Recently problems have been discovered in the way we write the FPM
(free page map). In order to fix this, we first need to establish
a baseline about what a correct FPM looks like using an MSVC
generated PDB, so that we can then make our own generated PDBs
match. And in order to do this, the dumper needs a mode where it
can dump an FPM so that we can write tests for it.
This patch adds a command to dump the FPM, as well as a test against
a known-good PDB.
llvm-svn: 309894
I was surprised to see the code model being passed to MC. After all,
it assembles code, it doesn't create it.
The one place it is used is in the expansion of .cfi directives to
handle .eh_frame being more that 2gb away from the code.
As far as I can tell, gnu assembler doesn't even have an option to
enable this. Compiling a c file with gcc -mcmodel=large produces a
regular looking .eh_frame. This is probably because in practice linker
parse and recreate .eh_frames.
In llvm this is used because the JIT can place the code and .eh_frame
very far apart. Ideally we would fix the jit and delete this
option. This is hard.
Apart from confusion another problem with the current interface is
that most callers pass CodeModel::Default, which is bad since MC has
no way to map it to the target default if it actually needed to.
This patch then replaces the argument with a boolean with a default
value. The vast majority of users don't ever need to look at it. In
fact, only CodeGen and llvm-mc use it and llvm-mc just to enable more
testing.
llvm-svn: 309884
Summary:
This patch makes LoopDeletion use the incremental DominatorTree API.
We modify LoopDeletion to perform the deletion in 5 steps:
1. Create a new dummy edge from the preheader to the exit, by adding a conditional branch.
2. Inform the DomTree about the new edge.
3. Remove the conditional branch and replace it with an unconditional edge to the exit. This removes the edge to the loop header, making it unreachable.
4. Inform the DomTree about the deleted edge.
5. Remove the unreachable block from the function.
Creating the dummy conditional branch is necessary to perform incremental DomTree update.
We should consider using the batch updater when it's ready.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, grosser, sanjoy
Reviewed By: dberlin, grosser
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35391
llvm-svn: 309850
Summary:
As we are in the process of changing the behavior of how the post-dominator tree
is computed, make sure we have some more test coverage in this area.
Current inconsistencies:
- Newly unreachable nodes are not added as new roots, in case the PDT is updated
but not rebuilt.
- Newly unreachable loops are not added to the CFG at all (neither when
building from scratch nor when updating the CFG). This is inconsistent with
the fact that unreachables are added to the PDT, but unreachable loops not.
On the other side, PDT relationships are not loosened at the moment in
cases where new unreachable loops are built.
This commit is providing additional test coverage for
https://reviews.llvm.org/D35851
Reviewers: dberlin, kuhar
Reviewed By: kuhar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36107
llvm-svn: 309684
Summary:
Adding part of the changes in D30369 (needed to make progress):
Current patch updates AliasAnalysis and MemoryLocation, but does _not_ clean up MemorySSA.
Original summary from D30369, by dberlin:
Currently, we have instructions which affect memory but have no memory
location. If you call, for example, MemoryLocation::get on a fence,
it asserts. This means things specifically have to avoid that. It
also means we end up with a copy of each API, one taking a memory
location, one not.
This starts to fix that.
We add MemoryLocation::getOrNone as a new call, and reimplement the
old asserting version in terms of it.
We make MemoryLocation optional in the (Instruction, MemoryLocation)
version of getModRefInfo, and kill the old one argument version in
favor of passing None (it had one caller). Now both can handle fences
because you can just use MemoryLocation::getOrNone on an instruction
and it will return a correct answer.
We use all this to clean up part of MemorySSA that had to handle this difference.
Note that literally every actual getModRefInfo interface we have could be made private and replaced with:
getModRefInfo(Instruction, Optional<MemoryLocation>)
and
getModRefInfo(Instruction, Optional<MemoryLocation>, Instruction, Optional<MemoryLocation>)
and delegating to the right ones, if we wanted to.
