Commit Graph

2827 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vedant Kumar 1edd169e4b [unittests] Delete even more copy constructors (NFC)
llvm-svn: 284069
2016-10-12 22:44:50 +00:00
Vedant Kumar b13ed136bb [unittests] Delete some copy constructors (NFC)
llvm-svn: 284066
2016-10-12 22:27:54 +00:00
Vedant Kumar 9a4abceb8c [unittest] Pass a reference instead of making a copy (NFC)
llvm-svn: 284065
2016-10-12 22:27:52 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 28ac334add Revert "[ADT] Zip range adapter"
This reverts commit r284035, which breaks with MSVC 2013.

llvm-svn: 284037
2016-10-12 19:54:08 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 105a3ce062 [ADT] Zip range adapter
This augments the STLExtras toolset with a zip iterator and range
adapter. Zip comes in two varieties: `zip`, which will zip to the
shortest of the input ranges, and `zip_first`, which limits its
`begin() == end()` checks to just the first krange.

Patch by: Bryant Wong <github.com/bryant>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23252

llvm-svn: 284035
2016-10-12 19:43:02 +00:00
Diana Picus 40f9341154 Add AArch64 unit tests
Add unit tests for checking a few tricky instruction sizes. Also remove the old
tests for the instruction sizes, which were clunky and brittle.

Since this is the first set of target-specific unit tests, we need to add some
CMake plumbing. In the future, adding unit tests for a given target will be as
simple as creating a directory with the same name as the target under
unittests/Target. The tests are only run if the target is enabled in
LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24548

llvm-svn: 283990
2016-10-12 09:00:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5dbc164d15 [LCG] Add the necessary functionality to the LazyCallGraph to support inlining.
The basic inlining operation makes the following changes to the call graph:
1) Add edges that were previously transitive edges. This is always trivial and
   this patch gives the LCG helper methods to make this more convenient.
2) Remove the inlined edge. We had existing support for this, but it contained
   bugs that needed to be fixed. Testing in the same pattern as the inliner
   exposes these bugs very nicely.
3) Delete a function when it becomes dead because it is internal and all calls
   have been inlined. The LCG had no support at all for this operation, so this
   adds that support.

Two unittests have been added that exercise this specific mutation pattern to
the call graph. They were extremely effective in uncovering bugs. Sadly,
a large fraction of the code here is just to implement those unit tests, but
I think they're paying for themselves. =]

This was split out of a patch that actually uses the routines to
implement inlining in the new pass manager in order to isolate (with
unit tests) the logic that was entirely within the LCG.

Many thanks for the careful review from folks! There will be a few minor
follow-up patches based on the comments in the review as well.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24225

llvm-svn: 283982
2016-10-12 07:59:56 +00:00
Jordan Rose 764f9f7806 Re-apply "Disallow ArrayRef assignment from temporaries."
This re-applies r283798, disabled in r283803, with the static_assert
tests disabled under MSVC. The deleted functions still seem to catch
mistakes in MSVC, so it's not a significant loss.

Part of rdar://problem/16375365

llvm-svn: 283935
2016-10-11 20:39:16 +00:00
Reid Kleckner a012dac9d6 Avoid unnecessary constexpr to appease MSVC 2013
llvm-svn: 283916
2016-10-11 18:35:13 +00:00
Mehdi Amini ea8e9795a5 Make RandomNumberGenerator compatible with <random>
LLVM's RandomNumberGenerator wasn't compatible with
the random distribution from <random>.

Fixes PR25105

Patch by: Serge Guelton <serge.guelton@telecom-bretagne.eu>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25443

llvm-svn: 283854
2016-10-11 07:13:01 +00:00
Zachary Turner 5f78a9723f Revert "Disallow ArrayRef assignment from temporaries."
This reverts commit r283798, as it causes static asserts on
MSVC 2015 with the following errors:

ArrayRefTest.cpp(38): error C2338: Assigning from single prvalue element
ArrayRefTest.cpp(41): error C2338: Assigning from single xvalue element
ArrayRefTest.cpp(47): error C2338: Assigning from an initializer list

llvm-svn: 283803
2016-10-10 21:36:23 +00:00
Zachary Turner edce6e9126 Rename llvm::apply -> llvm::apply_tuple.
llvm::cl already has a function called llvm::apply() so this is
causing an ODR violation.  The STLExtras version should win the
vote on which one gets to be called apply() since it is named
after the equivalent STL function, but since renaiming the cl
version is more difficult, let's do this for now to get the
bots green.

llvm-svn: 283800
2016-10-10 21:24:34 +00:00
Jordan Rose d77cee3f54 Disallow ArrayRef assignment from temporaries.
Without this, the following statements will create ArrayRefs that
refer to temporary storage that goes out of scope by the end of the
line:

  someArrayRef = getSingleElement();
  someArrayRef = {elem1, elem2};

Note that the constructor still has this problem:

  ArrayRef<Element> someArrayRef = getSingleElement();
  ArrayRef<Element> someArrayRef = {elem1, elem2};

but that's a little harder to get rid of because we want to be able to
use this in calls:

  takesArrayRef(getSingleElement());
  takesArrayRef({elem1, elem2});

Part of rdar://problem/16375365. Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.

llvm-svn: 283798
2016-10-10 20:57:33 +00:00
Justin Lebar 4765c01981 [ADT] Don't use make_pointee_iterator in IteratorTest.
llvm-svn: 283794
2016-10-10 19:56:52 +00:00
Zachary Turner 3174bde6f4 Add llvm::apply to STLExtras.
This is equivalent to the C++14 std::apply().  Since we are not
using C++14 yet, this allows us to still make use of apply anyway.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25100

llvm-svn: 283779
2016-10-10 16:44:09 +00:00
Justin Lebar 1109197156 [ADT] Add make_pointe{e,r}_iterator.
Reviewers: timshen

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25418

llvm-svn: 283765
2016-10-10 16:26:03 +00:00
Justin Lebar 1b78217662 [ADT] Let MapVector handle non-copyable values.
Summary: The keys must still be copyable, because we store two copies of them.

Reviewers: timshen

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25404

llvm-svn: 283764
2016-10-10 16:25:59 +00:00
Javed Absar fb4b6e8db9 [ARM]: Add Cortex-R52 target to LLVM
This patch adds Cortex-R52, the new ARM real-time processor, to LLVM. 
Cortex-R52 implements the ARMv8-R architecture.

llvm-svn: 283542
2016-10-07 12:06:40 +00:00
Mehdi Amini a0016ec95f Use StringReg in TargetParser APIs (NFC)
llvm-svn: 283527
2016-10-07 08:37:29 +00:00
Tim Northover fe6fec9f65 GlobalISel: fix misuse of using declaration in test.
Clang didn't diagnose it before. Oops.

llvm-svn: 283451
2016-10-06 13:57:31 +00:00
Petr Hosek e023d62e76 [Triple] Add triple for Fuchsia
Fuchsia is a new operating system.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25116

llvm-svn: 283419
2016-10-06 05:17:26 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 6f83e8b1d7 Remove extra semicolon
llvm-svn: 283395
2016-10-05 21:46:56 +00:00
Reid Kleckner b0311b290e Fix the build with MSVC 2013, still cannot default move ctors yet
Ten days.

llvm-svn: 283394
2016-10-05 21:44:46 +00:00
David Callahan c1051ab26e Modify df_iterator to support post-order actions
Summary: This makes a change to the state used to maintain visited information for depth first iterator. We know assume a method "completed(...)" which is called after all children of a node have been visited. In all existing cases, this method does nothing so this patch has no functional changes.  It will however allow a client to distinguish back from cross edges in a DFS tree.

Reviewers: nadav, mehdi_amini, dberlin

Subscribers: MatzeB, mzolotukhin, twoh, freik, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25191

llvm-svn: 283391
2016-10-05 21:36:16 +00:00
Vitaly Buka f12b1c700c [ADT] Add missing const_iterator DenseSet::find() const
Summary: Probably overlooked.

Reviewers: eugenis, dblaikie

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24689

llvm-svn: 283377
2016-10-05 20:36:39 +00:00
Zachary Turner aad1583877 Fix build due to comparison of std::pairs.
llvm-svn: 283342
2016-10-05 17:04:36 +00:00
Zachary Turner aa0a562bd7 Add llvm::enumerate() range adapter.
This allows you to enumerate over a range using a range-based
for while the return type contains the index of the enumeration.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25124

llvm-svn: 283337
2016-10-05 16:54:09 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 149f6eaed9 Re-commit "Use StringRef in Support/Darf APIs (NFC)"
This reverts commit r283285 and re-commit r283275 with
a fix for format("%s", Str); where Str is a StringRef.

llvm-svn: 283298
2016-10-05 05:59:29 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris 27358cff88 [Support][CommandLine] Add cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()
This should allow users of the library to get a range to iterate through
all the subcommands that are registered to the global parser. This
allows users to define subcommands in libraries that self-register to
have dispatch done at a different stage (like main). It allows for
writing code like the following:

    for (auto *S : cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()) {
      if (*S) {
	// Dispatch on S->getName().
      }
    }

This change also contains tests that show this usage pattern.

Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie, echristo

Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24489

llvm-svn: 283296
2016-10-05 05:20:08 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 2bcac0fac4 Revert "Re-commit "Use StringRef in Support/Darf APIs (NFC)""
One test seems randomly broken: DebugInfo/X86/gnu-public-names.ll

llvm-svn: 283285
2016-10-05 01:04:02 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 32b297a42f Re-commit "Use StringRef in Support/Darf APIs (NFC)"
This reverts commit r283278 and re-commit r283275 with
the update to fix the build on the LLDB side.

llvm-svn: 283281
2016-10-05 00:37:18 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 78b04ae7ac Revert "Use StringRef in Support/Darf APIs (NFC)"
This reverts commit r283275, it broke LLDB Android debug server.

llvm-svn: 283278
2016-10-05 00:21:14 +00:00
Mehdi Amini e0327be584 Use StringRef in Support/Darf APIs (NFC)
llvm-svn: 283275
2016-10-04 23:55:40 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 39751afc4e Misc improvements to StringTableBuilder.
This patch adds write methods to StringTableBuilder so that it is
easier to change the underlying implementation.

