Make llvm_unreachable take an optional string, thus moving the cerr<< out of
line.
LLVM_UNREACHABLE is now a simple wrapper that makes the message go away for
NDEBUG builds.
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library to tell it the addresses of JITted functions. For a
particular program, this changes the opreport -l output from:
samples % image name symbol name
48182 98.9729 anon (tgid:19412 range:0x7f12ccaab000-0x7f12cdaab000) anon (tgid:19412 range:0x7f12ccaab000-0x7f12cdaab000)
11 0.0226 libstdc++.so.6.0.9 /usr/lib/libstdc++.so.6.0.9
to:
samples % image name symbol name
24565 60.7308 19814.jo fib_left
15365 37.9861 19814.jo fib_right
22 0.0544 ld-2.7.so do_lookup_x
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default, this option is not enabled to support clients who rely on
this behavior.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR4483
A patch to allocate additional memory for globals after we run out is
forthcoming.
Patch by Reid Kleckner!
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This will replace exit()/abort() style error handling with an API
that allows clients to register custom error handling hooks.
The default is to call exit(1) when no error handler is provided.
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emitted or the machine code for a function is freed. Chris mentioned that we
may also want a notification when a stub is emitted, but that'll be a future
change. I intend to use this to tell oprofile where functions are emitted and
what lines correspond to what addresses.
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libraries instead of relinked objects, the interpreter, JIT, and native
target libraries were not being linked in to an ocaml program using the
ExecutionEngine.
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integer and floating-point opcodes, introducing
FAdd, FSub, and FMul.
For now, the AsmParser, BitcodeReader, and IRBuilder all preserve
backwards compatability, and the Core LLVM APIs preserve backwards
compatibility for IR producers. Most front-ends won't need to change
immediately.
This implements the first step of the plan outlined here:
http://nondot.org/sabre/LLVMNotes/IntegerOverflow.txt
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Introduce a new class (MachineCodeInfo) that the JIT can fill in with details. Right now, just the address and the size of the machine code are reported.
Patch by Evan Phoenix!
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an optimization level instead of a simple boolean telling it to generate code
"fast" or the other type of "fast".
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another stub, but then never calling the jitted function) can cause the JIT to
leave a stub in place. Judging by the comments this is a known deficiency, so
we're just not going to use AssertingVH for the StubToFunctionTy map.
Also shorten some lines longer than 80 columns.
This fixes the "make check" failure with ocaml on x86-64 linux.
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locks must be matched with unlocks. Also, use calloc to allocate the
block so that it is properly zero'd. Thanks to Nick Kledzik for
tracking this down.
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is appropriate. This helps visually differentiate host-oriented
calculations from target-oriented calculations.
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1. ConstantPoolSDNode alignment field is log2 value of the alignment requirement. This is not consistent with other SDNode variants.
2. MachineConstantPool alignment field is also a log2 value.
3. However, some places are creating ConstantPoolSDNode with alignment value rather than log2 values. This creates entries with artificially large alignments, e.g. 256 for SSE vector values.
4. Constant pool entry offsets are computed when they are created. However, asm printer group them by sections. That means the offsets are no longer valid. However, asm printer uses them to determine size of padding between entries.
5. Asm printer uses expensive data structure multimap to track constant pool entries by sections.
6. Asm printer iterate over SmallPtrSet when it's emitting constant pool entries. This is non-deterministic.
Solutions:
1. ConstantPoolSDNode alignment field is changed to keep non-log2 value.
2. MachineConstantPool alignment field is also changed to keep non-log2 value.
3. Functions that create ConstantPool nodes are passing in non-log2 alignments.
4. MachineConstantPoolEntry no longer keeps an offset field. It's replaced with an alignment field. Offsets are not computed when constant pool entries are created. They are computed on the fly in asm printer and JIT.
5. Asm printer uses cheaper data structure to group constant pool entries.
6. Asm printer compute entry offsets after grouping is done.
7. Change JIT code to compute entry offsets on the fly.
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allocating memory in the JIT. This is insanely inefficient, but
hey, most people implement their own memory managers anyway.
Patch by Eric Yew!
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and extern_weak_odr. These are the same as the non-odr versions,
except that they indicate that the global will only be overridden
by an *equivalent* global. In C, a function with weak linkage can
be overridden by a function which behaves completely differently.
