Incremental LTO will usea cache to store object files.
This patch handles the pruning part of the cache, exposing
a few knobs:
- Pruning interval: the implementation keeps a "timestamp" file in the
directory and will scan it only after a given interval since the
last modification of the timestamp file. This is for performance
purpose, we don't want to scan continuously the folder.
- Entry expiration: this is the time after which a file that hasn't
been used is remove from the cache.
- Maximum size: expressed in percentage of the available disk space,
it helps to avoid that we blow up the disk space.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18422
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265209
A ``swifterror`` attribute can be applied to a function parameter or an
AllocaInst.
This commit does not include any target-specific change. The target-specific
optimization will come as a follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18092
llvm-svn: 265189
Refactor the code that gets and creates PGOFuncName meta data so that it can be
used in clang's value profile annotation.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18623
llvm-svn: 265149
This avoids undefined behavior when casting pointers to it. Also make
sure that we don't cast to a derived StringMapEntry before checking for
tombstone, as that may have different alignment requirements.
llvm-svn: 265145
This allows the linker to instruct ThinLTO to perform only the
optimization part or only the codegen part of the process.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265113
This is intended to be used for ThinLTO incremental build.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18213
This is a recommit of r265095 after fixing the Windows issues.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265111
Provide a class to generate a SHA1 from a sequence of bytes, and
a convenience raw_ostream adaptor.
This will be used to provide a "build-id" by hashing the Module
block when writing bitcode. ThinLTO will use this information for
incremental build.
Reapply r265094 which was reverted in r265102 because it broke
MSVC bots (constexpr is not supported).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D16325
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265107
This reverts commit r265096, r265095, and r265094.
Windows build is broken, and the validation does not pass.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265102
This is intended to be used for ThinLTO incremental build.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18213
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265095
Provide a class to generate a SHA1 from a sequence of bytes, and
a convenience raw_ostream adaptor.
This will be used to provide a "build-id" by hashing the Module
block when writing bitcode. ThinLTO will use this information for
incremental build.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265094
when compiling with LTO.
r244523 a new class DiagnosticInfoOptimizationRemarkAnalysisAliasing for
optimization analysis remarks related to pointer aliasing without
guarding it in isDiagnosticEnabled in LLVMContext.cpp. This caused the
diagnostic message to be printed unconditionally when compiling with
LTO.
This commit cleans up isDiagnosticEnabled and makes sure all the
vectorization optimization remarks are guarded.
rdar://problem/25382153
llvm-svn: 265084
Summary: Adapted from Boost::filesystem.
(This is a reapply by reverting commit r265080 and fixing the WinAPI part)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18467
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265082
This mostly cosmetic patch moves the DebugEmissionKind enum from DIBuilder
into DICompileUnit. DIBuilder is not the right place for this enum to live
in — a metadata consumer should not have to include DIBuilder.h.
I also added a Verifier check that checks that the emission kind of a
DICompileUnit is actually legal.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18612
<rdar://problem/25427165>
llvm-svn: 265077
Summary: Adapted from Boost::filesystem.
(This is a reapply by reverting commit r265062 and fixing the WinAPI part)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18467
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 265068
This patch simply mirrors the attributes we give to @llvm.nvvm.reflect
to the __nvvm_reflect libdevice call. This shaves about 30% of the code
in libdevice away because of CSE opportunities. It's also helps us
figure out that libdevice implementations of transcendental functions
don't have side-effects.
llvm-svn: 265060
This will become necessary in a subsequent change to make this method
merge adjacent stack adjustments, i.e. it might erase the previous
and/or next instruction.
It also greatly simplifies the calls to this function from Prolog-
EpilogInserter. Previously, that had a bunch of logic to resume iteration
after the call; now it just continues with the returned iterator.
Note that this changes the behaviour of PEI a little. Previously,
it attempted to re-visit the new instruction created by
eliminateCallFramePseudoInstr(). That code was added in r36625,
but I can't see any reason for it: the new instructions will obviously
not be pseudo instructions, they will not have FrameIndex operands,
and we have already accounted for the stack adjustment.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18627
llvm-svn: 265036
This patch is a part of http://reviews.llvm.org/D15525
GlobalIndirectSymbol class contains common implementation for both
aliases and ifuncs. This patch should be NFC change that just prepare
common code for ifunc support.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18433
llvm-svn: 265016
Change isConsecutiveLoads to check that loads are non-volatile as this
is a requirement for any load merges. Propagate change to two callers.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18546
llvm-svn: 265013
PPC has a vector popcount, this lets the vectorizer use the correct cost
for it. Tweak X86 test to use an intrinsic that's actually scalarized (we
have a somewhat efficient lowering for vector popcount using SSE, the
cost model finds that now).
llvm-svn: 265005
Summary:
As discussed on llvm-dev[1].
This change adds the basic boilerplate code around having this intrinsic
in LLVM:
- Changes in Intrinsics.td, and the IR Verifier
- A lowering pass to lower @llvm.experimental.guard to normal
control flow
- Inliner support
[1]: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-February/095523.html
Reviewers: reames, atrick, chandlerc, rnk, JosephTremoulet, echristo
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18527
llvm-svn: 264976
Commit r260791 contained an error in that it would introduce a cross-module
reference in the old module. It also introduced O(N^2) complexity in the
module cloner by requiring the entire module to be visited for each function.
Fix both of these problems by avoiding use of the CloneDebugInfoMetadata
function (which is only designed to do intra-module cloning) and cloning
function-attached metadata in the same way that we clone all other metadata.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18583
llvm-svn: 264935
For the same reason as the corresponding load change.
Note that ExpandStore is completely broken for non-byte sized element
vector stores, but preserve the current broken behavior which has tests
for it. The behavior should be the same, but now introduces a new typed
store that is incorrectly split later rather than doing it directly.
llvm-svn: 264928
On AMDGPU we want to be able to promote i64/f64 loads to v2i32.
