After a number of previous small iterations, the functions
llvm_start_multithreaded() and llvm_stop_multithreaded() have
been reduced essentially to no-ops. This change removes them
entirely.
Reviewed by: rnk, dblaikie
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4216
llvm-svn: 211287
This patch removes the LLVM global lock, and updates all existing
users of the global lock to use their own mutex. None of the
existing users of the global lock were protecting code that was
mutually exclusive with any of the other users of the global
lock, so its purpose was not being met.
Reviewed by: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4142
llvm-svn: 211277
These errors are strictly unrecoverable and indicate serious issues such as
conflicting option names or an incorrectly linked LLVM distribution.
With this change, the errors actually get detected so tests don't pass
silently.
llvm-svn: 211260
Summary:
Provides an abstraction for a random number generator (RNG) that produces a stream of pseudo-random numbers.
The current implementation uses C++11 facilities and is therefore not cryptographically secure.
The RNG is salted with the text of the current command line invocation.
In addition, a user may specify a seed (reproducible builds).
In clang, the seed can be set via
-frandom-seed=X
In the back end, the seed can be set via
-rng-seed=X
This is the llvm part of the patch.
clang part: D3391
Reviewers: ahomescu, rinon, nicholas, jfb
Reviewed By: jfb
Subscribers: jfb, perl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3390
llvm-svn: 211145
Mimic r116632 in passing LLVM_VERSION_INFO from the Makefile build
system to the build. This improves the -version output of tools that
use llvm::cl under the configure+make system.
llvm-svn: 211091
Prior to this change, error handling functions must be installed
and removed only inside of an llvm_[start/stop]_multithreading
pair. This change allows error handling functions to be installed
any time, and from any thread.
Reviewed by: chandlerc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4140
llvm-svn: 210937
While std::error_code itself seems to work OK in all platforms, there
are few annoying differences with regards to the std::errc enumeration.
This patch adds a simple llvm enumeration, which will hopefully avoid build
breakages in other platforms and surprises as we get more uses of
std::error_code.
llvm-svn: 210920
The idea of this patch is to turn llvm/Support/system_error.h into a
transitional header that just brings in the erorr_code api to the llvm
namespace. I will remove it shortly afterwards.
The cases where the general idea needed some tweaking:
* std::errc is a namespace in msvc, so we cannot use "using std::errc". I could
add an #ifdef, but there were not that many uses, so I just added std:: to
them in this patch.
* Template specialization had to be moved to the std namespace in this
patch set already.
* The msvc implementation of default_error_condition doesn't seem to
provide the same transformations as we need. Not too surprising since
the standard doesn't actually say what "equivalent" means. I fixed the
problem by keeping our old mapping and using it at error_code
construction time.
Despite these shortcomings I think this is still a good thing. Some reasons:
* The different implementations of system_error might improve over time.
* It removes 925 lines of code from llvm already.
* It removes 6313 bytes from the text segment of the clang binary when
it is built with gcc and 2816 bytes when building with clang and
libstdc++.
llvm-svn: 210687
Some c++ libraries (libstdc++ at least) don't seem to map to the generic
category in in the system_category's default_error_condition.
llvm-svn: 210635
MSVC doesn't seem to provide any is_error_code_enum enumeration for the
windows errors.
Fortunately very few places in llvm have to handle raw windows errors, so
we can just construct the corresponding error_code directly.
llvm-svn: 210631
This patch removes the functions llvm_start_multithreaded() and
llvm_stop_multithreaded(), and changes llvm_is_multithreaded()
to return a constant value based on the value of the compile-time
definition LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS.
Previously, it was possible to have compile-time support for
threads on, and runtime support for threads off, in which case
certain mutexes were not allocated or ever acquired. Now, if the
build is created with threads enabled, mutexes are always acquired.
A test before/after patch of compiling a very large TU showed no
noticeable performance impact of this change.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4076
llvm-svn: 210600
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
Avoid changing behaviour for everyone who's used to the traditional ghostview
UI, especially since it knows how to stay in the foreground unlike xdg-open.
Amendment to r210147.
llvm-svn: 210148
Replace the crufty build-time configure checks for program paths with
equivalent runtime logic.
This lets users install graphing tools as needed without having to reconfigure
and rebuild LLVM, while eliminating a long chain of inappropriate compile
dependencies that included GUI programs and the windowing system.
Additional features:
* Support the OS X 'open' command to view graphs generated by any of the
Graphviz utilities. This is an alternative to the Graphviz OS X UI which is
no longer available on Mountain Lion.
* Produce informative log output upon failure to indicate which programs can
be installed to view graphs.
Ping me if this doesn't work for your particular environment.
llvm-svn: 210001
Introduce the support structures necessary to deal with the Windows ARM EH data.
