BlockFrequencies can only be printed relative to their entry frequency. Thus
since the entry frequency is no longer necessarily a static constant on the
BlockFrequency class and is instead a potentially dynamic value taken from
BlockFrequencyImpl, we must necessarily print it via a method on
BlockFrequencyImpl.
llvm-svn: 197285
This is a property associated with a function, not with BlockFrequency data.
Additionally it loosens the artifical requirement that the entry frequency
arbitrarily be the same for every function.
There is a series of patches forthcoming updating various code that uses the old
way of getting a block frequency to the new location.
llvm-svn: 197284
were falling into the cases for 24-bit branch kinds which are not 24-bit
branches. The routine is to return false for fixups are expected to always
be resolvable at assembly time. Which these three fixups are as they have
limited displacement and are for local references within a function.
rdar://15586725
llvm-svn: 197282
This commit does not complete the type units feature - there are issues
around fission support (skeletal type units, pubtypes/pubnames) and
hashing of some types including those containing references to types in
other type units.
Originally committed as r197073 and reverted in r197079.
Recommitted as r197197 to reproduce the failure and reverted as r197199
Turns out there was unstable ordering in the type unit dumping code.
Fixed by using MapVector in DWARFContext to store the debug_types
comdat sections.
Recommitted as r197210 with a fix to dumping and reverted as r197211
because I was a bit gun shy and thought I saw a failure that turned out
to be unrelated.
So here we go - once more with feeling! \o/
llvm-svn: 197275
There's nothing special about type traits accepting two arguments.
This commit eliminates BinaryTypeTraitExpr and switches all related handling
over to TypeTraitExpr.
Also fixes a CodeGen failure with variadic type traits appearing in a
non-constant expression.
The BTT/TT prefix and evaluation code is retained as-is for now but will soon
be further cleaned up.
This is part of the ongoing work to unify type traits.
llvm-svn: 197273
This reverts commit r197254.
This was an accidental merge of Juergen's patch. It will be checked in
shortly, but wasn't meant to go in quite yet.
Conflicts:
include/llvm/CodeGen/StackMaps.h
lib/CodeGen/StackMaps.cpp
test/CodeGen/X86/stackmap-liveness.ll
llvm-svn: 197260
The tests were perhaps made too relaxed in r197164 when we switched to the new
MinGW ABI. This makes sure we check explicitly for an optional thiscall
attribute and nothing else.
We should still look into whether we should print these attributes at all in
these cases.
llvm-svn: 197252
property declaration has a memory management
attribute (retain, copy, etc.). Sich properties
are usually overridden to become 'readwrite'
via a class extension (which require the memory
management attribute specified). In the absence of class
extension override, memory management attribute is
needed to produce correct Code Gen. for the
property getter in any case and this warning becomes
confusing to user. // rdar://15641300
llvm-svn: 197251
While investigating test suite failures when running the test suite remotely, I noticed we had 3 copies of code that launched a process:
1 - in "process launch" command
2 - SBTarget::Launch() with args
3 - SBTarget::Launch() with SBLaunchInfo
"process launch" was launching through the platform if it was supported (this is needed for remote debugging) and the 2 and 3 were not.
Now all code is in one place.
llvm-svn: 197247
The cpp backend is not a reasonable fallback for a missing target. It is a
very special backend, so it is reasonable to use it only if explicitly
requested.
While at it, simplify the interface a bit.
llvm-svn: 197241
Well, that's one way to pass a test, I suppose. Unfortunately actually doing
the testing means I didn't pass all I thought (embedded v7a is not supported,
apparently). I'll deal with that with the move to -none-macho rather than
putting heinous hacks in right now.
llvm-svn: 197240
This originally came about after noticing that InstCombine turns
some of the TMHH (icmp (and...), ...) tests into plain comparisons.
Since there is no instruction to compare with a 64-bit immediate,
TMHH is generally better than an ordered comparison for the cases
that it can handle.
llvm-svn: 197238