Summary:
1. Fix return value in `SparseBitVector::operator&=`.
2. Add checks if SBV is being assigned is invoking SBV.
Reviewers: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11342
Committed on behalf of sl@
llvm-svn: 242693
Summary:
This patch changes the way APInt is compared with a value of type uint64_t.
Before the uint64_t value was truncated to the size of APInt before comparison.
Now the comparison takes into account full 64-bit precision.
Test Plan: Unit tests added. No regressions. Self-hosted check-all done as well.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10655
llvm-svn: 241204
This unbreaks TripleTest.Normalization. We'll have to come up with a new
plan for the OS component of the target triple for WebAssembly.
llvm-svn: 241041
While often you want to use something specialized like StringMap, when
the strings already have persistent storage a normal densemap over them
can be more efficient.
This can't go into StringRef.h because of really obnoxious header chains
from the hashing code to the endian detection code to CPU feature
detection code to StringMap.
llvm-svn: 240528
This commit moves the APSInt initialization code that's used by
the LLLexer class into a new APSInt constructor that constructs
APSInts from strings.
This change is useful for MIR Serialization, as it would allow
the MILexer class to use the same APSInt initialization as
LLexer when parsing immediate machine operands.
llvm-svn: 240436
`LLVM_ENABLE_MODULES` builds sometimes fail because `Intrinsics.td`
needs to regenerate `Instrinsics.h` before anyone can include anything
from the LLVM_IR module. Represent the dependency explicitly to prevent
that.
llvm-svn: 239796
This allows us to match armv6m to default to thumb, but will also be used by
Clang's driver and remove the current incomplete copy in it.
llvm-svn: 238036
Simplifying Triple::parseARMArch, leaving all the parsing to ARMTargetParser.
This commit also adds AArch64 detection to ARMTargetParser canonicalization,
and a two RedHat arch names (v{6,7}hl, meaning hard-float / little-endian).
Adding enough unit tests to cover the basics. Clang checks fine.
llvm-svn: 237902
First ARMTargetParser FIXME, conservatively changing the way we parse CPUs
in the back-end. Still not perfect, with a lot of special cases, but moving
towards a more generic solution.
Moving all logic to the target parser made some unwritten assumptions
about architectures in Clang to break. I've added a lot of architectures
required by Clang, and default to CPUs that Clang believes it should
(and I agree).
I've also added a lot of unit tests, with the correct CPU for each
architecture, and Clang seems to be working correctly, too.
It also became clear that using "unsigned ID" as the argument for the get
methods makes it hard to know what ID, so I also changed the argument names
to match the enum type names.
llvm-svn: 237797
Restructure Triple::getARMCPUForArch so that invalid values will
return nullptr, while retaining the behaviour that an argument
specifying no particular architecture version will give a default
CPU. This will be used by clang to give an error on invalid -march
values.
Also restructure the extraction of the architecture version from
the MArch string a little to hopefully make what it's doing clearer.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9599
llvm-svn: 236845
Iteration over all permutations didn't really work,
due to evolution of the underlying enums.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9057
llvm-svn: 236251
Summary: This patch fixes step D4 of Knuth's division algorithm implementation. Negative sign of the step result was not always detected due to incorrect "borrow" handling.
Test Plan: Unit test that reveals the bug included.
Reviewers: chandlerc, yaron.keren
Reviewed By: yaron.keren
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9196
llvm-svn: 235699
The patch is generated using clang-tidy misc-use-override check.
This command was used:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py \
-checks='-*,misc-use-override' -header-filter='llvm|clang' \
-j=32 -fix -format
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8925
llvm-svn: 234679
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
APInt uses Knuth's D algorithm for long division. In rare cases the
implementation applied a transformation that was not needed.
Added unit tests for long division. KnuthDiv() procedure is fully covered.
There is a case in APInt::divide() that I believe is never used (marked with
a comment) as all users of divide() handle trivial cases earlier.
Patch by Pawel Bylica!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8448
llvm-svn: 233312
CloudABI is a POSIX-like runtime environment built around the concept of
capability-based security. More details:
https://github.com/NuxiNL/cloudlibc
CloudABI uses its own ELFOSABI number. This number has been allocated by
the maintainers of ELF a couple of days ago.
Reviewed by: echristo
llvm-svn: 231681
Accidentally committed a few more of these cleanup changes than
intended. Still breaking these out & tidying them up.
