This is necessary to allow Clang to only emit implicit members when
there is code generated for them, rather than whenever they are ODR
used.
llvm-svn: 188082
The compiler was warning about using | on a uintptr_t and bool:
Object/ELFObjectFile.h(131) : warning C4805: '|' : unsafe
mix of type 'uintptr_t' and type 'bool' in operation
I think the warning might be useful in other cases, so I added
a cast instead of disabling it altogether.
llvm-svn: 188079
In Thumb1, only one variant is supported: CPS{effect} {flags}
Thumb2 supports three:
CPS{effect}.W {flags}
CPS{effect} {flags} {mode}
CPS {mode}
Canonically, .W should be used only when ambiguity is present between encodings of different width.
The wide suffix is still accepted for the latter two forms via aliases.
llvm-svn: 188071
The long encoding for Thumb2 unconditional branches is broken.
Additionally, there is no range checking for target operands; as such
for instructions originating in assembly code, only short Thumb encodings
are generated, regardless of the bitsize needed for the offset.
Adding range checking is non trivial due to the representation of Thumb
branch instructions. There is no true difference between conditional and
unconditional branches in terms of operands and syntax - even unconditional
branches have a predicate which is expected to match that of the IT block
they are in. Yet, the encodings and the permitted size of the offset differ.
Due to this, for any mnemonic there are really 4 encodings to choose for.
The problem cannot be handled in the parser alone or by manipulating td files.
Because the parser builds first a set of match candidates and then checks them
one by one, whatever tablegen-only solution might be found will ultimately be
dependent of the parser's evaluation order. What's worse is that due to the fact
that all branches have the same syntax and the same kinds of operands, that
order is governed by the lexicographical ordering of the names of operand
classes...
To circumvent all this, any necessary disambiguation is added to the instruction
validation pass.
llvm-svn: 188067
Previously the asserts were only checking that RHS and LHS were the same type and had the same element type as the result. All downstream code for ISD::VECTOR_SHUFFLE requires the types to be the same.
Also removed one unnecessary check of matched element counts that was present in the code.
llvm-svn: 188051
For most libm ISD nodes, TargetLoweringBase::initActions sets the default
scalar-type action to Expand, and leaves the vector-type action default as
Legal. This is not appropriate for the new ISD::FROUND node (which no backend
but PowerPC handles explicitly).
Fixes PR16842.
llvm-svn: 188048
Currently, when an invalid attribute is encountered on processing a .s file,
clang will abort due to llvm_unreachable. Invalid user input should not cause
an abnormal termination of the compiler. Change the interface to return a
boolean to indicate the failure as a first step towards improving hanlding of
malformed user input to clang.
Signed-off-by: Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd@compnerd.org>
llvm-svn: 188047
- Injecting it as 'lit' is gross, since that name should be used to refer to
the actual package. For now both are available so it is possibly to cleanup
test config files incrementally.
llvm-svn: 188039
* ELFTypes.h contains template magic for defining types based on endianess, size, and alignment.
* ELFFile.h defines the ELFFile class which provides low level ELF specific access.
* ELFObjectFile.h contains ELFObjectFile which uses ELFFile to implement the ObjectFile interface.
llvm-svn: 188022
this records relocation entries in the mach-o object file
for PIC code generation.
tested on powerpc-darwin8, validated against darwin otool -rvV
llvm-svn: 188004
This is the only Thumb2 instruction defined with "t" prefix; all other Thumb2 instructions have "t2" prefix (e.g. "t2CDP2" which is defined immediately afterwards).
Patch by Artyom Skrobov.
llvm-svn: 187973
the type exists.
Fix up cases where we weren't checking for optional types and add
an assert to addType to make sure we catch this in the future.
Fix up a testcase that was using the tag for DW_TAG_array_type
when it meant DW_TAG_enumeration_type.
llvm-svn: 187963
Making use of the recently-added ISD::FROUND, which allows for custom lowering
of round(), the PPC backend will now map frin to round(). Previously, we had
been using frin to lower nearbyint() (and rint() via some custom lowering to
handle the extra fenv flags requirements), but only in fast-math mode because
frin does not tie-to-even. Several users had complained about this behavior,
and this new mapping of frin to round is certainly more appropriate (and does
not require fast-math mode).
In effect, this reverts r178362 (and part of r178337, replacing the nearbyint
mapping with the round mapping).
llvm-svn: 187960
This reverts commit r77814.
We were sticking global constants in the .data section instead of in the
.rdata section when emitting for COFF.