Using the write methods, avoid creating a temporary buffer when using
mmaped output.

It also uses a more compact key in the DenseMap. Overall this produces
a slightly faster lld:

firefox
  master 6.853419709
  patch  6.841968912 1.00167361138x faster
chromium
  master 4.297280174
  patch  4.298712163 1.00033323147x slower
chromium fast
  master 1.802335952
  patch  1.806872459 1.00251701521x slower
the gold plugin
  master 0.3247149
  patch  0.321971644 1.00852017888x faster
clang
  master 0.551279945
  patch  0.543733194 1.01387951128x faster
llvm-as
  master 0.032743458
  patch  0.032143478 1.01866568391x faster
the gold plugin fsds
  master 0.350814247
  patch  0.348571741 1.00643341309x faster
clang fsds
  master 0.6281672
  patch  0.621130222 1.01132931187x faster
llvm-as fsds
  master 0.030168899
  patch  0.029797155 1.01247582194x faster
scylla
  master 3.104222518
  patch  3.059590248 1.01458766252x faster

llvm-svn: 283266
2016-10-04 22:43:25 +00:00
Zachary Turner c43fa4f23c [Support] Add case-insensitive versions of StringSwitch members.
This adds support for CaseLower, CasesLower, StartsWithLower, and
EndsWithLower.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24686

llvm-svn: 283244
2016-10-04 19:33:13 +00:00
George Burgess IV 80ed86368d [MSSA] Allow unittests to use BasicAA when building.
We now build MemorySSA in its ctor, instead of waiting until the user
calls MemorySSA::getWalker. This silently changed our unittests, since
we add BasicAA to AAResults *after* constructing MemorySSA (...but
before calling MemorySSA::getWalker).

None of them broke because we do most of our "did this get optimized
correctly?" tests in .ll files.

llvm-svn: 283158
2016-10-03 23:12:35 +00:00
Zachary Turner c485b877be Add unit tests for StringSwitch.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25205

llvm-svn: 283138
2016-10-03 19:56:50 +00:00
Sanjoy Das c7d3291b68 [ConstantRange] Make getEquivalentICmp smarter
This change teaches getEquivalentICmp to be smarter about generating
ICMP_NE and ICMP_EQ predicates.

An earlier version of this change was landed as rL283057 which had a
use-after-free bug.  This new version has a fix for that bug, and a (C++
unittests/) test case that would have triggered it rL283057.

llvm-svn: 283078
2016-10-02 20:59:05 +00:00
Sanjoy Das f230b0aa43 Revert r283057 and r283058
They've broken the sanitizer-bootstrap bots.  Reverting while I investigate.

Original commit messages:

r283057: "[ConstantRange] Make getEquivalentICmp smarter"

r283058: "[SCEV] Rely on ConstantRange instead of custom logic; NFCI"
llvm-svn: 283062
2016-10-02 02:40:27 +00:00
Sanjoy Das 6ef69d97f5 [ConstantRange] Make getEquivalentICmp smarter
This change teaches getEquivalentICmp to be smarter about generating
ICMP_NE and ICMP_EQ predicates.

llvm-svn: 283057
2016-10-02 00:09:49 +00:00
Mehdi Amini e11b745b66 Use StringRef in CommandLine Options handling (NFC)
llvm-svn: 283007
2016-10-01 03:43:20 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger ece29ea90b Turn LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS into a 0/1 definition like
LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS. Include llvm-config.h explicitly in headers to make
sure that the definition is available.

llvm-svn: 282907
2016-09-30 19:52:27 +00:00
Zachary Turner 4f20a0a4d9 Resubmit "Add llvm::enumerate() to STLExtras."
The CL was originally failing due to the use of some C++14
specific features, so I've removed those.  Hopefully this will
satisfy the bots.

llvm-svn: 282867
2016-09-30 15:43:59 +00:00
Zachary Turner 928bf6978e Revert "Add llvm::enumerate() to STLExtras."
This reverts commit r282804 as it seems to use some C++ features
that not all compilers support.

llvm-svn: 282809
2016-09-29 23:05:41 +00:00
Zachary Turner 27e610f986 Add llvm::enumerate() to STLExtras.
enumerate allows you to iterate over a range by pairing the
iterator's value with its index in the enumeration.  This gives
you most of the benefits of using a for loop while still allowing
the range syntax.

llvm-svn: 282804
2016-09-29 22:59:30 +00:00
Zachary Turner 0e31a38418 Add llvm::join_items to StringExtras.
llvm::join_items is similar to llvm::join, which produces a string
by concatenating a sequence of values together separated by a
given separator.  But it differs in that the arguments to
llvm::join() are same-type members of a container, whereas the
arguments to llvm::join_items are arbitrary types passed into
a variadic template.  The only requirement on parameters to
llvm::join_items (including for the separator themselves) is
that they be implicitly convertible to std::string or have
an overload of std::string::operator+

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24880

llvm-svn: 282502
2016-09-27 16:37:30 +00:00
Rafael Espindola eaeb6d91a1 Add xxhash to llvm.
It will be used for fast fingerprinting in lld at least.

llvm-svn: 282493
2016-09-27 15:45:57 +00:00
Daniel Berlin f72ac492cc Update MemorySSA unittest to account for non-pruned SSA form
llvm-svn: 282421
2016-09-26 17:44:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth dc288a896e [PM] Refactor this unittest a bit to remove duplicated code. This was
suggested at one point during code review and I deferred it to
a follow-up commit.

llvm-svn: 282383
2016-09-26 06:29:21 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e35f84a2f0 [PM] Add a unittest covering the invalidation of a Module analysis from
a function pass nested inside of a CGSCC pass manager.

This is very similar to the previous unittest but makes sure the
invalidation logic works across all the layers here.

llvm-svn: 282378
2016-09-26 04:17:12 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b52b573deb [PM] Add a unittest for invalidating module analyses with an SCC pass.
This reinstates r280447. Original commit log:
This wasn't really well explicitly tested with a nice unittest before.
It seems good to have reasonably broken out unittests for this kind of
functionality as I'm workin go other invalidation features to make sure
none of the existing ones regress.

This still has too much duplicated code, I plan to factor that out in
a subsequent commit to use common helpers for repeated parts of this.

llvm-svn: 282377
2016-09-26 04:01:55 +00:00
Zachary Turner c3618896f0 Fix signed / unsigned comparison.
llvm-svn: 282348
2016-09-25 03:57:34 +00:00
Zachary Turner 84505f9a9c Add some predicated searching functions to StringRef.
This adds 4 new functions to StringRef, which can be used to
take or drop characters while a certain condition is met, or
until a certain condition is met.  They are:

take_while - Return characters until a condition is not met.
take_until - Return characters until a condition is met.
drop_while - Remove characters until a condition is not met.
drop_until - Remove characters until a condition is met.

Internally, all of these functions delegate to two additional
helper functions which can be used to search for the position
of a character meeting or not meeting a condition, which are:

find_if - Find the first character matching a predicate.
find_if_not - Find the first character not matching a predicate.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24842

llvm-svn: 282346
2016-09-25 03:27:29 +00:00
Tom Stellard e190cd2834 Triple: Add opencl environment type
Summary:
For AMDGPU, we have been using the operating system component of the triple
for specifying the low-level runtime that is being used.  The rationale for
this is that the host operating system (e.g. Linux) is irrelevant for GPU code,
since its execution enviroment will be mostly controled by the low-level runtime
being used to execute the code.

In most cases, higher level languages have their own runtime which is
implemented on top of the low-level runtime.  The kernel ABIs of each
language mostly depend on the low-level runtime, but there may be some
slight differences between languages.  OpenCL for example, may append
additional arguments to the kernel in order to pass values like global
offsets or buffers for printf.  OpenMP, HCC, or other languages may want
to add their own values which differ from OpenCL.

The reason for adding a new opencl environment type is to make it possible for the backend
to distinguish between the ABIs of the higher-level languages and handle them correctly.
It seems cleaner to use the enviroment component for this rather than creating a new
OS type for every combination of low-level runtime / high-level language.

Reviewers: Anastasia, chandlerc

Subscribers: whchung, pekka.jaaskelainen, wdng, yaxunl, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24735

llvm-svn: 282218
2016-09-23 00:42:56 +00:00
Zachary Turner aec851ce9a Fix build breakage due to typo in cast.
llvm-svn: 282183
2016-09-22 19:21:32 +00:00
Zachary Turner d5d57635ba Speculative fix for build failures due to consumeInteger.
A recent patch added support for consumeInteger() and made
getAsInteger delegate to this function.  A few buildbots are
failing as a result with an assertion failure.  On a hunch,
I tested what happens if I call getAsInteger() on an empty
string, and sure enough it crashes the same way that the
buildbots are crashing.

I confirmed that getAsInteger() on an empty string did not
crash before my patch, so I suspect this to be the cause.

I also added a unit test for the empty string.

llvm-svn: 282170
2016-09-22 15:55:05 +00:00
Zachary Turner 65fd2fc7b4 [Support] Add StringRef::consumeInteger.
StringRef::getInteger() exists and treats the entire string as
an integer of the specified radix, failing if any invalid characters
are encountered or the number overflows.

Sometimes you might have something like "123456foo" and you want
to get the number 123456 and leave the string "foo" remaining.
This is similar to what would be possible by using the standard
runtime library functions strtoul et al and specifying an end
pointer.

This patch adds consumeInteger(), which does exactly that.  It
consumes as much as possible until an invalid character is found,
and modifies the StringRef in place so that upon return only
the portion of the StringRef after the number remains.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24778

llvm-svn: 282164
2016-09-22 15:05:19 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 49d728ad21 [LCG] Redesign the lazy post-order iteration mechanism for the
LazyCallGraph to support repeated, stable iterations, even in the face
of graph updates.

