Modified the tests to accept any iteration order, to run only on Unix, and added
additional error reporting to investigate SystemZ bot issue.
The VFS directory iterator and recursive directory iterator behave differently
from the LLVM counterparts. Once the VFS iterators hit a broken symlink they
immediately abort. The LLVM counterparts don't stat entries unless they have to
descend into the next directory, which allows to recover from this issue by
clearing the error code and skipping to the next entry.
This change adds similar behavior to the VFS iterators. There should be no
change in current behavior in the current CLANG source base, because all
clients have loop exit conditions that also check the error code.
This fixes rdar://problem/30934619.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30768
llvm-svn: 297693
For now this only diffs the stream directory and the MSF
Superblock. Future patches will drill down into individual
streams to find out where the differences lie.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30908
llvm-svn: 297689
This patch consolidates the DEBUG_FPU_REGS code for i386 and x86_64 to take advantage of the fact that the non-AVX members of the avx register state structure overlap with the standard fpu register state structure.
This reduces the amount of code required to set debug values into the register state structures because the register state structures are stored in a union.
llvm-svn: 297688
Summary:
The first Sandybridge iMacs with AVX support shipped in Spring 2011 with Snow Leopard as their OS. Unfortunately due to a kernel bug debugging AVX code was not really possible until 10.7.4.
The old code here checked the kernel build number to determine when to support AVX, but that code was incorrect. It verified that the kernel build number was greater than xnu-2020, which is the build of the kernel that had the fix for 10.8. The fix was also back ported to 10.7.4. Which means all publicly available OS builds 10.7.4 and later have working AVX support.
This new patch verifies that the host OS is greater than or equal to 10.7.4 by checking that the build number is greater than or equal to 11Exx.
The patch also removes the HasAVX assembly blob in favor of querying the kernel via sysctl for the hardware features.
Using sysctl is slower, however since the code is executed once and the result cached it is a better approach because it is possible for the kernel to disable AVX support on hardware that supports it, so listening to the kernel is a better approach for the debugger to take.
Reviewers: jasonmolenda, spyffe
Subscribers: lldb-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30918
llvm-svn: 297685
This reverts commit r242302. External type refs of this form were
never used by any LLVM frontend so this is effectively dead code.
(They were introduced to support clang module debug info, but in the
end we came up with a better design that doesn't use this feature at
all.)
rdar://problem/25897929
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30917
llvm-svn: 297684
All of these were found by a new warning that I am prototyping,
-Wbitfield-enum-conversion.
Stmt::ExprBits::ObjectKind - This was not wide enough to represent
OK_ObjSubscript, so this was a real, true positive bug.
ObjCDeclSpec::objCDeclQualifier - On Windows, setting DQ_CSNullability
would cause the bitfield to become negative because enum types are
always implicitly 'int' there. This would probably never be noticed
because this is a flag-style enum, so we only ever test one bit at a
time. Switching to 'unsigned' also makes this type pack smaller on
Windows.
FunctionDecl::SClass - Technically, we only need two bits for all valid
function storage classes. Functions can never have automatic or register
storage class. This seems a bit too clever, and we have a bit to spare,
so widening the bitfield seems like the best way to pacify the warning.
You could classify this as a false positive, but widening the bitfield
defends us from invalid ASTs.
llvm-svn: 297680
Previously, it created a temporary directory and then failed when
FileOutputBuffer tried to rename that file to the destination file
(which is actually a directory name).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30912
llvm-svn: 297679
The previous algorithm for RegUsageInfoCollector had pretty bad
performance on architectures with a lot of registers that alias
a lot one another, because we potentially iterate for every register
over all the aliasing registers. This costs even more if the function
is small and doesn't define a lot of registers.
This patch changes the algorithm to one that while iterating over
all the registers it will iterate over the aliasing registers only
if the register itself is defined.
