Rename member 'Size' to 'AllocatedSize' in order to provide a hint that the
allocated size may be different than the requested size. Comments are added to
clarify this point. Updated the InMemoryBuffer in FileOutputBuffer.cpp to track
the requested buffer size.
Patch by Machiel van Hooren. Thanks Machiel!
https://reviews.llvm.org/D61599
llvm-svn: 361195
Summary:
It was supposed that Ref LazyCallGraph::Edge's were being inserted by
inlining, but that doesn't seem to be the case. Instead, it seems that
there was no test for a blockaddress Constant in an instruction that
referenced the function that contained the instruction. Ex:
```
define void @f() {
%1 = alloca i8*, align 8
2:
store i8* blockaddress(@f, %2), i8** %1, align 8
ret void
}
```
When iterating blockaddresses, do not add the function they refer to
back to the worklist if the blockaddress is referring to the contained
function (as opposed to an external function).
Because blockaddress has sligtly different semantics than GNU C's
address of labels, there are 3 cases that can occur with blockaddress,
where only 1 can happen in GNU C due to C's scoping rules:
* blockaddress is within the function it refers to (possible in GNU C).
* blockaddress is within a different function than the one it refers to
(not possible in GNU C).
* blockaddress is used in to declare a global (not possible in GNU C).
The second case is tested in:
```
$ ./llvm/build/unittests/Analysis/AnalysisTests \
--gtest_filter=LazyCallGraphTest.HandleBlockAddress
```
This patch adjusts the iteration of blockaddresses in
LazyCallGraph::visitReferences to not revisit the blockaddresses
function in the first case.
The Linux kernel contains code that's not semantically valid at -O0;
specifically code passed to asm goto. It requires that asm goto be
inline-able. This patch conservatively does not attempt to handle the
more general case of inlining blockaddresses that have non-callbr users
(pr/39560).
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39560https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40722https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/6https://reviews.llvm.org/rL212077
Reviewers: jyknight, eli.friedman, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: george.burgess.iv, nathanchance, mgorny, craig.topper, mengxu.gatech, void, mehdi_amini, E5ten, chandlerc, efriedma, eraman, hiraditya, haicheng, pirama, llvm-commits, srhines
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58260
llvm-svn: 361173
Refactor DIExpression::With* into a flag enum in order to be less
error-prone to use (as discussed on D60866).
Patch by Djordje Todorovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61943
llvm-svn: 361137
Summary:
Rather than duplicating code between PointerUnion, PointerUnion3, and
PointerUnion4 (and missing things from the latter cases, such as some of the
DenseMap support and operator==), convert PointerUnion to a variadic template
that can be used as a union of any number of pointers.
(This doesn't support PointerUnion<> right now. Adding a special case for that
would be possible, and perhaps even useful in some situations, but it doesn't
seem worthwhile until we have a concrete use case.)
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62027
llvm-svn: 360962
Summary:
This is a fix to D61574, r360179, that allowed duplicate
OptionCategory's. This change adds a check to make sure a category can
only be added once even if the user passes it twice.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61972
llvm-svn: 360913
Summary:
the stream format is exactly the same as for ThreadList and ModuleList
streams, only the entry types are slightly different, so the changes in
this patch are just straight-forward applications of established
patterns.
Reviewers: amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: markmentovai, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61885
llvm-svn: 360908
Summary:
Currently InductionBinOps are only saved for FP induction variables, the PR extends it with non FP induction variable, so user of IVDescriptors can query the InductionBinOps for integer induction variables.
The changes in hasUnsafeAlgebra() and getUnsafeAlgebraInst() are required for the existing LIT test cases to pass. As described in the comment of the two functions, one of the requirement to return true is it is a FP induction variable. The checks was not needed because InductionBinOp was not set on non FP cases before.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D60565 depends on the patch.
Committed on behalf of @Whitney (Whitney Tsang).
Reviewers: jdoerfert, kbarton, fhahn, hfinkel, dmgreen, Meinersbur
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61329
llvm-svn: 360671
This reinstates r360578 (git e47362c1ec),
reverted in r360653 (git 004393681c),
with a fix for the list added in FileCheck.rst to build without error.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar,
arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar,
arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60385
llvm-svn: 360665
stdout may be buffered, and may not flush on every write. Explicitly flushing
before redirecting the output ensures that the captured output does not contain
output from other tests.
llvm-svn: 360617
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces regular numeric
variables which can be set on the command-line.
This commit introduces regular numeric variable that can be set on the
command-line with the -D option to a numeric value. They can then be
used in CHECK patterns in numeric expression with the same shape as
@LINE numeric expression, ie. VAR, VAR+offset or VAR-offset where offset
is an integer literal.
The commit also enable strict whitespace in the verbose.txt testcase to
check that the position or the location diagnostics. It fixes one of the
existing CHECK in the process which was not accurately testing a
location diagnostic (ie. the diagnostic was correct, not the CHECK).
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60385
llvm-svn: 360578
Summary:
This patch adds the following features defined by Arm SVE2 architecture
extension:
sve2, sve2-aes, sve2-sm4, sve2-sha3, bitperm
For existing CPUs these features are declared as unsupported to prevent
scheduler errors.
The specification can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/docs/ddi0602/latest
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, sdesmalen, ostannard, rovka
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer, rovka
Subscribers: rovka, javed.absar, tschuett, kristof.beyls, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61513
llvm-svn: 360573
Summary:
If passed, the long option flag makes the CommandLine parser
mimic the behavior or GNU getopt_long. Short options are a single
character prefixed by a single dash, and long options are multiple
characters prefixed by a double dash.
This patch was motivated by the discussion in the following thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-April/131786.html
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61294
llvm-svn: 360532
Close the temporary file after the test is done using it.
If it is not closed and the file was created on NFS, it will cause the test
to fail. The problem happens in the cleanup process afterwards. It first
tries to delete the file but it is not really deleted. Afterwards, the
program fails to delete the directory containing the file, causing the whole
test to fail.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
llvm-svn: 360259
This patch changes the return type of sys::Process::getPageSize to
Expected<unsigned> to account for the fact that the underlying syscalls used to
obtain the page size may fail (see below).
For clients who use the page size as an optimization only this patch adds a new
method, getPageSizeEstimate, which calls through to getPageSize but discards
any error returned and substitues a "reasonable" page size estimate estimate
instead. All existing LLVM clients are updated to call getPageSizeEstimate
rather than getPageSize.
On Unix, sys::Process::getPageSize is implemented in terms of getpagesize or
sysconf, depending on which macros are set. The sysconf call is documented to
return -1 on failure. On Darwin getpagesize is implemented in terms of sysconf
and may also fail (though the manpage documentation does not mention this).
These failures have been observed in practice when highly restrictive sandbox
permissions have been applied. Without this patch, the result is that
getPageSize returns -1, which wreaks havoc on any subsequent code that was
assuming a sane page size value.
<rdar://problem/41654857>
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59107
llvm-svn: 360221
Summary:
It's not uncommon for separate components to share common
Options, e.g., it's common for related Passes to share Options in
addition to the Pass specific ones.
With this change, components can use OptionCategory's to simply help
output even if some of the options are shared.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61574
llvm-svn: 360179
Add support for srem() to ConstantRange so we can use it in LVI. For
srem the sign of the result matches the sign of the LHS. For the RHS
only the absolute value is important. Apart from that the logic is
like urem.
Just like for urem this is only an approximate implementation. The tests
check a few specific cases and run an exhaustive test for conservative
correctness (but not exactness).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61207
llvm-svn: 360055
Summary:
By default, `parseCommandLineOptions()` will accept either a
`-` or `--` prefix for long options -- options with names longer than
a single character.
While this change does not affect behavior, it will be helpful with a
subsequent change that requires long options use the `--` prefix.
Reviewers: rnk, thopre
Reviewed By: thopre
Subscribers: thopre, cfe-commits, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #clang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61269
llvm-svn: 359909
Summary:
The stream contains the list of threads belonging to the process
described by the minidump. Its structure is the same as the ModuleList
stream, and in fact, I have generalized the ModuleList reading code to
handle this stream too.
Reviewers: amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: llvm-commits, lldb-commits, markmentovai, zturner
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61064
llvm-svn: 359762
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch introduces the @LINE numeric
expressions.
This commit introduces a new syntax to express a relation a numeric
value in the input text must have with the line number of a given CHECK
pattern: [[#<@LINE numeric expression>]]. Further commits build on that
to express relations between several numeric values in the input text.
To help with naming, regular variables are renamed into pattern
variables and old @LINE expression syntax is referred to as legacy
numeric expression.
Compared to existing @LINE expressions, this new syntax allow arbitrary
spacing between the component of the expression. It offers otherwise the
same functionality but the commit serves to introduce some of the data
structure needed to support more general numeric expressions.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60384
llvm-svn: 359741
If the user passes a flag like `-version` to a program, it's more likely
they mean `--version` than `-version:`, since there's no parameter
passed. Hence, give delimited arguments a penalty of 1 if the user input
doesn't contain the delimiter or no data after it.
The motivation is that with this, lld-link can suggest "--version"
instead of "-version:" for "-version" and "-nodefaultlib" instead of
"-nodefaultlib:" for "-nodefaultlibs".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61382
llvm-svn: 359701
Prior to this, OptTable::findNearest() thought that the input `--foo`
had an editing distance of 0 from an existing flag `--foo=`, which made
it suggest flags with delimiters more often than flags without one.
After this, it correctly assigns this case an editing distance of 1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61373
llvm-svn: 359685
Add triple tests for "wasm32-wasi" and "wasm64-wasi", and also remove the
"-musl" component from the existing wasm triple tests as we're not using that
in practice (WASI libc is derived in part from musl, but it is not fully
musl-compatible).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61334
Reviewer: sbc100
llvm-svn: 359629
Summary:
This is a redo of D60914.
The objective is to not invalidate AAManager, which is stateless, unless
there is an explicit invalidate in one of the AAResults.
To achieve this, this patch adds an API to PAC, to check precisely this:
is this analysis not invalidated explicitly == is this analysis not abandoned == is this analysis stateless, so preserved without explicitly being marked as preserved by everyone
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jlebar, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61284
llvm-svn: 359622
This was first reviewed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D46776 and
landed in r332299, but got reverted because it broke the PS4
bots.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50410 fixed this, and then this
change was re-reviewed at https://reviews.llvm.org/D50515 and
relanded in r341329. It got reverted due to causing MSan issues.
However, nobody wrote down the error message and the bot link
is dead, so I'm relanding this to capture the MSan error.
I'll then either fix it, or copy it somewhere and revert if
fixing looks difficult.
llvm-svn: 359580
Summary:
With this change, cl::ResetAllOptionOccurrences() clears
cl::list just like cl::opt, allowing users to call
cl::ParseCommandLineOptions() multiple times without interference from
previous calls.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61234
llvm-svn: 359522
Background: A definition generator can be attached to a JITDylib to generate
new definitions in response to queries. For example: a generator that forwards
calls to dlsym can map symbols from a dynamic library into the JIT process on
demand.
If definition generation fails then the generator should be able to return an
error. This allows the JIT API to distinguish between the case where a
generator does not provide a definition, and the case where it was not able to
determine whether it provided a definition due to an error.
The immediate motivation for this is cross-process symbol lookups: If the
remote-lookup generator is attached to a JITDylib early in the search list, and
if a generator failure is misinterpreted as "no definition in this JITDylib" then
lookup may continue and bind to a different definition in a later JITDylib, which
is a bug.
llvm-svn: 359521
lld-link used to write PDB files that DIA couldn't recover natvis
files from if:
- The global strings table was > 64kiB
- There were at least 3 natvis files
The cause was that the hash function for the /src/headerblock stream
was incorrect: It needs to be truncated to 16 bit.
