Test that all VP intrinsics are tested.
Test intrinsic id -> opcode -> intrinsic id round tripping.
Test property scopes in the include/llvm/IR/VPIntrinsics.def file.
Reviewed By: frasercrmck
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93534
When using parallel loop construct, the OpenMP specification allows for
guided, auto and runtime as scheduling variants (as well as static and
dynamic which are already supported).
This adds the translation from MLIR to LLVM-IR for these scheduling
variants.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101435
Generalizing this API allows work to be distributed more evenly. In particular,
query callbacks can now be dispatched (rather than running immediately on the
thread that satisfied the query). This avoids the pathalogical case where an
operation on one thread satisfies many queries simultaneously, causing large
amounts of work to be run on that thread while other threads potentially sit
idle.
Printing pass manager invocations is fairly verbose and not super
useful.
This allows us to remove DebugLogging from pass managers and PassBuilder
since all logging (aside from analysis managers) goes through
instrumentation now.
This has the downside of never being able to print the top level pass
manager via instrumentation, but that seems like a minor downside.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101797
UnwindTable::parseRows() may return successfully if the CFIProgram has either
no CFI instructions or only DW_CFA_nop instructions and the UnwindRow return
argument will be empty. But currently, the callers are not checking for this case
which is leading to incorrect dumps in the unwind tables in such cases i.e.
CFA=unspecified
Reviewed By: clayborg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101892
We're trying to move DebugLogging into instrumentation, rather than
being part of PassManagers/AnalysisManagers.
Reviewed By: ychen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102093
induction variable to be perfect
This patch allow more conditional branches to be considered as loop
guard, and so more loop nests can be considered perfect.
Reviewed By: bmahjour, sidbav
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94717
The CGSCC pass manager interplay with the FunctionAnalysisManagerCGSCCProxy is 'special' in the sense that the former will rerun the latter if there are changes to a SCC structure; that being said, some of the functions in the SCC may be unchanged. In that case, the function simplification pipeline will be re-run, which impacts compile time[1].
This patch allows the function simplification pipeline be skipped if it was already run and the function was not modified since.
The behavior is currently disabled by default. This is because, currently, the rerunning of the function simplification pipeline on an unchanged function may still result in changes. The patch simplifies investigating and fixing those cases where repeated function pass runs do actually positively impact code quality, while offering an easy workaround for those impacted negatively by compile time regressions, and not impacting mainline scenarios.
[1] A [[ http://llvm-compile-time-tracker.com/compare.php?from=eb37d3546cd0c6e67798496634c45e501f7806f1&to=ac722d1190dc7bbdd17e977ef7ec95e69eefc91e&stat=instructions | compile time tracker ]] run with the option enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98103
As mentioned before in D78813, currently the XCOFF backend does not
support writing 64-bit object files, which the ORC JIT tests will try to
exercise if we are on AIX. This patch disables the tests on AIX for now.
This is consistent with what's been done, for example, regarding
`armv7`.
Reviewed By: lhames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101971
This can be useful for clients constructing custom JIT stacks: If the C API
for your custom stack exposes API to obtain a reference to an object layer
(e.g. LLVMOrcLLJITGetObjLinkingLayer) then the newly added
LLVMOrcObjectLayerAddObjectFile and LLVMOrcObjectLayerAddObjectFileWithRT
functions can be used to add objects directly to that layer.
This untangles the MCContext and the MCObjectFileInfo. There is a circular
dependency between MCContext and MCObjectFileInfo. Currently this dependency
also exists during construction: You can't contruct a MOFI without a MCContext
without constructing the MCContext with a dummy version of that MOFI first.
This removes this dependency during construction. In a perfect world,
MCObjectFileInfo wouldn't depend on MCContext at all, but only be stored in the
MCContext, like other MC information. This is future work.
This also shifts/adds more information to the MCContext making it more
available to the different targets. Namely:
- TargetTriple
- ObjectFileType
- SubtargetInfo
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101462
- As per the HLASM support we are providing, i.e. support only for the first parameter of the inline asm block, only pertaining to Z machine instructions defined in LLVM, character literals and string literals are not supported (see Figure 4 - https://www-01.ibm.com/servers/resourcelink/svc00100.nsf/pages/zOSV2R3sc264940/$file/asmr1023.pdf for more information)
- This patch explicitly rejects the usage of char literals and string literals (for example "abc 'a'") when the relevant field is set
- This is achieved by introducing a field called `LexHLASMStrings` in MCAsmLexer similar to `LexMasmStrings`
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan, Kai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101660
This test was removed in 51495fd285 due to broken bots. Its reintroduction is
expected to trigger failures on some builders. The test has been modified to
print error messages in full, which should aid in tracking these down.
This patch adds initial unit tests for appendToUsedList
in the ModuleUtils. It specifically tests changes from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D101363 which intent to allow
insertion of globals in non-zero address spaces into the
llvm used lists.
Reviewed by: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101746
Add a demangling support for a small subset of a new Rust mangling
scheme, with complete support planned as a follow up work.
Intergate Rust demangling into llvm-cxxfilt and use llvm-cxxfilt for
end-to-end testing. The new Rust mangling scheme uses "_R" as a prefix,
which makes it easy to disambiguate it from other mangling schemes.
The public API is modeled after __cxa_demangle / llvm::itaniumDemangle,
since potential candidates for further integration use those.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101444
Add function to create the offload_maptypes and the offload_mapnames globals. These two functions
are used in clang. They will be used in the Flang/MLIR lowering as well.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101503
- This patch attempts to implement the location counter syntax (*) for the HLASM variant for PC-relative instructions.
- In the HLASM variant, for purely constant relocatable values, we expect a * token preceding it, with special support for " *" which is parsed as "<pc-rel-insn 0>"
- For combinations of absolute values and relocatable values, we don't expect the "*" preceding the token.
