Currently FileCheck errors out on empty input. This is usually the
right thing to do, but makes testing things like "this command does
not emit some error message" hard to test. This usually leads to
people using "command 2>&1 | count 0" instead, and then the bots that
use guard malloc fail a few hours later.
By adding a flag to FileCheck that allows empty inputs, we can make
tests that consist entirely of "CHECK-NOT" lines feasible.
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After adding the masking variants to several instructions, I have decided to
experiment with generating these from the non-masking/unconditional
variant. This will hopefully reduce the amount repetition that we currently
have in order to define an instruction with all its variants (for a reg/mem
instruction this would be 6 instruction defs and 2 Pat<> for the intrinsic).
The patch is the first cut that is currently only applied to valignd/q to make
the patch small.
A few notes on the approach:
* In order to stitch together the dag for both the conditional and the
unconditional patterns I pass the RHS of the set rather than the full
pattern (set dest, RHS).
* Rather than subclassing each instruction base class (e.g. AVX512AIi8),
with a masking variant which wouldn't scale, I derived the masking
instructions from a new base class AVX512 (this is just I<> with
Requires<HasAVX512>). The instructions derive from this now, plus a new set
of classes that add the format bits and everything else that instruction
base class provided (i.e. AVX512AIi8 vs. AVX512AIi8Base).
I hope we can go incrementally from here. I expect that:
* We will need different variants of the masking class. One example is
instructions requiring three vector sources. In this case we tie one of the
source operands to dest rather than a new implicit source operand ($src0)
* Add the zero-masking variant
* Add more AVX512*Base classes as new uses are added
I've looked at X86.td.expanded before and after to make sure that nothing got
lost for valignd/q.
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I am sure we will be finding bits and pieces of dead code for years to
come, but this is a good start.
Thanks to Lang Hames for making MCJIT a good replacement!
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Summary:
These directives are used to toggle whether the assembler accepts MSA-specific instructions or not.
Patch by Matheus Almeida and Toma Tabacu.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4783
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shuffle lowering.
This is closely related to the previous one. Here we failed to use the
source offset when swapping in the other case -- where we end up
swapping the *final* shuffle. The cause of this bug is a bit different:
I simply wasn't thinking about the fact that this mask is actually
a slice of a wide mask and thus has numbers that need SourceOffset
applied. Simple fix. Would be even more simple with an algorithm-y thing
to use here, but correctness first. =]
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via the fuzz tester.
Here I missed an offset when round-tripping a value through a shuffle
mask. I got it right 2 lines below. See a problem? I do. ;] I'll
probably be adding a little "swap" algorithm which accepts a range and
two values and swaps those values where they occur in the range. Don't
really have a name for it, let me know if you do.
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through the new fuzzer.
This one is great: bad operator precedence led the modulus to happen at
the wrong point. All the asserts didn't fire because there were usually
the right values past the end of the 4 element region we were looking
at. Probably could have gotten a crash here with ASan + fuzzing, but the
correctness tests pinpointed this really nicely.
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Summary:
Since pointers are 32-bit on x32 we can use ebp and esp as frame and stack
pointer. Some operations like PUSH/POP and CFI_INSTRUCTION still
require 64-bit register, so using 64-bit MachineFramePtr where required.
X86_64 NaCl uses 64-bit frame/stack pointers, however it's been found that
both isTarget64BitLP64 and isTarget64BitILP32 are true for NaCl. Addressing
this issue here as well by making isTarget64BitLP64 false.
Also mark hasReservedSpillSlot unreachable on X86. See inlined comments.
Test Plan: Add one new simple test and upgrade 2 existing with x32 target case.
Reviewers: nadav, dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits, zinovy.nis
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4617
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fuzz testing.
The function which tested for adjacency did what it said on the tin, but
when I called it, I wanted it to do something more thorough: I wanted to
know if the *pairs* of shuffle elements were adjacent and started at
0 mod 2. In one place I had the decency to try to test for this, but in
the other it was completely skipped, miscompiling this test case. Fix
this by making the helper actually do what I wanted it to do everywhere
I called it (and removing the now redundant code in one place).
I *really* dislike the name "canWidenShuffleElements" for this
predicate. If anyone can come up with a better name, please let me know.
The other name I thought about was "canWidenShuffleMask" but is it
really widening the mask to reduce the number of lanes shuffled? I don't
know. Naming things is hard.
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It also allows nested { } expressions, as now that they are sized, we can merge pull bits from the nested value.
In the current behaviour, everything in { } must have been convertible to a single bit.
However, now that binary literals are sized, its useful to be able to initialize a range of bits.
