The theory is it's still faster than a pair of movq / a quad of movl. This
will probably hurt older chips like P4 but should run faster on current
and future Intel processors. rdar://8817010
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etc. takes an option OptSize. If OptSize is true, it would return
the inline limit for functions with attribute OptSize.
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ret i64 ptrtoint (i8* getelementptr ([1000 x i8]* @X, i64 1, i64 sub (i64 0, i64 ptrtoint ([1000 x i8]* @X to i64))) to i64)
to "ret i64 1000". This allows us to correctly compute the trip count
on a loop in PR8883, which occurs with std::fill on a char array. This
allows us to transform it into a memset with a constant size.
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into a separate function, so that it can be called from a loop using a worklist
rather than a loop traversing a whole basic block.
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This pass precomputes CFG block frequency information that can be used by the
register allocator to find optimal spill code placement.
Given an interference pattern, placeSpills() will compute which basic blocks
should have the current variable enter or exit in a register, and which blocks
prefer the stack.
The algorithm is ready to consume block frequencies from profiling data, but for
now it gets by with the static estimates used for spill weights.
This is a work in progress and still not hooked up to RegAllocGreedy.
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up freebsd bootloader. However, this doesn't make much sense for Darwin, whose
-Os is meant to optimize for size only if it doesn't hurt performance.
rdar://8821501
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beginning of the "main" function. The assembler complains about the invalid
suffix for the 'call' instruction. The right instruction is "callq __main".
Patch by KS Sreeram!
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My i386 llvm-gcc nightly tester found a regression for
SingleSource/Benchmarks/McGill/chomp that a bisect blamed on 122743.
That seems strange but apparently the combination of earlycse and instcombine
did something bad. Chris says he intended to remove the instcombine pass, so
let's go ahead and try that. We'll see if there are any performance losses.
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hasBlockValue() that was causing iterator invalidations. Many thanks to Dimitry Andric for
tracking down those invalidations!
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step is to only process instructions in subloops if they have been modified by
an earlier simplification.
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skipping them, but it should probably use a worklist and only revisit those
instructions in subloops that have actually changed. It should probably also
use a worklist after the first iteration like instsimplify now does. Regardless,
it's only 0.3% of opt -O2 time on 403.gcc if it replaces the instcombine placed
in the middle of the loop passes.
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It forms memset and memcpy's, and will someday form popcount and
other stuff. All of this is bad when compiling the implementation
of memset, memcpy, popcount, etc.
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