pad, separating the exception and selector calls from the new lpad. Teaching
it not to do that, or to properly adjust the CFG afterwards, is out of
scope because it would require the other edges to the landing pad to be split
as well (effectively). Instead, just recover from the most likely cases
during inlining. The best long-term solution is to change the exception
representation and commit to either requiring or not requiring the more
complex edge-splitting logic; this is just a shorter-term hack.
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assuming that all offsets are legal vector accesses, and thus trying to access
the float member of { <2 x float>, float } as the 3rd element of the first
member.
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former was using the size of the entire alloca, whereas the latter was correctly using
the allocated size of the immediate type being converted (which may differ from the size
of the alloca). This fixes PR10082.
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then we don't want to set the destination in the indirect branch to the
destination. This is because the indirect branch needs its destinations to have
had their block addresses taken. This isn't so of the new critical edge that's
split during this process. If it turns out that the destination block has only
one predecessor, and that being a BB with an indirect branch, then it won't be
marked as 'used' and may be removed.
PR10072
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which edge to split by pred/succ pair, which means that we can end up splitting
the wrong edge (by case value) in the switch statement entirely. Fixes PR10031!
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variable. Noticed by inspection.
Simulate memset in EvaluateFunction where the target of the memset and the
value we're setting are both the null value. Fixes PR10047!
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transformed by the inliner into a branch to the enclosing landing pad
(when inlined through an invoke). If not so optimized, it is lowered
DWARF EH preparation into a call to _Unwind_Resume (or _Unwind_SjLj_Resume
as appropriate). Its chief advantage is that it takes both the
exception value and the selector value as arguments, meaning that there
is zero effort in recovering these; however, the frontend is required
to pass these down, which is not actually particularly difficult.
Also document the behavior of landing pads a bit better, and make it
clearer that it's okay that personality functions don't always land at
landing pads. This is just a fact of life. Don't write optimizations that
rely on pushing things over an unwind edge.
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- the selector for the landing pad must provide all available information
about the handlers, filters, and cleanups within that landing pad
- calls to _Unwind_Resume must be converted to branches to the enclosing
lpad so as to avoid re-entering the unwinder when the lpad claimed it
was going to handle the exception in some way
This is quite specific to libUnwind-based unwinding. In an effort to not
interfere too badly with other unwinders, and with existing hacks in frontends,
this only triggers on _Unwind_Resume (not _Unwind_Resume_or_Rethrow) and does
nothing with selectors if it cannot find a selector call for either lpad.
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This looks like it flagged an actual bug. Devang, please review. I added
the parentheses that change behavior, but make the behavior more closely
match commit log's intent.
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crc32.[8|16|32] have been renamed to .crc32.32.[8|16|32] and
crc64.[8|16|32] have been renamed to .crc32.64.[8|64].
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Use a proper worklist for use-def traversal without holding onto an
iterator. Now that we process all IV uses, we need complete logic for
resusing existing derived IV defs. See HoistStep.
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case of a switch instruction. Back off this optimization when this would
eliminate all of the predecessors to the latch.
Sorry, I am unable to reduce a reasonably sized test case.
rdar://9486843
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aligned.
Teach memcpyopt to not give up all hope when confonted with an underaligned
memcpy feeding an overaligned byval. If the *source* of the memcpy can be
determined to be adequeately aligned, or if it can be forced to be, we can
eliminate the memcpy.
This addresses PR9794. We now compile the example into:
define i32 @f(%struct.p* nocapture byval align 8 %q) nounwind ssp {
entry:
%call = call i32 @g(%struct.p* byval align 8 %q) nounwind
ret i32 %call
}
in both x86-64 and x86-32 mode. We still don't get a tailcall though,
because tailcalls apparently can't handle byval.
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