If the access is unaligned, this would conclude that since i64 is legal,
it would convert it back to i64 and there is an endless legalization
loop.
Extract the logic for scalarizing the load into a new TargetLowering
function, where this can also replace the custom function AMDGPU
has for this.
llvm-svn: 264927
Summary:
This gives callers flexibility to pass lambdas with captures, which lets
callers avoid the C-style void*-ptr closure style. (Currently, callers
in clang store state in the PassManagerBuilderBase arg.)
No functional change, and the new API is backwards-compatible.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: joker.eph, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18613
llvm-svn: 264918
There is code under review that requires StringMap to have a copy constructor,
and this makes StringMap more consistent with our other containers (like
DenseMap) that have copy constructors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18506
llvm-svn: 264906
PGOFuncNames are used as the key to retrieve the Function definition from the
MD5 stored in the profile. For internal linkage function, we prefix the source
file name to the PGOFuncNames. LTO's internalization privatizes many global linkage
symbols. This happens after value profile annotation, but those internal
linkage functions should not have a source prefix. To differentiate compiler
generated internal symbols from original ones, PGOFuncName meta data are
created and attached to the original internal symbols in the value profile
annotation step. If a symbol does not have the meta data, its original linkage
must be non-internal.
Also add a new map that maps PGOFuncName's MD5 value to the function definition.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17895
llvm-svn: 264902
Using ArrayRef in annotateValueSite's parameter instead of using an array
and it's size.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18568
llvm-svn: 264879
This makes check failures much easier to understand.
Make it empty (but leave it in the class) for NDEBUG builds.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18529
llvm-svn: 264780
Create a common accessor, DbgInfoIntrinsic::getVariableLocation, which
doesn't care about the type of debug info intrinsic. Use this to
further unify the implementations of DbgDeclareInst::getAddress and
DbgValueInst::getValue.
Besides being a cleanup, I'm planning to use this to prepare DEBUG
output without having to branch on the concrete type.
llvm-svn: 264767
Since we have moved to a model where functions are imported in bulk from
each source module after making summary-based importing decisions, there
is no longer a need to link metadata as a postpass, and all users have
been removed.
This essentially reverts r255909 and follow-on fixes.
llvm-svn: 264763
Add function soft attribute to the generation of Jump Tables in CodeGen
as initial step towards clang support of gcc's no-jump-table support
Reviewers: hans, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18321
llvm-svn: 264756
When eliminating or merging almost empty basic blocks, the existence of non-trivial PHI nodes
is currently used to recognize potential loops of which the block is the header and keep the block.
However, the current algorithm fails if the loops' exit condition is evaluated only with volatile
values hence no PHI nodes in the header. Especially when such a loop is an outer loop of a nested
loop, the loop is collapsed into a single loop which prevent later optimizations from being
applied (e.g., transforming nested loops into simplified forms and loop vectorization).
The patch augments the existing PHI node-based check by adding a pre-test if the BB actually
belongs to a set of loop headers and not eliminating it if yes.
llvm-svn: 264697
to function names
Summary:
Hopefully this will make it easier for the next person to figure all
this out...
Reviewers: bogner, davidxl
Subscribers: davidxl, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18489
llvm-svn: 264678
Function names in ObjC can have spaces in them. This interacts poorly
with name compression, which uses spaces to separate PGO names. Fix the
issue by using a different separator and update a test.
I chose "\01" as the separator because 1) it's non-printable, 2) we
strip it from PGO names, and 3) it's the next natural choice once "\00"
is discarded (that one's overloaded).
What's changed since the original commit?
- I fixed up the covmap-V2 binary format tests using a linux VM.
- I weakened the CHECK lines in instrprof-comdat.h to account for the
fact that there have been bugfixes to clang coverage. These will be
fixed up in a follow-up.
- I added an assert to make sure we don't get bitten by this again.
- I constructed the c-general.profraw file without name compression
enabled to appease some bots.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18516
llvm-svn: 264658
Explicitly check that artificial byte limit is rounded correctly by
exposing BitstreamReader::Size through a new accessor, getSizeIfKnown.
The original code for rounding (from r264547) wasn't obviously correct,
and even though r264623 cleaned it up (by calling llvm::alignTo) I think
it's worth testing.
llvm-svn: 264650
This is a fix for PR26941.
When there is both a section and a global definition with the same
name, the global wins.
Section symbols are not added to the symbol table; section references
are left undefined and fixed up in the object writer unless they've
been satisfied by some other definition.
llvm-svn: 264649
Function names in ObjC can have spaces in them. This interacts poorly
with name compression, which uses spaces to separate PGO names. Fix the
issue by using a different separator and update a test.
I chose "\01" as the separator because 1) it's non-printable, 2) we
strip it from PGO names, and 3) it's the next natural choice once "\00"
is discarded (that one's overloaded).
This reverts the revert commit beaf3d18. What's changed?
- I fixed up the covmap-V2 binary format tests using a linux VM.
- I updated the expected counts in instrprof-comdat.h to account for
the fact that there have been bugfixes to clang coverage.
- I added an assert to make sure we don't get bitten by this again.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18516
llvm-svn: 264641
Instead of using a bit to detect if they are "dynamic", just look at
sh_link.
This is a simplification on its own, and will help with using
llvm-objdump in dynamic objects.
llvm-svn: 264624
Summary:
Hopefully this will make it easier for the next person to figure all
this out...
Reviewers: bogner, davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18490
llvm-svn: 264611
They do have a def machine operand.
Fixing the definition is necessary for an upcoming patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18384
llvm-svn: 264607
When eliminating or merging almost empty basic blocks, the existence of non-trivial PHI nodes
is currently used to recognize potential loops of which the block is the header and keep the block.
However, the current algorithm fails if the loops' exit condition is evaluated only with volatile
values hence no PHI nodes in the header. Especially when such a loop is an outer loop of a nested
loop, the loop is collapsed into a single loop which prevent later optimizations from being
applied (e.g., transforming nested loops into simplified forms and loop vectorization).
