MC disassembler clients (LLDB) are interested in querying if an
instruction may affect control flow other than by virtue of being
an explicit branch instruction. For example, instructions which
write directly to the PC on some architectures.
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These were defined on TargetRegisterInfo, but they don't use any information
that's not available in MCRegisterInfo, so sink them down to be available
at the MC layer.
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Use the version that also takes an MF reference instead.
It would technically be possible to extract an MF reference from the MI
as MI->getParent()->getParent(), but that would not work for MIs that
are not inserted into any basic block.
Given the reasonably small number of places this constructor was used at
all, I preferred the compile time check to a run time assertion.
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Just like for addMemOperand(), the function pointer provides a context
for allocating memory. This will make it possible to use a better memory
allocation strategy for the MI operand list, which is currently a slow
std::vector.
Most calls to addOperand() come from MachineInstrBuilder, so give that
class an MF reference as well. Code using BuildMI() won't need changing
at all since the MF reference is already required to allocate a
MachineInstr.
Future patches will fix code that calls MI::addOperand(Op) directly, as
well as code that uses the now deprecated MachineInstrBuilder(MI)
constructor.
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- An MVT can become an EVT when being split (e.g. v2i8 -> v1i8, the latter doesn't exist)
- Return the scalar value when an MVT is scalarized (v1i64 -> i64)
Fixes PR14639ff.
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I cannot reproduce it the failures locally, so I will keep an eye at the ppc
bots. This patch does add the change to the "Disassembly of section" message,
but that is not what was failing on the bots.
Original message:
Add a funciton to get the segment name of a section.
On MachO, sections also have segment names. When a tool looking at a .o file
prints a segment name, this is what they mean. In reality, a .o has only one
anonymous, segment.
This patch adds a MachO only function to fetch that segment name. I named it
getSectionFinalSegmentName since the main use for the name seems to be infor
the linker with segment this section should go to.
The patch also changes MachOObjectFile::getSectionName to return just the
section name instead of computing SegmentName,SectionName.
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The bundle flags are now maintained by the slightly higher-level
functions bundleWithPred() / bundleWithSucc() which enforce consistent
bundle flags between neighboring instructions.
See also MIBundleBuilder for an even higher-level approach to building
bundles.
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The bundle_iterator::operator++ function now doesn't need to dig out the
basic block and check against end(). It can use the isBundledWithSucc()
flag to find the last bundled instruction safely.
Similarly, MachineInstr::isBundled() no longer needs to look at
iterators etc. It only has to look at flags.
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The bundle-related MI flags need to be kept in sync with the neighboring
instructions. Don't allow the bulk flag-setting setFlags() function to
change them.
Also don't copy MI flags when cloning an instruction. The clone's bundle
flags will be set when it is explicitly inserted into a bundle.
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Remove the instr_iterator versions of the splice() functions. It doesn't
seem useful to be able to splice sequences of instructions that don't
consist of full bundles.
The normal splice functions that take MBB::iterator arguments are not
changed, and they can move whole bundles around without any problems.
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The single-element ilist::splice() function supports a noop move:
List.splice(I, List, I);
The corresponding std::list function doesn't allow that, so add a unit
test to document that behavior.
This also means that
List.splice(I, List, F);
is somewhat surprisingly not equivalent to
List.splice(I, List, F, next(F));
This patch adds an assertion to catch the illegal case I == F above.
Alternatively, we could make I == F a legal noop, but that would make
ilist differ even more from std::list.
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The normal insert() function takes an MBB::iterator position, and
inserts a stand-alone MachineInstr as before.
The insert() function that takes an MBB::instr_iterator position can
insert instructions inside a bundle, and will now update the bundle
flags correctly when that happens.
When the insert position is between two bundles, it is unclear whether
the instruction should be appended to the previous bundle, prepended to
the next bundle, or stand on its own. The MBB::insert() function doesn't
bundle the instruction in that case, use the MIBundleBuilder class for
that.
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Most code is oblivious to bundles and uses the MBB::iterator which only
visits whole bundles. MBB::erase() operates on whole bundles at a time
as before.
MBB::remove() now refuses to remove bundled instructions. It is not safe
to remove all instructions in a bundle without deleting them since there
is no way of returning pointers to all the removed instructions.
