The aim of this patch is to fix the following piece of code in the
platform-independent AsmParser:
void AsmParser::CheckForValidSection() {
if (!ParsingInlineAsm && !getStreamer().getCurrentSection()) {
TokError("expected section directive before assembly directive");
Out.SwitchSection(Ctx.getMachOSection(
"__TEXT", "__text",
MCSectionMachO::S_ATTR_PURE_INSTRUCTIONS,
0, SectionKind::getText()));
}
}
This was added for the "-n" option of llvm-mc.
The proposed fix adds another virtual method to MCStreamer, called
InitToTextSection. Conceptually, it's similar to the existing
InitSections which initializes all common sections and switches to
text. The new method is implemented by each platform streamer in a way
that it sees fit. So AsmParser can now do this:
void AsmParser::CheckForValidSection() {
if (!ParsingInlineAsm && !getStreamer().getCurrentSection()) {
TokError("expected section directive before assembly directive");
Out.InitToTextSection();
}
}
Which is much more reasonable.
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Since it's used by extensions. One further step to fully decoupling
GenericAsmParser from an intimate knowledge of the internals of AsmParser,
pointing it to the MCASmParser interface instead (like all other parser
extensions do).
Since this change moves the MacroArgument type to the interface header, it's
renamed to be a bit more descriptive in a general context.
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The methods are also exposed via the MCAsmParser interface, which allows more
than one client to control them. Previously, GenericAsmParser was playing with
a member var in AsmParser directly (by virtue of being its friend).
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The MCAsmParser interface defines ParseIdentifier is public. There's no reason
whatsoever for AsmParser (which implements the MCAsmParser interface) to hide
this method.
This is all part of a bigger scheme. Several asm parsing "extensions" use the
main parser properly through the MCAsmParser interface. However,
GenericAsmParser has much more exclusive access and uses implementation details
from the concrete implementation - AsmParser, in which it is also declared as
a friend. This makes for overly coupled code, and even makes it hard to split
GenericAsmParser into a separate file. There's no reason why GenericAsmParser
shouldn't be able to access AsmParser through an abstract interface, as long
as it's actually registered as an extension.
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GenericAsmParser extension, where a lot of directives are already being parsed.
The end goal is having just a single place (and a single lookup table) for
all directive parsing.
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This patch adjust the r171506 to make all DWARF enconding pc-relative
for PPC64. It also adds the R_PPC64_REL32 relocation handling in MCJIT
(since the eh_frame will not generate PIC-relative relocation) and also
adds the emission of stubs created by the TTypeEncoding.
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method because getContents().size() already covers it. So computeFragmentSize
can use the generic MCEncodedFragment interface when querying both Data and
Relaxable fragments for contents sizes.
No change in functionality
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This is necessary not only for representing empty ranges, but for handling
multibyte characters in the input. (If the end pointer in a range refers to
a multibyte character, should it point to the beginning or the end of the
character in a char array?) Some of the code in the asm parsers was already
assuming this anyway.
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This patch fixes the PPC eh_frame definitions for the personality and
frame unwinding for PIC objects. It makes PIC build correctly creates
relative relocations in the '.rela.eh_frame' segments and thus avoiding
a text relocation that generates a DT_TEXTREL segments in link phase.
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instructions in the assembly code variant if one exists.
The intended use for this is so tools like lldb and darwin's otool(1)
can be switched to print Intel-flavored disassembly.
I discussed extensively this API with Jim Grosbach and we feel
while it may not be fully general, in reality there is only one syntax
for each assembly with the exception of X86 which has exactly
two for historical reasons.
rdar://10989182
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It must be explicity set in MCPureStreamer because otherwise it will
inherit incorrectly from the parent.
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compilation directory.
This defaults to the current working directory, just as it always has,
but now an assembler can choose to override it with a custom directory.
I've taught llvm-mc about this option and added a test case.
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Mips16 is really a processor decoding mode (ala thumb 1) and in the same
program, mips16 and mips32 functions can exist and can call each other.
If a jal type instruction encounters an address with the lower bit set, then
the processor switches to mips16 mode (if it is not already in it). If the
lower bit is not set, then it switches to mips32 mode.
The linker knows which functions are mips16 and which are mips32.
When relocation is performed on code labels, this lower order bit is
set if the code label is a mips16 code label.
In general this works just fine, however when creating exception handling
tables and dwarf, there are cases where you don't want this lower order
bit added in.
This has been traditionally distinguished in gas assembly source by using a
different syntax for the label.
lab1: ; this will cause the lower order bit to be added
lab2=. ; this will not cause the lower order bit to be added
In some cases, it does not matter because in dwarf and debug tables
the difference of two labels is used and in that case the lower order
bits subtract each other out.
To fix this, I have added to mcstreamer the notion of a debuglabel.
The default is for label and debug label to be the same. So calling
EmitLabel and EmitDebugLabel produce the same result.
For various reasons, there is only one set of labels that needs to be
modified for the mips exceptions to work. These are the "$eh_func_beginXXX"
labels.
Mips overrides the debug label suffix from ":" to "=." .
This initial patch fixes exceptions. More changes most likely
will be needed to DwarfCFException to make all of this work
for actual debugging. These changes will be to emit debug labels in some
places where a simple label is emitted now.
