make it optional doesn't work out. If you don't want to specify this, don't
specify a TD string at all.
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datatypes on a given CPU. This is intended to allow instcombine and other
transformations to avoid converting big sequences of operations to an
inconvenient width, and will help clean up after SRoA. See also "Adding
legal integer sizes to TargetData" on Feb 1, 2009 on llvmdev, and PR3451.
Comments welcome.
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unfolding loads for hoisting. getOpcodeAfterMemoryUnfold returns the
opcode of the original operation without the load, not the load
itself, MachineLICM needs to know the operand index in order to get
the correct register class. Extend getOpcodeAfterMemoryUnfold to
return this information.
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bunch of associated comments, because it doesn't have anything to do
with DAGs or scheduling. This is another step in decoupling MachineInstr
emitting from scheduling.
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bootstrapping. It's not safe to leave identity subreg_to_reg and insert_subreg
around.
- Relax register scavenging to allow use of partially "not-live" registers. It's
common for targets to operate on registers where the top bits are undef. e.g.
s0 =
d0 = insert_subreg d0<undef>, s0, 1
...
= d0
When the insert_subreg is eliminated by the coalescer, the scavenger used to
complain. The previous fix was to keep to insert_subreg around. But that's
brittle and it's overly conservative when we want to use the scavenger to
allocate registers. It's actually legal and desirable for other instructions
to use the "undef" part of d0. e.g.
s0 =
d0 = insert_subreg d0<undef>, s0, 1
...
s1 =
= s1
= d0
We probably need add a "partial-undef" marker on machine operand so the
machine verifier would not complain.
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appropriate restore location for the spill as well as perform the actual
save and restore.
The Thumb1 target uses this to make sure R12 is not clobbered while a spilled
scavenger register is live there.
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bootstrap of FSF-style PPC, so there is some
reason to believe the original bug (which was
never analyzed) has been fixed, probably by
82266.
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is trivially rematerializable and integrate it into
TargetInstrInfo::isTriviallyReMaterializable. This way, all places that
need to know whether an instruction is rematerializable will get the
same answer.
This enables the useful parts of the aggressive-remat option by
default -- using AliasAnalysis to determine whether a memory location
is invariant, and removes the questionable parts -- rematting operations
with virtual register inputs that may not be live everywhere.
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implementations with a new MachineInstr::isInvariantLoad, which uses
MachineMemOperands and is target-independent. This brings MachineLICM
and other functionality to targets which previously lacked an
isInvariantLoad implementation.
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a virtual register to eliminate a frame index, it can return that register
and the constant stored there to PEI to track. When scavenging to allocate
for those registers, PEI then tracks the last-used register and value, and
if it is still available and matches the value for the next index, reuses
the existing value rather and removes the re-materialization instructions.
Fancier tracking and adjustment of scavenger allocations to keep more
values live for longer is possible, but not yet implemented and would likely
be better done via a different, less special-purpose, approach to the
problem.
eliminateFrameIndex() is modified so the target implementations can return
the registers they wish to be tracked for reuse.
ARM Thumb1 implements and utilizes the new mechanism. All other targets are
simply modified to adjust for the changed eliminateFrameIndex() prototype.
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spill slot. When frame references are via the frame pointer, they will be
negative, but Thumb1 load/store instructions only allow positive immediate
offsets. Instead, Thumb1 will spill to R12.
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set, these flags indicate the instructions source / def operands have special
register allocation requirement that are not captured in their register classes.
Post-allocation passes (e.g. post-alloc scheduler) should not change their
allocations. e.g. ARM::LDRD require the two definitions to be allocated
even / odd register pair.
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Add a new TargetLoweringObjectFileMachO::getConstTextCoalSection method to
get access to that section.
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unused DECLARE instruction.
KILL is not yet used anywhere, it will replace TargetInstrInfo::IMPLICIT_DEF
in the places where IMPLICIT_DEF is just used to alter liveness of physical
registers.
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For the AAPCS ABI, SP must always be 4-byte aligned, and at any "public
interface" it must be 8-byte aligned. For the older ARM APCS ABI, the stack
alignment is just always 4 bytes. For X86, we currently align SP at
entry to a function (e.g., to 16 bytes for Darwin), but no stack alignment
is needed at other times, such as for a leaf function.
