Clang requires them to have complete types, but
we were previously only completing them if they
were of tag or Objective-C object types.
I have implemented a method on the ASTImporter
whose job is to complete a type. It handles not
only the cases mentioned above, but also array
and atomic types.
<rdar://problem/13446777>
llvm-svn: 177672
We now put the Clang module cache in
<system-temp-directory>/org.llvm.clang/ModuleCache. Perhaps some day
there will be other caches under <system-temp-directory>/org.llvm.clang>.
llvm-svn: 177671
The DARWIN_USER_TEMP_DIR and DARWIN_USER_CACHE_DIR configuration
settings are more idiomatic for Darwin than the TMPDIR environment
variable.
llvm-svn: 177669
The .set directive in the Mips the assembler can be
used to set the value of a symbol to an expression.
This changes the symbol's value and type to conform
to the expression's.
Syntax: .set symbol, expression
This patch implements the parsing of the above syntax
and enables the parser to use defined symbols when
parsing operands.
Contributor: Vladimir Medic
llvm-svn: 177667
This implements SJLJ lowering on PPC, making the Clang functions
__builtin_{setjmp/longjmp} functional on PPC platforms. The implementation
strategy is similar to that on X86, with the exception that a branch-and-link
variant is used to get the right jump address. Credit goes to Bill Schmidt for
suggesting the use of the unconditional bcl form (instead of the regular bl
instruction) to limit return-address-cache pollution.
Benchmarking the speed at -O3 of:
static jmp_buf env_sigill;
void foo() {
__builtin_longjmp(env_sigill,1);
}
main() {
...
for (int i = 0; i < c; ++i) {
if (__builtin_setjmp(env_sigill)) {
goto done;
} else {
foo();
}
done:;
}
...
}
vs. the same code using the libc setjmp/longjmp functions on a P7 shows that
this builtin implementation is ~4x faster with Altivec enabled and ~7.25x
faster with Altivec disabled. This comparison is somewhat unfair because the
libc version must also save/restore the VSX registers which we don't yet
support.
llvm-svn: 177666
is issused for on overriding 'readwrite'
property which is not auto-synthesized.
Buttom line is that if hueristics determine
that there will be a user implemented setter,
no warning will be issued. // rdar://13388503
llvm-svn: 177662
Although there is only one Altivec VRSAVE register, it is a member of
a register class, and we need the ability to spill it. Because this
register is normally callee-preserved and handled by special code this
has never before been necessary. However, this capability will be required by
a forthcoming commit adding SjLj support.
llvm-svn: 177654
The old code used to lower FRAMEADDR tried to replicate the logic in the real
frame-lowering code that determines whether or not the frame pointer (r31) will
be used. When it seemed as through the frame pointer would not be used, the
stack pointer (r1) was used instead. Unfortunately, because the stack size is
not yet known, this does not work. Instead, this change introduces new
always-reserved pseudo-registers (FP and FP8) that are replaced during prologue
insertion with the real frame-pointer register (either r1 or r31).
It is important that this intrinsic always return a valid frame address because
it is used by Clang to store the frame address as part of code generation for
__builtin_setjmp.
llvm-svn: 177653
NEON is not IEEE 754 compliant, so we should avoid lowering single-precision
floating point operations with NEON unless unsafe-math is turned on. The
equivalent VFP instructions are IEEE 754 compliant, but in some cores they're
much slower, so some archs/OSs might still request it to be on by default,
such as Swift and Darwin.
llvm-svn: 177651
Scev code generation can now handle scops with non canonical induction
variables. Hence there is no need to introduce canonical ones any more.
llvm-svn: 177644
We now detect scops without a canonical induction variable and can generate a
polyhedral representation for them. There was no modification necessary to
code generate these scops.
llvm-svn: 177643
Summary:
1. When splitting one-line block comment, use indentation and *s.
2. Remove trailing whitespace from all lines of a comment, not only the ones being splitted.
3. Add backslashes for all lines if a comment is used insed a preprocessor directive.
Reviewers: djasper
Reviewed By: djasper
CC: cfe-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D557
llvm-svn: 177635
header.
This method is called in the hot path for *many* passes, SROA is what
caught my interest. A common pattern is that which branch of the switch
should be taken is known in the callsite and so it is a very good
candidate for inlining and simplification. Moving it into the header
allows the optimizer to fold a lot of boring, repeatitive code in
callers of this routine.
I'm seeing pretty significant speedups in parts of SROA and I suspect
other passes will see similar speedups if they end up working with type
sizes frequently. I've not seen any significant growth of the binaries
as a consequence, but let me know if you see anything suspicious here.
llvm-svn: 177632
The key part of this is ensuring that name prefixes remain in a Twine
form until we get to a point where we can nuke them under NDEBUG. This
is tricky using the old APIs as they played fast and loose with Twine,
which is prone to serious error. The inserter is much cleaner as it is
actually in the call stack leading to the setName call, and so has
a good opportunity to prepend the prefix.
This matters more than you might imagine because most runs over an
alloca find a single partition, and rewrite 3 or 4 instructions
referring to it. As a consequence doing this lazily and exclusively with
Twine allows the optimizer to delete more of it and shaves another 2% to
3% off of the release build's SROA run time for PR15412. I also think
the APIs are cleaner, and the use of Twine is more reliable, so
I consider it a win-win despite the churn required to reach this state.
llvm-svn: 177631
This returns a vector of <file address, size> entries for all of
the functions in the module that have an eh_frame FDE.
Update ObjectFileMachO to use the eh_frame FDE function addresses if
the LC_FUNCTION_STARTS section is missing, to fill in the start
addresses of any symbols that have been stripped from the binary.
Generally speaking, lldb works best if it knows the actual start
address of every function in a module - it's especially important
for unwinding, where lldb inspects the instructions in the prologue
of the function. In a stripped binary, it is deprived of this
information and it reduces the quality of our unwinds and saved
register retrieval.
Other ObjectFile users may want to use the function addresses from
DWARFCallFrameInfo to fill in any stripped symbols like ObjectFileMachO
does already.
<rdar://problem/13365659>
llvm-svn: 177624