This is particularly important to allow the CGSCC pass manager to walk
the RefSCCs (and thus everything else) in a module more than once. Lots
of unittests and other tests were hard or impossible to write because
repeated CGSCC pass managers which didn't invalidate the LazyCallGraph
would conclude the module was empty after the first one. =[ Really,
really bad.

The interesting thing is that in many ways this simplifies the code. We
can now re-use the same code for handling reference edge insertion
updates of the RefSCC graph as we use for handling call edge insertion
updates of the SCC graph. Outside of adapting to the shared logic for
this (which isn't trivial, but is *much* simpler than the DFS it
replaces!), the new code involves putting newly created RefSCCs when
deleting a reference edge into the cached list in the correct way, and
to re-formulate the iterator to be stable and effective even in the face
of these kinds of updates.

I've updated the unittests for the LazyCallGraph to re-iterate the
postorder sequence and verify that this all works. We even check for
using alternating iterators to trigger the lazy formation of RefSCCs
after mutation has occured.

It's worth noting that there are a reasonable number of likely
simplifications we can make past this. It isn't clear that we need to
keep the "LeafRefSCCs" around any more. But I've not removed that mostly
because I want this to be a more isolated change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24219

llvm-svn: 281716
2016-09-16 10:20:17 +00:00
Tim Northover 32a078ad1a GlobalISel: remove "unsized" LLT
It was only really there as a sentinel when instructions had to have precisely
one type. Now that registers are typed, each register really has to have a type
that is sized.

llvm-svn: 281599
2016-09-15 10:09:59 +00:00
Tim Northover 5ae8350af6 GlobalISel: cache pointer sizes in LLT
Otherwise everything that needs to work out what size they are has to keep a
DataLayout handy, which is a bit silly and very annoying.

llvm-svn: 281597
2016-09-15 09:20:34 +00:00
Wei Mi 3076cc398d Add a C++ unittest to test the fix for PR30213.
The test exercises the branch in scev expansion when the value in ValueOffsetPair
is a ptr and the offset is not divisible by the elem type size of value.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24088

llvm-svn: 281575
2016-09-15 04:06:44 +00:00
Zachary Turner 9f664051ab [pdb] Fix unit test compilation.
llvm-svn: 281560
2016-09-14 23:17:08 +00:00
Adrian Prantl a2ef047bd9 Verifier: Mark orphaned DICompileUnits as a debug info failure.
This is a follow-up to r268778 that adds a couple of missing cases,
most notably orphaned compile units.

rdar://problem/28193346

llvm-svn: 281508
2016-09-14 17:30:37 +00:00
Zachary Turner d97d5a2cee Revert "[Support][CommandLine] Add cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()"
This reverts r281290, as it breaks unit tests.
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86-windows-msvc2015/builds/303

llvm-svn: 281292
2016-09-13 04:11:57 +00:00
Dean Michael Berris d9d290c0c6 [Support][CommandLine] Add cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()
This should allow users of the library to get a range to iterate through
all the subcommands that are registered to the global parser. This
allows users to define subcommands in libraries that self-register to
have dispatch done at a different stage (like main). It allows for
writing code like the following:

    for (auto *S : cl::getRegisteredSubcommands()) {
      if (*S) {
	// Dispatch on S->getName().
      }
    }

This change also contains tests that show this usage pattern.

Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie, echristo

Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24489

llvm-svn: 281290
2016-09-13 02:35:00 +00:00
Peter Collingbourne d4135bbc30 DebugInfo: New metadata representation for global variables.
This patch reverses the edge from DIGlobalVariable to GlobalVariable.
This will allow us to more easily preserve debug info metadata when
manipulating global variables.

Fixes PR30362. A program for upgrading test cases is attached to that
bug.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20147

llvm-svn: 281284
2016-09-13 01:12:59 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b5da005335 ADT: Never allocate nodes in iplist<> and ilist<>
Remove createNode() and any API that depending on it, and add
HasCreateNode to the list of checks for HasObsoleteCustomizations.  Now
an ilist *never* allocates (this was already true for iplist).

This factors out all the differences between iplist and ilist.  I'll aim
to rename both to "owning_ilist" eventually, to call out the interesting
(not exactly intrusive) ownership semantics.  In the meantime, I've left
both names around to reduce code churn.

One of the deleted APIs is the ilist copy constructor.  I've lifted up
and tested iplist::cloneFrom (ala simple_ilist::cloneFrom) as a
replacement.

Users of ilist<> and iplist<> that want the list to allocate nodes have
a few options:
- use std::list;
- use AllocatorList or BumpPtrList (or build a similarly trivial list);
- use cloneFrom (which is explicit at the call site); or
- allocate at the call site.

See r280573, r281177, r281181, and r281182 for examples of what to do if
you're updating out-of-tree code.

llvm-svn: 281184
2016-09-11 23:43:43 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 23d8306d13 ADT: Add AllocatorList, and use it for yaml::Token
- Add AllocatorList, a non-intrusive list that owns an LLVM-style
  allocator and provides a std::list-like interface (trivially built on
  top of simple_ilist),
- add a typedef (and unit tests) for BumpPtrList, and
- use BumpPtrList for the list of llvm::yaml::Token (i.e., TokenQueueT).

TokenQueueT has no need for the complexity of an intrusive list.  The
only reason to inherit from ilist was to customize the allocator.
TokenQueueT was the only example in-tree of using ilist<> in a truly
non-intrusive way.

Moreover, this removes the final use of the non-intrusive
ilist_traits<>::createNode (after r280573, r281177, and r281181).  I
have a WIP patch that removes this customization point (and the API that
relies on it) that I plan to commit soon.

Note: AllocatorList owns the allocator, which limits the viable API
(e.g., splicing must be on the same list).  For now I've left out
any problematic API.  It wouldn't be hard to split AllocatorList into
two layers: an Impl class that calls DerivedT::getAlloc (via CRTP), and
derived classes that handle Allocator ownership/reference/etc semantics;
and then implement splice with appropriate assertions; but TBH we should
probably just customize the std::list allocators at that point.

llvm-svn: 281182
2016-09-11 22:40:40 +00:00
Lang Hames 3e718e0818 [ORC] Fix the RPC unit test for header changes in r281171.
llvm-svn: 281173
2016-09-11 19:12:19 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 1872096f1e CodeGen: Give MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator a handle to the current MI
Now that MachineBasicBlock::reverse_instr_iterator knows when it's at
the end (since r281168 and r281170), implement
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator directly on top of an
ilist::reverse_iterator by adding an IsReverse template parameter to
MachineInstrBundleIterator.  This replaces another hard-to-reason-about
use of std::reverse_iterator on list iterators, matching the changes for
ilist::reverse_iterator from r280032 (see the "out of scope" section at
the end of that commit message).  MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator
now has a handle to the current node and has obvious invalidation
semantics.

r280032 has a more detailed explanation of how list-style reverse
iterators (invalidated when the pointed-at node is deleted) are
different from vector-style reverse iterators like std::reverse_iterator
(invalidated on every operation).  A great motivating example is this
commit's changes to lib/CodeGen/DeadMachineInstructionElim.cpp.

Note: If your out-of-tree backend deletes instructions while iterating
on a MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator or converts between
MachineBasicBlock::iterator and MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator,
you'll need to update your code in similar ways to r280032.  The
following table might help:

                  [Old]              ==>             [New]
        delete &*RI, RE = end()                   delete &*RI++
        RI->erase(), RE = end()                   RI++->erase()
      reverse_iterator(I)                 std::prev(I).getReverse()
      reverse_iterator(I)                          ++I.getReverse()
    --reverse_iterator(I)                            I.getReverse()
      reverse_iterator(std::next(I))                 I.getReverse()
                RI.base()                std::prev(RI).getReverse()
                RI.base()                         ++RI.getReverse()
              --RI.base()                           RI.getReverse()
     std::next(RI).base()                           RI.getReverse()

(For more details, have a look at r280032.)

llvm-svn: 281172
2016-09-11 18:51:28 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 3b22b18154 CodeGen: Assert that bundle iterators are valid
Add an assertion to the MachineInstrBundleIterator from instr_iterator
that the underlying iterator is valid.  This is possible know that we
can check ilist_node::isSentinel (since r281168), and is consistent with
the constructors from MachineInstr* and MachineInstr&.

Avoiding the new assertion in operator== and operator!= requires four
(!!!!) new overloads each.

(As an aside, I'm strongly in favour of:
- making the conversion from instr_iterator explicit;
- making the conversion from pointer explicit;
- making the conversion from reference explicit; and
- removing all the extra overloads of operator== and operator!= except
  const_instr_iterator.

I'm not signing up for that at this point, but being clear about when
something is an MachineInstr-iterator (possibly instr_end()) vs
MachineInstr-bundle-iterator (possibly end()) vs MachineInstr* (possibly
nullptr) vs MachineInstr& (known valid) would surely make code
cleaner... and it would remove a ton of boilerplate from
MachineInstrBundleIterator operators.)

llvm-svn: 281170
2016-09-11 17:12:28 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith cc9edace0c CodeGen: Turn on sentinel tracking for MachineInstr iterators
This is a prep commit before fixing MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator
invalidation semantics, ala r281167 for ilist::reverse_iterator.  This
changes MachineBasicBlock::Instructions to track which node is the
sentinel regardless of LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.

There's almost no functionality change (aside from ABI).  However, in
the rare configuration:

    #if !defined(NDEBUG) && !defined(LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS)

the isKnownSentinel() assertions in ilist_iterator<>::operator* suddenly
have teeth for MachineInstr.  If these assertions start firing for your
out-of-tree backend, have a look at the suggestions in the commit
message for r279314, and at some of the commits leading up to it that
avoid dereferencing the end() iterator.

llvm-svn: 281168
2016-09-11 16:38:18 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 085bbf1e2f ADT: Add sentinel tracking and custom tags to ilists
This adds two declarative configuration options for intrusive lists
(available for simple_ilist, iplist, and ilist).  Both of these options
affect ilist_node interoperability and need to be passed both to the
node and the list.  Instead of adding a new traits class, they're
specified as optional template parameters (in any order).

