than a managed static because other managed statics can (and do) access this
list in their destructors. Yes, I know it's horrible.
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create separate recursive mutexes for each value map. The recursive-ness fixes the double-acquiring issue, which having one per ValueMap
lets us continue to maintain some concurrency.
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gets involved, and we end up trying to recursively acquire a writer lock. The fix for this is slightly horrible,
and involves passing a boolean "locked" parameter around in Constants.cpp, but it's better than having locked and
unlocked versions of most of the code.
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Document those ValueMap functions that are _not_ locked, so that callers are aware that they need to do the locking themselves.
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There's still some more work to be done here, such as guarding removeAbstractTypeUser() and the printers.
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failures.
To support this, add some utility functions to Type to help support
vector/scalar-independent code. Change ConstantInt::get and
ConstantFP::get to support vector types, and add an overload to
ConstantInt::get that uses a static IntegerType type, for
convenience.
Introduce a new getConstant method for ScalarEvolution, to simplify
common use cases.
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the relationship with MergeFunctions.cpp's isEquivalentOperation,
and make a trivial code reordering so that the two functions are
easier to compare.
Fix the name of Instruction::isSameOperationAs in MergeFunction.cpp's
isEquivalentOperation's comment, and fix a nearby 80-column violation.
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Also create isValidElementType for ArrayType, PointerType, StructType and
VectorType.
Make LLParser use them. This closes up some holes like an assertion failure on:
%x = type {label}
but largely doesn't change any semantics. The only thing we accept now which
we didn't before is vectors of opaque type such as "<4 x opaque>". The opaque
can be resolved to an int or float when linking.
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Update code generator to use this attribute and remove NoImplicitFloat target option.
Update llc to set this attribute when -no-implicit-float command line option is used.
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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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Update code generator to use this attribute and remove DisableRedZone target option.
Update llc to set this attribute when -disable-red-zone command line option is used.
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This only rejects mismatches between target specific calling convention
and C/LLVM specific calling convention.
There are too many fastcc/C, coldcc/cc42 mismatches in the testsuite, these are
not reject by the verifier.
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type as a target independent constant expression. I confess
that I didn't check that this method works as intended (though
I did test the equivalent hand-written IR a little). But what
could possibly go wrong!
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between integers and pointers when the source type is marked signed,
since inttoptr and ptrtoint always use zero-extension when the destination
is larger than the source.
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the optimizers about this. For example, a readonly
function with no uses cannot be removed unless it is
also marked nounwind.
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to make the copy constructor and destructor protected, and corresponding
adjustments to the unittests.
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The real fix for this whole mess is to require the operand of the
alias to be a *GlobalValue* (not a general constant, including
constant exprs) but allow the operand and the alias type to be
unrelated.
This fixes PR4066
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to support C99 inline, GNU extern inline, etc. Related bugzilla's
include PR3517, PR3100, & PR2933. Nothing uses this yet, but it
appears to work.
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Constant, MDString and MDNode which can only be used by globals with a name
that starts with "llvm." or as arguments to a function with the same naming
restriction.
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which are effectively smart pointers to Value*'s. They are both very light
weight and simple, and react to values being destroyed or being RAUW'd.
WeakVN does a best effort to follow a value around, including through RAUW
operations and will get nulled out of the value is destroyed. This is useful
for the eventual "metadata that references a value" work, because it is a
reference to a value that does not show up on its use_* list.
AssertingVH is a pointer that compiles down to a dumb raw pointer when
assertions are disabled. When enabled, it emits an assertion if the
pointed-to value is destroyed while it is still being referenced. This
is very useful for Maps and other things, and should have caught the recent
bugs in CallGraph and Reassociate, for example.
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same as a normal i80 {low64, high16} rather
than its own {high64, low16}. A depressing number
of places know about this; I think I got them all.
Bitcode readers and writers convert back to the old
form to avoid breaking compatibility.
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unneeded bitcast is requested. This is common for frontends who just unconditionally
cast even if the target is often the right type already. THis prevents going into
getFoldedCast which switches on the opcode and does a bunch of other stuff before
doing the same opzn.
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