This reverts commit r231135.
llvm-svn: 231136
There doesn't seem to be any need to assert that iterator assignment is
between iterators over the same node - if you want to reuse an iterator
variable to iterate another node, that's perfectly acceptable. Just
don't mix comparisons between iterators into disjoint sequences, as
usual.
llvm-svn: 231135
Without this, use of this copy ctor is deprecated in C++11 due to the
presence of a user-declared dtor.
Marking the class final is just a little extra security that there are
no further derived classes that may then end up using the intermediate
base class's copy assignment operator and cause slicing to occur.
I didn't bother marking the other (non-test) base class final, since it
has reference members so it won't have any implicit assignment operators
anyway. Open to ideas on that, though.
We probably want a warning about use of a slicing assignment operator,
then I wouldn't worry so much about marking the class as final.
llvm-svn: 231114
With initializer lists there is a really neat idiomatic way to write
this, 'ArrayRef.equals({1, 2, 3, 4, 5})'. Remove the equal method which
always had a hard limit on the number of arguments. I considered
rewriting it with variadic templates but that's not really a good fit
for a function with homogeneous arguments.
'ArrayRef == {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}' would've been even more awesome, but C++11
doesn't allow init lists with binary operators.
llvm-svn: 230907
I just realized that the specialized metadata node patch I'm about to
commit won't compile on old compilers. Bump `hash_combine()`'s support
for non-variadic templates to 18 (I tested this by reversing the logic
in the #ifdef).
llvm-svn: 228629
Add some API to `APSInt` to make it easier to compare with `int64_t`.
- `APSInt::compareValues(APSInt, APSInt)` returns 1, -1 or 0 for
greater, lesser, or equal, doing the right thing for mismatched
"has-sign" and bitwidths. This is just like `isSameValue()` (and is
now the implementation of it).
- `APSInt::get(int64_t)` gets a signed `APSInt`.
- `operator<(int64_t)`, etc., are implemented trivially via `get()`
and `compareValues()`.
- Also added `APSInt::getUnsigned(uint64_t)` to make it easier to test
`compareValues()`.
llvm-svn: 228239
suffix it seems:
# ./config.guess
earmv7hfeb-unknown-netbsd7.99.4
Extend the triple parsing to support this. Avoid running the ARM parser
multiple times because StringSwitch is not lazy.
Reviewers: Renato Golin, Tim Northover
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7166
llvm-svn: 227085
This patch adds a check for underflow when truncating results back to lower
precision at the end of an FMA. The additional sign handling logic in
APFloat::fusedMultiplyAdd should only be performed when the result of the
addition step of the FMA (in full precision) is exactly zero, not when the
result underflows to zero.
Unit tests for this case and related signed zero FMA results are included.
Fixes <rdar://problem/18925551>.
llvm-svn: 225123
This appears to have broken at least the windows build bots due to
compile errors in the predicate that didn't simply supress the overload.
I'm not sure what the fix is, and the bots have been broken for a long
time now so I'm just reverting until Michael can figure out a fix.
llvm-svn: 225064
If the template specialization for externally managed sets in
PostOrderIterator call too far out of sync with each other, this unit
test will fail to build. This is especially useful for developers who
may not build Clang (the only in-tree user) every time.
llvm-svn: 222447
As detailed at http://llvm.org/PR20728, due to an internal overflow in
APFloat::multiplySignificand the APFloat::fusedMultiplyAdd method can return
incorrect results for x87DoubleExtended (x86_fp80) values. This commonly
manifests as incorrect constant folding of libm fmal calls on x86. E.g.
fmal(1.0L, 1.0L, 3.0L) == 0.0L (should be 4.0L)
This patch fixes PR20728 by adding an extra bit to the significand for
intermediate results of APFloat::multiplySignificand, avoiding the overflow.
llvm-svn: 222374
Having two ways to do this doesn't seem terribly helpful and
consistently using the insert version (which we already has) seems like
it'll make the code easier to understand to anyone working with standard
data structures. (I also updated many references to the Entry's
key and value to use first() and second instead of getKey{Data,Length,}
and get/setValue - for similar consistency)
Also removes the GetOrCreateValue functions so there's less surface area
to StringMap to fix/improve/change/accommodate move semantics, etc.
llvm-svn: 222319
A subtle bug was found where attempting to copy a non-const function_ref
lvalue would actually invoke the generic forwarding constructor (as it
was a closer match - being T& rather than the const T& of the implicit
copy constructor). In the particular case this lead to a dangling
function_ref member (since it had referenced the function_ref passed by
value to its ctor, rather than the outer function_ref that was still
alive)
SFINAE the converting constructor to not be considered if the copy
constructor is available and demonstrate that this causes the copy to
refer to the original functor, not to the function_ref it was copied
from. (without the code change, the test would fail as Y would be
referencing X and Y() would see the result of the mutation to X, ie: 2)
llvm-svn: 221753
This operation is analogous to its counterpart in DenseMap: It allows lookup
via cheap-to-construct keys (provided that getHashValue and isEqual are
implemented for the cheap key-type in the DenseMapInfo specialization).