After discussing this with Dan, I decided to go with the approach of adding
a new "TransientStackAlignment" field to TargetFrameInfo. This value
specifies the stack alignment that must be maintained even in between calls.
It defaults to 1 except for ARM, where it is 4. (Some other targets may
also want to set this if they have similar stack requirements. It's not
currently required for PPC because it sets targetHandlesStackFrameRounding
and handles the alignment in target-specific code.) The existing StackAlignment
value specifies the alignment upon entry to a function, which is how we've
been using it anyway.
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feature, either build the JIT in debug mode to enable it by default or pass
-jit-emit-debug to lli.
Right now, the only debug information that this communicates to GDB is call
frame information, since it's already being generated to support exceptions in
the JIT. Eventually, when DWARF generation isn't tied so tightly to AsmPrinter,
it will be easy to push that information to GDB through this interface.
Here's a step-by-step breakdown of how the feature works:
- The JIT generates the machine code and DWARF call frame info
(.eh_frame/.debug_frame) for a function into memory.
- The JIT copies that info into an in-memory ELF file with a symbol for the
function.
- The JIT creates a code entry pointing to the ELF buffer and adds it to a
linked list hanging off of a global descriptor at a special symbol that GDB
knows about.
- The JIT calls a function marked noinline that GDB knows about and has put an
internal breakpoint in.
- GDB catches the breakpoint and reads the global descriptor to look for new
code.
- When sees there is new code, it reads the ELF from the inferior's memory and
adds it to itself as an object file.
- The JIT continues, and the next time we stop the program, we are able to
produce a proper backtrace.
Consider running the following program through the JIT:
#include <stdio.h>
void baz(short z) {
long w = z + 1;
printf("%d, %x\n", w, *((int*)NULL)); // SEGFAULT here
}
void bar(short y) {
int z = y + 1;
baz(z);
}
void foo(char x) {
short y = x + 1;
bar(y);
}
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
char x = 1;
foo(x);
}
Here is a backtrace before this patch:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
[Switching to Thread 0x2aaaabdfbd10 (LWP 25476)]
0x00002aaaabe7d1a8 in ?? ()
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00002aaaabe7d1a8 in ?? ()
#1 0x0000000000000003 in ?? ()
#2 0x0000000000000004 in ?? ()
#3 0x00032aaaabe7cfd0 in ?? ()
#4 0x00002aaaabe7d12c in ?? ()
#5 0x00022aaa00000003 in ?? ()
#6 0x00002aaaabe7d0aa in ?? ()
#7 0x01000002abe7cff0 in ?? ()
#8 0x00002aaaabe7d02c in ?? ()
#9 0x0100000000000001 in ?? ()
#10 0x00000000014388e0 in ?? ()
#11 0x00007fff00000001 in ?? ()
#12 0x0000000000b870a2 in llvm::JIT::runFunction (this=0x1405b70,
F=0x14024e0, ArgValues=@0x7fffffffe050)
at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/lib/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JIT.cpp:395
#13 0x0000000000baa4c5 in llvm::ExecutionEngine::runFunctionAsMain
(this=0x1405b70, Fn=0x14024e0, argv=@0x13f06f8, envp=0x7fffffffe3b0)
at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/lib/ExecutionEngine/ExecutionEngine.cpp:377
#14 0x00000000007ebd52 in main (argc=2, argv=0x7fffffffe398,
envp=0x7fffffffe3b0) at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/tools/lli/lli.cpp:208
And a backtrace after this patch:
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
0x00002aaaabe7d1a8 in baz ()
(gdb) bt
#0 0x00002aaaabe7d1a8 in baz ()
#1 0x00002aaaabe7d12c in bar ()
#2 0x00002aaaabe7d0aa in foo ()
#3 0x00002aaaabe7d02c in main ()
#4 0x0000000000b870a2 in llvm::JIT::runFunction (this=0x1405b70,
F=0x14024e0, ArgValues=...)
