(x pred y) with more thorough code that does more complete canonicalization
before resorting to range checks. This helps it find more cases where
the canonicalized expressions match.
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For now this only computes the allocated size of the memory pointed to by a
pointer, and offset a pointer from allocated pointer.
The actual checkLimits part will come later, after another round of review.
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than a wider one, before trying to compare their contents which will crash
if their sizes are different.
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blocks, and also exit blocks with multiple conditions (combined
with (bitwise) ands and ors). It's often infeasible to compute an
exact trip count in such cases, but a useful upper bound can often
be found.
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If C is a single bit and the and gets analyzed as a truncate and
zero-extend, the xor can be represnted as an add.
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that gets recognized with a SCEVZeroExtendExpr must be an And
with a low-bits mask. With r73540, this is no longer the case.
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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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beyond their associated static array type.
I believe that this fixes a legitimate bug, because BasicAliasAnalysis
already has code to check for this condition that works for non-constant
indices, however it was missing the case of constant indices. With this
change, it checks for both.
This fixes PR4267, and miscompiles of SPEC 188.ammp and 464.h264.href.
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add-recurrence to be exposed. Add a new SCEV folding rule to
help simplify expressions in the presence of these extra truncs.
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artificial "ptrtoint", as it tends to clutter up complicated
expressions. The cast operators now print both source and
destination types, which is usually sufficient.
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compute an upper-bound value for the trip count, in addition to
the actual trip count. Use this to allow getZeroExtendExpr and
getSignExtendExpr to fold casts in more cases.
This may eventually morph into a more general value-range
analysis capability; there are certainly plenty of places where
more complete value-range information would allow more folding.
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(sext i8 {-128,+,1} to i64) to i64 {-128,+,1}, where the iteration
crosses from negative to positive, but is still safe if the trip
count is within range.
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print sext, zext, and trunc, instead of signextend, zeroextend,
and truncate, respectively, for consistency with the main IR.
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type to truncate to should be the number of bits of the value that are
preserved, not the number that are clobbered with sign-extension.
This fixes regressions in ldecod.
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to more accurately describe what it does. Expand its doxygen comment
to describe what the backedge-taken count is and how it differs
from the actual iteration count of the loop. Adjust names and
comments in associated code accordingly.
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couldn't ever be the return of call instruction. However, it's quite possible
that said local allocation is itself the return of a function call. That's
what malloc and calloc are for, actually.
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The problematic part of this patch is that we were out of attribute bits,
requiring some fancy bit hacking to make it fit (by shrinking alignment)
without breaking existing users or the file format.
This change will require users to rebuild llvm-gcc to match llvm.
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