MBB::remove_instr() and MBB::erase_instr() will now update bundle flags
correctly, lifting individual instructions out of bundles while leaving
the remaining bundle intact.
The MachineInstr convenience functions are updated so
eraseFromParent() erases a whole bundle as before
eraseFromBundle() erases a single instruction, leaving the rest of its bundle.
removeFromParent() refuses to operate on bundled instructions, and
removeFromBundle() lifts a single instruction out of its bundle.
These functions will no longer accidentally split or coalesce bundles -
bundle flags are updated to preserve the existing bundling, and explicit
bundleWith* / unbundleFrom* functions should be used to change the
instruction bundling.
This API update is still a work in progress. I am going to update APIs
first so they maintain bundle flags automatically when possible. Then
I'll add stricter verification of the bundle flags.
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compilation directory.
This defaults to the current working directory, just as it always has,
but now an assembler can choose to override it with a custom directory.
I've taught llvm-mc about this option and added a test case.
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Mips16 is really a processor decoding mode (ala thumb 1) and in the same
program, mips16 and mips32 functions can exist and can call each other.
If a jal type instruction encounters an address with the lower bit set, then
the processor switches to mips16 mode (if it is not already in it). If the
lower bit is not set, then it switches to mips32 mode.
The linker knows which functions are mips16 and which are mips32.
When relocation is performed on code labels, this lower order bit is
set if the code label is a mips16 code label.
In general this works just fine, however when creating exception handling
tables and dwarf, there are cases where you don't want this lower order
bit added in.
This has been traditionally distinguished in gas assembly source by using a
different syntax for the label.
lab1: ; this will cause the lower order bit to be added
lab2=. ; this will not cause the lower order bit to be added
In some cases, it does not matter because in dwarf and debug tables
the difference of two labels is used and in that case the lower order
bits subtract each other out.
To fix this, I have added to mcstreamer the notion of a debuglabel.
The default is for label and debug label to be the same. So calling
EmitLabel and EmitDebugLabel produce the same result.
For various reasons, there is only one set of labels that needs to be
modified for the mips exceptions to work. These are the "$eh_func_beginXXX"
labels.
Mips overrides the debug label suffix from ":" to "=." .
This initial patch fixes exceptions. More changes most likely
will be needed to DwarfCFException to make all of this work
for actual debugging. These changes will be to emit debug labels in some
places where a simple label is emitted now.
Some historical discussion on this from gcc can be found at:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2008-08/msg00623.htmlhttp://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2008-11/msg01273.html
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for a wider range of GOT entries that can hold thread-relative offsets.
This matches the behavior of GCC, which was not documented in the PPC64 TLS
ABI. The ABI will be updated with the new code sequence.
Former sequence:
ld 9,x@got@tprel(2)
add 9,9,x@tls
New sequence:
addis 9,2,x@got@tprel@ha
ld 9,x@got@tprel@l(9)
add 9,9,x@tls
Note that a linker optimization exists to transform the new sequence into
the shorter sequence when appropriate, by replacing the addis with a nop
and modifying the base register and relocation type of the ld.
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Accordingly, add helper funtions getSimpleValueType (in parallel to
getValueType) in SDValue, SDNode, and TargetLowering.
This is the first, in a series of patches.
This is the second attempt. In the first attempt (r169837), a few
getSimpleVT() were hoisted too far, detected by bootstrap failures.
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On MachO, sections also have segment names. When a tool looking at a .o file
prints a segment name, this is what they mean. In reality, a .o has only one,
anonymous, segment.
This patch adds a MachO only function to fetch that segment name. I named it
getSectionFinalSegmentName since the main use for the name seems to be informing
the linker with segment this section should go to.
The patch also changes MachOObjectFile::getSectionName to return just the
section name instead of computing SegmentName,SectionName.
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In a previous thread it was pointed out that isPowerOfTwo is not a very precise
name since it can return false for powers of two if it is unable to show that
they are powers of two.
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Provides m_Argument that allows matching against a CallSite's specified argument. Provides m_Intrinsic pattern that can be templatized over the intrinsic id and bind/match arguments similarly to other pattern matchers. Implementations provided for 0 to 4 arguments, though it's very simple to extend for more. Also provides example template specialization for bswap (m_BSwap) and example of code cleanup for its use.
