Move CallBacksToRun into the common Signals.cpp, create RunCallBacksToRun()
and use these in both Unix/Signals.inc and Windows/Signals.inc.
Lots of potential code to be merged here.
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Not all components build correctly on all targets and the release
script had no way to disable them other than editing the script locally.
This change provides a way to disable the test-suite, compiler-rt and
the libraries, as well as allowing you to re-run on the same directory
without checking out all sources again.
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Shrink-wrapping can now be tested on ARM with -enable-shrink-wrap.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821730>
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pipeline.
Even before I started improving its runtime, it was already crazy fast
once the call graph exists, and if we can get it to be conservatively
correct, will still likely catch a lot of interesting and useful cases.
So it may well be useful to enable by default.
But more importantly for me, this should make it easier for me to test
that changes aren't breaking it in fundamental ways by enabling it for
normal builds.
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This almost certainly doesn't matter in some deep sense, but std::set is
essentially always going to be slower here. Now the alias query should
be essentially constant time instead of having to chase the set tree
each time.
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it wasn't one of the indirect globals (which clearly cannot be an
allocation function call). Also only do a single lookup into this map
instead of two. NFC.
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Since we have to iterate this map not that infrequently, we should use
a map that is efficient for iteration. It is also almost certainly much
faster for lookups as well. There is more to do in terms of reducing the
wasted overhead of GMR's runtime though. Not sure how much is worthwhile
though.
The loop improvements should hopefully address the code review that
Duncan gave when he saw this code as I moved it around.
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Currently, a load from an alloca that is used in as single block and is not preceded
by a store is replaced by undef. This is not always correct if the single block is
inside a loop.
Fix the logic so that:
1) If there are no stores in the block, replace the load with an undef, as before.
2) If there is a store (regardless of where it is in the block w.r.t the load), bail
out, and let the rest of mem2reg handle this alloca.
Patch by: gil.rapaport@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11355
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In r242510, non-instrumented allocas are now moved into the first basic block. This patch limits that to only move allocas that are present *after* the first instrumented one (i.e. only move allocas up). A testcase was updated to show behavior in these two cases. Without the patch, an alloca could be moved down, and could cause an invalid IR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11339
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through APIs that are no longer necessary now that the update API has
been removed.
This will make changes to the AA interfaces significantly less
disruptive (I hope). Either way, it seems like a really nice cleanup.
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part of simplifying its interface and usage in preparation for porting
to work with the new pass manager.
Note that this will likely expose that we have dead arguments, members,
and maybe even pass requirements for AA. I'll be cleaning those up in
seperate patches. This just zaps the actual update API.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11325
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change because the diff is *useless*. I assure you, I just switched to
early-return in this function.
Cleanup in preparation for my next commit, as requested in code review!
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GlobalsModRef) with CallbackVHs that trigger the same behavior.
This is technically more expensive, but in benchmarking some LTO runs,
it seems unlikely to even be above the noise floor. The only way I was
able to measure the performance of GMR at all was to run nothing else
but this one analysis on a linked clang bitcode file. The call graph
analysis still took 5x more time than GMR, and this change at most made
GMR 2% slower (this is well within the noise, so its hard for me to be
sure that this is an actual change). However, in a real LTO run over the
same bitcode, the GMR run takes so little time that the pass timers
don't measure it.
With this, I can remove the last update API from the AliasAnalysis
interface, but I'll actually remove the interface hook point in
a follow-up commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11324
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Summary: The current code in LoopUnswtich::processCurrentLoop() mixes trivial loop unswitch and non-trivial loop unswitch together. It goes over all basic blocks in the loop and checks if a condition is trivial or non-trivial unswitch condition. However, trivial unswitch condition can only occur in the loop header basic block (where it controls whether or not the loop does something at all). This refactoring separate trivial loop unswitch and non-trivial loop unswitch. Before going over all basic blocks in the loop, it checks if the loop header contains a trivial unswitch condition. If so, unswitch it. Otherwise, go over all blocks like before but don't check trivial condition any more since they are not possible to be in the other blocks. This code has no functionality change.
Reviewers: meheff, reames, broune
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11276
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Summary:
MCRegAliasIterator only works for physical registers. So, do not run it
on virtual registers.
With this issue fixed, we can resurrect the BranchFolding pass in NVPTX
backend.
Reviewers: jholewinski, bkramer
Subscribers: henryhu, meheff, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11174
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types and loads, loads or stores widened past the size of an alloca,
etc.
This started off with a bug report about big-endian behavior with
bitfields and loads and stores to a { i32, i24 } struct. An initial
attempt to fix this was sent for review in D10357, but that didn't
really get to the root of the problem.