The patch augments the existing PHI node-based check by adding a pre-test if the BB actually
belongs to a set of loop headers and not eliminating it if yes.
llvm-svn: 264596
MachineFunctionProperties represents a set of properties that a MachineFunction
can have at particular points in time. Existing examples of this idea are
MachineRegisterInfo::isSSA() and MachineRegisterInfo::tracksLiveness() which
will eventually be switched to use this mechanism.
This change introduces the AllVRegsAllocated property; i.e. the property that
all virtual registers have been allocated and there are no VReg operands
left.
With this mechanism, passes can declare that they require a particular property
to be set, or that they set or clear properties by implementing e.g.
MachineFunctionPass::getRequiredProperties(). The MachineFunctionPass base class
verifies that the requirements are met, and handles the setting and clearing
based on the delcarations. Passes can also directly query and update the current
properties of the MF if they want to have conditional behavior.
This change annotates the target-independent post-regalloc passes; future
changes will also annotate target-specific ones.
Reviewers: qcolombet, hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18421
llvm-svn: 264593
Function names in ObjC can have spaces in them. This interacts poorly
with name compression, which uses spaces to separate PGO names. Fix the
issue by using a different separator and update a test.
I chose "\01" as the separator because 1) it's non-printable, 2) we
strip it from PGO names, and 3) it's the next natural choice once "\00"
is discarded (that one's overloaded).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18516
llvm-svn: 264587
Spiritually reapply commit r264409 (reverted in r264410), albeit with a
bit of a redesign.
Firstly, avoid splitting the big blob into multiple chunks of strings.
r264409 imposed an arbitrary limit to avoid a massive allocation on the
shared 'Record' SmallVector. The bug with that commit only reproduced
when there were more than "chunk-size" strings. A test for this would
have been useless long-term, since we're liable to adjust the chunk-size
in the future.
Thus, eliminate the motivation for chunk-ing by storing the string sizes
in the blob. Here's the layout:
vbr6: # of strings
vbr6: offset-to-blob
blob:
[vbr6]: string lengths
[char]: concatenated strings
Secondly, make the output of llvm-bcanalyzer readable.
I noticed when debugging r264409 that llvm-bcanalyzer was outputting a
massive blob all in one line. Past a small number, the strings were
impossible to split in my head, and the lines were way too long. This
version adds support in llvm-bcanalyzer for pretty-printing.
<STRINGS abbrevid=4 op0=3 op1=9/> num-strings = 3 {
'abc'
'def'
'ghi'
}
From the original commit:
Inspired by Mehdi's similar patch, http://reviews.llvm.org/D18342, this
should (a) slightly reduce bitcode size, since there is less record
overhead, and (b) greatly improve reading speed, since blobs are super
cheap to deserialize.
llvm-svn: 264551
Split helper out of EmitRecordWithAbbrevImpl called emitBlob to reduce
code duplication, and add a few tests for it.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 264550
The implementation is fairly obvious. This is preparation for using
some blobs in bitcode.
For clarity (and perhaps future-proofing?), I moved the call to
JumpToBit in BitstreamCursor::readRecord ahead of calling
MemoryObject::getPointer, since JumpToBit can theoretically (a) read
bytes, which (b) invalidates the blob pointer.
This isn't strictly necessary the two memory objects we have:
- The return of RawMemoryObject::getPointer is valid until the memory
object is destroyed.
- StreamingMemoryObject::getPointer is valid until the next chunk is
read from the stream. Since the JumpToBit call is only going ahead
to a word boundary, we'll never load another chunk.
However, reordering makes it clear by inspection that the blob returned
by BitstreamCursor::readRecord will be valid.
I added some tests for StreamingMemoryObject::getPointer and
BitstreamCursor::readRecord.
llvm-svn: 264549
Allow users of SimpleBitstreamCursor to limit the number of bytes
available to the cursor. This is preparation for instantiating a cursor
that isn't allowed to load more bytes from a StreamingMemoryObject (just
move around the ones already-loaded).
llvm-svn: 264547
Add API to SimpleBitstreamCursor to allow users to translate between
byte addresses and pointers.
- jumpToPointer: move the bit position to a particular pointer.
- getPointerToByte: get the pointer for a particular byte.
- getPointerToBit: get the pointer for the byte of the current bit.
- getCurrentByteNo: convenience function for assertions and tests.
Mainly adds unit tests (getPointerToBit/Byte already has a use), but
also preparation for eventually using jumpToPointer.
llvm-svn: 264546
Split out SimpleBitstreamCursor from BitstreamCursor, which is a
lower-level cursor with no knowledge of bitcode blocks, abbreviations,
or records. It just knows how to read bits and navigate the stream.
This is mainly organizational, to separate the API for manipulating raw
bits from that for bitcode concepts like Record and Block.
llvm-svn: 264545
This reverts commit c45f2afac5d6855a4804456a0f718563dc47ada0.
Looks like it may be causing a failure, I'll revert for now.
from
lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfDebug.cpp:14:
/usr/include/c++/4.9.2/bits/stl_pair.h: In instantiation of
'std::pair<_T1, _T2>& std::pair<_T1,
_T2>::operator=(const std::pair<_T1, _T2>&) [with _T1 =
std::unique_ptr<llvm::DwarfTypeUnit>; _T2 = const
llvm::DICompositeType*]':
/usr/include/c++/4.9.2/bits/stl_pair.h:160:8: error: use of deleted
function 'std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>& std::unique_ptr<_Tp,
_Dp>::operator=(const std::unique_ptr<_Tp, _Dp>&) [with _Tp =
llvm::DwarfTypeUnit; _Dp = std::default_delete<llvm::DwarfTypeUnit>]'
first = __p.first;
^
llvm-svn: 264544
I tried to use isPodLike in:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18483
That failed because !is_class is too strict on platforms which don't yet
have is_trivially_copyable. This update tries to make isPodLike smarter
for platforms which don't have is_trivially_copyable, and AFAICT it
Should Just Work on all of them. I'll revert if the bots disagree with
me.