The two options:

 1. Pass ilist_sentinel_tracking<true> or ilist_sentinel_tracking<false>
    to control whether there's a bit on ilist_node "prev" pointer
    indicating whether it's the sentinel.  The default behaviour is to
    use a bit if and only if LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHECKS.

 2. Pass ilist_tag<TagA> and ilist_tag<TagB> to allow insertion of a
    single node into two different lists (simultaneously).

I have an immediate use-case for (1) ilist_sentinel_tracking: fixing the
validation semantics of MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator to match
ilist::reverse_iterator (ala r280032: see the comments at the end of the
commit message there).  I'm adding (2) ilist_tag in the same commit to
validate that the options framework supports expansion.  Justin Bogner
mentioned this might enable a possible cleanup in SelectionDAG, but I'll
leave this to others to explore.  In the meantime, the unit tests and
the comments for simple_ilist and ilist_node have usage examples.

Note that there's a layer of indirection to support optional,
out-of-order, template paramaters.  Internal classes are templated on an
instantiation of the non-variadic ilist_detail::node_options.
User-facing classes use ilist_detail::compute_node_options to compute
the correct instantiation of ilist_detail::node_options.

The comments for ilist_detail::is_valid_option describe how to add new
options (e.g., ilist_packed_int<int NumBits>).

llvm-svn: 281167
2016-09-11 16:20:53 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 34c4d2abfd ADT: Move ilist_node_access to ilist_detail::NodeAccess...
... and make a few ilist-internal API changes, in preparation for
changing how ilist_node is templated.  The only effect for ilist users
should be changing the friend target from llvm::ilist_node_access to
llvm::ilist_detail::NodeAccess (which is only necessary when they
inherit privately from ilist_node).
- Split out SpecificNodeAccess, which has overloads of getNodePtr and
  getValuePtr that are untemplated.
- Use more typedefs to prevent more changes later.
- Force inheritance to use *NodeAccess (to emphasize that ilist *users*
  shouldn't be doing this).

There should be no functionality change here.

llvm-svn: 281142
2016-09-10 16:55:06 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 41aceac37f ADT: Use typedefs for ilist_base and ilist_node_base, NFC
This is a prep commit to minimize changes in a follow-up that is adding
a template parameter to ilist_node_base and ilist_base.

llvm-svn: 281141
2016-09-10 16:28:52 +00:00
Zachary Turner 35377f88f5 [YAMLIO] Add the ability to map with context.
mapping a yaml field to an object in code has always been
a stateless operation.  You could still pass state by using the
`setContext` function of the YAMLIO object, but this represented
global state for the entire yaml input.  In order to have
context-sensitive state, it is necessary to pass this state in
at the granularity of an individual mapping.

This patch adds support for this type of context-sensitive state.
You simply pass an additional argument of type T to the
`mapRequired` or `mapOptional` functions, and provided you have
specialized a `MappingContextTraits<U, T>` class with the
appropriate mapping function, you can pass this context into
the mapping function.

Reviewed By: chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24162

llvm-svn: 280977
2016-09-08 18:22:44 +00:00
Diana Picus 42431e7ce7 [CMake] Use CMake's default RPATH for the unit tests
In the top-level CMakeLists.txt, we set CMAKE_BUILD_WITH_INSTALL_RPATH to ON,
and then for the unit tests we set it to <test>/../../lib. This works for tests
that live in unittest/<whatever>, but not for those that live in subdirectories
e.g. unittest/Transforms/IPO or unittest/ExecutionEngine/Orc. When building
with BUILD_SHARED_LIBRARIES, such tests don't manage to find their libraries.

Since the tests are run from the build directory, it makes sense to set their
RPATH for the build tree, rather than the install tree. This is the default in
CMake since 2.6, so all we have to do is set CMAKE_BUILD_WITH_INSTALL_RPATH to
OFF for the unit tests.

llvm-svn: 280791
2016-09-07 08:37:15 +00:00
Leny Kholodov 40c6235b79 Formatting with clang-format patch r280700
llvm-svn: 280716
2016-09-06 17:03:02 +00:00
Leny Kholodov 5fcc4185f5 DebugInfo: use strongly typed enum for debug info flags
Use ADT/BitmaskEnum for DINode::DIFlags for the following purposes:

Get rid of unsigned int for flags to avoid problems on platforms with sizeof(int) < 4
Flags are now strongly typed
Patch by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23766

llvm-svn: 280700
2016-09-06 10:46:28 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 3821b53b84 Revert "DebugInfo: use strongly typed enum for debug info flags"
This reverts commit r280686, bots are broken.

llvm-svn: 280688
2016-09-06 03:26:37 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 356d6b636b DebugInfo: use strongly typed enum for debug info flags
Use ADT/BitmaskEnum for DINode::DIFlags for the following purposes:
    * Get rid of unsigned int for flags to avoid problems on platforms with sizeof(int) < 4
    * Flags are now strongly typed

Patch by: Victor Leschuk <vleschuk@gmail.com>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23766

llvm-svn: 280686
2016-09-06 03:14:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ccd44939ef [PM] Revert r280447: Add a unittest for invalidating module analyses with an SCC pass.
This was mistakenly committed. The world isn't ready for this test, the
test code has horrible debugging code in it that should never have
landed in tree, it currently passes because of bugs elsewhere, and it
needs to be rewritten to not be susceptible to passing for the wrong
reasons.

I'll re-land this in a better form when the prerequisite patches land.

So sorry that I got this mixed into a series of commits that *were*
ready to land. I shouldn't have. =[ What's worse is that it stuck around
for so long and I discovered it while fixing the underlying bug that
caused it to pass.

llvm-svn: 280620
2016-09-04 08:42:31 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith e974f57298 ADT: Fix up IListTest.privateNode and get it passing
This test was using the wrong type, and so not actually testing much.
ilist_iterator constructors weren't going through ilist_node_access, so
they didn't actually work with private inheritance.

llvm-svn: 280564
2016-09-03 01:06:08 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 0f0ef132af [PM] Try to fix an MSVC2013 failure due to finding a template
constructor when trying to do copy construction by adding an explicit
move constructor.

Will watch the bots to discover if this is sufficient.

llvm-svn: 280479
2016-09-02 10:49:58 +00:00
George Rimar d8dfeec019 [Support] - Fix possible crash in match() of llvm::Regex.
Crash was possible if match() method
was called on object that was moved or object
created with empty constructor.

Testcases updated.

DIfferential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24123

llvm-svn: 280473
2016-09-02 08:44:46 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi bc46927659 raw_pwrite_stream_test.cpp: _putenv_s() may be assumed as win32-generic.
llvm-svn: 280449
2016-09-02 01:20:18 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c906ff63da [PM] Add a unittest for invalidating module analyses with an SCC pass.
This wasn't really well explicitly tested with a nice unittest before.
It seems good to have reasonably broken out unittests for this kind of
functionality as I'm workin go other invalidation features to make sure
none of the existing ones regress.

This still has too much duplicated code, I plan to factor that out in
a subsequent commit to use common helpers for repeated parts of this.

llvm-svn: 280447
2016-09-02 01:16:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 4f83742ab6 [PM] (NFC) Split the IR parsing into a fixture so that I can split out
more testing into other test routines while using the same core module.

llvm-svn: 280446
2016-09-02 01:14:05 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 1a4398a198 Fix a real temp file leak in FileOutputBuffer
If we failed to commit the buffer but did not die to a signal, the temp
file would remain on disk on Windows. Having an open file mapping and
file handle prevents the file from being deleted. I am choosing not to
add an assertion of success on the temp file removal, since virus
scanners and other environmental things can often cause removal to fail
in real world tools.

Also fix more temp file leaks in unit tests.

llvm-svn: 280445
2016-09-02 01:10:53 +00:00
Chandler Carruth d4e80a9615 [PM] (NFC) Refactor the CGSCC pass manager tests to use lambda-based
passes.

This simplifies the test some and makes it more focused and clear what
is being tested. It will also make it much easier to extend with further
testing of different pass behaviors.

I've also replaced a pointless module pass with running the requires
pass directly as that is all that it was really doing.

llvm-svn: 280444
2016-09-02 01:08:04 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 75e557f1fd Try to fix some temp file leaks in SupportTests, PR18335
llvm-svn: 280443
2016-09-02 00:51:34 +00:00
George Rimar a9ff072fe8 [LLVM/Support] - Create no-arguments constructor for llvm::Regex
This is useful when need to defer the construction,
e.g. using Regex as a member of class.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24101

llvm-svn: 280339
2016-09-01 08:00:28 +00:00
Tim Shen 48f814e8a3 s/static inline/static/ for headers I have changed in r279475. NFC.
llvm-svn: 280257
2016-08-31 16:48:13 +00:00
Lang Hames d63c865906 Re-instate recent RPC updates (r280016, r280017, r280027, r280051) with a
workaround for the limitations of MSVC 2013's std::future class.

llvm-svn: 280141
2016-08-30 19:56:15 +00:00
Zachary Turner 613c075237 Fix unit test after function name change.
llvm-svn: 280129
2016-08-30 18:45:32 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith f947c3afe1 ADT: Split ilist_node_traits into alloc and callback, NFC
Many lists want to override only allocation semantics, or callbacks for
iplist.  Split these up to prevent code duplication.
- Specialize ilist_alloc_traits to change the implementations of
  deleteNode() and createNode().
- One common desire is to do nothing deleteNode() and disable
  createNode().  Specialize ilist_alloc_traits to inherit from
  ilist_noalloc_traits for that behaviour.
- Specialize ilist_callback_traits to use the addNodeToList(),
  removeNodeFromList(), and transferNodesFromList() callbacks.

