This is consistent with GDB ToT and reduces the number of relocations in
(type and compile) units, substantially reducing relocations and debug
size in fission + type units builds.
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When copying an i1 value into a GPR for a vaarg call, we need to explicitly
zero-extend the i1 value (otherwise an invalid CRBIT -> GPR copy will be
generated).
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are operations that do not access memory but may be sensitive
to floating-point environment changes. LLVM does not attempt
to model FP environment changes, so this was unnecessarily conservative
and was getting on the way of some optimizations, in particular
SLP vectorization.
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On cores without fpcvt support, we cannot promote int_to_fp i1 operations,
because there is nothing to promote them to. The most straightforward
implementation of this uses a select to choose between the two possible
resulting floating-point values (and that's what is done here).
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Before llvm-mc would print it, but llc was assuming that it would produce
another section changing directive before one was needed. That assumption is
false with inline asm.
Fixes PR19049.
Another option would be to always create the section, but in the asm printer
avoid printing sections changes during initialization. That would work, but
* We do use the fact that llvm-mc prints it in testing. The tests can be changed
if needed.
* A quick poll on IRC suggest that most developers prefer the implicit .text to
be printed.
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Patchpoints already did this. Doing it for stackmaps is a convenience
for the runtime in the event that it needs to scratch register to
patch or perform a runtime call thunk.
Unlike patchpoints, we just assume the AnyRegCC calling
convention. This is the only language and target independent calling
convention specific to stackmaps so makes sense. Although the calling
convention is not currently used to select the scratch registers.
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selection dag (PR19012)
In X86SelectionDagInfo::EmitTargetCodeForMemcpy we check with MachineFrameInfo
to make sure that ESI isn't used as a base pointer register before we choose to
emit rep movs (which clobbers esi).
The problem is that MachineFrameInfo wouldn't know about dynamic allocas or
inline asm that clobbers the stack pointer until SelectionDAGBuilder has
encountered them.
This patch fixes the problem by checking for such things when building the
FunctionLoweringInfo.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2954
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Unwind info contents were indented at the same level as function table
contents. That's a bit confusing because the unwind info is pointed by
function table. In other places we usually increment indentation depth
by one when dereferncing a pointer.
This patch also removes extraneous newlines between function tables.
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Previously for:
tail call void inttoptr (i64 65536 to void ()*)() nounwind
We would emit:
bl 65536
The immediate operand of the bl instruction is a relative offset so it is
wrong to use the absolute address here.
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The original code does not work correctly on executable files because the
code is written in such a way that only object files are assumed to be given
to llvm-objdump.
Contents of RuntimeFunction are different between executables and objects. In
executables, fields in RuntimeFunction have actual addresses to unwind info
structures. On the other hand, in object files, the fields have zero value,
but instead there are relocations pointing to the fields, so that Linker will
fill them at link-time.
So, when we are reading an object file, we need to use relocation info to
find the location of unwind info. When executable, we should just look at the
values in RuntimeFunction.
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We were dropping the displacement on the floor if we also had some
immediate offset.
Should fix PR19033.
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for the Cortex-A53 subtarget in the AArch64 backend.
This patch lays the ground work to annotate each AArch64 instruction
(no NEON yet) with a list of SchedReadWrite types. The patch also
provides the Cortex-A53 processor resources, maps those the the default
SchedReadWrites, and provides basic latency. NEON support will be added
in a subsequent patch with proper forwarding logic.
Verification was done by setting the pre-RA scheduler to linearize to
better gauge the effect of the MIScheduler. Even without modeling the
forward logic, the results show a modest improvement for Cortex-A53.
Reviewers: apazos, mcrosier, atrick
Patch by Dave Estes <cestes@codeaurora.org>!
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DWARF discriminators are used to distinguish multiple control flow paths
on the same source location. When this happens, instructions across
basic block boundaries will share the same debug location.
This pass detects this situation and creates a new lexical scope to one
of the two instructions. This lexical scope is a child scope of the
original and contains a new discriminator value. This discriminator is
then picked up from MCObjectStreamer::EmitDwarfLocDirective to be
written on the object file.
This fixes http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18270.
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Summary:
Parts of the compiler still believed MSA load/stores have a 16-bit offset when
it is actually 10-bit. Corrected this, and fixed a closely related issue this
uncovered where load/stores with 10-bit and 12-bit offsets (MSA and microMIPS
respectively) could not load/store using offsets from the stack/frame pointer.
They accepted frameindex+offset, but not frameindex by itself.
Reviewers: jacksprat, matheusalmeida
Reviewed By: jacksprat
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2888
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Now that the PowerPC backend can track individual CR bits as first-class
registers, we should also have a way of allocating them for inline asm
statements. Because these registers are only one bit, if an output variable is
implicitly cast to a larger integer size, we'll get an any_extend to that
larger type (this is part of the existing target-independent logic). As a
result, regardless of the size of the output type, only the first bit is
meaningful.
The constraint identifier "wc" has been chosen for this purpose. Although gcc
does not currently support allocating individual CR bits, this identifier
choice has been coordinated with the gcc PowerPC team, and will be marked as
reserved for this purpose in the gcc constraints.md file.
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