This should be faster based on the assumption that only a subset
of the whole LLVM registers set is actually defined in the function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30880
llvm-svn: 297673
This commit adds a unit test to the file system tests to verify the behavior of
the directory iterator and recursive directory iterator with broken symlinks.
This test is Unix only.
llvm-svn: 297669
rL230225 made the assumption that only the lower 32-bits of an MMX register load is used as a shift value, when in fact the whole 64-bits are reloaded and treated as a i64 to determine the shift value.
This patch reverts rL230225 to ensure that the whole 64-bits of memory are folded and ensures that the upper 32-bit are zero'd for cases where the shift value has come from a scalar source.
Found during fuzz testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30833
llvm-svn: 297667
Summary: This is useful in some platforms where one of these signals is special.
Reviewers: kubamracek, kcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30783
llvm-svn: 297665
I am leaving the code in clang which filters mxcsr from the clobber list because that is still technically correct and will be useful again when the MXCSR register is reintroduced.
llvm-svn: 297664
We can't actually pretend that 0 is valid for address space 0.
r295877 added a workaround to stop allocating user objects
there, so we can use 0 as the invalid pointer.
Some of the tests seemed to be using private as the non-0 null
test address space, so add copies using local to make sure
this is still stressed.
llvm-svn: 297659
Change ASTFileSignature from a random 32-bit number to the hash of the
PCM content.
- Move definition ASTFileSignature to Basic/Module.h so Module and
ASTSourceDescriptor can use it.
- Change the signature from uint64_t to std::array<uint32_t,5>.
- Stop using (saving/reading) the size and modification time of PCM
files when there is a valid SIGNATURE.
- Add UNHASHED_CONTROL_BLOCK, and use it to store the SIGNATURE record
and other records that shouldn't affect the hash. Because implicit
modules reuses the same file for multiple levels of -Werror, this
includes DIAGNOSTIC_OPTIONS and DIAG_PRAGMA_MAPPINGS.
This helps to solve a PCH + implicit Modules dependency issue: PCH files
are handled by the external build system, whereas implicit modules are
handled by internal compiler build system. This prevents invalidating a
PCH when the compiler overwrites a PCM file with the same content
(modulo the diagnostic differences).
Design and original patch by Manman Ren!
llvm-svn: 297655
This commit adds tail call support to the MachineOutliner pass. This allows
the outliner to insert jumps rather than calls in areas where tail calling is
possible. Outlined tail calls include the return or terminator of the basic
block being outlined from.
Tail call support allows the outliner to take returns and terminators into
consideration while finding candidates to outline. It also allows the outliner
to save more instructions. For example, in the X86-64 outliner, a tail called
outlined function saves one instruction since no return has to be inserted.
llvm-svn: 297653
For AVX-512 we force the input to zero if the input is undef or the mask is all ones to break an execution dependency. This patch brings the same behavior to AVX2.
llvm-svn: 297652
We were already forcing undef inputs to become a zero vector, this now catches an all ones mask too.
Ideally we'd use undef and let execution dep fix handle picking the best register/clearance for the undef, but I don't think it can handle the early clobber today.
llvm-svn: 297651
Currently we don't enforce that ISD::ANY_EXTEND, ZERO_EXTEND, SIGN_EXTEND, TRUNC, FP_ROUND, FP_EXTEND have the same number of elements(including scalar) between their input and output. Though we have them documented as such. Up until a few months ago x86 created nodes that violated this rule. That's all been fixed now, and we should enforce the rule going forward.
In order to do this we need to allow SDTCisSameNumEltsAs to support scalar types and not enforce being a vector. If one type is scalar we will force the other type to also be scalar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30878
llvm-svn: 297648
Patch from James Henderson.
If a user has a long link, e.g. due to a large LTO link, they do not
wish to run it and find that it failed because there was a mistake in
their command-line, after they waited for some significant amount of
time. This change adds some basic checking of the linker output file
path, which is run shortly after parsing the command-line and linker
script. An error is emitted if LLD cannot write to the specified path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30449
llvm-svn: 297645