Objective-C metadata types which should be marked as "weak", but which the
linker will remove upon final linkage. However, this linkage isn't specific to
Objective-C.
For example, the "objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc" symbol is defined like this:
.globl l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc
.weak_definition l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc
.section __DATA, __objc_msgrefs, coalesced
.align 3
l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc:
.quad _objc_msgSend_fixup
.quad L_OBJC_METH_VAR_NAME_1
This is different from the "linker_private" linkage type, because it can't have
the metadata defined with ".weak_definition".
Currently only supported on Darwin platforms.
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when the condition is constant. This optimization shouldn't be
necessary, because codegen shouldn't be able to find dead control
paths that the IR-level optimizer can't find. And it's undesirable,
because it encourages bugpoint to leave "br i1 false" branches
in its output. And it wasn't updating the CFG.
I updated all the tests I could, but some tests are too reduced
and I wasn't able to meaningfully preserve them.
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otherwise labels get incorrectly merged. We handled this by emitting a
".byte 0", but this isn't correct on thumb/arm targets where the text segment
needs to be a multiple of 2/4 bytes. Handle this by emitting a noop. This
is more gross than it should be because arm/ppc are not fully mc'ized yet.
This fixes rdar://7908505
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in other types. fix this by only bumping zero-byte globals
up to a single byte if the *entire global* is zero size,
fixing PR6340.
This also fixes empty arrays etc to be handled correctly,
and only does this on subsection-via-symbols targets (aka
darwin) which is the only place where this matters.
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label instead of trying to form one based on the BB name (which
causes collisions if the name is empty). This fixes PR6608
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Make it so. (This patch is in LowerCall_Darwin, which seems
to be used by SVR4 code as well; since that doesn't belong here,
I haven't worried about this case.)
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The PowerPC floating point registers can represent both f32 and f64 via the
two register classes F4RC and F8RC. F8RC is considered a subclass of F4RC to
allow cross-class coalescing. This coalescing only affects whether registers
are spilled as f32 or f64.
Spill slots must be accessed with load/store instructions corresponding to the
class of the spilled register. PPCInstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl was looking
at the instruction opcode which is wrong.
X86 has similar floating point register classes, but doesn't try to fold
memory operands, so there is no problem there.
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to adding them in a determinstic order (bottom up from
the root) based on the structure of the graph itself.
This updates tests for some random changes, interesting
bits: CodeGen/Blackfin/promote-logic.ll no longer crashes.
I have no idea why, but that's good right?
CodeGen/X86/2009-07-16-LoadFoldingBug.ll also fails, but
now compiles to have one fewer constant pool entry, making
the expected load that was being folded disappear. Since it
is an unreduced mass of gnast, I just removed it.
This fixes PR6370
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induction variable value and a loop-variant value, don't force the
insert position to be at the post-increment position, because it may
not be dominated by the loop-variant value. This fixes a
use-before-def problem noticed on PPC.
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stack frame, the prolog/epilog code was using the same
register for the copy of CR and the address of the save slot. Oops.
This is fixed here for Darwin, sort of, by reserving R2 for this case.
A better way would be to do the store before the decrement of SP,
which is safe on Darwin due to the red zone.
SVR4 probably has the same problem, but I don't know how to fix it;
there is no red zone and R2 is already used for something else.
I'm going to leave it to someone interested in that target.
Better still would be to rewrite the CR-saving code completely;
spilling each CR subregister individually is horrible code.
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following it. However, the EmitGlobalConstant method wasn't emitting a body for
the constant. The assembler doesn't like that. Before, we were generating this:
.zerofill __DATA, __common, __cmd, 1, 3
This fix puts us back to that semantic.
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as output. Needed for (functional) correctness in inline asm,
and should be generally beneficial. 7361612.
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runOnMachineFunction, and switch PPC to use EmitFunctionBody.
The two ppc asmprinters now don't heave to define
runOnMachineFunction.
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doing global variable classification anymore) and hookized, sink almost
all target targets global variable emission code into AsmPrinter and out
of each target.
Some notes:
1. PIC16 does completely custom and crazy stuff, so it is not changed.
2. XCore has some custom handling for extra directives. I'll look at it next.
3. This switches linux/ppc to use .globl instead of .global. If .globl is
actually wrong, let me know and I'll fix it.
4. This makes linux/ppc get a lot of random cases right which were obviously
wrong before, it is probably now a bit healthier.
5. Blackfin will probably start getting .comm and other things that it didn't
before. If this is undesirable, it should explicitly opt out of these
things by clearing the relevant fields of MCAsmInfo.
This leads to a nice diffstat:
14 files changed, 127 insertions(+), 830 deletions(-)
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different BlockAddress labels, but nothing semantically important.
Add a FIXME that BlockAddress codegen is broken if the LLVM BB has
an empty name (e.g. strip was run).
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in local register allocator. If a reg-reg copy has a phys reg
input and a virt reg output, and this is the last use of the phys
reg, assign the phys reg to the virt reg. If a reg-reg copy has
a phys reg output and we need to reload its spilled input, reload
it directly into the phys reg than passing it through another reg.
Following 76208, there is sometimes no dependency between the def of
a phys reg and its use; this creates a window where that phys reg
can be used for spilling (this is true in linear scan also). This
is bad and needs to be fixed a better way, although 76208 works too
well in practice to be reverted. However, there should normally be
no spilling within inline asm blocks. The patch here goes a long way
towards making this actually be true.
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This violates the ABI (that area is "reserved"), and
while it is safe if all code is generated with current
compilers, there is some very old code around that uses
that slot for something else, and breaks if it is stored
into. Adjust testcases looking for current behavior.
I've verified that the stack frame size is right in all
testcases, whether it changed or not. 7311323.
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