If the global strings table was <= 64kiB, truncating to 16 bit is a
no-op, so this wasn't needed for small programs.
If there are only 1 or 2 natvis files, then the growth strategy in
HashTable::grow() would mean the hash table would have 2 buckets (for 1
natvis file) or 4 buckets (for 4 natvis files), and since the hash
function is used modulo number of buckets, and since 2 and 4 divide
0x10000, the missing `% 0x10000` is a no-op there too. For 3 natvis
files, the hash table grows to 6 buckets, which has a factor that's not
common with 0x10000 and the difference starts to matter.
Fixes PR41626.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61277
llvm-svn: 359515
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch gives earlier and better
diagnostics for the @LINE expressions.
Rather than detect parsing errors at matching time, this commit adds
enhance parsing to detect issues with @LINE expressions at parse time
and diagnose them more accurately.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60383
llvm-svn: 359475
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch gives earlier and better
diagnostics for the -D option.
Prior to this change, parsing of -D option was very loose: it assumed
that there is an equal sign (which to be fair is now checked by the
FileCheck executable) and that the part on the left of the equal sign
was a valid variable name. This commit adds logic to ensure that this
is the case and gives diagnostic when it is not, making it clear that
the issue came from a command-line option error. This is achieved by
sharing the variable parsing code into a new function ParseVariable.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60382
llvm-svn: 359447
I got confused on the terminology, and the change in D60598 was not
correct. I was thinking of "exact" in terms of the result being
non-approximate. However, the relevant distinction here is whether
the result is
* Largest range such that:
Forall Y in Other: Forall X in Result: X BinOp Y does not wrap.
(makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion)
* Smallest range such that:
Forall Y in Other: Forall X not in Result: X BinOp Y wraps.
(A hypothetical makeAllowedNoWrapRegion)
* Both. (makeExactNoWrapRegion)
I'm adding a separate makeExactNoWrapRegion method accepting a
single APInt (same as makeExactICmpRegion) and using it in the
places where the guarantee is relevant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60960
llvm-svn: 359402
Add support for abs() to ConstantRange. This will allow to handle
SPF_ABS select flavor in LVI and will also come in handy as a
primitive for the srem implementation.
The implementation is slightly tricky, because a) abs of signed min
is signed min and b) sign-wrapped ranges may have an abs() that is
smaller than a full range, so we need to explicitly handle them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61084
llvm-svn: 359321
When failing materialization of a symbol X, remove X from the dependants list
of any of X's dependencies. This ensures that when X's dependencies are
emitted (or fail themselves) they do not try to access the no-longer-existing
MaterializationInfo for X.
llvm-svn: 359252
Summary:
There's still a little bit of constant factor that could be trimmed (e.g.
more overloads to avoid round-tripping primitives through json::Value).
But this solves the memory scaling problem, and greatly improves the performance
constant factor, and the API should leave room for optimization if needed.
Adapt TimeProfiler to use it, eliminating almost all the performance regression
from r358476.
Performance test on my machine:
perf stat -r 5 ~/llvmbuild-opt/bin/clang++ -w -S -ftime-trace -mllvm -time-trace-granularity=0 spirit.cpp
Handcrafted JSON (HEAD=r358532 with r358476 reverted): 2480ms
json::Value (HEAD): 2757ms (+11%)
After this patch: 2520 ms (+1.6%)
Reviewers: anton-afanasyev, lebedev.ri
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60804
llvm-svn: 359186
Summary:
Annotations allow writing nice-looking unit test code when one needs
access to locations from the source code, e.g. running code completion
at particular offsets in a file. See comments in Annotations.cpp for
more details on the API.
Also got rid of a duplicate annotations parsing code in clang's code
complete tests.
Reviewers: gribozavr, sammccall
Reviewed By: gribozavr
Subscribers: mgorny, hiraditya, ioeric, MaskRay, jkorous, arphaman, kadircet, jdoerfert, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59814
llvm-svn: 359179
* Add support for uniquing strings in the remark streamer and emitting the string table in the remarks section.
* Add parsing support for the string table in the RemarkParser.
From this remark:
```
--- !Missed
Pass: inline
Name: NoDefinition
DebugLoc: { File: 'test-suite/SingleSource/UnitTests/2002-04-17-PrintfChar.c',
Line: 7, Column: 3 }
Function: printArgsNoRet
Args:
- Callee: printf
- String: ' will not be inlined into '
- Caller: printArgsNoRet
DebugLoc: { File: 'test-suite/SingleSource/UnitTests/2002-04-17-PrintfChar.c',
Line: 6, Column: 0 }
- String: ' because its definition is unavailable'
...
```
to:
```
--- !Missed
Pass: 0
Name: 1
DebugLoc: { File: 3, Line: 7, Column: 3 }
Function: 2
Args:
- Callee: 4
- String: 5
- Caller: 2
DebugLoc: { File: 3, Line: 6, Column: 0 }
- String: 6
...
```
And the string table in the .remarks/__remarks section containing:
```
inline\0NoDefinition\0printArgsNoRet\0
test-suite/SingleSource/UnitTests/2002-04-17-PrintfChar.c\0printf\0
will not be inlined into \0 because its definition is unavailable\0
```
This is mostly supposed to be used for testing purposes, but it gives us
a 2x reduction in the remark size, and is an incremental change for the
updates to the remarks file format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60227
llvm-svn: 359050
Add urem support to ConstantRange, so we can handle in in LVI. This
is an approximate implementation that tries to capture the most useful
conditions: If the LHS is always strictly smaller than the RHS, then
the urem is a no-op and the result is the same as the LHS range.
Otherwise the lower bound is zero and the upper bound is
min(LHSMax, RHSMax - 1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60952
llvm-svn: 359019
Without this patch, APSInt inherits APInt::isNegative, which merely
checks the sign bit without regard to whether the type is actually
signed. isNonNegative and isStrictlyPositive call isNegative and so
are also affected.
This patch adjusts APSInt to override isNegative, isNonNegative, and
isStrictlyPositive with implementations that consider whether the type
is signed.
A large set of Clang OpenMP tests are affected. Without this patch,
these tests assume that `true` is not a valid argument for clauses
like `collapse`. Indeed, `true` fails APInt::isStrictlyPositive but
not APSInt::isStrictlyPositive. This patch adjusts those tests to
assume `true` should be accepted.
This patch also adds tests revealing various other similar fixes due
to APSInt::isNegative calls in Clang's ExprConstant.cpp and
SemaExpr.cpp: `++` and `--` overflow in `constexpr`, evaluated object
size based on `alloc_size`, `<<` and `>>` shift count validation, and
OpenMP array section validation.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, ABataev, hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59712
llvm-svn: 359012
Summary:
This test was added to verify that createUniqueEntity() does
not enter an infinite loop when all possible names are taken. However,
it also checked that all possible names are generated, which is flaky
(because the names are generated randomly). This change increases the
number of attempts we make to make flakes exceedingly
unlikely (3.88e-62).
Reviewers: fedor.sergeev, rsmith
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56336
llvm-svn: 358914
This reverts commit 7bf4d7c07f2fac862ef34c82ad0fef6513452445.
After thinking about this more, this isn't right, the range is not exact
in the same sense as makeExactICmpRegion(). This needs a separate
function.
llvm-svn: 358876
Following D60632 makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion() always returns an
exact nowrap region. Rename the function accordingly. This is in
line with the naming of makeExactICmpRegion().
llvm-svn: 358875
Add support for uadd_sat and friends to ConstantRange, so we can
handle uadd.sat and friends in LVI. The implementation is forwarding
to the corresponding APInt methods with appropriate bounds.
One thing worth pointing out here is that the handling of wrapping
ranges is not maximally accurate. A simple example is that adding 0
to a wrapped range will return a full range, rather than the original
wrapped range. The tests also only check that the non-wrapping
envelope is correct and minimal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60946
llvm-svn: 358855
Summary:
JITLink is a jit-linker that performs the same high-level task as RuntimeDyld:
it parses relocatable object files and makes their contents runnable in a target
process.
JITLink aims to improve on RuntimeDyld in several ways:
(1) A clear design intended to maximize code-sharing while minimizing coupling.
RuntimeDyld has been developed in an ad-hoc fashion for a number of years and
this had led to intermingling of code for multiple architectures (e.g. in
RuntimeDyldELF::processRelocationRef) in a way that makes the code more
difficult to read, reason about, extend. JITLink is designed to isolate
format and architecture specific code, while still sharing generic code.
(2) Support for native code models.
RuntimeDyld required the use of large code models (where calls to external
functions are made indirectly via registers) for many of platforms due to its
restrictive model for stub generation (one "stub" per symbol). JITLink allows
arbitrary mutation of the atom graph, allowing both GOT and PLT atoms to be
added naturally.
(3) Native support for asynchronous linking.
JITLink uses asynchronous calls for symbol resolution and finalization: these
callbacks are passed a continuation function that they must call to complete the
linker's work. This allows for cleaner interoperation with the new concurrent
ORC JIT APIs, while still being easily implementable in synchronous style if
asynchrony is not needed.
To maximise sharing, the design has a hierarchy of common code:
(1) Generic atom-graph data structure and algorithms (e.g. dead stripping and
| memory allocation) that are intended to be shared by all architectures.
|
+ -- (2) Shared per-format code that utilizes (1), e.g. Generic MachO to
| atom-graph parsing.
|
+ -- (3) Architecture specific code that uses (1) and (2). E.g.
JITLinkerMachO_x86_64, which adds x86-64 specific relocation
support to (2) to build and patch up the atom graph.
To support asynchronous symbol resolution and finalization, the callbacks for
these operations take continuations as arguments:
using JITLinkAsyncLookupContinuation =
std::function<void(Expected<AsyncLookupResult> LR)>;
using JITLinkAsyncLookupFunction =
std::function<void(const DenseSet<StringRef> &Symbols,
JITLinkAsyncLookupContinuation LookupContinuation)>;
using FinalizeContinuation = std::function<void(Error)>;
virtual void finalizeAsync(FinalizeContinuation OnFinalize);
In addition to its headline features, JITLink also makes other improvements:
- Dead stripping support: symbols that are not used (e.g. redundant ODR
definitions) are discarded, and take up no memory in the target process
(In contrast, RuntimeDyld supported pointer equality for weak definitions,
but the redundant definitions stayed resident in memory).
- Improved exception handling support. JITLink provides a much more extensive
eh-frame parser than RuntimeDyld, and is able to correctly fix up many
eh-frame sections that RuntimeDyld currently (silently) fails on.
- More extensive validation and error handling throughout.
This initial patch supports linking MachO/x86-64 only. Work on support for
other architectures and formats will happen in-tree.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58704
llvm-svn: 358818
Summary:
Trying to add the plumbing necessary to add tuning options to the new pass manager.
Testing with the flags for loop vectorize.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: sanjoy, mehdi_amini, jlebar, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59723
llvm-svn: 358763
Change two costly udiv() calls to lshr(1)*RHS + left-shift + plus
On one 64-bit umul_ov benchmark, I measured an obvious improvement: 12.8129s -> 3.6257s
Note, there may be some value to special case 64-bit (the most common
case) with __builtin_umulll_overflow().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60669
llvm-svn: 358730
Summary:
This patch adds support for ULEB128 and SLEB128 encoding and decoding to
BinaryStreamWriter and BinaryStreamReader respectively.
Support for ULEB128/SLEB128 will be used for eh-frame parsing in the JITLink
library currently under development (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D58704).
Reviewers: zturner, dblaikie
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60810
llvm-svn: 358584
Summary:
Add to STLExtras a binary search function with a simple mental model:
You provide a range and a predicate which is true above a certain point.
bsearch() tells you that point.
Overloads are provided for integers, iterators, and containers.