This means that IP passes have to skip weak functions, since any
deductions made from the function definition might be wrong, since
the definition could be replaced by something completely different
at link time. This is not allowed in C++, thanks to the ODR
(One-Definition-Rule): if a function is replaced by another at
link-time, then the new function must be the same as the original
function. If a language knows that a function or other global can
only be overridden by an equivalent global, it can give it the
weak_odr linkage type, and the optimizers will understand that it
is alright to make deductions based on the function body. The
code generators on the other hand map weak and weak_odr linkage
to the same thing.
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1. When the JIT is asked to remove a function, updating it's
mapping to 0, we invalidate any function stubs used only
by that function. Now, also invalidate the JIT's mapping
from the GV the stub pointed to, to the address of the GV.
2. When dlsym stubs for cross-process JIT are enabled, do not
abort just because a named function cannot be found in the
JIT's process.
3. Fix various assumptions about when it is ok to use the lazy
resolver when non-lazy JITing is enabled.
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This invalidates the stubs in the resolver map when they are no longer referenced,
and should the JIT memory manager ever pick up a deallocateStub interface, the
JIT could reclaim the memory for unused stubs as well.
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on failure to resolve it.
Do not abort on failure to resolve an external symbol when using dlsym stubs,
since the symbol may not be in the JIT's address space. Just use 0.
Allow dlsym stubs to differentiate between GlobalVars and Functions.
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that has not been JIT'd yet, the callee is put on a list of pending functions
to JIT. The call is directed through a stub, which is updated with the address
of the function after it has been JIT'd. A new interface for allocating and
updating empty stubs is provided.
Add support for removing the ModuleProvider the JIT was created with, which
would otherwise invalidate the JIT's PassManager, which is initialized with the
ModuleProvider's Module.
Add support under a new ExecutionEngine flag for emitting the infomration
necessary to update Function and GlobalVariable stubs after JITing them, by
recording the address of the stub and the name of the GlobalValue. This allows
code to be copied from one address space to another, where libraries may live
at different virtual addresses, and have the stubs updated with their new
correct target addresses.
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there.
This changes the interpreter to use libffi. After this patch, the interpreter
will barely be able to call any external functions if built on a system without
libffi installed (just enough to pass 'make check' really). But with libffi,
we can now call any function that isn't variadic or taking a struct or vector
parameter (but pointer to struct is fine). Patch by Alexei Svitkine!
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This requires a rebuild of 'configure' itself. I will be committing that next, but
built with the wrong version of autoconf. Somebody who has the right one, please update
it.
As a side-note, because of the way autoconf works, all built tools will link against
libffi, not just lli. If you know how to fix this, please let me know ...
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Split Support/Registry.h into two files so that we have less to
recompile every time CommandLine.h is changed.
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SingleSource/UnitTests/2007-04-25-weak.c in JIT mode. The test
now passes on systems which are able to produce a correct
reference output to compare with.
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This is a short term workaround. The current solution is for the JIT memory manager to manage code and data memory separately.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@58688 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Since the ARM constant pool handling supercedes the standard LLVM constant
pool entirely, the JIT emitter does not allocate space for the constants,
nor initialize the memory. The constant pool is considered part of the
instruction stream.
Likewise, when resolving relocations into the constant pool, a hook into
the target back end is used to resolve from the constant ID# to the
address where the constant is stored.
For now, the support in the ARM emitter is limited to 32-bit integer. Future
patches will expand this to the full range of constants necessary.
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variable is moved to the execution engine. The JIT calls the TargetJITInfo
to allocate thread local storage. Currently, only linux/x86 knows how to
allocate thread local global variables.
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this handling to work properly for modifying stub functions, relocations
back to entry points after JIT compilation, etc..
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s/ParamAttr/Attribute/g
s/PAList/AttrList/g
s/FnAttributeWithIndex/AttributeWithIndex/g
s/FnAttr/Attribute/g
This sets the stage
- to implement function notes as function attributes and
- to distinguish between function attributes and return value attributes.
This requires corresponding changes in llvm-gcc and clang.
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whose darwin code was written after the ability to dynamically register frames,
we need to do special hacks to make things work.
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Also skip indirect encoding for platforms that ask for one: we direclty
write an address, not a pointer to the address.
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model, except for external calls; this makes
addressing modes PC-relative. Incomplete.
The assertion at the top of Emitter::runOnMachineFunction
was obviously bogus (always true) so I removed it.