When you have a " * " what’s accepted is:
```
*<space>.*{.*} -> <pc-rel-insn> 0
*[+|-][constant-value] -> <pc-rel-insn> [+|-]constant-value
```
When you don’t have a " * " what’s accepted is:
```
brasl 1,func is allowed (MCSymbolRef type)
brasl 1,func+4 is allowed (MCBinary type)
brasl 1,4+func is allowed (MCBinary type)
brasl 1,-4+func is allowed (MCBinary type)
brasl 1,func-4 is allowed (MCBinary type)
brasl 1,*func is not allowed (* cannot be used for non-MCConstantExprs)
brasl 1,*+func is not allowed (* cannot be used for non-MCConstantExprs)
brasl 1,*+func+4 is not allowed (* cannot be used for non-MCConstantExprs)
brasl 1,*+4+func is not allowed (* cannot be used for non-MCConstantExprs)
brasl 1,*-4+8+func is not allowed (* cannot be used for non-MCConstantExprs)
```
Reviewed By: Kai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100987
Move some types in STLExtras.h which are named and behave identically to
STL types from future standards into a dedicated header. This keeps them
organized (they are not "extras" in the same sense as most types in
STLExtras.h are) and fixes circular dependencies in future patches.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100668
- Currently, the "." (Dot) character, when not identifying an Identifier or a Constant, refers to the current PC (Program Counter)
- However, in z/OS, for the HLASM dialect, it strictly accepts only the "*" as the current PC (Support for this will be put up in a follow-up patch)
- The changes in this patch allow individual platforms to choose whether they would like to use the "." (Dot) character as a marker for the current PC or not.
- It is achieved by introducing a new field in MCAsmInfo.h called `DotIsPC` (similar to `DollarIsPC`)
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100975
This patch adds section support in the OpenMP IRBuilder module, along with a test for the same.
Reviewed By: fghanim
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89671
As suggested in D99294, this adds a getVPSingleValue helper to use for
recipes that are guaranteed to define a single value. This replaces uses
of getVPValue() which used to default to I = 0.
verifyFunctionAttrs has a comment that the value V is printed in error messages. The recently added errors for attributes didn't print V. Make them print V.
Change the stringification of AttributeList. Firstly they started with 'PAL[' which stood for ParamAttrsList. Change that to 'AttributeList[' matching its current name AttributeList. Print out semantic meaning of the index instead of the raw index value (i.e. 'return', 'function' or 'arg(n)').
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101484
- Previously, https://reviews.llvm.org/D99889 changed the framework in the AsmLexer to treat special tokens, if they occur at the start of the string, as Identifiers.
- These are used by the MASM Parser implementation in LLVM, and we can extend some of the changes made in the previous patch to SystemZ.
- In SystemZ, the special "tokens" referred to here are "_", "$", "@", "#". [_|$|@|#] are already supported as "part" of an Identifier.
- The changes in this patch ensure that these special tokens, when they occur at the start of the Identifier, are treated as Identifiers.
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100959
As a follow on to D96282, since bug point passes is built as a module the proper file extension to use is LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT, rather than SHLIBEXT. Using SHLIBEXT causes the tests to load a non-existent file on AIX. We also adjust the PluginsTest unittest to use LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT for similar reasons.
This change should hopefully make little difference to other platforms, since generally `SHLIBEXT=LTDL_SHLIB_EXT=CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_SUFFIX` and `LLVM_PLUGIN_EXT=CMAKE_SHARED_LIBRARY_SUFFIX` on every platform except AIX.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101412
This utility allows more efficient start of pattern match.
Often MachineInstr(MI) is available and instead of using
mi_match(MI.getOperand(0).getReg(), MRI, ...) followed by
MRI.getVRegDef(Reg) that gives back MI we now use
mi_match(MI, MRI, ...).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99735
The https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/107 builder is failing on this
testcase, but doesn't produce a helpful error message yet. Disabling for now
until I have time to dig in further.
This reapplies 8740360093, which was reverted in bbddadd46e due to buildbot
errors.
This version checks that a JIT instance can be safely constructed, skipping
tests if it can not be. To enable this it introduces new C API to retrieve and
set the target triple for a JITTargetMachineBuilder.
When iterating over const blocks, the base type in the lambdas needs
to use const VPBlockBase *, otherwise it cannot be used with input
iterators over const VPBlockBase.
Also adjust the type of the input iterator range to const &, as it
does not take ownership of the input range.
This patch adds a blocksOnly helpers which take an iterator range
over VPBlockBase * or const VPBlockBase * and returns an interator
range that only include BlockTy blocks. The accesses are casted to
BlockTy.
Reviewed By: a.elovikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101093
The StringView::substr now accepts a substring starting position and its
length instead of previous non-standard `from` & `to` positions.
All uses of two argument StringView::substr are in MicrosoftDemangler
and have 0 as a starting position, so no changes are necessary.
This also fixes a bug where attempting to extract a suffix with substr
(a `to` position equal to size) would return a substring without the
last character.
Fixing the issue should not introduce observable changes in the
demangler, since as currently used, a second argument to
StringView::substr is either: 1) a result of a successful call to
StringView::find and so necessarily smaller than size., or 2) in the
case of Demangler::demangleCharLiteral potentially equal to size, but
with demangler expecting more data to follow later on and failing either
way.
Reviewed By: #libc_abi, ldionne, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100246
This patch adds a new iterator to traverse through VPRegionBlocks and a
GraphTraits specialization using the iterator to traverse through
VPRegionBlocks.
Because there is already a GraphTraits specialization for VPBlockBase *
and co, a new VPBlockRecursiveTraversalWrapper helper is introduced.
This allows us to provide a new GraphTraits specialization for that
type. Users can use the new recursive traversal by using this wrapper.
