This uses a map, keeping the type DIE numbering separate from the DIEs
themselves - alternatively we could do things the way GCC does if we
want to add an integer to the DIE type to record the numbering there.
llvm-svn: 193105
GTest assumes the left hand side of the assert is the expectation and
the right hand side is the test result. It's easier to read gtest
failures when these things are ordered correctly.
llvm-svn: 192854
This patch fixes a small mistake in MCDataAtom::addData() where it doesn't ever
call remap():
- if (Data.size() > Begin - End - 1)
+ if (Data.size() > End + 1 - Begin)
remap(Begin, End + 1);
This is currently not visible because of another bug is the disassembler, so
the patch includes a unit test.
Patch by Stephen Checkoway.
llvm-svn: 192823
Before this patch we would assert when building llvm as multiple shared
libraries (cmake's BUILD_SHARED_LIBS). The problem was the line
if (T.AsmStreamerCtorFn == Target::createDefaultAsmStreamer)
which returns false because of -fvisibility-inlines-hidden. It is easy
to fix just this one case, but I decided to try to also make the
registration more strict. It looks like the old logic for ignoring
followup registration was just a temporary hack that outlived its
usefulness.
This patch converts the ifs to asserts, fixes the few cases that were
registering twice and makes sure all the asserts compare with null.
Thanks for Joerg for reporting the problem and reviewing the patch.
llvm-svn: 192803
It's useful for the memory managers that are allocating a section to know what the name of the section is.
At a minimum, this is useful for low-level debugging - it's customary for JITs to be able to tell you what
memory they allocated, and as part of any such dump, they should be able to tell you some meta-data about
what each allocation is for. This allows clients that supply their own memory managers to do this.
Additionally, we also envision the SectionName being useful for passing meta-data from within LLVM to an LLVM
client.
This changes both the C and C++ APIs, and all of the clients of those APIs within LLVM. I'm assuming that
it's safe to change the C++ API because that API is allowed to change. I'm assuming that it's safe to change
the C API because we haven't shipped the API in a release yet (LLVM 3.3 doesn't include the MCJIT memory
management C API).
llvm-svn: 191804
- New ProcessInfo class to encapsulate information about child processes.
- Generalized the Wait() to support non-blocking wait on child processes.
- ExecuteNoWait() now returns a ProcessInfo object with information about
the launched child. Users will be able to use this object to
perform non-blocking wait.
- ExecuteNoWait() now accepts an ExecutionFailed param that tells if execution
failed or not.
These changes will allow users to implement basic process parallel
tools.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1728
llvm-svn: 191763
Inspired by the object from the SLPVectorizer. This found a minor bug in the
debug loc restoration in the vectorizer where the location of a following
instruction was attached instead of the location from the original instruction.
llvm-svn: 191673
YAMLIO printed a string as is without quotes unless it contains a newline
character. That did not suffice. We also need to quote a string if it starts
with a backquote, quote, double quote or atsign, or it's the empty string.
llvm-svn: 190469
On Windows, character encoding of multibyte environment variable varies
depending on settings. The only reliable way to handle it I think is to use
GetEnvironmentVariableW().
GetEnvironmentVariableW() works on wchar_t string, which is on Windows UTF16
string. That's not ideal because we use UTF-8 as the internal encoding in LLVM.
This patch defines a wrapper function which takes and returns UTF-8 string for
GetEnvironmentVariableW().
The wrapper function does not do any conversion and just forwards the argument
to getenv() on Unix.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1612
llvm-svn: 190423
The work on this project was left in an unfinished and inconsistent state.
Hopefully someone will eventually get a chance to implement this feature, but
in the meantime, it is better to put things back the way the were. I have
left support in the bitcode reader to handle the case-range bitcode format,
so that we do not lose bitcode compatibility with the llvm 3.3 release.