As a drive-by, add some coverage to the callback-related unit tests.

llvm-svn: 280128
2016-08-30 18:40:47 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith d0c619944e IR: Appease MSVC after r280107 with an & or two
Fixes the bot:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x64-ninja-win7/builds/15192

llvm-svn: 280116
2016-08-30 17:34:58 +00:00
Zachary Turner 84fc059e38 Add StringRef::take_front and StringRef::take_back
Reviewed By: majnemer, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23965

llvm-svn: 280114
2016-08-30 17:29:59 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith ac79897019 ADT: Split out simple_ilist, a simple intrusive list
Split out a new, low-level intrusive list type with clear semantics.
Unlike iplist (and ilist), all operations on simple_ilist are intrusive,
and simple_ilist never takes ownership of its nodes.  This enables an
intuitive API that has the right defaults for intrusive lists.
- insert() takes references (not pointers!) to nodes (in iplist/ilist,
  passing a reference will cause the node to be copied).
- erase() takes only iterators (like std::list), and does not destroy
  the nodes.
- remove() takes only references and has the same behaviour as erase().
- clear() does not destroy the nodes.
- The destructor does not destroy the nodes.
- New API {erase,remove,clear}AndDispose() take an extra Disposer
  functor for callsites that want to call some disposal routine (e.g.,
  std::default_delete).

This list is not currently configurable, and has no callbacks.

The initial motivation was to fix iplist<>::sort to work correctly (even
with callbacks in ilist_traits<>).  iplist<> uses simple_ilist<>::sort
directly.  The new test in unittests/IR/ModuleTest.cpp crashes without
this commit.

Fixing sort() via a low-level layer provided a good opportunity to:
- Unit test the low-level functionality thoroughly.
- Modernize the API, largely inspired by other intrusive list
  implementations.

Here's a sketch of a longer-term plan:
- Create BumpPtrList<>, a non-intrusive list implemented using
  simple_ilist<>, and use it for the Token list in
  lib/Support/YAMLParser.cpp.  This will factor out the only real use of
  createNode().
- Evolve the iplist<> and ilist<> APIs in the direction of
  simple_ilist<>, making allocation/deallocation explicit at call sites
  (similar to simple_ilist<>::eraseAndDispose()).
- Factor out remaining calls to createNode() and deleteNode() and remove
  the customization from ilist_traits<>.
- Transition uses of iplist<>/ilist<> that don't need callbacks over to
  simple_ilist<>.

llvm-svn: 280107
2016-08-30 16:23:55 +00:00
Reid Kleckner 9581f2dda8 Revert "[ORC][RPC] Make the future type of an Orc RPC call Error/Expected rather than"
This reverts commit r280016, and the followups of r280017, r280027,
r280051, r280058, and r280059.

MSVC's implementation of std::promise does not get along with
llvm::Error. It uses its promised value too much like a normal value
type.

llvm-svn: 280100
2016-08-30 15:12:58 +00:00
Lang Hames 8427a09d58 [ORC][RPC] Reword 'async' to 'non-blocking' to better reflect call primitive
behaviors, and add a callB (blacking call) primitive.

callB is a blocking call primitive for threaded code where the RPC responses are
being processed on a separate thread. (For single threaded code callST should
continue to be used instead).

No unit test yet: Last time I commited a threaded unit test it deadlocked on
one of the s390x builders. I'll try to re-enable that test first, and add a new
test if I can sort out the deadlock issue.

llvm-svn: 280051
2016-08-30 01:57:06 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 79185d80dc ADT: Explode include/llvm/ADT/{ilist,ilist_node}.h, NFC
I'm working on a lower-level intrusive list that can be used
stand-alone, and splitting the files up a bit will make the code easier
to organize.  Explode the ilist headers in advance to improve blame
lists in the future.
- Move ilist_node_base from ilist_node.h to ilist_node_base.h.
- Move ilist_base from ilist.h to ilist_base.h.
- Move ilist_iterator from ilist.h to ilist_iterator.h.
- Move ilist_node_access from ilist.h to ilist_node.h to support
  ilist_iterator.
- Update unit tests to #include smaller headers.
- Clang-format the moved things.

I noticed in transit that there is a simplify_type specialization for
ilist_iterator.  Since there is no longer an implicit conversion from
ilist<T>::iterator to T*, this doesn't make sense (effectively it's a
form of implicit conversion).  For now I've added a FIXME.

llvm-svn: 280047
2016-08-30 01:37:58 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith fbdb201dc8 Rename unittests/ADT/ilistTestTemp.cpp => IListTest.cpp
And rename the tests inside from ilistTest to IListTest.  This makes the
file sort properly in the CMakeLists.txt (previously, sorting would
throw it down to the end of the list) and is consistent with the tests
I've added more recently.

Why use IListNodeBaseTest.cpp (and a test name of IListNodeBaseTest)?
- ilist_node_base_test is the obvious thing, since this is testing
  ilist_node_base.  However, gtest disallows underscores in test names.
- ilist_node_baseTest fails for the same reason.
- ilistNodeBaseTest is weird, because it isn't in our usual
  TitleCaseTest form that we use for tests, and it also doesn't have the
  name of the tested class in it.
- IlistNodeBaseTest matches TitleCaseTest, but "Ilist" is hard to read,
  and really "ilist" is an abbreviation for "IntrusiveList" so the
  lowercase "list" is strange.
- That left IListNodeBaseTest.

Note: I made this move in two stages, with a temporary filename of
ilistTestTemp in between in r279524.  This was in the hopes of avoiding
problems on Git and SVN clients on case-insensitive filesystems,
particularly on buildbots with incremental checkouts.

llvm-svn: 280033
2016-08-30 00:18:43 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 5c001c367f ADT: Give ilist<T>::reverse_iterator a handle to the current node
Reverse iterators to doubly-linked lists can be simpler (and cheaper)
than std::reverse_iterator.  Make it so.

In particular, change ilist<T>::reverse_iterator so that it is *never*
invalidated unless the node it references is deleted.  This matches the
guarantees of ilist<T>::iterator.

(Note: MachineBasicBlock::iterator is *not* an ilist iterator, but a
MachineInstrBundleIterator<MachineInstr>.  This commit does not change
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_iterator, but it does update
MachineBasicBlock::reverse_instr_iterator.  See note at end of commit
message for details on bundle iterators.)

Given the list (with the Sentinel showing twice for simplicity):

     [Sentinel] <-> A <-> B <-> [Sentinel]

the following is now true:
 1. begin() represents A.
 2. begin() holds the pointer for A.
 3. end() represents [Sentinel].
 4. end() holds the poitner for [Sentinel].
 5. rbegin() represents B.
 6. rbegin() holds the pointer for B.
 7. rend() represents [Sentinel].
 8. rend() holds the pointer for [Sentinel].

The changes are #6 and #8.  Here are some properties from the old
scheme (which used std::reverse_iterator):
- rbegin() held the pointer for [Sentinel] and rend() held the pointer
  for A;
- operator*() cost two dereferences instead of one;
- converting from a valid iterator to its valid reverse_iterator
  involved a confusing increment; and
- "RI++->erase()" left RI invalid.  The unintuitive replacement was
  "RI->erase(), RE = end()".

With vector-like data structures these properties are hard to avoid
(since past-the-beginning is not a valid pointer), and don't impose a
real cost (since there's still only one dereference, and all iterators
are invalidated on erase).  But with lists, this was a poor design.

Specifically, the following code (which obviously works with normal
iterators) now works with ilist::reverse_iterator as well:

    for (auto RI = L.rbegin(), RE = L.rend(); RI != RE;)
      fooThatMightRemoveArgFromList(*RI++);

Converting between iterator and reverse_iterator for the same node uses
the getReverse() function.

    reverse_iterator iterator::getReverse();
    iterator reverse_iterator::getReverse();

Why doesn't iterator <=> reverse_iterator conversion use constructors?

In order to catch and update old code, reverse_iterator does not even
have an explicit conversion from iterator.  It wouldn't be safe because
there would be no reasonable way to catch all the bugs from the changed
semantic (see the changes at call sites that are part of this patch).

Old code used this API:

    std::reverse_iterator::reverse_iterator(iterator);
    iterator std::reverse_iterator::base();

Here's how to update from old code to new (that incorporates the
semantic change), assuming I is an ilist<>::iterator and RI is an
ilist<>::reverse_iterator:

            [Old]         ==>          [New]
    reverse_iterator(I)       (--I).getReverse()
    reverse_iterator(I)         ++I.getReverse()
  --reverse_iterator(I)           I.getReverse()
    reverse_iterator(++I)         I.getReverse()
          RI.base()          (--RI).getReverse()
          RI.base()            ++RI.getReverse()
        --RI.base()              RI.getReverse()
      (++RI).base()              RI.getReverse()
  delete &*RI, RE = end()         delete &*RI++
  RI->erase(), RE = end()         RI++->erase()

=======================================
Note: bundle iterators are out of scope
=======================================

MachineBasicBlock::iterator, also known as
MachineInstrBundleIterator<MachineInstr>, is a wrapper to represent
MachineInstr bundles.  The idea is that each operator++ takes you to the
beginning of the next bundle.  Implementing a sane reverse iterator for
this is harder than ilist.  Here are the options:
- Use std::reverse_iterator<MBB::i>.  Store a handle to the beginning of
  the next bundle.  A call to operator*() runs a loop (usually
  operator--() will be called 1 time, for unbundled instructions).
  Increment/decrement just works.  This is the status quo.
- Store a handle to the final node in the bundle.  A call to operator*()
  still runs a loop, but it iterates one time fewer (usually
  operator--() will be called 0 times, for unbundled instructions).
  Increment/decrement just works.
- Make the ilist_sentinel<MachineInstr> *always* store that it's the
  sentinel (instead of just in asserts mode).  Then the bundle iterator
  can sniff the sentinel bit in operator++().