The graph trait visits both the entry block of a region, as well as all
its successors. Exit blocks of a region implicitly have their parent
region's successors. This ensures all blocks in a region are visited
before any blocks in a successor region when doing a reverse post-order
traversal of the graph.
Reviewed By: a.elovikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100175
ConstantFoldingMIRBuilder was an experiment which is not used for
anything. The constant folding functionality is now part of
CSEMIRBuilder.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101050
In quite a few cases in LoopVectorize.cpp we call createStepForVF
with a step value of 0, which leads to unnecessary generation of
llvm.vscale intrinsic calls. I've optimised IRBuilder::CreateVScale
and createStepForVF to return 0 when attempting to multiply
vscale by 0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100763
- Previously, https://reviews.llvm.org/D72680 introduced a new attribute called `AllowSymbolAtNameStart` (in relation to the MAsmParser changes) in `MCAsmInfo.h` which (according to the comment in the header) allows the following behaviour:
```
/// This is true if the assembler allows $ @ ? characters at the start of
/// symbol names. Defaults to false.
```
- However, the usage of this field in AsmLexer.cpp doesn't seem completely accurate* for a couple of reasons.
```
default:
if (MAI.doesAllowSymbolAtNameStart()) {
// Handle Microsoft-style identifier: [a-zA-Z_$.@?][a-zA-Z0-9_$.@#?]*
if (!isDigit(CurChar) &&
isIdentifierChar(CurChar, MAI.doesAllowAtInName(),
AllowHashInIdentifier))
return LexIdentifier();
}
```
1. The Dollar and At tokens, when occurring at the start of the string, are treated as separate tokens (AsmToken::Dollar and AsmToken::At respectively) and not lexed as an Identifier.
2. I'm not too sure why `MAI.doesAllowAtInName()` is used when `AllowAtInIdentifier` could be used. For X86 platforms, afaict, this shouldn't be an issue, since the `CommentString` attribute isn't "@". (alternatively the call to the setter can be set anywhere else as needed). The `AllowAtInName` does have an additional important meaning, but in the context of AsmLexer, shouldn't mean anything different compared to `AllowAtInIdentifier`
My proposal is the following:
- Introduce 3 new fields called `AllowQuestionTokenAtStartOfString`, `AllowDollarTokenAtStartOfString` and `AllowAtTokenAtStartOfString` in MCAsmInfo.h which will encapsulate the previously documented behaviour of "allowing $, @, ? characters at the start of symbol names")
- Introduce these fields where "$", "@" are lexed, and treat them as identifiers depending on whether `Allow[Dollar|At]TokenAtStartOfString` is set.
- For the sole case of "?", append it to the existing logic for treating a "default" token as an Identifier.
z/OS (HLASM) will also make use of some of these fields in follow up patches.
completely accurate* - This was based on the comments and the intended behaviour the code. I might have completely misinterpreted it, and if that is the case my sincere apologies. We can close this patch if necessary, if there are no changes to be made :)
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D99374
Reviewed By: Jonathan.Crowther
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99889
CommandLine.h is indirectly included in ~50% of TUs when building
clang, and VirtualFileSystem.h is large.
(Already remarked by jhenderson on D70769.)
No behavior change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100957
If you gave clang the options `--target=arm-pc-windows-msvc` and
`-march=armv8-a+crypto` together, the crypto extension would not be
enabled in the compilation, and you'd see the following warning
message suggesting that the 'armv8-a' had been ignored:
clang: warning: ignoring extension 'crypto' because the 'armv7-a' architecture does not support it [-Winvalid-command-line-argument]
This happens because Triple::getARMCPUForArch(), for the Win32 OS,
unconditionally returns "cortex-a9" (an Armv7 CPU) regardless of
MArch, which overrides the architecture setting on the command line.
I don't think that the combination of Windows and AArch32 _should_
unconditionally outlaw the use of the crypto extension. MSVC itself
doesn't think so: you can perfectly well compile Thumb crypto code
using its AArch32-targeted compiler.
All the other default CPUs in the same switch statement are
conditional on a particular MArch setting; this is the only one that
returns a particular CPU _regardless_ of MArch. So I've fixed this one
by adding a condition, so that if you ask for an architecture *above*
v7, the default of Cortex-A9 no longer overrides it.
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100937
apple-m1 has the same level of ISA support as apple-a14,
so this is a straightforward mechanical change. However, that
also means this inherits apple-a14's v8.5a+nobti quirkiness.
rdar://68287159
Currently a CHECK-NOT directive succeeds whenever the corresponding
match fails. However match can fail due to an error rather than a lack
of match, for instance if a variable is undefined. This commit makes match
error a failure for CHECK-NOT.
Reviewed By: jdenny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86222
Value::replaceUsesOutsideBlock doesn't replace debug uses which leads to an
unnecessary reduction in variable location coverage. Fix this, add a unittest for
it, and add a regression test demonstrating the change through instcombine's
replacedSelectWithOperand.
Reviewed By: djtodoro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99169
This fixes https://reviews.llvm.org/D93990#2666922
by teaching `m_Undef` to match vectors/aggrs with poison elements.
As suggested, fixes in InstCombine files to use the `m_Undef` matcher instead
of `isa<UndefValue>` will be followed.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100122
At the moment, ReversePostOrderTraversal performs a post-order walk on
the entry node of the passed in graph, rather than the graph type
itself.
If GT::NodeRef is the same as GraphT, everything works as expected and
this is the case for the current uses in-tree. But it does not work as
expected if GraphT != GT::NodeRef. In that case, we either fail to build
(if there is no GraphTrait specialization for GT:NodeRef) or we pick the
GraphTrait specialization for GT::NodeRef, instead of the specialization
of GraphT.
Both the depth-first and post-order iterators pick the expected
specalization and this patch updates ReversePostOrderTraversal to
delegate to po_begin & po_end to pick the right specialization, rather
than forcing using GraphTraits<GT::NodeRef>, by first getting the entry
node.
