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51 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Teresa Johnson
0062c013da Change TargetLibraryInfo analysis passes to always require Function
Summary:
This is the first change to enable the TLI to be built per-function so
that -fno-builtin* handling can be migrated to use function attributes.
See discussion on D61634 for background. This is an enabler for fixing
handling of these options for LTO, for example.

This change should not affect behavior, as the provided function is not
yet used to build a specifically per-function TLI, but rather enables
that migration.

Most of the changes were very mechanical, e.g. passing a Function to the
legacy analysis pass's getTLI interface, or in Module level cases,
adding a callback. This is similar to the way the per-function TTI
analysis works.

There was one place where we were looking for builtins but not in the
context of a specific function. See FindCXAAtExit in
lib/Transforms/IPO/GlobalOpt.cpp. I'm somewhat concerned my workaround
could provide the wrong behavior in some corner cases. Suggestions
welcome.

Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel

Subscribers: arsenm, dschuff, jvesely, nhaehnle, mehdi_amini, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, aheejin, steven_wu, george.burgess.iv, dexonsmith, jfb, asbirlea, gchatelet, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66428

llvm-svn: 371284
2019-09-07 03:09:36 +00:00
Evandro Menezes
1222e2dc7d [TargetLibraryInfo] Define enumerator for no library function (NFC)
Add a null enumerator do designate no library function.

llvm-svn: 370947
2019-09-04 18:15:58 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
f29a7ec8d3 Fix some accidental global initializers by using StringLiteral instead of StringRef
llvm-svn: 369850
2019-08-24 15:24:25 +00:00
Nemanja Ivanovic
b48ef1c4de Initial support for IBM MASS vector library
This is the LLVM portion of patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D59881.
The clang portion is to follow.

llvm-svn: 362568
2019-06-05 01:31:43 +00:00
Clement Courbet
9500985700 Fix sanitizer failures for 356550.
Mark bcmp as having optimized codegen, so that asan can detect it and
mark users as nobuiltin.

llvm-svn: 356568
2019-03-20 16:14:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
ae65e281f3 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Joel Jones
78f772fee0 Revert unapproved commit
llvm-svn: 347511
2018-11-24 07:26:55 +00:00
Joel Jones
74a51d699d [AArch64] Enable libm vectorized functions via SLEEF
This changeset is modeled after Intel's submission for SVML. It enables
trigonometry functions vectorization via SLEEF: http://sleef.org/.

 * A new vectorization library enum is added to TargetLibraryInfo.h: SLEEF.
 * A new option is added to TargetLibraryInfoImpl - ClVectorLibrary: SLEEF.
 * A comprehensive test case is included in this changeset.
 * In a separate changeset (for clang), a new vectorization library argument is
   added to -fveclib: -fveclib=SLEEF.

Trigonometry functions that are vectorized by sleef:

acos
asin
atan
atanh
cos
cosh
exp
exp2
exp10
lgamma
log10
log2
log
sin
sinh
sqrt
tan
tanh
tgamma

Patch by Stefan Teleman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53927

llvm-svn: 347510
2018-11-24 06:41:39 +00:00
Matthias Braun
bd0cb32d95 TargetLibraryInfo: Stop guessing wchar_t size
Usually the frontend communicates the size of wchar_t via metadata and
we can optimize wcslen (and possibly other calls in the future). In
cases without the wchar_size metadata we would previously try to guess
the correct size based on the target triple; however this is fragile to
keep up to date and may miss users manually changing the size via flags.
Better be safe and stop guessing and optimizing if the frontend didn't
communicate the size.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38106

llvm-svn: 314185
2017-09-26 02:36:57 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
03e3bdee22 fix formatting; NFC
llvm-svn: 305008
2017-06-08 20:00:09 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
33b4725d4a [CGP] don't expand a memcmp with nobuiltin attribute
This matches the behavior used in the SDAG when expanding memcmp.

For reference, we're intentionally treating the earlier fortified call transforms differently after:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=23093
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL233776

One motivation for not transforming nobuiltin calls is that it can interfere with sanitizers:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D19781
https://reviews.llvm.org/D19801

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34043

llvm-svn: 305007
2017-06-08 19:47:25 +00:00
Matthias Braun
be57ef6b4f SimplifyLibCalls: Optimize wcslen
Refactor the strlen optimization code to work for both strlen and wcslen.

