I think, in principle, intrinsics_gen may be added explicitly.
That said, it can be added incidentally, since each target already has dependencies to llvm-tblgen.
Almost all source files depend on both CommonTaleGen and intrinsics_gen.
Explicit add_dependencies() have been pruned under lib/Target.
llvm-svn: 195929
add_public_tablegen_target adds *CommonTableGen to LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS.
LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS affects add_llvm_library (and other add_target stuff) within its scope.
llvm-svn: 195927
In some case, it may be required to build LLVM in C++11 mode, as some the subprojects (like lldb) requires it.
This mimics the autoconf behaviour.
However, given the discussions on the switch to C++11 of the codebase, this behaviour should evolve to default to C++11 with some checks of the compiler capabilities.
llvm-svn: 195727
for release builds.
This is a follow-up to r194589. Aaron pointed out that building
libraries with /MT and using them in an application that uses a
different run-time library can be a bad idea.
Move the option to build with /MT behind a CMake option so it can be
turned on selectively, such as when building the toolchain installer.
llvm-svn: 194596
This should fix the problem of snapshot builds created with MSVC 2012 not
working for users with MSVC 2010, etc.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2157
llvm-svn: 194589
After r192904, Reid pointed out he thought we already set the stack
size for MSVC. Turns out we did, but it didn't seem to work.
This commit sets the stack size in a single place, using
CMAKE_EXE_LINKER_FLAGS because that seems to be the way that works
best.
llvm-svn: 192912
Compiling under Visual C++ 2012 with the default stack size of 1MB, the stack
overflows at a depth of 216 template instantiations, well before the 256
default limit. This patch modifies the default MSVC stack size to 2MB.
Patch by Yaron Keren!
llvm-svn: 192904
Summary:
The MSVCRT deliberately sends main() code-page specific characters.
This isn't too useful to LLVM as we end up converting the arguments to
UTF-16 and subsequently attempt to use the result as, for example, a
file name. Instead, we need to have the ability to access the Unicode
command line and transform it to UTF-8.
This has the distinct advantage over using the MSVC-specific wmain()
function as our entry point because:
- It doesn't work on cygwin.
- It only work on MinGW with caveats and only then on certain versions.
- We get to keep our entry point as main(). :)
N.B. This patch includes fixes to other parts of lib/Support/Windows
s.t. we would be able to take advantage of getting the Unicode paths.
E.G. clang spawning clang -cc1 would want to give it Unicode arguments.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, Bigcheese, rnk, ruiu
Reviewed By: rnk
CC: llvm-commits, ygao
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1834
llvm-svn: 192069
I got a report of a hang in git's helper functions trying to figure out
how to display results of "git svn info" when run inside ninja, even though
the result is immediately piped to grep. This seems to avoid that.
llvm-svn: 190808
This allows the logic to work with Git, and also uses the variable names
to match what Clang is actually looking for.
This changes the interface of GetSVN.cmake. Clang change to follow.
llvm-svn: 190556
It was removed in r189130, but it turns out this makes life hard for
folks packaging LLVM and Clang and building the latter based on the
LLVM package.
Note that this only adds back the LLVM tblgen, and it's obviously
not included when LLVM_INSTALL_TOOLCHAIN_ONLY is set.
llvm-svn: 190419
Xcode always puts executable targets in the directory
bin/<Config>. When building separate LLVM and Clang projects for
Xcode, this prevents the CMake-configured project for Clang from
finding llvm-tblgen. Add a symlink so that tblgen executables are
always available in bin/ (regardless of the configuration LLVM is
built with).
llvm-svn: 189220
Allow CMake to pick up external projects in llvm/tools without the need to modify the "llvm/tools/CMakeLists.txt" file.
This makes it easier to work with projects that live in other repositories, without needing to specify each one in "llvm/tools/CMakeLists.txt".
llvm-svn: 188921
library for color support detection. This still will use a curses
library if that is all we have available on the system. This change
tries to use a smaller subset of the curses library, specifically the
subset that is on some systems split off into a separate library. For
example, if you install ncurses configured --with-tinfo, a 'libtinfo' is
install that provides just the terminfo querying functionality. That
library is now used instead of curses when it is available.
