp) leads to logical
inconsistency such as:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38086
The earlier patch for select made almost no practical difference because most
unoptimized conditional code begins life as a phi (based on what I see in clang).
Similarly, I don't expect this patch to do much on its own either because
SimplifyCFG promptly drops the flags when converting to select on a minimal
example like:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39535
But once we have this plumbing in place, we should be able to wire up the FMF
propagation and start solving cases like that.
The change to RecurrenceDescriptor::AddReductionVar() is required to prevent a
regression in a LoopVectorize test. We are intersecting the FMF of any
FPMathOperator there, so if a phi is not properly annotated, new math
instructions may not be either. Once we fix the propagation in SimplifyCFG, it
may be safe to remove that hack.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67564
llvm-svn: 372866
Summary:
Add function to AutoUpgrade to change the datalayout of old X86 datalayout strings.
This adds "-p270:32:32-p271:32:32-p272:64:64" to X86 datalayouts that are otherwise valid
and don't already contain it.
This also removes the compatibility changes in https://reviews.llvm.org/D66843.
Datalayout change in https://reviews.llvm.org/D64931.
Reviewers: rnk, echristo
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67631
llvm-svn: 372267
We cannot create null constants for certain types, e.g. VoidTy,
FunctionTy or LabelTy. getNullValue asserts if we pass in an
unsupported type. We should also check for opaque types, but I'm not
sure how.
This fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=14795.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, jfb, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65897
llvm-svn: 369557
Summary:
This is a tweak to r368311 and r368646 which auto upgrades the calls to
objc runtime functions to objc runtime intrinsics, in order to make sure
that the auto upgrader does not trigger with up-to-date bitcode.
It is possible for bitcode that is up-to-date to contain direct calls to
objc runtime function and those are not inserted by compiler as part of
ARC and they should not be upgraded. Now auto upgrader only triggers as
when the old style of ARC marker is used so it is guaranteed that it
won't trigger on update-to-date bitcode.
This also means it won't do this upgrade for bitcode from llvm-8 and
llvm-9, which preserves the behavior of those releases. Ideally they
should be upgraded as well but it is more important to make sure
AutoUpgrader will not trigger on up-to-date bitcode.
Reviewers: ahatanak, rjmccall, dexonsmith, pete
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Subscribers: hiraditya, jkorous, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66153
llvm-svn: 368730
to intrinsic calls
This fixes a bug in r368311.
It turns out that the ARC runtime functions in the IR can have pointer
parameter types that are not i8* or i8**. Instead of RAUWing normal
functions with intrinsics, manually bitcast the arguments before passing
them to the intrinsic functions and bitcast the return value back to the
type of the original call instruction.
This recommits r368634, which was reverted in r368637. The loop in the
patch was iterating over uses of a function and deleting function calls
inside it, which caused bots to crash.
rdar://problem/54125406
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66047
llvm-svn: 368646
to intrinsic calls
This fixes a bug in r368311.
It turns out that the ARC runtime functions in the IR can have pointer
parameter types that are not i8* or i8**. Instead of RAUWing normal
functions with intrinsics, manually bitcast the arguments before passing
them to the intrinsic functions and bitcast the return value back to the
type of the original call instruction.
rdar://problem/54125406
llvm-svn: 368634
the bitcode has the arm64 retainAutoreleasedReturnValue marker
The ARC middle-end passes stopped optimizing or transforming bitcode
that has been compiled with old compilers after we started emitting
calls to ARC runtime functions as intrinsic calls instead of normal
function calls in the front-end and made changes to teach the ARC
middle-end passes about those intrinsics (see r349534). This patch
converts calls to ARC runtime functions that are not intrinsic functions
to intrinsic function calls if the bitcode has the arm64
retainAutoreleasedReturnValue marker. Checking for the presence of the
marker is necessary to make sure we aren't changing ARC function calls
that were originally MRR message sends (see r349952).
rdar://problem/53280660
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65902
llvm-svn: 368311
For consistency with normal instructions and clarity when reading IR,
it's best to print the %0, %1, ... names of function arguments in
definitions.
