The PowerPC 128-bit long double data type (ppcf128 in LLVM) is in fact a
pair of two doubles, where one is considered the "high" or
more-significant part, and the other is considered the "low" or
less-significant part. When a ppcf128 value is stored in memory or a
register pair, the high part always comes first, i.e. at the lower
memory address or in the lower-numbered register, and the low part
always comes second. This is true both on big-endian and little-endian
PowerPC systems. (Similar to how with a complex number, the real part
always comes first and the imaginary part second, no matter the byte
order of the system.)
This was implemented incorrectly for little-endian systems in LLVM.
This commit fixes three related issues:
- When printing an immediate ppcf128 constant to assembler output
in emitGlobalConstantFP, emit the high part first on both big-
and little-endian systems.
- When lowering a ppcf128 type to a pair of f64 types in SelectionDAG
(which is used e.g. when generating code to load an argument into a
register pair), use correct low/high part ordering on little-endian
systems.
- In a related issue, because lowering ppcf128 into a pair of f64 must
operate differently from lowering an int128 into a pair of i64,
bitcasts between ppcf128 and int128 must not be optimized away by the
DAG combiner on little-endian systems, but must effect a word-swap.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
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With this change all values passed through blacklisted functions
become fully initialized. Previous behavior was to initialize all
loads in blacklisted functions, but apply normal shadow propagation
logic for all other operation.
This makes blacklist applicable in a wider range of situations.
It also makes code for blacklisted functions a lot shorter, which
works as yet another workaround for PR17409.
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With this change all values passed through blacklisted functions
become fully initialized. Previous behavior was to initialize all
loads in blacklisted functions, but apply normal shadow propagation
logic for all other operation.
This makes blacklist applicable in a wider range of situations.
It also makes code for blacklisted functions a lot shorter, which
works as yet another workaround for PR17409.
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This operation was classified as a binary operation in the widening
logic for some reason (clearly, untested). It is in fact a unary
operation. Add a RUN line to a test to exercise this for x86.
Note that again the vector widening strategy doesn't regress anything
and in one case removes a totally unecessary instruction that we
couldn't avoid when promoting the element type.
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mode.
This also runs the test in that mode which would reproduce the crash.
What I love is that *every single FIXME* in the test is addressed by
switching to widening.
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Finkel, Eric Christopher, and a bunch of other people I'm probably
forgetting (sorry), add an option to the x86 backend to widen vectors
during type legalization rather than promote them.
This still would promote vNi1 vectors to get the masks right, but would
widen other vectors. A lot of experiments are piling up right now
showing that widening should probably be the default legalization
strategy outside of vNi1 cases, but it is very hard to test the
rammifications of that and fix bugs in widening-based legalization
without an option that enables it. I'll be checking in tests shortly
that use this option to exercise cases where widening doesn't work well
and hopefully we'll be able to switch fully to this soon.
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Now that we have a lib/MC/MCAnalysis, the dependency was there just because
of two helper classes. Move the two over to MC.
This will allow IRObjectFile to parse inline assembly.
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vector type legalization strategies in a more fine grained manner, and
change the legalization of several v1iN types and v1f32 to be widening
rather than scalarization on AArch64.
This fixes an assertion failure caused by scalarizing nodes like "v1i32
trunc v1i64". As v1i64 is legal it will fail to scalarize v1i32.
This also provides a foundation for other targets to have more granular
control over how vector types are legalized.
Patch by Hao Liu, reviewed by Tim Northover. I'm committing it to allow
some work to start taking place on top of this patch as it adds some
really important hooks to the backend that I'd like to immediately start
using. =]
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4322
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This reverts commit r212205.
Reverting this again, still seeing crashes when building compiler-rt...
Sorry for the continued noise, not sure why I'm failing to reproduce
this locally.
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This new multiclass, avx512_perm_table_3src derives from the current one and
provides the Pat<>. The next patch will add another Pat<> that uses the
writemask.
Note that I dropped the type annotation from the intrinsic call, i.e.: (v16f32
VR512:$src1) -> R512:$src1. I think that this should be fine (at least many
intrinsic calls don't provide them) and it greatly reduces the number of
template arguments.
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This includes assembler and codegen support (see the new tests in
avx512-encodings.s and avx512-shuffle.ll).
<rdar://problem/17492620>
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SGPRs are written by instructions that sometimes will ignore control flow,
which means if you have code like:
if (VGPR0) {
SGPR0 = S_MOV_B32 0
} else {
SGPR0 = S_MOV_B32 1
}
The value of SGPR0 will 1 no matter what the condition is.
