Static libraries where installed into "lib${LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX}" while
shared ones into "lib". I found no justification for this behaviour.
This patch changes both types of libraries to be install into
"lib${LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX}". LLVM and clang use the same behaviour.
This fixes llvm.org/PR27305.
llvm-svn: 265872
Summary: A program shall not declare an explicit instantiation (14.8.2), an explicit specialization (14.8.3), or a partial specialization of a concept definition.
Reviewers: rsmith, hubert.reinterpretcast, faisalv, aaron.ballman
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18221
llvm-svn: 265868
This is re-landing r260742. I've reworked the conditionals so that it only hits when targeting Apple platforms with ld64.
Original Summary:
With this change generating clang order files using dtrace uses the following workflow:
cmake <whatever options you want>
ninja generate-order-file
ninja clang
This patch works by setting a default path to the order file (which can be overridden by the user). If the order file doesn't exist during configuration CMake will create an empty one.
CMake then ties up the dependencies between the clang link job and the order file, and generate-order-file overwrites CLANG_ORDER_FILE with the new order file.
llvm-svn: 265864
This makes it so that when running 'ninja test-suite' from the top-level LLVM ninja build it *always* re-runs the ninja command in the test-suite directory.
This mechanism is required because the top-level ninja file doesn't have a view into the subdirectory dependency tree, so it can't know what, if anything, needs to be rebuilt.
llvm-svn: 265863
profiling and optimization remarks and indicate that no debug info shall
be emitted for these compile units.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18808
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265862
Sample-based profiling and optimization remarks currently remove
DICompileUnits from llvm.dbg.cu to suppress the emission of debug info
from them. This is somewhat of a hack and only borderline legal IR.
This patch uses the recently introduced NoDebug emission kind in
DICompileUnit to achieve the same result without breaking the Verifier.
A nice side-effect of this change is that it is now possible to combine
NoDebug and regular compile units under LTO.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18808
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265861
-thread-info in lldbmi does not conform to protocol. Should end with
current thread id as described here:
https://sourceware.org/gdb/onlinedocs/gdb/GDB_002fMI-Thread-Commands.html#GDB_002fMI-Thread-Commands
When printing all threads, the current thread id should be printed
afterwards.
Example:
-thread-info
^done,threads=[
{id="2",target-id="Thread 0xb7e14b90 (LWP 21257)",
frame={level="0",addr="0xffffe410",func="__kernel_vsyscall",
args=[]},state="running"},
{id="1",target-id="Thread 0xb7e156b0 (LWP 21254)",
frame={level="0",addr="0x0804891f",func="foo",
args=[{name="i",value="10"}],
file="/tmp/a.c",fullname="/tmp/a.c",line="158"},
state="running"}],
current-thread-id="1"
(gdb)
Patch from jacdavis@microsoft.com
Reviewers: zturner, chuckr
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/differential/revision/edit/18880/
llvm-svn: 265858
This is a cleanup patch for SSP support in LLVM. There is no functional change.
llvm.stackprotectorcheck is not needed, because SelectionDAG isn't
actually lowering it in SelectBasicBlock; rather, it adds check code in
FinishBasicBlock, ignoring the position where the intrinsic is inserted
(See FindSplitPointForStackProtector()).
llvm-svn: 265851
processed update records. If an update record adds a definition, we need to
merge that with any pre-existing definition to determine which the canonical
definition is before we apply the visible update, otherwise we wouldn't know
where to apply it.
Thanks to Vassil Vassilev for help reducing this and tracking down the problem.
llvm-svn: 265848
Previously, Lazy symbols were created for undefined symbols even though
such symbols cannot be resolved by loading object files. This patch
fixes that bug.
llvm-svn: 265847
The doxygen comments are automatically generated based on Sony's intrinsics document.
I got an OK from Eric Christopher to commit doxygen comments without prior code review upstream. This patch was internally reviewed by Paul Robinson.
llvm-svn: 265844
This is in preparation for tail duplication during block placement. See D18226.
This needs to be a utility class for 2 reasons. No passes may run after block
placement, and also, tail-duplication affects subsequent layout decisions, so
it must be interleaved with placement, and can't be separated out into its own
pass. The original pass is still useful, and now runs by delegating to the
utility class.
llvm-svn: 265842
Teach trackNullOrUndefValue() how to look through PseudoObjectExprs to find
the underlying method call for property getters. This makes over-suppression
of 'return nil' in getters consistent with the similar over-suppression for
method and function calls.
rdar://problem/24437252
llvm-svn: 265839
In Memcpy lowering we had missed a dependence from the load of the
operation to successor operations. This causes us to potentially
construct an in initial DAG with a memory dependence not fully
represented in the chain sub-DAG but rather require looking at the
entire DAG breaking alias analysis by allowing incorrect repositioning
of memory operations.