Also modifies the parser to accept IR in that form for obvious reasons.
llvm-svn: 367755
Add a new serializer, using a binary format based on the LLVM bitstream
format.
This format provides a way to serialize the remarks in two modes:
1) Separate mode: the metadata is separate from the remark entries.
2) Standalone mode: the metadata and the remark entries are in the same
file.
The format contains:
* a meta block: container version, container type, string table,
external file path, remark version
* a remark block: type, remark name, pass name, function name, debug
file, debug line, debug column, hotness, arguments (key, value, debug
file, debug line, debug column)
A string table is required for this format, which will be dumped in the
meta block to be consumed before parsing the remark blocks.
On clang itself, we noticed a size reduction of 13.4x compared to YAML,
and a compile-time reduction of between 1.7% and 3.5% on CTMark.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63466
Original llvm-svn: 367364
Revert llvm-svn: 367370
llvm-svn: 367372
Add a new serializer, using a binary format based on the LLVM bitstream
format.
This format provides a way to serialize the remarks in two modes:
1) Separate mode: the metadata is separate from the remark entries.
2) Standalone mode: the metadata and the remark entries are in the same
file.
The format contains:
* a meta block: container version, container type, string table,
external file path, remark version
* a remark block: type, remark name, pass name, function name, debug
file, debug line, debug column, hotness, arguments (key, value, debug
file, debug line, debug column)
A string table is required for this format, which will be dumped in the
meta block to be consumed before parsing the remark blocks.
On clang itself, we noticed a size reduction of 13.4x compared to YAML,
and a compile-time reduction of between 1.7% and 3.5% on CTMark.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63466
llvm-svn: 367364
Summary:
In D62801, new function attribute `willreturn` was introduced. In short, a function with `willreturn` is guaranteed to come back to the call site(more precise definition is in LangRef).
In this patch, willreturn is annotated for LLVM intrinsics.
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: jvesely, nhaehnle, sstefan1, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64904
llvm-svn: 367184
For aliases, any expression that lowers at the MC level to global_object or
global_object+constant is valid at the object file level. getBaseObject()
should return a result if the aliasee ends up being of that form even if
the IR used to produce it is somewhat unconventional.
Note that this is different from what stripInBoundsOffsets() and that family
of functions is doing. Those functions are concerned about semantic properties
of IR, whereas here we only care about the lowering result.
Therefore reimplement getBaseObject() in a way that matches the lowering
result. This fixes a crash when producing a summary for aliases such as
that in the included test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65115
llvm-svn: 366952
Add "memtag" sanitizer that detects and mitigates stack memory issues
using armv8.5 Memory Tagging Extension.
It is similar in principle to HWASan, which is a software implementation
of the same idea, but there are enough differencies to warrant a new
sanitizer type IMHO. It is also expected to have very different
performance properties.
The new sanitizer does not have a runtime library (it may grow one
later, along with a "debugging" mode). Similar to SafeStack and
StackProtector, the instrumentation pass (in a follow up change) will be
inserted in all cases, but will only affect functions marked with the
new sanitize_memtag attribute.
Reviewers: pcc, hctim, vitalybuka, ostannard
Subscribers: srhines, mehdi_amini, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cryptoad, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64169
llvm-svn: 366123
This recommits r365750 (git commit 8b222ecf27)
Original message:
Currently invalid bitcode files can cause a crash, when OpNum exceeds
the number of elements in Record, like in the attached bitcode file.
The test case was generated by clusterfuzz: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=15698
Reviewers: t.p.northover, thegameg, jfb
Reviewed By: jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64507
llvm-svn: 365750jkkkk
llvm-svn: 366018
At the moment, bitcode files with invalid forward reference can easily
cause the bitcode reader to run out of memory, by creating a forward
reference with a very high index.
We can use the size of the bitcode file as an upper bound, because a
valid bitcode file can never contain more records. This should be
sufficient to fail early in most cases. The only exception is large
files with invalid forward references close to the file size.