Thanks to Chandler for the review.
llvm-svn: 220168
to what we actually want ilogb implementation. This makes everything
*much* easier to deal with and is actually what we want when using it
anyways.
llvm-svn: 219474
code using it more readable.
Also add a copySign static function that works more like the standard
function by accepting the value and sign-carying value as arguments.
No interesting logic here, but tests added to cover the basic API
additions and make sure they do something plausible.
llvm-svn: 219453
This can be used for in-place initialization of non-moveable types.
For compilers that don't support variadic templates, only up to four
arguments are supported. We can always add more, of course, but this
should be good enough until we move to a later MSVC that has full
support for variadic templates.
Inspired by std::experimental::optional from the "Library Fundamentals" C++ TS.
Reviewed by David Blaikie.
llvm-svn: 218732
This takes a single argument convertible to T, and
- if the Optional has a value, returns the existing value,
- otherwise, constructs a T from the argument and returns that.
Inspired by std::experimental::optional from the "Library Fundamentals" C++ TS.
llvm-svn: 218618
It's not clear what the semantics of a self-move should be. The
consensus appears to be that a self-move should leave the object in a
moved-from state, which is what our existing move assignment operator
does.
However, the MSVC 2013 STL will perform self-moves in some cases. In
particular, when doing a std::stable_sort of an already sorted APSInt
vector of an appropriate size, one of the merge steps will self-move
half of the elements.
We don't notice this when building with MSVC, because MSVC will not
synthesize the move assignment operator for APSInt. Presumably MSVC
does this because APInt, the base class, has user-declared special
members that implicitly delete move special members. Instead, MSVC
selects the copy-assign operator, which defends against self-assignment.
Clang, on the other hand, selects the move-assign operator, and we get
garbage APInts.
llvm-svn: 215478
Remove the MinGW32 and Cygwin types from the OSType enumeration. These values
are represented via environments of Windows. It is a source of confusion and
needlessly clutters the code. The cost of doing this is that we must sink the
check for them into the normalization code path along with the spelling.
Addresses PR20592.
llvm-svn: 215303
checking whether the ArrayRef is equal to an explicit list of arguments.
This is particularly easy to implement even without variadic templates
because ArrayRef happens to be homogeneously typed. As a consequence we
can use a "clever" wrapper type and default arguments to capture in
a single method many arguments as well as *how many* arguments the user
specified.
Thanks to Dave Blaikie for helping me pull together this little helper.
Suggestions for how to improve or generalize it are of course welcome.
I'll be using it immediately in my follow-up patch. =D
llvm-svn: 214041
Add a `MapVector::remove_if()` that erases items in bulk in linear time,
as opposed to quadratic time for repeated calls to `MapVector::erase()`.
llvm-svn: 213090
Actually update the changed indexes in the map portion of `MapVector`
when erasing from the middle. Add a unit test that checks for this.
Note that `MapVector::erase()` is a linear time operation (it was and
still is). I'll commit a new method in a moment called
`MapVector::remove_if()` that deletes multiple entries in linear time,
which should be slightly less painful.
llvm-svn: 213084
The slice(N, M) interface is powerful but not concise when wanting to
drop a few elements off of an ArrayRef, fix this by adding a drop_back
method.
llvm-svn: 212370
Certain versions of GCC (~4.7) couldn't handle the SFINAE on access
control, but with "= delete" (hidden behind a macro for portability)
this issue is worked around/addressed.
Patch by Agustín Bergé
llvm-svn: 211525
Unfortunately there's no way to elegantly do this with pre-canned
algorithms. Using a generating iterator doesn't work because you default
construct for each element, then move construct into the actual slot
(bad for copy but non-movable types, and a little unneeded overhead even
in the move-only case), so just write it out manually.
This solution isn't exception safe (if one of the element's ctors calls
we don't fall back, destroy the constructed elements, and throw on -
which std::uninitialized_fill does do) but SmallVector (and LLVM) isn't
exception safe anyway.
llvm-svn: 210495
To test cases that involve actual repetition (> 1 elements), at least
one element before the insertion point, and some elements of the
original range that still fit in that range space after insertion.
