This includes a patch by Roman Divacky to fix the initial crash.
Move the actual addition of passes from *PassManager::add to
*PassManager::addImpl. That way, when adding printer passes we won't
recurse infinitely.
Finally, check to make sure that we are actually adding a FunctionPass
to a FunctionPassManager before doing a print before or after it.
Immutable passes are strange in this way because they aren't
FunctionPasses yet they can be and are added to the FunctionPassManager.
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when it detects undefined behavior. llvm.trap generally codegens into some
thing really small (e.g. a 2 byte ud2 instruction on x86) and debugging this
sort of thing is "nontrivial". For example, we now compile:
void foo() { *(int*)0 = 42; }
into:
_foo:
pushl %ebp
movl %esp, %ebp
ud2
Some may even claim that this is a security hole, though that seems dubious
to me. This addresses rdar://7958343 - Optimizing away null dereference
potentially allows arbitrary code execution
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with a vector input and output into a shuffle vector. This sort of
sequence happens when the input code stores with one type and reloads
with another type and then SROA promotes to i96 integers, which make
everyone sad.
This fixes rdar://7896024
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LSRUse's Regs set after all pruning is done, rather than trying
to do it on the fly, which can produce an incomplete result.
This fixes a case where heuristic pruning was stripping all
formulae from a use, which led the solver to enter an infinite
loop.
Also, add a few asserts to diagnose this kind of situation.
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getConstantFP to accept the two supported long double
target types. This was not the original intent, but
there are other places that assume this works and it's
easy enough to do.
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and %rcr_, leaving just %cr_ which is what people expect.
Updated the disassembler to support this unified register set.
Added a testcase to verify that the registers continue to be
decoded correctly.
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at the token level. Consider the following horrible test case:
a = 1
.globl $a
movl ($a), %eax
movl $a, %eax
movl $$a, %eax
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Users can write broken code that emits the same label twice with asm renaming,
detect this and emit a fatal backend error instead of aborting.
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values passed to llvm.dbg.value were not valid for the intrinsic, it
might have caused trouble one day if the verifier ever started checking
for valid debug info.
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instructions which have no direct register usage.
Darwin 'as' accepts:
add $0, (%rax)
but rejects
mov $0, (%rax)
for example.
Given that, only accept suffix matches which match exactly one form. We still
need to emit nice diagnostics for failures...
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- The idea is that when a match fails, we just try to match each of +'b', +'w',
+'l'. If exactly one matches, we assume this is a mnemonic prefix and accept
it. If all match, we assume it is width generic, and take the 'l' form.
- This would be a horrible hack, if it weren't so simple. Therefore it is an
elegant solution! Chris gets the credit for this particular elegant
solution. :)
- Next step to making this more robust is to have the X86 matcher generate the
mnemonic prefix information. Ideally we would also compute up-front exactly
which mnemonic to attempt to match, but this may require more custom code in
the matcher than is really worth it.
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RAUW of a global variable with a local variable in function F,
if function local metadata M in function G was using the global
then M would become function-local to both F and G, which is not
allowed. See the testcase for an example. Fixed by detecting
this situation and zapping the metadata operand when it occurs.
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