This especially helps with programs in the wild where people pass
L"string"s to const std::wstring& function parameters and the wstring
constructor gets inlined.

This also fixes a lingerind API problem/bug in getConstantStringInfo()
where zeroinitializers would always give you an empty string (without a
length) back regardless of the actual length of the initializer which
did not work well in the TrimAtNul==false causing the PR mentioned
below.

Note that the fixed getConstantStringInfo() needed fixes to SelectionDAG
memcpy lowering and may lead to some cases for out-of-bounds
zeroinitializer accesses not getting optimized anymore. So some code
with UB may produce out of bound memory reads now instead of just
producing zeros.

The refactoring "accidentally" fixes http://llvm.org/PR32124

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32839

llvm-svn: 303461
2017-05-19 22:37:09 +00:00
David L. Jones
268960185f [Analysis] Add LibFunc_ prefix to enums in TargetLibraryInfo. (NFC)
Summary:
The LibFunc::Func enum holds enumerators named for libc functions.
Unfortunately, there are real situations, including libc implementations, where
function names are actually macros (musl uses "#define fopen64 fopen", for
example; any other transitively visible macro would have similar effects).

Strictly speaking, a conforming C++ Standard Library should provide any such
macros as functions instead (via <cstdio>). However, there are some "library"
functions which are not part of the standard, and thus not subject to this
rule (fopen64, for example). So, in order to be both portable and consistent,
the enum should not use the bare function names.

The old enum naming used a namespace LibFunc and an enum Func, with bare
enumerators. This patch changes LibFunc to be an enum with enumerators prefixed
with "LibFFunc_". (Unfortunately, a scoped enum is not sufficient to override
macros.)

There are additional changes required in clang.

Reviewers: rsmith

Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mzolotukhin, nemanjai, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28476

llvm-svn: 292848
2017-01-23 23:16:46 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
5937e81c61 fix comment typos; NFC
llvm-svn: 291447
2017-01-09 16:27:56 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
84780666b4 [PM] Extend the explicit 'invalidate' method API on analysis results to
accept an Invalidator that allows them to invalidate themselves if their
dependencies are in turn invalidated.

Rather than recording the dependency graph ahead of time when analysis
get results from other analyses, this simply lets each result trigger
the immediate invalidation of any analyses they actually depend on. They
do this in a way that has three nice properties:

1) They don't have to handle transitive dependencies because the
   infrastructure will recurse for them.
2) The invalidate methods are still called only once. We just
   dynamically discover the necessary topological ordering, everything
   is memoized nicely.
3) The infrastructure still provides a default implementation and can
   access it so that only analyses which have dependencies need to do
   anything custom.

To make this work at all, the invalidation logic also has to defer the
deletion of the result objects themselves so that they can remain alive
until we have collected the complete set of results to invalidate.

A unittest is added here that has exactly the dependency pattern we are
concerned with. It hit the use-after-free described by Sean in much
detail in the long thread about analysis invalidation before this
change, and even in an intermediate form of this change where we failed
to defer the deletion of the result objects.

There is an important problem with doing dependency invalidation that
*isn't* solved here: we don't *enforce* that results correctly
invalidate all the analyses whose results they depend on.

I actually looked at what it would take to do that, and it isn't as hard
as I had thought but the complexity it introduces seems very likely to
outweigh the benefit. The technique would be to provide a base class for
an analysis result that would be populated with other results, and
automatically provide the invalidate method which immediately does the
correct thing. This approach has some nice pros IMO:
- Handles the case we care about and nothing else: only *results*
  that depend on other analyses trigger extra invalidation.
- Localized to the result rather than centralized in the analysis
  manager.
- Ties the storage of the reference to another result to the triggering
  of the invalidation of that analysis.
- Still supports extending invalidation in customized ways.

But the down sides here are:
- Very heavy-weight meta-programming is needed to provide this base
  class.
- Requires a pretty awful API for accessing the dependencies.

