Adding another CU-wide list, in this case of imported_modules (since they
should be relatively rare, it seemed better to add a list where each element
had a "context" value, rather than add a (usually empty) list to every scope).
This takes care of DW_TAG_imported_module, but to fully address PR14606 we'll
need to expand this to cover DW_TAG_imported_declaration too.
llvm-svn: 179836
When the SlotIndexes pass was introduced it was intended to support insertion
of code during register allocation. Removal of code was a minor consideration
(and raised the question of what to do about dangling SlotIndex objects pointing
to the erased index), so I opted to keep all indexes around indefinitely and
simply null out those that weren't being used.
Nowadays people are moving more code around (e.g. via HandleMove), which means
more zombie indexes. I want to start killing off indexes when we're done with
them to reclaim the resources they use up.
llvm-svn: 179834
variant/dialect. Addresses a FIXME in the emitMnemonicAliases function.
Use and test case to come shortly.
rdar://13688439 and part of PR13340.
llvm-svn: 179804
Semantics of parameters named Index and Idx were inconsistent between
"include/llvm/IR/Attributes.h", "lib/IR/AttributeImpl.h" and
"lib/IR/Attributes.cpp": sometimes these were fixed 1-based indexes of IR
parameters (or AttributeSet::ReturnIndex for IR return values or
AttributeSet::FunctionIndex for IR functions), other times they were the
internal slot for storage in the underlying AttributeSetImpl. I renamed usage of
the former to "Index" and usage of the latter to "Slot" ("Slot" was already
being used consistently for the latter in a subset of cases)
Patch by Stephen Lin!
llvm-svn: 179791
1. Verify::VerifyParameterAttrs in "lib/IR/Verifier.cpp" and
AttrBuilder::removeFunctionOnlyAttrs in "lib/IR/Attributes.cpp" (only called
by Verify::VerifyFunctionAttrs) separately maintained a list of function-only
attribute types. I've consolidated the logic into a new function used for
both cases in "lib/IR/Verifier.cpp", so this logic is in one place (other
than the AsmParser front-end)
2. Various functions in "lib/IR/Verifier.cpp" passed AttributeSet around by
reference needlessly, as it's just a handle to an immutable pimpl body.
Patch by Stephen Lin!
llvm-svn: 179790
* We only ever specialize these templates with an instantiation of ELFType,
so we don't need a template template.
* Replace LLVM_ELF_COMMA with just passing the individual parameters to the
macro. This requires a second macro for when we only have ELFT, but that
is still a small win.
llvm-svn: 179726
I will remove the isBigEndianHost function once I update clang.
The ifdef logic is designed to
* not use configure/cmake to avoid breaking -arch i686 -arch ppc.
* default to little endian
* be as small as possible
It looks like sys/endian.h is the preferred header on most modern BSD systems,
but it is better to change this in a followup patch as machine/endian.h is
available on FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD and OS X.
llvm-svn: 179527
This is a rework of the broken parts in r179373 which were subsequently reverted in r179374 due to incompatibility with C++98 compilers. This version should be ok under C++98.
llvm-svn: 179520
The register allocator expects minimal physreg live ranges. Schedule
physreg copies accordingly. This is slightly tricky when they occur in
the middle of the scheduling region. For now, this is handled by
rescheduling the copy when its associated instruction is
scheduled. Eventually we may instead bundle them, but only if we can
preserve the bundles as parallel copies during regalloc.
llvm-svn: 179449
MIPS64EL relocation entries have up to three relocation operations. Because
libObject only exposes a single relocation name, use the concatenation of
the individual relocation type names.
llvm-svn: 179357
Original message:
Print more information about relocations.
With this patch llvm-readobj now prints if a relocation is pcrel, its length,
if it is extern and if it is scattered.
It also refactors the code a bit to use bit fields instead of shifts and
masks all over the place.
llvm-svn: 179345
With this patch llvm-readobj now prints if a relocation is pcrel, its length,
if it is extern and if it is scattered.
It also refactors the code a bit to use bit fields instead of shifts and
masks all over the place.
llvm-svn: 179294
It was returning the loaded address of the section containing the relocation,
which really doesn't seem to be the intent of this function.
llvm-svn: 179255
Add support for the COFF relocation types IMAGE_REL_I386_DIR32NB and
IMAGE_REL_AMD64_ADDR32NB for 32- and 64-bit respectively. These are
similar to normal 4-byte relocations except that they do not include
the base address of the image.