This makes `ReversePostOrderTraversal<Graph<6>> RPOT(G);` build and
work as expected in the test.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100169
Attributes don't know their parent Context, adding this would make Attribute larger. Instead, we add hasParentContext that answers whether this Attribute belongs to a particular LLVMContext by checking for itself inside the context's FoldingSet. Same with AttributeSet and AttributeList. The Verifier checks them with the Module context.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99362
The implementation supports static schedule for Fortran do loops. This
implements the dynamic variant of the same concept.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97393
This allows for walking all nested locations of a given location, and is generally useful when processing locations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100437
Value::replaceUsesOutsideBlock doesn't replace debug uses which leads to an
unnecessary reduction in variable location coverage. Fix this, add a unittest for
it, and add a regression test demonstrating the change through instcombine's
replacedSelectWithOperand.
Reviewed By: djtodoro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99169
Add an initial version of a helper to determine whether a recipe may
have side-effects.
Reviewed By: a.elovikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100259
When DIE is extracted manually, the DieArray is empty. When dump is invoked on aforementioned DIE it tries to extract child, even if Dump options say otherwise. Resulting in crash.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99698
- Add support for HLASM style integers. These are the decimal integers [0-9].
- HLASM does not support the additional prefixed integers like, `0b`, `0x`, octal integers and Masm style integers.
- To achieve this, a field `LexHLASMStyleIntegers` (similar to the `LexMasmStyleIntegers` field) is introduced in `MCAsmLexer.h` as well as a corresponding setter.
Note: This field could also go into MCAsmInfo.h. I used the previous precedent set by the `LexMasmIntegers` field.
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D99286
Reviewed By: epastor
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99374
- Currently, MCAsmInfo provides a CommentString attribute, that various targets can set, so that the AsmLexer can appropriately lex a string as a comment based on the set value of the attribute.
- However, AsmLexer also supports a few additional comment syntaxes, in addition to what's specified as a CommentString attribute. This includes regular C-style block comments (/* ... */), regular C-style line comments (// .... ) and #. While I'm not sure as to why this behaviour exists, I am assuming it does to maintain backward compatibility with GNU AS (see https://sourceware.org/binutils/docs/as/Comments.html#Comments for reference)
For example:
Consider a target which sets the CommentString attribute to '*'.
The following strings are all lexed as comments.
```
"# abc" -> comment
"// abc" -> comment
"/* abc */ -> comment
"* abc" -> comment
```
- In HLASM however, only "*" is accepted as a comment string, and nothing else.
- To achieve this, an additional attribute (`AllowAdditionalComments`) has been added to MCAsmInfo. If this attribute is set to false, then only the string specified by the CommentString attribute is used as a possible comment string to be lexed by the AsmLexer. The regular C-style block comments, line comments and "#" are disabled. As a final note, "#" will still be treated as a comment, if the CommentString attribute is set to "#".
Depends on https://reviews.llvm.org/D99277
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan, myiwanch
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99286
"Does the predicate hold between two ranges?"
Not very surprisingly, some places were already doing this check,
without explicitly naming the algorithm, cleanup them all.
"Does the predicate hold between two ranges?"
Not very surprisingly, some places were already doing this check,
without explicitly naming the algorithm, cleanup them all.
Update llvm::sys::fs::mapped_file_region to have a move constructor and
a move assignment operator, allowing it to be used as an Optional. Also,
update FileOutputBuffer's OnDiskBuffer to take advantage of this,
avoiding an extra allocation from the unique_ptr.
A nice follow-up would be to make the mapped_file_region constructor
private and replace its use with a factory function, such as
mapped_file_region::create(), that returns an Expected (or ErrorOr). I
don't plan on doing that immediately, but I might swing back later.
No functionality change, besides the saved allocation in OnDiskBuffer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100159
Any given Windows system will have only one "system" encoding for
UTF-16 (BE or LE), so the assert for the other one would always
show up as rotten. Use a common assertion for both paths to avoid
this.
Add an ability to store `Offset` between partially aliased location. Use this
storage within returned `ResultAlias` instead of caching it in `AAQueryInfo`.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98718
Main reason is preparation to transform AliasResult to class that contains
offset for PartialAlias case.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98027
Add a variant of `fs::resize_file` for use immediately before opening a
file with `mapped_file_region::readwrite`. On Windows, `_chsize`
(`ftruncate`) is slow, but `CreateFileMapping` (`mmap`) automatically
extends the file so the call to `fs::resize_file` can be skipped.
This optimization was added to `FileOutputBuffer` in
da9bc2e56d5a5c6332a9def1a0065eb399182b93; this commit just extracts the
logic out and adds a unit test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95490
Proposed edit https://reviews.llvm.org/D97845#inline-922769 in D97845
suggests the checkWildcardRegexCharMatchFailure function name is
misleading because it is not clear it checks for a match failure on each
character in the string parameter. This commit renames it to an
hopefully clearer name.
Reviewed By: jdenny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98343
This is a (late) follow-up patch of 8871a4b4ca and
c95f39891a to make ConstantStruct::get/ConstantArray::getImpl
correctly return PoisonValue if all elements are poison.
This was found while discussing about the elements of a vector-typed UndefValue (D99853)
As D99834 was meant specifically for FreeBSD, which still uses the older
non-trivial std::pair copy constructors, test for `__FreeBSD__` instead
of relying on a macro which is an internal detail of libc++.
Noted by Louis Dionne.
Summary:
The function SplitCriticalEdge (called by SplitEdge) can return a nullptr in
cases where the edge is a critical. SplitEdge uses SplitCriticalEdge assuming it
can always split all critical edges, which is an incorrect assumption.