Actually we need coverage for the inverse case too (where no elements
after the insertion point fit into the previously allocated space), but
this'll do for now, and I might end up rewriting bits of SmallVector to
avoid that special case anyway.
llvm-svn: 210436
Specifically this caused inserting an element from a SmallVector into
itself when such an insertion would cause a reallocation. We have code
to handle this for non-reallocating cases, but it's not robust against
reallocation.
llvm-svn: 210430
(& because it makes it easier to test, this also improves
correctness/performance slightly by moving the last element in an insert
operation, rather than copying it)
llvm-svn: 210429
Because we don't have a separate negate( ) function, 0 - NaN does double-duty as the IEEE-754 negate( ) operation, which (unlike most FP ops) *does* attach semantic meaning to the signbit of NaN.
llvm-svn: 210428
This would cause the last element in a range to be in a moved-from state
after an insert at a non-end position, losing that value entirely in the
process.
Side note: move_backward is subtle. It copies [A, B) to C-1 and down.
(the fact that it decrements both the second and third iterators before
the first movement is the subtle part... kind of surprising, anyway)
llvm-svn: 210426
When we were moving from a larger vector to a smaller one but didn't
need to re-allocate, we would move-assign over uninitialized memory in
the target, then move-construct that same data again.
llvm-svn: 207663
It's fishy to be changing the `std::vector<>` owned by the iterator, and
no one actual does it, so I'm going to remove the ability in a
subsequent commit. First, update the users.
<rdar://problem/14292693>
llvm-svn: 207252
This generalises the object file type parsing to all Windows environments. This
is used by cygwin as well as MSVC environments for MCJIT. This also makes the
triple more similar to Chandler's suggestion of a separate field for the object
file format.
llvm-svn: 205219
If the environment is unknown and no object file is provided, then assume an
"MSVC" environment, otherwise, set the environment to the object file format.
In the case that we have a known environment but a non-native file format for
Windows (COFF) which is used for MCJIT, then append the custom file format to
the triple as an additional component.
This fixes the MCJIT tests on Windows.
llvm-svn: 205130
This adds a second implementation of the AArch64 architecture to LLVM,
accessible in parallel via the "arm64" triple. The plan over the
coming weeks & months is to merge the two into a single backend,
during which time thorough code review should naturally occur.
Everything will be easier with the target in-tree though, hence this
commit.
llvm-svn: 205090
Construct a uniform Windows target triple nomenclature which is congruent to the
Linux counterpart. The old triples are normalised to the new canonical form.
This cleans up the long-standing issue of odd naming for various Windows
environments.
There are four different environments on Windows:
MSVC: The MS ABI, MSVCRT environment as defined by Microsoft
GNU: The MinGW32/MinGW32-W64 environment which uses MSVCRT and auxiliary libraries
Itanium: The MSVCRT environment + libc++ built with Itanium ABI
Cygnus: The Cygwin environment which uses custom libraries for everything
The following spellings are now written as:
i686-pc-win32 => i686-pc-windows-msvc
i686-pc-mingw32 => i686-pc-windows-gnu
i686-pc-cygwin => i686-pc-windows-cygnus
This should be sufficiently flexible to allow us to target other windows
environments in the future as necessary.
llvm-svn: 204977
This reverts commit r203374.
Ambiguities in assign... oh well. I'm just going to revert this and
probably not try to recommit it as it's not terribly important.
llvm-svn: 203375
Move a common utility (assign(iter, iter)) into SmallVector (some of the
others could be moved there too, but this one seemed particularly
generic) and replace repetitions overrides with using directives.
And simplify SmallVector::assign(num, element) while I'm here rather
than thrashing these files (that cause everyone to rebuild) again.
llvm-svn: 203374
Previously, the assertions in PointerIntPair would try to calculate the value
(1 << NumLowBitsAvailable); the inferred type here is 'int', so if there were
more than 31 bits available we'd get a shift overflow.
Also, add a rudimentary unit test file for PointerIntPair.
llvm-svn: 203273
This is a preliminary setup change to support a renaming of Windows target
triples. Split the object file format information out of the environment into a
separate entity. Unfortunately, file format was previously treated as an
environment with an unknown OS. This is most obvious in the ARM subtarget where
the handling for macho on an arbitrary platform switches to AAPCS rather than
APCS (as per Apple's needs).
llvm-svn: 203160
The interaction between defaulted operators and move elision isn't
totally obvious, add a unit test so it doesn't break unintentionally.
llvm-svn: 202662
it interoperate (minimally) with std::unique_ptr<T>. This is part of my
plan to migrate LLVM to use std::unique_ptr with a minimal impact on
out-of-tree code.
