nodes can be used in loops, this could result in infinite looping
if there is no recursion limit, so add such a limit. It is also
used for the SelectInst case because in theory there could be an
infinite loop there too if the basic block is unreachable.
llvm-svn: 118694
The simplifications performed here never create new instructions, they
only return existing instructions (or a constant), and so are always a
win. In theory they should transform (for example)
%z = and i32 %x, %y
%s = select i1 %cond, i32 %y, i32 %z
%r = and i32 %x, %s
into
%r = and i32 %x, y
but in practice they get into a fight with instcombine, and lose.
Unfortunately instcombine does a poor job in this case. Nonetheless
I'm committing this transform to make it easier to discuss what to
do to make peace with instcombine.
llvm-svn: 118679
The special file "NUL" is FILE_TYPE_CHAR with GetFileType(h). It was treated as display device and discarding output to NUL had failed. (eg. opt -o nul)
llvm-svn: 118678
@property declaration to the autogenerated methods. I'm uncertain
whether this should apply to attributes in general, but these are
a reasonable core.
Implements rdar://problem/8617301
llvm-svn: 118676
using new/delete and OwningPtrs. After memory profiling Clang, I witnessed periodic leaks of these
objects; digging deeper into the code, it was clear that our management of these objects was a mess. The ownership rules were murky at best, and not always followed. Worse, there are plenty of error paths where we could screw up.
This patch introduces AttributeList::Factory, which is a factory class that creates AttributeList
objects and then blows them away all at once. While conceptually simple, most of the changes in
this patch just have to do with migrating over to the new interface. Most of the changes have resulted in some nice simplifications.
This new strategy currently holds on to all AttributeList objects during the lifetime of the Parser
object. This is easily tunable. If we desire to have more bound the lifetime of AttributeList
objects more precisely, we can have the AttributeList::Factory object (in Parser) push/pop its
underlying allocator as we enter/leave key methods in the Parser. This means that we get
simple memory management while still having the ability to finely control memory use if necessary.
Note that because AttributeList objects are now BumpPtrAllocated, we may reduce malloc() traffic
in many large files with attributes.
This fixes the leak reported in: <rdar://problem/8650003>
llvm-svn: 118675
comes from by using a virtual function to provide it from the Module's
SymbolVendor by default. This allows the DWARF parser, when being used to
parse DWARF in .o files with a parent DWARF + debug map parser, to get its
type list from the DWARF + debug map parser so when we go and find full
definitions for types (that might come from other .o files), we can use the
type list from the debug map parser. Otherwise we ended up mixing clang types
from one .o file (say a const pointer to a forward declaration "class A") with
the a full type from another .o file. This causes expression parsing, when
copying the clang types from those parsed by the DWARF parser into the
expression AST, to fail -- for good reason. Now all types are created in the
same list.
Also added host support for crash description strings that can be set before
doing a piece of work. On MacOSX, this ties in with CrashReporter support
that allows a string to be dispalyed when the app crashes and allows
LLDB.framework to print a description string in the crash log. Right now this
is hookup up the the CommandInterpreter::HandleCommand() where each command
notes that it is about to be executed, so if we crash while trying to do this
command, we should be able to see the command that caused LLDB to exit. For
all other platforms, this is a nop.
llvm-svn: 118672
Fixed the DWARF plug-in such that when it gets all attributes for a DIE, that
it omits the DW_AT_sibling and DW_AT_declaration when getting attributes
from a DW_AT_abstract_origin or DW_AT_specification DIE.
llvm-svn: 118654
invoke the test driver to rerun the very same test. Example output:
/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test $ tail 2010-11-09-14_51_34/ExpectedFailure-TestSettings.SettingsCommandTestCase.test_set_output_path.log
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Volumes/data/lldb/svn/trunk/test/settings/TestSettings.py", line 136, in test_set_output_path
"'stdout.txt' exists due to target.process.output-path.")
AssertionError: False is not True : 'stdout.txt' exists due to target.process.output-path.
To rerun this test, issue the following command from the 'test' directory:
./dotest.py -v -t -f SettingsCommandTestCase.test_set_output_path
llvm-svn: 118646