I'll also rename isPodLike to isTriviallyCopyable if this all works out,
since that's what the standard calls it now and one day we'll be rid of
isPodLike.
llvm-svn: 264541
Summary:
Now that the summary contains the full reference/call graph, we can
replace the existing function importer that loads and inspect the IR
to iteratively walk the call graph by a traversal based purely on the
summary information. Decouple the actual importing decision from any
IR manipulation.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18343
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264503
preposterously large for some lookup tables -- in C++ classes generated by
template instantiation, it's very common for the number of lookup results to be
either 1 or 2.
This reduces size of a libstdc++ module by 7-15%.
llvm-svn: 264486
The implementation of SDLoc has an extra layer of indirection here for
no particular reason, and was leading to problems where we were
dereferencing pointers to SDNodes that had already been deleted so
that we could get at the DebugLoc for a new SDNode. This is one of the
errors that came up often in PR26808.
Instead, we can just track the DebugLoc and IROrder directly. This
makes the code both easier to understand and more correct. It's also
basically NFC other than fixing a large number of places where we were
reading the memory of deleted SDNodes.
llvm-svn: 264470
method instead.
This is not quite a named constructor: Construction may fail, and
MachOObjectFiles are usually passed by unique_ptr anyway, so create
returns an Expected<std::unique_ptr<MachOObjectFile>>.
llvm-svn: 264469
This helper method creates a pre-checked Error suitable for use as an out
parameter in a constructor. This avoids the need to have the constructor
check a known-good error before assigning to it.
llvm-svn: 264467
When merging stores in DAGCombiner, add check to ensure that no
dependenices exist that would cause the construction of a cycle in our
DAG. This may happen if one store has a data dependence on another
instruction (e.g. a load) which itself has a (chain) dependence on
another store being merged. These stores cannot be merged safely and
doing so results in a cycle that is discovered in LegalizeDAG.
This test is only done in cases where Antialias analysis is used (UseAA)
as non-AA store merge candidates will be merged logically after all
loads which have been checked to not alias.
Reviewers: ahatanak, spatel, niravd, arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18336
llvm-svn: 264461
This is a recommit of r264414 after fixing the buildbot failure caused by
incompatible use of std::vector.erase().
The original message:
Add erase() which returns an iterator pointing to the next element after the
erased one. This makes it possible to erase selected elements while iterating
over the SetVector :
while (I != E)
if (test(*I))
I = SetVector.erase(I);
else
++I;
Reviewers: qcolombet, mcrosier, MatzeB, dblaikie
Subscribers: dberlin, dblaikie, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18281
llvm-svn: 264450
Summary:
Add erase() which returns an iterator pointing to the next element after the
erased one. This makes it possible to erase selected elements while iterating
over the SetVector :
while (I != E)
if (test(*I))
I = SetVector.erase(I);
else
++I;
Reviewers: qcolombet, mcrosier, MatzeB, dblaikie
Subscribers: dberlin, dblaikie, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18281
llvm-svn: 264414
Optimize output of MDStrings in bitcode. This emits them in big blocks
(currently 1024) in a pair of records:
- BULK_STRING_SIZES: the sizes of the strings in the block, and
- BULK_STRING_DATA: a single blob, which is the concatenation of all
the strings.
Inspired by Mehdi's similar patch, http://reviews.llvm.org/D18342, this
should (a) slightly reduce bitcode size, since there is less record
overhead, and (b) greatly improve reading speed, since blobs are super
cheap to deserialize.
I needed to add support for blobs to streaming input to get the test
suite passing.
- StreamingMemoryObject::getPointer reads ahead and returns the
address of the blob.
- To avoid a possible reallocation of StreamingMemoryObject::Bytes,
BitstreamCursor::readRecord needs to move the call to JumpToEnd
forward so that getPointer is the last bitstream operation.
llvm-svn: 264409
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18456
This is a re-commit of r264387 and r264388 after fixing a typo.
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264392
This reverts commit r264387.
Bots are broken in various ways, I need to take one commit at a time...
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264390
Summary:
Loading IR with debug info improves MDString::get() from 19ms to 10ms.
This is a rework of D16597 with adding an "emplace" method on the StringMap
to avoid requiring the MDString move ctor to be public.
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17920
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264386
Summary:
StringMap ctor accepts an initialize size, but expect it to be
rounded to the next power of 2. The ctor can handle that directly
instead of expecting clients to round it. Also, since the map will
resize itself when 75% full, take this into account an initialize
a larger initial size to avoid any growth.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18344
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264385
Summary:
Just running the loop in the unittests for a few more iterations
(till 48) exhibit that the condition on the limit was not handled
properly in r263522.
Rewrite the test to use a class to count move/copies that happens
when inserting into the map.
Also take the opportunity to refactor the logic to compute the
number of buckets required for a given number of entries in the map.
Use this when constructing a DenseMap with a desired size given to
the constructor (and add a tests for this).
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18345
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264384
Summary:
These are just helpers calling their static counter part to
simplify client code.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18339
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 264382
The motivation for MODULE_CODE_METADATA_VALUES was to enable an
-flto=thin scheme where:
1. First, one function is cherry-picked from a bitcode file.
2. Later, another function is cherry-picked.
3. Later, ...
4. Finally, the metadata needed by all the previous functions is
loaded.
This was abandoned in favour of:
1. Calculate the superset of functions needed from a Module.
2. Link all functions at once.
Delayed metadata reading no longer serves a purpose. It also adds
a few complication, since we can't count on metadata being properly
parsed when exiting the BitcodeReader. After discussing with Teresa, we
agreed to remove it.
The code that depended on this was removed/updated in r264326.
llvm-svn: 264378
Remove logic to upgrade !llvm.loop by changing the MDString tag
directly. This old logic would check (and change) arbitrary strings
that had nothing to do with loop metadata. Instead, check !llvm.loop
attachments directly, and change which strings get attached.
