make it more consistent with its intended semantics.
The `linker_private_weak_def_auto' linkage type was meant to automatically hide
globals which never had their addresses taken. It has nothing to do with the
`linker_private' linkage type, which outputs the symbols with a `l' (ell) prefix
among other things.
The intended semantic is more like the `linkonce_odr' linkage type.
Change the name of the linkage type to `linkonce_odr_auto_hide'. And therefore
changing the semantics so that it produces the correct output for the linker.
Note: The old linkage name `linker_private_weak_def_auto' will still parse but
is not a synonym for `linkonce_odr_auto_hide'. This should be removed in 4.0.
<rdar://problem/11754934>
llvm-svn: 162114
When the command line target options were removed from the LLVM libraries, LTO
lost its ability to specify things like `-disable-fp-elim'. Add this back by
adding the command line variables to the `lto' project.
<rdar://problem/12038729>
llvm-svn: 161353
There are some that I didn't remove this round because they looked like
obvious stubs. There are dead variables in gtest too, they should be
fixed upstream.
llvm-svn: 158090
This broke in r144788 when the CodeGenOpt option was moved from everywhere else
(specifically, from addPassesToEmitFile) to createTargetMachine. Since
LTOCodeGenerator wasn't passing the 4th argument, when the 4th parameter became
the 3rd, it silently continued to compile (int->bool conversion) but meant
something completely different.
This change preserves the existing (accidental) and previous (default)
semantics of the addPassesToEmitFile and restores the previous/intended
CodeGenOpt argument by passing it appropriately to createTargetMachine.
(discovered by pending changes to -Wconversion to catch constant->bool
conversions)
llvm-svn: 157705
so we don't want it to show up in the stable 3.1 interface.
While at it, add a comment about why LTOCodeGenerator manually creates the
internalize pass.
llvm-svn: 154807
Consider the following program:
$ cat main.c
void foo(void) { }
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
foo();
return 0;
}
$ cat bundle.c
extern void foo(void);
void bar(void) {
foo();
}
$ clang -o main main.c
$ clang -o bundle.so bundle.c -bundle -bundle_loader ./main
$ nm -m bundle.so
0000000000000f40 (__TEXT,__text) external _bar
(undefined) external _foo (from executable)
(undefined) external dyld_stub_binder (from libSystem)
$ clang -o main main.c -O4
$ clang -o bundle.so bundle.c -bundle -bundle_loader ./main
Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
"_foo", referenced from:
_bar in bundle-elQN6d.o
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
The linker was told that the 'foo' in 'main' was 'internal' and had no uses, so
it was dead stripped.
Another situation is something like:
define void @foo() {
ret void
}
define void @bar() {
call asm volatile "call _foo" ...
ret void
}
The only use of 'foo' is inside of an inline ASM call. Since we don't look
inside those for uses of functions, we don't specify this as a "use."
Get around this by not invoking the 'internalize' pass by default. This is an
admitted hack for LTO correctness.
<rdar://problem/11185386>
llvm-svn: 154124
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.
llvm-svn: 153870
Module-level ASM may contain definitions of functions and globals. However, we
were not telling the linker that these globals had definitions. As far as it was
concerned, they were just declarations.
Attempt to resolve this by inserting module-level ASM functions and globals into
the '_symbol' set so that the linker will know that they have values.
This gets us further towards our goal of compiling LLVM, but it still has
problems when linking libLTO.dylib because of the `-dead_strip' flag that's
passed to the linker.
<rdar://problem/11124216>
llvm-svn: 153638
but with a critical fix to the SelectionDAG code that optimizes copies
from strings into immediate stores: the previous code was stopping reading
string data at the first nul. Address this by adding a new argument to
llvm::getConstantStringInfo, preserving the behavior before the patch.
llvm-svn: 149800
This is the initial checkin of the basic-block autovectorization pass along with some supporting vectorization infrastructure.
Special thanks to everyone who helped review this code over the last several months (especially Tobias Grosser).
llvm-svn: 149468
file error checking. Use that to error on an unfinished cfi_startproc.
The error is not nice, but is already better than a segmentation fault.
llvm-svn: 147717
change, now you need a TargetOptions object to create a TargetMachine. Clang
patch to follow.
One small functionality change in PTX. PTX had commented out the machine
verifier parts in their copy of printAndVerify. That now calls the version in
LLVMTargetMachine. Users of PTX who need verification disabled should rely on
not passing the command-line flag to enable it.
llvm-svn: 145714