This happens to fix a build error on systems with that library because
when we tried to link ncurses into the binary, we didn't pull tinfo in
as well. =]
It should also provide an easy path for supporting the NetBSD
libterminfo library, but as I don't have access to a NetBSD system I'm
leaving adding that support to those folks.
llvm-svn: 188160
using it to detect whether or not a terminal supports colors. This
replaces a particularly egregious hack that merely compared the TERM
environment variable to "dumb". That doesn't really translate to
a reasonable experience for users that have actually ensured their
terminal's capabilities are accurately reflected.
This makes testing a terminal for color support somewhat more expensive,
but it is called very rarely anyways. The important fast path when the
output is being piped somewhere is already in place.
The global lock may seem excessive, but the spec for calling into curses
is *terrible*. The whole library is terrible, and I spent quite a bit of
time looking for a better way of doing this before convincing myself
that this was the fundamentally correct way to behave. The damage of the
curses library is very narrowly confined, and we continue to use raw
escape codes for actually manipulating the colors which is a much sane
system than directly using curses here (IMO).
If this causes trouble for folks, please let me know. I've tested it on
Linux and will watch the bots carefully. I've also worked to account for
the variances of curses interfaces that I could finde documentation for,
but that may not have been sufficient.
llvm-svn: 187874
The issue is that CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=ON was
not building with assertions enabled. (I was unable to find what in the LLVM
source tree was adding -DNDEBUG to the build line in this case, so decided that
it must be cmake itself that was adding it - this may depend on the cmake
version). The fix treats any mode that is not Debug as being the same as
Release for this purpose (previously it was being assumed that cmake would only
add -DNDEBUG for Release and not for RelWithDebInfo or MinSizeRel). If other
versions of cmake don't add -DNDEBUG for RelWithDebInfo then that's OK: with
this change you just get a useless but harmless -UNDEBUG or -DNDEBUG.
llvm-svn: 186499
to have them appear in the right order. Instead append all warnings explicitly
to the language flags. This was already the case for many warnings. Fixes the
issue of -Wno-maybe-uninitialized not being effective because -Wall was being
placed after it rather than before.
llvm-svn: 177866
CMake and autotools disagree on what "host" means in a cross-compilation
context. Autotools (and lit) take it to be the machine the binaries being
compiled now will run on. CMake takes it to be the machine actually compiling
the binaries now.
This change makes lit.site-cfg more consistent between autotools and CMake,
allowing lit tests (particularly in ExecutionEngine) to run correctly when
cross-compiled with CMake
llvm-svn: 175179
Added support to the cmake build to turn off uninitialized use warnings
for gcc. This cleans the build up somewhat.
Used logic simpler than found in autoconf by making use of the fact that
although gcc won't complain about unsupported -Wno-* flags it *will*
complain about unsupported -W flags.
Reviewers: gribozavr, doug.gregor, chandlerc
llvm-svn: 174299
catches uses of an extremely minor and widely-available C++ extension (which
every C++ compiler I could find supports, but EDG and Clang reject in strict
mode).
The diagnosed code pattern looks like this:
struct X {
union {
struct {
int a;
int b;
} S;
};
};
llvm-svn: 174103
gcc produces false positives for empty braces so turning the warning off.
Instead, turning the warning on for clang so proper warnings aren't missed.
Reviewers: dblaikie, chandlerc
llvm-svn: 174073
For example,
cur) unittests/ADT/Release/ADTTests
new) unittests/ADT/ADTTests
RUNTIME_BUILD_MODE can be substituted to CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR.
With Make and Ninja, the tree is not built with multiple configurations.
Then, including the build type in target directory doesn't make sense.
See also "How can I build multiple modes without switching?"
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_FAQ
CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR is set to "."
With multiple-configuration-aware build system, like Visual Studio, each unittest is built on appropriate directory, for example,
unittests/ADT/Release/ADTTests.exe
CMAKE_CFG_INTDIR is set to build system's variable, like "$(Configuration)" or "$(OutDir)".
