A special case list can now specify categories for specific globals,
which can be used to instruct an instrumentation pass to treat certain
functions or global variables in a specific way, such as by omitting
certain aspects of instrumentation while keeping others, or informing
the instrumentation pass that a specific uninstrumentable function
has certain semantics, thus allowing the pass to instrument callers
according to those semantics.
For example, AddressSanitizer now uses the "init" category instead of
global-init prefixes for globals whose initializers should not be
instrumented, but which in all other respects should be instrumented.
The motivating use case is DataFlowSanitizer, which will have a
number of different categories for uninstrumentable functions, such
as "functional" which specifies that a function has pure functional
semantics, or "discard" which indicates that a function's return
value should not be labelled.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1092
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- Build debug metadata for 'bare' Modules using DIBuilder
- DebugIR can be constructed to generate an IR file (to be seen by a debugger)
or not in cases where the user already has an IR file on disk.
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CGSCC pass manager. This should insulate the inlining decisions from the
vectorization decisions, however it may have both compile time and code
size problems so it is just an experimental option right now.
Adding this based on a discussion with Arnold and it seems at least
worth having this flag for us to both run some experiments to see if
this strategy is workable. It may solve some of the regressions seen
with the loop vectorizer.
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This commit completely removes what is left of the simplify-libcalls
pass. All of the functionality has now been migrated to the instcombine
and functionattrs passes. The following C API functions are now NOPs:
1. LLVMAddSimplifyLibCallsPass
2. LLVMPassManagerBuilderSetDisableSimplifyLibCalls
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Extend LinkModules to pass a ValueMaterializer to RemapInstruction and friends to lazily create Functions for lazily linked globals. This is a big win when linking small modules with large (mostly unused) library modules.
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- move AsmWriter.h from public headers into lib
- marked all AssemblyWriter functions as non-virtual; no need to override them
- DebugIR now "plugs into" AssemblyWriter with an AssemblyAnnotationWriter helper
- exposed flags to control hiding of a) debug metadata b) debug intrinsic calls
C/R: Paul Redmond
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Other passes, PPC counter-loop formation for example, also need to add loop
preheaders outside of the regular loop simplification pass. This makes
InsertPreheaderForLoop a global function so that it can be used by other
passes.
No functionality change intended.
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- requires existing debug information to be present
- fixes up file name and line number information in metadata
- emits a "<orig_filename>-debug.ll" succinct IR file (without !dbg metadata
or debug intrinsics) that can be read by a debugger
- initialize pass in opt tool to enable the "-debug-ir" flag
- lit tests to follow
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Since we can't guarantee that the original dbg.declare instrinsic
is removed by LowerDbgDeclare(), we need to make sure that we are
not inserting the same dbg.value intrinsic over and over.
This removes tons of redundant DIEs when compiling optimized code.
rdar://problem/13056109
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This commit adds the infrastructure for performing bottom-up SLP vectorization (and other optimizations) on parallel computations.
The infrastructure has three potential users:
1. The loop vectorizer needs to be able to vectorize AOS data structures such as (sum += A[i] + A[i+1]).
2. The BB-vectorizer needs this infrastructure for bottom-up SLP vectorization, because bottom-up vectorization is faster to compute.
3. A loop-roller needs to be able to analyze consecutive chains and roll them into a loop, in order to reduce code size. A loop roller does not need to create vector instructions, and this infrastructure separates the chain analysis from the vectorization.
This patch also includes a simple (100 LOC) bottom up SLP vectorizer that uses the infrastructure, and can vectorize this code:
void SAXPY(int *x, int *y, int a, int i) {
x[i] = a * x[i] + y[i];
x[i+1] = a * x[i+1] + y[i+1];
x[i+2] = a * x[i+2] + y[i+2];
x[i+3] = a * x[i+3] + y[i+3];
}
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constructs default arguments. It can now take default arguments from
cl::opt'ions. Add a new -default-gcov-version=... option, and actually test it!
Sink the reverse-order of the version into GCOVProfiling, hiding it from our
users.
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into the actual gcov file.
Instead of using the bottom 4 bytes as the function identifier, use a counter.
This makes the identifier numbers stable across multiple runs.
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passing a null pointer to the function name in to GCDAProfiling, and add another
switch onto GCOVProfiling.
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enhancement done the trivial way; by extending inputs and truncating outputs
which is addequate for targets with little or no support for integer arithmetic
on integer types less than 32 bits.
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For some basic blocks, it is possible to generate many candidate pairs for
relatively few pairable instructions. When many (tens of thousands) of these pairs
are generated for a single instruction group, the time taken to generate and
rank the different vectorization plans can become quite large. As a result, we now
cap the number of candidate pairs within each instruction group. This is done by
closing out the group once the threshold is reached (set now at 3000 pairs).
Although this will limit the overall compile-time impact, this may not be the best
way to achieve this result. It might be better, for example, to prune excessive
candidate pairs after the fact the prevent the generation of short, but highly-connected
groups. We can experiment with this in the future.
This change reduces the overall compile-time slowdown of the csa.ll test case in
PR15222 to ~5x. If 5x is still considered too large, a lower limit can be
used as the default.
This represents a functionality change, but only for very large inputs
(thus, there is no regression test).
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TargetTransformInfo rather than TargetLowering, removing one of the
primary instances of the layering violation of Transforms depending
directly on Target.
This is a really big deal because LSR used to be a "special" pass that
could only be tested fully using llc and by looking at the full output
of it. It also couldn't run with any other loop passes because it had to
be created by the backend. No longer is this true. LSR is now just
a normal pass and we should probably lift the creation of LSR out of
lib/CodeGen/Passes.cpp and into the PassManagerBuilder. =] I've not done
this, or updated all of the tests to use opt and a triple, because
I suspect someone more familiar with LSR would do a better job. This
change should be essentially without functional impact for normal
compilations, and only change behvaior of targetless compilations.
The conversion required changing all of the LSR code to refer to the TTI
interfaces, which fortunately are very similar to TargetLowering's
interfaces. However, it also allowed us to *always* expect to have some
implementation around. I've pushed that simplification through the pass,
and leveraged it to simplify code somewhat. It required some test
updates for one of two things: either we used to skip some checks
altogether but now we get the default "no" answer for them, or we used
to have no information about the target and now we do have some.
I've also started the process of removing AddrMode, as the TTI interface
doesn't use it any longer. In some cases this simplifies code, and in
others it adds some complexity, but I think it's not a bad tradeoff even
there. Subsequent patches will try to clean this up even further and use
other (more appropriate) abstractions.
Yet again, almost all of the formatting changes brought to you by
clang-format. =]
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through as a reference rather than a pointer. There is always *some*
implementation of this available, so this simplifies code by not having
to test for whether it is available or not.
Further, it turns out there were piles of places where SimplifyCFG was
recursing and not passing down either TD or TTI. These are fixed to be
more pedantically consistent even though I don't have any particular
cases where it would matter.
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next to its only user. This helper relies on TargetLowering information
that shouldn't be generally used throughout the Transfoms library, and
so it made little sense as a generic utility.
This also consolidates the file where we need to remove the remaining
uses of TargetLowering in favor of the IR-layer abstract interface in
TargetTransformInfo.
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into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the
directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point
of file layout clutter in LLVM.
There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle
them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each
layer easier.
The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic
tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today.
I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my
tests think, but I may have missed something).
I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be
committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily.
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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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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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AKA: Recompile *ALL* the source code!
This one went much better. No manual edits here. I spot-checked for
silliness and grep-checked for really broken edits and everything seemed
good. It all still compiles. Yell if you see something that looks goofy.
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Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.
Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]
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