This is more suitable than std:: alternatives in many cases:
- std::binary_search only indicates presence/absence
- upper_bound/lower_bound give you the opportunity to pick the wrong one
- all of the options have confusing names and definitions when your predicate
doesn't have simple "less than" semantics
- all of the options require iterators
- we plumb around a useless `value` parameter that should be a lambda capture
The API is inspired by Go's standard library, but we add an extra parameter as
well as some overloads and templates to show how clever C++ is.
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, gribozavr
Subscribers: dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60779
llvm-svn: 358540
The test in the dependent revision has been fixed for Windows.
Original commit message:
Response file expansion limits the amount of expansion to prevent
potential infinite recursion. However, the current logic assumes that
any argument beginning with @ is a response file, which is not true for
e.g. `-Xlinker -rpath -Xlinker @executable_path/../lib` on Darwin.
Having too many of these non-response file arguments beginning with @
prevents actual response files from being expanded. Instead, limit based
on the number of successful response file expansions, which should still
prevent infinite recursion but also avoid false positives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60631
> llvm-svn: 358452
llvm-svn: 358466
Use the appropriate tokenizer to fix the test on Windows.
Original commit message:
I'm going to be modifying the logic to avoid infinitely recursing on
self-referential response files, so add a unit test to verify the
expected behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60630
> llvm-svn: 358451
llvm-svn: 358465
Response file expansion limits the amount of expansion to prevent
potential infinite recursion. However, the current logic assumes that
any argument beginning with @ is a response file, which is not true for
e.g. `-Xlinker -rpath -Xlinker @executable_path/../lib` on Darwin.
Having too many of these non-response file arguments beginning with @
prevents actual response files from being expanded. Instead, limit based
on the number of successful response file expansions, which should still
prevent infinite recursion but also avoid false positives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60631
llvm-svn: 358452
I'm going to be modifying the logic to avoid infinitely recursing on
self-referential response files, so add a unit test to verify the
expected behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60630
llvm-svn: 358451
Summary: Add DefaultOption flag to CommandLineParser which provides a
default option or alias, but allows users to override it for some
other purpose as needed.
Also, add `-h` as a default alias to `-help`, which can be seamlessly
overridden by applications like llvm-objdump and llvm-readobj which
use `-h` as an alias for other options.
(relanding after revert, r358414)
Added DefaultOptions.clear() to reset().
Reviewers: alexfh, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: kristina, MaskRay, mehdi_amini, inglorion, dexonsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, jhenderson, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59746
llvm-svn: 358428
Summary:
This patch is part of a patch series to add support for FileCheck
numeric expressions. This specific patch adds a new class to hold
pattern matching global state.
The table holding the values of FileCheck variable constitutes some sort
of global state for the matching phase, yet is passed as parameters of
all functions using it. This commit create a new FileCheckPatternContext
class pointed at from FileCheckPattern. While it increases the line
count, it separates local data from global state. Later commits build
on that to add numeric expression global state to that class.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes up to diff 183612 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions of revision D55940 and
in new revision created off D55940)
Reviewers: jhenderson, chandlerc, jdenny, probinson, grimar, arichardson, rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, probinson, dblaikie, grimar, arichardson, tra, rnk, kristina, hfinkel, rogfer01, JonChesterfield
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60381
llvm-svn: 358390
It didn't handle empty LHS correctly. If two ranges of LHS were
contiguous and jointly contained one range of RHS, it could also be incorrect.
DWARFAddressRange::contains can be removed and its tests can be merged into DWARFVerifier::DieRangeInfo::contains
llvm-svn: 358387
Summary:
Use KnownBits::computeForAddSub/computeForAddCarry
in SelectionDAG::computeKnownBits when doing value
tracking for addition/subtraction.
This should improve the precision of the known bits,
as we only used to make a simple estimate of known
zeroes. The KnownBits support functions are also
able to deduce bits that are known to be one in the
result.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, nikic, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: nikic
Subscribers: nikic, javed.absar, lebedev.ri, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60460
llvm-svn: 358372
Because CodeGen can't depend on GlobalISel, we need a way to encapsulate the CSE
configs that can be passed between TargetPassConfig and the targets' custom
pass configs. This CSEConfigBase allows targets to create custom CSE configs
which is then used by the GISel passes for the CSEMIRBuilder.
This support will be used in a follow up commit to allow constant-only CSE for
-O0 compiles in D60580.
llvm-svn: 358368
Summary:
The Linux kernel uses PC-relative mode, so allow that when the code model is
"kernel".
Reviewers: craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, kees, nickdesaulniers
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60643
llvm-svn: 358343
As motivated in D60598, this drops support for specifying both NUW and
NSW in makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion(). None of the users of this function
currently make use of this.
When both NUW and NSW are specified, the exact nowrap region has two
disjoint parts and makeGNWR() returns one of them. This result doesn't
seem to be useful for anything, but makes the semantics of the function
fuzzier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60632
llvm-svn: 358340
Summary: Add DefaultOption flag to CommandLineParser which provides a
default option or alias, but allows users to override it for some
other purpose as needed.
Also, add `-h` as a default alias to `-help`, which can be seamlessly
overridden by applications like llvm-objdump and llvm-readobj which
use `-h` as an alias for other options.
Reviewers: alexfh, klimek
Reviewed By: klimek
Subscribers: MaskRay, mehdi_amini, inglorion, dexonsmith, hiraditya, llvm-commits, jhenderson, arphaman, cfe-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59746
llvm-svn: 358337
makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion() is actually makeExactNoWrapRegion() as
long as only one of NUW or NSW is specified. This is not obvious from
the current documentation, and some code seems to think that it is
only exact for single-element ranges. Clarify docs and add tests to
be more confident this really holds.
There are currently no users of makeGuaranteedNoWrapRegion() that
pass both NUW and NSW. I think it would be best to drop support for
this entirely and then rename the function to makeExactNoWrapRegion().
Knowing that the no-wrap region is exact is useful, because we can
backwards-constrain values. What I have in mind in particular is
that LVI should be able to constrain values on edges where the
with.overflow overflow flag is false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60598
llvm-svn: 358305
Summary:
Create a method to forget everything in SCEV.
Add a cl::opt and PassManagerBuilder option to use this in LoopUnroll.
Motivation: Certain Halide applications spend a very long time compiling in forgetLoop, and prefer to forget everything and rebuild SCEV from scratch.
Sample difference in compile time reduction: 21.04 to 14.78 using current ToT release build.
Testcase showcasing this cannot be opensourced and is fairly large.
The option disabled by default, but it may be desirable to enable by
default. Evidence in favor (two difference runs on different days/ToT state):
File Before (s) After (s)
clang-9.bc 7267.91 6639.14
llvm-as.bc 194.12 194.12
llvm-dis.bc 62.50 62.50
opt.bc 1855.85 1857.53
File Before (s) After (s)
clang-9.bc 8588.70 7812.83
llvm-as.bc 196.20 194.78
llvm-dis.bc 61.55 61.97
opt.bc 1739.78 1886.26
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, jlebar, zzheng, javed.absar, dmgreen, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60144
llvm-svn: 358304
This is for D60460. computeForAddSub() essentially already supports
carries because it has to deal with subtractions. This revision
extracts a lower-level computeForAddCarry() function, which allows
computing the known bits for add (carry known zero), sub (carry known
one) and addcarry (carry unknown).
As we don't seem to have any yet, I've added a unit test file for
KnownBits and exhaustive tests for the new computeForAddCarry()
functionality, as well the existing computeForAddSub() function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60522
llvm-svn: 358297
Same as the other ConstantRange overflow checking methods, but for
unsigned mul. In this case there is no cheap overflow criterion, so
using umul_ov for the implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60574
llvm-svn: 358228
Summary:
A bug/typo in Output::scalarString caused us to round-trip a StringRef
through a const char *. This meant that any strings with embedded nuls
were unintentionally cut short at the first such character. (It also
could have caused accidental buffer overruns, but it seems that all
StringRefs coming into this functions were formed from null-terminated
strings.)
This patch fixes the bug and adds an appropriate test.
Reviewers: sammccall, jhenderson
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60505
llvm-svn: 358176
Summary:
The ModuleList stream consists of an integer giving the number of
entries in the list, followed by the list itself. Each entry in the list
describes a module (dynamically loaded objects which were loaded in the
process when it crashed (or when the minidump was generated).
The code for reading the list is relatively straight-forward, with a
single gotcha. Some minidump writers are emitting padding after the
"count" field in order to align the subsequent list on 8 byte boundary
(this depends on how their ModuleList type was defined and the native
alignment of various types on their platform). Fortunately, the minidump
format contains enough redundancy (in the form of the stream length
field in the stream directory), which allows us to detect this situation
and correct it.
This patch just adds the ability to parse the stream. Code for
conversion to/from yaml will come in a follow-up patch.
Reviewers: zturner, amccarth, jhenderson, clayborg
Subscribers: jdoerfert, markmentovai, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60121
llvm-svn: 357897
This extends D59959 to unionWith(), allowing to specify that a
non-wrapping unsigned/signed range is preferred. This is somewhat
less useful than the intersect case, because union operations are
rarer. An example use would the the phi union computed in SCEV.
The implementation is mostly a straightforward use of getPreferredRange(),
but I also had to adjust some <=/< checks to make sure that no ranges with
lower==upper get constructed before they're passed to getPreferredRange(),
as these have additional constraints.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60377
llvm-svn: 357876
The intersection of two ConstantRanges may consist of two disjoint
ranges. As we can only return one range as the result, we need to
return one of the two possible ranges that cover both. Currently the
result is picked based on set size. However, this is not always
optimal: If we're in an unsigned context, we'd prefer to get a large
unsigned range over a small signed range -- the latter effectively
becomes a full set in the unsigned domain.
This revision adds a PreferredRangeType, which can be either Smallest,
Unsigned or Signed. Smallest is the current behavior and Unsigned and
Signed are new variants that prefer not to wrap the unsigned/signed
domain. The new type isn't used anywhere yet (but SCEV will be a good
first user, see D60035).
I've also added some comments to illustrate the various cases in
intersectWith(), which should hopefully make it more obvious what is
going on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59959
llvm-svn: 357873
Add isAllNegative() and isAllNonNegative() methods to ConstantRange,
which determine whether all values in the constant range are
negative/non-negative.
This is useful for replacing KnownBits isNegative() and isNonNegative()
calls when changing code to use constant ranges.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60264
llvm-svn: 357871
if we do SHL of two 16-bit ranges like [0, 30000) with [1,2) we get
"full-set" instead of what I would have expected [0, 60000) which is
still in the 16-bit unsigned range.
This patch changes the SHL algorithm to allow getting a usable range
even in this case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57983
llvm-svn: 357854
Summary:
Reorder the condition code enum to match their encodings. Move it to MC layer so it can be used by the scheduler models.
This avoids needing an isel pattern for each condition code. And it removes
translation switches for converting between CMOV instructions and condition
codes.
Now the printer, encoder and disassembler take care of converting the immediate.
We use InstAliases to handle the assembly matching. But we print using the
asm string in the instruction definition. The instruction itself is marked
IsCodeGenOnly=1 to hide it from the assembly parser.
This does complicate the scheduler models a little since we can't assign the
A and BE instructions to a separate class now.
I plan to make similar changes for SETcc and Jcc.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, lebedev.ri, andreadb, courbet
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: gchatelet, hiraditya, kristina, lebedev.ri, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60041
llvm-svn: 357800
Summary:
Add new ``isa_and_nonnull<>`` operator that works just like
the ``isa<>`` operator, except that it allows for a null pointer as an
argument (which it then returns false).
