brace) so that we get more accurate line number information about the
declaration of a given function and the line where the function
first starts.
Part of rdar://11026482
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This is just the fallback tie-breaker ordering, the main allocation
order is still descending size.
Patch by Shamil Kurmangaleev!
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This patch allows llvm to recognize that a 64 bit object file is being produced
and that the subsequently generated ELF header has the correct information.
The test case checks for both big and little endian flavors.
Patch by Jack Carter.
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http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=12343
We have not trivial way for splitting edges that are goes from indirect branch. We can do it with some tricks, but it should be additionally discussed. And it is still dangerous due to difficulty of indirect branches controlling.
Fix forbids this case for unswitching.
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reflected in the LLVM IR (as a declare or something), then treat it like a data
object.
N.B. This isn't 100% correct. The ASM parser should supply more information so
that we know what type of object it is, and what attributes it should have.
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Do not try to optimize swizzles of shuffles if the source shuffle has more than
a single user, except when the source shuffle is also a swizzle.
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definition for it. In that case, we want to wait for the potential definition
before we create a symbol for it.
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rather than a bitfield, a great suggestion by Chris during code review.
There is still quite a bit of cruft in the interface, but that requires
sorting out some awkward uses of the cost inside the actual inliner.
No functionality changed intended here.
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The 440 and A2 cores have detailed itineraries, and this allows them to be
fully used to maximize throughput.
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Post-RA scheduling gives a significant performance improvement on
the embedded cores, so turn it on. Using full anti-dep. breaking is
important for FP-intensive blocks, so turn it on (just on the
embedded cores for now; this should also be good on the 970s because
post-ra scheduling is all that we have for now, but that should have
more testing first).
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This adds a full itinerary for IBM's PPC64 A2 embedded core. These
cores form the basis for the CPUs in the new IBM BG/Q supercomputer.
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This also avoids emitting the information twice, which led to code bloat. On i386-linux-Release+Asserts
with all targets built this change shaves a whopping 1.3 MB off clang. The number is probably exaggerated
by recent inliner changes but the methods were already enormous with the old inline cost computation.
The DWARF reg -> LLVM reg mapping doesn't seem to have holes in it, so it could be a simple lookup table.
I didn't implement that optimization yet to avoid potentially changing functionality.
There is still some duplication both in tablegen and the generated code that should be cleaned up eventually.
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As a side note, I really dislike array_pod_sort... Do we really still
care about any STL implementations that get this so wrong? Does libc++?
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a single missing character. Somehow, this had gone untested. I've added
tests for returns-twice logic specifically with the always-inliner that
would have caught this, and fixed the bug.
Thanks to Matt for the careful review and spotting this!!! =D
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Loads and stores can have different pipeline behavior, especially on
embedded chips. This change allows those differences to be expressed.
Except for the 440 scheduler, there are no functionality changes.
On the 440, the latency adjustment is only by one cycle, and so this
probably does not affect much. Nevertheless, it will make a larger
difference in the future and this removes a FIXME from the 440 itin.
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