There are a couple of clusterfuzz runs that fail with out-of-memory
because of very high forward references and they should be fixed by this
patch.
A concrete example for this is D64507, which causes out-of-memory on
systems with low memory, like the hexagon upstream bots.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, thegameg, jfb, efriedma, hfinkel
Reviewed By: jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64577
llvm-svn: 366017
Introduce and deduce "nosync" function attribute to indicate that a function
does not synchronize with another thread in a way that other thread might free memory.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, jfb, nhaehnle, arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, hfinkel, nhaenhle, mehdi_amini, steven_wu,
dexonsmith, arsenm, uenoku, hiraditya, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62766
llvm-svn: 365830
Currently invalid bitcode files can cause a crash, when OpNum exceeds
the number of elements in Record, like in the attached bitcode file.
The test case was generated by clusterfuzz: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=15698
Reviewers: t.p.northover, thegameg, jfb
Reviewed By: jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64507
llvm-svn: 365750
We are about to add enum attributes with AttrKind numbers >= 63. This
means we cannot use AttrKind #63 to test for an invalid attribute number
in the RAW format anymore. This patch changes the number of an invalid
attribute to #255. There is no change to the character of the tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64531
llvm-svn: 365722
This patch adds a function attribute, nofree, to indicate that a function does
not, directly or indirectly, call a memory-deallocation function (e.g., free,
C++'s operator delete).
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49165
llvm-svn: 365336
Reintroduces the scalable vector IR type from D32530, after it was reverted
a couple of times due to increasing chromium LTO build times. This latest
incarnation removes the walk over aggregate types from the verifier entirely,
in favor of rejecting scalable vectors in the isValidElementType methods in
ArrayType and StructType. This removes the 70% degradation observed with
the second repro tarball from PR42210.
Reviewers: thakis, hans, rengolin, sdesmalen
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64079
llvm-svn: 365203
It's possible that some function can load and store the same
variable using the same constant expression:
store %Derived* @foo, %Derived** bitcast (%Base** @bar to %Derived**)
%42 = load %Derived*, %Derived** bitcast (%Base** @bar to %Derived**)
The bitcast expression was mistakenly cached while processing loads,
and never examined later when processing store. This caused @bar to
be mistakenly treated as read-only variable. See load-store-caching.ll.
llvm-svn: 365188
This reverts r365040 (git commit 5cacb91475)
Speculatively reverting, since this appears to have broken check-lld on
Linux. Partial analysis in https://crbug.com/981168.
llvm-svn: 365097
This patch adjusts tests not to depend on deprecated FileCheck
behavior that permits overlapping matches within a block of
`CHECK-DAG` directives:
1. `thinlto-function-summary-originalnames.ll`: The directive with the
pattern `<COMBINED` is surely intended to match `<COMBINED ` (note the
trailing space), but it instead matches
`<COMBINED_GLOBALVAR_INIT_REFS`, for which there is a separate
directive. With the deprecated behavior, both directives match the
latter text and neither match the former text. I've adjusted the
former directive so it matches only the former text.
2. `thinlto-summary-local-5.0.ll`: Two directives have identical
patterns when they were clearly meant to have different patterns.
3. `upgrade-pointer-address-space.ll`: There are three identical
directives but only two occurrences of the matching text. With the
deprecated behavior, they always match exactly the same text, so the
behavior can't have been useful. I removed one of the directives and
converted the other two from `CHECK-DAG` to `CHECK`.
Reviewed By: probinson, aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64036
llvm-svn: 365060
This patch introduces a new function attribute, willreturn, to indicate
that a call of this function will either exhibit undefined behavior or
comes back and continues execution at a point in the existing call stack
that includes the current invocation.
This attribute guarantees that the function does not have any endless
loops, endless recursion, or terminating functions like abort or exit.
Patch by Hideto Ueno (@uenoku)
Reviewers: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62801
llvm-svn: 364555
There is existing bitcode that we need to support where the structured nature
of pointer types is used to derive the result type of some operation. For
example a GEP's operation and result will be based on its input Type.