These definitions are extremely aggressive about assertions to aid future use
for generation of the entries and subsequent decoding.
The names for the various fields are meant to reflect the names used by the
Visual Studio toolchain to aid communication.
Due to the complexity in reading a few of the values, there are a couple of
additional utility functions to decode the information.
In general, there are two ways to encode the unwinding information:
- packed, which places the data inline into the
_IMAGE_ARM_RUNTIME_FUNCTION_ENTRY structure.
- unpacked, which places the data into auxiliary structures placed into the
.xdata section.
The set of structures allow reading of data in either encoding, with the minor
caveat that epilogue scopes need to be decoded manually by constructing the
structure from the data returned by the RuntimeFunction structure.
These definitions are meant for read-only access at the current point as the
first use of them will be to decode the exception information.
llvm-svn: 209998
Input YAML file might contain multiple object file definitions.
New option `-docnum` allows to specify an ordinal number (starting from 1)
of definition used for an object file generation.
Patch reviewed by Sean Silva.
llvm-svn: 209967
On x64, windows.h doesn't include intrin.h for intrinsics. It just
declares them in the global namespace and uses them, expecting the
compiler to lower it as a builtin. We basically need to do this in
clang, eventually.
llvm-svn: 208023
Tested that the right -target-cpu is set in the clang -cc1 command line
when running "clang -march=native -E -v - </dev/null" on both an FX-8150
and an FX-8350. Both are family 15h; the FX-8150 (Bulldozer processor)
reports a model number of 1, and the FX-8350 (Piledriver processor)
reports a model number of 2.
llvm-svn: 207973
Change `BlockFrequency` to defer to `BranchProbability::scale()` and
`BranchProbability::scaleByInverse()`.
This removes `BlockFrequency::scale()` from its API (and drops the
ability to see the remainder), but the only user was the unit tests. If
some code in the future needs an API that exposes the remainder, we can
add something to `BranchProbability`, but I find that unlikely.
llvm-svn: 207550
each line. This is particularly nice for tracking which run of
a particular pass over a particular function was slow.
This also required making the TimeValue string much more useful. First,
there is a standard format for writing out a date and time. Let's use
that rather than strings that would have to be parsed. Second, actually
output the nanosecond resolution that timevalue claims to have.
This is proving useful working on PR19499, so I figured it would be
generally useful to commit.
llvm-svn: 207385
behavior based on other files defining DEBUG_TYPE, which means it cannot
define DEBUG_TYPE at all. This is actually better IMO as it forces folks
to define relevant DEBUG_TYPEs for their files. However, it requires all
files that currently use DEBUG(...) to define a DEBUG_TYPE if they don't
already. I've updated all such files in LLVM and will do the same for
other upstream projects.
This still leaves one important change in how LLVM uses the DEBUG_TYPE
macro going forward: we need to only define the macro *after* header
files have been #include-ed. Previously, this wasn't possible because
Debug.h required the macro to be pre-defined. This commit removes that.
By defining DEBUG_TYPE after the includes two things are fixed:
- Header files that need to provide a DEBUG_TYPE for some inline code
can do so by defining the macro before their inline code and undef-ing
it afterward so the macro does not escape.
- We no longer have rampant ODR violations due to including headers with
different DEBUG_TYPE definitions. This may be mostly an academic
violation today, but with modules these types of violations are easy
to check for and potentially very relevant.
Where necessary to suppor headers with DEBUG_TYPE, I have moved the
definitions below the includes in this commit. I plan to move the rest
of the DEBUG_TYPE macros in LLVM in subsequent commits; this one is big
enough.
The comments in Debug.h, which were hilariously out of date already,
have been updated to reflect the recommended practice going forward.
llvm-svn: 206822
declaration. GCC 4.7 appears to get hopelessly confused by declaring
this function within a member function of a class template. Go figure.
llvm-svn: 206152
abstract interface. The only user of this functionality is the JIT
memory manager and it is quite happy to have a custom type here. This
removes a virtual function call and a lot of unnecessary abstraction
from the common case where this is just a *very* thin vaneer around
a call to malloc.
Hopefully still no functionality changed here. =]
llvm-svn: 206149
slabs rather than embedding a singly linked list in the slabs
themselves. This has a few advantages:
- Better utilization of the slab's memory by not wasting 16-bytes at the
front.
- Simpler allocation strategy by not having a struct packed at the
front.
- Avoids paging every allocated slab in just to traverse them for
deallocating or dumping stats.
The latter is the really nice part. Folks have complained from time to
time bitterly that tearing down a BumpPtrAllocator, even if it doesn't
run any destructors, pages in all of the memory allocated. Now it won't.
=]
Also resolves a FIXME with the scaling of the slab sizes. The scaling
now disregards specially sized slabs for allocations larger than the
threshold.
llvm-svn: 206147