Patch by Ahmed Charles with some minor cleanups (and bool casts) by me.
llvm-svn: 202608
In theory, Clang should figure out how to parse this correctly without
typename, but since this is the last TU that Clang falls back on in the
self-host, I'm going to compromise and check for __clang__.
And now Clang can self-host on -win32 without fallback! The 'check' and
'check-clang' targets both pass.
llvm-svn: 201358
There are a couple of interesting things here that we want to check over
(particularly the expecting asserts in StringRef) and get right for general use
in ADT so hold back on this one. For clang we have a workable templated
solution to use in the meanwhile.
This reverts commit r200187.
llvm-svn: 200194
(1) Add llvm_expect(), an asserting macro that can be evaluated as a constexpr
expression as well as a runtime assert or compiler hint in release builds. This
technique can be used to construct functions that are both unevaluated and
compiled depending on usage.
(2) Update StringRef using llvm_expect() to preserve runtime assertions while
extending the same checks to static asserts in C++11 builds that support the
feature.
(3) Introduce ConstStringRef, a strong subclass of StringRef that references
compile-time constant strings. It's convertible to, but not from, ordinary
StringRef and thus can be used to add compile-time safety to various interfaces
in LLVM and clang that only accept fixed inputs such as diagnostic format
strings that tend to get misused.
llvm-svn: 200187
This was due to arithmetic overflow in the getNumBits() computation. Now we
cast BitWidth to a uint64_t so that does not occur during the computation. After
the computation is complete, the uint64_t is truncated when the function
returns.
I know that this is not something that is likely to happen, but it *IS* a valid
input and we should not blow up.
llvm-svn: 199609
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.
Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.
llvm-svn: 198685
This functionality was enabled by r198374. Here's a test to ensure it
works and we don't regress it.
Based on a patch by Maciej Piechotka.
llvm-svn: 198377
Defaulting to iOS 3.0 when LLVM has to guess the version is no longer a useful
option and can give surprising results (like tail calls being disabled).
5.0 seems like a reasonable compromise as a platform that's still interesting
to some people.
rdar://problem/15567348
llvm-svn: 196912
Enhance the tests to actually require moves in C++11 mode, in addition
to testing the moved-from state. Further enhance the tests to cover
copy-assignment into a moved-from object and moving a large-state
object. (Note that we can't really test small-state vs. large-state as
that isn't an observable property of the API really.) This should finish
addressing review on r195239.
llvm-svn: 195261
r195239, as well as a comment about the fact that assigning over
a moved-from object was in fact tested. Addresses some of the review
feedback on r195239.
llvm-svn: 195260
Somehow, this ADT got missed which is moderately terrifying considering
the efficiency of move for it.
The code to implement move semantics for it is pretty horrible
currently but was written to reasonably closely match the rest of the
code. Unittests that cover both copying and moving (at a basic level)
added.
llvm-svn: 195239
This patch places class definitions in implementation files into anonymous
namespaces to prevent weak vtables. This eliminates the need of providing an
out-of-line definition to pin the vtable explicitly to the file.
llvm-svn: 195092
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file. The memory leaks in this version have been fixed. Thanks
Alexey for pointing them out.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 195064
This change is incorrect. If you delete virtual destructor of both a base class
and a subclass, then the following code:
Base *foo = new Child();
delete foo;
will not cause the destructor for members of Child class. As a result, I observe
plently of memory leaks. Notable examples I investigated are:
ObjectBuffer and ObjectBufferStream, AttributeImpl and StringSAttributeImpl.
llvm-svn: 194997
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194865
This bug only bit the C++98 build bots because all of the actual uses
really do move. ;] But not *quite* ready to do the whole C++11 switch
yet, so clean it up. Also add a unit test that catches this immediately.
llvm-svn: 194548
r-value references. I still want to test that when we have them,
llvm_move is actually a move.
Have I mentioned that I really want to move to C++11? ;]
llvm-svn: 194318
Clang managed to never instantiate the copy constructor. Added tests to
ensure this path is tested.
We could still use tests for the polymorphic nature. Those coming up
next.
llvm-svn: 194317
unique ownership smart pointer which is *deep* copyable by assuming it
can call a T::clone() method to allocate a copy of the owned data.
This is mostly useful with containers or other collections of uniquely
owned data in C++98 where they *might* copy. With C++11 we can likely
remove this in favor of move-only types and containers wrapped around
those types.
llvm-svn: 194315
startswith_lower is ocassionally useful and I think worth adding.
endwith_lower is added for completeness.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2041
llvm-svn: 193706
This is a re-commit of r189442; I'll follow up with clang changes.