Image-relative relocations are used for debug information (32-bit) and
SEH unwind tables (64-bit).
A new MCSymbolRef variant called 'VK_COFF_IMGREL32' is introduced to
specify such relocations. For AT&T assembly, this variant can be accessed
using the symbol suffix '@imgrel'.
llvm-svn: 179240
Compact unwind has an encoding for when we're not able to generate compact
unwind and must generate an EH frame instead. Track that, but still emit that CU
encoding.
llvm-svn: 179220
Test cases that regressed due to r179115, plus a few more, were added in
r179182. Original commit message below:
[ms-inline asm] Use parsePrimaryExpr in lieu of parseExpression if we need to
parse an identifier. Otherwise, parseExpression may parse multiple tokens,
which makes it impossible to properly compute an immediate displacement.
An example of such a case is the source operand (i.e., [Symbol + ImmDisp]) in
the below example:
__asm mov eax, [Symbol + ImmDisp]
Part of rdar://13611297
llvm-svn: 179187
The target hooks are getting out of hand. What does it mean to run
before or after regalloc anyway? Allowing either Pass* or AnalysisID
pass identification should make it much easier for targets to use the
substitutePass and insertPass APIs, and create less need for badly
named target hooks.
llvm-svn: 179140
This commit adds the infrastructure for performing bottom-up SLP vectorization (and other optimizations) on parallel computations.
The infrastructure has three potential users:
1. The loop vectorizer needs to be able to vectorize AOS data structures such as (sum += A[i] + A[i+1]).
2. The BB-vectorizer needs this infrastructure for bottom-up SLP vectorization, because bottom-up vectorization is faster to compute.
3. A loop-roller needs to be able to analyze consecutive chains and roll them into a loop, in order to reduce code size. A loop roller does not need to create vector instructions, and this infrastructure separates the chain analysis from the vectorization.
This patch also includes a simple (100 LOC) bottom up SLP vectorizer that uses the infrastructure, and can vectorize this code:
void SAXPY(int *x, int *y, int a, int i) {
x[i] = a * x[i] + y[i];
x[i+1] = a * x[i+1] + y[i+1];
x[i+2] = a * x[i+2] + y[i+2];
x[i+3] = a * x[i+3] + y[i+3];
}
llvm-svn: 179117
parse an identifier. Otherwise, parseExpression may parse multiple tokens,
which makes it impossible to properly compute an immediate displacement.
An example of such a case is the source operand (i.e., [Symbol + ImmDisp]) in
the below example:
__asm mov eax, [Symbol + ImmDisp]
The existing test cases exercise this patch.
rdar://13611297
llvm-svn: 179115
rather than deriving the StringRef from the Start and End SMLocs.
Using the Start and End SMLocs works fine for operands such as [Symbol], but
not for operands such as [Symbol + ImmDisp]. All existing test cases that
reference a variable exercise this patch.
rdar://13602265
llvm-svn: 179109
Some parts of PointerIntPair assumed that the IntType of the pair was implicitly
convertible to intptr_t, which is not the case for enum class values. Add a
static_cast<intptr_t> to make these conversions explicit and allow
PointerIntPair to be used with an enum class IntType. While we're here, rename
some of the argument values so we don't have variables named "Int" floating
around.
llvm-svn: 179073
The code in getTypeConversion attempts to promote the element vector type
before it trys to split or widen the vector.
After it failed finding a legal vector type by promoting it would continue using
the promoted vector element type. Thereby missing legal splitted vector types.
For example the type v32i32 that has a legal split of 4 x v3i32 on x86/sse2
would be transformed to: v32i256 and from there on successively split to:
v16i256, v8i256, v1i256 and then finally ends up as an i64 type.
By resetting the vector element type to the original vector element type that
existed before the promotion the code will attempt to split the vector type to
smaller vector widths of the same type.
llvm-svn: 178999
LoadCommandInfo was needed to keep a command and its offset in the file. Now
that we always have a pointer to the command, we don't need the offset.
llvm-svn: 178991
This comment documents the current behavior of the ARM implementation of this
callback, and also the soon-to-be-committed PPC version.
llvm-svn: 178959
This fixes PEI as previously described, but correctly handles the case where
the instruction defining the virtual register to be scavenged is the first in
the block. Arnold provided me with a bugpoint-reduced test case, but even that
seems too large to use as a regression test. If I'm successful in cleaning it
up then I'll commit that as well.