So, for example, its now possible to do
bits<8> x = { 0, 1, { 0b1001 }, 0, 0b0 }
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This is useful in a later patch where binary literals such as 0b000 will become BitsInit values instead of IntInit values.
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Instead of these becoming an integer literal internally, they now become bits<n> values.
Prior to this change, 0b001 was 1 bit long. This is confusing as clearly the user gave 3 bits.
This new type holds both the literal value and the size, and so can ensure sizes match on initializers.
For example, this used to be legal
bits<1> x = 0b00;
but now it must be written as
bits<2> x = 0b00;
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Prior to this change, it was legal to do something like
bits<2> opc = { 0, 1 };
bits<2> opc2 = { 1, 0 };
bits<2> a = { opc, opc2 };
This involved silently dropping bits from opc and opc2 which is very hard to debug.
Now the above test would be an error. Having tested with an assert, none of LLVM/clang was relying on this behaviour.
Thanks to Adam Nemet for the above test.
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The commit after this changes { } and 0bxx literals to be of type bits<n> and not int. This means we need to write exactly the right number of bits, and not rely on the values being silently zero extended for us.
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within a single bit-width of vectors. This is particularly useful for
when you know you have bugs in a certain area and want to find simpler
test cases than those produced by an open-ended fuzzing that ends up
legalizing the vector in addition to shuffling it.
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This is a python script which for a given seed generates a random
sequence of random shuffles of a random vector width. It embeds this
into a function and emits a main function which calls the test routine
and checks that the results (where defined) match the obvious results.
I'll be using this to drive out miscompiles from the new vector shuffle
logic now that it is clean of any crashes I can find with llvm-stress.
Note, my python skills are very poor. Sorry if this is terrible code,
and feel free to tell me how I should write this or just patch it as
necessary.
The tests generated try to be very portable and use boring C routines.
It technically will mis-declare the C routines and pass 32-bit integers
to parametrs that expect 64-bit integers. If someone wants to fix this
and has less terrible ideas of how to do it, I'm all ears. Fortunately,
this "just works" for x86. =]
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mach-o doesn't like sections without segments, and elf is perfectly
happy with commas in section names, so use a Darwin-like section name.
Suggestion by Eric Christopher.
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This changes Win64EHEmitter into a utility WinEH UnwindEmitter that can be
shared across multiple architectures and a target specific bit which is
overridden (Win64::UnwindEmitter). This enables sharing the section selection
code across X86 and the intended use in ARM for emitting unwind information for
Windows on ARM.
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Also make the disassembler created with the Mach-O parser (the -m option)
pick up the Target specific attributes specified with -mattr option.
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Fixes PR18916. I don't think we need to implement support for either
hybrid syntax. Nobody should write Intel assembly with '%' prefixes on
their registers or AT&T assembly without them.
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This reverts commit r214761.
Revert while Reid investigates & provides a reproduction for an
assertion failure for this on Windows.
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to get the subtarget and that's accessible from the MachineFunction
now. This helps clear the way for smaller changes where we getting
a subtarget will require passing in a MachineFunction/Function as
well.
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In r210492 the logic of calculateDbgValueHistory was changed to end
register variable live ranges at the end of MBB conditionally on
the fact that the register was or not clobbered by the function body.
This requires an initial scan of all the operands of the function
to collect all clobbered registers. In a second pass over all
instructions, we compare this set with the set of clobbered
registers for the current MachineInstruction. This modification
incurred a compilation time regression on some benchmarks: the
debug info emission phase takes ~10% more time.
While a small performance hit is unavoidable due to the initial
scan requirement, we can improve the situation by avoiding to
create too many temporary sets and just use lambdas to work directly
on the result of the initial scan.
Fixes <rdar://problem/17884104>
Patch by Frederic Riss!
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The handling of the epilogue is best expressed as an early exit and
there is no reason to look for register defs in DbgValue MIs.
Patch by Frederic Riss!
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Originally this test case tested the specified behavior (that -gmlt
would not produce DW_AT_ranges and that when no CU DW_AT_ranges were
produced, no debug_ranges section (not even an empty list) would be
produced) but then the ranges emission code was improved not to create
ranges of a single element (instead favoring high_pc/low_pc) and so this
test case no longer exercised the -gmlt portion of the behavior.
This caused me some confusion when reading the comments and trying to
update this test case for future changes to -gmlt. I've made this test
resilient to those changes (by using the {{DW_TAG|NULL}} pattern to
block the end of the attribute search at the end of the CU's attribute
list without mandating that it must (or must not) be followed by another
tag (the future changes to -gmlt should produce no subprograms in this
CU))
Fix the test case to have two functions in distinct sections to force
the use of DW_AT_ranges.
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