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189624
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189442
IEEE-754R 1.4 Exclusions states that IEEE-754R does not specify the
interpretation of the sign of NaNs. In order to remove an irrelevant
variable that most floating point implementations do not use,
standardize add, sub, mul, div, mod so that operating anything with
NaN always yields a positive NaN.
In a later commit I am going to update the APIs for creating NaNs so
that one can not even create a negative NaN.
llvm-svn: 187314
Both GCC and LLVM will implicitly define __ppc__ and __powerpc__ for
all PowerPC targets, whether 32- or 64-bit. They will both implicitly
define __ppc64__ and __powerpc64__ for 64-bit PowerPC targets, and not
for 32-bit targets. We cannot be sure that all other possible
compilers used to compile Clang/LLVM define both __ppc__ and
__powerpc__, for example, so it is best to check for both when relying
on either inside the Clang/LLVM code base.
This patch makes sure we always check for both variants. In addition,
it fixes one unnecessary check in lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCJITInfo.cpp.
(At least one of __ppc__ and __powerpc__ should always be defined when
compiling for a PowerPC target, no matter which compiler is used, so
testing for them is unnecessary.)
There are some places in the compiler that check for other variants,
like __POWERPC__ and _POWER, and I have left those in place. There is
no need to add them elsewhere. This seems to be in Apple-specific
code, and I won't take a chance on breaking it.
There is no intended change in behavior; thus, no test cases are
added.
llvm-svn: 187248
There were a couple of different loops that were not handling
'.' correctly in APFloat::convertFromHexadecimalString; these mistakes
could lead to assertion failures and incorrect rounding for overlong
hex float literals.
Fixes PR16643.
llvm-svn: 186539
The old isNormal is already functionally replaced by the method isFiniteNonZero
in r184350 and all references to said method were replaced in LLVM/clang in
r184356/134366.
llvm-svn: 184449
This is the first patch in a series of patches to rename isNormal =>
isFiniteNonZero and isIEEENormal => isNormal. In order to prevent careless
errors on my part the overall plan is:
1. Add the isFiniteNonZero predicate with tests. I can do this in a method
independent of isNormal. (This step is this patch).
2. Convert all references to isNormal with isFiniteNonZero. My plan is to
comment out isNormal locally and continually convert isNormal references =>
isFiniteNonZero until llvm/clang compiles.
3. Remove old isNormal and rename isIEEENormal to isNormal.
4. Look through all of said references from patch 2 and see if we can simplify
them by using the new isNormal.
llvm-svn: 184350
Specifically the following work was done:
1. If the operation was not implemented, I implemented it.
2. If the operation was already implemented, I just moved its location
in the APFloat header into the IEEE-754R 5.7.2 section. If the name was
incorrect, I put in a comment giving the true IEEE-754R name.
Also unittests have been added for all of the functions which did not
already have a unittest.
llvm-svn: 183179
This reverts commit 617330909f0c26a3f2ab8601a029b9bdca48aa61.
It broke the bots:
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:150: PushPopTest
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:118: Failure
Value of: v[i].getValue()
Actual: 0
Expected: value
Which is: 2
llvm-svn: 178334
This generalizes Optional to require less from the T type by using aligned
storage for backing & placement new/deleting the T into it when necessary.
Also includes unit tests.
llvm-svn: 175580
PR15138 was opened because of a segfault in the Bitcode writer.
The actual issue ended up being a bug in APInt where calls to
APInt::getActiveWords returns a bogus value when the APInt value
is 0. This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that getActiveWords
returns 1 for 0 valued APInts.
llvm-svn: 174641
As a bonus I put in some extra checks to make sure that we are identifying the
machine word of various Mac OS X/iOS targets appropriately.
llvm-svn: 173994
A SparseMultiSet adds multiset behavior to SparseSet, while retaining SparseSet's desirable properties. Essentially, SparseMultiSet provides multiset behavior by storing its dense data in doubly linked lists that are inlined into the dense vector. This allows it to provide good data locality as well as vector-like constant-time clear() and fast constant time find(), insert(), and erase(). It also allows SparseMultiSet to have a builtin recycler rather than keeping SparseSet's behavior of always swapping upon removal, which allows it to preserve more iterators. It's often a better alternative to a SparseSet of a growable container or vector-of-vector.
llvm-svn: 173064
The iplist::clear() function can be quite expensive because it traverses
the entire list, calling deleteNode() and removeNodeFromList() on each
element. If node destruction and deallocation can be handled some other
way, clearAndLeakNodesUnsafely() can be used to jettison all nodes
without bringing them into cache.