The three cases where the function SplitCriticalEdge will return a nullptr is:
1. DestBB is an exception block
2. Options.IgnoreUnreachableDests is set to true and
isa(DestBB->getFirstNonPHIOrDbgOrLifetime()) is not equal to a nullptr
3. LoopSimplify form must be preserved (Options.PreserveLoopSimplify is true)
and it cannot be maintained for a loop due to indirect branches
For each of these situations they are handled in the following way:
1. Modified the function ehAwareSplitEdge originally from
llvm/lib/Transforms/Coroutines/CoroFrame.cpp to handle the cases when the DestBB
is an exception block. This function is called directly in SplitEdge.
SplitEdge does not call SplitCriticalEdge in this case
2. Options.IgnoreUnreachableDests is set to false by default, so this situation
does not apply.
3. Return a nullptr in this situation since the SplitCriticalEdge also returned
nullptr. Nothing we can do in this case.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision:https://reviews.llvm.org/D94619
Follow up to a6d2a8d6f5. This covers all the public interfaces of the bundle related code. I tried to cleanup the internals where the changes were obvious, but there's definitely more room for improvement.
Add the subclass, update a few places which check for the intrinsic to use idiomatic dyn_cast, and update the public interface of AssumptionCache to use the new class. A follow up change will do the same for the newer assumption query/bundle mechanisms.
Problem:
On SystemZ we need to open text files in text mode. On Windows, files opened in text mode adds a CRLF '\r\n' which may not be desirable.
Solution:
This patch adds two new flags
- OF_CRLF which indicates that CRLF translation is used.
- OF_TextWithCRLF = OF_Text | OF_CRLF indicates that the file is text and uses CRLF translation.
Developers should now use either the OF_Text or OF_TextWithCRLF for text files and OF_None for binary files. If the developer doesn't want carriage returns on Windows, they should use OF_Text, if they do want carriage returns on Windows, they should use OF_TextWithCRLF.
So this is the behaviour per platform with my patch:
z/OS:
OF_None: open in binary mode
OF_Text : open in text mode
OF_TextWithCRLF: open in text mode
Windows:
OF_None: open file with no carriage return
OF_Text: open file with no carriage return
OF_TextWithCRLF: open file with carriage return
The Major change is in llvm/lib/Support/Windows/Path.inc to only set text mode if the OF_CRLF is set.
```
if (Flags & OF_CRLF)
CrtOpenFlags |= _O_TEXT;
```
These following files are the ones that still use OF_Text which I left unchanged. I modified all these except raw_ostream.cpp in recent patches so I know these were previously in Binary mode on Windows.
./llvm/lib/Support/raw_ostream.cpp
./llvm/lib/TableGen/Main.cpp
./llvm/tools/dsymutil/DwarfLinkerForBinary.cpp
./llvm/unittests/Support/Path.cpp
./clang/lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/HTMLDiagnostics.cpp
./clang/lib/Frontend/CompilerInstance.cpp
./clang/lib/Driver/Driver.cpp
./clang/lib/Driver/ToolChains/Clang.cpp
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99426
For VPWidenPHIRecipes that model all incoming values as VPValue
operands, print those operands instead of printing the original PHI.
D99294 updates recipes of reduction PHIs to use the VPValue for the
incoming value from the loop backedge, making use of this new printing.
The reason for the NewPM redesign is described in the commit
cba3e783389a: [NewPM] Disable PreservedCFGChecker ...
The checker introduces an internal custom CFG analysis that tracks
current up-to date CFG snapshot. The analysis is invalidated along
any other CFG related analysis (the key is CFGAnalyses). If the CFG
analysis is not invalidated at a functional pass exit then the checker
asserts that the CFG snapshot taken from this analysis is equals to
a snapshot of the current CFG.
Along the way:
- the function CFG::printDiff() is simplified by removing function
name calculation. The name is printed by the caller;
- fixed CFG invalidated condition (see CFG::invalidate());
- StandardInstrumentations::registerCallbacks() gets additional
optional parameter of type FunctionAnalysisManager*, which is
needed by the checker to get the custom CFG analysis;
- several PM related tests updated to explicitly set
-verify-cfg-preserved=1 as they need.
This patch is safe to land as the CFGChecker is left switched off
(the options -verify-cfg-preserved is false by default). It will be
switched on by a separate patch to minimize possible reverts.
Reviewed By: skatkov, kuhar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91327
TextAPI/ELF has moved out into InterfaceStubs, so theres no longer a
need to seperate out TextAPI between formats.
Reviewed By: ributzka, int3, #lld-macho
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99811
As FreeBSD already used libc++ before it changed its ABI, we still use
the non-trivially copyable version of std::pair, which used to be
exposed via `_LIBCPP_TRIVIAL_PAIR_COPY_CTOR`, but more recently via
`_LIBCPP_DEPRECATED_ABI_DISABLE_PAIR_TRIVIAL_COPY_CTOR`.
Reviewed By: serge-sans-paille
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99834
Change the definition of G_SBFX and G_UBFX so that the lsb and width
can have different types than the src and dst operands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99739
In order to bring up scalable vector support in LLVM incrementally,
we introduced behaviour to emit a warning, instead of an error, when
asking the wrong question of a scalable vector, like asking for the
fixed number of elements.
This patch puts that behaviour under a flag. The default behaviour is
that the compiler will always error, which means that all LLVM unit
tests and regression tests will now fail when a code-path is taken that
still uses the wrong interface.
The behaviour to demote an error to a warning can be individually enabled
for tools that want to support experimental use of scalable vectors.
This patch enables that behaviour when driving compilation from Clang.
This means that for users who want to try out scalable-vector support,
fixed-width codegen support, or build user-code with scalable vector
intrinsics, Clang will not crash and burn when the compiler encounters
such a case.
This allows us to do away with the following pattern in many of the SVE tests:
RUN: .... 2>%t
RUN: cat %t | FileCheck --check-prefix=WARN
WARN-NOT: warning: ...