I have not attempted to do this yet.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, dblaikie
Subscribers: sanjoy, hfinkel, chandlerc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35441
llvm-svn: 309641
Found it during work on LLD, it would crash on following
linker script:
SECTIONS { .foo : { *("*®") } }
That happens because ® has int value -82. And chars are used as
array index in code, and are signed by default.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35891
llvm-svn: 309549
There is no situation where this rarely-used argument cannot be
substituted with a DIExpression and removing it allows us to simplify
the DWARF backend. Note that this patch does not yet remove any of
the newly dead code.
rdar://problem/33580047
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35951
llvm-svn: 309426
Summary:
Using c++11 enum classes ensures that only valid enum values are used
for ArchKind, ProfileKind, VersionKind and ISAKind. This removes the
need for checks that the provided values map to a proper enum value,
allows us to get rid of AK_LAST and prevents comparing values from
different enums. It also removes a bunch of static_cast
from unsigned to enum values and vice versa, at the cost of introducing
static casts to access AArch64ARCHNames and ARMARCHNames by ArchKind.
FPUKind and ArchExtKind are the only remaining old-style enum in
TargetParser.h. I think it's beneficial to keep ArchExtKind as old-style
enum, but FPUKind can be converted too, but this patch is quite big, so
could do this in a follow-up patch. I could also split this patch up a
bit, if people would prefer that.
Reviewers: rengolin, javed.absar, chandlerc, rovka
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: aemerson, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35882
llvm-svn: 309287
This changes DwarfContext to delegate to DwarfObject instead of having
pure virtual methods.
With this DwarfContextInMemory is replaced with an implementation of
DwarfObject that is local to a .cpp file.
llvm-svn: 308543
DIImportedEntity has a line number, but not a file field. To determine
the decl_line/decl_file we combine the line number from the
DIImportedEntity with the file from the DIImportedEntity's scope. This
does not work correctly when the parent scope is a DINamespace or a
DIModule, both of which do not have a source file.
This patch adds a file field to DIImportedEntity to unambiguously
identify the source location of the using/import declaration. Most
testcase updates are mechanical, the interesting one is the removal of
the FIXME in test/DebugInfo/Generic/namespace.ll.
This fixes PR33822. See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33822
for more context.
<rdar://problem/33357889>
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33822
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35583
llvm-svn: 308398
Summary:
Instead of wiring these through the CVTypeVisitor interface, clients
should inspect the CVTypeArray before visiting it and potentially load
up the type server's TPI stream if they need it.
No tests relied on this functionality because LLD was the only client.
Reviewers: ruiu
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, zturner, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35394
llvm-svn: 308212
Summary:
The current yaml::Input constructor takes a StringRef of data as its
first parameter, discarding any filename information that may have been
present when a YAML file was opened. Add an alterate yaml::Input
constructor that takes a MemoryBufferRef, which can have a filename
associated with it. This leads to clearer diagnostic messages.
Sponsored By: DARPA, AFRL
Reviewed By: arphaman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35398
Patch by: Jonathan Anderson (trombonehero)
llvm-svn: 308172
function to every defined function known to LLVM as a library function.
LLVM can introduce calls to these functions either by replacing other
library calls or by recognizing patterns (such as memset_pattern or
vector math patterns) and replacing those with calls. When these library
functions are actually defined in the module, we need to have reference
edges to them initially so that we visit them during the CGSCC walk in
the right order and can effectively rebuild the call graph afterward.
This was discovered when building code with Fortify enabled as that is
a common case of both inline definitions of library calls and
simplifications of code into calling them.
This can in extreme cases of LTO-ing with libc introduce *many* more
reference edges. I discussed a bunch of different options with folks but
all of them are unsatisfying. They either make the graph operations
substantially more complex even when there are *no* defined libfuncs, or
they introduce some other complexity into the callgraph. So this patch
goes with the simplest possible solution of actual synthetic reference
edges. If this proves to be a memory problem, I'm happy to implement one
of the clever techniques to save memory here.
llvm-svn: 308088
This fixes a minor bug in insertion to a reachable node that caused
DominatorTree.InsertDeleteExhaustive flakiness. The patch also adds
a new testcase for this exact failure.
llvm-svn: 308074
The DominatorTree.InsertDeleteExhaustive uses a RNG with a
constant seed to generate different sequences of updates. The test
fails on some buildbots and this patch disables it for now.
llvm-svn: 308070
Summary:
This patch implements incremental edge deletions.
It also makes DominatorTreeBase store a pointer to the parent function. The parent function is needed to perform full rebuilts during some deletions, but it is also used to verify that inserted and deleted edges come from the same function.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, grosser, sanjoy, brzycki
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35342
llvm-svn: 308062
Summary:
This patch introduces incremental edge insertions based on the Depth Based Search algorithm.