at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/lib/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JIT.cpp:395
#5 0x0000000000baa4c5 in llvm::ExecutionEngine::runFunctionAsMain
(this=0x1405b70, Fn=0x14024e0, argv=..., envp=0x7fffffffe3c0)
at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/lib/ExecutionEngine/ExecutionEngine.cpp:377
#6 0x00000000007ebd52 in main (argc=2, argv=0x7fffffffe3a8,
envp=0x7fffffffe3c0) at /home/rnk/llvm-gdb/tools/lli/lli.cpp:208
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@82418 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Eliminate the PersonalityPrefix/Suffix & NeedsIndirectEncoding
fields from MAI: they aren't part of the asm syntax, they are
related to the structure of the object file.
To replace their functionality, add a new
TLOF::getSymbolForDwarfGlobalReference method which asks targets
to decide how to reference a global from EH in a pc-relative way.
The default implementation just returns the symbol. The default
darwin implementation references the symbol through an indirect
$non_lazy_ptr stub. The bizarro x86-64 darwin specialization
handles the weird "foo@GOTPCREL+4" hack.
DwarfException.cpp now uses this to emit the reference to the
symbol in the right way, and this also eliminates another
horrible hack from DwarfException.cpp:
- if (strcmp(MAI->getPersonalitySuffix(), "+4@GOTPCREL"))
- O << "-" << MAI->getPCSymbol();
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full AsmPrinter, and change TargetRegistry to keep track
of registered MCInstPrinters.
llvm-mc is still linking in the entire
target foo to get the code emitter stuff, but this is an
important step in the right direction.
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that things like .word can be parsed as target specific. Moved parsing .word
out of AsmParser.cpp into X86AsmParser.cpp as it is 2 bytes on X86 and 4 bytes
for other targets that support the .word directive.
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all disassemblers.
Modified the MemoryObject to support 64-bit address
spaces, regardless of the LLVM process's address
width.
Modified the Target class to allow extraction of a
MCDisassembler.
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avoid reloads by reusing clobbered registers.
This was causing issues in 256.bzip2 when compiled with PIC for
a while (starting at r78217), though the problem has since been masked.
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encodings.
- Make some of the values emitted by the FDEs dependent upon the pointer
size. This is in line with how GCC does things. And it has the benefit of
working for Darwin in 64-bit mode now.
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U include/llvm/Target/TargetData.h
U lib/Target/TargetData.cpp
Temporarily revert 79555. It was causing hangs and test failures.
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support unaligned mem access only for certain types. (Should it be size
instead?)
ARM v7 supports unaligned access for i16 and i32, some v6 variants support it
as well.
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libcall. Take advantage of this in the ARM backend to rectify broken
choice of CC when hard float is in effect. PIC16 may want to see if
it could be of use in MakePIC16Libcall, which works unchanged.
Patch by Sandeep!
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TargetAsmInfo. This eliminates a dependency on TargetMachine.h from
TargetRegistry.h, which technically was a layering violation.
- Clients probably can only sensibly pass in the same TargetAsmInfo as the
TargetMachine has, but there are only limited clients of this API.
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x86_64-apple-darwin10.
--- Reverse-merging r78895 into '.':
U test/CodeGen/PowerPC/2008-12-12-EH.ll
U lib/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.cpp
--- Reverse-merging r78892 into '.':
U include/llvm/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.h
U lib/Target/X86/X86TargetAsmInfo.cpp
U lib/Target/X86/X86TargetAsmInfo.h
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetAsmInfo.h
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetMachine.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetAsmInfo.cpp
U lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetAsmInfo.cpp
U lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetAsmInfo.h
U lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetMachine.cpp
G lib/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.cpp
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syntactically as a string, very similiar to what Chris did with MachO.
The parsing support and validation is not introduced yet.
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int x __attribute__((section("_foo, _bar"))) = 4;
int y __attribute__((section("_foo, _bar, 4byte_literals"))) = 1;
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There have been a few times where I've wanted this but ended up leaving the
operand type unconstrained. It is easy to add this now and should help
catch errors in the future.
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pair instead of from a virtual method on TargetMachine. This cuts the final
ties of TargetAsmInfo to TargetMachine, meaning that MC can now use
TargetAsmInfo.