The behaviour to emit warnings is only temporary and we expect this flag
to be removed in the future when scalable vector support is more stable.
This patch also has fixes the following tests:
unittests:
ScalableVectorMVTsTest.SizeQueries
SelectionDAGAddressAnalysisTest.unknownSizeFrameObjects
AArch64SelectionDAGTest.computeKnownBitsSVE_ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG
regression tests:
Transforms/InstCombine/vscale_gep.ll
Reviewed By: paulwalker-arm, ctetreau
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98856
Also, make it structurally required so it can't be forgotten and re-introduce
the bug that led to the rotten green tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99692
- This patch adds in support to accept the "#" character as part of an Identifier.
- This support is needed especially for the HLASM dialect since "#" is treated as part of the valid "Alphabet" range
- The way this is done is by making use of the previous precedent set by the `AllowAtInIdentifier` field in `MCAsmLexer.h`. A new field called `AllowHashInIdentifier` is introduced.
- The static function `IsIdentifierChar` is also updated to accept the `#` character if the `AllowHashInIdentifier` field is set to true.
Note: The field introduced in `MCAsmLexer.h` could very well be moved to `MCAsmInfo.h`. I'm not opposed to it. I decided to put it in `MCAsmLexer` since there seems to be some sort of precedent already with `AllowAtInIdentifier`.
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan, nickdesaulniers, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99277
That's how it was originally intended but that wasn't possible because
we still needed to support older CMake versions.
The problem here is that the sources in TableGenGlobalISel are meant to
be linked into both llvm-tblgen and TableGenTests (a unit test), but not
be part of LLVM proper. So they shouldn't be an ordinary LLVM component.
Because they are used in llvm-tblgen, they can't draw in the LLVM dylib
dependency, but then we'd have to do the same thing in TableGenTests to
make sure we don't link both a static Support library and another copy
through the LLVM dylib.
With an object library we're just reusing the object files and don't
have to care about dependencies at all.
Reviewed By: beanz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74588
This is a patch teaching ValueTracking that `s/u*.with.overflow` intrinsics do not
create undef/poison and they propagate poison.
I couldn't write a nice example like the one with ctpop; ValueTrackingTest.cpp were simply updated
to check these instead.
This patch helps reducing regression while fixing https://llvm.org/pr49688 .
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99671
Adds utilities for creating anonymous pointers and jump stubs to x86_64.h. These
are used by the GOT and Stubs builder, but may also be used by pass writers who
want to create pointer stubs for indirection.
This patch also switches the underlying type for LinkGraph content from
StringRef to ArrayRef<char>. This avoids any confusion when working with buffers
that contain null bytes in the middle like, for example, a newly added null
pointer content array. ;)
This commit adds debugging support for set types defined in languages
such as Pascal and Modula-2.
Patch by Peter McKinna!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76115
I think byval/sret and the others are close to being able to rip out
the code to support the missing type case. A lot of this code is
shared with inalloca, so catch this up to the others so that can
happen.
The function utilizes Windows' SearchPathW function, which as I found out today, may also return directories. After looking at the Unix implementation of the file I found that it contains a check whether the found path is also executable. While fixing the Windows implementation, I also learned that sys::fs::access returns successfully when querying whether directories are executable, which the Unix version does not.
This patch makes both of these functions equivalent to their Unix implementation and insures that any path returned by sys::findProgramByName on Windows may only be executable, just like the Unix implementation.
The equivalent additions I have made to the Windows implementation, in the Unix implementation are here:
sys::findProgramByName: 39ecfe6143/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Program.inc (L90)
sys::fs::access: c2a84771bb/llvm/lib/Support/Unix/Path.inc (L608)
I encountered this issue when running the LLVM testsuite. Commands of the form not test ... would fail to correctly execute test.exe, which is part of GnuWin32, as it actually tried to execute a folder called test, which happened to be in a directory on my PATH.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99357
SCEV currently tries to prove implications of x pred y by also
trying to imply ~y pred ~x. This is expensive in terms of
compile-time (in fact, the majority of isImpliedCond compile-time
is spent here) and generally not fruitful. The issue is that this
also swaps the operands and thus breaks canonical ordering. If
originally we were trying to prove an implication like
X > C1 -> Y > C2, then we'll now try to prove X > C1 -> C3 > ~Y,
which will not work.
The only real case where we can get some use out of this transform
is if the original conditions were in the form X > C1 -> Y < C2, were
then swapped to X > C1 -> C2 > Y and are then swapped again here to
X > C1 -> ~Y > C3.
As such, handle this at a higher level, where we are doing the
swapping in the first place. There's four different ways that we
can line up a predicate and a swapped predicate, so we use some
heuristics to pick some profitable way.
Because we now try this transform at a higher level
(isImpliedCondOperands rather than isImpliedCondOperandsHelper),
we can also prove additional facts. Of the added tests, one was
proven previously while the other wasn't.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90926
FileCheck string substitution block parsing code only report an invalid
variable name in a string variable use if it starts with a forbidden
character. It does not report anything if there are unparsed characters
after the variable name, i.e. [[X-Y]] is parsed as [[X]] and no error is
returned. This commit fixes that.
Reviewed By: jdenny, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98691
- https://reviews.llvm.org/rGb605cfb336989705f391d255b7628062d3dfe9c3 was reverted due to sanitizer bugs in the introduced unit-test (specifically in the Address sanitizer https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/5/builds/5697)
- This patch attempts to rectify that, as well as re-factor parts of the test
- The issue was previously, within the `setupCallToAsmParser` function in the unit-test, `SrcMgr` was declared as a local variable. `SrcMgr` owns a unique pointer. Since the variable goes out of scope at the end of the function, the unique pointer is released.