Thus, "--param build_config" is also deprecated.
llvm-svn: 173616
This warning fires on:
Operator::~Operator() {
llvm_unreachable("should never destroy an Operator");
}
That seems like a false positive. I don't see any good way to silence
the warning here, so I'm disabling it.
llvm-svn: 173455
wall time, user time, and system time since a process started.
For walltime, we currently use TimeValue's interface and a global
initializer to compute a close approximation of total process runtime.
For user time, this adds support for an somewhat more precise timing
mechanism -- clock_gettime with the CLOCK_PROCESS_CPUTIME_ID clock
selected.
For system time, we have to do a full getrusage call to extract the
system time from the OS. This is expensive but unavoidable.
In passing, clean up the implementation of the old APIs and fix some
latent bugs in the Windows code. This might have manifested on Windows
ARM systems or other systems with strange 64-bit integer behavior.
The old API for this both user time and system time simultaneously from
a single getrusage call. While this results in fewer system calls, it
also results in a lower precision user time and if only user time is
desired, it introduces a higher overhead. It may be worthwhile to switch
some of the pass timers to not track system time and directly track user
and wall time. The old API also tracked walltime in a confusing way --
it just set it to the current walltime rather than providing any measure
of wall time since the process started the way buth user and system time
are tracked. The new API is more consistent here.
The plan is to eventually implement these methods for a *child* process
by using the wait3(2) system call to populate an rusage struct
representing the whole subprocess execution. That way, after waiting on
a child process its stats will become accurate and cheap to query.
llvm-svn: 171551
"check-all" can be executed with 0 status, "check-all does nothing, no tools built."
LLVM_EXTERNAL_CLANG_BUILD=OFF LLVM_BUILD_TOOLS=OFF can reproduce this.
Oscar Fuentes reported this. Thank you.
llvm-svn: 171046
Adding CXX_SUPPORTS_COVERED_SWITCH_DEFAULT_FLAG
C_SUPPORTS_COVERED_SWITCH_DEFAULT_FLAG
This is to handle the wackiness on a Mac host where cmake detects:
CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER == "/usr/bin/c++"
CMAKE_C_COMPILER == "/usr/bin/gcc"
llvm-svn: 168577
- Substitute hyphen to underscore, s/-/_/g, as the variable name.
- Additional parameter can be specified as the name of directory.
e.g.) add_llvm_external_project(clang-tools-extra extra)
- LLVM_EXTERNAL_CLANG_TOOLS_EXTRA_SOURCE_DIR=/path/to/llvm-srcroot/tools/clang/tools/extra, by default.
- Build directory is in ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/extra
llvm-svn: 165311
in the abstraction for lit test suites so that the various other layers
of abstraction pick up the same behavioral fix, and so that we still get
a complete list of dependencies for the 'check-all' target.
This should fix the follow-on issues of the same nature with various
other build targets, including Clang targets. Sorry for the churn, and
again thanks to Matt for testing and breaking this more thoroughly.
llvm-svn: 159593
re-used. Also, build in direct support for accumulating a set of lit
parameters, arguments, and testsuites to run as part of a 'check-all'
rule. This sinks 'check-all' from a Clang-specific construct to
a generic construct of the project.
llvm-svn: 159482
Makefiles, the CMake files in every other part of the LLVM tree, and
sanity.
This should also restore the output tree structure of all the unit
tests, sorry for breaking that, and thanks for letting me know.
The fundamental change is to put a CMakeLists.txt file in the unittest
directory, with a single test binary produced from it. This has several
advantages:
- No more weird directory stripping in the unittest macro, allowing it
to be used more readily in other projects.
- No more directory prefixes on all the source files.
- Allows correct and precise use of LLVM's per-directory dependency
system.
- Allows use of the checking logic for source files that have not been
added to the CMake build. This uncovered a file being skipped with
CMake in LLVM and one in Clang's unit tests.
- Makes Specifying conditional compilation or other custom logic for JIT
tests easier.
It did require adding the concept of an explicit 'optional' source file
to the CMake build so that the missing-file check can skip cases where
the file is *supposed* to be missing. =]
This is another chunk of refactoring the CMake build in order to make it
usable for other clients like CompilerRT / ASan / TSan.
Note that this is interdependent with a Clang CMake change.
llvm-svn: 158909
facilities.