The core issue was that canConvertValue and convertValue in SROA were
handling different bitwidth integers by doing a zext of the integer. It
wouldn't do a trunc though, only a zext! This would in turn lead SROA to
form an i24 load from an i24 alloca, zext it to i32, and then use it.
This would at least produce the wrong value for big-endian systems.
One of my many false starts here was to correct the computation for
big-endian systems by shifting. But this doesn't actually work because
the original code has a 64-bit store to the entire 8 bytes, and a 32-bit
load of the last 4 bytes, and because the alloc size is 8 bytes, we
can't lose that last (least significant if bigendian) byte! The real
problem here is that we're forming an i24 load in SROA which is actually
not sufficiently wide to load all of the necessary bits here. The source
has an i32 load, and SROA needs to form that as well.
The straightforward way to do this is to disable the zext logic in
canConvertValue and convertValue, forcing us to actually load all
32-bits. This seems like a really good change, but it in turn breaks
several other parts of SROA.
First in the chain of knock-on failures, we had places where we were
doing integer-widening promotion even though some of the integer loads
or stores extended *past the end* of the alloca's memory! There was even
a comment about preventing this, but it only prevented the case where
the type had a different bit size from its store size. So I added checks
to handle the cases where we actually have a widened load or store and
to avoid trying to special integer widening promotion in those cases.
Second, we actually rely on the ability to promote in the face of loads
past the end of an alloca! This is important so that we can (for
example) speculate loads around PHI nodes to do more promotion. The bits
loaded are garbage, but as long as they aren't used and the alignment is
suitable high (which it wasn't in the test case!) this is "fine". And we
can't stop promoting here, lots of things stop working well if we do. So
we need to add specific logic to handle the extension (and truncation)
case, but *only* where that extension or truncation are over bytes that
*are outside the alloca's allocated storage* and thus totally bogus to
load or store.
And of course, once we add back this correct handling of extension or
truncation, we need to correctly handle bigendian systems to avoid
re-introducing the exact bug that started us off on this chain of misery
in the first place, but this time even more subtle as it only happens
along speculated loads atop a PHI node.
I've ported an existing test for PHI speculation to the big-endian test
file and checked that we get that part correct, and I've added several
more interesting big-endian test cases that should help check that we're
getting this correct.
Fun times.
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This optimization allows the DWARF linker to reuse definition of
types it has emitted in previous CUs rather than reemitting them
in each CU that references them. The size and link time gains are
huge. For example when linking the DWARF for a debug build of
clang, this generates a ~150M dwarf file instead of a ~700M one
(the numbers date back a bit and must not be totally accurate
these days).
As with all the other parts of the llvm-dsymutil codebase, the
goal is to keep bit-for-bit compatibility with dsymutil-classic.
The code is littered with a lot of FIXMEs that should be
addressed once we can get rid of the compatibilty goal.
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This commit begins serialization of the CFI index machine operands by
serializing one kind of CFI instruction - the .cfi_def_cfa_offset instruction.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
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Summary:
In the benchmark (https://github.com/vetter/shoc) we are researching,
the duplicated load is not eliminated because MemoryDependenceAnalysis
hit the BlockScanLimit. This patch change it into a command line option
instead of a hardcoded value.
Patched by Xuetian Weng.
Test Plan: test/Analysis/MemoryDependenceAnalysis/memdep-block-scan-limit.ll
Reviewers: jingyue, reames
Subscribers: reames, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11366
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Check whether BaseCst is valid before extracting a GlobalValue.
This fixes PR24163.
Patch by David Majnemer.
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This makes one substantive change and a few stylistic changes to the
VSX swap optimization pass.
The substantive change is to permit LXSDX and LXSSPX instructions to
participate in swap optimization computations. The previous change to
insert a swap following a SUBREG_TO_REG widening operation makes this
almost trivial.
I experimented with also permitting STXSDX and STXSSPX instructions.
This can be done using similar techniques: we could insert a swap
prior to a narrowing COPY operation, and then permit these stores to
participate. I prototyped this, but discovered that the pattern of a
narrowing COPY followed by an STXSDX does not occur in any of our
test-suite code. So instead, I added commentary indicating that this
could be done.
Other TLC:
- I changed SH_COPYSCALAR to SH_COPYWIDEN to more clearly indicate
the direction of the copy.
- I factored the insertion of swap instructions into a separate
function.
Finally, I added a new test case to check that the scalar-to-vector
loads are working properly with swap optimization.
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This commit refactors the function 'maybeLexGlobalValue' so that now it reuses
the function 'lexName' when lexing a named global value token.
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Not every program needs this information.
In particular, it is necessary and sufficient for a static linker to scan the
section table.
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Use a named lambda for readability, common some code, remove a stale comments, and use llvm style variable names.
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