Rather than updating the assembly-based upgrade, drop it entirely. It
has been quite a while since we supported upgrading textual IR.
llvm-svn: 264373
This reserves an MDKind for !llvm.loop, which allows callers to avoid a
string-based lookup. I'm not sure why it was missing.
There should be no functionality change here, just a small compile-time
speedup.
llvm-svn: 264371
Summary:
Apparently, when compiling with gcc 5.3.2 for powerpc64, the order of
headers is such that it gets an error about std::atomic<> use in
ThreadPool.h, since this header is not included explicitly. See also:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27058
Fix this by including <atomic>. Patch by Bryan Drewery.
Reviewers: chandlerc, joker.eph
Subscribers: bdrewery, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18460
llvm-svn: 264335
Summary:
Only adds support for "naked" calls to llvm.experimental.deoptimize.
Support for round-tripping through RewriteStatepointsForGC will come
as a separate patch (should be simpler than this one).
Reviewers: reames
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18429
llvm-svn: 264329
Given that StatepointLowering now uniques derived pointers before
putting them in the per-statepoint spill map, we may end up with missing
entries for derived pointers when we visit a gc.relocate on a pointer
that was de-duplicated away.
Fix this by keeping two maps, one mapping gc pointers to their
de-duplicated values, and one mapping a de-duplicated value to the slot
it is spilled in.
llvm-svn: 264320
If the operation's type has been promoted during type legalization, we
need to account for the fact that the high bits of the comparison
operand are likely unspecified.
The LHS is usually zero-extended, but MIPS sign extends it, so we have
to be slightly careful.
Patch by Simon Dardis.
llvm-svn: 264296
This is a temporary crutch to enable code that currently uses std::error_code
to be incrementally moved over to Error. Requiring all Error instances be
convertible enables clients to call errorToErrorCode on any error (not just
ECErrors created by conversion *from* an error_code).
This patch also moves code for Error from ErrorHandling.cpp into a new
Error.cpp file.
llvm-svn: 264221
The BumpPtrAllocator currently doesn't handle zero length allocations well.
The discussion for how to fix that is ongoing. However, there's no need
for StringRef::copy to actually allocate anything here anyway, so just
return StringRef() when we get a zero length copy.
Reviewed by David Blaikie
llvm-svn: 264201
Currently, AnalyzeBranch() fails non-equality comparison between floating points
on X86 (see https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23875). This is because this
function can modify the branch by reversing the conditional jump and removing
unconditional jump if there is a proper fall-through. However, in the case of
non-equality comparison between floating points, this can turn the branch
"unanalyzable". Consider the following case:
jne.BB1
jp.BB1
jmp.BB2
.BB1:
...
.BB2:
...
AnalyzeBranch() will reverse "jp .BB1" to "jnp .BB2" and then "jmp .BB2" will be
removed:
jne.BB1
jnp.BB2
.BB1:
...
.BB2:
...
However, AnalyzeBranch() cannot analyze this branch anymore as there are two
conditional jumps with different targets. This may disable some optimizations
like block-placement: in this case the fall-through behavior is enforced even if
the fall-through block is very cold, which is suboptimal.
Actually this optimization is also done in block-placement pass, which means we
can remove this optimization from AnalyzeBranch(). However, currently
X86::COND_NE_OR_P and X86::COND_NP_OR_E are not reversible: there is no defined
negation conditions for them.
In order to reverse them, this patch defines two new CondCode X86::COND_E_AND_NP
and X86::COND_P_AND_NE. It also defines how to synthesize instructions for them.
Here only the second conditional jump is reversed. This is valid as we only need
them to do this "unconditional jump removal" optimization.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11393
llvm-svn: 264199
in the test suite. While this is not really an interesting tool and option to run
on a Mach-O file to show the symbol table in a generic libObject format
it shouldn’t crash.
The reason for the crash was in MachOObjectFile::getSymbolType() when it was
calling MachOObjectFile::getSymbolSection() without checking its return value
for the error case.
What makes this fix require a fair bit of diffs is that the method getSymbolType() is
in the class ObjectFile defined without an ErrorOr<> so I needed to add that all
the sub classes. And all of the uses needed to be updated and the return value
needed to be checked for the error case.
The MachOObjectFile version of getSymbolType() “can” get an error in trying to
come up with the libObject’s internal SymbolRef::Type when the Mach-O symbol
symbol type is an N_SECT type because the code is trying to select from the
SymbolRef::ST_Data or SymbolRef::ST_Function values for the SymbolRef::Type.
And it needs the Mach-O section to use isData() and isBSS to determine if
it will return SymbolRef::ST_Data.
One other possible fix I considered is to simply return SymbolRef::ST_Other
when MachOObjectFile::getSymbolSection() returned an error. But since in
the past when I did such changes that “ate an error in the libObject code” I
was asked instead to push the error out of the libObject code I chose not
to implement the fix this way.
As currently written both the COFF and ELF versions of getSymbolType()
can’t get an error. But if isReservedSectionNumber() wanted to check for
the two known negative values rather than allowing all negative values or
the code wanted to add the same check as in getSymbolAddress() to use
getSection() and check for the error then these versions of getSymbolType()
could return errors.
At the end of the day the error printed now is the generic “Invalid data was
encountered while parsing the file” for object_error::parse_failed. In the
future when we thread Lang’s new TypedError for recoverable error handling
though libObject this will improve. And where the added // Diagnostic(…
comment is, it would be changed to produce and error message
like “bad section index (42) for symbol at index 8” for this case.
llvm-svn: 264187
Summary:
This changes the conversion functions from SCEV * to SCEVAddRecExpr from
ScalarEvolution and PredicatedScalarEvolution to return a SCEVAddRecExpr*
instead of a SCEV* (which removes the need of most clients to do a
dyn_cast right after calling these functions).
We also don't add new predicates if the transformation was not successful.