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- Used to mark fake instructions which don't correspond to an actual machine
instruction (or are duplicates of a real instruction). This is to be used for
"special cases" in the .td files, which should be ignored by things like the
assembler and disassembler. We still need a good solution to handle pervasive
duplication, like with the Int_ instructions.
- Set the bit on fake "mov 0" style instructions, which allows turning an
assembler matcher warning into a hard error.
- -2 FIXMEs.
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version. This allows TAI implementations to specify the directive to use
based on the mode being codegen'd for.
The real fix for this is to remove JumpTableDirective, but I don't feel
like diving into the jumptable snarl just now.
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and short. Well, it's kinda short. Definitely nasty and brutish.
The front-end generates the register/unregister calls into the SjLj runtime,
call-site indices and landing pad dispatch. The back end fills in the LSDA
with the call-site information provided by the front end. Catch blocks are
not yet implemented.
Built on Darwin and verified no llvm-core "make check" regressions.
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instead of syntactically as a string. This means that it keeps track of the
segment, section, flags, etc directly and asmprints them in the right format.
This also includes parsing and validation support for llvm-mc and
"attribute(section)", so we should now start getting errors about invalid
section attributes from the compiler instead of the assembler on darwin.
Still todo:
1) Uniquing of darwin mcsections
2) Move all the Darwin stuff out to MCSectionMachO.[cpp|h]
3) there are a few FIXMEs, for example what is the syntax to get the
S_GB_ZEROFILL segment type?
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2. Move section switch printing to MCSection virtual method which takes a
TAI. This eliminates textual formatting stuff from TLOF.
3. Eliminate SwitchToSectionDirective, getSectionFlagsAsString, and
TLOFELF::AtIsCommentChar.
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A TAI hook is appropriate in this case because this is just an
asm syntax issue, not a semantic difference. TLOF should model
the semantics of the section.
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driven by TAI to being static, driven by tblgen. This means that a
target doesn't get impacted by this stuff at all if it doesn't opt
into it.
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creation activity into the target-specific subclasses of TLOF.
Before this, globals with explicit sections could be created by
the base class.
1. make getOrCreateSection protected, add a new getExplicitSectionGlobal
pure virtual method to assign sections to globals with a specified
section.
2. eliminate getSpecialCasedSectionGlobals, which is now PIC specific.
3. eliminate the getKindForNamedSection virtual method, which is
now just a static method for ELF.
4. Add implementions of getExplicitSectionGlobal for ELF/PECOFF/Darwin/PIC16.
They are now all detangled and understandable, woo! :)
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a dirty hack and isn't need anymore since the last x86 code emitter patch)
- Add a target-dependent modifier to addend calculation
- Use R_X86_64_32S relocation for X86::reloc_absolute_word_sext
- Use getELFSectionFlags whenever possible
- fix getTextSection to use TLOF and emit the right text section
- Handle global emission for static ctors, dtors and Type::PointerTyID
- Some minor fixes
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Instead of awkwardly encoding calling-convention information with ISD::CALL,
ISD::FORMAL_ARGUMENTS, ISD::RET, and ISD::ARG_FLAGS nodes, TargetLowering
provides three virtual functions for targets to override:
LowerFormalArguments, LowerCall, and LowerRet, which replace the custom
lowering done on the special nodes. They provide the same information, but
in a more immediately usable format.
This also reworks much of the target-independent tail call logic. The
decision of whether or not to perform a tail call is now cleanly split
between target-independent portions, and the target dependent portion
in IsEligibleForTailCallOptimization.
This also synchronizes all in-tree targets, to help enable future
refactoring and feature work.
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the masm backend. If anyone cares about masm in the future,
we'll have semantic sections it can hang off of.
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This is not just a matter of passing in the target triple from the module;
currently backends are making decisions based on the build and host
architecture. The goal is to migrate to making these decisions based off of the
triple (in conjunction with the feature string). Thus most clients pass in the
target triple, or the host triple if that is empty.
This has one important change in the way behavior of the JIT and llc.
For the JIT, it was previously selecting the Target based on the host
(naturally), but it was setting the target machine features based on the triple
from the module. Now it is setting the target machine features based on the
triple of the host.