This reverts the following commits: 155464, 156374, 156377, 156613, 156704,
156757, 156804 156808, 156985, 157046, 157112, 157183, 157315, 157384, 157575,
157576, 157586, 157612, 157810, 157814, 157815, 157880, 157881, 157882, 157884,
157887, 157901, 158979, 157987, 157989, 158986, 158997, 159076, 159101, 159100,
159200, 159201, 159207, 159527, 159532, 159540, 159583, 159618, 159658, 159659,
159660, 159661, 159703, 159704, 160076, 167356, 172025, 186736
llvm-svn: 190328
Summary:
This is needed so we can use generic columnWidthUTF8 in clang-format on
win32 simultaneously with a separate system-dependent implementations of
isPrint/columnWidth in TextDiagnostic.cpp to avoid attempts to print Unicode
characters using narrow-character interfaces (which is not supported on Windows,
and we'll have to figure out how to handle this).
Reviewers: jordan_rose
Reviewed By: jordan_rose
CC: llvm-commits, klimek
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1559
llvm-svn: 189952
This is a re-commit of r189442; I'll follow up with clang changes.
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189624
The previous default was almost, but not quite enough digits to
represent a floating-point value in a manner which preserves the
representation when it's read back in. The larger default is much
less confusing.
I spent some time looking into printing exactly the right number of
digits if a precision isn't specified, but it's kind of complicated,
and I'm not really sure I understand what APFloat::toString is supposed
to output for FormatPrecision != 0 (or maybe the current API specification
is just silly, not sure which). I have a WIP patch if anyone is interested.
llvm-svn: 189442
Link.exe's command line options are case-insensitive. This patch
adds a new attribute to OptTable to let the option parser to compare
options, ignoring case.
Command lines are generally case-insensitive on Windows. CL.exe is an
exception. So this new attribute should be useful for other commands
running on Windows.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1485
llvm-svn: 189416
Clients of the option parsing library should handle it explicitly
using a KIND_REMAINING_ARGS option.
Clang and lld have been updated in r188316 and r188318, respectively.
Also fix -Wsign-compare warning in the option parsing test.
llvm-svn: 188323
This adds KIND_REMAINING_ARGS, a class of options that consume
all remaining arguments on the command line.
This will be used to support /link in clang-cl, which is used
to forward all remaining arguments to the linker.
It also allows us to remove the hard-coded handling of "--",
allowing clients (clang and lld) to implement that functionality
themselves with this new option class.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1387
llvm-svn: 188314
to find loops if the From and To instructions were in the same block.
Refactor the code a little now that we need to fill to start the CFG-walking
algorithm with more than one starting basic block sometimes.
Special thanks to Andrew Trick for catching an error in my understanding of
natural loops in code review.
llvm-svn: 188236
Summary:
Doing work in constructors is bad: this change suggests to
call SpecialCaseList::create(Path, Error) instead of
"new SpecialCaseList(Path)". Currently the latter may crash with
report_fatal_error, which is undesirable - sometimes we want to report
the error to user gracefully - for example, if he provides an incorrect
file as an argument of Clang's -fsanitize-blacklist flag.
Reviewers: pcc
Reviewed By: pcc
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1327
llvm-svn: 188156
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
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
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
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
This makes option aliases more powerful by enabling them to
pass along arguments to the option they're aliasing.
For example, if we have a joined option "-foo=", we can now
specify a flag option "-bar" to be an alias of that, with the
argument "baz".
This is especially useful for the cl.exe compatible clang driver,
where many options are aliases. For example, this patch enables
us to alias "/Ox" to "-O3" (-O is a joined option), and "/WX" to
"-Werror" (again, -W is a joined option).
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1245
llvm-svn: 187537
One form would accept a vector of pointers, and the other did not.
Make both accept vectors of pointers, and add an assertion
for the number of elements.
llvm-svn: 187464
The unix one was returning no_such_file_or_directory, but the windows one
was return success.
Update the one one caller that was depending on the old behavior.
llvm-svn: 187463
This avoids constant folding bitcast/ptrtoint/inttoptr combinations
that have illegal bitcasts between differently sized address spaces.
llvm-svn: 187455
It will now only convert the arguments / return value and call
the underlying function if the types are able to be bitcasted.