Original commit message:
This change fixes a bug that I introduced in r178058. After a register is
scavenged using one of the available spills slots the instruction defining the
virtual register needs to be moved to after the spill code. The scavenger has
already processed the defining instruction so that registers killed by that
instruction are available for definition in that same instruction. Unfortunately,
after this, the scavenger needs to iterate through the spill code and then
visit, again, the instruction that defines the now-scavenged register. In order
to avoid confusion, the register scavenger needs the ability to 'back up'
through the spill code so that it can again process the instructions in the
appropriate order. Prior to this fix, once the scavenger reached the
just-moved instruction, it would assert if it killed any registers because,
having already processed the instruction, it believed they were undefined.
Unfortunately, I don't yet have a small test case. Thanks to Pranav Bhandarkar
for diagnosing the problem and testing this fix.
llvm-svn: 178919
During LTO, the target options on functions within the same Module may
change. This would necessitate resetting some of the back-end. Do this for X86,
because it's a Friday afternoon.
llvm-svn: 178917
Reverting because this breaks one of the LTO builders. Original commit message:
This change fixes a bug that I introduced in r178058. After a register is
scavenged using one of the available spills slots the instruction defining the
virtual register needs to be moved to after the spill code. The scavenger has
already processed the defining instruction so that registers killed by that
instruction are available for definition in that same instruction. Unfortunately,
after this, the scavenger needs to iterate through the spill code and then
visit, again, the instruction that defines the now-scavenged register. In order
to avoid confusion, the register scavenger needs the ability to 'back up'
through the spill code so that it can again process the instructions in the
appropriate order. Prior to this fix, once the scavenger reached the
just-moved instruction, it would assert if it killed any registers because,
having already processed the instruction, it believed they were undefined.
Unfortunately, I don't yet have a small test case. Thanks to Pranav Bhandarkar
for diagnosing the problem and testing this fix.
llvm-svn: 178916
InMemoryStruct is extremely dangerous as it returns data from an internal
buffer when the endiannes doesn't match. This should fix the tests on big
endian hosts.
llvm-svn: 178875
This change fixes a bug that I introduced in r178058. After a register is
scavenged using one of the available spills slots the instruction defining the
virtual register needs to be moved to after the spill code. The scavenger has
already processed the defining instruction so that registers killed by that
instruction are available for definition in that same instruction. Unfortunately,
after this, the scavenger needs to iterate through the spill code and then
visit, again, the instruction that defines the now-scavenged register. In order
to avoid confusion, the register scavenger needs the ability to 'back up'
through the spill code so that it can again process the instructions in the
appropriate order. Prior to this fix, once the scavenger reached the
just-moved instruction, it would assert if it killed any registers because,
having already processed the instruction, it believed they were undefined.
Unfortunately, I don't yet have a small test case. Thanks to Pranav Bhandarkar
for diagnosing the problem and testing this fix.
llvm-svn: 178845
On certain architectures we can support efficient vectorized version of
instructions if the operand value is uniform (splat) or a constant scalar.
An example of this is a vector shift on x86.
We can efficiently support
for (i = 0 ; i < ; i += 4)
w[0:3] = v[0:3] << <2, 2, 2, 2>
but not
for (i = 0; i < ; i += 4)
w[0:3] = v[0:3] << x[0:3]
This patch adds a parameter to getArithmeticInstrCost to further qualify operand
values as uniform or uniform constant.
Targets can then choose to return a different cost for instructions with such
operand values.
A follow-up commit will test this feature on x86.
radar://13576547
llvm-svn: 178807
Normally r_info is just a 32 of 64 bit number matching the endian of the rest
of the file. Unfortunately, mips 64 bit little endian is special: The top 32
bits are a little endian number and the following 32 are a big endian one.
llvm-svn: 178694
ELF with support for:
- File headers
- Section headers + data
- Relocations
- Symbols
- Unwind data (only COFF/Win64)
The output format follows a few rules:
- Values are almost always output one per line (as elf-dump/coff-dump already do). - Many values are translated to something readable (like enum names), with the raw value in parentheses.
