id_000021,sig_11,src_000002,op_flip1,pos_92 from PR30540
does not have TLS sections, but type
of one of the symbol is broken and set to STT_TLS,
what resulted in a crash. Patch fixes crash.
DIfferential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25083
llvm-svn: 283198
Testcase contains a common symbol with zero alignment,
previously lld would crash, patch fixes that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25085
llvm-svn: 283197
When using broken input object found using AFL,
getExtendedSymbolTableIndex() crashed because ShndxTable
was empty as object does not contain SHT_SYMTAB_SHNDX section.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25189
llvm-svn: 283196
Follow-up to r282716. Reject input files with non-zero GP0 value only in
case of relocatable object generation. In other case we can handle
arbitrary GP0 value so it does not have a sense to make the restriction
so wide.
llvm-svn: 283194
Added the code which explicitly emits an error in Clang in case
`-fxray-instrument` is passed, but XRay is not supported for the
selected target.
Author: rSerge
Reviewers: dberris, rsmith, aaron.ballman, rnk
Subscribers: cfe-commits, iid_iunknown
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24799
llvm-svn: 283193
This fixes the inconsistency of the fp denormal option names: in LLVM this was
DenormalType, but in Clang this is DenormalMode which seems better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24906
llvm-svn: 283192
This patch corresponds to review:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D23155
This patch removes the VSHRC register class (based on D20310) and adds
exploitation of the Power9 sub-word integer loads into VSX registers as well
as vector sign extensions.
The new instructions are useful for a few purposes:
Int to Fp conversions of 1 or 2-byte values loaded from memory
Building vectors of 1 or 2-byte integers with values loaded from memory
Storing individual 1 or 2-byte elements from integer vectors
This patch implements all of those uses.
llvm-svn: 283190
Reintroduce versioning of shared libraries via SOVERSION, addressing
the issues with the previous design, since Gentoo is relying
on shared-split install of LLVM. The SOVERSIONs were originally
introduced in r229720 for all libraries, and removed in r252093 in favor
of custom SONAME. As far as I understand, the major concern with the old
versioning was that the used versions were incompatible with ldconfig.
Having considered that, this commit introduce SOVERSIONS with the
following considerations:
1. SOVERSIONs are formed of major & minor version concatenated -- i.e.
for 4.0 its .so.40. This matches the common practice where the first
version number indicates ABI breakage, and therefore fixes the issues
with ldconfig. Additionally, VERSION with the remaining verion
components appended is used, however this is not strictly necessary.
2. The versioning is only applied to libraries with no explicit SONAME
specified -- i.e. it won't apply to libLLVM but only to the split
libraries. It will also apply to libraries installed by the subprojects.
3. The versioning is only done on *nix systems, Darwin excluded. This
matches the current use of SONAME.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24757
llvm-svn: 283189
Use separate doctrees between different Sphinx builders in order to
prevent race condition issues due to multiple Sphinx instances accessing
the same doctree cache in parallel.
Bug: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23781
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23755
llvm-svn: 283188
unittests. If I have time, I'd like to see if I can write some
tests of the eh_frame augmentation which is a wholly separate code
path (it seems like maybe it should be rolled into the main instruction
scanning codepath, to be honest, and operate on the generated
UnwindPlan instead of bothering with raw instructions at all).
Outside the eh_frame augmentation, I'm comfortable that this unwind
generator is being tested well now.
llvm-svn: 283186
I do not fully understand how to use these classes yet, but
seems like these arguments are not used, since without them
all tests still pass. In order to simplify the situation,
I'll remove them now.
llvm-svn: 283174
Summary:
Use os.getcwd() instead of get_process_working_directory() as prefix for
souce file.
Reviewers: labath
Subscribers: lldb-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25217
llvm-svn: 283171
Summary:
The minimum version of Python necessary to run the LLVM test suite is
2.7. Code to work around Python 2.5 and lower isn't necessary.
Reviewers: ddunbar, echristo, delcypher, beanz
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25209
llvm-svn: 283169
Slightly improves the precision of GlobalsAA in certain situations, and
makes the behavior of optimization passes more predictable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24104
llvm-svn: 283165
The tail duplication pass uses an assumed layout when making duplication
decisions. This is fine, but passes up duplication opportunities that
may arise when blocks are outlined. Because we want the updated CFG to
affect subsequent placement decisions, this change must occur during
placement.
In order to achieve this goal, TailDuplicationPass is split into a
utility class, TailDuplicator, and the pass itself. The pass delegates
nearly everything to the TailDuplicator object, except for looping over
the blocks in a function. This allows the same code to be used for tail
duplication in both places.
This change, in concert with outlining optional branches, allows
triangle shaped code to perform much better, esepecially when the
taken/untaken branches are correlated, as it creates a second spine when
the tests are small enough.
llvm-svn: 283164
We now build MemorySSA in its ctor, instead of waiting until the user
calls MemorySSA::getWalker. This silently changed our unittests, since
we add BasicAA to AAResults *after* constructing MemorySSA (...but
before calling MemorySSA::getWalker).
None of them broke because we do most of our "did this get optimized
correctly?" tests in .ll files.
llvm-svn: 283158
There were a number of issues with the Args class preventing
efficient use of strings and incoporating LLVM's StringRef class.
The two biggest were:
1. Backing memory stored in a std::string, so we would frequently
have to use const_cast to get a mutable buffer for passing to
various low level APIs.
2. backing std::strings stored in a std::list, which doesn't
provide random access.
I wanted to solve these two issues so that we could provide
StringRef access to the underlying arguments, and also a way
to provide range-based access to the underlying argument array
while still providing convenient c-style access via an argv style
const char**.
The solution here is to store arguments in a single "entry" class
which contains the backing memory, a StringRef with precomputed
length, and the quote char. The backing memory is a manually
allocated const char* so that it is not invalidated when the
container is resized, and there is a separate argv array provided
for c-style access.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25099
llvm-svn: 283157
Summary:
With this commit simple coroutines can be created in plain C using coroutine builtins.
Reviewers: rnk, EricWF, rsmith
Subscribers: modocache, mgorny, mehdi_amini, beanz, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24373
llvm-svn: 283155
WebAssembly has officially switched from being an AST to being a stack
machine. Update various bits of terminology and README.md entries
accordingly.
llvm-svn: 283154
Summary:
optparse is deprecated in Python 2.7, which is the minimum version of
Python required to run the LLVM test suite. Replace its usage in lit
with argparse, optparse's 2.7 replacement module.
argparse has several benefits over optparse, but this commit does not
make use of those benefits yet. Instead, it simply uses the new API,
and attempts to keep the number of changes to a minimum.
Confirmed that lit's test suite, as well as LLVM's regression test suite,
still pass with these changes.
Patch By Brian Gesiak!
Reviewers: ddunbar, echristo, beanz, delcypher
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25173
llvm-svn: 283152
This is to avoid problems with win32 + ELF which surprisingly happens a
lot in practice: If a user just specifies -march on the commandline the
object format changes along with the architecture to ELF in many
instances while the OS stays with the default/host OS.
llvm-svn: 283151
This avoids llc using the hosts OS/vendor as defaults and triggering
unwanted behaviour in the tests. This should deal with the buildbot
breakages on windows after r283140.
llvm-svn: 283149