This was only used in one place in LLVM, and was used pervasively (but
with different code!) in Clang. It has no advantages over the standard
CMake facilities and in some cases disadvantages.
llvm-svn: 158889
This was previously only done for executables and shared libraries, but not
for modules. As modules are essentially shared libraries (that need to be
dlopened explicitly), threating them the same as shared libraries seems
reasonable. This fixes the LLVM_BUILD_32_BITS build of Polly.
Contributed by: Ondra Hosek <ondra.hosek@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 158195
output. Peter Collingbourne also reports that it is showing up in
$(llvm-config --cflags).
Revert this for now since I don't know enough cmake to fix it properly.
This reverts commit 18efed7adc79c1970f307bb5b015d199012ba872.
llvm-svn: 156392
While making lld build under the tools directory I decided to refactor how this
works.
There is now a macro, add_llvm_external_project, which takes the name of the
expected subdirectory. This sets up two CMake options.
* LLVM_EXTERNAL_${NAME}_SOURCE_DIR
This is the path to the source. It defaults to
${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/${name}.
* LLVM_EXTERNAL_${NAME}_BUILD
Enable and disable building the tool as part of LLVM.
I chose LLVM_EXTERNAL_${NAME} as a prefix so they all show up together in the
GUI.
llvm-svn: 155654
Clang builds. The detection logic for compilers that support the warning
isn't working. Rafael is going to investigate it, but didn't want people
to have to wade through build spam until then.
llvm-svn: 151649
This is useful for clients that want to maintain compatibility
across multiple releases of LLVM. Currently users like Klee and
Mesa all have to roll their own 'parse llvm-config --version
output and generate defines' solution.
Also reuse the new macros so that version information is less
redundant/likely to fall out of sync again in the future.
llvm-svn: 150405
dealing in the host triple, be honest about it and document the decision
to default the target triple to the host triple unless overridden.
llvm-svn: 148822
CMake versions 2.8.4 and earlier were giving this error since r146323:
"string end index: -1 is out of range 0 - 6"
Passing -1 as the length of the desired substring was a new feature
added in CMake 2.8.5:
http://www.cmake.org/Bug/view.php?id=10740
llvm-svn: 146372
in CMake a bit more handy. Previously we would get such charming
versions as the following for revision NNNN and commit-ish XXXXX:
3.1svnsvn-rNNNN
3.1svngit-svn-rNNNN
3.1svngit-svn-XXXXX
The mechanism selecting betwene the latter two was particularly odd, and
didn't work with all of the ways git-svn repos are set up apparently. It
also misses an important point -- both the revision *and* the git commit
might be relevant when working on a local branch some distance from
mainline. The new logic does several things:
1) It strips the redundant initial 'svn'.
2) It always looks for a git-svn revision number base, and when found
includes it in the version.
3) If the git commit-ish for the current HEAD is not exactly that
revision number, it is also included.
The resulting strings should roughly be:
3.1svn-rNNNN
3.1git-svn-rNNNN
3.1git-svn-rNNNN-XXXXX
Suggestions on formatting etc always welcome. =] I've only looked at the
LLVM version string here, not Clang's (yet).
Note that the commit-ish reported is *not* terribly accurate. It updates
when 'cmake' is run, not when the binary is built. Still, it may be
better than nothing, especially if people have fairly long-lived git
repos and branches. This is not a new limitation, just didn't want
anyone to be surprised.
llvm-svn: 146323
- I verified locally that the current dependency lists are identical.
- This makes add_llvm_library_dependencies() a no-op. I'll remove it once this
change passes the bots.
llvm-svn: 145355
CMAKE_CONFIGURATION_TYPES is only set on Visual Studio generators. For NMake CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE is used instead.
Patch by EJose Fonseca!
llvm-svn: 143898
one aspect of them by having them use the (annoying, if not broken)
proper library dependency model for adding the LLVMTableGen library as
a dependency. This could manifest as a link order issue in the presence
of separate LLVM / Clang source builds with CMake and a linker that
really cares about such things.
Also, add the Support dependency to llvm-tblgen itself so that it
doesn't rely on TableGen's transitive Support dependency. A parallel
change for clang-tblgen will be forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 143531
sub-library for the targets depended on the core target CodeGen library.
