- This matches the normal dependency generation code.
- This also fixes the problem that when building a normal and bitcode
archive from the same source, the dependency files would overwrite
one another. Which was bad.
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possible to build both a .a and a .bca.
- My understanding is no one else is using this stuff, please let me
know if I am wrong.
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after finding the (unique) layout predecessor. Sometimes a block may be listed
more than once, and processing it more than once in this loop can lead to
inconsistent values for FtTBB/FtFBB, since the AnalyzeBranch method does not
clear these values. There's no point in continuing the loop regardless.
The testcase for this is reduced from the 2003-05-02-DependentPHI SingleSource
test.
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and generalize it so that it can be used by IndVarSimplify. Implement the
base IndVarSimplify transformation code using IVUsers. This removes
TestOrigIVForWrap and associated code, as ScalarEvolution now has enough
builtin overflow detection and folding logic to handle all the same cases,
and more. Run "opt -iv-users -analyze -disable-output" on your favorite
loop for an example of what IVUsers does.
This lets IndVarSimplify eliminate IV casts and compute trip counts in
more cases. Also, this happens to finally fix the remaining testcases
in PR1301.
Now that IndVarSimplify is being more aggressive, it occasionally runs
into the problem where ScalarEvolutionExpander's code for avoiding
duplicate expansions makes it difficult to ensure that all expanded
instructions dominate all the instructions that will use them. As a
temporary measure, IndVarSimplify now uses a FixUsesBeforeDefs function
to fix up instructions inserted by SCEVExpander. Fortunately, this code
is contained, and can be easily removed once a more comprehensive
solution is available.
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These values aren't analyzable, so they don't care if more information
about the loop trip count can be had. Also, SCEVUnknown is used for
a PHI while the PHI itself is being analyzed, so it needs to be left
in the Scalars map. This fixes a variety of subtle issues.
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return the correct value when the cast operand is all zeros. This ought
to be pretty rare, because it would mean that the regular SCEV folding
routines missed a case, though there are cases they might legitimately
miss. Also, it's unlikely anything currently using GetMinTrailingZeros
cares about this case.
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Also, if the compare is the only use, LSR would place the iv increment instruction before the compare instead in the latch.
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type, rather than assume that it does. If the operand is not vector, it
shouldn't be run through ScalarizeVectorOp. This fixes one of the
testcases in PR3886.
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count down to 0 instead, under very restricted
circumstances. Adjust 4 testcases in which this
optimization fires.
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- reduces _static_ callee saved register spills
and restores similar to Chow's original algorithm.
- iterative implementation with simple heuristic
limits to mitigate compile time impact.
- handles placing spills/restores for multi-entry,
multi-exit regions in the Machine CFG without
splitting edges.
- passes test-suite in LLCBETA mode.
Added contains() method to ADT/SparseBitVector.
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only for those. These extern declarations to intrinsics are currently
being emitted at the bottom of generated .s file, which works fine with
gpasm(not sure about MPSAM though).
PIC16 linker generates errors for few cases (function-args/struct_args_5) if you do not include any
extern declarations (even if no intrinsics are being used), but that
needs to be fixed in the linker itself.
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The DwarfWriter expects DbgScopes and DIEs to behave themselves according to
DwarfWriter's rules. However, inlined functions violate these rules. There are
two different types of DIEs associated with an inlined function: an abstract
instance, which has information about the original source code for the function
being inlined; and concrete instances, which are created for each place the
function was inlined and point back to the abstract instance.
This patch tries to stay true to this schema. It bypasses how regular DbgScopes
and DIEs are created and used when necessary. It provides special handling for
DIEs of abstract and concrete instances.
This doesn't take care of all of the problems with debug info for inlined
functions, but it's a step in the right direction. For one thing, llvm-gcc
generates wrong IR (it's missing some llvm.dbg intrinsics at the point where the
function's inlined) for this example:
#include <stdio.h>
static __inline__ __attribute__((always_inline)) int bar(int x) { return 4; }
void foo() {
long long b = 1;
int Y = bar(4);
printf("%d\n", Y);
}
while clang generates correct IR.
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