When pointers become opaque, the BitcodeReader will still have access to this
information because it's explicitly told how to construct the more complex
types used, but this information will not be attached to any Value that gets
looked up. This changes BitcodeReader so that in all places which use type
information in this manner, it's derived from a side-table rather than from the
Value in question.
llvm-svn: 364550
We saw a 70% ThinLTO link time increase in Chromium for Android, see
crbug.com/978817. Sounds like more of PR42210.
> Recommit of D32530 with a few small changes:
> - Stopped recursively walking through aggregates in
> the verifier, so that we don't impose too much
> overhead on large modules under LTO (see PR42210).
> - Changed tests to match; the errors are slightly
> different since they only report the array or
> struct that actually contains a scalable vector,
> rather than all aggregates which contain one in
> a nested member.
> - Corrected an older comment
>
> Reviewers: thakis, rengolin, sdesmalen
>
> Reviewed By: sdesmalen
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63321
llvm-svn: 364543
The bitstream reader handles errors poorly. This has two effects:
* Bugs in file handling (especially modules) manifest as an "unexpected end of
file" crash
* Users of clang as a library end up aborting because the code unconditionally
calls `report_fatal_error`
The bitstream reader should be more resilient and return Expected / Error as
soon as an error is encountered, not way late like it does now. This patch
starts doing so and adopting the error handling where I think it makes sense.
There's plenty more to do: this patch propagates errors to be minimally useful,
and follow-ups will propagate them further and improve diagnostics.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42311
<rdar://problem/33159405>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63518
llvm-svn: 364464
Recommit of D32530 with a few small changes:
- Stopped recursively walking through aggregates in
the verifier, so that we don't impose too much
overhead on large modules under LTO (see PR42210).
- Changed tests to match; the errors are slightly
different since they only report the array or
struct that actually contains a scalable vector,
rather than all aggregates which contain one in
a nested member.
- Corrected an older comment
Reviewers: thakis, rengolin, sdesmalen
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63321
llvm-svn: 363658
This patch changes how LLVM handles the accumulator/start value
in the reduction, by never ignoring it regardless of the presence of
fast-math flags on callsites. This change introduces the following
new intrinsics to replace the existing ones:
llvm.experimental.vector.reduce.fadd -> llvm.experimental.vector.reduce.v2.fadd
llvm.experimental.vector.reduce.fmul -> llvm.experimental.vector.reduce.v2.fmul
and adds functionality to auto-upgrade existing LLVM IR and bitcode.
Reviewers: RKSimon, greened, dmgreen, nikic, simoll, aemerson
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60261
llvm-svn: 363035
When we switch to opaque pointer types we will need some way to describe
how many bytes a 'byval' parameter should occupy on the stack. This adds
a (for now) optional extra type parameter.
If present, the type must match the pointee type of the argument.
The original commit did not remap byval types when linking modules, which broke
LTO. This version fixes that.
Note to front-end maintainers: if this causes test failures, it's probably
because the "byval" attribute is printed after attributes without any parameter
after this change.
llvm-svn: 362128
When we switch to opaque pointer types we will need some way to describe
how many bytes a 'byval' parameter should occupy on the stack. This adds
a (for now) optional extra type parameter.
If present, the type must match the pointee type of the argument.
Note to front-end maintainers: if this causes test failures, it's probably
because the "byval" attribute is printed after attributes without any parameter
after this change.
llvm-svn: 362012
* Adds a 'scalable' flag to VectorType
* Adds an 'ElementCount' class to VectorType to pass (possibly scalable) vector lengths, with overloaded operators.
* Modifies existing helper functions to use ElementCount
* Adds support for serializing/deserializing to/from both textual and bitcode IR formats
* Extends the verifier to reject global variables of scalable types
* Updates documentation
See the latest version of the RFC here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-July/124396.html
Reviewers: rengolin, lattner, echristo, chandlerc, hfinkel, rkruppe, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, greened, sebpop
Reviewed By: hfinkel, sebpop
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32530
llvm-svn: 361953