Some historical discussion on this from gcc can be found at:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2008-08/msg00623.htmlhttp://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2008-11/msg01273.html
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for a wider range of GOT entries that can hold thread-relative offsets.
This matches the behavior of GCC, which was not documented in the PPC64 TLS
ABI. The ABI will be updated with the new code sequence.
Former sequence:
ld 9,x@got@tprel(2)
add 9,9,x@tls
New sequence:
addis 9,2,x@got@tprel@ha
ld 9,x@got@tprel@l(9)
add 9,9,x@tls
Note that a linker optimization exists to transform the new sequence into
the shorter sequence when appropriate, by replacing the addis with a nop
and modifying the base register and relocation type of the ld.
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should only occur on invalid input. Instruction matching errors aren't
unexpected, so we can't rely on the AsmParsers HadError variable directly.
rdar://12840278
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PowerPC target. This is the last of the four models, so we now have
full TLS support.
This is mostly a straightforward extension of the general dynamic model.
I had to use an additional Chain operand to tie ADDIS_DTPREL_HA to the
register copy following ADDI_TLSLD_L; otherwise everything above the
ADDIS_DTPREL_HA appeared dead and was removed.
As before, there are new test cases to test the assembly generation, and
the relocations output during integrated assembly. The expected code
gen sequence can be read in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/tls-ld.ll.
There are a couple of things I think can be done more efficiently in the
overall TLS code, so there will likely be a clean-up patch forthcoming;
but for now I want to be sure the functionality is in place.
Bill
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Add R_ARM_NONE and R_ARM_PREL31 relocation types
to MCExpr. Both of them will be used while
generating .ARM.extab and .ARM.exidx sections.
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Given a thread-local symbol x with global-dynamic access, the generated
code to obtain x's address is:
Instruction Relocation Symbol
addis ra,r2,x@got@tlsgd@ha R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_HA x
addi r3,ra,x@got@tlsgd@l R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_L x
bl __tls_get_addr(x@tlsgd) R_PPC64_TLSGD x
R_PPC64_REL24 __tls_get_addr
nop
<use address in r3>
The implementation borrows from the medium code model work for introducing
special forms of ADDIS and ADDI into the DAG representation. This is made
slightly more complicated by having to introduce a call to the external
function __tls_get_addr. Using the full call machinery is overkill and,
more importantly, makes it difficult to add a special relocation. So I've
introduced another opcode GET_TLS_ADDR to represent the function call, and
surrounded it with register copies to set up the parameter and return value.
Most of the code is pretty straightforward. I ran into one peculiarity
when I introduced a new PPC opcode BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD, which is just like
BL8_NOP_ELF except that it takes another parameter to represent the symbol
("x" above) that requires a relocation on the call. Something in the
TblGen machinery causes BL8_NOP_ELF and BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD to be treated
identically during the emit phase, so this second operand was never
visited to generate relocations. This is the reason for the slightly
messy workaround in PPCMCCodeEmitter.cpp:getDirectBrEncoding().
Two new tests are included to demonstrate correct external assembly and
correct generation of relocations using the integrated assembler.
Comments welcome!
Thanks,
Bill
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because that method is only getting called for MCInstFragment. These
fragments aren't even generated when RelaxAll is set, which is why the
flag reference here is superfluous. Removing it simplifies the code
with no harmful effects.
An assertion is added higher up to make sure this path is never
reached.
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InitSections is called before the MCContext is initialized it could cause
duplicate temporary symbols to be emitted later (after context initialization
resets the temporary label counter).
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the assembler. This is useful in order to know how the numbers add up,
since in particular the Align fragments account for a non-trivial
portion of the emitted fragments (especially on -O0 which sets
relax-all).
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It was a nasty oversight that we didn't include this when we added this
API in the first place. Blech.
rdar://12839439
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SmallString. This makes it possible to use the length-erased SmallVectorImpl
in the interface without imposing buffer size. Thus, the size of MCInstFragment
is back down since a preallocated 8-byte contents buffer is enough.
It would be generally a good idea to rid all the fragments of SmallString as
contents, because a vector just makes more sense.
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Before this patch, when you objdump an LLVM-compiled file, objdump tried to
decode data-in-code sections as if they were code. This patch adds the missing
Mapping Symbols, as defined by "ELF for the ARM Architecture" (ARM IHI 0044D).
Patch based on work by Greg Fitzgerald.
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original change description:
change MCContext to work on the doInitialization/doFinalization model
reviewed by Evan Cheng <evan.cheng@apple.com>
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This is more consistent with other vectors in this code. In addition, I ran some
tests compiling a large program and >96% of fragments have 4 or less fixups, so
SmallVector<4> is a good optimization.
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This is for the lldb team so most of but not all of the values are
to be printed as hex with this option. Some small values like the
scale in an X86 address were requested to printed in decimal
without the leading 0x.
There may be some tweaks need to places that may still be in
decimal that they want in hex. Specially for arm. I made my best
guess. Any tweaks from here should be simple.
I also did the best I know now with help from the C++ gurus
creating the cleanest formatImm() utility function and containing
the changes. But if someone has a better idea to make something
cleaner I'm all ears and game for changing the implementation.
rdar://8109283
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on 64-bit PowerPC ELF.