Insertions should work for both dominators and postdominators.
Reviewers: dberlin, grosser, davide, sanjoy, brzycki
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35341
llvm-svn: 308054
Summary:
DominatorTreeBase used to have IsPostDominators (bool) member to indicate if the tree is a dominator or a postdominator tree. This made it possible to switch between the two 'modes' at runtime, but it isn't used in practice anywhere.
This patch makes IsPostDominator a template argument. This way, it is easier to switch between different algorithms at compile-time based on this argument and design external utilities around it. It also makes it impossible to incidentally assign a postdominator tree to a dominator tree (and vice versa), and to further simplify template code in GenericDominatorTreeConstruction.
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, davide, grosser
Reviewed By: dberlin
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35315
llvm-svn: 308040
Summary:
This patch introduces a new testing utility for building and modifying CFG -- CFGBuilder. The primary use case for the utility is testing the upcoming incremental dominator tree update API.
The current design provides a simple mechanism of constructing arbitrary graphs and then applying series of updates to them. CFGBuilder takes care of creating empty functions, connecting and disconnecting basic blocks. Under the hood it uses SwitchInst and UnreachableInst.
It will be also possible to create a thin wrapper over CFGBuilder for parsing string input and to hook it up to other textual tools (e.g. opt used with FileCheck).
Reviewers: dberlin, sanjoy, grosser, dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: davide, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34798
llvm-svn: 307960
Summary: Different JITs and other clients of LLVM may have different needs in how symbol resolution should occur.
Reviewers: v.g.vassilev, lhames, karies
Reviewed By: v.g.vassilev
Subscribers: pcanal, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33529
llvm-svn: 307849
I used the wrong variable to update. This was even covered by a unittest
I wrote, and the comments for the unittest were correct (if confusing)
but the test itself just matched the buggy behavior. =[
llvm-svn: 307764
OpenCL 2.0 introduces the notion of memory scopes in atomic operations to
global and local memory. These scopes restrict how synchronization is
achieved, which can result in improved performance.
This change extends existing notion of synchronization scopes in LLVM to
support arbitrary scopes expressed as target-specific strings, in addition to
the already defined scopes (single thread, system).
The LLVM IR and MIR syntax for expressing synchronization scopes has changed
to use *syncscope("<scope>")*, where <scope> can be "singlethread" (this
replaces *singlethread* keyword), or a target-specific name. As before, if
the scope is not specified, it defaults to CrossThread/System scope.
Implementation details:
- Mapping from synchronization scope name/string to synchronization scope id
is stored in LLVM context;
- CrossThread/System and SingleThread scopes are pre-defined to efficiently
check for known scopes without comparing strings;
- Synchronization scope names are stored in SYNC_SCOPE_NAMES_BLOCK in
the bitcode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21723
llvm-svn: 307722
This unit test constructed some profile records incorrectly. One of the
records had a duplicate name: adding that record into the writer caused
an error unrelated to what needed to be tested.
Reported by David Blaikie!
llvm-svn: 307596
Summary:
This patch adds a callback registration API to the PassBuilder,
enabling registering out-of-tree passes with it.
Through the Callback API, callers may register callbacks with the
various stages at which passes are added into pass managers, including
parsing of a pass pipeline as well as at extension points within the
default -O pipelines.
Registering utilities like `require<>` and `invalidate<>` needs to be
handled manually by the caller, but a helper is provided.
Additionally, adding passes at pipeline extension points is exposed
through the opt tool. This patch adds a `-passes-ep-X` commandline
option for every extension point X, which opt parses into pipelines
inserted into that extension point.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: lksbhm, grosser, davide, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33464
llvm-svn: 307532
Reduces llvm-profdata memory usage on a large profile from 7.8GB to 5.1GB.
The ProfData API now supports reporting all the errors/warnings rather
than only the first, though llvm-profdata ignores everything after the
first for now to preserve existing behavior. (if there's a desire for
other behavior, happy to implement that - but might be as well left for
a separate patch)
Reviewers: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35149
llvm-svn: 307516
invalidation of analyses when merging SCCs.
While I've added a bunch of testing of this, it takes something much
more like the inliner to really trigger this as you need to have
partially-analyzed SCCs with updates at just the right time. So I've
added a direct test for this using the inliner and verifying the
domtree. Without the changes here, this test ends up finding a stale
dominator tree.