This fixes PR16831.
llvm-svn: 187956
Summary:
This is consistent with MacOSX implementation, and most terminals
actually display this character (checked on gnome-terminal, lxterminal, lxterm,
Terminal.app, iterm2). Actually, this is in line with the ISO Latin 1 standard
(ISO 8859-1), which defines it differently from the Unicode Standard. More
information here: http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/shy.html
Reviewers: gribozavr, jordan_rose
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1310
llvm-svn: 187949
This reverts commit r187941.
The commit was passing on my os x box, but it is failing on some non-osx
platforms. I do not have time to look into it now, so I am reverting and will
recommit after I figure this out.
llvm-svn: 187946
Original commit message:
Stop emitting weak symbols into the "coal" sections.
The Mach-O linker has been able to support the weak-def bit on any symbol for
quite a while now. The compiler however continued to place these symbols into a
"coal" section, which required the linker to map them back to the base section
name.
Replace the sections like this:
__TEXT/__textcoal_nt instead use __TEXT/__text
__TEXT/__const_coal instead use __TEXT/__const
__DATA/__datacoal_nt instead use __DATA/__data
<rdar://problem/14265330>
llvm-svn: 187939
All libm floating-point rounding functions, except for round(), had their own
ISD nodes. Recent PowerPC cores have an instruction for round(), and so here I'm
adding ISD::FROUND so that round() can be custom lowered as well.
For the most part, this is straightforward. I've added an intrinsic
and a matching ISD node just like those for nearbyint() and friends. The
SelectionDAG pattern I've named frnd (because ISD::FP_ROUND has already claimed
fround).
This will be used by the PowerPC backend in a follow-up commit.
llvm-svn: 187926
DataFlowSanitizer is a generalised dynamic data flow analysis.
Unlike other Sanitizer tools, this tool is not designed to detect a
specific class of bugs on its own. Instead, it provides a generic
dynamic data flow analysis framework to be used by clients to help
detect application-specific issues within their own code.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D965
llvm-svn: 187923
This allows llvm-tblgen to link successfully when compiling with clang.
Both MSBuild and CMake will automatically add advapi32 as part of a set
of other dlls comprising the win32 API to the link line, but CMake
doesn't do that when compiling with clang. Until someone adds that info
to cmake upstream, this seems like a reasonable work around.
llvm-svn: 187907
This follows the same lines as the integer code. In the end it seemed
easier to have a second 4-bit mask in TSFlags to specify the compare-like
CC values. That eats one more TSFlags bit than adding a CCHasUnordered
would have done, but it feels more concise.
llvm-svn: 187883
r187874 seems to have been missed by the build bot infrastructure, and
the subsequent commits to compiler-rt don't seem to be queuing up new
build requsets. Hopefully this will.
As it happens, having the space here is the more common formatting. =]
llvm-svn: 187879
using it to detect whether or not a terminal supports colors. This
replaces a particularly egregious hack that merely compared the TERM
environment variable to "dumb". That doesn't really translate to
a reasonable experience for users that have actually ensured their
terminal's capabilities are accurately reflected.
This makes testing a terminal for color support somewhat more expensive,
but it is called very rarely anyways. The important fast path when the
output is being piped somewhere is already in place.
The global lock may seem excessive, but the spec for calling into curses
is *terrible*. The whole library is terrible, and I spent quite a bit of
time looking for a better way of doing this before convincing myself
that this was the fundamentally correct way to behave. The damage of the
curses library is very narrowly confined, and we continue to use raw
escape codes for actually manipulating the colors which is a much sane
system than directly using curses here (IMO).
If this causes trouble for folks, please let me know. I've tested it on
Linux and will watch the bots carefully. I've also worked to account for
the variances of curses interfaces that I could finde documentation for,
but that may not have been sufficient.
llvm-svn: 187874
lld has a hashtable with StringRef keys; it needs to iterate over the keys in
*insertion* order. This is currently implemented as std::vector<StringRef> +
DenseMap<StringRef, T>. This will probably need a proper
DenseMapInfo<StringRef> if we don't want to lose memory/performance by
migrating to a different data structure.
llvm-svn: 187868
for StringRef with a StringMap
The bug is that the empty key compares equal to the tombstone key.
Also added an assertion to DenseMap to catch similar bugs in future.
llvm-svn: 187866
- Since we only have a few of these, use the cumbersome method of getting the
exception object from 'sys' to retain the current pre-2.6 compatibility.
llvm-svn: 187854
One use needs to copy the alloca into a std::string, and the other use
is before calling CreateProcess, which is very heavyweight anyway.
llvm-svn: 187845
Previously this check was guarded by MSVC, which doesn't distinguish
between the compiler and the headers/library. This enables clang to
compile more of LLVM on Windows with Microsoft headers.