This is not entirely a NFC (as it can theoretically remove some predicates
from LAA when we have an unknown dependece), but I couldn't find an obvious
regression test for it.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: sanjoy, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18368
llvm-svn: 264161
MCContext shouldn't be accessing the filesystem - that's a gross
layering violation and makes it awkward to use as a library or in a
daemon where it may not even be allowed filesystem access.
The CWD lookup here is normally redundant anyway, since the calling
context either also looks up the CWD or sets this to something more
specific. Here, we fix up the one caller that doesn't already set up a
debug compilation dir and make it clear that the responsibility for
such set up is in the users of MCContext.
llvm-svn: 264109
Summary:
I've completed my audit of all the code that looks at noduplicate and
added handling of convergent where appropriate, so we no longer need
noduplicate on these intrinsics.
Reviewers: jholewinski
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18168
llvm-svn: 264107
Summary:
After this change, deopt operand bundles can be lowered directly by
SelectionDAG into STATEPOINT instructions (which are then lowered to a
call or sequence of nop, with an associated __llvm_stackmaps entry0.
This obviates the need to round-trip deoptimization state through
gc.statepoint via RewriteStatepointsForGC.
Reviewers: reames, atrick, majnemer, JosephTremoulet, pgavlin
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18257
llvm-svn: 264015
In executable and shared object ELF files, relocations in the file contain the final virtual address rather than section offset so this is adjusted to display section offset.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15965
llvm-svn: 263971
Summary: Also expose getters and setters in the C API, so that the change can be tested.
Reviewers: nhaehnle, axw, joker.eph
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18260
From: Bas Nieuwenhuizen <bas@basnieuwenhuizen.nl>
llvm-svn: 263886
The sinpi/cospi can be replaced with sincospi to remove unnecessary
computations. However, we need to make sure that the calls are within
the same function!
This fixes PR26993.
llvm-svn: 263875
MDString are uniqued in the Context on creation, hashing the
pointer is less expensive than hashing the String itself.
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16560
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 263867
Summary:
ThinLTO is relying on linkInModule to import selected function.
However a lot of "magic" was hidden in linkInModule and the IRMover,
who would rename and promote global variables on the fly.
This is moving to an approach where the steps are decoupled and the
client is reponsible to specify the list of globals to import.
As a consequence some test are changed because they were relying on
the previous behavior which was importing the definition of *every*
single global without control on the client side.
Now the burden is on the client to decide if a global has to be imported
or not.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: joker.eph, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18122
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 263863
While not strictly necessary, since we don't support large integer
types, this avoids bugs due to silent truncation from uint64_t to a
32-bit unsigned (e.g. DL.isLegalInteger(DL.getTypeSizeInBits(Ty) )
This fixes PR26972.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18258
llvm-svn: 263850
Summary:
Allow the selection of BUFFER_LOAD_FORMAT_x and _XY. Do this now before
the frontend patches land in Mesa. Eventually, we may want to automatically
reduce the size of loads at the LLVM IR level, which requires such overloads,
and in some cases Mesa can generate them directly.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18255
llvm-svn: 263792
Summary:
These intrinsics expose the BUFFER_ATOMIC_* instructions and will be used
by Mesa to implement atomics with buffer semantics. The intrinsic interface
matches that of buffer.load.format and buffer.store.format, except that the
GLC bit is not exposed (it is automatically deduced based on whether the
return value is used).
The change of hasSideEffects is required for TableGen to accept the pattern
that matches the intrinsic.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, rivanvx, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18151
llvm-svn: 263791
Summary:
We cannot easily deduce that an offset is in an SGPR, but the Mesa frontend
cannot easily make use of an explicit soffset parameter either. Furthermore,
it is likely that in the future, LLVM will be in a better position than the
frontend to choose an SGPR offset if possible.
Since there aren't any frontend uses of these intrinsics in upstream
repositories yet, I would like to take this opportunity to change the
intrinsic signatures to a single offset parameter, which is then selected
to immediate offsets or voffsets using a ComplexPattern.
Reviewers: arsenm, tstellarAMD, mareko
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18218
llvm-svn: 263790
Summary:
It can hurt performance to prefetch ahead too much. Be conservative for
now and don't prefetch ahead more than 3 iterations on Cyclone.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17949
llvm-svn: 263772
Summary:
And use this TTI for Cyclone. As it was explained in the original RFC
(http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/92758), the HW
prefetcher work up to 2KB strides.
I am also adding tests for this and the previous change (D17943):
* Cyclone prefetching accesses with a large stride
* Cyclone not prefetching accesses with a small stride
* Generic Aarch64 subtarget not prefetching either
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17945
llvm-svn: 263771
A virtual index of -1u indicates that the subprogram's virtual index is
unrepresentable (for example, when using the relative vtable ABI), so do
not emit a DW_AT_vtable_elem_location attribute for it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18236
llvm-svn: 263765
MSVC as usual:
C:\Buildbot\Slave\llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast\llvm.src\include\llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h(120):
error C2100: illegal indirection
C:\Buildbot\Slave\llvm-clang-lld-x86_64-scei-ps4-windows10pro-fast\llvm.src\include\llvm/IR/Instructions.h(3966):
note: see reference to class template instantiation
'llvm::mapped_iterator<llvm::User::op_iterator,llvm::CatchSwitchInst::DerefFnTy>'
being compiled
This reverts commit e091dd63f1f34e043748e28ad160d3bc17731168.
llvm-svn: 263760
idiom.
Most LLVM tool code exits immediately when an error is encountered and prints an
error message to stderr. The ExitOnError class supports this by providing two
call operators - one for Errors, and one for Expected<T>s. Calls to code that
can return Errors (or Expected<T>s) can use these calls to bail out on error,
and otherwise continue as if the operation had succeeded. E.g.
Error foo();
Expected<int> bar();
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
ExitOnError ExitOnErr;
ExitOnErr.setBanner(std::string("Error in ") + argv[0] + ":");
// Exit if foo returns an error. No need to manually check error return.