This avoids using fp<->int conversions that would occur before.
llvm-svn: 187444
IEEE-754R 1.4 Exclusions states that IEEE-754R does not specify the
interpretation of the sign of NaNs. In order to remove an irrelevant
variable that most floating point implementations do not use,
standardize add, sub, mul, div, mod so that operating anything with
NaN always yields a positive NaN.
In a later commit I am going to update the APIs for creating NaNs so
that one can not even create a negative NaN.
llvm-svn: 187314
Adds unit tests for it too.
Split BasicBlockUtils into an analysis-half and a transforms-half, and put the
analysis bits into a new Analysis/CFG.{h,cpp}. Promote isPotentiallyReachable
into llvm::isPotentiallyReachable and move it into Analysis/CFG.
llvm-svn: 187283
Both GCC and LLVM will implicitly define __ppc__ and __powerpc__ for
all PowerPC targets, whether 32- or 64-bit. They will both implicitly
define __ppc64__ and __powerpc64__ for 64-bit PowerPC targets, and not
for 32-bit targets. We cannot be sure that all other possible
compilers used to compile Clang/LLVM define both __ppc__ and
__powerpc__, for example, so it is best to check for both when relying
on either inside the Clang/LLVM code base.
This patch makes sure we always check for both variants. In addition,
it fixes one unnecessary check in lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCJITInfo.cpp.
(At least one of __ppc__ and __powerpc__ should always be defined when
compiling for a PowerPC target, no matter which compiler is used, so
testing for them is unnecessary.)
There are some places in the compiler that check for other variants,
like __POWERPC__ and _POWER, and I have left those in place. There is
no need to add them elsewhere. This seems to be in Apple-specific
code, and I won't take a chance on breaking it.
There is no intended change in behavior; thus, no test cases are
added.
llvm-svn: 187248
Similar to ARM change r182800, dynamic linker will read bits/addends from
the original object rather than from the object that might have been patched
previously. For the purpose of relocations for MCJIT stubs on MIPS, we
internally use otherwise unused MIPS relocations.
The change also enables MCJIT unit tests for MIPS (EL/BE), and the following
two tests now pass:
- MCJITTest.return_global and
- MCJITTest.multiple_functions.
These issues have been tracked as Bug 16250.
Patch by Petar Jovanovic.
llvm-svn: 187019
The main observation is that we never need both the filesize and the map size.
When mapping a slice of a file, it doesn't make sense to request a null
terminator and that would be the only case where the filesize would be used.
There are other cleanups that should be done in this area:
* A client should not have to pass the size (even an explicit -1) to say if
it wants a null terminator or not, so we should probably swap the argument
order.
* The default should be to not require a null terminator. Very few clients
require this, but many end up asking for it just because it is the default.
llvm-svn: 186984
Option aliases in option groups were previously disallowed by an assert.
As far as I can tell, there was no technical reason for this, and I would
like to be able to put cl.exe compatible options in their own group for Clang,
so let's change the assert.
llvm-svn: 186838
The plan is to use it for clang and lld.
Major behavior changes:
- We can now parse UTF-16 files that have a byte order mark.
- PR16209: Don't drop backslashes on the floor if they don't escape
anything.
The actual parsing loop was based on code from Clang's driver.cpp,
although it's been rewritten to track its state with control flow rather
than state variables.
Reviewers: hans
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1170
llvm-svn: 186587
We don't want cast and dyn_cast to work on temporaries. They don't extend
lifetime like a direct bind to a reference would, so they can introduce
hard to find bugs.
I added tests to make sure we don't regress this. Thanks to Eli Friedman for
noticing this and for his suggestions on how to test it.
llvm-svn: 186559
There were a couple of different loops that were not handling
'.' correctly in APFloat::convertFromHexadecimalString; these mistakes
could lead to assertion failures and incorrect rounding for overlong
hex float literals.
Fixes PR16643.
llvm-svn: 186539
This is to support parsing UTF16 response files in LLVM/lib/Option for
lld and clang.