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Also add an MIBundleBuilder constructor that takes an existing bundle.
Together these functions make it possible to add instructions to
existing bundles.
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PowerPC target. This is the last of the four models, so we now have
full TLS support.
This is mostly a straightforward extension of the general dynamic model.
I had to use an additional Chain operand to tie ADDIS_DTPREL_HA to the
register copy following ADDI_TLSLD_L; otherwise everything above the
ADDIS_DTPREL_HA appeared dead and was removed.
As before, there are new test cases to test the assembly generation, and
the relocations output during integrated assembly. The expected code
gen sequence can be read in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/tls-ld.ll.
There are a couple of things I think can be done more efficiently in the
overall TLS code, so there will likely be a clean-up patch forthcoming;
but for now I want to be sure the functionality is in place.
Bill
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been used in the first place. It simply was passed to the function and to the
recursive invocations. Simply drop the parameter and update the callers for the
new signature.
Patch by Saleem Abdulrasool!
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When ASan replaces <alloca instruction> with
<offset into a common large alloca>, it should also patch
llvm.dbg.declare calls and replace debug info descriptors to mark
that we've replaced alloca with a value that stores an address
of the user variable, not the user variable itself.
See PR11818 for more context.
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Add R_ARM_NONE and R_ARM_PREL31 relocation types
to MCExpr. Both of them will be used while
generating .ARM.extab and .ARM.exidx sections.
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mention the inline memcpy / memset expansion code is a mess?
This patch split the ZeroOrLdSrc argument into two: IsMemset and ZeroMemset.
The first indicates whether it is expanding a memset or a memcpy / memmove.
The later is whether the memset is a memset of zero. It's totally possible
(likely even) that targets may want to do different things for memcpy and
memset of zero.
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Also added more comments to explain why it is generally ok to return true.
- Rename getOptimalMemOpType argument IsZeroVal to ZeroOrLdSrc. It's meant to
be true for loaded source (memcpy) or zero constants (memset). The poor name
choice is probably some kind of legacy issue.
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fsub X, +0 ==> X
fsub X, -0 ==> X, when we know X is not -0
fsub +/-0.0, (fsub -0.0, X) ==> X
fsub nsz +/-0.0, (fsub +/-0.0, X) ==> X
fsub nnan ninf X, X ==> 0.0
fadd nsz X, 0 ==> X
fadd [nnan ninf] X, (fsub [nnan ninf] 0, X) ==> 0
where nnan and ninf have to occur at least once somewhere in this expression
fmul X, 1.0 ==> X
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m_ConstantFP - match and bind a float constant
m_SpecificConstantFP - match a specific floating point value or vector of floats of that value
m_FPOne - match a floating point 1.0 or vector of 1.0s
m_NegZero - match -0.0
m_AnyZero - match 0 or -0.0
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ScalarTargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost() instead. "Legal" is a poorly defined
term for something like integer immediate materialization. It is always possible
to materialize an integer immediate. Whether to use it for memcpy expansion is
more a "cost" conceern.
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Given a thread-local symbol x with global-dynamic access, the generated
code to obtain x's address is:
Instruction Relocation Symbol
addis ra,r2,x@got@tlsgd@ha R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_HA x
addi r3,ra,x@got@tlsgd@l R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_L x
bl __tls_get_addr(x@tlsgd) R_PPC64_TLSGD x
R_PPC64_REL24 __tls_get_addr
nop
<use address in r3>
The implementation borrows from the medium code model work for introducing
special forms of ADDIS and ADDI into the DAG representation. This is made
slightly more complicated by having to introduce a call to the external
function __tls_get_addr. Using the full call machinery is overkill and,
more importantly, makes it difficult to add a special relocation. So I've
introduced another opcode GET_TLS_ADDR to represent the function call, and
surrounded it with register copies to set up the parameter and return value.