To work around this, r200033 changed DAGCombiner::GatherAllAliases to be
conservative if any possible issues to happen. Unfortunately this check
forbade many non-problematic situations as well. For example, it's
common for incoming argument lowering to add a non-aliasing load hanging
off of EntryNode. Then, if GatherAllAliases visited EntryNode, it would
find that other (unvisited) use of the EntryNode chain, and just give up
entirely. Furthermore, the check was incomplete: it would not actually
detect all such potentially problematic DAG constructions, because
GatherAllAliases did not guarantee to visit all chain nodes going up to
the root EntryNode. This is in general fine -- giving up early will just
miss a potential optimization, not generate incorrect results. But, for
this non-chain dependency detection code, it's possible that you could
have a load attached to a higher-up chain node than any which were
visited. If that load aliases your store, but the only dependency is
through the value operand of a non-aliasing store, it would've been
missed by this code, and potentially reordered.
With the dependence added, this check can be removed and Alias Analysis
can be much more aggressive. This fixes code quality regression in the
Consecutive Store Merge cleanup (D14834).
Test Change:
ppc64-align-long-double.ll now may see multiple serializations
of its stores
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18062
llvm-svn: 265836
Strip out the remapping parts of IRLinker::linkFunctionBody and put them
in ValueMapper.cpp under the name Mapper::remapFunction (with a
top-level entry-point llvm::RemapFunction).
This is a nice cleanup on its own since it puts the remapping code
together and shares a single Mapper context for the entire
IRLinker::linkFunctionBody Call. Besides that, this will make it easier
to break the co-recursion between IRMover.cpp and ValueMapper.cpp in
follow ups.
llvm-svn: 265835
Use Mapper::mapValue instead of llvm::MapValue from
Mapper::remapInstruction when mapping an incoming block for a PHINode
(follow-up to r265832). This will implicitly pass along the
Materializer argument, but when this code was added in r133513 there was
no Materializer argument. I suspect this call to MapValue was just
missed in r182776 since it's not observable (basic blocks can't be
materialized, and they don't reference other values).
llvm-svn: 265833
Add Mapper::remapInstruction, move the guts of llvm::RemapInstruction
into it, and use the same Mapper for most of the calls to MapValue and
MapMetadata. There should be no functionality change here.
I left off the call to MapValue that wasn't passing in a Materializer
argument (for basic blocks of PHINodes). It shouldn't change
functionality either, but I'm suspicious enough to commit separately.
llvm-svn: 265832
This is a cleanup after clarifying the meaning of RF_IgnoreMissingLocals
in r265628 and truly limiting it to locals in r265768.
This should have no functionality change, since the only context that
the flag has an effect is when we could hit function-local Value and
Metadata, and we were already passing it in those contexts.
llvm-svn: 265831
This code was getting evaluated unintentionally at binding
generation time instead of binding file compilation time.
Addresses:
https://bugs.swift.org/browse/SR-1192
llvm-svn: 265829
Prevent the Metadata side-table in ValueMap from growing unnecessarily
when RF_NoModuleLevelChanges. As a drive-by, make ValueMap::hasMD,
which apparently had no users until I used it here for testing, actually
compile.
llvm-svn: 265828
Stop adding MDString to the Metadata section of the ValueMap in
MapMetadata. It blows up the size of the map for no benefit, since we
can always return quickly anyway.
There is a potential follow-up that I don't think I'll push on right
away, but maybe someone else is interested: stop checking for a
pre-mapped MDString, and move the `isa<MDString>()` checks in
Mapper::mapSimpleMetadata and MDNodeMapper::getMappedOp in front of the
`VM.getMappedMD()` calls. While this would preclude explicitly
remapping MDStrings it would probably be a little faster.
llvm-svn: 265827
Now MustBeInDynSym is only true if the symbol really must be in the
dynamic symbol table.
IsUsedInRegularObj is only true if the symbol is used in a .o or -u. Not
a .so or a .bc.
A benefit is that this is now done almost entirilly during symbol
resolution. The only exception is copy relocations because of aliases.
This includes a small fix in that protected symbols in .so don't force
executable symbols to be exported.
This also opens the way for implementing internalize for -shared.
llvm-svn: 265826
Summary:
The llvm cos intrinsic currently does not propagate undef's. This change
transforms cos(undef) to null value or 0.
There are 2 test cases added as well.
Patch by Anna Thomas!
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18863
llvm-svn: 265825
We verify the optimized function now for a long time and it helped to track
down bugs early. This will now also happen for all parallel subfunctions we
generate.
llvm-svn: 265823