We would wrongly transform the testcase into the equivalent of an AND with 1.
The problem was that, when testing whether the shifted-in bits of the right
shift were significant, we used the width of the final zero-extended result
rather than the width of the shifted value.
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In some case, it may be required to build LLVM in C++11 mode, as some the subprojects (like lldb) requires it.
This mimics the autoconf behaviour.
However, given the discussions on the switch to C++11 of the codebase, this behaviour should evolve to default to C++11 with some checks of the compiler capabilities.
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CallGraph.
This makes the CallGraph a totally generic analysis object that is the
container for the graph data structure and the primary interface for
querying and manipulating it. The pass logic is separated into its own
class. For compatibility reasons, the pass provides wrapper methods for
most of the methods on CallGraph -- they all just forward.
This will allow the new pass manager infrastructure to provide its own
analysis pass that constructs the same CallGraph object and makes it
available. The idea is that in the new pass manager, the analysis pass's
'run' method returns a concrete analysis 'result'. Here, that result is
a 'CallGraph'. The 'run' method will typically do only minimal work,
deferring much of the work into the implementation of the result object
in order to be lazy about computing things, but when (like DomTree)
there is *some* up-front computation, the analysis does it prior to
handing the result back to the querying pass.
I know some of this is fairly ugly. I'm happy to change it around if
folks can suggest a cleaner interim state, but there is going to be some
amount of unavoidable ugliness during the transition period. The good
thing is that this is very limited and will naturally go away when the
old pass infrastructure goes away. It won't hang around to bother us
later.
Next up is the initial new-PM-style call graph analysis. =]
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that lets the analysis and graph types be separate and the graph
computed from the analysis through some arbitrary user-supplied code.
This will allow a call graph to an independent entity from the pass
which creates it which is necessary for the new pass manager.
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changes to it. No functionality changed.
You may wonder why on earth touching this code is involved in the pass
manager work as indicated by my lovely '[PM]' tag? Let me tell you
a story.
<redacted>
Yea, it's too long of a story. Let us say that there are yaks, many of
them. I am busy shaving them as fast as I can.
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A Direct stack map location records the address of frame index. This
address is itself the value that the runtime requested. This differs
from IndirectMemRefOp locations, which refer to a stack locations from
which the requested values must be loaded. Direct locations can
directly communicate the address if an alloca, while IndirectMemRefOp
handle register spills.
For example:
entry:
%a = alloca i64...
llvm.experimental.stackmap(i32 <ID>, i32 <shadowBytes>, i64* %a)
Since both the alloca and stackmap intrinsic are in the entry block,
and the intrinsic takes the address of the alloca, the runtime can
assume that LLVM will not substitute alloca with any intervening
value. This must be verified by the runtime by checking that the stack
map's location is a Direct location type. The runtime can then
determine the alloca's relative location on the stack immediately after
compilation, or at any time thereafter. This differs from Register and
Indirect locations, because the runtime can only read the values in
those locations when execution reaches the instruction address of the
stack map.
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spacing around the '*' in pointer types. Will let me use clang-format on
subsequent changes without introducing any noise. No functionality
changed.
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The dumper was only dumping one pubtypes set and it was /always/ dumping
one pubtypes set even when there were zero sets. Now that the dumper
correctly dumps zero, one, or many sets, we can update this test case to
test for the absolute absence of a set rather than a bogus/accidental
zero-valued set.
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implementation. Silliness, but it'll be a trivial performance
optimization. This should clear up a failure on the vg_leak bot.
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r195698 moved the type unit checking up into getOrCreateTypeDIE so
remove the redundant check and fold the functions back together again.
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whitespace, and a couple of argument name fixes before I start hacking
on this code. No functionality changed here.
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It might be possible to eventually use one data structure, but I haven't
looked at the exact criteria used for accelerator tables and pubtypes to
see if there's good reason for the differences between the two or not.
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Patch by Mikulas Patocka. I added the test. I checked that for cpu names that
gas knows about, it also doesn't generate nopl.
The modified cpus:
i686 - there are i686-class CPUs that don't have nopl: Via c3, Transmeta
Crusoe, Microsoft VirtualBox - see
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=775414
k6, k6-2, k6-3, winchip-c6, winchip2 - these are 586-class CPUs
via c3 c3-2 - see https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/19733 as a proof that
Via c3 and c3-Nehemiah don't have nopl
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This patch fixes a bug in the assembler that was causing bad code to
be emitted. When switching modes in an assembly file (e.g. arm to
thumb mode) we would always emit the opcode from the original mode.
Consider this small example:
$ cat align.s
.code 16
foo:
add r0, r0
.align 3
add r0, r0
$ llvm-mc -triple armv7-none-linux align.s -filetype=obj -o t.o
$ llvm-objdump -triple thumbv7 -d t.o
Disassembly of section .text:
foo:
0: 00 44 add r0, r0
2: 00 f0 20 e3 blx #4195904
6: 00 00 movs r0, r0
8: 00 44 add r0, r0
This shows that we have actually emitted an arm nop (e320f000)
instead of a thumb nop. Unfortunately, this encodes to a thumb
branch which causes bad things to happen when compiling assembly
code with align directives.
The fix is to notify the ARMAsmBackend when we switch mode. The
MCMachOStreamer was already doing this correctly. This patch makes
the same change for the MCElfStreamer.
There is still a bug in the way nops are emitted for alignment
because the MCAlignment fragment does not store the correct mode.
The ARMAsmBackend will emit nops for the last mode it knew about. In
the example above, we still generate an arm nop if we add a `.code
32` to the end of the file.
PR18019
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These are handled almost identically to static mode (and ELF's global address
materialisation), except that a symbol may have "$non_lazy_ptr" appended. This
can be handled by passing appropriate flags along with the instruction instead
of using entirely separate pseudo-instructions.
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These should not use COMDATs. GNU as uses .bss for .lcomm and section 0 for
.comm.
Given
static int a;
int b;
MSVC puts both in .bss. This patch then puts both .comm and .lcomm on .bss. With
this change we agree with gas on .lcomm, are much closer on .comm and clang-cl
matches msvc on the above example.
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There is no sane way for an LEApcrel (= single ADR) instruction to generate a
global address on any ARM target I know of. Fortunately, no-one was trying to
any more, but there were vestigial patterns.
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Summary:
Moved the requirement for SelectionDAG::getConstant() to return legally
typed nodes slightly earlier. There were two optional DAGCombine passes
that were missed out and were required to produce type-legal DAGs.
Simplified a code-path in tryFoldToZero() to use SelectionDAG::getConstant().
This provides support for both promoted and expanded vector types whereas the
previous code only supported promoted vector types.
Fixes a "Type for zero vector elements is not legal" assertion detected by
an llvm-stress generated test.
Reviewers: resistor
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2251
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to what is needed for constant islands. The prescan method for Mips16 constant
islands will eventually go away. It is only temporary and should be done
earlier when the instructions are first created or from the DAG. If we keep
it here we need to handle better the situation where constant islands
is called multiple times since don't want to prescan more than once.
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I had to move some code and I moved a declaration forward past it's first use
in the function but by nutty coincidence there was another variable of the same
name and type and with completely unrelated function that was declared globally
in the class so no compilation error ensued.
It required some unusual conditions for it to even matter. Caused test
case casts.c in test-suite to fail during compilation with a duplicate
symbol error. I would have noticed it during final code review for this port.
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