The patch includes code to handle external assembly and MC output with the
integrated assembler. It intentionally does not support the "old" JIT.
For the initial-exec TLS model, the ABI requires the following to calculate
the address of external thread-local variable x:
Code sequence Relocation Symbol
ld 9,x@got@tprel(2) R_PPC64_GOT_TPREL16_DS x
add 9,9,x@tls R_PPC64_TLS x
The register 9 is arbitrary here. The linker will replace x@got@tprel
with the offset relative to the thread pointer to the generated GOT
entry for symbol x. It will replace x@tls with the thread-pointer
register (13).
The two test cases verify correct assembly output and relocation output
as just described.
PowerPC-specific selection node variants are added for the two
instructions above: LD_GOT_TPREL and ADD_TLS. These are inserted
when an initial-exec global variable is encountered by
PPCTargetLowering::LowerGlobalTLSAddress(), and later lowered to
machine instructions LDgotTPREL and ADD8TLS. LDgotTPREL is a pseudo
that uses the same LDrs support added for medium code model's LDtocL,
with a different relocation type.
The rest of the processing is straightforward.
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missed in the first pass because the script didn't yet handle include
guards.
Note that the script is now able to handle all of these headers without
manual edits. =]
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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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- Each macro instantiation introduces a new buffer, and FindBufferForLoc() is
linear, so previously macro instantiation could be N^2 for some pathological
inputs.
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The default for 64-bit PowerPC is small code model, in which TOC entries
must be addressable using a 16-bit offset from the TOC pointer. Additionally,
only TOC entries are addressed via the TOC pointer.
With medium code model, TOC entries and data sections can all be addressed
via the TOC pointer using a 32-bit offset. Cooperation with the linker
allows 16-bit offsets to be used when these are sufficient, reducing the
number of extra instructions that need to be executed. Medium code model
also does not generate explicit TOC entries in ".section toc" for variables
that are wholly internal to the compilation unit.
Consider a load of an external 4-byte integer. With small code model, the
compiler generates:
ld 3, .LC1@toc(2)
lwz 4, 0(3)
.section .toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
.tc ei[TC],ei
With medium model, it instead generates:
addis 3, 2, .LC1@toc@ha
ld 3, .LC1@toc@l(3)
lwz 4, 0(3)
.section .toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
.tc ei[TC],ei
Here .LC1@toc@ha is a relocation requesting the upper 16 bits of the
32-bit offset of ei's TOC entry from the TOC base pointer. Similarly,
.LC1@toc@l is a relocation requesting the lower 16 bits. Note that if
the linker determines that ei's TOC entry is within a 16-bit offset of
the TOC base pointer, it will replace the "addis" with a "nop", and
replace the "ld" with the identical "ld" instruction from the small
code model example.
Consider next a load of a function-scope static integer. For small code
model, the compiler generates:
ld 3, .LC1@toc(2)
lwz 4, 0(3)
.section .toc,"aw",@progbits
.LC1:
.tc test_fn_static.si[TC],test_fn_static.si
.type test_fn_static.si,@object
.local test_fn_static.si
.comm test_fn_static.si,4,4
For medium code model, the compiler generates:
addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha
addi 3, 3, test_fn_static.si@toc@l
lwz 4, 0(3)
.type test_fn_static.si,@object
.local test_fn_static.si
.comm test_fn_static.si,4,4
Again, the linker may replace the "addis" with a "nop", calculating only
a 16-bit offset when this is sufficient.
Note that it would be more efficient for the compiler to generate:
addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha
lwz 4, test_fn_static.si@toc@l(3)
The current patch does not perform this optimization yet. This will be
addressed as a peephole optimization in a later patch.
For the moment, the default code model for 64-bit PowerPC will remain the
small code model. We plan to eventually change the default to medium code
model, which matches current upstream GCC behavior. Note that the different
code models are ABI-compatible, so code compiled with different models will
be linked and execute correctly.
I've tested the regression suite and the application/benchmark test suite in
two ways: Once with the patch as submitted here, and once with additional
logic to force medium code model as the default. The tests all compile
cleanly, with one exception. The mandel-2 application test fails due to an
unrelated ABI compatibility with passing complex numbers. It just so happens
that small code model was incredibly lucky, in that temporary values in
floating-point registers held the expected values needed by the external
library routine that was called incorrectly. My current thought is to correct
the ABI problems with _Complex before making medium code model the default,
to avoid introducing this "regression."
Here are a few comments on how the patch works, since the selection code
can be difficult to follow:
The existing logic for small code model defines three pseudo-instructions:
LDtoc for most uses, LDtocJTI for jump table addresses, and LDtocCPT for
constant pool addresses. These are expanded by SelectCodeCommon(). The
pseudo-instruction approach doesn't work for medium code model, because
we need to generate two instructions when we match the same pattern.
Instead, new logic in PPCDAGToDAGISel::Select() intercepts the TOC_ENTRY
node for medium code model, and generates an ADDIStocHA followed by either
a LDtocL or an ADDItocL. These new node types correspond naturally to
the sequences described above.