- This patch, moves the declaration of the `SrcMgr` variable to a class field, since the scope will remain until the class's destructor is invoked (which in this case is at the end of the unit test)
- Furthermore, this patch also moves the `MCContext Ctx` declaration from a local variable instance inside a function, to a unique pointer class field. This ensures the instantiation of the MCContext remains until the tear down of the test.
Reviewed By: abhina.sreeskantharajan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99004
As mentioned in [[ https://reviews.llvm.org/D96979 | D96979 ]], I'm extending the **IsGuaranteedLoopInvariant** check also to the `MemorySSA.cpp` file.
@fhahn For now I didn't unify the function into `MemorySSA.h` because, as you mentioned, it's not directly MSSA related. I'm open to suggestions to find a better place so we can improve the unification process.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97155
This avoids temporary and memcpy call when computing large expressions.
It's basically some kind of poor man's expression template, but it seems easier
to maintain to have a single generic `apply` call instead of the whole
expression template machinery here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98176
This patch adds a new llvm.experimental.stepvector intrinsic,
which takes no arguments and returns a linear integer sequence of
values of the form <0, 1, ...>. It is primarily intended for
scalable vectors, although it will work for fixed width vectors
too. It is intended that later patches will make use of this
new intrinsic when vectorising induction variables, currently only
supported for fixed width. I've added a new CreateStepVector
method to the IRBuilder, which will generate a call to this
intrinsic for scalable vectors and fall back on creating a
ConstantVector for fixed width.
For scalable vectors this intrinsic is lowered to a new ISD node
called STEP_VECTOR, which takes a single constant integer argument
as the step. During lowering this argument is set to a value of 1.
The reason for this additional argument at the codegen level is
because in future patches we will introduce various generic DAG
combines such as
mul step_vector(1), 2 -> step_vector(2)
add step_vector(1), step_vector(1) -> step_vector(2)
shl step_vector(1), 1 -> step_vector(2)
etc.
that encourage a canonical format for all targets. This hopefully
means all other targets supporting scalable vectors can benefit
from this too.
I've added cost model tests for both fixed width and scalable
vectors:
llvm/test/Analysis/CostModel/AArch64/neon-stepvector.ll
llvm/test/Analysis/CostModel/AArch64/sve-stepvector.ll
as well as codegen lowering tests for fixed width and scalable
vectors:
llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/neon-stepvector.ll
llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/sve-stepvector.ll
See this thread for discussion of the intrinsic:
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-January/147943.html
writeToOutput function is useful when it is necessary to create different kinds
of streams(based on stream name) and when we need to use a temporary file
while writing(which would be renamed into the resulting file in a success case).
This patch moves the writeToStream helper into the Support library.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98426
There is a bunch of similar bitfield extraction code throughout *ISelDAGToDAG.
E.g, ARMISelDAGToDAG, AArch64ISelDAGToDAG, and AMDGPUISelDAGToDAG all contain
code that matches a bitfield extract from an and + right shift.
Rather than duplicating code in the same way, this adds two opcodes:
- G_UBFX (unsigned bitfield extract)
- G_SBFX (signed bitfield extract)
They work like this
```
%x = G_UBFX %y, %lsb, %width
```
Where `lsb` and `width` are
- The least-significant bit of the extraction
- The width of the extraction
This will extract `width` bits from `%y`, starting at `lsb`. G_UBFX zero-extends
the result, while G_SBFX sign-extends the result.
This should allow us to use the combiner to match the bitfield extraction
patterns rather than duplicating pattern-matching code in each target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98464
I foresee two uses for this:
1) It's easier to use those in debugger.
2) Once we start implementing more VPlan-to-VPlan transformations (especially
inner loop massaging stuff), using the vectorized LLVM IR as CHECK targets in
LIT test would become too obscure. I can imagine that we'd want to CHECK
against VPlan dumps after multiple transformations instead. That would be
easier with plain text dumps than with DOT format.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96628
Count iterations of zero-trip loops and assert the count is zero,
rather than asserting inside the loop.
Unreachable functions should use llvm_unreachable.
Remove tautological 'if' statements, even when they're following a
pattern of checks.
Found by the Rotten Green Tests project.
Suppresses an implicit TypeSize to uint64_t conversion warning.
We might be able to just not offset it since we're writing to a
Fixed stack object, but I wasn't sure so I just did what
DAGTypeLegalizer::IncrementPointer does.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98736
This reverts commit 6b053c9867.
The build is broken:
ld.lld: error: undefined symbol: llvm::VPlan::printDOT(llvm::raw_ostream&) const
>>> referenced by LoopVectorize.cpp
>>> LoopVectorize.cpp.o:(llvm::LoopVectorizationPlanner::printPlans(llvm::raw_ostream&)) in archive lib/libLLVMVectorize.a
I foresee two uses for this:
1) It's easier to use those in debugger.
2) Once we start implementing more VPlan-to-VPlan transformations (especially
inner loop massaging stuff), using the vectorized LLVM IR as CHECK targets in
LIT test would become too obscure. I can imagine that we'd want to CHECK
against VPlan dumps after multiple transformations instead. That would be
easier with plain text dumps than with DOT format.
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96628
This reverts commit 11b70b9e3a.
The bot failure was due to ArgumentPromotion deleting functions
without deleting their analyses. This was separately fixed in 4b1c807.
The XCore backend does not support object emission. Several tests fail for this
reason when XCore is the default target. See staging buildbot builder:
clang-xcore-ubuntu-20-x64.
So check for backend object emission before running the tests requiring it.
Incorporate isConfigurationSupported functionality in isObjectEmissionSupported,
to avoid calling them both in the same tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98400
A more general name might be match-time error propagation. That is,
it's conceivable we'll one day have non-numeric errors that require
the handling fixed by this patch.
