My variadics patch, r169588, changed these calls to typically be
bitcasts rather than calls to a supposedly variadic function.
This totally subverted a hack where we intentionally dropped
excess arguments from such calls in order to appease the inliner
and a "warning" from the optimizer. This patch extends the hack
to also work with bitcasts, as well as teaching it to rewrite
invokes.
llvm-svn: 170034
if the definition has a non-variadic prototype with compatible
parameters. Therefore, the default rule for such calls must be to
use a non-variadic convention. Achieve this by casting the callee to
the function type with which it is required to be compatible, unless
the target specifically opts out and insists that unprototyped calls
should use the variadic rules. The only case of that I'm aware of is
the x86-64 convention, which passes arguments the same way in both
cases but also sets a small amount of extra information; here we seek
to maintain compatibility with GCC, which does set this when calling
an unprototyped function.
Addresses PR10810 and PR10713.
llvm-svn: 140241
a common source of oddities and, in theory, removes some redundant ABI
computations. Also fixes a miscompile I introduced yesterday by refactoring
some code and causing a slightly different code path to be taken that
didn't perform *parameter* type canonicalization, just normal type
canonicalization; this in turn caused a bit of ABI code to misfire because
it was looking for 'double' or 'float' but received 'const float'.
llvm-svn: 97030
- This is designed to make it obvious that %clang_cc1 is a "test variable"
which is substituted. It is '%clang_cc1' instead of '%clang -cc1' because it
can be useful to redefine what gets run as 'clang -cc1' (for example, to set
a default target).
llvm-svn: 91446
to go back and clean up existing uses of the bitcasted function. This
is not just an optimization: it is required for correctness to get
always inline functions to work, see testcases in function-attributes.c.
llvm-svn: 70971