Remove some unused macros while I'm here: error_t and LTDL stuff.
llvm-svn: 187839
Summary:
This is a second attempt to get this right. After reading the Unicode
Standard I came up with the code that uses definitions of "printable" and
"column width" more suitable for terminal output (i.e. fixed-width fonts and
special treatment of many control characters).
The implementation here can probably be used for Windows and MacOS if someone
can test it properly.
The patch addresses PR14910.
Reviewers: jordan_rose, gribozavr
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1253
llvm-svn: 187837
Since the VSrc_* register classes contain both VGPRs and SGPRs, copies
that used be emitted by isel like this:
SGPR = COPY VGPR
Will now be emitted like this:
VSrC = COPY VGPR
This patch also adds a pass that tries to identify and fix situations where
a VGPR to SGPR copy may occur. Hopefully, these changes will make it
impossible for the compiler to generate illegal VGPR to SGPR copies.
llvm-svn: 187831
The globals being generated here were given the 'private' linkage type. However,
this caused them to end up in different sections with the wrong prefix. E.g.,
they would be in the __TEXT,__const section with an 'L' prefix instead of an 'l'
(lowercase ell) prefix.
The problem is that the linker will eat a literal label with 'L'. If a weak
symbol is then placed into the __TEXT,__const section near that literal, then it
cannot distinguish between the literal and the weak symbol.
Part of the problems here was introduced because the address sanitizer converted
some C strings into constant initializers with trailing nuls. (Thus putting them
in the __const section with the wrong prefix.) The others were variables that
the address sanitizer created but simply had the wrong linkage type.
llvm-svn: 187827
LLVM's coding standards recommend raw_ostream and MemoryBuffer for
reading and writing text.
This has the side effect of allowing clang to compile more of Support
and TableGen in the Microsoft C++ ABI.
llvm-svn: 187826
Also remove checking of llvm.dbg.sp since it is not used in generating dwarf.
Current state of Finder:
DebugInfoFinder tries to list all debug info MDNodes used in a module. To
list debug info MDNodes used by an instruction, DebugInfoFinder provides
processDeclare, processValue and processLocation to handle DbgDeclareInst,
DbgValueInst and DbgLoc attached to instructions. processModule will go
through all DICompileUnits in llvm.dbg.cu and list debug info MDNodes
used by the CUs.
TODO:
1> Finder has a list of CUs, SPs, Types, Scopes and global variables. We
need to add a list of variables that are used by DbgDeclareInst and
DbgValueInst.
2> MDString fields should be null or isa<MDString> and MDNode fields should be
null or isa<MDNode>. We currently use empty string or int 0 to represent null.
3> Go though Verify functions and make sure that they check field types.
4> Clean up existing testing cases to remove llvm.dbg.sp and make sure each
testing case has a llvm.dbg.cu.
Re-apply r187609 with fix to pass ocaml binding. vmcore.ml generates a debug
location with scope being metadata !{}, in verifier we treat this as a null
scope.
llvm-svn: 187812
The PPC backend had been missing a pattern to generate mulli for 64-bit
multiples. We had been generating it only for 32-bit multiplies. Unfortunately,
generating li + mulld unnecessarily increases register pressure.
llvm-svn: 187807
This change converts the NVPTX target to use the MC infrastructure
instead of directly emitting MachineInstr instances. This brings
the target more up-to-date with LLVM TOT, and should fix PR15175
and PR15958 (libNVPTXInstPrinter is empty) as a side-effect.
llvm-svn: 187798
fix for: Bug 16694 - ExecutionEngine/test-interp-vec-loadstore.ll failing on powerpc-darwin8 (http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=16694)
The ExecutionEngine/test-interp-vec-loadstore.ll test has been failing on powerpc-darwin8 (on other platforms it passed)
the reason of fail was wrong output by printf. this output is checked by FileCheck, but on little-endian powerpc the output numeric data were printed inside out and FileCheck reported fail.
the printfs have been replaced by checking data inside test and numeric output has been replaced by the text output like : "int test passed, float test passed". The text output is checked by FileCheck.
the dependency on data layout has been removed.
done by Yuri Veselov (Intel)
llvm-svn: 187791
This change came about primarily because of two issues in the existing code.
