This teaches CoverageMapping::getCoveredFunctions to filter to a
particular file and uses that to replace most of the logic found in
llvm-cov report.
llvm-svn: 221962
getTargetConstant should only be used when you can guarantee the instruction
selected will be able to cope with the raw value. BUILD_VECTOR is rather too
generic for this so we should use getConstant instead. In that case, an
instruction can still consume the constant, but if it doesn't it'll be
materialised through its own round of ISel.
Should fix PR21352.
llvm-svn: 221961
Stop using `Value::getName()` to get the string behind an `MDString`.
Switch to `StringMapEntry<MDString>` so that we can find the string by
its coallocation.
This is part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 221960
When "MBB->Insert(It, ...)" is called, we want It to be pointing inside the
correct basic block. No actual failures at the moment, but it's caused problems
before.
llvm-svn: 221953
Hide the fact that `MDString`'s string is stored in `Value::Name` --
that's going to change soon. Update the only in-tree client that was
using it instead of `Value::getString()`.
Part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 221951
Summary:
This has most of what is needed for mips fast-isel call lowering for O32.
What is missing I will add on the next patch because this patch is already too large.
It should not be doing anything wrong but it will punt on some cases that it is basically
capable of doing.
The mechanism is there for parameters to be passed on the stack but I have not enabled it because it serves as a way for now to prevent some of the strange cases of O32 register passing that I have not fully checked yet and have some issues.
The Mips O32 abi rules are very complicated as far how data is passed in floating and integer registers.
However there is a way to think about this all very simply and this implementation reflects that.
Basically, the ABI rules are written as if everything is passed on the stack and aligned as such.
Once that is conceptually done, it is nearly trivial to reassign those locations to registers and
then all the complexity disappears.
So I have told tablegen that all the data is passed on the stack and during the lowering I fix
this by assigning to registers as per the ABI doc.
This has been my approach and you can line up what I did with the ABI document and see 1 to 1 what
is going on.
Test Plan: callabi.ll
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: jholewinski, echristo, ahatanak, llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5714
llvm-svn: 221948
Fix for LLI failure on Windows\X86: http://llvm.org/PR5053
LLI.exe crashes on Windows\X86 when single precession floating point
intrinsics like the following are used: acos, asin, atan, atan2, ceil,
copysign, cos, cosh, exp, floor, fmin, fmax, fmod, log, pow, sin, sinh,
sqrt, tan, tanh
The above intrinsics are defined as inline-expansions in math.h, and are
not exported by msvcr120.dll (Win32 API GetProcAddress returns null).
For an FREM instruction, the JIT compiler generates a call to a stub for
the fmodf() intrinsic, and adds a relocation to fixup at load time. The
loader searches the libraries for the function, but fails because the
symbol is not exported. So, the call target remains NULL and the
execution crashes.
Since the math functions are loaded at JIT/runtime, the JIT can patch
CALL instruction directly instead of the searching the libraries'
exported symbols. However, this fix caused build failures due to
unresolved symbols like _fmodf at link time.
Therefore, the current fix defines helper functions in the Runtime
link/load library to perform the above operations. The address of these
helper functions are used to patch up the CALL instruction at load time.
Reviewers: lhames, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5387
Patch by Swaroop Sridhar!
llvm-svn: 221947
Windows defines NULL to 0, which when used as an argument to a variadic
function, is not a null pointer constant. As a result, Clang's
-Wsentinel fires on this code. Using '0' would be wrong on most 64-bit
platforms, but both MSVC and Clang make it work on Windows. Sidestep the
issue with nullptr.
llvm-svn: 221940
in-lane shuffles that aren't always handled well by the current vector
shuffle lowering.
No functionality change yet, that will follow in a subsequent commit.
llvm-svn: 221938
The generic FastISel code would bail, because it can't emit a sign-extend for
AArch64. This copies the code over and uses AArch64 specific emit functions.
This is not ideal and 'computeAddress' should handles this, so it can fold the
address computation into the memory operation.
I plan to clean up 'computeAddress' anyways, so I will add that in a future
commit.
Related to rdar://problem/18962471.
llvm-svn: 221923
These were directly using the old base instruction
class, and specifying the wrong register classes
for operands. The operands can be the other special
inputs besides SGPRs. The op name was also being
directly used for the asm string, so this was printed
without any operands.
llvm-svn: 221921
If a function is just an unreachable, this would hit a
"this is not a MachO target" assertion because of setting
HasSubsectionViaSymbols.
llvm-svn: 221920
e.g. v_mad_f32 a, b, c -> v_mad_f32 b, a, c
This simplifies matching v_madmk_f32.
This looks somewhat surprising, but it appears to be
OK to do this. We can commute src0 and src1 in all
of these instructions, and that's all that appears
to matter.
llvm-svn: 221910
Normally entries can only move to a lower address, but when that wasn't viable,
the user's block was considered anyway. Unfortunately, it went via
createNewWater which wasn't designed to handle the case where there's already
an island after the block.
Unfortunately, the test we have is slow and fragile, and I couldn't reduce it
to anything sane even with the @llvm.arm.space intrinsic. The test change here
is recreating the previous one after the change.
rdar://problem/18545506
llvm-svn: 221905
We were using a naive heuristic to determine whether a basic block already had
an unconditional branch at the end. This mostly corresponded to reality
(assuming branches got optimised) because there's not much point in a branch to
the next block, but could go wrong.
llvm-svn: 221904
Creating tests for the ConstantIslands pass is very difficult, since it depends
on precise layout details. Having the ability to precisely inject a number of
bytes into the stream helps greatly.
llvm-svn: 221903