Reviewers: hans
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1138
llvm-svn: 186426
It is failing with
YAMLTest.cpp:38: instantiated from here
YAMLTraits.h:226: error: 'llvm::yaml::MappingTraits<<unnamed>::BinaryHolder>::mapping' is not a valid template argument for type 'void (*)(llvm::yaml::IO&, <unnamed>::BinaryHolder&)' because function 'static void llvm::yaml::MappingTraits<<unnamed>::BinaryHolder>::mapping(llvm::yaml::IO&, <unnamed>::BinaryHolder&)' has not external linkage
llvm-svn: 186245
A special case list can now specify categories for specific globals,
which can be used to instruct an instrumentation pass to treat certain
functions or global variables in a specific way, such as by omitting
certain aspects of instrumentation while keeping others, or informing
the instrumentation pass that a specific uninstrumentable function
has certain semantics, thus allowing the pass to instrument callers
according to those semantics.
For example, AddressSanitizer now uses the "init" category instead of
global-init prefixes for globals whose initializers should not be
instrumented, but which in all other respects should be instrumented.
The motivating use case is DataFlowSanitizer, which will have a
number of different categories for uninstrumentable functions, such
as "functional" which specifies that a function has pure functional
semantics, or "discard" which indicates that a function's return
value should not be labelled.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1092
llvm-svn: 185978
- lit tests verify that each line of input LLVM IR gets a !dbg node and a
corresponding entry of metadata that contains the line number
- unit tests verify that DebugIR works as advertised in the interface
- refactored some useful IR generation functionality from the MCJIT unit tests
so it can be reused
llvm-svn: 185212
Allow a BlockFrequency to be divided by a non-zero BranchProbability
with saturating arithmetic. This will be used to compute the frequency
of a loop header given the probability of leaving the loop.
Our long division algorithm already saturates on overflow, so that was a
freebie.
llvm-svn: 185184
There are a few valid situation where we care about the structure inside a
directory, but not about the directory itself. A simple example is for unit
testing directory traversal.
PathV1 had a function like this, add one to V2 and port existing users of the
created temp file and delete it hack to using it.
llvm-svn: 185059
Zero is used by BlockFrequencyInfo as a special "don't know" value. It also
causes a sink for frequencies as you can't ever get off a zero frequency with
more multiplies.
This recovers a 10% regression on MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip. A zero frequency
was propagated into an inner loop causing excessive spilling.
PR16402.
llvm-svn: 184584
MIPS does not handle multiple relocations correctly, so two tests from the
unittests are expected to fail. These are:
- MCJITTest.return_global and
- MCJITTest.multiple_functions.
Until the multiple relocations are fixed, XFAIL the MCJIT unittests for
MIPS. This issue is tracked as Bug 16250.
Patch by Petar Jovanovic.
llvm-svn: 184461
The old isNormal is already functionally replaced by the method isFiniteNonZero
in r184350 and all references to said method were replaced in LLVM/clang in
r184356/134366.
llvm-svn: 184449
This is the first patch in a series of patches to rename isNormal =>
isFiniteNonZero and isIEEENormal => isNormal. In order to prevent careless
errors on my part the overall plan is:
1. Add the isFiniteNonZero predicate with tests. I can do this in a method
independent of isNormal. (This step is this patch).
2. Convert all references to isNormal with isFiniteNonZero. My plan is to
comment out isNormal locally and continually convert isNormal references =>
isFiniteNonZero until llvm/clang compiles.
3. Remove old isNormal and rename isIEEENormal to isNormal.
4. Look through all of said references from patch 2 and see if we can simplify
them by using the new isNormal.
llvm-svn: 184350
It was only used to implement ExecuteAndWait and ExecuteNoWait. Expose just
those two functions and make Execute and Wait implementations details.
llvm-svn: 183864
Specifically the following work was done:
1. If the operation was not implemented, I implemented it.
2. If the operation was already implemented, I just moved its location
in the APFloat header into the IEEE-754R 5.7.2 section. If the name was
incorrect, I put in a comment giving the true IEEE-754R name.