The addis/ld sequence is generated for the following cases:
* Jump table addresses
* Function addresses
* External global variables
* Tentative definitions of global variables (common linkage)
The addis/addi sequence is generated for the following cases:
* Constant pool entries
* File-scope static global variables
* Function-scope static variables
Expanding to the two-instruction sequences at select time exposes the
instructions to subsequent optimization, particularly scheduling.
The rest of the processing occurs at assembly time, in
PPCAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction. Each of the instructions is converted to
a "real" PowerPC instruction. When a TOC entry needs to be created, this
is done here in the same manner as for the existing LDtoc, LDtocJTI, and
LDtocCPT pseudo-instructions (I factored out a new routine to handle this).
I had originally thought that if a TOC entry was needed for LDtocL or
ADDItocL, it would already have been generated for the previous ADDIStocHA.
However, at higher optimization levels, the ADDIStocHA may appear in a
different block, which may be assembled textually following the block
containing the LDtocL or ADDItocL. So it is necessary to include the
possibility of creating a new TOC entry for those two instructions.
Note that for LDtocL, we generate a new form of LD called LDrs. This
allows specifying the @toc@l relocation for the offset field of the LD
instruction (i.e., the offset is replaced by a SymbolLo relocation).
When the peephole optimization described above is added, we will need
to do similar things for all immediate-form load and store operations.
The seven "mcm-n.ll" test cases are kept separate because otherwise the
intermingling of various TOC entries and so forth makes the tests fragile
and hard to understand.
The above assumes use of an external assembler. For use of the
integrated assembler, new relocations are added and used by
PPCELFObjectWriter. Testing is done with "mcm-obj.ll", which tests for
proper generation of the various relocations for the same sequences
tested with the external assembler.
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to support it. Original patch with the parsing and plumbing by the PaX team and
Roman Divacky. I added the bits in MCDwarf.cpp and the test.
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Necessary to give disassembler users (like darwin's otool) a possibility to
dlopen libLTO and still initialize the required LLVM bits. This used to go
through libMCDisassembler but that's a gross layering violation, the MC layer
can't pull in functions from the targets. Adding a function to libLTO is a bit
of a hack but not worse than exposing other disassembler bits from libLTO.
Fixes PR14362.
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This untangles the switch cases of the old Move and RelMove opcodes a bit
and makes it clear how to add new instructions.
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Give MCCFIInstruction a single, private constructor and add helper static
methods that create each type of cfi instruction. This is is preparation
for changing its representation. The representation with a pair
MachineLocations older than MC and has been abused quiet a bit to support
more cfi instructions.
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run through the 'C' preprocessor. That is pick up the file name
and line numbers from the cpp hash file line comments for the
dwarf file and line numbers tables.
rdar://9275556
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This patch adds initial PPC64 TOC MC object creation using the small mcmodel
(a single 64K TOC) adding the some TOC relocations (R_PPC64_TOC,
R_PPC64_TOC16, and R_PPC64_TOC16DS).
The addition of 'undefinedExplicitRelSym' hook on 'MCELFObjectTargetWriter'
is meant to avoid the creation of an unreferenced ".TOC." symbol (used in
the .odp creation) as well to set the R_PPC64_TOC relocation target as the
temporary ".TOC." symbol. On PPC64 ABI, the R_PPC64_TOC relocation should
not point to any symbol.
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see the offsetof operator. Previously, we were matching something like MOVrm
in the front-end and later matching MOVrr in the back-end. This change makes
things more consistent. It also fixes cases where we can't match against a
memory operand as the source (test cases coming).
Part of rdar://12470317
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and easier to read by adding a couple helper functions. Suggestion by
Chandler Carruth and seconded by Meador Inge!
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Per the October 12, 2012 Proposal for annotated disassembly output sent out by
Jim Grosbach this set of changes implements this for X86 and arm. The llvm-mc
tool now has a -mdis option to produced the marked up disassembly and a couple
of small example test cases have been added.
rdar://11764962
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a memory operand. Retain this information and then add the sizing directives
to the IR. This allows the backend to do proper instruction selection.
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*NamedDecl. In turn, build the expressions after we're finished parsing the
asm. This avoids a crasher if the lookup fails.
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layer. Add the ParseMSInlineAsm() function, which is the new interface to
clang. Also expose the new MCAsmParserSemaCallback interface, which is used
by the back-end to do name lookup in Sema. Finally, remove the now defunct
APIs introduced in r165946.
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inline assembly. For the time being, these will be called directly by clang.
However, in the near future I expect these to be sunk back into the MC layer
and more basic APIs (e.g., getClobbers(), getConstraints(), etc.) will be called
by clang.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165946 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This patch replaces the EmitRawText by a EmitTCEntry class (specialized for
each Streamer) in PowerPC64 TOC entry creation.
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the interface between the front-end and the MC layer when parsing inline
assembly. Unfortunately, this is too deep into the parsing stack. Specifically,
we're unable to handle target-independent assembly (i.e., assembly directives,
labels, etc.). Note the MatchAndEmitInstruction() isn't the correct
abstraction either. I'll be exposing target-independent hooks shortly, so this
is really just a cleanup.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@165858 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This adds 'elf' as a recognized target triple environment value and overrides the default generated object format on Windows platforms if that value is present. This patch also enables MCJIT tests on Windows using the new environment value.
