an assert on Darwin llvm-gcc builds.
Assertion failed: (castIsValid(op, S, Ty) && "Invalid cast!"), function Create, file /Users/buildslave/zorg/buildbot/smooshlab/slave-0.8/build.llvm-gcc-i386-darwin9-RA/llvm.src/lib/VMCore/Instructions.cpp, li\
ne 2067.
etc.
http://smooshlab.apple.com:8013/builders/llvm-gcc-i386-darwin9-RA/builds/2354
--- Reverse-merging r134893 into '.':
U include/llvm/Target/TargetData.h
U include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h
U tools/bugpoint/ExtractFunction.cpp
U unittests/Support/TypeBuilderTest.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMGlobalMerge.cpp
U lib/Target/TargetData.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Constants.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Type.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Core.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/CodeExtractor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/ProfilingUtils.cpp
U lib/Transforms/IPO/DeadArgumentElimination.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/SjLjEHPrepare.cpp
--- Reverse-merging r134888 into '.':
G include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h
U include/llvm/Support/TypeBuilder.h
U include/llvm/Intrinsics.h
U unittests/Analysis/ScalarEvolutionTest.cpp
U unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JITTest.cpp
U unittests/ExecutionEngine/JIT/JITMemoryManagerTest.cpp
U unittests/VMCore/PassManagerTest.cpp
G unittests/Support/TypeBuilderTest.cpp
U lib/Target/MBlaze/MBlazeIntrinsicInfo.cpp
U lib/Target/Blackfin/BlackfinIntrinsicInfo.cpp
U lib/VMCore/IRBuilder.cpp
G lib/VMCore/Type.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Function.cpp
G lib/VMCore/Core.cpp
U lib/VMCore/Module.cpp
U lib/AsmParser/LLParser.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/CloneFunction.cpp
G lib/Transforms/Utils/CodeExtractor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Utils/InlineFunction.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/GCOVProfiling.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/ObjCARC.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/SimplifyLibCalls.cpp
U lib/Transforms/Scalar/MemCpyOptimizer.cpp
G lib/Transforms/IPO/DeadArgumentElimination.cpp
U lib/Transforms/IPO/ArgumentPromotion.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCompares.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineAndOrXor.cpp
U lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineCalls.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/DwarfEHPrepare.cpp
U lib/CodeGen/IntrinsicLowering.cpp
U lib/Bitcode/Reader/BitcodeReader.cpp
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@134949 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
that many of these things, so the memory savings isn't significant,
and there are now situations where there can be alignments greater
than 128.
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terms of store and load, which means bitcasting between scalar
integer and vector has endian-specific results, which undermines
this whole approach.
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the number of value bits, not the number of bits of allocation for in-memory
storage.
Make getTypeStoreSize and getTypeAllocSize work consistently for arrays and
vectors.
Fix several places in CodeGen which compute offsets into in-memory vectors
to use TargetData information.
This fixes PR1784.
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that it doesn't have dangling pointers when abstract types are resolved. This
modifies it somewhat to address comments: making the "StructLayoutMap" an
anonymous structure, calling "removeAbstractTypeUser" when appropriate, and
adding asserts where helpful.
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This is probably not confined to *just* these two things.
Anyway, the llvm-gcc front-end may look up the structure layout information for
an abstract type. That information will be stored into a table with the FE's
TD. Instruction combine can come along and also ask for information on that
abstract type, but for a separate TD (the one associated with the pass manager).
After the type is refined, the old structure layout information in the pass
manager's TD file is out of date. If a new type is allocated in the same space
as the old-unrefined type, then the structure type information in the pass
manager's TD file will be wrong, but won't know it.
Fix this by making the TD's structure type information an abstract type user.
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make it optional doesn't work out. If you don't want to specify this, don't
specify a TD string at all.
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datatypes on a given CPU. This is intended to allow instcombine and other
transformations to avoid converting big sequences of operations to an
inconvenient width, and will help clean up after SRoA. See also "Adding
legal integer sizes to TargetData" on Feb 1, 2009 on llvmdev, and PR3451.
Comments welcome.
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U include/llvm/Target/TargetData.h
U lib/Target/TargetData.cpp
Temporarily revert 79555. It was causing hangs and test failures.
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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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AND. This is speedup on any reasonable target, but particularly
on 32-bit targets where this often turns into a libcall like udivdi3.
We know that alignments are a power of two but the compiler doesn't.
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than hardware supported type will be scalarized, so we
can infer their alignment from that info.
We now codegen pr1845 into:
_boolVectorSelect:
lbz r2, 0(r3)
stb r2, -16(r1)
blr
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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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don't have to #include config.h in it. #including config.h breaks
other projects that have their own autoconf stuff and try to #include
the llvm headers. One obscure example is llvm-gcc.
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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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should only effect x86 when using long double. Now
12/16 bytes are output for long double globals (the
exact amount depends on the alignment). This brings
globals in line with the rest of LLVM: the space
reserved for an object is now always the ABI size.
One tricky point is that only 10 bytes should be
output for long double if it is a field in a packed
struct, which is the reason for the additional
argument to EmitGlobalConstant.
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or getTypeSizeInBits as appropriate in ScalarReplAggregates.
The right change to make was not always obvious, so it would
be good to have an sroa guru review this. While there I noticed
some bugs, and fixed them: (1) arrays of x86 long double have
holes due to alignment padding, but this wasn't being spotted
by HasStructPadding (renamed to HasPadding). The same goes
for arrays of oddly sized ints. Vectors also suffer from this,
in fact the problem for vectors is much worse because basic
vector assumptions seem to be broken by vectors of type with
alignment padding. I didn't try to fix any of these vector
problems. (2) The code for extracting smaller integers from
larger ones (in the "int union" case) was wrong on big-endian
machines for integers with size not a multiple of 8, like i1.
Probably this is impossible to hit via llvm-gcc, but I fixed
it anyway while there and added a testcase. I also got rid of
some trailing whitespace and changed a function name which
had an obvious typo in it.
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