intrinsic call. This prevents it from being reordered so that it appears
*before* the setjmp intrinsic (thus making it completely useless).
<rdar://problem/9409683>
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only check arguments with pointer types. Update the documentation
of IntrReadArgMem reflect this.
While here, add support for TBAA tags on intrinsic calls.
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It needed to be moved closer to the setjmp statement, because the code directly
after the setjmp needs to know about values that are on the stack. Also, the
'bitcast' of the function context was causing a dead load. This wouldn't be too
horrible, except that at -O0 it wasn't optimized out, and because it wasn't
using the correct base pointer (if there is a VLA), it would try to access a
value from a garbage address.
<rdar://problem/9130540>
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unbreaks test/Transforms/InstCombine/invariant.ll which was broken by r120382.
This is a fix-forward to do what I think Chris intended.
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setup they require. Use this for ARM/Darwin to rematerialize the base
pointer from the frame pointer when required. rdar://8564268
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Added support for address spaces and added a isVolatile field to memcpy, memmove, and memset,
e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
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Added support for address spaces and added a isVolatile field to memcpy, memmove, and memset,
e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
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e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
A update of langref will occur in a subsequent checkin.
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This allows code gen and the exception table writer to cooperate to make sure
landing pads are associated with the correct invoke locations.
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This patch also cleans up code that expects there to be a bitcast in the first argument and testcases that call llvm.dbg.declare.
It also strips old llvm.dbg.declare intrinsics that did not pass metadata as the first argument.
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This patch also cleans up code that expects there to be a bitcast in the first argument and testcases that call llvm.dbg.declare.
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The semantics of llvm.dbg.value are that starting from where it is executed, an offset into the specified user source variable is specified to get a new value.
An example:
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata !{ i32 7 }, i64 0, metadata !2)
Here the user source variable associated with metadata #2 gets the value "i32 7" at offset 0.
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so get rid of eh.selector.i64 and rename eh.selector.i32 to eh.selector.
Likewise for eh.typeid.for. This aligns us with gcc, which always uses a
32 bit value for the selector on all platforms. My understanding is that
the register allocator used to assert if the selector intrinsic size didn't
match the pointer size, and this was the reason for introducing the two
variants. However my testing shows that this is no longer the case (I
fixed some bugs in selector lowering yesterday, and some more today in the
fastisel path; these might have caused the original problems).
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This change speeds up llvm-gcc by more then 6% at "-O0 -g" (measured by compiling InstructionCombining.cpp!)
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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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implemented in codegen, have no frontend to generate them, and are
better implemented with pattern matching (like the ppc backend does
to generate rlwimi/rlwinm etc).
PR4543
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