Reviewers: lattner, aaron.ballman, greened
Reviewed By: lattner
Subscribers: hubert.reinterpretcast, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60291
llvm-svn: 357761
Summary:
Strings in minidump files are stored as a 32-bit length field, giving
the length of the string in *bytes*, which is followed by the
appropriate number of UTF16 code units. The string is also supposed to
be null-terminated, and the null-terminator is not a part of the length
field. This patch:
- adds support for reading these strings out of the minidump file (this
implementation does not depend on proper null-termination)
- adds support for writing them to a minidump file
- using the previous two pieces implements proper (de)serialization of
the CSDVersion field of the SystemInfo stream. Previously, this was
only read/written as hex, and no attempt was made to access the
referenced string -- now this string is read and written correctly.
The changes are tested via yaml2obj|obj2yaml round-trip as well as a
unit test which checks the corner cases of the string deserialization
logic.
Reviewers: jhenderson, zturner, clayborg
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aprantl, markmentovai, amccarth, lldb-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59775
llvm-svn: 357749
A block reachable from the entry block can't have any route to a block that's not reachable from the entry block (if it did, that route would make it reachable from the entry block). That is the intended performance optimization for isPotentiallyReachable. For the case where we ask whether an unreachable from entry block has a route to a reachable from entry block, we can't conclude one way or the other. Fix a bug where we claimed there could be no such route.
The fix in rL357425 ironically reintroduced the very bug it was fixing but only when a DominatorTree is provided. This fixes the remaining bug.
llvm-svn: 357734
Summary: This changes the Architecture enum to use a prefix (AK_) to prevent the
preprocessor from replacing i386 with 1 when building llvm/clang for i386.
Reviewers: steven_wu, lhames, mstorsjo
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Subscribers: hiraditya, jkorous, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60241
llvm-svn: 357733
Summary:
Now CVType and CVSymbol are effectively type-safe wrappers around
ArrayRef<uint8_t>. Make the kind() accessor load it from the
RecordPrefix, which is the same for types and symbols.
Reviewers: zturner, aganea
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60018
llvm-svn: 357658
Summary:
On AIX, we can determine whether a filesystem is remote using `mntctl`.
If the information is not found, then claim that the file is remote
(since that is the more restrictive case). Testing for the associated
interface is restored with a modified version of the unit test from
rL295768.
Reviewers: jasonliu, xingxue
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: jsji, apaprocki, Hahnfeld, zturner, krytarowski, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58801
llvm-svn: 357333
Summary:
`ResolvedSchedClass` will need to be used outside of `Analysis`
(before `InstructionBenchmarkClustering` even), therefore promote
it into a non-private top-level class, and while there also
move all of the functions that are only called by `ResolvedSchedClass`
into that same new file.
Reviewers: courbet, gchatelet
Reviewed By: courbet
Subscribers: mgorny, tschuett, mgrang, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59993
llvm-svn: 357259
This patch has three related fixes to improve float literal lexing:
1. Make AsmLexer::LexDigit handle floats without a decimal point more
consistently.
2. Make AsmLexer::LexFloatLiteral print an error for floats which are
apparently missing an "e".
3. Make APFloat::convertFromString use binutils-compatible exponent
parsing.
Together, this fixes some cases where a float would be incorrectly
rejected, fixes some cases where the compiler would crash, and improves
diagnostics in some cases.
Patch by Brandon Jones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57321
llvm-svn: 357214
Summary:
This is an alternative to D59539.
Let's suppose we have measured 4 different opcodes, and got: `0.5`, `1.0`, `1.5`, `2.0`.
Let's suppose we are using `-analysis-clustering-epsilon=0.5`.
By default now we will start processing the `0.5` point, find that `1.0` is it's neighbor, add them to a new cluster.
Then we will notice that `1.5` is a neighbor of `1.0` and add it to that same cluster.
Then we will notice that `2.0` is a neighbor of `1.5` and add it to that same cluster.
So all these points ended up in the same cluster.
This may or may not be a correct implementation of dbscan clustering algorithm.
But this is rather horribly broken for the reasons of comparing the clusters with the LLVM sched data.
Let's suppose all those opcodes are currently in the same sched cluster.
If i specify `-analysis-inconsistency-epsilon=0.5`, then no matter
the LLVM values this cluster will **never** match the LLVM values,
and thus this cluster will **always** be displayed as inconsistent.
The solution is obviously to split off some of these opcodes into different sched cluster.
But how do i do that? Out of 4 opcodes displayed in the inconsistency report,
which ones are the "bad ones"? Which ones are the most different from the checked-in data?
I'd need to go in to the `.yaml` and look it up manually.
The trivial solution is to, when creating clusters, don't use the full dbscan algorithm,
but instead "pick some unclustered point, pick all unclustered points that are it's neighbor,
put them all into a new cluster, repeat". And just so as it happens, we can arrive
at that algorithm by not performing the "add neighbors of a neighbor to the cluster" step.
But that won't work well once we teach analyze mode to operate in on-1D mode
(i.e. on more than a single measurement type at a time), because the clustering would
depend on the order of the measurements.
Instead, let's just create a single cluster per opcode, and put all the points of that opcode into said cluster.
And simultaneously check that every point in that cluster is a neighbor of every other point in the cluster,
and if they are not, the cluster (==opcode) is unstable.
This is //yet another// step to bring me closer to being able to continue cleanup of bdver2 sched model..
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40880 | PR40880 ]].
Reviewers: courbet, gchatelet
Reviewed By: courbet
Subscribers: tschuett, jdoerfert, RKSimon, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59820
llvm-svn: 357152
The issue here is that we actually allow CGSCC passes to mutate IR (and
therefore invalidate analyses) outside of the current SCC. At a minimum,
we need to support mutating parent and ancestor SCCs to support the
ArgumentPromotion pass which rewrites all calls to a function.
However, the analysis invalidation infrastructure is heavily based
around not needing to invalidate the same IR-unit at multiple levels.
With Loop passes for example, they don't invalidate other Loops. So we
need to customize how we handle CGSCC invalidation. Doing this without
gratuitously re-running analyses is even harder. I've avoided most of
these by using an out-of-band preserved set to accumulate the cross-SCC
invalidation, but it still isn't perfect in the case of re-visiting the
same SCC repeatedly *but* it coming off the worklist. Unclear how
important this use case really is, but I wanted to call it out.
Another wrinkle is that in order for this to successfully propagate to
function analyses, we have to make sure we have a proxy from the SCC to
the Function level. That requires pre-creating the necessary proxy.
The motivating test case now works cleanly and is added for
ArgumentPromotion.
Thanks for the review from Philip and Wei!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59869
llvm-svn: 357137
Add a test that checks the intersectWith() implementation against
all 4-bit range pairs. The test uses a more explicit way of
calculating the possible intersections, and checks that the right
one is picked out according to the smallest set heuristic.
This is in preparation for introducing intersectWith() variants that
use different heuristics to pick an intersection range, if there are
multiple possibilities.
llvm-svn: 357119
Split off from D59749. This adds isWrappedSet() and
isUpperSignWrapped() set with the same behavior as isSignWrappedSet()
and isUpperWrapped() for the respectively other domain.
The methods isWrappedSet() and isSignWrappedSet() will not consider
ranges of the form [X, Max] == [X, 0) and [X, SignedMax] == [X, SignedMin)
to be wrapping, while isUpperWrapped() and isUpperSignWrapped() will.
Also replace the checks in getUnsignedMin() and friends with method
calls that implement the same logic.
llvm-svn: 357112
Split out from D59749. The current implementation of isWrappedSet()
doesn't do what it says on the tin, and treats ranges like
[X, Max] as wrapping, because they are represented as [X, 0) when
using half-inclusive ranges. This also makes it inconsistent with
the semantics of isSignWrappedSet().
This patch renames isWrappedSet() to isUpperWrapped(), in preparation
for the introduction of a new isWrappedSet() method with corrected
behavior.
llvm-svn: 357107
Split off from D59749. This uses a simpler and more efficient
implementation of isSignWrappedSet(), and considers full sets
as non-wrapped, to be consistent with isWrappedSet(). Otherwise
the behavior is unchanged.
There are currently only two users of this function and both already
check for isFullSet() || isSignWrappedSet(), so this is not going to
cause a change in overall behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59848
llvm-svn: 357039
Summary:
This prevents "Cannot encode high byte register in REX-prefixed instruction"
from happening on instructions that require REX encoding when AH & co
get selected.
On the down side, these 4 registers can no longer be selected
automatically, but this avoids having to expose all the X86 encoding
complexity.
Reviewers: gchatelet
Subscribers: tschuett, jdoerfert, llvm-commits, bdb
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59821
llvm-svn: 357003
rL356312 changed the return type of emplace_back from void to reference.
Update the tests to check the behavior.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59809
llvm-svn: 356980
This adds ConstantRange::getFull(BitWidth) and
ConstantRange::getEmpty(BitWidth) named constructors as more readable
alternatives to the current ConstantRange(BitWidth, /* full */ false)
and similar. Additionally private getFull() and getEmpty() member
functions are added which return a full/empty range with the same bit
width -- these are commonly needed inside ConstantRange.cpp.
The IsFullSet argument in the ConstantRange(BitWidth, IsFullSet)
constructor is now mandatory for the few usages that still make use of it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59716
llvm-svn: 356852
As a followup to newpm -time-passes fix (D59366), now adding a similar
functionality to legacy time-passes.
Enhancing llvm::reportAndResetTimings to accept an optional stream
for reporting output. By default it still reports into the stream created
by CreateInfoOutputFile (-info-output-file).
Also fixing to actually reset after printing as declared.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59416
llvm-svn: 356824
Add basic infrastructure for reading and writting TBD files (version 1 - 3).
The TextAPI library is not used by anything yet (besides the unit tests). Tool
support will be added in a separate commit.
The TBD format is currently documented in the implementation file (TextStub.cpp).
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53945
Update: This contains changes to fix issues discovered by the bots:
- add parentheses to silence warnings.
- rename variables
- use PlatformType from BinaryFormat
- Trying if switching from a vector to an array will appeas the bots.
- Replace the tuple with a struct to work around an explicit constructor bug.
- This fixes an issue where we were leaking the YAML document if there was a
parsing error.
Updated the license information in all files.
llvm-svn: 356820
Summary:
Adding contained caching to AliasAnalysis. BasicAA is currently the only one using it.
AA changes:
- This patch is pulling the caches from BasicAAResults to AAResults, meaning the getModRefInfo call benefits from the IsCapturedCache as well when in "batch mode".
- All AAResultBase implementations add the QueryInfo member to all APIs. AAResults APIs maintain wrapper APIs such that all alias()/getModRefInfo call sites are unchanged.
- AA now provides a BatchAAResults type as a wrapper to AAResults. It keeps the AAResults instance and a QueryInfo instantiated to batch mode. It delegates all work to the AAResults instance with the batched QueryInfo. More API wrappers may be needed in BatchAAResults; only the minimum needed is currently added.
MemorySSA changes:
- All walkers are now templated on the AA used (AliasAnalysis=AAResults or BatchAAResults).
- At build time, we optimize uses; now we create a local walker (lives only as long as OptimizeUses does) using BatchAAResults.
- All Walkers have an internal AA and only use that now, never the AA in MemorySSA. The Walkers receive the AA they will use when built.
- The walker we use for queries after the build is instantiated on AliasAnalysis and is built after building MemorySSA and setting AA.
- All static methods doing walking are now templated on AliasAnalysisType if they are used both during build and after. If used only during build, the method now only takes a BatchAAResults. If used only after build, the method now takes an AliasAnalysis.
Subscribers: sanjoy, arsenm, jvesely, nhaehnle, jlebar, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59315
llvm-svn: 356783
Summary:
This patch adds the ability to read a yaml form of a minidump file and
write it out as binary. Apart from the minidump header and the stream
directory, only three basic stream kinds are supported:
- Text: This kind is used for streams which contain textual data. This
is typically the contents of a /proc file on linux (e.g.