Most of the code is pretty straightforward. I ran into one peculiarity
when I introduced a new PPC opcode BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD, which is just like
BL8_NOP_ELF except that it takes another parameter to represent the symbol
("x" above) that requires a relocation on the call. Something in the
TblGen machinery causes BL8_NOP_ELF and BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD to be treated
identically during the emit phase, so this second operand was never
visited to generate relocations. This is the reason for the slightly
messy workaround in PPCMCCodeEmitter.cpp:getDirectBrEncoding().
Two new tests are included to demonstrate correct external assembly and
correct generation of relocations using the integrated assembler.
Comments welcome!
Thanks,
Bill
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instead of the instruction. I've left a forwarding wrapper for the
instruction so users with the instruction don't need to create
a GEPOperator themselves.
This lets us remove the copy of this code in instsimplify.
I've looked at most of the other copies of similar code, and this is the
only one I've found that is actually exactly the same. The one in
InlineCost is very close, but it requires re-mapping non-constant
indices through the cost analysis value simplification map. I could add
direct support for this to the generic routine, but it seems overly
specific.
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the GEP instruction class.
This is part of the continued refactoring and cleaning of the
infrastructure used by SROA. This particular operation is also done in
a few other places which I'll try to refactor to share this
implementation.
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Accordingly, add helper funtions getSimpleValueType (in parallel to
getValueType) in SDValue, SDNode, and TargetLowering.
This is the first, in a series of patches.
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This shouldn't affect codegen for -O0 compiles as tail call markers are not
emitted in unoptimized compiles. Testing with the external/internal nightly
test suite reveals no change in compile time performance. Testing with -O1,
-O2 and -O3 with fast-isel enabled did not cause any compile-time or
execution-time failures. All tests were performed on my x86 machine.
I'll monitor our arm testers to ensure no regressions occur there.
In an upcoming clang patch I will be marking the objc_autoreleaseReturnValue
and objc_retainAutoreleaseReturnValue as tail calls unconditionally. While
it's theoretically true that this is just an optimization, it's an
optimization that we very much want to happen even at -O0, or else ARC
applications become substantially harder to debug.
Part of rdar://12553082
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1. Teach it to use overlapping unaligned load / store to copy / set the trailing
bytes. e.g. On 86, use two pairs of movups / movaps for 17 - 31 byte copies.
2. Use f64 for memcpy / memset on targets where i64 is not legal but f64 is. e.g.
x86 and ARM.
3. When memcpy from a constant string, do *not* replace the load with a constant
if it's not possible to materialize an integer immediate with a single
instruction (required a new target hook: TLI.isIntImmLegal()).
4. Use unaligned load / stores more aggressively if target hooks indicates they
are "fast".
5. Update ARM target hooks to use unaligned load / stores. e.g. vld1.8 / vst1.8.
Also increase the threshold to something reasonable (8 for memset, 4 pairs
for memcpy).
This significantly improves Dhrystone, up to 50% on ARM iOS devices.
rdar://12760078
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InitSections is called before the MCContext is initialized it could cause
duplicate temporary symbols to be emitted later (after context initialization
resets the temporary label counter).
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The `-mno-red-zone' flag wasn't being propagated to the functions that code
coverage generates. This allowed some of them to use the red zone when that
wasn't allowed.
<rdar://problem/12843084>
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This visitor provides infrastructure for recursively traversing the
use-graph of a pointer-producing instruction like an alloca or a malloc.
It maintains a worklist of uses to visit, so it can handle very deep
recursions. It automatically looks through instructions which simply
translate one pointer to another (bitcasts and GEPs). It tracks the
offset relative to the original pointer as long as that offset remains
constant and exposes it during the visit as an APInt offset. Finally, it
performs conservative escape analysis.
However, currently it has some limitations that should be addressed
going forward:
1) It doesn't handle vectors of pointers.
2) It doesn't provide a cheaper visitor when the constant offset
tracking isn't needed.
3) It doesn't support non-instruction pointer values.
The current functionality is exactly what is required to implement the
SROA pointer-use visitors in terms of this one, rather than in terms of
their own ad-hoc base visitor, which was always very poorly specified.
SROA has been converted to use this, and the code there deleted which
this utility now provides.
Technically speaking, using this new visitor allows SROA to handle a few
more cases than it previously did. It is now more aggressive in ignoring
chains of instructions which look like they would defeat SROA, but in
fact do not because they never result in a read or write of memory.