I initially tried implementing the end() option as part of this commit,
but updating iterator/reverse_iterator conversion call sites was
error-prone.  I have a WIP series of patches that implements the final
option.

llvm-svn: 280032
2016-08-30 00:13:12 +00:00
Lang Hames 46bfc2178e [ORC] Fix unit-test breakage from r280016.
Void functions returning error now boolean convert to 'false' if they succeed.
Unit tests updated to reflect this.

llvm-svn: 280027
2016-08-29 23:10:20 +00:00
Lang Hames 3d0657d2ee [ORC][RPC] Make the future type of an Orc RPC call Error/Expected rather than
Optional.

For void functions the return type of a nonblocking call changes from
Expected<future<Optional<bool>>> to Expected<future<Error>>, and for functions
returning T the return type changes from Expected<future<Optional<T>>> to
Expected<future<Expected<T>>>.

Inner results need to be checked (since the RPC connection may have dropped
out before a result came back) and Error/Expected provide stronger checking
requirements. It also allows us drop the crufty 'optionalToError' function and
just collapse Errors in the single-threaded call primitives.

llvm-svn: 280016
2016-08-29 21:56:30 +00:00
Tim Northover f8bab1ce0c GlobalISel: use multi-dimensional arrays for legalize actions.
Instead of putting all possible requests into a single table, we can perform
the extremely dense lookup based on opcode and type-index in constant time
using multi-dimensional array-like things.

This roughly halves the time spent doing legalization, which was dominated by
queries against the Actions table.

llvm-svn: 280011
2016-08-29 21:00:00 +00:00
Vitaly Buka db331d8be7 [asan] Separate calculation of ShadowBytes from calculating ASanStackFrameLayout
Summary: No functional changes, just refactoring to make D23947 simpler.

Reviewers: eugenis

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23954

llvm-svn: 279982
2016-08-29 17:41:29 +00:00
Lang Hames 6b21751ba9 [Orc] Simplify LogicalDylib and move it back inside CompileOnDemandLayer. Also
switch to using one indirect stub manager per logical dylib rather than one per
input module.

LogicalDylib is a helper class used by the CompileOnDemandLayer to manage
symbol resolution between modules during lazy compilation. In particular, it
ensures that internal symbols resolve correctly even in the case where multiple
input modules contain the same internal symbol name (which must to be promoted
to external hidden linkage so that functions in any given module can be split
out by lazy compilation). LogicalDylib's resolution scheme (before this commit)
required one stub-manager per input module. This made recompilation of functions
(by adding a module containing a new definition) difficult, as the stub manager
for any given symbol was bound to the module that supplied the original
definition. By using one stubs manager for the whole logical dylib symbols can
be more easily replaced, although support for doing this is not included in this
patch (it will be implemented in a follow up).

llvm-svn: 279952
2016-08-29 00:54:29 +00:00
Lang Hames 60110f542f [Orc] Explicitly specify type for assignment.
This should fix the MSVC errors in
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x64-ninja-win7/builds/15120

llvm-svn: 279908
2016-08-27 02:59:24 +00:00
Lang Hames 28fa3c519c [ORC] Fix typo in LogicalDylib, add unit test.
llvm-svn: 279892
2016-08-27 00:19:05 +00:00
Tim Northover cecee56abb GlobalISel: legalize sdiv and srem operations.
llvm-svn: 279842
2016-08-26 17:46:13 +00:00
David Blaikie 68ce7928dc Fix ArrayRef initializer_list Ctor Test
The InitializerList test had undefined behavior by creating a dangling pointer to the temporary initializer list.  This patch removes the undefined behavior in the test by creating the initializer list directly.

Reviewers: mehdi_amini, dblaikie

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23890

llvm-svn: 279783
2016-08-25 22:09:13 +00:00
David Blaikie a01f295322 DebugInfo: Add flag to CU to disable emission of inline debug info into the skeleton CU
In cases where .dwo/.dwp files are guaranteed to be available, skipping
the extra online (in the .o file) inline info can save a substantial
amount of space - see the original r221306 for more details there.

llvm-svn: 279650
2016-08-24 18:29:49 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 8882346842 [PM] Introduce basic update capabilities to the new PM's CGSCC pass
manager, including both plumbing and logic to handle function pass
updates.

There are three fundamentally tied changes here:
1) Plumbing *some* mechanism for updating the CGSCC pass manager as the
   CG changes while passes are running.
2) Changing the CGSCC pass manager infrastructure to have support for
   the underlying graph to mutate mid-pass run.
3) Actually updating the CG after function passes run.

I can separate them if necessary, but I think its really useful to have
them together as the needs of #3 drove #2, and that in turn drove #1.

The plumbing technique is to extend the "run" method signature with
extra arguments. We provide the call graph that intrinsically is
available as it is the basis of the pass manager's IR units, and an
output parameter that records the results of updating the call graph
during an SCC passes's run. Note that "...UpdateResult" isn't a *great*
name here... suggestions very welcome.

I tried a pretty frustrating number of different data structures and such
for the innards of the update result. Every other one failed for one
reason or another. Sometimes I just couldn't keep the layers of
complexity right in my head. The thing that really worked was to just
directly provide access to the underlying structures used to walk the
call graph so that their updates could be informed by the *particular*
nature of the change to the graph.

The technique for how to make the pass management infrastructure cope
with mutating graphs was also something that took a really, really large
number of iterations to get to a place where I was happy. Here are some
of the considerations that drove the design:

- We operate at three levels within the infrastructure: RefSCC, SCC, and
  Node. In each case, we are working bottom up and so we want to
  continue to iterate on the "lowest" node as the graph changes. Look at
  how we iterate over nodes in an SCC running function passes as those
  function passes mutate the CG. We continue to iterate on the "lowest"
  SCC, which is the one that continues to contain the function just
  processed.

- The call graph structure re-uses SCCs (and RefSCCs) during mutation
  events for the *highest* entry in the resulting new subgraph, not the
  lowest. This means that it is necessary to continually update the
  current SCC or RefSCC as it shifts. This is really surprising and
  subtle, and took a long time for me to work out. I actually tried
  changing the call graph to provide the opposite behavior, and it
  breaks *EVERYTHING*. The graph update algorithms are really deeply
  tied to this particualr pattern.

- When SCCs or RefSCCs are split apart and refined and we continually
  re-pin our processing to the bottom one in the subgraph, we need to
  enqueue the newly formed SCCs and RefSCCs for subsequent processing.
  Queuing them presents a few challenges:
  1) SCCs and RefSCCs use wildly different iteration strategies at
     a high level. We end up needing to converge them on worklist
     approaches that can be extended in order to be able to handle the
     mutations.
  2) The order of the enqueuing need to remain bottom-up post-order so
     that we don't get surprising order of visitation for things like
     the inliner.
  3) We need the worklists to have set semantics so we don't duplicate
     things endlessly. We don't need a *persistent* set though because
     we always keep processing the bottom node!!!! This is super, super
     surprising to me and took a long time to convince myself this is
     correct, but I'm pretty sure it is... Once we sink down to the
     bottom node, we can't re-split out the same node in any way, and
     the postorder of the current queue is fixed and unchanging.
  4) We need to make sure that the "current" SCC or RefSCC actually gets
     enqueued here such that we re-visit it because we continue
     processing a *new*, *bottom* SCC/RefSCC.

- We also need the ability to *skip* SCCs and RefSCCs that get merged
  into a larger component. We even need the ability to skip *nodes* from
  an SCC that are no longer part of that SCC.

This led to the design you see in the patch which uses SetVector-based
worklists. The RefSCC worklist is always empty until an update occurs
and is just used to handle those RefSCCs created by updates as the
others don't even exist yet and are formed on-demand during the
bottom-up walk. The SCC worklist is pre-populated from the RefSCC, and
we push new SCCs onto it and blacklist existing SCCs on it to get the
desired processing.

We then *directly* update these when updating the call graph as I was
never able to find a satisfactory abstraction around the update
strategy.

Finally, we need to compute the updates for function passes. This is
mostly used as an initial customer of all the update mechanisms to drive
their design to at least cover some real set of use cases. There are
a bunch of interesting things that came out of doing this:

- It is really nice to do this a function at a time because that
  function is likely hot in the cache. This means we want even the
  function pass adaptor to support online updates to the call graph!

- To update the call graph after arbitrary function pass mutations is
  quite hard. We have to build a fairly comprehensive set of
  data structures and then process them. Fortunately, some of this code
  is related to the code for building the cal graph in the first place.
  Unfortunately, very little of it makes any sense to share because the
  nature of what we're doing is so very different. I've factored out the
  one part that made sense at least.

- We need to transfer these updates into the various structures for the
  CGSCC pass manager. Once those were more sanely worked out, this
  became relatively easier. But some of those needs necessitated changes
  to the LazyCallGraph interface to make it significantly easier to
  extract the changed SCCs from an update operation.

- We also need to update the CGSCC analysis manager as the shape of the
  graph changes. When an SCC is merged away we need to clear analyses
  associated with it from the analysis manager which we didn't have
  support for in the analysis manager infrsatructure. New SCCs are easy!
  But then we have the case that the original SCC has its shape changed
  but remains in the call graph. There we need to *invalidate* the
  analyses associated with it.

- We also need to invalidate analyses after we *finish* processing an
  SCC. But the analyses we need to invalidate here are *only those for
  the newly updated SCC*!!! Because we only continue processing the
  bottom SCC, if we split SCCs apart the original one gets invalidated
  once when its shape changes and is not processed farther so its
  analyses will be correct. It is the bottom SCC which continues being
  processed and needs to have the "normal" invalidation done based on
  the preserved analyses set.

All of this is mostly background and context for the changes here.

Many thanks to all the reviewers who helped here. Especially Sanjoy who
caught several interesting bugs in the graph algorithms, David, Sean,
and others who all helped with feedback.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21464

llvm-svn: 279618
2016-08-24 09:37:14 +00:00
Matthias Braun 733fe3676c CodeGen: Remove MachineFunctionAnalysis => Enable (Machine)ModulePasses
Re-apply this patch, hopefully I will get away without any warnings
in the constructor now.

This patch removes the MachineFunctionAnalysis. Instead we keep a
map from IR Function to MachineFunction in the MachineModuleInfo.