/proc/PID/maps). In this case, we just put the raw stream contents
into the yaml.
- SystemInfo: This stream contains various bits of information about the
host system in binary form. We expose the data in a structured form.
- Raw: This kind is used as a fallback when we don't have any special
knowledge about the stream. In this case, we just print the stream
contents in hex.
For this code to be really useful, more stream kinds will need to be
added (particularly for things like lists of memory regions and loaded
modules). However, these can be added incrementally.
Reviewers: jhenderson, zturner, clayborg, aprantl
Subscribers: mgorny, lemo, llvm-commits, lldb-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59482
llvm-svn: 356753
Summary: To show that dbscan is insensitive to the order of the points.
Subscribers: tschuett, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59693
llvm-svn: 356747
The first problem was a use-after-free in the tests (detected by asan
bots). The temporary array created for the "create" call is guaranteed
to live only until the end of the statement. The fix there is to store
the test data in a local variable to ensure it has the right lifetime
The second issue is broken BUILD_SHARED_LIBS build, which I fix by
adding the appropriate BinaryFormat dependency to the Object unit tests.
llvm-svn: 356655
Summary:
This patch adds basic support for reading minidump files. It contains
the definitions of various important minidump data structures (header,
stream directory), and of one minidump stream (SystemInfo). The ability
to read other streams will be added in follow-up patches. However, all
streams can be read even now as raw data, which means lldb's minidump
support (where this code is taken from) can be immediately rebased on
top of this patch as soon as it lands.
As we don't have any support for generating minidump files (yet), this
tests the code via unit tests with some small handcrafted binaries in
the form of c char arrays.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, jhenderson, zturner
Subscribers: srhines, dschuff, mgorny, fedor.sergeev, lemo, clayborg, JDevlieghere, aprantl, lldb-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59291
llvm-svn: 356652
This adds a Remark class that allows us to share code when working with
remarks.
The C API has been updated to reflect this. Instead of the parser
generating C structs, it's now using a C++ object that is used through
opaque pointers in C. This gives us much more flexibility on what
changes we can make to the internal state of the object and interacts
much better with scenarios where the library is used through dlopen.
* C API updates:
* move from C structs to opaque pointers and functions
* the remark type is now an enum instead of a string
* unit tests updates:
* use mostly the C++ API
* keep one test for the C API
* rename to YAMLRemarksParsingTest
* a typo was fixed: AnalysisFPCompute -> AnalysisFPCommute.
* a new error message was added: "expected a remark tag."
* llvm-opt-report has been updated to use the C++ parser instead of the
C API
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59049
Original llvm-svn: 356491
llvm-svn: 356519
This adds a Remark class that allows us to share code when working with
remarks.
The C API has been updated to reflect this. Instead of the parser
generating C structs, it's now using a C++ object that is used through
opaque pointers in C. This gives us much more flexibility on what
changes we can make to the internal state of the object and interacts
much better with scenarios where the library is used through dlopen.
* C API updates:
* move from C structs to opaque pointers and functions
* the remark type is now an enum instead of a string
* unit tests updates:
* use mostly the C++ API
* keep one test for the C API
* rename to YAMLRemarksParsingTest
* a typo was fixed: AnalysisFPCompute -> AnalysisFPCommute.
* a new error message was added: "expected a remark tag."
* llvm-opt-report has been updated to use the C++ parser instead of the
C API
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59049
llvm-svn: 356491
Introduce a DW_OP_LLVM_convert Dwarf expression pseudo op that allows
for a convenient way to perform type conversions on the Dwarf expression
stack. As an additional bonus it paves the way for using other Dwarf
v5 ops that need to reference a base_type.
The new DW_OP_LLVM_convert is used from lib/Transforms/Utils/Local.cpp
to perform sext/zext on debug values but mainly the patch is about
preparing terrain for adding other Dwarf v5 ops that need to reference a
base_type.
For Dwarf v5 the op maps to DW_OP_convert and for earlier versions a
complex shift & mask pattern is generated to emulate sext/zext.
This is a recommit of r356442 with trivial fixes for the failing tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56587
llvm-svn: 356451
Introduce a DW_OP_LLVM_convert Dwarf expression pseudo op that allows
for a convenient way to perform type conversions on the Dwarf expression
stack. As an additional bonus it paves the way for using other Dwarf
v5 ops that need to reference a base_type.
The new DW_OP_LLVM_convert is used from lib/Transforms/Utils/Local.cpp
to perform sext/zext on debug values but mainly the patch is about
preparing terrain for adding other Dwarf v5 ops that need to reference a
base_type.
For Dwarf v5 the op maps to DW_OP_convert and for earlier versions a
complex shift & mask pattern is generated to emulate sext/zext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56587
llvm-svn: 356442
Following the suggestion in D59450, I'm moving the code for constructing
a ConstantRange from KnownBits out of ValueTracking, which also allows us
to test this code independently.
I'm adding this method to ConstantRange rather than KnownBits (which
would have been a bit nicer API wise) to avoid creating a dependency
from Support to IR, where ConstantRange lives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59475
llvm-svn: 356339
TimePassesHandler object (implementation of time-passes for new pass manager)
gains ability to report into a stream customizable per-instance (per pipeline).
Intended use is to specify separate time-passes output stream per each compilation,
setting up TimePasses member of StandardInstrumentation during PassBuilder setup.
That allows to get independent non-overlapping pass-times reports for parallel
independent compilations (in JIT-like setups).
By default it still puts timing reports into the info-output-file stream
(created by CreateInfoOutputFile every time report is requested).
Unit-test added for non-default case, and it also allowed to discover that print() does not work
as declared - it did not reset the timers, leading to yet another report being printed into the default stream.
Fixed print() to actually reset timers according to what was declared in print's comments before.
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59366
llvm-svn: 356305
Add functions to ConstantRange that determine whether the
unsigned/signed addition/subtraction of two ConstantRanges
may/always/never overflows. This will allow checking overflow
conditions based on known constant ranges in addition to known bits.
I'm implementing these methods on ConstantRange to allow them to be
unit tested independently of any ValueTracking machinery. The tests
include exhaustive testing on 4-bit ranges, to make sure the result
is both conservatively correct and maximally precise.
The OverflowResult enum is redeclared on ConstantRange, because
I wanted to avoid a dependency in either direction between
ValueTracking.h and ConstantRange.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59193
llvm-svn: 356276
Summary:
Now that endian types support enumerations (D59141), the existing yaml
support for them is somewhat insufficient. The current solution was to
define the ScalarTraits class for these types, which always forwards to
the ScalarTraits of the underlying type. However, the enum types will
usually have ScalarEnumerationTraits of ScalarBitsetTraits.
In this patch I add the two extra Traits types to the endian types. In
order to properly SFINAE-ize them, I've also added an extra "Enable"
template argument to the Traits template classes.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: kristina, Bigcheese, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59289
llvm-svn: 356269
Windows command line argument processing treats consecutive double quotes
as a single double-quote. This patch implements this functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58662
llvm-svn: 356193
Summary:
The way c++ template argument deduction works, both arguments are used
to deduce the template type in the three-argument overload of
mapOptional. This is a problem if the types are slightly different, even
if they are implicitly convertible. This is fairly easy to trigger with
integral types, as the default type of most integral constants is int,
which then requires casting the constant to the type of the other
argument.
This patch fixes that by using a separate template type for the default
value, which is then cast to the type of the first argument. To avoid
this conversion triggerring conversions marged as explicit, we use
static_assert to check that the types are implicitly convertible.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: kristina, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59142
llvm-svn: 356157
Summary:
Add hooks for determining the policy used to decide whether/how
to chop off symbol 'suffixes' when locating a given function
in a sample profile.
Prior to this change, any function symbols of the form "X.Y" were
elided/truncated into just "X" when looking up things in a sample
profile data file.
With this change, the policy on suffixes can be changed by adding a
new attribute "sample-profile-suffix-elision-policy" to the function:
this attribute can have the value "all" (the default), "selected", or
"none". A value of "all" preserves the previous behavior (chop off
everything after the first "." character, then treat that as the
symbol name). A value of "selected" chops off only the rightmost
".llvm.XXXX" suffix (where "XXX" is any string not containing a "."
char). A value of "none" indicates that names should be left as is.
Subscribers: jdoerfert, wmi, mtrofin, danielcdh, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58832
llvm-svn: 356146
Summary:
MsgPackTypes has been replaced by the lighter-weight MsgPackDocument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57025
Change-Id: Ia7069880ef29f55490abbe5d8ae15f25cc1490a4
llvm-svn: 356082
Summary:
A class that exposes a simple in-memory representation of a document of
MsgPack objects, that can be read from and written to MsgPack, read from
and written to YAML, and inspected and modified in memory. This is
intended to be a lighter-weight (in terms of memory allocations)
replacement for MsgPackTypes.
Two subsequent changes will:
1. switch AMDGPU HSA metadata to using MsgPackDocument instead of
MsgPackTypes;
2. add MsgPack AMDGPU PAL metadata via MsgPackDocument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57023
Change-Id: Ie15a054831d5a6467c5867c064c8f8f6b80270e1
llvm-svn: 356080
Summary:
AIX compilers define macros based on the version of the operating
system.
This patch implements updating of versionless AIX triples to include the
host AIX version. Also, the host triple detection in the build system is
adjusted to strip the AIX version information so that the run-time
detection is preferred.
Reviewers: xingxue, stefanp, nemanjai, jasonliu
Reviewed By: xingxue
Subscribers: mgorny, kristina, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58798
llvm-svn: 355995
This patch adds an XCOFF triple object format type into LLVM.
This XCOFF triple object file type will be used later by object file and assembly generation for the AIX platform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58930
llvm-svn: 355989
Summary:
Extract the functionality of eliminating unreachable basic blocks
within a function, previously encapsulated within the
-unreachableblockelim pass, and make it available as a function within
BlockUtils.h. No functional change intended other than making the logic
reusable.
Exposing this logic makes it easier to implement
https://reviews.llvm.org/D59068, which fixes coroutines bug
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40979.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, wmi, davidxl, silvas, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59069
llvm-svn: 355846
Summary:
Binary formats often include various enumerations or bitsets, but using
endian-specific types for accessing them is tricky because they
currently only support integral types. This is particularly true for
scoped enums (enum class), as these are not implicitly convertible to
integral types, and so one has to perform two casts just to read the
enum value.
This fixes that support by adding first-class support for enumeration
types to endian-specific types. The support for them was already almost
working -- all I needed to do was overload getSwappedBytes for
enumeration types (which casts the enum to its underlying type and performs the
conversion there). I also add some convenience template aliases to simplify
declaring endian-specific enums.
Reviewers: Bigcheese, zturner
Subscribers: kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59141
llvm-svn: 355812
Use this feature to fix a bug on ARM where 4 byte alignment is
incorrectly assumed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57335
llvm-svn: 355685
Use this feature to fix a bug on ARM where 4 byte alignment is
incorrectly assumed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57335
llvm-svn: 355585
Use this feature to fix a bug on ARM where 4 byte alignment is
incorrectly assumed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57335
llvm-svn: 355522
Getting rid of the name "optimization remarks" for anything that
involves handling remarks on the client side.
It's safer to do this now, before we get stuck with that name in all the
APIs and public interfaces we decide to export to users in the future.
This renames llvm/tools/opt-remarks to llvm/tools/remarks-shlib, and now
generates `libRemarks.dylib` instead of `libOptRemarks.dylib`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58535
llvm-svn: 355439
These arrays are both keyed by CPU name and go into the same tablegenerated file. Merge them so we only need to store keys once.
