treating it as if it were an IEEE floating-point type with 106-bit
mantissa.
This makes compile-time arithmetic on "long double" for PowerPC
in clang (in particular parsing of floating point constants)
work, and fixes all "long double" related failures in the test
suite.
llvm-svn: 166951
Partial copies can show up even when CoalescerPair.isPartial() returns
false. For example:
%vreg24:dsub_0<def> = COPY %vreg31:dsub_0; QPR:%vreg24,%vreg31
Such a partial-partial copy is not good enough for the transformation
adjustCopiesBackFrom() needs to do.
llvm-svn: 166944
Previously, the warning would erroneously fire on this:
for (Test *a in someArray)
use(a.weakProp);
...because it looks like the same property is being accessed over and over.
However, clearly this is not the case. We now ignore loops like this for
local variables, but continue to warn if the base object is a parameter,
global variable, or instance variable, on the assumption that these are
not repeatedly usually assigned to within loops.
Additionally, do-while loops where the condition is 'false' are not really
loops at all; usually they're just used for semicolon-swallowing macros or
using "break" like "goto".
<rdar://problem/12578785&12578849>
llvm-svn: 166942
Our one basic suppression heuristic is to assume that functions do not
usually return NULL. However, when one of the arguments is NULL it is
suddenly much more likely that NULL is a valid return value. In this case,
we don't suppress the report here, but we do attach /another/ visitor to
go find out if this NULL argument also comes from an inlined function's
error path.
This new behavior, controlled by the 'avoid-suppressing-null-argument-paths'
analyzer-config option, is turned off by default. Turning it on produced
two false positives and no new true positives when running over LLVM/Clang.
This is one of the possible refinements to our suppression heuristics.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166941
Additionally, don't collect PostStore nodes -- they are often used in
path diagnostics.
Previously, we tried to track null arguments in the same way as any other
null values, but in many cases the necessary nodes had already been
collected (a memory optimization in ExplodedGraph). Now, we fall back to
using the value of the argument at the time of the call, which may not
always match the actual contents of the region, but often will.
This is a precursor to improving our suppression heuristic.
<rdar://problem/12350829>
llvm-svn: 166940
wrapper returns a vector of integers when passed a vector of pointers) by having
getIntPtrType itself return a vector of integers in this case. Outside of this
wrapper, I didn't find anywhere in the codebase that was relying on the old
behaviour for vectors of pointers, so give this a whirl through the buildbots.
llvm-svn: 166939
We may need to change the way profile counter values are stored, but
saturation is the wrong thing to do. Just remove it for now.
Patch by Alastair Murray!
llvm-svn: 166938
incorrect instruction sequence due to it not being aware that an
inline assembly instruction may reference memory.
This patch fixes the problem by causing the scheduler to always assume that any
inline assembly code instruction could access memory. This is necessary because
the internal representation of the inline instruction does not include
any information about memory accesses.
This should fix PR13504.
llvm-svn: 166929
ELF subtarget.
The existing logic is used as a fallback to avoid any changes to the Darwin
ABI. PPC64 ELF now has two possible data layout strings: one for FreeBSD,
which requires 8-byte alignment, and a default string that requires
16-byte alignment.
I've added a test for PPC64 Linux to verify the 16-byte alignment. If
somebody wants to add a separate test for FreeBSD, that would be great.
Note that there is a companion patch to update the alignment information
in Clang, which I am committing now as well.
llvm-svn: 166928
ELF subtarget.
The existing description string is moved from PPC64TargetInfo to its
DarwinTargetInfo subclass, to avoid any changes to the Darwin ABI.
PPC64TargetInfo now has two possible description strings: one for FreeBSD,
which requires 8-byte alignment, and a default string that requires
16-byte alignment.
I've added a test for PPC64 Linux to verify the 16-byte alignment. If
somebody wants to add a separate test for FreeBSD, that would be great.
Note that there is a companion patch to update the alignment information
in LLVM, which I am committing now as well.
llvm-svn: 166927
output of both
llvm-extract foo.ll -func=bar
and
llvm-extract foo.ll -func=bar -delete
so the two new files could not be linked together anymore. With this change
alias are handled almost like functions and global variables. Almost because
with alias we cannot just clear the initializer/body, we have to create a new
declaration and replace the alias with it.
The net result is that now the output of the above commands can be linked
even if foo.ll has aliases.
llvm-svn: 166907