This completely undermined the careful work to separate the those
libraries, especially the MC-layer ones. This surfaced as circular
dependencies when the libraries were built as shared libraries where
CMake doesn't allow cycles.
This should fix PR10537. I'll watch the bots to see if there is fallout
on other platforms.
llvm-svn: 136565
globally scoped constructs. Also, round-trip these dependencies through
the LLVMConfig.cmake.in file thata is used by CMake-based clients of
"installed" (or built) LLVM trees.
llvm-svn: 136543
specified in the same file that the library itself is created. This is
more idiomatic for CMake builds, and also allows us to correctly specify
dependencies that are missed due to bugs in the GenLibDeps perl script,
or change from compiler to compiler. On Linux, this returns CMake to
a place where it can relably rebuild several targets of LLVM.
I have tried not to change the dependencies from the ones in the current
auto-generated file. The only places I've really diverged are in places
where I was seeing link failures, and added a dependency. The goal of
this patch is not to start changing the dependencies, merely to move
them into the correct location, and an explicit form that we can control
and change when necessary.
This also removes a serialization point in the build because we don't
have to scan all the libraries before we begin building various tools.
We no longer have a step of the build that regenerates a file inside the
source tree. A few other associated cleanups fall out of this.
This isn't really finished yet though. After talking to dgregor he urged
switching to a single CMake macro to construct libraries with both
sources and dependencies in the arguments. Migrating from the two macros
to that style will be a follow-up patch.
Also, llvm-config is still generated with GenLibDeps.pl, which means it
still has slightly buggy dependencies. The internal CMake
'llvm-config-like' macro uses the correct explicitly specified
dependencies however. A future patch will switch llvm-config generation
(when using CMake) to be based on these deps as well.
This may well break Windows. I'm getting a machine set up now to dig
into any failures there. If anyone can chime in with problems they see
or ideas of how to solve them for Windows, much appreciated.
llvm-svn: 136433
The first problem to fix is to stop creating synthetic *Table_gen
targets next to all of the LLVM libraries. These had no real effect as
CMake specifies that add_custom_command(OUTPUT ...) directives (what the
'tablegen(...)' stuff expands to) are implicitly added as dependencies
to all the rules in that CMakeLists.txt.
These synthetic rules started to cause problems as we started more and
more heavily using tablegen files from *subdirectories* of the one where
they were generated. Within those directories, the set of tablegen
outputs was still available and so these synthetic rules added them as
dependencies of those subdirectories. However, they were no longer
properly associated with the custom command to generate them. Most of
the time this "just worked" because something would get to the parent
directory first, and run tablegen there. Once run, the files existed and
the build proceeded happily. However, as more and more subdirectories
have started using this, the probability of this failing to happen has
increased. Recently with the MC refactorings, it became quite common for
me when touching a large enough number of targets.
To add insult to injury, several of the backends *tried* to fix this by
adding explicit dependencies back to the parent directory's tablegen
rules, but those dependencies didn't work as expected -- they weren't
forming a linear chain, they were adding another thread in the race.
This patch removes these synthetic rules completely, and adds a much
simpler function to declare explicitly that a collection of tablegen'ed
files are referenced by other libraries. From that, we can add explicit
dependencies from the smaller libraries (such as every architectures
Desc library) on this and correctly form a linear sequence. All of the
backends are updated to use it, sometimes replacing the existing attempt
at adding a dependency, sometimes adding a previously missing dependency
edge.
Please let me know if this causes any problems, but it fixes a rather
persistent and problematic source of build flakiness on our end.
llvm-svn: 136023
refactorings. Several places that shouldn't have dependend on Target no
longer do. Also almost all of the CodeGen dependencies have gone away
for the MCDisassembler. Others add reasonable dependencies within the
target-specific layers.
llvm-svn: 135977
The header file was already properly located. The previous need for it
in Support had to do with the version string printing which was fixed in
r135757.