This allows the insertion of ModulePasses into the codegen pipeline
without breaking it because the MachineFunctionAnalysis gets dropped
before a module pass.

Peak memory should stay unchanged without a ModulePass in the codegen
pipeline: Previously the MachineFunction was freed at the end of a codegen
function pipeline because the MachineFunctionAnalysis was dropped; With
this patch the MachineFunction is freed after the AsmPrinter has
finished.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23736

llvm-svn: 279602
2016-08-24 01:52:46 +00:00
Matthias Braun c3b2e80b9d MachineModuleInfo: Avoid dummy constructor, use INITIALIZE_TM_PASS
Change this pass constructor to just accept a const TargetMachine * and
use INITIALIZE_TM_PASS, that way we can get rid of the dummy
constructor. The pass will still fail when calling the default
constructor leading to TM == nullptr, this is no different than before
but is more in line what other codegen passes are doing and avoids the
dummy constructor.

llvm-svn: 279598
2016-08-24 00:42:05 +00:00
Richard Smith 8c3fbdc6c4 Revert r279564. It introduces undefined behavior (binding a reference to a
dereferenced null pointer) in MachineModuleInfo::MachineModuleInfo that causes
-Werror builds (including several buildbots) to fail.

llvm-svn: 279580
2016-08-23 22:08:27 +00:00
Matthias Braun 4c1f1f120c CodeGen: Remove MachineFunctionAnalysis => Enable (Machine)ModulePasses
Re-apply this commit with the deletion of a MachineFunction delegated to
a separate pass to avoid use after free when doing this directly in
AsmPrinter.

This patch removes the MachineFunctionAnalysis. Instead we keep a
map from IR Function to MachineFunction in the MachineModuleInfo.

This allows the insertion of ModulePasses into the codegen pipeline
without breaking it because the MachineFunctionAnalysis gets dropped
before a module pass.

Peak memory should stay unchanged without a ModulePass in the codegen
pipeline: Previously the MachineFunction was freed at the end of a codegen
function pipeline because the MachineFunctionAnalysis was dropped; With
this patch the MachineFunction is freed after the AsmPrinter has
finished.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23736

llvm-svn: 279564
2016-08-23 20:58:29 +00:00
Tim Northover a01bece1dc GlobalISel: extend legalizer interface to handle multiple types.
Instructions like G_ICMP have multiple types that may need to be legalized (the
boolean output and nearly arbitrary inputs in this case). So the legalizer must
be capable of deciding what to do for each of them separately.

llvm-svn: 279554
2016-08-23 19:30:42 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 75ef78c14d Rename unittests/ADT/ilistTest.cpp to ilistTestTemp.cpp (temporarily)
I'll rename this to IListTest.cpp after a waiting period (tonight?
tomorrow?), with a full explanation in that commit.

First, I'm moving it aside because Git doesn't play well with case-only
filename changes on case-insensitive file systems (and I suspect the
same is true of SVN).  This two-stage change should help to avoid
spurious failures on bots that don't do clean checkouts.

llvm-svn: 279524
2016-08-23 15:56:50 +00:00
Matthias Braun 7f66202d38 Revert "(HEAD -> master, origin/master, origin/HEAD) CodeGen: Remove MachineFunctionAnalysis => Enable (Machine)ModulePasses"
Reverting while tracking down a use after free.

This reverts commit r279502.

llvm-svn: 279503
2016-08-23 05:17:11 +00:00
Matthias Braun fd936841eb CodeGen: Remove MachineFunctionAnalysis => Enable (Machine)ModulePasses
This patch removes the MachineFunctionAnalysis. Instead we keep a
map from IR Function to MachineFunction in the MachineModuleInfo.

This allows the insertion of ModulePasses into the codegen pipeline
without breaking it because the MachineFunctionAnalysis gets dropped
before a module pass.

Peak memory should stay unchanged without a ModulePass in the codegen
pipeline: Previously the MachineFunction was freed at the end of a codegen
function pipeline because the MachineFunctionAnalysis was dropped; With
this patch the MachineFunction is freed after the AsmPrinter has
finished.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23736

llvm-svn: 279502
2016-08-23 03:20:09 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 9f5c83b914 ADT: Separate some list manipulation API into ilist_base, NFC
Separate algorithms in iplist<T> that don't depend on T into ilist_base,
and unit test them.

While I was adding unit tests for these algorithms anyway, I also added
unit tests for ilist_node_base and ilist_sentinel<T>.

To make the algorithms and unit tests easier to write, I also did the
following minor changes as a drive-by:
- encapsulate Prev/Next in ilist_node_base to so that algorithms are
  easier to read, and
- update ilist_node_access API to take nodes by reference.

There should be no real functionality change here.

llvm-svn: 279484
2016-08-22 22:21:07 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 49a8ebd7c1 Fix header comment for unittests/ADT/ilistTest.cpp
llvm-svn: 279483
2016-08-22 22:04:16 +00:00
Tim Shen 608ca2504a [ADT] Actually mutate the iterator VisitStack.back().second, not its copy.
Summary: Before the change, *Opt never actually gets updated by the end
of toNext(), so for every next time the loop has to start over from
child_begin(). This bug doesn't affect the correctness, since Visited prevents
it from re-entering the same node again; but it's slow.

Reviewers: dberris, dblaikie, dannyb

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23649

llvm-svn: 279482
2016-08-22 21:59:26 +00:00
Tim Shen f2187ed321 [GraphTraits] Replace all NodeType usage with NodeRef
This should finish the GraphTraits migration.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D23730

llvm-svn: 279475
2016-08-22 21:09:30 +00:00
Vitaly Buka f9fd63ad39 [asan] Add support of lifetime poisoning into ComputeASanStackFrameLayout
Summary:
We are going to combine poisoning of red zones and scope poisoning.

PR27453

Reviewers: kcc, eugenis

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23623

llvm-svn: 279373
2016-08-20 16:48:24 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 1bdc716dca Move unittests/Support/IteratorTest.cpp to unittests/ADT/
This testing stuff from ADT, not Support.  Fix the file location.

llvm-svn: 279372
2016-08-20 14:58:31 +00:00
Vitaly Buka e149b392a8 Revert "[asan] Add support of lifetime poisoning into ComputeASanStackFrameLayout"
This reverts commit r279020.

Speculative revert in hope to fix asan test on arm.

llvm-svn: 279332
2016-08-19 22:12:58 +00:00
Tim Shen b5e0f5ac95 [GraphTraits] Make nodes_iterator dereference to NodeType*/NodeRef
Currently nodes_iterator may dereference to a NodeType* or a NodeType&. Make them all dereference to NodeType*, which is NodeRef later.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23704
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23705

llvm-svn: 279326
2016-08-19 21:20:13 +00:00
Tim Shen cf03add8c0 [ADT] add pointer_iterator, the opposite of pointee_iterator
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23703

llvm-svn: 279323
2016-08-19 21:04:45 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 64093a35ff Reapply "ADT: Remove UB in ilist (and use a circular linked list)"
This reverts commit r279053, reapplying r278974 after fixing PR29035
with r279104.

Note that r279312 has been committed in the meantime, and this has been
rebased on top of that.  Otherwise it's identical to r278974.

Note for maintainers of out-of-tree code (that I missed in the original
message): if the new isKnownSentinel() assertion is firing from
ilist_iterator<>::operator*(), this patch has identified a bug in your
code.  There are a few common patterns:
- Some IR-related APIs htake an IRUnit* that might be nullptr, and pass
  in an incremented iterator as an insertion point.  Some old code was
  using "&*++I", which in the case of end() only worked by fluke.  If
  the IRUnit in question inherits from ilist_node_with_parent<>, you can
  use "I->getNextNode()".  Otherwise, use "List.getNextNode(*I)".
- In most other cases, crashes on &*I just need to check for I==end()
  before dereferencing.
- There's also occasional code that sends iterators into a function, and
  then starts calling I->getOperand() (or other API).  Either check for
  end() before the entering the function, or early exit.

Note for if the static_assert with HasObsoleteCustomization is firing
for you:
- r278513 has examples of how to stop using custom sentinel traits.
- r278532 removed ilist_nextprev_traits since no one was using it.  See
  lld's r278469 for the only migration I needed to do.

Original commit message follows.

----

This removes the undefined behaviour (UB) in ilist/ilist_node/etc.,
mainly by removing (gutting) the ilist_sentinel_traits customization
point and canonicalizing on a single, efficient memory layout.  This
fixes PR26753.

The new ilist is a doubly-linked circular list.
- ilist_node_base has two ilist_node_base*: Next and Prev.  Size-of: two
  pointers.
- ilist_node<T> (size-of: two pointers) is a type-safe wrapper around
  ilist_node_base.
- ilist_iterator<T> (size-of: two pointers) operates on an
  ilist_node<T>*, and downcasts to T* on dereference.
- ilist_sentinel<T> (size-of: two pointers) is a wrapper around
  ilist_node<T> that has some extra API for list management.
- ilist<T> (size-of: two pointers) has an ilist_sentinel<T>, whose
  address is returned for end().

The new memory layout matches ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits<T>
exactly.  The Head pointer that previously lived in ilist<T> is
effectively glued to the ilist_half_node<T> that lived in
ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits<T>, becoming the Next and Prev in
the ilist_sentinel_node<T>, respectively.  sizeof(ilist<T>) is now the
size of two pointers, and there is never any additional storage for a
sentinel.

This is a much simpler design for a doubly-linked list, removing most of
the corner cases of list manipulation (add, remove, etc.).  In follow-up
commits, I intend to move as many algorithms as possible into a
non-templated base class (ilist_base) to reduce code size.

Moreover, this fixes the UB in ilist_iterator/getNext/getPrev
operations.  Previously, ilist_iterator<T> operated on a T*, even when
the sentinel was not of type T (i.e., ilist_embedded_sentinel_traits and
ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits).  This added UB to all operations
involving end().   Now, ilist_iterator<T> operates on an ilist_node<T>*,
and only downcasts when the full type is guaranteed to be T*.