This also removes a weird space saving quirk where we used the ProcDesc.size() to create to build an ArrayRef for ProcSched.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58939
llvm-svn: 355431
We have two sources of known bits:
1. For adds leading ones of either operand are preserved. For sub
leading zeros of LHS and leading ones of RHS become leading zeros in
the result.
2. The saturating math is a select between add/sub and an all-ones/
zero value. As such we can carry out the add/sub known bits
calculation, and only preseve the known one/zero bits respectively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58329
llvm-svn: 355223
This patch allows all forms of values for options to be used at the end
of a group. With the fix, it is possible to follow the way GNU binutils
tools handle grouping options better. For example, the -j option can be
used with objdump in any of the following ways:
$ objdump -d -j .text a.o
$ objdump -d -j.text a.o
$ objdump -dj .text a.o
$ objdump -dj.text a.o
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58711
llvm-svn: 355185
If an option, which requires a value, has a `cl::Grouping` formatting
modifier, it works well as far as it is used at the end of a group,
or as a separate argument. However, if the option appears accidentally
in the middle of a group, the program just crashes. This patch prints
an error message instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58499
llvm-svn: 355184
Part 2 of CSPGO changes (mostly related to ProfileSummary).
Note that I use a default parameter in setProfileSummary() and getSummary().
This is to break the dependency in clang. I will make the parameter explicit
after changing clang in a separated patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54175
llvm-svn: 355131
OptBisect is in IR due to LLVMContext using it. However, it uses IR units from
Analysis as well. This change moves getDescription functions from OptBisect
to their respective IR units. Generating names for IR units will now be up
to the callers, keeping the Analysis IR units in Analysis. To prevent
unnecessary string generation, isEnabled function is added so that callers know
when the description needs to be generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58406
llvm-svn: 355068
This patch introduces Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT which indicates that allocateMappedMemory() shall return a pointer to a large memory page.
However the flag is a hint because we're not guaranteed in any way that we will get back a large memory page. There are several restrictions:
- Large/huge memory pages aren't enabled by default on modern OSes (Windows 10 and Linux at least), and should be manually enabled/reserved.
- Once enabled, it should be kept in mind that large pages are physical only, they can't be swapped.
- Memory fragmentation can affect the availability of large pages, especially after running the OS for a long time and/or running along many other applications.
Memory::allocateMappedMemory() will fallback to 4KB pages if it can't allocate 2MB large pages (if Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT is provided)
Currently, Memory::MF_HUGE_HINT only works on Windows. The hint will be ignored on Linux, 4KB pages will always be returned.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58718
llvm-svn: 355065
Summary:
The original assumption for the insertDef method was that it would not
materialize Defs out of no-where, hence it will not insert phis needed
after inserting a Def.
However, when cloning an instruction (use case used in LICM), we do
materialize Defs "out of no-where". If the block receiving a Def has at
least one other Def, then no processing is needed. If the block just
received its first Def, we must check where Phi placement is needed.
The only new usage of insertDef is in LICM, hence the trigger for the bug.
But the original goal of the method also fails to apply for the move()
method. If we move a Def from the entry point of a diamond to either the
left or right blocks, then the merge block must add a phi.
While this usecase does not currently occur, or may be viewed as an
incorrect transformation, MSSA must behave corectly given the scenario.
Resolves PR40749 and PR40754.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58652
llvm-svn: 355040
That patch is the fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40703
"wrong line number info for obj file compiled with -ffunction-sections"
bug. The problem happened with only .o files. If object file contains
several .text sections then line number information showed incorrectly.
The reason for this is that DwarfLineTable could not detect section which
corresponds to specified address(because address is the local to the
section). And as the result it could not select proper sequence in the
line table. The fix is to pass SectionIndex with the address. So that it
would be possible to differentiate addresses from various sections. With
this fix llvm-objdump shows correct line numbers for disassembled code.
Differential review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58194
llvm-svn: 354972
DWARFFormValues can be created from a data extractor or by passing its
value directly. Until now this was done by member functions that
modified an existing object's internal state. This patch replaces a
subset of these methods with static method that return a new
DWARFFormValue.
llvm-svn: 354941
Summary:
Prior to r310876 one of our out-of-tree targets was enabling IPRA by modifying
the TargetOptions::EnableIPRA. This no longer works on current trunk since the
useIPRA() hook overrides any values that are set in advance. This patch adjusts
the behaviour of the hook so that API users and useIPRA() can both enable it
but useIPRA() cannot disable it if the API user already enabled it.
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38043
llvm-svn: 354692
Summary:
This patch separates two semantics of `applyUpdates`:
1. User provides an accurate CFG diff and the dominator tree is updated according to the difference of `the number of edge insertions` and `the number of edge deletions` to infer the status of an edge before and after the update.
2. User provides a sequence of hints. Updates mentioned in this sequence might never happened and even duplicated.
Logic changes:
Previously, removing invalid updates is considered a side-effect of deduplication and is not guaranteed to be reliable. To handle the second semantic, `applyUpdates` does validity checking before deduplication, which can cause updates that have already been applied to be submitted again. Then, different calls to `applyUpdates` might cause unintended consequences, for example,
```
DTU(Lazy) and Edge A->B exists.
1. DTU.applyUpdates({{Delete, A, B}, {Insert, A, B}}) // User expects these 2 updates result in a no-op, but {Insert, A, B} is queued
2. Remove A->B
3. DTU.applyUpdates({{Delete, A, B}}) // DTU cancels this update with {Insert, A, B} mentioned above together (Unintended)
```
But by restricting the precondition that updates of an edge need to be strictly ordered as how CFG changes were made, we can infer the initial status of this edge to resolve this issue.
Interface changes:
The second semantic of `applyUpdates` is separated to `applyUpdatesPermissive`.
These changes enable DTU(Lazy) to use the first semantic if needed, which is quite useful in `transforms/utils`.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, grosser
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58170
llvm-svn: 354669
Summary:
Following on from the review for D58088, this patch provides the
prerequisite to_address() implementation that's needed to have
pointer_iterator support unique_ptr.
The late bound return should be removed once we move to C++14 to better
align with the C++20 declaration. Also, this implementation can be removed
once we move to C++20 where it's defined as std::to_addres()
The std::pointer_traits<>::to_address(p) variations of these overloads has
not been implemented.
Reviewers: dblaikie, paquette
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58421
llvm-svn: 354491
This is a follow-up to r354246 and a reimplementation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D57097?id=186600
that should not trigger any UB thanks to the use of an union.
This may still be subject to the problem solved by std::launder, but I'm unsure how it interacts whith union.
/me plans to revert if this triggers any relevant bot failure. At least this validates in Release mode with
clang 6.0.1 and gcc 4.8.5.
llvm-svn: 354264
and
r354055 "Optional specialization for trivially copyable types, part2"
These are suspected to cause Clang to get miscompiled on Ubuntu 14.04
(Trusty) which uses GCC 4.8.4. Reverting for an hour to see if this
helps. See llvm-commits thread.
> Recommit Optional specialization for trivially copyable types
>
> Unfortunately the original code gets misscompiled by GCC (at least 8.1),
> this is a tentative workaround using std::memcpy instead of inplace new
> for trivially copyable types. I'll revert if it breaks.
>
> Original revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57097
llvm-svn: 354126
Unfortunately the original code gets misscompiled by GCC (at least 8.1),
this is a tentative workaround using std::memcpy instead of inplace new
for trivially copyable types. I'll revert if it breaks.
Original revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57097
llvm-svn: 354051
This reverts commit r351091.
The original mac breakages are addressed by ensuring the root directory
we're working from is fully symlink-resolved before starting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58169
llvm-svn: 354026
Specialization of Optional for trivially copyable types yields failure on the buildbots I fail to reproduce locally.
Better safe than sorry, reverting.
llvm-svn: 353982
Make llvm::Optional<T> trivially copyable when T is trivially copyable
This is an ever-recurring issue (see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39427 and https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35978)
but I believe that thanks to https://reviews.llvm.org/D54472 we can now ship a decent implementation of this.
Basically the fact that llvm::is_trivially_copyable has a consistent behavior across compilers should prevent any ABI issue,
and using in-place new instead of memcpy should keep compiler bugs away.
This patch is slightly different from the original revision https://reviews.llvm.org/rL353927 but achieves the same goal. It just avoids
going through std::conditional which may the code more explicit.
llvm-svn: 353962
Add plumbing to get MemorySSA in the remaining loop passes.
Also update unit test to add the dependency.
[EnableMSSALoopDependency remains disabled].
llvm-svn: 353901
When CodeExtractor saves the result of InvokeInst at the first insertion
point of the 'normal destination' basic block, this block can be omitted
in the outlined region, so store is placed outside of the function. The
suggested solution is to process saving outputs after creating exit
stubs for new function, and stores will be placed in that blocks before
return in this case.
Patch by Sergei Kachkov!
Fixes llvm.org/PR40455.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57919
llvm-svn: 353562
DomTreeUpdater depends on headers from Analysis, but is in IR. This is a
layering violation since Analysis depends on IR. Relocate this code from IR
to Analysis to fix the layering violation.
llvm-svn: 353265
A fallible iterator is one whose increment or decrement operations may fail.
This would usually be supported by replacing the ++ and -- operators with
methods that return error:
class MyFallibleIterator {
public:
// ...
Error inc();
Errro dec();
// ...
};
The downside of this style is that it no longer conforms to the C++ iterator
concept, and can not make use of standard algorithms and features such as
range-based for loops.
The fallible_iterator wrapper takes an iterator written in the style above
and adapts it to (mostly) conform with the C++ iterator concept. It does this
by providing standard ++ and -- operator implementations, returning any errors
generated via a side channel (an Error reference passed into the wrapper at
construction time), and immediately jumping the iterator to a known 'end'
value upon error. It also marks the Error as checked any time an iterator is
compared with a known end value and found to be inequal, allowing early exit
from loops without redundant error checking*.
Usage looks like:
MyFallibleIterator I = ..., E = ...;
Error Err = Error::success();
for (auto &Elem : make_fallible_range(I, E, Err)) {
// Loop body is only entered when safe.
// Early exits from loop body permitted without checking Err.
if (SomeCondition)
return;
}
if (Err)
// Handle error.
* Since failure causes a fallible iterator to jump to end, testing that a
fallible iterator is not an end value implicitly verifies that the error is a
success value, and so is equivalent to an error check.
Reviewers: dblaikie, rupprecht
Subscribers: mgorny, dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57618
llvm-svn: 353237
Summary:
Add support for options that always prefix their value, giving an error
if the value is in the next argument or if the option is given a value
assignment (ie. opt=val). This is the desired behavior for the -D option
of FileCheck for instance.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes in version 2 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions and introduced when creating
D56549)
Reviewers: jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits, probinson, kristina, hiraditya,
JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56549
llvm-svn: 353172
This fixes two problems with CSE done in buildConstant. First, this
would hit an assert when used with a vector result type. Solve this by
allowing CSE on the vector elements, but not on the result vector for
now.
Second, this was also performing the CSE based on the input
ConstantInt pointer. The underlying buildConstant could potentially
convert the constant depending on the result type, giving in a
different ConstantInt*. Stop allowing the APInt and ConstantInt forms
from automatically casting to the result type to avoid any similar
problems in the future.
llvm-svn: 353077
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
attribute and an empty-named value are required. Prior to this change,
this empty-named value appears in the command-line help text:
-some-option - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
= -
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
-some-option - some help text
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2
=<empty> - description
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
This is mostly a reland of r353048 which in turn was a reland of
r352750.
Reviewed by: ruiu, thopre, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 353053
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
attribute and an empty-named value are required. Prior to this change,
this empty-named value appears in the command-line help text:
-some-option - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
= -
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
-some-option - some help text
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2 - description 2
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
-some-option=<value> - some help text
=v1 - description 1
=v2
=<empty> - description
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
This is mostly a reland of r352750.
