and introducing new unittests/CodeGen/GlobalISel/LegalizerTest.cpp
relying on it to unit test the entire legalizer algorithm (including the
top-level main loop).
See also https://reviews.llvm.org/D71448
Summary:
This copy ensures that debug location information is kept for
compressed instructions. There are places where both compressInstruction and
uncompressInstruction are called that were not doing this copy, discarding some
debug info.
This change merely moves the copy into the generated file, so you cannot forget
to copy the location over when compressing or uncompressing.
Reviewers: asb, luismarques
Reviewed By: luismarques
Subscribers: sameer.abuasal, aprantl, hiraditya, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, Jim, s.egerton, pzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67493
Summary:
This is a follow up for D70548.
Currently, variables with debug info coverage between 0% and 1% are put into
zero-bucket. D70548 changed the way statistics calculate a variable's coverage:
we began to use enclosing scope rather than a possible variable life range.
Thus more variables might be moved to zero-bucket despite they have some debug
info coverage.
The patch is to distinguish between a variable that has location info but
it's significantly less than its enclosing scope and a variable that doesn't
have it at all.
Reviewers: djtodoro, aprantl, dblaikie, avl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71070
Summary:
This changes the representation of 'coverage buckets' in llvm-dwarfdump and
llvm-locstats to one that makes more clear what the buckets contain.
See some related details in D71070.
Reviewers: djtodoro, aprantl, cmtice, jhenderson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71366
If the total number of PC range bytes in each variable's enclosing scope
('scope bytes total') is 0, we will have division by zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71415
This has two main effects:
- Optimizes debug info size by saving 221.86 MB of obj file size in a
Windows optimized+debug build of 'all'. This is 3.03% of 7,332.7MB of
object file size.
- Incremental step towards decoupling target intrinsics.
The enums are still compact, so adding and removing a single
target-specific intrinsic will trigger a rebuild of all of LLVM.
Assigning distinct target id spaces is potential future work.
Part of PR34259
Reviewers: efriedma, echristo, MaskRay
Reviewed By: echristo, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71320
AMDGPU was the last in tree target to use this tablegen mode. I plan to
split up the global intrinsic enum similar to the way that clang
diagnostics are split up today. I don't plan to build on this mode.
Reviewers: arsenm, echristo, efriedma
Reviewed By: echristo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71318
D34393 added MCCodePadder as an infrastructure for padding code with
NOP instructions. It lacked tests and was not being worked on since
then.
Intel has now worked on an assembler patch to mitigate performance loss
after applying microcode update for the Jump Conditional Code Erratum.
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000055650/processors.html
This new patch shares similarity with MCCodePadder, but has a concrete
use case in mind and is being actively developed. The infrastructure it
introduces can potentially be used for general performance improvement
via alignment. Delete the unused MCCodePadder so that people can develop
the new feature from a clean state.
Reviewed By: jyknight, skan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71106
Summary:
The patch removes OffsetToFirstDefinition in the 'scope bytes total'
statistic computation. Thus it unifies the way the scope and the coverage
buckets are computed. The rationals behind that are the following:
1. OffsetToFirstDefinition was used to calculate the variable's life range.
However, there is no simple way to do it accurately, so the scope calculated
this way might be misleading. See D69027 for more details on the subject.
2. Both 'scope bytes total' and coverage buckets seem to be intended
to represent the same data in different ways. Otherwise, the statistics
might be controversial and confusing.
Note that the approach gives up a thorough evaluation of debug information
completeness (i.e. coverage buckets by themselves doesn't tell how good
the debug information is). Only changes in coverage over time make
a 'physical' sense.
Reviewers: djtodoro, aprantl, vsk, dblaikie, avl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70548
Scudo only supports building for android/linux/fuchsia, so require target_os to
be one of linux/fuchsia to do a stage2_unix scudo build. Android is already
covered by the stage2_android* toolchains below.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71131
Before this change, the *InstPrinter.cpp files of each target where some
of the slowest objects to compile in all of LLVM. See this snippet produced by
ClangBuildAnalyzer:
https://reviews.llvm.org/P8171$96
Search for "InstPrinter", and see that it shows up in a few places.
Tablegen was emitting a large switch containing a sequence of operand checks,
each of which created many conditions and many BBs. Register allocation and
jump threading both did not scale well with such a large repetitive sequence of
basic blocks.
So, this change essentially turns those control flow structures into
data. The previous structure looked like:
switch (Opc) {
case TGT::ADD:
// check alias 1
if (MI->getOperandCount() == N && // check num opnds
MI->getOperand(0).isReg() && // check opnd 0
...
MI->getOperand(1).isImm() && // check opnd 1
AsmString = "foo";
break;
}
// check alias 2
if (...)
...
return false;
The new structure looks like:
OpToPatterns: Sorted table of opcodes mapping to pattern indices.
\->
Patterns: List of patterns. Previous table points to subrange of
patterns to match.
\->
Conds: The if conditions above encoded as a kind and 32-bit value.
See MCInstPrinter.cpp for the details of how the new data structures are
interpreted.
Here are some before and after metrics.
Time to compile AArch64InstPrinter.cpp:
0m29.062s vs. 0m2.203s
size of the obj:
3.9M vs. 676K
size of clang.exe:
97M vs. 96M
I have not benchmarked disassembly performance, but typically
disassemblers are bottlenecked on IO and string processing, not alias
matching, so I'm not sure it's interesting enough to be worth doing.
Reviewers: RKSimon, andreadb, xbolva00, craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70650
Jenkins sometimes starts a new working directory by appending @2 (or
incrementing the number if the @n suffix is already there). This causes
several clang tests to fail as:
s@INPUT_DIR@%/S/Inputs@g
gets expanded to the invalid:
s@INPUT_DIR@/path/to/workdir@2/Inputs@g
~~~~~~~~~~
where the part marked with ~'s is interpreted as the flags. These are
invalid and the test fails.
Previous fixes simply exchanged the @ character for another like | but
that's just moving the problem. Address it by adding an expansion that
escapes the @ character we're using as a delimiter as well as other magic
characters in the replacement of sed's s@@@.
There's still room for expansions to cause trouble though. One I ran into
while testing this was that having a directory called foo@bar causes lots
of `CHECK-NOT: foo` directives to match. There's also things like
directories containing `\1`
'python' means Python 2 on some platforms while Python 3 on others.
'python3' is Python 3 only. Python 2.7 End of Life is set to January 1,
2020. Getting rid of Python 2 support reduces maintenance burden.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70730
Problem: `FILECHECK_OPTS` was implemented so that a test runner, such
as a bot, can specify FileCheck debugging options, such as
`-dump-input=fail`. However, some existing test suites have FileCheck
calls that already specify `-dump-input=fail` or `-dump-input=always`.
Without this patch, such tests fail under such a test runner because
FileCheck doesn't accept multiple occurrences of `-dump-input`.
Solution: This patch permits multiple occurrences of `-dump-input` by
assigning precedence to its values in the following descending order:
`help`, `always`, `fail`, and `never`. That is, any occurrence of
`help` always obtains help, and otherwise the behavior is similar to
`-v` vs. `-vv` in that the option specifying the greatest verbosity
has precedence.
Rationale: My justification for the new behavior is as follows. I
have not experienced use cases where, either as a test runner or as a
test author, I want to **limit** the permitted debugging verbosity
(except as a test author in FileCheck's or lit's test suites where the
FileCheck debugging output itself is under test, but the solution
there is `env FILECHECK_OPTS=`, and I imagine we should use the same
solution anywhere else this need might occur). Of course, as either a
test runner or test author, it is useful to **increase** debugging
verbosity.
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70784