If someone knows what the correct test should be to cover
all the various targets, please fix.
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Evan broke it in r54523 by adding a parameter in the implementation without
updating the header correspondingly.
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are allocated in the same buffer as the code,
jump tables, etc.
The default JIT memory manager does not handle buffer
overflow well. I didn't introduce this and I'm not
attempting to fix it here, but it is more likely to
be hit now since we're putting more stuff in the
buffer. This affects one test that I know of so far,
MultiSource/Benchmarks/NPB-serial/is.
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the need for a flavor operand, and add a new SDNode subclass,
LabelSDNode, for use with them to eliminate the need for a label id
operand.
Change instruction selection to let these label nodes through
unmodified instead of creating copies of them. Teach the MachineInstr
emitter how to emit a MachineInstr directly from an ISD label node.
This avoids the need for allocating SDNodes for the label id and
flavor value, as well as SDNodes for each of the post-isel label,
label id, and label flavor.
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InvalidateInstructionCache method instead of calling through
a hook on the JIT. This is a host feature, not a target feature.
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1. The "JITState" object creates a PassManager with the ModuleProvider that the
jit is created with. If the ModuleProvider is removed and deleted, the
PassManager is invalid.
2. The Global maps in the JIT were not invalidated with a ModuleProvider was
removed. This could lead to a case where the Module would be freed, and a
new Module with Globals at the same addresses could return invalid results.
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are represented as "weak", but there are subtle differences
in some cases on Darwin, so we need both. The intent
is that "common" will behave identically to "weak" unless
somebody changes their target to do something else.
No functional change as yet.
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several things that were neither in an anonymous namespace nor static
but not intended to be global.
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function has already been codegen'd. This is required by the Java class loading
mechanism which executes Java code when materializing a function.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@49988 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Specifically, introduction of XXX::Create methods
for Users that have a potentially variable number of
Uses.
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tools. This is currently only enabled on the mac, but could easily be
supported by other hosts that are interested.
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was actually passing a completely incorrect size to sys_icache_invalidate.
Instead of having the JITEmitter do this (which doesn't have the correct
size), just make the target sync its own stubs.
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for non-function GV relocations that require function address stubs (e.g. Mac OS X in non-static mode).
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endianness of the target not of the host. Done by the
simple expedient of reversing bytes for primitive types
if the host and target endianness don't match. This is
correct for integer and pointer types. I don't know if
it is correct for floating point types.
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put it in a new header System/Host.h instead.
Instead of getting the endianness from configure,
calculate it directly.
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using the minimum possible number of bytes. For little
endian targets run on little endian machines, apints are
stored in memory from LSB to MSB as before. For big endian
targets on big endian machines they are stored from MSB to
LSB which wasn't always the case before (if the target and
host endianness doesn't match values are stored according
to the host's endianness). Doing this requires knowing the
endianness of the host, which is determined when configuring -
thanks go to Anton for this. Only having access to little
endian machines I was unable to properly test the big endian
part, which is also the most complicated...
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to create a JIT. This lets you specify JIT-specific configuration items
like the JITMemoryManager to use.
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in this call:
Result.IntVal = APInt(80, 2, x);
What is x?
uint16_t x[8];
I deduce that the APInt constructor being used is this one:
APInt(uint32_t numBits, uint64_t val, bool isSigned = false);
rather than this one:
APInt(uint32_t numBits, uint32_t numWords, const uint64_t bigVal[]);
That doesn't seem right! This fix compiles but is otherwise completely
untested.
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The meaning of getTypeSize was not clear - clarifying it is important
now that we have x86 long double and arbitrary precision integers.
The issue with long double is that it requires 80 bits, and this is
not a multiple of its alignment. This gives a primitive type for
which getTypeSize differed from getABITypeSize. For arbitrary precision
integers it is even worse: there is the minimum number of bits needed to
hold the type (eg: 36 for an i36), the maximum number of bits that will
be overwriten when storing the type (40 bits for i36) and the ABI size
(i.e. the storage size rounded up to a multiple of the alignment; 64 bits
for i36).
This patch removes getTypeSize (not really - it is still there but
deprecated to allow for a gradual transition). Instead there is:
(1) getTypeSizeInBits - a number of bits that suffices to hold all
values of the type. For a primitive type, this is the minimum number
of bits. For an i36 this is 36 bits. For x86 long double it is 80.