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The target backend can support data-in-code load commands even when
the assembler doesn't, or vice-versa. Allow targets to opt-in for
direct-to-object.
PR13973.
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Reduces runtime of i386-large-relocations.s by 10x in Release builds, even more
in Debug+Asserts builds.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@164945 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
to improve compatibility with GNU as.
Based on a patch by PaX Team.
Fixed assertion failures on non-Darwin and added additional test cases.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@164248 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Now where we used to call ReInitMCSubtargetInfo, we actually recompute
the same information as InitMCSubtargetInfo instead of only setting
the feature bits.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@164105 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
* wrap code blocks in \code ... \endcode;
* refer to parameter names in paragraphs correctly (\arg is not what most
people want -- it starts a new paragraph);
* use \param instead of \arg to document parameters in order to be consistent
with the rest of the codebase.
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.set a, b - c + CONSTANT
d = b - c + CONSTANT
Both 'a' and 'd' should be marked as absolute symbols (N_ABS).
rdar://12219394
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Apparently, NumSubRegIndices was completely unused before. Adjust it by
one to include the null subreg index, just like getNumRegs() includes
the null register.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@163628 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
For some reason .lcomm uses byte alignment and .comm log2 alignment so we can't
use the same setting for both. Fix this by reintroducing the LCOMM enum.
I verified this against mingw's gcc.
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- Darwin lied about not supporting .lcomm and turned it into zerofill in the
asm parser. Push the zerofill-conversion down into macho-specific code.
- This makes the tri-state LCOMMType enum superfluous, there are no targets
without .lcomm.
- Do proper error reporting when trying to use .lcomm with alignment on a target
that doesn't support it.
- .comm and .lcomm alignment was parsed in bytes on COFF, should be power of 2.
- Fixes PR13755 (.lcomm crashes on ELF).
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within the codegen EK_GPRel64BlockAddress. This was not
supported for direct object output and resulted in an assertion.
This change adds support for EK_GPRel64BlockAddress for
direct object.
One fallout from this is to turn on rela relocations
for mips64 to match gas.
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consistent with the other "expected identifier" errors.
Extracted from the Andy/PaX patch. I added the test.
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There are situations where inline ASM may want to change the section -- for
instance, to create a variable in the .data section. However, it cannot do this
without (potentially) restoring to the wrong section. E.g.:
asm volatile (".section __DATA, __data\n\t"
".globl _fnord\n\t"
"_fnord: .quad 1f\n\t"
".text\n\t"
"1:" :::);
This may be wrong if this is inlined into a function that has a "section"
attribute. The user should use `.pushsection' and `.popsection' here instead.
The addition of `.previous' is added for completeness.
<rdar://problem/12048387>
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Empty macro arguments at the end of the list should be as-if not specified at
all, but those in the middle of the list need to be kept so as not to screw
up the positional numbering. E.g.:
.macro foo
foo_-bash___:
nop
.endm
foo 1, 2, 3, 4
foo 1, , 3, 4
Should create two labels, "foo_1_2_3_4" and "foo_1__3_4".
rdar://11948769
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subtarget CPU descriptions and support new features of
MachineScheduler.
MachineModel has three categories of data:
1) Basic properties for coarse grained instruction cost model.
2) Scheduler Read/Write resources for simple per-opcode and operand cost model (TBD).
3) Instruction itineraties for detailed per-cycle reservation tables.
These will all live side-by-side. Any subtarget can use any
combination of them. Instruction itineraries will not change in the
near term. In the long run, I expect them to only be relevant for
in-order VLIW machines that have complex contraints and require a
precise scheduling/bundling model. Once itineraries are only actively
used by VLIW-ish targets, they could be replaced by something more
appropriate for those targets.
This tablegen backend rewrite sets things up for introducing
MachineModel type #2: per opcode/operand cost model.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@159891 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
which many Mips 64 ABIs use than for O64 which many
if not all other target ABIs use.
Most architectures have the following 64 bit relocation record format:
typedef struct
{
Elf64_Addr r_offset; /* Address of reference */
Elf64_Xword r_info; /* Symbol index and type of relocation */
} Elf64_Rel;
typedef struct
{
Elf64_Addr r_offset;
Elf64_Xword r_info;
Elf64_Sxword r_addend;
} Elf64_Rela;
Whereas N64 has the following format:
typedef struct
{
Elf64_Addr r_offset;/* Address of reference */
Elf64_Word r_sym; /* Symbol index */
Elf64_Byte r_ssym; /* Special symbol */
Elf64_Byte r_type3; /* Relocation type */
Elf64_Byte r_type2; /* Relocation type */
Elf64_Byte r_type; /* Relocation type */
} Elf64_Rel;
typedef struct
{
Elf64_Addr r_offset;/* Address of reference */
Elf64_Word r_sym; /* Symbol index */
Elf64_Byte r_ssym; /* Special symbol */
Elf64_Byte r_type3; /* Relocation type */
Elf64_Byte r_type2; /* Relocation type */
Elf64_Byte r_type; /* Relocation type */
Elf64_Sxword r_addend;
} Elf64_Rela;
The structure is the same size, but the r_info data element
is now 5 separate elements. Besides the content aspects,
endian byte reordering will be different for the area with
each element being endianized separately.