Ultimately, I fear it will not pull its weight. But we can re-evaluate
this at any point if we start discovering consistent problems where the
invalidation and dependencies get out of sync. It will fit as a clean
layer on top of the facilities in this patch that we can add if and when
we need it.

Note that I'm not really thrilled with the names for these APIs... The
name "Invalidator" seems ok but not great. The method name "invalidate"
also. In review some improvements were suggested, but they really need
*other* uses of these terms to be updated as well so I'm going to do
that in a follow-up commit.

I'm working on the actual fixes to various analyses that need to use
these, but I want to try to get tests for each of them so we don't
regress. And those changes are seperable and obvious so once this goes
in I should be able to roll them out throughout LLVM.

Many thanks to Sean, Justin, and others for help reviewing here.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23738

llvm-svn: 288077
2016-11-28 22:04:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
dad102bcc9 [PM] Change the static object whose address is used to uniquely identify
analyses to have a common type which is enforced rather than using
a char object and a `void *` type when used as an identifier.

This has a number of advantages. First, it at least helps some of the
confusion raised in Justin Lebar's code review of why `void *` was being
used everywhere by having a stronger type that connects to documentation
about this.

However, perhaps more importantly, it addresses a serious issue where
the alignment of these pointer-like identifiers was unknown. This made
it hard to use them in pointer-like data structures. We were already
dodging this in dangerous ways to create the "all analyses" entry. In
a subsequent patch I attempted to use these with TinyPtrVector and
things fell apart in a very bad way.

And it isn't just a compile time or type system issue. Worse than that,
the actual alignment of these pointer-like opaque identifiers wasn't
guaranteed to be a useful alignment as they were just characters.

This change introduces a type to use as the "key" object whose address
forms the opaque identifier. This both forces the objects to have proper
alignment, and provides type checking that we get it right everywhere.
It also makes the types somewhat less mysterious than `void *`.

We could go one step further and introduce a truly opaque pointer-like
type to return from the `ID()` static function rather than returning
`AnalysisKey *`, but that didn't seem to be a clear win so this is just
the initial change to get to a reliably typed and aligned object serving
is a key for all the analyses.

Thanks to Richard Smith and Justin Lebar for helping pick plausible
names and avoid making this refactoring many times. =] And thanks to
Sean for the super fast review!

While here, I've tried to move away from the "PassID" nomenclature
entirely as it wasn't really helping and is overloaded with old pass
manager constructs. Now we have IDs for analyses, and key objects whose
address can be used as IDs. Where possible and clear I've shortened this
to just "ID". In a few places I kept "AnalysisID" to make it clear what
was being identified.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27031

llvm-svn: 287783
2016-11-23 17:53:26 +00:00
Marcin Koscielnicki
3aa3dc33a3 [TLI] Add functions determining if int parameters/returns should be zeroext/signext.
On some architectures (s390x, ppc64, sparc64, mips), C-level int is passed
as i32 signext instead of plain i32.  Likewise, unsigned int may be passed
as i32, i32 signext, or i32 zeroext depending on the platform.  Add this
information to TargetLibraryInfo, to be used whenever some LLVM pass
inserts a compiler-rt call to a function involving int parameters
or returns.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21739

llvm-svn: 287533
2016-11-21 11:57:11 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
c2de5980d3 Do a sweep over move ctors and remove those that are identical to the default.
All of these existed because MSVC 2013 was unable to synthesize default
move ctors. We recently dropped support for it so all that error-prone
boilerplate can go.

No functionality change intended.

llvm-svn: 284721
2016-10-20 12:20:28 +00:00
Mehdi Amini
1c713f7262 Use StringRef in TLI instead of raw pointer (NFC)
llvm-svn: 283005
2016-10-01 03:10:48 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
9056498e66 [PM] Redesign how the new PM detects whether an analysis result provides
its own invalidate method.

Previously, the technique would assume that if a result didn't have an
invalidate method that didn't exactly match the expected signature it
didn't have one at all. This is in fact not the case. And we had
analyses with incorrect signatures for the invalidate method in the
tree that would be erroneously invalidated in certain cases! Yikes.