ExitOnErr(foo());
// Exit if bar returns an error, otherwise unwrap the contained int and
// continue.
int X = ExitOnErr(bar());
// ...
return 0;
}
llvm-svn: 263749
Summary:
Use the new LoopVersioning facility (D16712) to add noalias metadata in
the vector loop if we versioned with memchecks. This can enable some
optimization opportunities further down the pipeline (see the included
test or the benchmark improvement quoted in D16712).
The test also covers the bug I had in the initial version in D16712.
The vectorizer did not previously use LoopVersioning. The reason is
that the vectorizer performs its transformations in single shot. It
creates an empty single-block vector loop that it then populates with
the widened, if-converted instructions. Thus creating an intermediate
versioned scalar loop seems wasteful.
So this patch (rather than bringing in LoopVersioning fully) adds a
special interface to LoopVersioning to allow the vectorizer to add
no-alias annotation while still performing its own versioning.
As the vectorizer propagates metadata from the instructions in the
original loop to the vector instructions we also check the pointer in
the original instruction and see if LoopVersioning can add no-alias
metadata based on the issued memchecks.
Reviewers: hfinkel, nadav, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17191
llvm-svn: 263744
Summary:
If we decide to version a loop to benefit a transformation, it makes
sense to record the now non-aliasing accesses in the newly versioned
loop. This allows non-aliasing information to be used by subsequent
passes.
One example is 456.hmmer in SPECint2006 where after loop distribution,
we vectorize one of the newly distributed loops. To vectorize we
version this loop to fully disambiguate may-aliasing accesses. If we
add the noalias markers, we can use the same information in a later DSE
pass to eliminate some dead stores which amounts to ~25% of the
instructions of this hot memory-pipeline-bound loop. The overall
performance improves by 18% on our ARM64.
The scoped noalias annotation is added in LoopVersioning. The patch
then enables this for loop distribution. A follow-on patch will enable
it for the vectorizer. Eventually this should be run by default when
versioning the loop but first I'd like to get some feedback whether my
understanding and application of scoped noalias metadata is correct.
Essentially my approach was to have a separate alias domain for each
versioning of the loop. For example, if we first version in loop
distribution and then in vectorization of the distributed loops, we have
a different set of memchecks for each versioning. By keeping the scopes
in different domains they can conveniently be defined independently
since different alias domains don't affect each other.
As written, I also have a separate domain for each loop. This is not
necessary and we could save some metadata here by using the same domain
across the different loops. I don't think it's a big deal either way.
Probably the best is to review the tests first to see if I mapped this
problem correctly to scoped noalias markers. I have plenty of comments
in the tests.
Note that the interface is prepared for the vectorizer which needs the
annotateInstWithNoAlias API. The vectorizer does not use LoopVersioning
so we need a way to pass in the versioned instructions. This is also
why the maps have to become part of the object state.
Also currently, we only have an AA-aware DSE after the vectorizer if we
also run the LTO pipeline. Depending how widely this triggers we may
want to schedule a DSE toward the end of the regular pass pipeline.
Reviewers: hfinkel, nadav, ashutosh.nema
Subscribers: mssimpso, aemerson, llvm-commits, mcrosier
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16712
llvm-svn: 263743
This is similar to D18133 where we allowed profile weights on select instructions.
This extends that change to also allow the 'unpredictable' attribute of branches to apply to selects.
A test to check that 'unpredictable' metadata is preserved when cloning instructions was checked in at:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL263648
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18220
llvm-svn: 263716
This splits out the logic that maps the `"statepoint-id"` attribute into
the actual statepoint ID, and the `"statepoint-num-patch-bytes"`
attribute into the number of patchable bytes the statpeoint is lowered
into. The new home of this logic is in IR/Statepoint.cpp, and this
refactoring will support similar functionality when lowering calls with
deopt operand bundles in the future.
llvm-svn: 263685
The allocator here can still be a nullptr, but this atleast makes the
single caller which needed nullptr be explicit about it.
Note, lld started always passing a parameter here as of r263680. If
anything builds out of sync, that would be why errors may occur.
llvm-svn: 263681
In lld we allocate atoms on an allocator and so don't run their
destructors. This means we also shouldn't allocate memory inside
them without that also being on an allocator.
Reviewed by Lang Hames and Rafael Espindola.
llvm-svn: 263676
- Rename getATOMIC to getSYNC, as llvm will soon be able to emit both
'__sync' libcalls and '__atomic' libcalls, and this function is for
the '__sync' ones.
- getInsertFencesForAtomic() has been replaced with
shouldInsertFencesForAtomic(Instruction), so that the decision can be
made per-instruction. This functionality will be used soon.
- emitLeadingFence/emitTrailingFence are no longer called if
shouldInsertFencesForAtomic returns false, and thus don't need to
check the condition themselves.
llvm-svn: 263665
The swift frontend needs to be able to look up PGO function name
variables based on the original raw function name. That's because it's
not possible to create PGO function name variables while emitting swift
IR. Instead, we have to create the name variables while lowering swift
IR to llvm IR, at which point we fix up all calls to the increment
intrinsic to point to the right name variable.
llvm-svn: 263662
This patch introduces the Error classs for lightweight, structured,
recoverable error handling. It includes utilities for creating, manipulating
and handling errors. The scheme is similar to exceptions, in that errors are
described with user-defined types. Unlike exceptions however, errors are
represented as ordinary return types in the API (similar to the way
std::error_code is used).
For usage notes see the LLVM programmer's manual, and the Error.h header.
Usage examples can be found in unittests/Support/ErrorTest.cpp.
Many thanks to David Blaikie, Mehdi Amini, Kevin Enderby and others on the
llvm-dev and llvm-commits lists for lots of discussion and review.
llvm-svn: 263609
Summary: This change adds a PACKAGE_VENDOR variable. When set it makes the version output more closely resemble the clang version output.