In order to deal with this situation correctly, we need to view the
program as if it were a single basic block when we calculate the
live ranges for the SGPRs. They way we actually update the live
range is by iterating over all of the segments in each LiveRange
object and setting the end of each segment equal to the start of
the next segment. So a live range like:
[3888r,9312r:0)[10032B,10384B:0) 0@3888r
will become:
[3888r,10032B:0)[10032B,10384B:0) 0@3888r
This change will allow us to use SALU instructions within branches.
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The new library is 150KB on a Release+Asserts build, so it is quiet a bit of
code that regular users of MC don't need to link with now.
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Originally committed in r211723, reverted in r211724 due to failure
cases found and fixed (ArgumentPromotion: r211872, Inlining: r212065),
committed again in r212085 and reverted again in r212089 after fixing
some other cases, such as debug info subprogram lists not keeping track
of the function they represent (r212128) and then short-circuiting
things like LiveDebugVariables that build LexicalScopes for functions
that might not have full debug info.
And again, I believe the invariant actually holds for some reasonable
amount of code (but I'll keep an eye on the buildbots and see what
happens... ).
Original commit message:
PR20038: DebugInfo: Inlined call sites where the caller has debug info
but the call itself has no debug location.
This situation does bad things when inlined, so I've fixed Clang not to
produce inlinable call sites without locations when the caller has debug
info (in the one case where I could find that this occurred). This
updates the PR20038 test case to be what clang now produces, and readds
the assertion that had to be removed due to this bug.
I've also beefed up the debug info verifier to help diagnose these
issues in the future, and I hope to add checks to the inliner to just
assert-fail if it encounters this situation. If, in the future, we
decide we have to cope with this situation, the right thing to do is
probably to just remove all the DebugLocs from the inlined instructions.
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heuristic.
By default, no functionality change.
This is a follow-up of r212099.
This hook provides a finer grain to control the optimization.
<rdar://problem/17444599>
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If a function isn't actually in a CU's subprogram list in the debug info
metadata, ignore all the DebugLocs and don't try to build scopes, track
variables, etc.
While this is possibly a minor optimization, it's also a correctness fix
for an incoming patch that will add assertions to LexicalScopes and the
debug info verifier to ensure that all scope chains lead to debug info
for the current function.
Fix up a few test cases that had broken/incomplete debug info that could
violate this constraint.
Add a test case where this occurs by design (inlining a
debug-info-having function in an attribute nodebug function - we want
this to work because /if/ the nodebug function is then inlined into a
debug-info-having function, it should be fine (and will work fine - we
just stitch the scopes up as usual), but should the inlining not happen
we need to not assert fail either).
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These don't need to be mutable and callers being added soon in CodeGen
won't have access to non-const Module&.
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This reverts commits r212189 and r212190.
While this pass was accidentally disabled (until r212073), r205437
slipped in a use of `auto` that should have been `auto&`.
This fixes PR20188.
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Temporarily disable AArch64AddressTypePromotion, which was effectively
re-enabled in r212073 and r212075, while I look into PR20188.
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See https://code.google.com/p/address-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=299 for the
original feature request.
Introduce llvm.asan.globals metadata, which Clang (or any other frontend)
may use to report extra information about global variables to ASan
instrumentation pass in the backend. This metadata replaces
llvm.asan.dynamically_initialized_globals that was used to detect init-order
bugs. llvm.asan.globals contains the following data for each global:
1) source location (file/line/column info);
2) whether it is dynamically initialized;
3) whether it is blacklisted (shouldn't be instrumented).
Source location data is then emitted in the binary and can be picked up
by ASan runtime in case it needs to print error report involving some global.
For example:
0x... is located 4 bytes to the right of global variable 'C::array' defined in '/path/to/file:17:8' (0x...) of size 40
These source locations are printed even if the binary doesn't have any
debug info.
This is an ABI-breaking change. ASan initialization is renamed to
__asan_init_v4(). Pre-built libraries compiled with older Clang will not work
with the fresh runtime.
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This reverts commit r212109, which reverted r212088.
However, disable the assert as it's not necessary for correctness. There are
several corner cases that the assert needed to handle better for in-order
scheduling, but none of them are incorrect scheduler behavior. The assert is
mainly there to collect good unit tests like this and ensure that the
target-independent scheduler is working as expected with the various machine
models.
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