way that C does. Among other differences, elaborated type specifiers
are defined to skip "non-types", which, as you might imagine, does not
include typedefs. Rework our use of IDNS masks to capture the semantics
of different kinds of declarations better, and remove most current lookup
filters. Removing the last remaining filter is more complicated and will
happen in a separate patch.
Fixes PR 6885 as well some spectrum of unfiled bugs.
llvm-svn: 102164
that appear in the SCC as a result of inlining as candidates
for inlining. Change this so that it *does* consider call
sites that change from being indirect to being direct as a
result of inlining. This allows it to completely
"devirtualize" the testcase.
llvm-svn: 102146
the definition of the nsw and nuw flags to make use of it.
nsw was introduced to help optimizers answer yes to the following:
// Can we change i from i32 to i64 to eliminate the cast inside the loop?
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) A[i] *= 0.1;
// Can we assume that this loop will eventually terminate?
for (int i = 0; i <= n; ++i) A[i] *= 0.1;
In its current form, it isn't truly sufficient for either.
In the first case, if the increment overflows, it'll still have some
valid i32 value; sign-extending it will produce a value which is 33
homogeneous sign bits trailed by 31 independent undef bits. If i is
promoted to i64, it won't have those same values when it reaches that
point. (The compiler could recover here by reasoning about how i is
used by the load, but that's a lot more complicated and isn't always
possible.)
In the second case, there is no value for i which will be greater than
n, so having the increment return undef on overflow doesn't help.
Trap values are a formalization of some existing concepts that we have
about LLVM IR, and give the optimizers a better basis for answering yes
to both questions above.
llvm-svn: 102140
arguments are handled with a new InlineFunctionInfo class. This
makes it easier to extend InlineFunction to return more info in the
future.
llvm-svn: 102137
define void @f3(void (i8*)* %__f) ssp {
entry:
call void %__f(i8* undef)
unreachable
}
define void @f4(i8* %this) ssp align 2 {
entry:
call void @f3(void (i8*)* @f2) ssp
ret void
}
The inliner is turning the indirect call to %__f into a direct
call to F2. Make the call graph more precise when this happens.
The inliner doesn't revisit call sites introduced by inlining,
so there isn't an easy way to test for this, but a more precise
callgraph is a good thing.
llvm-svn: 102131
Fix RefreshCallGraph to use CGN->replaceCallEdge instead of hand
rolling its own loop. replaceCallEdge properly maintains the
reference counts of the nodes, fixing a crash exposed by the
iterative callgraph stuff.
llvm-svn: 102120
FunctionLoweringInfo, as it isn't SelectionDAG-specific. This isn't
completely natural, as PHI node state is not per-function but rather
per-basic-block, however there's currently no other convenient
per-basic-block state to group it with.
llvm-svn: 102109
address of overloaded function, instead of assuming that a nested name
specifier was used. A nested name specifier is not required for static
functions.
Fixes PR6886.
llvm-svn: 102107