I treat this as generic and continue to pass r_type as
an integer masking and unmasking the byte sized N64
values for N64 mode. I've implemented this and it causes no
affect on other current targets.
This passes make check.
Jack
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Patch extracted from a larger one by the PaX team. I added the testcases
and tightened error handling a bit.
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This allows a subtarget to explicitly specify the issue width and
other properties without providing pipeline stage details for every
instruction.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@157979 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Use a dedicated MachO load command to annotate data-in-code regions.
This is the same format the linker produces for final executable images,
allowing consistency of representation and use of introspection tools
for both object and executable files.
Data-in-code regions are annotated via ".data_region"/".end_data_region"
directive pairs, with an optional region type.
data_region_directive := ".data_region" { region_type }
region_type := "jt8" | "jt16" | "jt32" | "jta32"
end_data_region_directive := ".end_data_region"
The previous handling of ARM-style "$d.*" labels was broken and has
been removed. Specifically, it didn't handle ARM vs. Thumb mode when
marking the end of the section.
rdar://11459456
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Previously, an unsupported/unknown assembler directive issued a warning.
That's generally unsafe, and inconsistent with the behaviour of pretty
much every system assembler. Now that the MC assemblers are mature
enough to be the default on multiple targets, it's reasonable to
issue errors for these.
For target or platform directives that need to stay warnings, we
should add explicit handlers for them in, e.g., ELFAsmParser.cpp,
DarwinAsmParser.cpp, et. al., and issue the warning there.
rdar://9246275
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The caller is already responsible for eating any additional input on the
line. Putting an additional EatToEndOfStatement() in ParseStatement()
causes an entire extra statement to be consumed when treating warnings
as errors. For example, test/MC/macros.s will assert() because the
.endmacro directive is missed as a result.
rdar://11355843
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A trailing comma means no argument at all (i.e., as if the comma were not
present), not an empty argument to the invokee.
rdar://11252521
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by default.
This is a behaviour configurable in the MCAsmInfo. I've decided to turn
it on by default in (possibly optimistic) hopes that most assemblers are
reasonably sane. If this proves a problem, switching to default seems
reasonable.
I'm not sure if this is the opportune place to test, but it seemed good
to make sure it was tested somewhere.
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disassembler requires a MCSubtargetInfo and a
MCInstrInfo to exist in order to initialize the
instruction printer and disassembler; however,
although the printer and disassembler keep
references to these objects they do not own them.
Previously, the MCSubtargetInfo and MCInstrInfo
objects were just leaked.
I have extended LLVMDisasmContext to own these
objects and delete them when it is destroyed.
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This needs a test, but it will take some time to figure
out the best way to get an input that will produce > 2^16 relocs.
Patch by Graydon Hoare!
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debug info for assembly files. We were already doing the right thing when
producing debug info for C/C++.
ELF linkers don't know dwarf, so they depend on these relocations to produce
valid dwarf output.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@151655 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
We on the linker to resolve calls to the appropriate BL/BLX instruction
to make interworking function correctly. It uses the symbol in the
relocation to do that, so we need to be careful about being too clever.
To enable this for ARM mode, split the BL/BLX fixup kind off from the
unconditional-branch fixups.
rdar://10927209
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Add support for a missed case when the symbols in a difference
expression are in the same section but not the same fragment.
rdar://10924681
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construction. Simplify its interface, implementation, and users
accordingly as there is no longer an 'uninitialized' state to check for.
Also, fixes a bug lurking in the interface as there was one method that
didn't correctly check for initialization.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@151024 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Fix the type of eh_frame on Solaris so that Sun ld doesn't fail to combine them (thus making it impossible for the unwind library to find them and breaking exceptions).
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@150814 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This CL delays reading of function bodies from initial parse until
materialization, allowing overlap of compilation with bitcode download.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@149918 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
cache disassemblers according to the string value
of the target triple, not according to the enum
of the triple CPU. The reason for this is that
certain attributes of the instruction set are not
reflected in the enum, but only in the string.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@149773 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
needed to emit a 64-bit gp-relative relocation entry. Make changes necessary
for emitting jump tables which have entries with directive .gpdword. This patch
does not implement the parts needed for direct object emission or JIT.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@149668 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
symbol from an assignment. In this case the symbol did not have a fragment so
MCObjectWriter::IsSymbolRefDifferenceFullyResolved() should not have been
calling IsSymbolRefDifferenceFullyResolvedImpl() with a NULL fragment and should
just have returned false in that case.
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This enables the linker to match concrete relocation types (absolute or relative) with whatever library or C++ support code is being linked against.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@149057 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
When not using subsections via symbols, the assembler can resolve
symbol differences (including pcrel references) to non-local
labels at assembly time, not just those in the same atom.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@148865 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
If the two fragments are in the same Atom, then the difference
expression is resolvable at compile time. Previously we were checking
that they were in the same fragment, but that breaks down in the
presence of instruction relaxation which has multiple fragments in the
same atom.
rdar://10711829
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When the non-local symbol in the expression is in the same fragment
as the second symbol, the assembler can still evaluate the expression
without needing a relocation.