The function name is meant to be ominous.
llvm-svn: 171540
The single-element ilist::splice() function supports a noop move:
List.splice(I, List, I);
The corresponding std::list function doesn't allow that, so add a unit
test to document that behavior.
This also means that
List.splice(I, List, F);
is somewhat surprisingly not equivalent to
List.splice(I, List, F, next(F));
This patch adds an assertion to catch the illegal case I == F above.
Alternatively, we could make I == F a legal noop, but that would make
ilist differ even more from std::list.
llvm-svn: 170443
Rationale:
1) This was the name in the comment block. ;]
2) It matches Clang's __has_feature naming convention.
3) It matches other compiler-feature-test conventions.
Sorry for the noise. =]
I've also switch the comment block to use a \brief tag and not duplicate
the name.
llvm-svn: 168996
treating it as if it were an IEEE floating-point type with 106-bit
mantissa.
This makes compile-time arithmetic on "long double" for PowerPC
in clang (in particular parsing of floating point constants)
work, and fixes all "long double" related failures in the test
suite.
llvm-svn: 166951
TinyPtrVector. With these, it is sufficiently functional for my more
normal / pedestrian uses.
I've not included some r-value reference stuff here because the value
type for a TinyPtrVector is, necessarily, just a pointer.
I've added tests that cover the basic behavior of these routines, but
they aren't as comprehensive as I'd like. In particular, they don't
really test the iterator semantics as thoroughly as they should. Maybe
some brave soul will feel enterprising and flesh them out. ;]
llvm-svn: 161104
for this class. These tests exercise most of the basic properties, but
the API for TinyPtrVector is very strange currently. My plan is to start
fleshing out the API to match that of SmallVector, but I wanted a test
for what is there first.
Sadly, it doesn't look reasonable to just re-use the SmallVector tests,
as this container can only ever store pointers, and much of the
SmallVector testing is to get construction and destruction right.
Just to get this basic test working, I had to add value_type to the
interface.
While here I found a subtle bug in the combination of 'erase', 'begin',
and 'end'. Both 'begin' and 'end' wanted to use a null pointer to
indicate the "end" iterator of an empty vector, regardless of whether
there is actually a vector allocated or the pointer union is null.
Everything else was fine with this except for erase. If you erase the
last element of a vector after it has held more than one element, we
return the end iterator of the underlying SmallVector which need not be
a null pointer. Instead, simply use the pointer, and poniter + size()
begin/end definitions in the tiny case, and delegate to the inner vector
whenever it is present.
llvm-svn: 161024
test more than a single instantiation of SmallVector.
Add testing for 0, 1, 2, and 4 element sized "small" buffers. These
appear to be essentially untested in the unit tests until now.
Fix several tests to be robust in the face of a '0' small buffer. As
a consequence of this size buffer, the growth patterns are actually
observable in the test -- yes this means that many tests never caused
a grow to occur before. For some tests I've merely added a reserve call
to normalize behavior. For others, the growth is actually interesting,
and so I captured the fact that growth would occur and adjusted the
assertions to not assume how rapidly growth occured.
Also update the specialization for a '0' small buffer length to have all
the same interface points as the normal small vector.
llvm-svn: 161001
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
StringMap suffered from the same bug as DenseMap: when you explicitly
construct it with a small number of buckets, you can arrange for the
tombstone-based growth path to be followed when the number of buckets
was less than '8'. In that case, even with a full map, it would compare
'0' as not less than '0', and refuse to grow the table, leading to
inf-loops trying to find an empty bucket on the next insertion. The fix
is very simple: use '<=' as the comparison. The same fix was applied to
DenseMap as well during its recent refactoring.
Thanks to Alex Bolz for the great report and test case. =]
llvm-svn: 158725
It always returns the iterator for the first inserted element, or the passed in
iterator if the inserted range was empty. Flesh out the unit test more and fix
all the cases it uncovered so far.
llvm-svn: 158645
SmallDenseMap::swap.
First, make it parse cleanly. Yay for uninstantiated methods.
Second, make the inline-buckets case work correctly. This is way
trickier than it should be due to the uninitialized values in empty and
tombstone buckets.
Finally fix a few typos that caused construction/destruction mismatches
in the counting unittest.
llvm-svn: 158641
destruction and fix a bug in SmallDenseMap they caught.
This is kind of a poor-man's version of the testing that just adds the
addresses to a set on construction and removes them on destruction. We
check that double construction and double destruction don't occur.
Amusingly enough, this is enough to catch a lot of SmallDenseMap issues
because we spend a lot of time with fixed stable addresses in the inline
buffer.