For LLC, -march was previously only used to select the target, the target
machine features were initialized from the module's triple (which may have been
empty). Now the target triple is taken from the module, or the host's triple is
used if that is empty. Then the triple is adjusted to match -march.
The take away is that -march for llc is now used in conjunction with the host
triple to initialize the subtarget. If users want more deterministic behavior
from llc, they should use -mtriple, or set the triple in the input module.
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the only real caller (GetFunctionSizeInBytes) uses it.
The custom ARM implementation of this is basically reimplementing
an assembler poorly for negligible gain. It should be removed
IMNSHO, but I'll leave that to ARMish folks to decide.
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getLSDASection() to be more specific. This makes it pretty obvious
that the ELF LSDA section is being specified wrong in PIC mode. We're
probably getting a lot of startup-time relocations to a readonly page,
which is expensive and bad.
Someone who cares about ELF C++ should investigate this.
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compute it based on what it knows. As part of this, rename getSectionForMergeableConstant
to getSectionForConstant because it works for non-mergable constants also.
The only functionality change from this is that Xcore will start dropping
its jump tables into readonly section instead of data section in -static mode.
This should be fine as the linker resolves the relocations. If this is a
problem, let me know and we'll come up with another solution.
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should have no state that is specific to particular globals in the
section. In this case, it means the removal of the "isWeak" and
"ExplicitSection" bits. MCSection uses the new form of SectionKind.
To handle isWeak, I introduced a new SectionInfo class, which is
SectionKind + isWeak, and it is used by the part of the code generator
that does classification of a specific global.
The ExplicitSection disappears. It is moved onto MCSection as a new
"IsDirective" bit. Since the Name of a section is either a section
or directive, it makes sense to keep this bit in MCSection. Ultimately
the creator of MCSection should canonicalize (e.g.) .text to whatever
the actual section is.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@77803 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
thing is #if0'd out anyway. Just simplify the code by reducing the interface.
Not deleting this is essential for Bill's continuing happiness.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@77736 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
indicate that it is a predicate, not an emitter. This eliminates TAI
dependencies on Mangler and GlobalValue.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@77726 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
and convert code to using it, instead of having lots of things
poke the isLookupPtrRegClass() method directly.
2. Make PointerLikeRegClass contain a 'kind' int, and store it in
the existing regclass field of TargetOperandInfo when the
isLookupPtrRegClass() predicate is set. Make getRegClass pass
this into TargetRegisterInfo::getPointerRegClass(), allowing
targets to have multiple ptr_rc things.
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it is highly specific to the object file that will be generated in the end,
this introduces a new TargetLoweringObjectFile interface that is implemented
for each of ELF/MachO/COFF/Alpha/PIC16 and XCore.
Though still is still a brutal and ugly refactoring, this is a major step
towards goodness.
This patch also:
1. fixes a bunch of dangling pointer problems in the PIC16 backend.
2. disables the TargetLowering copy ctor which PIC16 was accidentally using.
3. gets us closer to xcore having its own crazy target section flags and
pic16 not having to shadow sections with its own objects.
4. fixes wierdness where ELF targets would set CStringSection but not
CStringSection_. Factor the code better.
5. fixes some bugs in string lowering on ELF targets.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@77294 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
'unnamed' bss section, but some impls would want a named one. Since
they don't have consistent behavior, just make each target do their
own thing, instead of doing something "sortof common" then having
targets change immutable objects later.
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group instead of a bunch of random unrelated ideas. Provide predicates
to categorize a SectionKind into a group, and use them instead of
getKind() throughout the code.
This also renames a ton of SectionKinds to be more consistent and
evocative, and adds a huge number of comments on the enums so that
I will hopefully be able to remember how this stuff works long from
now.
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- This is a simplified mechanism which just looks up a target based on the
target triple, with a few additional flags.
- Remove getClosestStaticTargetForModule, the moral equivalent is now:
lookupTarget(Mod->getTargetTriple, true, false, ...);
- This no longer does the fuzzy matching with target data (based on endianness
and pointer width) that getClosestStaticTargetForModule was doing, but this
was deemed unnecessary.
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