For example, on ARM:
_foo:
ldr lr, (_foo - 4)
rdar://10348687
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directives was in the wrong place and getting triggered incorectly with a
cpp .file directive. This change fixes that and adds a test case.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@147951 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
functional change in r147860 to use DW_TAG_label's instead TAG_subprogram's.
This only changes names and updates comments. No functional change.
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of several newly un-defaulted switches. This also helps optimizers
(including LLVM's) recognize that every case is covered, and we should
assume as much.
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assembly source when it generates the TAG_subprogram dwarf debug info for
the labels that have nothing between them as in this bit of assembly source:
% cat ZeroLength.s
_func1:
_func2:
nop
One solution would be to not emit the subsequent labels with the same address
and use the next label with a different address or the end of the section for
the AT_high_pc value of the TAG_subprogram.
Turns out in llvm-mc it is not possible in all cases to determine of two
symbols have the same value at the point we put out the TAG_subprogram dwarf
debug info.
So we will have llvm-mc instead of putting out TAG_subprogram's put out
DW_TAG_label's. And the DW_TAG_label does not have a AT_high_pc value which
avoids the problem.
This commit is only the functional change to make the diffs clear as to what is
really being changed. The next commit will be to clean up the names of such
things like MCGenDwarfSubprogramEntry to something like MCGenDwarfLabelEntry.
rdar://10666925
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file error checking. Use that to error on an unfinished cfi_startproc.
The error is not nice, but is already better than a segmentation fault.
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test cases where there were a lot of relocations applied relative to a large
rodata section. Gas would create a symbol for each of these whereas we would
be relative to the beginning of the rodata section. This change mimics what
gas does.
Patch by Jack Carter.
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subdirectories to traverse into.
- Originally I wanted to avoid this and just autoscan, but this has one key
flaw in that new subdirectories can not automatically trigger a rerun of the
llvm-build tool. This is particularly a pain when switching back and forth
between trees where one has added a subdirectory, as the dependencies will
tend to be wrong. This will also eliminates FIXME implicitly.
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generates the dwarf Compile Unit DIE and a dwarf subprogram DIE for each
non-temporary label.
The next part will be to get the clang driver to enable this when assembling
a .s file. rdar://9275556
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symbol difference. This matches gas behavior and fixes PR11513.
We still don't handle _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ in data sections.
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When the file isn't being built with subsections-via-symbols, symbol
differences involving non-local symbols can be resolved more aggressively.
Needed for gas compatibility.
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Whether a fixup needs relaxation for the associated instruction is a
target-specific function, as the FIXME indicated. Create a hook for that
and use it.
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as MC is the only assembler we support.
This splits MS/Windows and GNU/Windows ASM infos into two seperate classes.
While there is currently only one difference, full MS C++ ABI support will
require many more.
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and code model. This eliminates the need to pass OptLevel flag all over the
place and makes it possible for any codegen pass to use this information.
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This will break users of the LLVMCreateDisasm API (not that I know of any). They have to call the
LLVMInitializeAll* functions from llvm-c/Target.h themselves now. edis' C API in all its horribleness
should be unaffected.
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to fix the types section (all types, not just global types), and testcases.
The code to do the final emission is disabled by default.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@143923 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
it is separating the directory part from the basename of the FileName. Noticed
that this:
.file 1 "dir/foo"
when assembled got the two parts switched. Using the Mac OS X dwarfdump tool
it can be seen easily:
% dwarfdump -a a.out
include_directories[ 1] = 'foo'
Dir Mod Time File Len File Name
---- ---------- ---------- ---------------------------
file_names[ 1] 1 0x00000000 0x00000000 dir
...
Which should be:
...
include_directories[ 1] = 'dir'
Dir Mod Time File Len File Name
---- ---------- ---------- ---------------------------
file_names[ 1] 1 0x00000000 0x00000000 foo
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-g flag. In this part we generate the .file for the source being assembled and
the .loc's for the assembled instructions.
The next part will be to generate the dwarf Compile Unit DIE and a dwarf
subprogram DIE for each non-temporary label.
Once the next part is done test cases will be added. rdar://9275556
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.file filenumber "directory" "filename"
This removes one join+split of the directory+filename in MC internals. Because
bitcode files have independent fields for directory and filenames in debug info,
this patch may change the .o files written by existing .bc files.
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the X86 asmparser to produce ranges in the one case that was annoying me, for example:
test.s:10:15: error: invalid operand for instruction
movl 0(%rax), 0(%edx)
^~~~~~~
It should be straight-forward to enhance filecheck, tblgen, and/or the .ll parser to use
ranges where appropriate if someone is interested.
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for cpp pre-processed assembly we give correct filename and line numbers when
reporting errors in assembly files when using clang and -integrated-as on .s
files. rdar://8998895
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using llvm's public 'C' disassembler API now including annotations.
Hooked this up to Darwin's otool(1) so it can again print things like branch
targets for example this:
blx _puts
instead of this:
blx #-36
and includes support for annotations for branches to symbol stubs like:
bl 0x40 @ symbol stub for: _puts
and annotations for pc relative loads like this:
ldr r3, #8 @ literal pool for: Hello, world!