The SmallDenseMap bug fix included makes grow() not double-destroy in
some cases. It also fixes a FIXME there, the code was pretty crappy. We
now don't have any wasted initialization, but we do move the entries in
inline bucket array an extra time. It's probably a better tradeoff, and
is much easier to get correct.
llvm-svn: 158639
implementation.
This type includes an inline bucket array which is used initially. Once
it is exceeded, an array of 64 buckets is allocated on the heap. The
bucket count grows from there as needed. Some highlights of this
implementation:
- The inline buffer is very carefully aligned, and so supports types
with alignment constraints.
- It works hard to avoid aliasing issues.
- Supports types with non-trivial constructors, destructors, copy
constructions, etc. It works reasonably hard to minimize copies and
unnecessary initialization. The most common initialization is to set
keys to the empty key, and so that should be fast if at all possible.
This class has a performance / space trade-off. It tries to optimize for
relatively small maps, and so packs the inline bucket array densely into
the object. It will be marginally slower than a normal DenseMap in a few
use patterns, so it isn't appropriate everywhere.
The unit tests for DenseMap have been generalized a bit to support
running over different map implementations in addition to different
key/value types. They've then been automatically extended to cover the
new container through the magic of GoogleTest's typed tests.
All of this is still a bit rough though. I'm going to be cleaning up
some aspects of the implementation, documenting things better, and
adding tests which include non-trivial types. As soon as I'm comfortable
with the correctness, I plan to switch existing users of SmallMap over
to this class as it is already more correct w.r.t. construction and
destruction of objects iin the map.
Thanks to Benjamin Kramer for all the reviews of this and the lead-up
patches. That said, more review on this would really be appreciated. As
I've noted a few times, I'm quite surprised how hard it is to get the
semantics for a hashtable-based map container with a small buffer
optimization correct. =]
llvm-svn: 158638
of typename. GCC and Clang were fine with this, but MSVC won't accept
it. Fortunately, it also doesn't need it. Yuck.
Thanks to Nakamura for pointing this out in IRC.
llvm-svn: 158593
These were already trying to be type parameterized over different
key/value pairs. I've realized this goal using GoogleTest's typed test
functionality. This allows us to easily replicate the tests across
different key/value combinations and soon different mapping templates.
I've fixed a few bugs in the tests and extended them a bit in the
process as many tests were only applying to the int->int mapping.
llvm-svn: 158589
Returning a temporary BitVector is very expensive. If you must, create
the temporary explicitly: Use BitVector(A).flip() instead of ~A.
llvm-svn: 156768
- FlatArrayMap. Very simple map container that uses flat array inside.
- MultiImplMap. Map container interface, that has two modes, one for small amount of elements and one for big amount.
- SmallMap. SmallMap is DenseMap compatible MultiImplMap. It uses FlatArrayMap for small mode, and DenseMap for big mode.
Also added unittests for new classes and update for ProgrammersManual.
For more details about new classes see ProgrammersManual and comments in sourcecode.
llvm-svn: 155557
This nicely handles the most common case of virtual register sets, but
also handles anticipated cases where we will map pointers to IDs.
The goal is not to develop a completely generic SparseSet
template. Instead we want to handle the expected uses within llvm
without any template antics in the client code. I'm adding a bit of
template nastiness here, and some assumption about expected usage in
order to make the client code very clean.
The expected common uses cases I'm designing for:
- integer keys that need to be reindexed, and may map to additional
data
- densely numbered objects where we want pointer keys because no
number->object map exists.
llvm-svn: 155227
integral and enumeration types. This is accomplished with a bit of
template type trait magic. Thanks to Richard Smith for the core idea
here to detect viable types by detecting the set of types which can be
default constructed in a template parameter.
This is used (in conjunction with a system for detecting nullptr_t
should it exist) to provide an is_integral_or_enum type trait that
doesn't need a whitelist or direct compiler support.
With this, the hashing is extended to the more general facility. This
will be used in a subsequent commit to hashing more things, but I wanted
to make sure the type trait magic went through the build bots separately
in case other compilers don't like this formulation.
llvm-svn: 152217
This currently assumes that both sets have the same SmallSize to keep the implementation simple,
a limitation that can be lifted if someone cares.
llvm-svn: 152143
just ensure that the number of bytes in the pair is the sum of the bytes
in each side of the pair. As long as thats true, there are no extra
bytes that might be padding.
Also add a few tests that previously would have slipped through the
checking. The more accurate checking mechanism catches these and ensures
they are handled conservatively correctly.
Thanks to Duncan for prodding me to do this right and more simply.
llvm-svn: 151891