Also update build dependencies where libraries that needed the
functionality of the Target library (in the form of the TargetRegistry)
were picking it up via Support. This is pretty pervasive, essentially
every TargetInfo library (ARMInfo, etc) uses TargetRegistry, making it
depend on Target. All of these were previously just sneaking by.
llvm-svn: 135760
Evan's recent refactorings (I believe). Specifically, MCDisassembler no
longer depends on Target, and ARMDisassembler no longer depends on
CodeGen. The added dependencies from ARMAsmParser to ARMDesc looks
correct based on header file inclusion.
llvm-svn: 135759
backend. Moved some MCAsmInfo files down into the MCTargetDesc
sublibraries, removed some (i suspect long) dead files from other parts
of the CMake build, etc. Also copied the include directory hack from the
Makefile.
Finally, updated the lib deps. I spot checked this, and think its
correct, but review appreciated there.
llvm-svn: 135234
Take #2. Don't piggyback on the existing config.build_mode. Instead,
define a new lit feature for each build feature we need (currently
just "asserts"). Teach both autoconf'd and cmake'd Makefiles to define
this feature within test/lit.site.cfg. This doesn't require any lit
harness changes and should be more robust across build systems.
llvm-svn: 133664
under cmake).
Add libprofile_rt.a so that we can tell clang to link against it in --coverage
mode. Also turn it on by default in cmake builds.
Oscar, this touches a change you made for EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL support -- I think
I've done the right thing, but please let me know (or fix and commit) if not!
llvm-svn: 130470
component names such as "engine" do not expand to "jit" and hence to
the native target libraries for external users.
Thanks to arrowdodger for reporting and diagnosing the problem.
llvm-svn: 129444
with the contents of CMAKE_C(XX)_FLAGS too, else `llvm-config
--c(xx)flags' doesn't tell the absolute truth.
This comes from PR9603 and is based on a patch by Ryuta Suzuki!
llvm-svn: 128727
unnecesary conditionals and introduced a new convenience function.
The problem was that the list of libraries for Clang's unit tests was
<clang libraries> <system libraries> <llvm libraries>. As the llvm
libraries references symbols defined on the system libraries, those
were reported as undefined.
llvm-svn: 128484
Now we can remove RuntimeDyld from the LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS of
tools/lli. CMakeLists.txt LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS shall not differ from
its companion Makefile LINK_COMPONENTS.
llvm-svn: 128069
of testing for its presence at cmake time.
This way the build automatically regenerates the makefiles when a svn
update brings in a new sublibrary.
llvm-svn: 126068
library.
Installs tblgen (required by Clang).
Translates handling of user settings and platform-dependant options to
its own file, where it can included by another project.
Installs the .cmake files required by projects like Clang.
llvm-svn: 124816
llvm-config --cflags --cxxflags --cppflags
We shouldn't impose those flags on people who use llvm-config for
building their own projects.
llvm-svn: 124399
(clang/include/clang/Basic/StmtNodes.td, for instance, is tablegenned
from clang/include/clang/AST/CMakeLists.txt) so it is not contained on
the list of all .td files on the current source directory which is
used as the DEPENDS of the custom command. We must add the .td file to
the DEPENDS list of the custom command. Otherwise some .inc files are
not regenerated when the corresponding .td file changes.
llvm-svn: 122768
options. If we are building with exceptions/rtti disabled, we replace
/EHsc with /EHs-c- and /GR with /GR-, respectively. If we just add the
disabling options we get warnings like this:
cl : Command line warning D9025 : overriding '/EHs' with '/EHs-'
llvm-svn: 122648
2. Parsing .word directive in MBlaze asm parser
3. Fixing hack where memory instructions reversed order of last two parameters
4. Fixing many improperly encoded instructions
5. Support parsing special instructions (MFS,MTS,etc.)
6. Removing unused functions from inst printer
llvm-svn: 118941
mostly based on the ARM AsmParser at this time and is not particularly
functional.
Changed the MBlaze data layout from:
"E-p:32:32-i8:8:8-i16:16:16-i64:32:32-f64:32:32-v64:32:32-v128:32:32-n32"
to:
"E-p:32:32:32-i8:8:8-i16:16:16"
because the MicroBlaze doesn't have i64, f64, v64, or v128 data types.
Cleaned up the MBlaze source code:
1. The floating point register class has been removed. The
MicroBlaze does not have floating point registers. Floating
point values are simply stored in integer registers.