What did we lose?  There used to be a crash (in some configurations) on
++end().  Curiously (via UB), ++end() would return begin() for users of
ilist_half_embedded_sentinel_traits<T>, but otherwise ++end() would
cause a nice dependable nullptr dereference, crashing instead of a
possible infinite loop.  Options:
 1. Lose that behaviour.
 2. Keep it, by stealing a bit from Prev in asserts builds.
 3. Crash on dereference instead, using the same technique.

Hans convinced me (because of the number of problems this and r278532
exposed on Windows) that we really need some assertion here, at least in
the short term.  I've opted for #3 since I think it catches more bugs.

I added only a couple of unit tests to root out specific bugs I hit
during bring-up, but otherwise this is tested implicitly via the
extensive usage throughout LLVM.

Planned follow-ups:
- Remove ilist_*sentinel_traits<T>.  Here I've just gutted them to
  prevent build failures in sub-projects.  Once I stop referring to them
  in sub-projects, I'll come back and delete them.
- Add ilist_base and move algorithms there.
- Check and fix move construction and assignment.

Eventually, there are other interesting directions:
- Rewrite reverse iterators, so that rbegin().getNodePtr()==&*rbegin().
  This allows much simpler logic when erasing elements during a reverse
  traversal.
- Remove ilist_traits::createNode, by deleting the remaining API that
  creates nodes.  Intrusive lists shouldn't be creating nodes
  themselves.
- Remove ilist_traits::deleteNode, by (1) asserting that lists are empty
  on destruction and (2) changing API that calls it to take a Deleter
  functor (intrusive lists shouldn't be in the memory management
  business).
- Reconfigure the remaining callback traits (addNodeToList, etc.) to be
  higher-level, pulling out a simple_ilist<T> that is much easier to
  read and understand.
- Allow tags (e.g., ilist_node<T,tag1> and ilist_node<T,tag2>) so that T
  can be a member of multiple intrusive lists.

llvm-svn: 279314
2016-08-19 20:40:12 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 11cb5385a9 Reapply "ADT: Tidy up ilist_traits static asserts, NFC"
This spiritually reapplies r279012 (reverted in r279052) without the
r278974 parts.  The differences:

  - Only the HasGetNext trait exists here, so I've only cleaned up (and
    tested) it.  I still added HasObsoleteCustomization since I know
    this will be expanding when r278974 is reapplied.

  - I changed the unit tests to use static_assert to catch problems
    earlier in the build.

  - I added negative tests for the type traits.

Original commit message follows.

----

Change the ilist traits to use decltype instead of sizeof, and add
HasObsoleteCustomization so that additions to this list don't
need to be added in two places.

I suspect this will now work with MSVC, since the trait tested in
r278991 seems to work.  If for some reason it continues to fail on
Windows I'll follow up by adding back the #ifndef _MSC_VER.

llvm-svn: 279312
2016-08-19 20:17:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 9b35e6d746 [PM] Re-instate r279227 and r279228 with a fix to the way the templating
was done to hopefully appease MSVC.

As an upside, this also implements the suggestion Sanjoy made in code
review, so two for one! =]

I'll be watching the bots to see if there are still issues.

llvm-svn: 279295
2016-08-19 18:36:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth b8824a5d3f [PM] Revert r279227 and r279228 until I can find someone to help me
solve completely opaque MSVC build errors. It complains about lots of
stuff with this change without givin nearly enough information to even
try to fix.

llvm-svn: 279231
2016-08-19 10:51:55 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 5dbc90a8f1 [PM] Fix a compile error with GCC. NFC.
llvm-svn: 279228
2016-08-19 09:53:10 +00:00
Chandler Carruth db1759ace1 [PM] Make the the new pass manager support fully generic extra arguments
to run methods, both for transform passes and analysis passes.

This also allows the analysis manager to use a different set of extra
arguments from the pass manager where useful. Consider passes over
analysis produced units of IR like SCCs of the call graph or loops.
Passes of this nature will often want to refer to the analysis result
that was used to compute their IR units (the call graph or LoopInfo).
And for transformations, they may want to communicate special update
information to the outer pass manager. With this change, it becomes
possible to have a run method for a loop pass that looks more like:

  PreservedAnalyses run(Loop &L, AnalysisManager<Loop, LoopInfo> &AM,
                        LoopInfo &LI, LoopUpdateRecord &UR);

And to query the analysis manager like:

    AM.getResult<MyLoopAnalysis>(L, LI);

This makes accessing the known-available analyses convenient and clear,
and it makes passing customized data structures around easy.

My initial use case is going to be in updating the pass manager layers
when the analysis units of IR change. But there are more use cases here
such as having a layer that lets inner passes signal whether certain
additional passes should be run because of particular simplifications
made. Two desires for this have come up in the past: triggering
additional optimization after successfully unrolling loops, and
triggering additional inlining after collapsing indirect calls to direct
calls.

Despite adding this layer of generic extensibility, the *only* change to
existing, simple usage are for places where we forward declare the
AnalysisManager template. We really shouldn't be doing this because of
the fragility exposed here, but currently it makes coping with the
legacy PM code easier.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21462

llvm-svn: 279227
2016-08-19 09:45:16 +00:00
Chandler Carruth e8529c28f1 [ADT] Add the worlds simplest STL extra. Or at least close to it.
This is a little class template that just builds an inheritance chain of
empty classes. Despite how simple this is, it can be used to really
nicely create ranked overload sets. I've added a unittest as much to
document this as test it. You can pass an object of this type as an
argument to a function overload set an it will call the first viable and
enabled candidate at or below the rank of the object.

I'm planning to use this in a subsequent commit to more clearly rank
overload candidates used for SFINAE. All credit for this technique and
both lines of code here to Richard Smith who was helping me rewrite the
SFINAE check in question to much more effectively capture the intended
set of checks.

llvm-svn: 279197
2016-08-19 02:07:51 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 9d748f9499 Reapply "ADT: Remove references in has_rbegin for reverse()"
This reverts commit r279086, reapplying r279084.  I'm not sure what I
ran before, because the compile failure for ADTTests reproduced locally.

The problem is that TestRev is calling BidirectionalVector::rbegin()
when the BidirectionalVector is const, but rbegin() is always non-const.
I've updated BidirectionalVector::rbegin() to be callable from const.

Original commit message follows.

--

As a follow-up to r278991, add some tests that check that
decltype(reverse(R).begin()) == decltype(R.rbegin()), and get them
passing by adding std::remove_reference to has_rbegin.

I'm using static_assert instead of EXPECT_TRUE (and updated the other
has_rbegin check from r278991 in the same way) since I figure that's
more helpful.

llvm-svn: 279091
2016-08-18 17:15:25 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 5195d3fc0e Revert "ADT: Remove references in has_rbegin for reverse()"
This reverts commit r279084, since it failed on a bot:
  http://bb.pgr.jp/builders/cmake-llvm-x86_64-linux/builds/41733

llvm-svn: 279086
2016-08-18 16:27:41 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith b28eb332d9 ADT: Remove references in has_rbegin for reverse()
As a follow-up to r278991, add some tests that check that
decltype(reverse(R).begin()) == decltype(R.rbegin()), and get them
passing by adding std::remove_reference to has_rbegin.

I'm using static_assert instead of EXPECT_TRUE (and updated the other
has_rbegin check from r278991 in the same way) since I figure that's
more helpful.

llvm-svn: 279084
2016-08-18 16:22:54 +00:00
Diana Picus 9405ae704b Revert "ADT: Remove UB in ilist (and use a circular linked list)"
This reverts commit r278974 which broke some of our bots (e.g.
clang-cmake-aarch64-42vma, clang-cmake-aarch64-full).

llvm-svn: 279053
2016-08-18 11:17:53 +00:00
Diana Picus fa1a4b36f1 Revert "ADT: Tidy up ilist_traits static asserts, NFC"
This reverts commit r279012.
r278974 broke some bots, I have to revert this to get to it.

llvm-svn: 279052
2016-08-18 11:17:47 +00:00
Lang Hames 75601bf71e Revert r279016 -- it breaks win32-elf JIT tests.
llvm-svn: 279029
2016-08-18 01:33:28 +00:00
Vitaly Buka d5ec14989d [asan] Add support of lifetime poisoning into ComputeASanStackFrameLayout
Summary:
We are going to combine poisoning of red zones and scope poisoning.

PR27453

Reviewers: kcc, eugenis

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23623

llvm-svn: 279020
2016-08-18 00:56:58 +00:00
Lang Hames 1d39cb16ec [RuntimeDyld] Strip leading '_' from symbols on 32-bit windows in
RTDyldMemoryManager::getSymbolAddressInProcess()

This should allow JIT'd code for win32 to find in-process symbols. See
http://llvm.org/PR28699 .

Patch by James Holderness. Thanks James!

llvm-svn: 279016
2016-08-18 00:22:34 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 56ee4f1fb7 ADT: Tidy up ilist_traits static asserts, NFC
Change the ilist traits to use decltype instead of sizeof, and add
HasObsoleteCustomization so that additions to this list don't need to be
added in two places.

I suspect this will now work with MSVC, since the trait tested in
r278991 seems to work.  If for some reason it continues to fail on
Windows I'll follow up by adding back the #ifndef _MSC_VER.

llvm-svn: 279012
2016-08-17 23:47:56 +00:00
Pete Cooper dce7c4eb18 Actually enable new test for const RangeAdapter. Missing from r278991
llvm-svn: 279000
2016-08-17 22:52:39 +00:00
Pete Cooper 0041888aea Fix reverse to work on const rbegin()/rend().
Duncan found that reverse worked on mutable rbegin(), but the has_rbegin
trait didn't work with a const method.  See http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160815/382890.html
for more details.

Turns out this was already solved in clang with has_getDecl.  Copied that and made it work for rbegin.

This includes the tests Duncan attached to that thread, including the traits test.

llvm-svn: 278991
2016-08-17 22:06:59 +00:00