- Hex numbers are output in uppercase, prefixed with "0x".
- Flags are sorted alphabetically.
- Lists and groups are always delimited.
Example output:
---------- snip ----------
Sections [
Section {
Index: 1
Name: .text (5)
Type: SHT_PROGBITS (0x1)
Flags [ (0x6)
SHF_ALLOC (0x2)
SHF_EXECINSTR (0x4)
]
Address: 0x0
Offset: 0x40
Size: 33
Link: 0
Info: 0
AddressAlignment: 16
EntrySize: 0
Relocations [
0x6 R_386_32 .rodata.str1.1 0x0
0xB R_386_PC32 puts 0x0
0x12 R_386_32 .rodata.str1.1 0x0
0x17 R_386_PC32 puts 0x0
]
SectionData (
0000: 83EC04C7 04240000 0000E8FC FFFFFFC7 |.....$..........|
0010: 04240600 0000E8FC FFFFFF31 C083C404 |.$.........1....|
0020: C3 |.|
)
}
]
---------- snip ----------
Relocations and symbols can be output standalone or together with the section header as displayed in the example.
This feature set supports all tests in test/MC/COFF and test/MC/ELF (and I suspect all additional tests using elf-dump), making elf-dump and coff-dump deprecated.
Patch by Nico Rieck!
llvm-svn: 178679
Add utilities to create struct nodes in TBAA type DAG and to create path-aware
tags. The format of struct nodes in TBAA type DAG: a unique name, a list of
fields with field offsets and field types. The format of path-aware tags:
a base type in TBAA type DAG, an access type and an offset relative to the base
type.
llvm-svn: 178564
The new instruction scheduling models provide information about the
number of cycles consumed on each processor resource. This makes it
possible to estimate ILP more accurately than simply counting
instructions / issue width.
The functions getResourceDepth() and getResourceLength() now identify
the limiting processor resource, and return a cycle count based on that.
This gives more precise resource information, particularly in traces
that use one resource a lot more than others.
llvm-svn: 178553
Revision 177141 caused a regression in all but
mips64 little endian. That is because none of the
other Mips targets had test cases checking the
contents of the .eh_frame section. This patch fixes
both the llvm code and adds an assembler test case
to include the current 4 flavors.
The test cases unfortunately rely on llvm-objdump. A
preferable method would be to use a pretty printer output
such as what readelf -wf <elf_file> would give.
I also changed the name of the test case to correct a typo.
llvm-svn: 178506
This reverts commit 617330909f0c26a3f2ab8601a029b9bdca48aa61.
It broke the bots:
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:150: PushPopTest
/home/clangbuild2/clang-ppc64-2/llvm.src/unittests/ADT/SmallVectorTest.cpp:118: Failure
Value of: v[i].getValue()
Actual: 0
Expected: value
Which is: 2
llvm-svn: 178334
requires that the return type of *r for all iterators r be reference,
where reference is defined in [iterator.requirements.general]/p11 as
iterator_traits<X>::reference, and X is the type of r.
But in CFG.h, the dereference operator of PredIterator and SuccIterator
return pointer, not reference.
Furthermore the nested type reference is value_type&, which is not the
type returned from operator*().
This patch simply makes the iterator::reference type value_type*, which
is what the operator*() returns, and then re-lables the return type as
reference.
From a functionality point of view, the only difference is that the
nested reference type is now value_type* instead of value_type&.
llvm-svn: 178240
This reverts commit 342d92c7a0adeabc9ab00f3f0d88d739fe7da4c7.
Turns out we're going with a different schema design to represent
DW_TAG_imported_modules so we won't need this extra field.
llvm-svn: 178215
Made sure we were looking a correct section
Added Mips32/64 as an extra check
Updated llvm-objdump to generate symbolic info for Mips relocations
llvm-svn: 178190
As far as simplify_type is concerned, there are 3 kinds of smart pointers:
* const correct: A 'const MyPtr<int> &' produces a 'const int*'. A
'MyPtr<int> &' produces a 'int *'.
* always const: Even a 'MyPtr<int> &' produces a 'const int*'.
* no const: Even a 'const MyPtr<int> &' produces a 'int*'.