Reviewed by: ruiu, thopre, mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 353048
This cleans up all GetElementPtr creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
value type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57173
llvm-svn: 352913
This cleans up all LoadInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass the
value type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57172
llvm-svn: 352911
This cleans up all InvokeInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57171
llvm-svn: 352910
This cleans up all CallInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57170
llvm-svn: 352909
Recommit r352791 after tweaking DerivedTypes.h slightly, so that gcc
doesn't choke on it, hopefully.
Original Message:
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352827
This reverts commit f47d6b38c7 (r352791).
Seems to run into compilation failures with GCC (but not clang, where
I tested it). Reverting while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 352800
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352791
In order to make an option value truly optional, both the ValueOptional
and an empty-named value are required. This empty-named value appears in
the command-line help text, which is not ideal.
This change improves the help text for these sort of options in a number
of ways:
1) ValueOptional options with an empty-named value now print their help
text twice: both without and then with '=<value>' after the name. The
latter version then lists the allowed values after it.
2) Empty-named values with no help text in ValueOptional options are not
listed in the permitted values.
3) Otherwise empty-named options are printed as =<empty> rather than
simply '='.
4) Option values without help text do not have the '-' separator
printed.
It also tweaks the llvm-symbolizer -functions help text to not print a
trailing ':' as that looks bad combined with 1) above.
Reviewed by: thopre, ruiu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57030
llvm-svn: 352750
Summary:
This switches the EH implementation to the new proposal:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/blob/master/proposals/Exceptions.md
(The previous proposal was
https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/blob/master/proposals/old/Exceptions.md)
- Instruction changes
- Now we have one single `catch` instruction that returns a except_ref
value
- `throw` now can take variable number of operations
- `rethrow` does not have 'depth' argument anymore
- `br_on_exn` queries an except_ref to see if it matches the tag and
branches to the given label if true.
- `extract_exception` is a pseudo instruction that simulates popping
values from wasm stack. This is to make `br_on_exn`, a very special
instruction, work: `br_on_exn` puts values onto the stack only if it
is taken, and the # of values can vay depending on the tag.
- Now there's only one `catch` per `try`, this patch removes all special
handling for terminate pad with a call to `__clang_call_terminate`.
Before it was the only case there are two catch clauses (a normal
`catch` and `catch_all` per `try`).
- Make `rethrow` act as a terminator like `throw`. This splits BB after
`rethrow` in WasmEHPrepare, and deletes an unnecessary `unreachable`
after `rethrow` in LateEHPrepare.
- Now we stop at all catchpads (because we add wasm `catch` instruction
that catches all exceptions), this creates new
`findWasmUnwindDestinations` function in SelectionDAGBuilder.
- Now we use `br_on_exn` instrution to figure out if an except_ref
matches the current tag or not, LateEHPrepare generates this sequence
for catch pads:
```
catch
block i32
br_on_exn $__cpp_exception
end_block
extract_exception
```
- Branch analysis for `br_on_exn` in WebAssemblyInstrInfo
- Other various misc. changes to switch to the new proposal.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57134
llvm-svn: 352598
Patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D56329 caused build failures for me when
building on Windows because of the use of cmake operator
'VERSION_GREATER_EQUAL' which isn't supported in older versions of cmake. The
llvm website states that minimum required version of cmake for building llvm is
3.4.3 https://llvm.org/docs/CMake.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57326
llvm-svn: 352378
The IR enforced limit for the address space is 24-bits, but LLT was
only using 23-bits. Additionally, the argument to the constructor was
truncating to 16-bits.
A similar problem still exists for the number of vector elements. The
IR enforces no limit, so if you try to use a vector with > 65535
elements the IRTranslator asserts in the LLT constructor.
llvm-svn: 352264
Summary:
Renamed setBaseDiscriminator to cloneWithBaseDiscriminator, to match
similar APIs. Also changed its behavior to copy over the other
discriminator components, instead of eliding them.
Renamed cloneWithDuplicationFactor to
cloneByMultiplyingDuplicationFactor, which more closely matches what
this API does.
Reviewers: dblaikie, wmi
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: zzheng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56220
llvm-svn: 351996
Summary:
Previously no client of ilist traits has needed to know about transfers
of nodes within the same list, so as an optimization, ilist doesn't call
transferNodesFromList in that case. However, now there are clients that
want to use ilist traits to cache instruction ordering information to
optimize dominance queries of instructions in the same basic block.
This change updates the existing ilist traits users to detect in-list
transfers and do nothing in that case.
After this change, we can start caching instruction ordering information
in LLVM IR data structures. There are two main ways to do that:
- by putting an order integer into the Instruction class
- by maintaining order integers in a hash table on BasicBlock
I plan to implement and measure both, but I wanted to commit this change
first to enable other out of tree ilist clients to implement this
optimization as well.
Reviewers: lattner, hfinkel, chandlerc
Subscribers: hiraditya, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57120
llvm-svn: 351992
VPlan-native path
Context: Patch Series #2 for outer loop vectorization support in LV
using VPlan. (RFC:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119523.html).
Patch series #2 checks that inner loops are still trivially lock-step
among all vector elements. Non-loop branches are blindly assumed as
divergent.
Changes here implement VPlan based predication algorithm to compute
predicates for blocks that need predication. Predicates are computed
for the VPLoop region in reverse post order. A block's predicate is
computed as OR of the masks of all incoming edges. The mask for an
incoming edge is computed as AND of predecessor block's predicate and
either predecessor's Condition bit or NOT(Condition bit) depending on
whether the edge from predecessor block to the current block is true
or false edge.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, hsaito, dcaballe
Reviewed By: fhahn
Patch by Satish Guggilla, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53349
llvm-svn: 351990
This version of gcc seems to be having issues with raw literals inside macro
arguments. I change the string to use regular string literals instead.
llvm-svn: 351756
This patch introduces the field `ExpressionSize` in SCEV. This field is
calculated only once on SCEV creation, and it represents the complexity of
this SCEV from arithmetical point of view (not from the point of the number
of actual different SCEV nodes that are used in the expression). Roughly
saying, it is the number of operands and operations symbols when we print this
SCEV.
A formal definition is following: if SCEV `X` has operands
`Op1`, `Op2`, ..., `OpN`,
then
Size(X) = 1 + Size(Op1) + Size(Op2) + ... + Size(OpN).
Size of SCEVConstant and SCEVUnknown is one.
Expression size may be used as a universal way to limit SCEV transformations
for huge SCEVs. Currently, we have a bunch of options that represents various
limits (such as recursion depth limit) that may not make any sense from the
point of view of a LLVM users who is not familiar with SCEV internals, and all
these different options pursue one goal. A more general rule that may
potentially allow us to get rid of this redundancy in options is "do not make
transformations with SCEVs of huge size". It can apply to all SCEV traversals
and transformations that may need to visit a SCEV node more than once, hence
they are prone to combinatorial explosions.
This patch only introduces SCEV sizes calculation as NFC, its utilization will
be introduced in follow-up patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35989
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 351725
As noted in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36651, the specialization for
isPodLike<std::pair<...>> did not match the expectation of
std::is_trivially_copyable which makes the memcpy optimization invalid.
This patch renames the llvm::isPodLike trait into llvm::is_trivially_copyable.
Unfortunately std::is_trivially_copyable is not portable across compiler / STL
versions. So a portable version is provided too.
Note that the following specialization were invalid:
std::pair<T0, T1>
llvm::Optional<T>
Tests have been added to assert that former specialization are respected by the
standard usage of llvm::is_trivially_copyable, and that when a decent version
of std::is_trivially_copyable is available, llvm::is_trivially_copyable is
compared to std::is_trivially_copyable.
As of this patch, llvm::Optional is no longer considered trivially copyable,
even if T is. This is to be fixed in a later patch, as it has impact on a
long-running bug (see r347004)
Note that GCC warns about this UB, but this got silented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D50296.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54472
llvm-svn: 351701
to reflect the new license. These used slightly different spellings that
defeated my regular expressions.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351648
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
This is a follow-up to r351448. It adds support for other _*Z extensions
of the Itanium demanling, to the newly available demangle function
heuristic.
Reviewed by: erik.pilkington, rupprecht, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56855
llvm-svn: 351551
Summary:
The operators simply print the underlying value or "None".
The trickier part of this patch is making sure the streaming operators
work even in unit tests (which was my primary motivation, though I can
also see them being useful elsewhere). Since the stream operator was a
template, implicit conversions did not kick in, and our gtest glue code
was explicitly introducing an implicit conversion to make sure other
implicit conversions do not kick in :P. I resolve that by specializing
llvm_gtest::StreamSwitch for llvm:Optional<T>.
Reviewers: sammccall, dblaikie
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: mgorny, dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56795
llvm-svn: 351548
This allows it to be used in an upcoming llvm-readobj change.
A small change in internal behaviour of the function is to always call
the microsoftDemangle function if the string does not have an itanium
encoding prefix, rather than only if it starts with '?'. This is
harmless because the microsoftDemangle function does the same check
already.
Reviewed by: grimar, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56721
llvm-svn: 351448
Summary:
The version of make_absolute which accepted a specific directory to use
as the "base" for the computation could never fail, even though it
returned a std::error_code. The reason for that seems to be historical
-- the CWD flavour (which can fail due to failure to retrieve CWD) was
there first, and the new version was implemented by extending that.
This removes the error return value from the non-CWD overload and
reimplements the CWD version on top of that. This enables us to remove
some dead code where people were pessimistically trying to handle the
errors returned from this function.
Reviewers: zturner, sammccall
Subscribers: hiraditya, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56599
llvm-svn: 351317
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52803
This patch adds support to continuously CSE instructions during
each of the GISel passes. It consists of a GISelCSEInfo analysis pass
that can be used by the CSEMIRBuilder.
llvm-svn: 351283
This adds support for multilib paths for wasm32 targets, following
[Debian's Multiarch conventions], and also adds an experimental OS name in
order to test it.
[Debian's Multiarch conventions]: https://wiki.debian.org/Multiarch/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56553
llvm-svn: 351163
Summary:
Previously only one RealFileSystem instance was available, and its working
directory is shared with the process. This doesn't work well for multithreaded
programs that want to work with relative paths - the vfs::FileSystem is assumed
to provide the working directory, but a thread cannot control this exclusively.
The new vfs::createPhysicalFileSystem() factory copies the process's working
directory initially, and then allows it to be independently modified.
This implementation records the working directory path, and glues it to relative
paths to provide the correct absolute path to the sys::fs:: functions.
This will give different results in unusual situations (e.g. the CWD is moved).
The main alternative is the use of openat(), fstatat(), etc to ask the OS to
resolve paths relative to a directory handle which can be kept open. This is
more robust. There are two reasons not to do this initially:
1. these functions are not available on all supported Unixes, and are somewhere
between difficult and unavailable on Windows. So we need a path-based
fallback anyway.
2. this would mean also adding support at the llvm::sys::fs level, which is a
larger project. My clearest idea is an OS-specific `BaseDirectory` object
that can be optionally passed to functions there. Eventually this could be
backed by either paths or a fd where openat() is supported.
This is a large project, and demonstrating here that a path-based fallback
works is a useful prerequisite.
There is some subtlety to the path-manipulation mechanism:
- when setting the working directory, both Specified=makeAbsolute(path) and
Resolved=realpath(path) are recorded. These may differ in the presence of
symlinks.
- getCurrentWorkingDirectory() and makeAbsolute() use Specified - this is
similar to the behavior of $PWD and sys::path::current_path
- IO operations like openFileForRead use Resolved. This is similar to the
behavior of an openat() based implementation, that doesn't see changes
in symlinks.