However, to handle this properly, we need to invalidate analyses
*before* merging the SCCs. After talking to Philip and Sanjoy about this
they convinced me this was the right approach. To do this, we need
a callback mechanism when merging SCCs so we can observe the cycle that
will be merged before the merge happens. This API update ended up being
surprisingly easy.
With this commit, the new PM passes the test-suite again. It hadn't
since MemorySSA was enabled for EarlyCSE as that also will find this bug
very quickly.
llvm-svn: 307498
dependencies between analyses.
This uncovers even more issues with the proxies and the splitting apart
of SCCs which are fixed in this patch. I discovered this while trying to
add more rigorous testing for a change I'm making to the call graph
update invalidation logic.
llvm-svn: 307497
The internal representation has a natural way to handle this and it
seems nicer than having to wrap this in an optional (with its own
separate flag).
This also matches how std::function works.
llvm-svn: 307490
the invalidation propagation logic from an SCC to a Function.
I wrote the infrastructure to test this but didn't actually use it in
the unit test where it was designed to be used. =[ My bad. Once
I actually added it to the test case I discovered that it also hadn't
been properly implemented, so I've implemented it. The logic in the FAM
proxy for an SCC pass to propagate invalidation follows the same ideas
as the FAM proxy for a Module pass, but the implementation is a bit
different to reflect the fact that it is forwarding just for an SCC.
However, implementing this correctly uncovered a surprising "bug" (it
was conservatively correct but relatively very expensive) in how we
handle invalidation when splitting one SCC into multiple SCCs. We did an
eager invalidation when in reality we should be deferring invaliadtion
for the *current* SCC to the CGSCC pass manager and just invaliating the
newly constructed SCCs. Otherwise we end up invalidating too much too
soon. This was exposed by the inliner test case that I've updated. Now,
we invalidate *just* the split off '(test1_f)' SCC when doing the CG
update, and then the inliner finishes and invalidates the '(test1_g,
test1_h)' SCC's analyses. The first few attempts at fixing this hit
still more bugs, but all of those are covered by existing tests. For
example, the inliner should also preserve the FAM proxy to avoid
unnecesasry invalidation, and this is safe because the CG update
routines it uses handle any necessary adjustments to the FAM proxy.
Finally, the unittests for the CGSCC pass manager needed a bunch of
updates where we weren't correctly preserving the FAM proxy because it
hadn't been fully implemented and failing to preserve it didn't matter.
Note that this doesn't yet fix the current crasher due to MemSSA finding
a stale dominator tree, but without this the fix to that crasher doesn't
really make any sense when testing because it relies on the proxy
behavior.
llvm-svn: 307487
This reverts commit 147f45ff24456aea59575fa4ac16c8fa554df46a.
Revert "Revert "Revert "Revert "Replace trivial use of external rc.exe by writing our own .res file.""""
This reverts commit 61a90a67ed54a1f0dfeab457b65abffa129569e4.
The patches were intially reverted because they were causing a failure
on CrWinClangLLD. Unfortunately, this was done haphazardly and didn't
compile, so the revert was reverted again quickly to fix this. One that
was done, the revert of the revert was itself reverted. This allowed me
to finally fix the actual bug in r307452. This patch re-enables the
code path that had originally been causing the bug, now that it (should)
be fixed.
llvm-svn: 307460
The 'NoError' function was meant to be used as the input to
ASSERT/EXPECT_TRUE, but it is easy to forget this (it could be annotated
with nodiscard to help this) so many sites that look like they're checked
are not (& silently discard the failure). Only one site actually has an
Error sneaking out this way and I've replaced that one with a
FIXME+consumeError.
The rest of the code has been modified to use the EXPECT_THAT_ERROR
macros Zach introduced a while back. Between the options available this
seems OK/good/something to standardize on - though it's difficult to
build a matcher that could handle checking for a specific llvm::Error
result, so those remain using the custom ErrorEquals (& the nodiscard
added to ensure it is not misused as it was previous to this patch). It
could still be generalized a bit further (even not as far as a matcher,
but at least support multiple kinds of Error, etc) & added to the
general Error utility header.
llvm-svn: 307440
Summary:
This is an addon to the change rl304488 cloning fixes. (Originally rl304226 reverted rl304228 and reapplied rl304488 https://reviews.llvm.org/D33655)
rl304488 works great when DILocalVariables that comes from the inlined function has a 'unique-ed' type, but,
in the case when the variable type is distinct we will create a second DILocalVariable in the scope of the original function that was inlined.