This patch then does the following:
* Removes the unused specializations. Since they are unused, it is hard
to know which kind should be implemented.
* Make sure we don't drop const.
* Fix the default forwarding so that const correct pointer only need
one specialization.
* Simplifies the existing specializations.
llvm-svn: 178147
This is just the basic groundwork for supporting DW_TAG_imported_module but I
wanted to commit this before pushing support further into Clang or LLVM so that
this rather churny change is isolated from the rest of the work. The major
churn here is obviously adding another field (within the common DIScope prefix)
to all DIScopes (files, classes, namespaces, lexical scopes, etc). This should
be the last big churny change needed for DW_TAG_imported_module/using directive
support/PR14606.
llvm-svn: 178099
if execution failed. ExecuteAndWait returns -1 upon an execution failure, but
checking the return value isn't sufficient because the wait command may
return -1 as well. This new parameter is to be used by the clang driver in a
subsequent commit.
Part of rdar://13362359
llvm-svn: 178087
This will be used to factor out some uses of magic number operand offsets
inside Clang where these fields were updated in an effort to resolve forward
declarations/circular references.
llvm-svn: 178078
As pointed out by Richard Sandiford, my recent updates to the register
scavenger broke targets that use custom spilling (because the new code assumed
that if there were no valid spill slots, than spilling would be impossible).
I don't have a test case, but it should be possible to create one for Thumb 1,
Mips 16, etc.
llvm-svn: 178073
The previous algorithm could not deal properly with scavenging multiple virtual
registers because it kept only one live virtual -> physical mapping (and
iterated through operands in order). Now we don't maintain a current mapping,
but rather use replaceRegWith to completely remove the virtual register as
soon as the mapping is established.
In order to allow the register scavenger to return a physical register killed
by an instruction for definition by that same instruction, we now call
RS->forward(I) prior to eliminating virtual registers defined in I. This
requires a minor update to forward to ignore virtual registers.
These new features will be tested in forthcoming commits.
llvm-svn: 178058
MCTargetDesc/PPCMCCodeEmitter.cpp current has code like:
if (isSVR4ABI() && is64BitMode())
Fixups.push_back(MCFixup::Create(0, MO.getExpr(),
(MCFixupKind)PPC::fixup_ppc_toc16));
else
Fixups.push_back(MCFixup::Create(0, MO.getExpr(),
(MCFixupKind)PPC::fixup_ppc_lo16));
This is a problem for the asm parser, since it requires knowledge of
the ABI / 64-bit mode to be set up. However, more fundamentally,
at this point we shouldn't make such distinctions anyway; in an assembler
file, it always ought to be possible to e.g. generate TOC relocations even
when the main ABI is one that doesn't use TOC.
Fortunately, this is actually completely unnecessary; that code was added
to decide whether to generate TOC relocations, but that information is in
fact already encoded in the VariantKind of the underlying symbol.
This commit therefore merges those fixup types into one, and then decides
which relocation to use based on the VariantKind.
No changes in generated code.
llvm-svn: 178007
Fixes PR15570: SEGV: SCEV back-edge info invalid after dead code removal.
Indvars creates a SCEV expression for the loop's back edge taken
count, then determines that the comparison is always true and
removes it.
When loop-unroll asks for the expression, it contains a NULL
SCEVUnknkown (as a CallbackVH).
forgetMemoizedResults should invalidate the loop back edges expression.
llvm-svn: 177986
its own library. These functions are bridging between the bitcode reader
and the ll parser which are in different libraries. Previously we didn't
have any good library to do this, and instead played fast and loose with
a "header only" set of interfaces in the Support library. This really
doesn't work well as evidenced by the recent attempt to add timing logic
to the these routines.
As part of this, make them normal functions rather than weird inline
functions, and sink the implementation into the library. Also clean up
the header to be nice and minimal.
This requires updating lots of build system dependencies to specify that
the IRReader library is needed, and several source files to not
implicitly rely upon the header file to transitively include all manner
of other headers.
If you are using IRReader.h, this commit will break you (the header
moved) and you'll need to also update your library usage to include
'irreader'. I will commit the corresponding change to Clang momentarily.
llvm-svn: 177971
it's only really useful if you're going to crash anyways. Use it in the pretty stack trace
printer to kill the compiler if we hang while printing the stack trace.
llvm-svn: 177962