is necessary. Inherits from new templated baseclass CallSiteBase<>
which is highly customizable. Base CallSite on it too, in a configuration
that allows full mutation.
Adapt some call sites in analyses to employ ImmutableCallSite.
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of the previous load - it's usually important. For example, we don't want
to blindly turn an unaligned load into an aligned one.
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I have audited all getOperandNo calls now, fixing
hidden assumptions. CallSite related uglyness will
be eliminated successively.
Note this patch has a long and griveous history,
for all the back-and-forths have a look at
CallSite.h's log.
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This time I did a self-hosted bootstrap on Linux x86-64,
with no problems. Let's see how darwin 64-bit self-hosting
goes. At the first sign of failure I'll back this out.
Maybe the valgrind bots give me a hint of what may be wrong
(it at all).
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The Caller cost info would be reset everytime a callee was inlined. If the
caller has lots of calls and there is some mutual recursion going on, the
caller cost info could be calculated many times.
This patch reduces inliner runtime from 240s to 0.5s for a function with 20000
small function calls.
This is a more conservative version of r98089 that doesn't break the clang
test CodeGenCXX/temp-order.cpp. That test relies on rather extreme inlining
for constant folding.
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The Caller cost info would be reset everytime a callee was inlined. If the
caller has lots of calls and there is some mutual recursion going on, the
caller cost info could be calculated many times.
This patch reduces inliner runtime from 240s to 0.5s for a function with 20000
small function calls.
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confusing the old MAT variable with the new GlobalType one. This caused
us to promote the @disp global pointer into:
@disp.body = internal global double*** undef
instead of:
@disp.body = internal global [3 x double**] undef
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and T->isPointerTy(). Convert most instances of the first form to the second form.
Requested by Chris.
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Functions explicitly marked inline will get an inlining threshold slightly
more aggressive than the default for -O3. This means than -O3 builds are
mostly unaffected while -Os builds will be a bit bigger and faster.
The difference depends entirely on how many 'inline's are sprinkled on the
source.
In the CINT2006 suite, only these tests are significantly affected under -Os:
Size Time
471.omnetpp +1.63% -1.85%
473.astar +4.01% -6.02%
483.xalancbmk +4.60% 0.00%
Note that 483.xalancbmk runs too quickly to give useful timing results.
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2. don't bother trying to merge globals in non-default sections,
doing so is quite dubious at best anyway.
3. fix a bug reported by Arnaud de Grandmaison where we'd try to
merge two globals in different address spaces.
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This time it's for real! I am going to hook this up in the frontends as well.
The inliner has some experimental heuristics for dealing with the inline hint.
When given a -respect-inlinehint option, functions marked with the inline
keyword are given a threshold just above the default for -O3.
We need some experiments to determine if that is the right thing to do.
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This makes the inliner about as agressive as it was before my changes to the
inliner cost calculations. These levels give the same performance and slightly
smaller code than before.
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This bug was exposed by my inliner cost changes in r94615, and caused failures
of lencod on most architectures when building with LTO.
This patch fixes lencod and 464.h264ref on x86-64 (and likely others).
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Modules and ModuleProviders. Because the "ModuleProvider" simply materializes
GlobalValues now, and doesn't provide modules, it's renamed to
"GVMaterializer". Code that used to need a ModuleProvider to materialize
Functions can now materialize the Functions directly. Functions no longer use a
magic linkage to record that they're materializable; they simply ask the
GVMaterializer.
Because the C ABI must never change, we can't remove LLVMModuleProviderRef or
the functions that refer to it. Instead, because Module now exposes the same
functionality ModuleProvider used to, we store a Module* in any
LLVMModuleProviderRef and translate in the wrapper methods. The bindings to
other languages still use the ModuleProvider concept. It would probably be
worth some time to update them to follow the C++ more closely, but I don't
intend to do it.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR5737 and http://llvm.org/PR5735.
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externally visible function, it can still find all callers of it and replace
the parameters to a dead argument with undef.
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missing ones are libsupport, libsystem and libvmcore. libvmcore is
currently blocked on bugpoint, which uses EH. Once it stops using
EH, we can switch it off.
This #if 0's out 3 unit tests, because gtest requires RTTI information.
Suggestions welcome on how to fix this.
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No functional change except the forgotten test for
InlineLimit.getNumOccurrences() == 0 in the CurrentThreshold2 calculation.
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to an element of a vector in a static ctor) which occurs with an
unrelated patch I'm testing. Annoyingly, EvaluateStoreInto basically
does exactly the same stuff as InsertElement constant folding, but it
now handles vectors, and you can't insertelement into a vector. It
would be 'really nice' if GEP into a vector were not legal.
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phi nodes when deciding which pointers point to local memory.
I actually checked long ago how useful this is, and it isn't
very: it hardly ever fires in the testsuite, but since Chris
wants it here it is!
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memcpy, memset and other intrinsics that only access their arguments
to be readnone if the intrinsic's arguments all point to local memory.
This improves the testcase in the README to readonly, but it could in
theory be made readnone, however this would involve more sophisticated
analysis that looks through the memcpy.
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