Also unittests have been added for all of the functions which did not
already have a unittest.
llvm-svn: 183179
the C API to provide their own way of allocating JIT memory (both code
and data) and finalizing memory permissions (page protections, cache
flush).
llvm-svn: 182448
the C API to provide their own way of allocating JIT memory (both code
and data) and finalizing memory permissions (page protections, cache
flush).
llvm-svn: 182408
Revision r182233 partially reverted the change in r181200 to simplify
JIT unif test #ifdefs, because that change caused a link error on some
host operating systems where the export list requires the following
symbols to be defined:
JITTest_AvailableExternallyFunction
JITTest_AvailableExternallyGlobal
As discussed on the list, the commit reverts r182233 (and re-installs
the full r181200 change), and instead fixes the link problem by moving
those two symbols to the top of the file and unconditionally defining
them.
llvm-svn: 182367
The export list for this test requires the following symbols to be available:
JITTest_AvailableExternallyFunction
JITTest_AvailableExternallyGlobal
The change in r181200 commented them out, which caused the test to fail to
link, at least on Darwin. I have only reverted the change for arm, since I
can't test the other targets and since it sounds like that change was fixing
real problems for those other targets. It should be possible to rearrange the
code to keep those definitions outside the #ifdefs, but that should be done by
someone who can reproduce the problems that r181200 was trying to fix.
llvm-svn: 182233
BitVector/SmallBitVector::reference::operator bool remain implicit since
they model more exactly a bool, rather than something else that can be
boolean tested.
The most common (non-buggy) case are where such objects are used as
return expressions in bool-returning functions or as boolean function
arguments. In those cases I've used (& added if necessary) a named
function to provide the equivalent (or sometimes negative, depending on
convenient wording) test.
One behavior change (YAMLParser) was made, though no test case is
included as I'm not sure how to reach that code path. Essentially any
comparison of llvm::yaml::document_iterators would be invalid if neither
iterator was at the end.
This helped uncover a couple of bugs in Clang - test cases provided for
those in a separate commit along with similar changes to `operator bool`
instances in Clang.
llvm-svn: 181868
EngineBuilder interface required a JITMemoryManager even if it was being used
to construct an MCJIT. But the MCJIT actually wants a RTDyldMemoryManager.
Consequently, the SectionMemoryManager, which is meant for MCJIT, derived
from the JITMemoryManager and then stubbed out a bunch of JITMemoryManager
methods that weren't relevant to the MCJIT.
This patch fixes the situation: it teaches the EngineBuilder that
RTDyldMemoryManager is a supertype of JITMemoryManager, and that it's
appropriate to pass a RTDyldMemoryManager instead of a JITMemoryManager if
we're using the MCJIT. This allows us to remove the stub methods from
SectionMemoryManager, and make SectionMemoryManager a direct subtype of
RTDyldMemoryManager.
llvm-svn: 181820
MCJIT on Windows requires an explicit target triple with "-elf" appended to generate objects in ELF format. The common test framework was setting up this triple, but it wasn't passed to the C API in the test.
llvm-svn: 181614
This patch adds the necessary configuration bits and #ifdef's to set up
the JIT/MCJIT test cases for SystemZ. Like other recent targets, we do
fully support MCJIT, but do not support the old JIT at all. Set up the
lit config files accordingly, and disable old-JIT unit tests.
Patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 181207
Several platforms need to disable all old-JIT unit tests, since they only
support the new MCJIT. This currently done via #ifdef'ing out those tests
in the ExecutionEngine/JIT/*.cpp files. As those #ifdef's have grown
historically, we now have a number of repeated directives which -in total-
cover nearly the whole file, but leave a couple of helper functions out.
When building the tests with clang itself, those helper functions now
cause spurious "unused function" warnings.
To fix those warnings, and also to remove the duplicate #ifdef conditions
and make it easier to disable the tests for a new target, this patch
consolidates the #ifdefs into a single one per file, which covers all
the tests including all helper routines.
Tested on PowerPC and SystemZ.
llvm-svn: 181200
Add support for matching 'ordered' and 'unordered' floating point min/max
constructs.
In LLVM we can express min/max functions as a combination of compare and select.