Also again can print the expression encoded in the Mach-O relocation entries for
things like this:
movt r0, :upper16:((_foo-_bar)+1234)
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Assembler private local symbols aren't legal targets of symbol attributes,
so issue a diagnostic for them.
Based on patch by Stepan Dyatkovskiy.
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If we see an EOF w/o a preceding end-of-line, return an EndOfStatement
token before returning the Eof token.
Based on patch by Stepan Dyatkovskiy.
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#line directives with the needed support in the lexer. Next will be to build
a simple file/line# table mapping source SMLoc's for later use by diagnostics.
And the last step will be to get the diagnostics to use the mapping for file
and line numbers.
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- On COFF the .lcomm directive has an alignment argument.
- On ELF we fall back to .local + .comm
Based on a patch by NAKAMURA Takumi.
Fixes PR9337, PR9483 and PR10128.
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In the case of EDInstInfo, this would actually cause a bug when -1 became 255
and was then compared >=0 in llvm-mc/Disassembler.cpp.
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.cfi_startproc. e.g. libffi:
$ cat confopt.c
asm (".cfi_startproc\n\t.cfi_endproc");
int main () { return 0; }
Teach MC / dwarf emission to handle these cfi directives which essentially
create an empty frame.
rdar://10017184
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Assigned symbol addresses get truncated to 32-bits, even on 64-bit platforms.
That's obviously bogus.
For example,
.globl _foo
.equ _foo, 0x987654321ULL
rdar://9922863
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This is meant to be overriden by backends. Implement an override on PowerPC
which adjusts the offset by 2 for ha16/lo16 relocation kinds. This removes
a commented out hack and enables hello world to be compiled on PowerPC.
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externally visable, create a local symbol to use in the CFE. If not, use the
function label itself.
Fixes PR10420.
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them properly. Specifically, the disassembler clearly attempts to
initialiaze all TargetInfo, MCTargeDesc, AsmParser, and Disassembler
sublibraries of registered targets. This makes the CMakeLists accurately
reflect this intent in the code.
This should fix the last of the link errors that I have gotten reports
of on OS X, but if anyone continues to see link errors, continue to
pester me and I'll look into it.
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for targets that don't have an MC-ized disassembler. I'm suspicious that
this shouldn't actually be happening, but hoping to fix the CMake build
on macs first, and investigate why second.
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First off, only depend on the actual MC-ized disassemblers in the
targets, not all of the libraries those in turn depend on.
Second off, only depend on those MC-ized disassemblers for targets we're
building.
This should fix builds of fewer than all targets.
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specified in the same file that the library itself is created. This is
more idiomatic for CMake builds, and also allows us to correctly specify
dependencies that are missed due to bugs in the GenLibDeps perl script,
or change from compiler to compiler. On Linux, this returns CMake to
a place where it can relably rebuild several targets of LLVM.
I have tried not to change the dependencies from the ones in the current
auto-generated file. The only places I've really diverged are in places
where I was seeing link failures, and added a dependency. The goal of
this patch is not to start changing the dependencies, merely to move
them into the correct location, and an explicit form that we can control
and change when necessary.
This also removes a serialization point in the build because we don't
have to scan all the libraries before we begin building various tools.
We no longer have a step of the build that regenerates a file inside the
source tree. A few other associated cleanups fall out of this.
This isn't really finished yet though. After talking to dgregor he urged
switching to a single CMake macro to construct libraries with both
sources and dependencies in the arguments. Migrating from the two macros
to that style will be a follow-up patch.
Also, llvm-config is still generated with GenLibDeps.pl, which means it
still has slightly buggy dependencies. The internal CMake
'llvm-config-like' macro uses the correct explicitly specified
dependencies however. A future patch will switch llvm-config generation
(when using CMake) to be based on these deps as well.
This may well break Windows. I'm getting a machine set up now to dig
into any failures there. If anyone can chime in with problems they see
or ideas of how to solve them for Windows, much appreciated.
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assert-path code, as previously we would have fallen off the end of the
function, but please review and let me know if this should go somewhere
else.
This fixes a Clang warning:
lib/MC/MCMachOStreamer.cpp:201:11: error: enumeration value 'MCSA_IndirectSymbol' not handled in switch [-Werror,-Wswitch-enum]
switch (Attribute) {
^
1 error generated.
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The .local, .hidden, .internal, and .protected are not legal for all supported
file formats (in particular, they're invalid for MachO). Move the parsing for
them into the ELF assembly parser since that's the format they're for.
Similarly, .weak is used by COFF and ELF, but not MachO, so move the parsing
to the COFF and ELF asm parsers. Previously, using any of these directives
on Darwin would result in an assertion failure in the parser; now we get
a diagnostic as we should.
rdar://9827089
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There is still a bit more refactoring left to do in Targets. But we are now very
close to fixing all the layering issues in MC.
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- Introduce JITDefault code model. This tells targets to set different default
code model for JIT. This eliminates the ugly hack in TargetMachine where
code model is changed after construction.
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TargetLoweringObjectFileImpl down to MCObjectFileInfo.
TargetAsmInfo is done to one last method. It's *almost* gone!
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