Moreover a result might legitimately want to have multiple overloads for
the invalidate method, and if one changes or a new one is needed we
again really want a compiler error. For example in the tree we had not
added the overload for a *function* IR unit to the invalidate routine
for TLI. Doh.

So a new techique for the SFINAE detection here: if the result has *any*
member spelled "invalidate" we turn off the synthesis of a default
version. We don't care if it is a member function or a member variable
or how many overloads there are. Once a result has something by that
name it must provide suitable overloads for the contexts in which it is
used. This seems much more resilient and durable.

Huge props to Richard Smith who helped me figure out how on earth we
could even do this in C++. It took quite some doing. The technique is
remarkably clean however, and merely requires that the analysis results
are not *final* classes. I think that's a requirement we can live with
even if it is a bit odd.

I've fixed the two bad in-tree analysis results. And this will make my
next change which changes the API for invalidate much easier to
validate as correct.

llvm-svn: 279217
2016-08-19 07:49:23 +00:00
Nico Weber
6aa81f4185 Revert r2277979.
For some reason, MSVC2013's cl.exe crashes with
  fatal error C1001: An internal error has occurred in the compiler
with this when compiling e.g. LoopDistribute.cpp.

llvm-svn: 278011
2016-08-08 14:51:53 +00:00
Sean Silva
912f72d66b [PM] Function-level TLI is also immutable.
llvm-svn: 277979
2016-08-08 05:37:58 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor
0d36636866 Recommitting r275284: add support to inline __builtin_mempcpy
Patch by Sunita Marathe

Third try, now following fixes to MSan to handle mempcy in such a way that this commit won't break the MSan buildbots. (Thanks, Evegenii!)

llvm-svn: 277189
2016-07-29 18:23:18 +00:00
Matt Masten
6edcc04bd0 Initial support for vectorization using svml (short vector math library).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19544

llvm-svn: 277166
2016-07-29 16:42:44 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor
b1036e2a2f Reverting r276771 due to MSan failures.
llvm-svn: 276824
2016-07-27 01:19:24 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor
a24aa8b45d Re-committing r275284: add support to inline __builtin_mempcpy
Patch by Sunita Marathe

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21920

llvm-svn: 276771
2016-07-26 17:23:13 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor
eeaea871fe Reverting r275284 due to platform-specific test failures
llvm-svn: 275304
2016-07-13 19:09:16 +00:00
Andrew Kaylor
cc64af7d18 Fix for Bug 26903, adds support to inline __builtin_mempcpy
Patch by Sunita Marathe

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21920

llvm-svn: 275284
2016-07-13 17:25:11 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
4cad16d76c [PM] Remove support for omitting the AnalysisManager argument to new
pass manager passes' `run` methods.

This removes a bunch of SFINAE goop from the pass manager and just
requires pass authors to accept `AnalysisManager<IRUnitT> &` as a dead
argument. This is a small price to pay for the simplicity of the system
as a whole, despite the noise that changing it causes at this stage.

This will also helpfull allow us to make the signature of the run
methods much more flexible for different kinds af passes to support
things like intelligently updating the pass's progression over IR units.

While this touches many, many, files, the changes are really boring.
Mostly made with the help of my trusty perl one liners.

Thanks to Sean and Hal for bouncing ideas for this with me in IRC.

llvm-svn: 272978
2016-06-17 00:11:01 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
d415569b3b Apply most suggestions of clang-tidy's performance-unnecessary-value-param
Avoids unnecessary copies. All changes audited & pass tests with asan.
No functional change intended.

llvm-svn: 272190
2016-06-08 19:09:22 +00:00
Ahmed Bougacha
fff706e40a [TLI] Unify LibFunc signature checking. NFCI.
I tried to be as close as possible to the strongest check that
existed before; cleaning these up properly is left for future work.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19469

llvm-svn: 267758
2016-04-27 19:04:35 +00:00
Mehdi Amini
9ff867f98c [NFC] Header cleanup
Removed some unused headers, replaced some headers with forward class declarations.