We have support for matching such constructs for integers but not for floating
point. In floating point math there is no total order because of the presence of
'NaN'. Therefore, we have to be careful to preserve the original fcmp semantics
when interpreting floating point compare select combinations as a minimum or
maximum function. The resulting 'ordered/unordered' floating point maximum
function has to select the same value as the select/fcmp combination it is based
on.
ordered_max(x,y) = max(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, y otherwise
unordered_max(x,y) = max(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, x otherwise
ordered_min(x,y) = min(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, y otherwise
unordered_min(x,y) = min(x,y) iff x and y are not NaN, x otherwise
This matches the behavior of the underlying select(fcmp(olt/ult/.., L, R), L, R)
construct.
Any code using this predicate has to preserve this semantics.
A follow-up patch will use this to implement floating point min/max reductions
in the vectorizer.
radar://13723044
llvm-svn: 181143
CodeModel: It's now possible to create an MCJIT instance with any CodeModel you like. Previously it was only possible to
create an MCJIT that used CodeModel::JITDefault.
EnableFastISel: It's now possible to turn on the fast instruction selector.
The CodeModel option required some trickery. The problem is that previously, we were ensuring future binary compatibility in
the MCJITCompilerOptions by mandating that the user bzero's the options struct and passes the sizeof() that he saw; the
bindings then bzero the remaining bits. This works great but assumes that the bitwise zero equivalent of any field is a
sensible default value.
But this is not the case for LLVMCodeModel, or its internal equivalent, llvm::CodeModel::Model. In both of those, the default
for a JIT is CodeModel::JITDefault (or LLVMCodeModelJITDefault), which is not bitwise zero.
Hence this change introduces LLVMInitializeMCJITCompilerOptions(), which will initialize the user's options struct with
defaults. The user will use this in the same way that they would have previously used memset() or bzero(). MCJITCAPITest.cpp
illustrates the change, as does the comment in ExecutionEngine.h.
llvm-svn: 180893
Re-submitting with fix for OCaml dependency problems (removing dependency on SectionMemoryManager when it isn't used).
Patch by Fili Pizlo
llvm-svn: 180720
That seems to interact poorly with the environ and _environ macros
defined in MSVC's <stdlib.h>.
Also remove the incorrect comment about _NSGetEnviron().
llvm-svn: 180200
This was r180041 and r180046, which was reverted in r180066.
Re-committing this should fix the dragonegg bootstrap, which I presume
needs LD_LIBRARY_PATH to be propagated to the child.
Tested on Linux, Windows, and Mac OS 10.6.
llvm-svn: 180099
Summary:
This is http://llvm.org/PR15802. Backslashes preceding double quotes in
arguments must be escaped. The interesting bit is that all other
backslashes should *not* be escaped, because the un-escaping logic is
only triggered by the presence of a double quote character.
Reviewers: Bigcheese
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D705
llvm-svn: 180035
Change unittests/ExecutionEngine/Makefile to include Makefile.config before
TARGET_HAS_JIT flag is checked.
Fixes bug: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=15669
llvm-svn: 178871
On freebsd this makes sure that symbols are exported on the binaries that need
them. The net result is that we should get symbols in the binaries that need
them on every platform.
On linux x86-64 this reduces the size of the bin directory from 262MB to 250MB.
Patch by Stephen Checkoway.
llvm-svn: 178725
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
This generalizes Optional to require less from the T type by using aligned
storage for backing & placement new/deleting the T into it when necessary.
Also includes unit tests.
llvm-svn: 175580
PR15138 was opened because of a segfault in the Bitcode writer.
The actual issue ended up being a bug in APInt where calls to
APInt::getActiveWords returns a bogus value when the APInt value
is 0. This patch fixes the problem by ensuring that getActiveWords
returns 1 for 0 valued APInts.
llvm-svn: 174641
This reverts commit a33e1fafac7fedb1b080ef07ddf9ad6ddff3a830.
This unit test crashes on Darwon. It needs to be temporarily reverted
to unblock the test infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 174458
As a bonus I put in some extra checks to make sure that we are identifying the
machine word of various Mac OS X/iOS targets appropriately.
llvm-svn: 173994
ErrorOr<void> represents an operation that returns nothing, but can still fail.
It should be used in cases where you need the aditional user data that ErrorOr
provides over error_code.
llvm-svn: 173209