Without this patch, FileCheck behaves as follows:
```
$ cat check
CHECK-NOT: [[#0x8000000000000000+0x8000000000000000]]
$ FileCheck -vv -dump-input=never check < input
check:1:54: remark: implicit EOF: expected string found in input
CHECK-NOT: [[#0x8000000000000000+0x8000000000000000]]
^
<stdin>:2:1: note: found here
^
check:1:15: error: unable to substitute variable or numeric expression: overflow error
CHECK-NOT: [[#0x8000000000000000+0x8000000000000000]]
^
$ echo $?
0
```
Notice that the exit status is 0 even though there's an error.
Moreover, FileCheck doesn't print the error diagnostic unless both
`-dump-input=never` and `-vv` are specified.
The same problem occurs when `CHECK-NOT` does have a match but a
capture fails due to overflow: exit status is 0, and no diagnostic is
printed unless both `-dump-input=never` and `-vv` are specified. The
usefulness of capturing from `CHECK-NOT` is questionable, but this
case should certainly produce an error.
With this patch, FileCheck always includes the error diagnostic and
has non-zero exit status for the above examples. It's conceivable
that this change will cause some existing tests to fail, but my
assumption is that they should fail. Moreover, with nearly every
project enabled, this patch didn't produce additional `check-all`
failures for me.
This patch also extends input dumps to include such numeric error
diagnostics for both expected and excluded patterns.
As noted in fixmes in some of the tests added by this patch, this
patch worsens an existing issue with redundant diagnostics. I'll fix
that bug in a subsequent patch.
Reviewed By: thopre, jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98086
Fixed section of code that iterated through a SmallDenseMap and added
instructions in each iteration, causing non-deterministic code; replaced
SmallDenseMap with MapVector to prevent non-determinism.
This reverts commit 01ac6d1587.
Unreachable code should be self-documented as unreachable.
Found by the Rotten Green Tests project.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98518
This caused non-deterministic compiler output; see comment on the
code review.
> This patch updates the various IR passes to correctly handle dbg.values with a
> DIArgList location. This patch does not actually allow DIArgLists to be produced
> by salvageDebugInfo, and it does not affect any pass after codegen-prepare.
> Other than that, it should cover every IR pass.
>
> Most of the changes simply extend code that operated on a single debug value to
> operate on the list of debug values in the style of any_of, all_of, for_each,
> etc. Instances of setOperand(0, ...) have been replaced with with
> replaceVariableLocationOp, which takes the value that is being replaced as an
> additional argument. In places where this value isn't readily available, we have
> to track the old value through to the point where it gets replaced.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88232
This reverts commit df69c69427.
BasicAA stores a reference to LoopInfo inside. This imposes an implicit
requirement of keeping it up to date whenever we modify the IR (in particular,
whenever we modify terminators of blocks that belong to loops). Failing
to do so leads to incorrect state of the LoopInfo.
Because general AA does not require loop info updates and provides to API to
update it properly, the users of AA reasonably assume that there is no need to
update the loop info. It may be a reason of bugs, as example in PR43276 shows.
This patch drops dependence of BasicAA on LoopInfo to avoid this problem.
This may potentially pessimize the result of queries to BasicAA.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98627
Reviewed By: nikic
- Previously, https://reviews.llvm.org/D97703 was [[ https://reviews.llvm.org/D98543 | reverted ]] as it broke when building the unit tests when shared libs on.
- This patch reverts the "revert" and makes two minor changes
- The first is it also links in the MCParser lib when building the unittest. This should resolve the issue when building with with shared libs on and off
- The second renames the name of the unit test from `SystemZAsmLexer` to `SystemZAsmLexerTests` since the convention for unittest binaries is to suffix the name of the unit test with "Tests"
Reviewed By: Kai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98666
This parallels ConstantDataArray::getRaw() and can be used with ConstantDataSequential::getRawDataValues() in the base class for both types.
Update BuildConstantData{Array,Vector} tests to test the getRaw API. Also removes its unused Module.
In passing, update some comments to include the support for half and bfloat. Update tests to include testing for bfloat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98302
This patch introduces generic x86-64 edge kinds, and refactors the MachO/x86-64
backend to use these edge kinds. This simplifies the implementation of the
MachO/x86-64 backend and makes it possible to write generic x86-64 passes and
utilities.
The new edge kinds are different from the original set used in the MachO/x86-64
backend. Several edge kinds that were not meaningfully distinguished in that
backend (e.g. the PCRelMinusN edges) have been merged into single edge kinds in
the new scheme (these edge kinds can be reintroduced later if we find a use for
them). At the same time, new edge kinds have been introduced to convey extra
information about the state of the graph. E.g. The Request*AndTransformTo**
edges represent GOT/TLVP relocations prior to synthesis of the GOT/TLVP
entries, and the 'Relaxable' suffix distinguishes edges that are candidates for
optimization from edges which should be left as-is (e.g. to enable runtime
redirection).
ELF/x86-64 will be refactored to use these generic edges at some point in the
future, and I anticipate a similar refactor to create a generic arm64 support
header too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98305
This is a patch to add nonnull and align to assume's operand bundle
only if noundef exists.
Since nonnull and align in fn attr have poison semantics, they should be
paired with noundef or noundef-implying attributes to be immediate UB.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert, Tyker
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98228
D98289 was erroneously reporting `invalid range list offset 0x20110`
instead of `invalid range list table index 0`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98589
This reverts commit 329aeb5db4,
and relands commit 61f006ac65.
This is a continuation of D89456.
As it was suggested there, now that SCEV models `PtrToInt`,
we can try to improve SCEV's pointer handling.
In particular, i believe, i will need this in the future
to further fix `SCEVAddExpr`operation type handling.
This removes special handling of `ConstantPointerNull`
from `ScalarEvolution::createSCEV()`, and add constant folding
into `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`.
This way, `null` constants stay as such in SCEV's,
but gracefully become zero integers when asked.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98147