There may still be combinations of operations and FS states that yield unhelpful
behavior. This is hard to avoid with symlinks and FS abstractions :(
The caching behavior of the current working directory is removed in this patch.
getRealFileSystem() is now specified to link to the process CWD, so the caching
is incorrect.
The user who needed this so far is clangd, which will immediately switch to
createPhysicalFileSystem().
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, bkramer, labath
Subscribers: ioeric, kadircet, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56545
llvm-svn: 351050
Summary:
Add support for options that always prefix their value, giving an error
if the value is in the next argument or if the option is given a value
assignment (ie. opt=val). This is the desired behavior for the -D option
of FileCheck for instance.
Copyright:
- Linaro (changes in version 2 of revision D55940)
- GraphCore (changes in later versions and introduced when creating
D56549)
Reviewers: jdenny
Subscribers: llvm-commits, probinson, kristina, hiraditya,
JonChesterfield
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56549
llvm-svn: 351038
This shortcut mechanism for creating types was added 10 years ago, but
has seen almost no uptake since then, neither internally nor in
external projects.
The very small number of characters saved by using it does not seem
worth the mental overhead of an additional type-creation API, so,
delete it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56573
llvm-svn: 351020
On AIX, attempting (without root) to set the sticky bit on a file with
the `chmod` utility will give:
```
chmod: not all requested changes were made to <file>
```
The same occurs when modifying other permission bits on a file with the
sticky bit already set.
It seems that the `chmod` function will report success despite failing
to set the sticky bit.
llvm-svn: 350735
Prediction control instructions are only
mandatory from v8.5a onwards but is optional
from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable it by it's own.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56007
llvm-svn: 350385
This makes the target name consistent with how all the other unit tests are
named.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56216
llvm-svn: 350339
SB (Speculative Barrier) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable SB, as it was previously only possible to
enable by selecting -march=armv8.5-a.
This patch also renames FeatureSpecRestrict to FeatureSB.
Reviewed By: olista01, LukeCheeseman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55990
llvm-svn: 350299
SB (Speculative Barrier) is only mandatory from 8.5
onwards but is optional from Armv8.0-A. This patch adds a command
line option to enable SB, as it was previously only possible to
enable by selecting -march=armv8.5-a.
This patch also moves to FeatureSB the old FeatureSpecRestrict.
Reviewers: pbarrio, olista01, t.p.northover, LukeCheeseman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55921
llvm-svn: 350126
Summary:
Added a pair of APIs for encoding/decoding the 3 components of a DWARF discriminator described in http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-October/106532.html: the base discriminator, the duplication factor (useful in profile-guided optimization) and the copy index (used to identify copies of code in cases like loop unrolling)
The encoding packs 3 unsigned values in 32 bits. This CL addresses 2 issues:
- communicates overflow back to the user
- supports encoding all 3 components together. Current APIs assume a sequencing of events. For example, creating a new discriminator based on an existing one by changing the base discriminator was not supported.
Reviewers: davidxl, danielcdh, wmi, dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: zzheng, dmgreen, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55681
llvm-svn: 349973
Weak symbols are supposed to be supported in the ELF TextAPI
implementation, but the YAML handler didn't read or write the `Weak`
member of ELFSymbol. This change adds the YAML mapping and updates tests
to ensure correct behavior.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56020
llvm-svn: 349950
Summary:
This function checks whether the mappings in the interval map overlap
with the given range [a;b]. The motivation is to enable checking for
overlap before inserting a new interval into the map.
Reviewers: vsk, dblaikie
Subscribers: dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55760
llvm-svn: 349898
Summary:
This function is very similar to add_llvm_library(), so this patch merges it
into add_llvm_library() and replaces all calls to add_llvm_loadable_module(lib ...)
with add_llvm_library(lib MODULE ...)
Reviewers: philip.pfaffe, beanz, chandlerc
Reviewed By: philip.pfaffe
Subscribers: chapuni, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51748
llvm-svn: 349839
We need to keep the underlying profile reader alive as long as the
profile data, because the profile data may contain StringRefs referring
to strings in the reader's name table.
llvm-svn: 349600
Summary:
This allows us to register it with the MachineFunction delegate and be
notified automatically about erasure and creation of instructions. However,
we still need explicit notification for modifications such as those caused
by setReg() or replaceRegWith().
There is a catch with this though. The notification for creation is
delivered before any operands can be added. While appropriate for
scheduling combiner work. This is unfortunate for debug output since an
opcode by itself doesn't provide sufficient information on what happened.
As a result, the work list remembers the instructions (when debug output is
requested) and emits a more complete dump later.
Another nit is that the MachineFunction::Delegate provides const pointers
which is inconvenient since we want to use it to schedule future
modification. To resolve this GISelWorkList now has an optional pointer to
the MachineFunction which describes the scope of the work it is permitted
to schedule. If a given MachineInstr* is in this function then it is
permitted to schedule work to be performed on the MachineInstr's. An
alternative to this would be to remove the const from the
MachineFunction::Delegate interface, however delegates are not permitted
to modify the MachineInstr's they receive.
In addition to this, the observer has three interface changes.
* erasedInstr() is now erasingInstr() to indicate it is about to be erased
but still exists at the moment.
* changingInstr() and changedInstr() have been added to report changes
before and after they are made. This allows us to trace the changes
in the debug output.
* As a convenience changingAllUsesOfReg() and
finishedChangingAllUsesOfReg() will report changingInstr() and
changedInstr() for each use of a given register. This is primarily useful
for changes caused by MachineRegisterInfo::replaceRegWith()
With this in place, both combine rules have been updated to report their
changes to the observer.
Finally, make some cosmetic changes to the debug output and make Combiner
and CombinerHelp
Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar, bogner, volkan, rtereshin, javed.absar
Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: mgorny, rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52947
llvm-svn: 349167
Summary:
In addition to knowing that an instruction is changed. It's also useful to
know when it's about to change. For example, it might print the instruction so
you can track the changes in a debug log, it might remove it from some queue
while it's being worked on, or it might want to change several instructions as
a single transaction and act on all the changes at once.
Added changingInstr() to all existing uses of changedInstr()
Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55623
llvm-svn: 348992
Summary:
There's little of interest that can be done to an already-erased instruction.
You can't inspect it, write it to a debug log, etc. It ought to be notification
that we're about to erase it. Rename the function to clarify the timing of the
event and reflect current usage.
Also fixed one case where we were trying to print an erased instruction.
Reviewers: aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55611
llvm-svn: 348976
IR-printing AfterPass instrumentation might be called on a loop
that has just been invalidated. We should skip printing it to
avoid spurious asserts.
Reviewed By: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54740
llvm-svn: 348887
This change makes DT_SONAME treated as an optional trait for ELF TextAPI
stubs. This change accounts for the fact that shared objects aren't
guaranteed to have a DT_SONAME entry. Tests have been updated to check
for correct behavior of an optional soname.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55533
llvm-svn: 348817
https://reviews.llvm.org/D55294
Previously MachineIRBuilder::buildInstr used to accept variadic
arguments for sources (which were either unsigned or
MachineInstrBuilder). While this worked well in common cases, it doesn't
allow us to build instructions that have multiple destinations.
Additionally passing in other optional parameters in the end (such as
flags) is not possible trivially. Also a trivial call such as
B.buildInstr(Opc, Reg1, Reg2, Reg3)
can be interpreted differently based on the opcode (2defs + 1 src for
unmerge vs 1 def + 2srcs).
This patch refactors the buildInstr to
buildInstr(Opc, ArrayRef<DstOps>, ArrayRef<SrcOps>)
where DstOps and SrcOps are typed unions that know how to add itself to
MachineInstrBuilder.
After this patch, most invocations would look like
B.buildInstr(Opc, {s32, DstReg}, {SrcRegs..., SrcMIBs..});
Now all the other calls (such as buildAdd, buildSub etc) forward to
buildInstr. It also makes it possible to build instructions with
multiple defs.
Additionally in a subsequent patch, we should make it possible to add
flags directly while building instructions.
Additionally, the main buildInstr method is now virtual and other
builders now only have to override buildInstr (for say constant
folding/cseing) is straightforward.
Also attached here (https://reviews.llvm.org/F7675680) is a clang-tidy
patch that should upgrade the API calls if necessary.
llvm-svn: 348815
A dependency on TestingSupport was introduced in rL348735 but
library was not incldued in the LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB build.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55526
llvm-svn: 348803
Summary: The APFloat and Constant APIs taking an APInt allow arbitrary payloads,
and that's great. There's a convenience API which takes an unsigned, and that's
silly because it then directly creates a 64-bit APInt. Just change it to 64-bits
directly.
At the same time, add ConstantFP NaN getters which match the APFloat ones (with
getQNaN / getSNaN and APInt parameters).
Improve the APFloat testing to set more payload bits.
Reviewers: scanon, rjmccall
Subscribers: jkorous, dexonsmith, kristina, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55460
llvm-svn: 348791
The list generated in the target parser tests is the
same as the one in the AArch64 target parser.
Use that one instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55509
llvm-svn: 348757
Since TBEHandler doesn't maintain state or otherwise have any need to be
a class right now, the read and write functions have been moved out and
turned into standalone functions. Additionally, the TBE read function
has been updated to return an Expected value for better error handling.
Tests have been updated to reflect these changes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55450
llvm-svn: 348735
When CodeExtractor outlines values which are used by the original
function, it must store those values in some in-out parameter. This
store instruction must not be inserted in between a PHI and an EH pad
instruction, as that results in invalid IR.
This fixes the following verifier failure seen while outlining within
ObjC methods with live exit values:
The unwind destination does not have an exception handling instruction!
%call35 = invoke i8* bitcast (i8* (i8*, i8*, ...)* @objc_msgSend to i8* (i8*, i8*)*)(i8* %exn.adjusted, i8* %1)
to label %invoke.cont34 unwind label %lpad33, !dbg !4183
The unwind destination does not have an exception handling instruction!
invoke void @objc_exception_throw(i8* %call35) #12
to label %invoke.cont36 unwind label %lpad33, !dbg !4184
LandingPadInst not the first non-PHI instruction in the block.
%3 = landingpad { i8*, i32 }
catch i8* null, !dbg !1411
rdar://46540815
llvm-svn: 348562
https://reviews.llvm.org/D54980
This provides a standard API across GISel passes to observe and notify
passes about changes (insertions/deletions/mutations) to MachineInstrs.
This patch also removes the recordInsertion method in MachineIRBuilder
and instead provides method to setObserver.
Reviewed by: vkeles.
llvm-svn: 348406
Like the already existing zip_shortest/zip_first iterators, zip_longest
iterates over multiple iterators at once, but has as many iterations as
the longest sequence.
This means some iterators may reach the end before others do.
zip_longest uses llvm::Optional's None value to mark a
past-the-end value.
zip_longest is not reverse-iteratable because the tuples iterated over
would be different for different length sequences (IMHO for the same
reason neither zip_shortest nor zip_first should be reverse-iteratable;
one can still reverse the ranges individually if that's the expected
behavior).
In contrast to zip_shortest/zip_first, zip_longest tuples contain
rvalues instead of references. This is because llvm::Optional cannot
contain reference types and the value-initialized default does not have
a memory location a reference could point to.
The motivation for these iterators is to use C++ foreach to compare two
lists of ordered attributes in D48100 (SemaOverload.cpp and
ASTReaderDecl.cpp).
Idea by @hfinkel.
This re-commits r348301 which was reverted by r348303.
The compilation error by gcc 5.4 was resolved using make_tuple in the in
the initializer_list.
The compileration error by msvc14 was resolved by splitting
ZipLongestValueType (which already was a workaround for msvc15) into
ZipLongestItemType and ZipLongestTupleType.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48348
llvm-svn: 348323