Fix a truly odd namespace qualifier that was flat out wrong in the
process. The fully qualified namespace would have been
llvm::sys::TimeValue, llvm::TimeValue makes no sense.
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The coding style used here is not LLVM's style because this is modeled
after a Boost interface and thus done in the style of a candidate C++
standard library interface. I'll probably end up proposing it as
a standard C++ library if it proves to be reasonably portable and
useful.
This is just the most basic parts of the interface -- getting the
process ID out of it. However, it helps sketch out some of the boiler
plate such as the base class, derived class, shared code, and static
factory function. It also introduces a unittest so that I can
incrementally ensure this stuff works.
However, I've not even compiled this code for Windows yet. I'll try to
fix any Windows fallout from the bots, and if I can't fix it I'll revert
and get someone on Windows to help out. There isn't a lot more that is
mandatory, so soon I'll switch to just stubbing out the Windows side and
get Michael Spencer to help with implementation as he can test it
directly.
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The later API is nicer than the former, and is correct regarding wrap-around offsets (if anyone cares).
There are a few more places left with duplicated code, which I'll remove soon.
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directly.
This is in preparation for removing the use of the 'Attribute' class as a
collection of attributes. That will shift to the AttributeSet class instead.
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LCSSA PHIs may have undef values. The vectorizer updates values that are used by outside users such as PHIs.
The bug happened because undefs are not loop values. This patch handles these PHIs.
PR14725
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* One that accepts a single Attribute::AttrKind.
* One that accepts an Attribute::AttrKind plus a list of values. This is for
attributes defined like this:
#1 = attributes { align = 4 }
* One that accepts a string, for target-specific attributes like this:
#2 = attributes { "cpu=cortex-a8" }
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stored here is of a certain kind. This is in preparation for when an Attribute
object represents a single attribute, instead of a bitmask of attributes.
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propagating one of the values it simplified to a constant across
a myriad of instructions. Notably, ptrtoint instructions when we had
a constant pointer (say, 0) didn't propagate that, blocking a massive
number of down-stream optimizations.
This was uncovered when investigating why we fail to inline and delete
the boilerplate in:
void f() {
std::vector<int> v;
v.push_back(1);
}
It turns out most of the efforts I've made thus far to improve the
analysis weren't making it far purely because of this. After this is
fixed, the store-to-load forwarding patch enables LLVM to optimize the
above to an empty function. We still can't nuke a second push_back, but
for different reasons.
There is a very real chance this will cause somewhat noticable changes
in inlining behavior, so please let me know if you see regressions (or
improvements!) because of this patch.
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how to propagate constants through insert and extract value
instructions.
With the recent improvements to instsimplify, this allows inline cost
analysis to constant fold through intrinsic functions, including notably
the with.overflow intrinsic math routines which often show up inside of
STL abstractions. This is yet another piece in the puzzle of breaking
down the code for:
void f() {
std::vector<int> v;
v.push_back(1);
}
But it still isn't enough. There are a pile of bugs in inline cost still
blocking this.
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constant folding calls. Add the initial tests for this which show that
now instsimplify can simplify blindingly obvious code patterns expressed
with both intrinsics and library calls.
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are nice and decomposed so that we can simplify synthesized calls as
easily as actually call instructions. The internal utility still has the
same behavior, it just now operates on a more generic interface so that
I can extend the set of call simplifications that instsimplify knows
about.
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register. In most cases we actually compare or select YMM-sized registers
and mixing the two types creates horrible code. This commit optimizes
some of the transition sequences.
PR14657.
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The vector truncs were scalarized during LegalizeVectorOps, later vectorized again by some DAGCombine optimization
and finally, lowered by a dagcombing optimization. Now, they are properly lowered during LegalizeVectorOps.
No new testcase because the original testcases still work.
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information doesn't return an addend for Rel relocations. Go ahead
and use this information to fix relocation handling inside dwarfdump
for 32-bit ELF REL.
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such as by a compiler warning, a check in clang -fsanitizer=undefined, being
optimized to unreachable, or a combination of the above. PR14722.
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Origin alignment is as high as the alignment of the corresponding application
location, but never less than 4.
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For the time being this includes only some dummy test cases. Once the
generic implementation of the intrinsics cost function does something other
than assuming scalarization in all cases, or some target specializes the
interface, some real test cases can be added.
Also, for consistency, I changed the type of IID from unsigned to Intrinsic::ID
in a few other places.
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Use of store or load with the atomic specifier on 64-bit types would
cause instruction-selection failures. As with the 32-bit case, these
can use the default expansion in terms of cmp-and-swap.
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These are now generally used for all diagnostics from the backend, not just
for inline assembly, so this drops the "InlineAsm" from the names. No
functional change. (I've left aliases for the old names but only for long
enough to let me switch over clang to use the new ones.)
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This affords us to use std::string's allocation routines and use the destructor
for the memory management. Switching to that also means that we can use
operator==(const std::string&, const char *) to perform the string comparison
rather than resorting to libc functionality (i.e. strcmp).
Patch by Saleem Abdulrasool!
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D230
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