2. Renaming the CPURegs register class to GPR to reflect the
standard naming.
3. Removing a lot of stale code from AsmPrinter after
the conversion to InstPrinter.
4. Simplified sign extended loads by marking them as
expanded in ISelLowering.
llvm-svn: 117054
1. A delay slot filler that searches for valid instructions
to fill the delay slot with. Previously NOPs would always
be inserted into delay slots.
2. Support for MC based instruction printer added.
3. Support for MC based machine code generation and ELF
file generation. ELF file generation does not yet
completely work as much of the ELF support infrastructure
is still x86/x86-64 specific.
4. General clean up of the MBlaze backend code. Much of the
tablegen code has been cleanup and simplified.
Bug Fixes:
1. Removed duplicate periods from subtarget feature descriptions.
2. Many of the instructions had bad machine code information
in the tablegen files. Much of this has been fixed.
llvm-svn: 116986
available targets unless LLVM_INCLUDE_X is ON. LLVM_BUILD_X implies
LLVM_INCLUDE_X"
It breaks the configuration phase when cmake is invoked without
parameters, it is too complex for the purpose and introduces an
incovenience for the user (as both LLVM_BUILD_X and LLVM_INCLUDE_X
must set to OFF for not including X on the build)
llvm-svn: 114795
XCore->XCoreGen
PIC16->PIC16CodeGen
After updating your working copy, the first build will fail because it
is using the old library dependencies. Start the build again and it
will work fine.
llvm-svn: 110127
is a dependence on an LLVM target that is not included on the build.
When LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD didn't include all the targets, the
function emitted an error like
"Library LLVMArmParser not found in list of llvm libraries."
llvm-svn: 110060
incarnations), integrated into the MC framework.
The disassembler is table-driven, using a custom TableGen backend to
generate hierarchical tables optimized for fast decode. The disassembler
consumes MemoryObjects and produces arrays of MCInsts, adhering to the
abstract base class MCDisassembler (llvm/MC/MCDisassembler.h).
The disassembler is documented in detail in
- lib/Target/X86/Disassembler/X86Disassembler.cpp (disassembler runtime)
- utils/TableGen/DisassemblerEmitter.cpp (table emitter)
You can test the disassembler by running llvm-mc -disassemble for i386
or x86_64 targets. Please let me know if you encounter any problems
with it.
llvm-svn: 91749
directory.
This is useful in case someone who works with the config&make build
system forgot to add a file to its CMakeLists.txt. Instead of
obtaining undefined references at link time, cmake will complain at
configure time on the first build after a svn update.
llvm-svn: 85817
failure with VS 9.0, nmake and cmake 2.6.4. The buildbot output does
not show the patch level of cmake, it just says 2.6.
Sadly, parallel builds are broken due to recent changes on LLVM Target
libraries and its auxiliaries (TargetInfo, AsmPrinter, AsmParser). I
have a patch for stablishing the correct dependencies, but cmake is
buggy and generates makefiles that can't handle them.
llvm-svn: 79180
It doesn't stop or reconfigure the build, though, so the user will see
a broken build that magically succeeds at the next attempt. It is
technically possible to halt the build with a helpful message, and
even to automatically restart the build using the new dependencies as
it we did when llvm-config was used by cmake for learning
dependencies. This is left on the TODO list.
llvm-svn: 79004
libraries for an executable.
Now LLVMConfig uses a new system for sorting library dependencies, as
the list of dependent libraries for each entry of FinalLibDeps.txt no
longer is topologically sorted.
llvm-svn: 78787
of compiler parameters explicitly added by the build
specification. This macro replaces the cmake built-in
`add_definitions'.
Detects glibc and defines _GNU_SOURCE accordingly.
Resolves bug 3882.
llvm-svn: 68428
Hopefully this doesn't break anyone else's build... it shouldn't unless
the MinGW variable means something other than compiling with MinGW.
llvm-svn: 60273
built native tblgen which is passed to cmake in the variable
LLVM_TABLEGEN.
See
http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CmakeMingw
for a quick example on how to cross-compile with CMake.
llvm-svn: 58939