Found using simple scripts like this one:
clear && ack --cpp -l '#include "llvm/ADT/IndexedMap.h"' | xargs grep -L 'IndexedMap[<]' | xargs grep -n --color=auto 'IndexedMap'

Patch by Eugene Kosov <claprix@yandex.ru>

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19219

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266595
2016-04-18 09:17:29 +00:00
Sanjay Patel
d0247b09f1 fix documentation comments; NFC
llvm-svn: 265321
2016-04-04 18:25:06 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0c3020180a [PM] Rename the CRTP mixin base classes for the new pass manager to
clarify their purpose.

Firstly, call them "...Mixin" types so it is clear that there is no
type hierarchy being formed here. Secondly, use the term 'Info' to
clarify that they aren't adding any interesting *semantics* to the
passes or analyses, just exposing APIs used by the management layer to
get information about the pass or analysis.

Thanks to Manuel for helping pin down the naming confusion here and come
up with effective names to address it.

In case you already have some out-of-tree stuff, the following should be
roughly what you want to update:

  perl -pi -e 's/\b(Pass|Analysis)Base\b/\1InfoMixin/g'

llvm-svn: 263217
2016-03-11 10:33:22 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0bb4ed7ba7 [PM] Implement the final conclusion as to how the analysis IDs should
work in the face of the limitations of DLLs and templated static
variables.

This requires passes that use the AnalysisBase mixin provide a static
variable themselves. So as to keep their APIs clean, I've made these
private and befriended the CRTP base class (which is the common
practice).

I've added documentation to AnalysisBase for why this is necessary and
at what point we can go back to the much simpler system.

This is clearly a better pattern than the extern template as it caught
*numerous* places where the template magic hadn't been applied and
things were "just working" but would eventually have broken
mysteriously.

llvm-svn: 263216
2016-03-11 10:22:49 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
798b80e69c [PM] Appease mingw32's auto-import DLL build with minimal tweaks, with fix for clang.
char AnalysisBase::ID should be declared as extern and defined in one module.

llvm-svn: 262188
2016-02-28 17:17:00 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
e7de739142 Revert r262185, "[PM] Appease mingw32's auto-import DLL build with minimal tweaks."
I'll rework soon.

llvm-svn: 262186
2016-02-28 16:54:06 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
56eaf56c6e [PM] Appease mingw32's auto-import DLL build with minimal tweaks.
char AnalysisBase::ID should be declared as extern and defined in one module.

llvm-svn: 262185
2016-02-28 16:38:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
a25189ea0f [PM] Introduce CRTP mixin base classes to help define passes and
analyses in the new pass manager.

These just handle really basic stuff: turning a type name into a string
statically that is nice to print in logs, and getting a static unique ID
for each analysis.

Sadly, the format of passes in anonymous namespaces makes using their
names in tests really annoying so I've customized the names of the no-op
passes to keep tests sane to read.

This is the first of a few simplifying refactorings for the new pass
manager that should reduce boilerplate and confusion.

llvm-svn: 262004
2016-02-26 11:44:45 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
69a3fdb314 Fix some comment typos.
llvm-svn: 244402
2015-08-08 18:27:36 +00:00
Hans Wennborg
34fee45808 Fix -Wextra-semi warnings.
Patch by Eugene Zelenko!

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11400

llvm-svn: 242930
2015-07-22 20:46:11 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin
32106188c4 TLI: Add addVectorizableFunctionsFromVecLib.
Also, add several entries to vectorizable functions table, and
corresponding tests. The table isn't complete, it'll be populated later.

Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8131
llvm-svn: 232531
2015-03-17 19:50:55 +00:00
Michael Zolotukhin
53657a8d22 TLI: Add interface for querying whether a function is vectorizable.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8093
llvm-svn: 232523
2015-03-17 19:22:30 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
385eaa614d Make static variables const if possible. Makes them go into a read-only section.
Or fold them into a initializer list which has the same effect. NFC.

llvm-svn: 231598
2015-03-08 16:07:39 +00:00
Eric Christopher
18294959f1 Typo.
llvm-svn: 231547
2015-03-07 01:39:09 +00:00
Jan Wen Voung
3c49412d27 Move TargetLibraryInfo data from two files into one common .def file.
Summary:
This makes it more obvious that the enum definition and the
"StandardName" array is in sync. Mechanically refactored w/ a
python script.