While this is "neat", it shouldn't be interesting for real programs as
any such chains should have been removed by others passes long before we
get to SROA. As a consequence, I've not added any tests for these
features -- it shouldn't be part of SROA's contract to perform such
heroics.
The goal is to extend the functionality of this visitor going forward,
and re-use it from passes like ASan that can benefit from doing
a detailed walk of the uses of a pointer.
Thanks to Ben Kramer for the code review rounds and lots of help
reviewing and debugging this patch.
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- added function to VectorTargetTransformInfo to query cost of intrinsics
- vectorize trivially vectorizable intrinsic calls such as sin, cos, log, etc.
Reviewed by: Nadav
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There are still bugs in this pass, as well as other issues that are
being worked on, but the bugs are crashers that occur pretty easily in
the wild. Test cases have been sent to the original commit's review
thread.
This reverts the commits:
r169671: Fix a logic error.
r169604: Move the popcnt tests to an X86 subdirectory.
r168931: Initial commit adding the pass.
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SmallString. This makes it possible to use the length-erased SmallVectorImpl
in the interface without imposing buffer size. Thus, the size of MCInstFragment
is back down since a preallocated 8-byte contents buffer is enough.
It would be generally a good idea to rid all the fragments of SmallString as
contents, because a vector just makes more sense.
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Before this patch, when you objdump an LLVM-compiled file, objdump tried to
decode data-in-code sections as if they were code. This patch adds the missing
Mapping Symbols, as defined by "ELF for the ARM Architecture" (ARM IHI 0044D).
Patch based on work by Greg Fitzgerald.
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This is still a work in progress. The purpose is to make bundling and
unbundling operations explicit, and to catch errors where bundles are
broken or created inadvertently.
The old IsInsideBundle flag is replaced by two MI flags: BundledPred
which has the same meaning as IsInsideBundle, and BundledSucc which is
set on instructions that are bundled with a successor. Having two flags
provdes redundancy to detect when a bundle is inadvertently torn by a
splice() or insert(), and it makes it possible to write bundle iterators
that don't need to peek at adjacent instructions.
The new flags can't be manipulated directly (once setIsInsideBundle is
gone). Instead there are MI functions to make and break bundle bonds.
The setIsInsideBundle function will be removed in a future commit. It
should be replaced by bundleWithPred().
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original change description:
change MCContext to work on the doInitialization/doFinalization model
reviewed by Evan Cheng <evan.cheng@apple.com>
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169553 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
understand target implementation of any_extend / extload, just generate
zero_extend in place of any_extend for liveouts when the target knows the
zero_extend will be implicit (e.g. ARM ldrb / ldrh) or folded (e.g. x86 movz).
rdar://12771555
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169536 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This is an alternative to the ImmutableMapRef interface where a factory
should still be canonicalizing by default, but in certain cases an
improvement can be made by delaying the canonicalization.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169532 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Some languages, e.g. Ada and Pascal, allow you to specify that the array bounds
are different from the default (1 in these cases). If we have a lower bound
that's non-default, then we emit the lower bound. We also calculate the correct
upper bound in those cases.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169484 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This is more consistent with other vectors in this code. In addition, I ran some
tests compiling a large program and >96% of fragments have 4 or less fixups, so
SmallVector<4> is a good optimization.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169433 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This is much simpler to reason about, more efficient, and
fixes some corner cases involving implicit super-register defs.
Fixed rdar://12797931.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169425 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Change member types of RuntimeFunction and UnwindInfo from uint64_t to
uint32_t:
These members represent addresses. According to MSDN, they are image
relative, that is, they are 32-bit offsets from the starting address
of the image that contains the function table entry.
See MSDN for more information:
RUNTIME_FUNCTION: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ft9x1kdx.aspx
UNWIND_INFO: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ddssxxy8.aspx
Make Win64.h platform-neutral:
The standard types unit8_t, uint16_t and uint32_t are replaced with
their counterparts from Endian.h. Accessor functions are introduced to
replace bit fields.
Patch by João Matos and Kai Nacke.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169414 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
A MachineInstr can only ever be constructed by CreateMachineInstr() and
CloneMachineInstr(), and those factories don't use the removed
constructors.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@169395 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8