Reviewers: aprantl, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18159
llvm-svn: 263566
This was a latent bug that got exposed by the change to add LoopSimplify
as a dependence to LoopLoadElimination. Since LoopInfo was corrupted
after LV, LoopSimplify mis-compiled nbench in the test-suite (more
details in the PR).
The problem was that when we create the blocks for predicated stores we
didn't add those to any loops.
The original testcase for store predication provides coverage for this
assuming we verify LI on the way out of LV.
Fixes PR26952.
llvm-svn: 263565
Summary:
Static LDS size is saved in MachineFunctionInfo::LDSSize,
We define a pseudo instruction with usesCustomInserter bit set. Then, in EmitInstrWithCustomInserter,
we replace this pseudo instruction with a mov of MachineFunctionInfo::LDSSize.
Reviewers:
arsenm
tstellarAMD
Subscribers
llvm-commits, arsenm
Differential Revision:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D18064
llvm-svn: 263563
The PE TLS directory contains information about where the TLS data
resides in the image, what functions should be executed when threads are
created, etc.
llvm-svn: 263537
Since the static getGlobalIdentifier and getGUID methods are now called
for global values other than functions, reflect that by moving these
methods to the GlobalValue class.
llvm-svn: 263524
In some places, like InstCombine, we resize a DenseMap to fit the elements
we intend to put in it, then insert those elements (to avoid continual
reallocations as it grows). But .resize(foo) doesn't actually do what
people think; it resizes to foo buckets (which is really an
implementation detail the user of DenseMap probably shouldn't care about),
not the space required to fit foo elements. DenseMap grows if 3/4 of its
buckets are full, so this actually causes one forced reallocation every
time instead of avoiding a reallocation.
This patch makes .resize(foo) do the intuitive thing: it grows to the size
necessary to fit foo elements without new allocations.
Also include a test to verify that .resize() actually does what we think it
does.
llvm-svn: 263522
This patch adds support for the MachO .alt_entry assembly directive, and uses
it for global aliases with non-zero GEP offsets. The alt_entry flag indicates
that a symbol should be layed out immediately after the preceding symbol.
Conceptually it introduces an alternate entry point for a function or data
structure. E.g.:
safe_foo:
// check preconditions for foo
.alt_entry fast_foo
fast_foo:
// body of foo, can assume preconditions.
The .alt_entry flag is also implicitly set on assembly aliases of the form:
a = b + C
where C is a non-zero constant, since these have the same effect as an
alt_entry symbol: they introduce a label that cannot be moved relative to the
preceding one. Setting the alt_entry flag on aliases of this form fixes
http://llvm.org/PR25381.
llvm-svn: 263521
`MCSymbolRefExpr` variant kind for TLSCALL is prefixed with
_ARM_ since this is how it was originally implemented.
The X86_64 version is exactly the same so there's no reason
to create a new variant, we can just rename the existing
one to be machine-independent.
This generalization is the first step to implement support
for GNU2 TLS dialect in MC.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18160
llvm-svn: 263515
(Resubmitting after fixing missing file issue)
With the changes in r263275, there are now more than just functions in
the summary. Completed the renaming of data structures (started in
r263275) to reflect the wider scope. In particular, changed the
FunctionIndex* data structures to ModuleIndex*, and renamed related
variables and comments. Also renamed the files to reflect the changes.
A companion clang patch will immediately succeed this patch to reflect
this renaming.
llvm-svn: 263513
These types are defined in ELFFile, so in order to use them, you have
to write ELFFile<ELFT>::SomeType. But there seems to be no reason to have
ELFFile have these types. This patch allows you to write ELFT::SomeType
instead.
This simplifies libObject users.
This is an example: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18129http://reviews.llvm.org/D18130
llvm-svn: 263504
Summary:
This form was replaced by a form taking an instruction instead of opcode and
return type in r258391. After committing this change (and some depending,
follow-up changes) it turned out in the review thread to be controversial. The
discussion didn't come to a conclusion yet. I'm re-adding the old form to fix
the API regression and to provide a better base for discussion, possibly on
llvm-dev.
A difference to the original function is that it can't be called with GEPs
(similarly to how it was already the case for compares). In order to support
opaque pointers in the future, folding GEPs needs to be passed the source
element type, which is not possible with the current API.
Reviewers: dberlin, reames
Subscribers: dblaikie, eddyb
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17901
llvm-svn: 263501
If anybody is actually using this, it probably doesn't do what they
think it does. This actually causes the dylib to *export* a
__cxa_atexit symbol, so anything that links it probably loses their
exit time destructors as well as disabling LLVM's.
This just removes the option entirely. If somebody does need this
behaviour we should figure out a more principled way to do it.
This is effectively a revert of r223805.
llvm-svn: 263498
With the changes in r263275, there are now more than just functions in
the summary. Completed the renaming of data structures (started in
r263275) to reflect the wider scope. In particular, changed the
FunctionIndex* data structures to ModuleIndex*, and renamed related
variables and comments. Also renamed the files to reflect the changes.
A companion clang patch will immediately succeed this patch to reflect
this renaming.
llvm-svn: 263490
Summary:
This check was added in rL152620, and has started causing downstream warnings in Julia:
```
In file included from /home/tkelman/Julia/julia-0.5/src/codegen.cpp:22:0:
/home/tkelman/Julia/julia-0.5/usr/include/llvm/ExecutionEngine/JITEventListener.h:84:5: warning: "LLVM_USE_INTEL_JITEVENTS" is not defined [-Wundef]
#if LLVM_USE_INTEL_JITEVENTS
^
/home/tkelman/Julia/julia-0.5/usr/include/llvm/ExecutionEngine/JITEventListener.h💯5: warning: "LLVM_USE_OPROFILE" is not defined [-Wundef]
#if LLVM_USE_OPROFILE
^
```
Patch by Tony Kelman.
Reviewers: loladiro
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17254
llvm-svn: 263487