Niether of:
define i64 @test1(i64 %val) {
%in = trunc i64 %val to i32
tail call i32 @ret32(i32 returned %in)
ret i64 %val
}
define i64 @test2(i64 %val) {
tail call i32 @ret32(i32 returned undef)
ret i32 42
}
should be tail calls, and the function sameNoopInput is responsible. The main
problem is that it is completely symmetric in the "tail call" and "ret" value,
but in reality different things are allowed on each side.
For these cases:
1. Any truncation should lead to a larger value being generated by "tail call"
than needed by "ret".
2. Undef should only be allowed as a source for ret, not as a result of the
call.
Along the way I noticed that a mismatch between what this function treats as a
valid truncation and what the backends see can lead to invalid calls as well
(see x86-32 test case).
This patch refactors the code so that instead of being based primarily on
values which it recurses into when necessary, it starts by inspecting the type
and considers each fundamental slot that the backend will see in turn. For
example, given a pathological function that returned {{}, {{}, i32, {}}, i32}
we would consider each "real" i32 in turn, and ask if it passes through
unchanged. This is much closer to what the backend sees as a result of
ComputeValueVTs.
Aside from the bug fixes, this eliminates the recursion that's going on and, I
believe, makes the bulk of the code significantly easier to understand. The
trade-off is the nasty iterators needed to find the real types inside a
returned value.
llvm-svn: 187787
Without explicit dependencies, both per-file action and in-CommonTableGen action could run in parallel.
It races to emit *.inc files simultaneously.
llvm-svn: 187780
This virtual function can be implemented by targets to specify the type
to use for the index operand of INSERT_VECTOR_ELT, EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT,
INSERT_SUBVECTOR, EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR. The default implementation returns
the result from TargetLowering::getPointerTy()
The previous code was using TargetLowering::getPointerTy() for vector
indices, because this is guaranteed to be legal on all targets. However,
using TargetLowering::getPointerTy() can be a problem for targets with
pointer sizes that differ across address spaces. On such targets,
when vectors need to be loaded or stored to an address space other than the
default 'zero' address space (which is the address space assumed by
TargetLowering::getPointerTy()), having an index that
is a different size than the pointer can lead to inefficient
pointer calculations, (e.g. 64-bit adds for a 32-bit address space).
There is no intended functionality change with this patch.
llvm-svn: 187748
Our internal regex implementation does not cope with large numbers
of anchors very efficiently. Given a ~3600-entry special case list,
regex compilation can take on the order of seconds. This patch solves
the problem for the special case of patterns matching literal global
names (i.e. patterns with no regex metacharacters). Rather than
forming regexes from literal global name patterns, add them to
a StringSet which is checked before matching against the regex.
This reduces regex compilation time by an order of roughly thousands
when reading the aforementioned special case list, according to a
completely unscientific study.
No test cases. I figure that any new tests for this code should
check that regex metacharacters are properly recognised. However,
I could not find any documentation which documents the fact that the
syntax of global names in special case lists is based on regexes.
The extent to which regex syntax is supported in special case lists
should probably be decided on/documented before writing tests.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1150
llvm-svn: 187732
This will be used to implement an optimisation for literal entries
in special case lists.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1278
llvm-svn: 187731
This patch just uses a peephole test for "add; compare; branch" sequences
within a single block. The IR optimizers already convert loops to
decrement-and-branch-on-nonzero form in some cases, so even this
simplistic test triggers many times during a clang bootstrap and
projects/test-suite run. It looks like there are still cases where we
need to more strongly prefer branches on nonzero though. E.g. I saw a
case where a loop that started out with a check for 0 ended up with a
check for -1. I'll try to look at that sometime.
I ended up adding the Reference class because MachineInstr::readsRegister()
doesn't check for subregisters (by design, as far as I could tell).
llvm-svn: 187723
Perhaps predictably, doing comparison elimination on the fly during
SystemZLongBranch turned out to be a bad idea. The next patches make
use of LOAD AND TEST and BRANCH ON COUNT, both of which require
changes to earlier instructions.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 187718
helper functions. This can be optimized out later when the remaining
parts of the helper function work is moved into the Mips16HardFloat pass.
For now it forces us to use the 32 bit save/restore instructions instead
of the 16 bit ones.
llvm-svn: 187712
Due to the weird and wondeful usual arithmetic conversions, some
calculations involving negative values were getting performed in
uint32_t and then promoted to int64_t, which is really not a good
idea.
