- stackprotector_prologue creates a stack object and stores the guard there.
- stackprotector_epilogue reads the stack guard from the stack position created
by stackprotector_prologue.
- The PrologEpilogInserter was changed to make sure that the stack guard is
first on the stack frame.
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dead nodes, but in this case its missing one. Fixing the DAGCombiner
is desirable, but it's somewhat involved.
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priority function. Instead, just iterate over the AllNodes list, which is
already in topological order. This eliminates a fair amount of bookkeeping,
and speeds up the isel phase by about 15% on many testcases.
The impact on most targets is that AddToISelQueue calls can be simply removed.
In the x86 target, there are two additional notable changes.
The rule-bending AND+SHIFT optimization in MatchAddress that creates new
pre-isel nodes during isel is now a little more verbose, but more robust.
Instead of either creating an invalid DAG or creating an invalid topological
sort, as it has historically done, it can now just insert the new nodes into
the node list at a position where they will be consistent with the topological
ordering.
Also, the address-matching code has logic that checked to see if a node was
"already selected". However, when a node is selected, it has all its uses
taken away via ReplaceAllUsesWith or equivalent, so it won't recieve any
further visits from MatchAddress. This code is now removed.
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"getOrInsertFunction" in that it either adds a new declaration of the global
and returns it, or returns the current one -- optionally casting it to the
correct type.
- Use the new getOrInsertGlobal in the stack protector code.
- Use "splitBasicBlock" in the stack protector code.
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- Use enums instead of magic numbers.
- Rework algorithm to use the bytes size from the target to determine when to
emit stack protectors.
- Get rid of "propolice" in any comments.
- Renamed an option to its expanded form.
- Other miscellanenous changes.
More changes will come after this.
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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.
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* The prologue is modified to read the __stack_chk_guard global and insert it
onto the stack.
* The epilogue is modified to read the stored guard from the stack and compare
it to the original __stack_chk_guard value. If they differ, then the
__stack_chk_fail() function is called.
* The stack protector needs to be first on the stack (after the parameters) to
catch any stack-smashing activities.
Front-end support will follow after a round of beta testing.
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bits, use a union of a SimpleValueType enum and a regular Type*.
This increases the size of MVT on 64-bit hosts from 32 bits to 64 bits.
In most cases, this doesn't add significant overhead. There are places
in codegen that use arrays of MVTs, so these are now larger, but
they're small in common cases.
This eliminates restrictions on the size of integer types and vector
types that can be represented in codegen. As the included testcase
demonstrates, it's now possible to codegen very large add operations.
There are still some complications with using very large types. PR2880
is still open so they can't be used as return values on normal targets,
there are no libcalls defined for very large integers so operations
like multiply and divide aren't supported.
This also introduces a minimal tablgen Type library, capable of
handling IntegerType and VectorType. This will allow parts of
TableGen that don't depend on using SimpleValueType values to handle
arbitrary integer and vector types.
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This triggers only 60 times in llvm-test (look at .llvm.bc, not .linked.rbc)
and so it probably wont be turned on by default. Also, may of those are likely
to go away when PR2973 is fixed.
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MyFunctionPass() : FunctionPass(ID) {}
when the user actually meant to write:
MyFunctionPass() : FunctionPass(&ID) {}
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function.
- This explicitly models the costs for functions which should
"always" or "never" be inlined. This fixes bugs where such costs
were not previously respected.
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other day that PPC custom lowering could create
a BUILD_PAIR of two f64 with a result type of...
f64! - already fixed). Fix a place that triggers
the sanity check.
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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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flag. Then in a debugger developers can set breakpoints at these calls
to see waht is about to be selected and what the resulting subgraph
looks like. This really helps when debugging instruction selection.
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