Consider cloning of the following function:
```
define private void @f() !dbg !5 {
%1 = alloca i32, !dbg !11
call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %1, metadata !14, metadata !12), !dbg !18
ret void, !dbg !18
}
!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "inlined", scope: !15, file: !6, line: 5, type: !17) ; came from an inlined function
!15 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "inlined", linkageName: "inlined", scope: null, file: !6, line: 8, type: !7, isLocal: true, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 9, isOptimized: false, unit: !0, variables: !16)
!16 = !{!14}
!17 = distinct !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "some_struct", size: 32, align: 32)
```
Without this fix, when function 'f' is cloned, we will create another DILocalVariable for "inlined", due to its type being distinct.
```
define private void @f.1() !dbg !23 {
%1 = alloca i32, !dbg !26
call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %1, metadata !28, metadata !12), !dbg !30
ret void, !dbg !30
}
!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "inlined", scope: !15, file: !6, line: 5, type: !17)
!15 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "inlined", linkageName: "inlined", scope: null, file: !6, line: 8, type: !7, isLocal: true, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 9, isOptimized: false, unit: !0, variables: !16)
!16 = !{!14}
!17 = distinct !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "some_struct", size: 32, align: 32)
;
!28 = !DILocalVariable(name: "inlined", scope: !15, file: !6, line: 5, type: !29) ; OOPS second DILocalVariable
!29 = distinct !DICompositeType(tag: DW_TAG_structure_type, name: "some_struct", size: 32, align: 32)
```
Now we have two DILocalVariable for "inlined" within the same scope. This result in assert in AsmPrinter/DwarfDebug.h:131: void llvm::DbgVariable::addMMIEntry(const llvm::DbgVariable &): Assertion `V.Var == Var && "conflicting variable"' failed.
(Full example: See: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33492)
In this change we prevent duplication of types so that when a metadata for DILocalVariable is cloned it will get uniqued to the same metadate node as an original variable.
Reviewers: loladiro, dblaikie, aprantl, echristo
Reviewed By: loladiro
Subscribers: EricWF, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35106
llvm-svn: 307418
the system's version of macOS
sys::getProcessTriple returns LLVM_HOST_TRIPLE, whose system version might not
be the actual version of the system on which the compiler running. This commit
ensures that, for macOS, sys::getProcessTriple returns a triple with the
system's macOS version.
rdar://33177551
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34446
llvm-svn: 307372
This patch updates the ORC layers and utilities to return and propagate
llvm::Errors where appropriate. This is necessary to allow ORC to safely handle
error cases in cross-process and remote JITing.
llvm-svn: 307350
The InstrProfWriter already stores the name and hash of the record in
the nested maps it uses for lookup while merging - this data is
duplicated in the value within the maps.
Refactor the InstrProfRecord to use a nested struct for the counters
themselves so that InstrProfWriter can use this nested struct alone
without the name or hash duplicated there.
This work is incomplete, but enough to demonstrate the value (around a
50% decrease in memory usage for a large test case (10GB -> 5GB)).
Though most of that decrease is probably from removing the
SoftInstrProfError as well, but I haven't implemented a replacement for
it yet. (it needs to go with the counters, because the operations on the
counters - merging, etc, are where the failures are - unlike the
name/hash which are totally unused by those counter-related operations
and thus easy to split out)
Ongoing discussion about removing SoftInstrProfError as a field of the
InstrProfRecord is happening on the thread that added it - including
the possibility of moving back towards an earlier version of that
proposed patch that passed SoftInstrProfError through the various APIs,
rather than as a member of InstrProfRecord.
Reviewers: davidxl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34838
llvm-svn: 307298
This reverts commit 5fecbbbe5049665d86834cf69d8f75db4f392308.
The initial revert was done in order to prevent ongoing errors on
chromium bots such as CrWinClangLLD. However, this was done haphazardly
and I didn't realize there were test and compilation failures, so this
revert was reverted. Now that those have been fixed, we can revert the
revert of the revert.
llvm-svn: 307226