with multiple return values it inserts a PHI to merge them all together.
However, if the return values are all the same, it ends up with a pointless
PHI and this pointless PHI happens to really block SRoA from happening in
at least a silly C++ example written by Doug, but probably others. This
fixes rdar://7339069.
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being destroyed. This allows users to run global optimizations like globaldce
even after some functions have been jitted.
This patch also removes the Function* parameter to
JITEventListener::NotifyFreeingMachineCode() since it can cause that to be
called when the Function is partially destroyed. This change will be even more
helpful later when I think we'll want to allow machine code to actually outlive
its Function.
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Remove LowerAllocations pass.
Update some more passes to treate free calls just like they were treating FreeInst.
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the loop exiting block dominates the latch block; if ScalarEvolution
can prove that the trip-count is finite, that's sufficient.
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GEPs (more than one non-zero index) into simple GEPs (at most one
non-zero index). In some simple experiments using this it's not
uncommon to see 3% overall code size wins, because it exposes
redundancies that can be eliminated, however it's tricky to use
because instcombine aggressively undoes the work that this pass does.
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machineinstr whether the aliased register is dead, rather than the original
register is dead. This allows it to get the correct answer when examining
an instruction like this:
CALLpcrel32 <ga:foo>, %AL<imp-def>, %EAX<imp-def,dead>
where EAX is dead but a subregister of it is still live. This fixes PR5294.
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strides for now, because it doesn't handle them correctly. This fixes a
miscompile of SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/ray.
This problem was usually hidden because indvars transforms such induction
variables into negations of canonical induction variables.
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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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or global after a function with conflicting names. Update some testcases
that were accidentally depending on this behavior.
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