This corresponds to gcc's TYPE_PRECISION.
(2) getTypeStoreSizeInBits - the maximum number of bits that is
written when storing the type (or read when reading it). For an
i36 this is 40 bits, for an x86 long double it is 80 bits. This
is the size alias analysis is interested in (getTypeStoreSize
returns the number of bytes). There doesn't seem to be anything
corresponding to this in gcc.
(3) getABITypeSizeInBits - this is getTypeStoreSizeInBits rounded
up to a multiple of the alignment. For an i36 this is 64, for an
x86 long double this is 96 or 128 depending on the OS. This is the
spacing between consecutive elements when you form an array out of
this type (getABITypeSize returns the number of bytes). This is
TYPE_SIZE in gcc.
Since successive elements in a SequentialType (arrays, pointers
and vectors) need to be aligned, the spacing between them will be
given by getABITypeSize. This means that the size of an array
is the length times the getABITypeSize. It also means that GEP
computations need to use getABITypeSize when computing offsets.
Furthermore, if an alloca allocates several elements at once then
these too need to be aligned, so the size of the alloca has to be
the number of elements multiplied by getABITypeSize. Logically
speaking this doesn't have to be the case when allocating just
one element, but it is simpler to also use getABITypeSize in this
case. So alloca's and mallocs should use getABITypeSize. Finally,
since gcc's only notion of size is that given by getABITypeSize, if
you want to output assembler etc the same as gcc then getABITypeSize
is the size you want.
Since a store will overwrite no more than getTypeStoreSize bytes,
and a read will read no more than that many bytes, this is the
notion of size appropriate for alias analysis calculations.
In this patch I have corrected all type size uses except some of
those in ScalarReplAggregates, lib/Codegen, lib/Target (the hard
cases). I will get around to auditing these too at some point,
but I could do with some help.
Finally, I made one change which I think wise but others might
consider pointless and suboptimal: in an unpacked struct the
amount of space allocated for a field is now given by the ABI
size rather than getTypeStoreSize. I did this because every
other place that reserves memory for a type (eg: alloca) now
uses getABITypeSize, and I didn't want to make an exception
for unpacked structs, i.e. I did it to make things more uniform.
This only effects structs containing long doubles and arbitrary
precision integers. If someone wants to pack these types more
tightly they can always use a packed struct.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@43620 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
input. APInt unfortunately zero-extends signed integers, so Dale
modified the function to expect zero-extended input. Make this
assumption explicit in the function name.
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use APFloat for int-to-float/double; use
round-to-nearest for these (implementation-defined,
seems to match gcc).
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bit width instead of number of words allocated, which
makes it actually work for int->APF conversions.
Adjust callers. Add const to one of the APInt constructors
to prevent surprising match when called with const
argument.
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Use APFloat in UpgradeParser and AsmParser.
Change all references to ConstantFP to use the
APFloat interface rather than double. Remove
the ConstantFP double interfaces.
Use APFloat functions for constant folding arithmetic
and comparisons.
(There are still way too many places APFloat is
just a wrapper around host float/double, but we're
getting there.)
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JITer (short path is added for darwin). This is needed to properly JIT llvm-gcc-4.2-built
binaries, since cxa_atexit is enabled by default on much more targets.
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This commit fixes two things. One is a pair of VStudio compiler errors stemming from variables
which defined within the for loop statement and also within the body of the for loop. I fixed these
by renaming one of the two variables. Additionally, I've made the Function*->ExFunc map in
ExternalFunctions.cpp a ManagedStatic object, so that cleanup will be done on llvm_shutdown. In repeated
uses of the interpreter, where the same Function* address may get used for completely differnet functions,
this was causing a crash.
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Avoid overwriting the APInt instance with 0 bytes which causes the bitwidth
to be set to 0 (illegal) producing a subsequent assert.
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turn "putchar" calls into _IO_putc calls which is a lower-level interface.
This patch allows these calls to be executed by lli in interpreter mode.
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on. This helps to speed up the debugging time by showing computational
results as the program executes.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@37095 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
extension is needed because the constructor for the Destination value
causes the APInt to have a bit width of 1.
Patch by Guoling Han.
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incorrect results (canonicalization was dropped several commits ago).
2. Add support for fscanf.
3. Suppress a warning about cast to pointer from non-pointer-sized integer.
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