Patch by Katsuhiro Ueno.
llvm-svn: 187703
Internally, the PowerPC backend names the 32-bit GPRs R[0-9]+, and names the
64-bit parent GPRs X[0-9]+. When matching inline assembly constraints with
explicit register names, on PPC64 when an i64 MVT has been requested, we need
to follow gcc's convention of using r[0-9]+ to refer to the 64-bit (parent)
registers.
At some point, we'll probably want to arrange things so that the generic code
in TargetLowering uses the AsmName fields declared in *RegisterInfo.td in order
to match these inline asm register constraints. If we do that, this change can
be reverted.
llvm-svn: 187693
Recent versions of the OS X linker support this but follow the existing
OS X linker convention of using an underscore in the option name, i.e.,
-export_dynamic. Rather than changing our configure scripts to check for
that alternate spelling, it is simpler to just use the compiler's -rdynamic
option and let it deal with translating that to the appropriate linker
option. One potential disadvantage of this approach is that the compiler
will typically ignore -rdynamic on platforms where it is not supported, so
the HAVE_LINK_EXPORT_DYNAMIC in config.h will not necessarily show whether
that option has any effect or not. I don't see any in-tree uses of that
macro, so I'm assuming it is OK.
llvm-svn: 187686
Everything that comes after -- should be treated as a filename. This
enables passing in filenames that would otherwise be conflated with
command-line options.
This is especially important for clang-cl which supports options
starting with /, which are easily conflatable with Unix-style
path names.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1274
llvm-svn: 187675
The ExtractLoops function tries to reduce the failing test case by extracting
one or more loops from the misoptimized piece of the program. In doing this,
ExtractLoops must keep the MiscompiledFunctions vector up-to-date by ensuring
that the pointers refer to functions in the current failing program.
Unfortunately, this is not trivial because:
- ExtractLoops is iterative, and there are several early exits (and the
MiscompiledFunctions vector must be consistent with the current program at
every non-fatal exit point).
- Several of the utility functions used by ExtractLoops (such as
TestOptimizer, some of which are called through the TestFn callback
parameter, and Linker::LinkModules) delete their inputs upon success.
This change adds several updates of the MiscompiledFunctions vector at
different points. The first is after the initial call to TestMergedProgram
which checks that the loop-extracted program still works. The second is after
the call to TestFn (TestOptimizer, for example). This function will delete its
inputs (which is why the existing ExtractLoops logic cloned the inputs first).
llvm-svn: 187674
This patch fixes the multiple breakages on ARM test-suite after the SLP
vectorizer was introduced by default on O3. The problem was an illegal
vector type on ARMTTI::getCmpSelInstrCost() <3 x i1> which is not simple.
The guard protects this code from breaking (cause of the problems) but
doesn't fix the issue that is generating the odd vector in the first
place, which also needs to be investigated.
llvm-svn: 187658
Function attributes are the future! So just query whether we want to realign the
stack directly from the function instead of through a random target options
structure.
llvm-svn: 187618
This is actually an LLVM bug in the way it generates signatures for these
when soft float is enabled. For example, floor ends up having the signature
of int64(int64). The signature part is not the same as where the actual
parameter types are recorded, and those ARE of course int64(int64) when
soft float is enabled. (Yes, Mips16 hard float uses soft float but with
different runtime rounes but then has to interoperate with Mips32 using
normal floating point). This logic will eventually be moved to the
Mips16HardFloat pass so it's not worth sorting out these issues in LLVM
since nobody but Mips16 cares about these signatures, as far as I know,
and even I won't eventually either.
llvm-svn: 187613
Also remove checking of llvm.dbg.sp since it is not used in generating dwarf.
Current state of Finder:
DebugInfoFinder tries to list all debug info MDNodes used in a module. To
list debug info MDNodes used by an instruction, DebugInfoFinder provides
processDeclare, processValue and processLocation to handle DbgDeclareInst,
DbgValueInst and DbgLoc attached to instructions. processModule will go
through all DICompileUnits in llvm.dbg.cu and list debug info MDNodes
used by the CUs.
TODO:
1> Finder has a list of CUs, SPs, Types, Scopes and global variables. We
need to add a list of variables that are used by DbgDeclareInst and
DbgValueInst.
2> MDString fields should be null or isa<MDString> and MDNode fields should be
null or isa<MDNode>. We currently use empty string or int 0 to represent null.
3> Go though Verify functions and make sure that they check field types.
4> Clean up existing testing cases to remove llvm.dbg.sp and make sure each
testing case has a llvm.dbg.cu.
llvm-svn: 187609