Test Plan: still compiles

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7845

llvm-svn: 231172
2015-03-03 23:41:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
359eeef50a [PM] Rework how the TargetLibraryInfo pass integrates with the new pass
manager to support the actual uses of it. =]

When I ported instcombine to the new pass manager I discover that it
didn't work because TLI wasn't available in the right places. This is
a somewhat surprising and/or subtle aspect of the new pass manager
design that came up before but I think is useful to be reminded of:

While the new pass manager *allows* a function pass to query a module
analysis, it requires that the module analysis is already run and cached
prior to the function pass manager starting up, possibly with
a 'require<foo>' style utility in the pass pipeline. This is an
intentional hurdle because using a module analysis from a function pass
*requires* that the module analysis is run prior to entering the
function pass manager. Otherwise the other functions in the module could
be in who-knows-what state, etc.

A somewhat surprising consequence of this design decision (at least to
me) is that you have to design a function pass that leverages
a module analysis to do so as an optional feature. Even if that means
your function pass does no work in the absence of the module analysis,
you have to handle that possibility and remain conservatively correct.
This is a natural consequence of things being able to invalidate the
module analysis and us being unable to re-run it. And it's a generally
good thing because it lets us reorder passes arbitrarily without
breaking correctness, etc.

This ends up causing problems in one case. What if we have a module
analysis that is *definitionally* impossible to invalidate. In the
places this might come up, the analysis is usually also definitionally
trivial to run even while other transformation passes run on the module,
regardless of the state of anything. And so, it follows that it is
natural to have a hard requirement on such analyses from a function
pass.

It turns out, that TargetLibraryInfo is just such an analysis, and
InstCombine has a hard requirement on it.

The approach I've taken here is to produce an analysis that models this
flexibility by making it both a module and a function analysis. This
exposes the fact that it is in fact safe to compute at any point. We can
even make it a valid CGSCC analysis at some point if that is useful.
However, we don't want to have a copy of the actual target library info
state for each function! This state is specific to the triple. The
somewhat direct and blunt approach here is to turn TLI into a pimpl,
with the state and mutators in the implementation class and the query
routines primarily in the wrapper. Then the analysis can lazily
construct and cache the implementations, keyed on the triple, and
on-demand produce wrappers of them for each function.

One minor annoyance is that we will end up with a wrapper for each
function in the module. While this is a bit wasteful (one pointer per
function) it seems tolerable. And it has the advantage of ensuring that
we pay the absolute minimum synchronization cost to access this
information should we end up with a nice parallel function pass manager
in the future. We could look into trying to mark when analysis results
are especially cheap to recompute and more eagerly GC-ing the cached
results, or we could look at supporting a variant of analyses whose
results are specifically *not* cached and expected to just be used and
discarded by the consumer. Either way, these seem like incremental
enhancements that should happen when we start profiling the memory and
CPU usage of the new pass manager and not before.

The other minor annoyance is that if we end up using the TLI in both
a module pass and a function pass, those will be produced by two
separate analyses, and thus will point to separate copies of the
implementation state. While a minor issue, I dislike this and would like
to find a way to cleanly allow a single analysis instance to be used
across multiple IR unit managers. But I don't have a good solution to
this today, and I don't want to hold up all of the work waiting to come
up with one. This too seems like a reasonable thing to incrementally
improve later.

llvm-svn: 226981
2015-01-24 02:06:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0a49f1bfc1 [PM] Port TargetLibraryInfo to the new pass manager, provided by the
TargetLibraryAnalysis pass.

There are actually no direct tests of this already in the tree. I've
added the most basic test that the pass manager bits themselves work,
and the TLI object produced will be tested by an upcoming patches as
they port passes which rely on TLI.

This is starting to point out the awkwardness of the invalidate API --
it seems poorly fitting on the *result* object. I suspect I will change
it to live on the analysis instead, but that's not for this change, and
I'd rather have a few more passes ported in order to have more
experience with how this plays out.

I believe there is only one more analysis required in order to start
porting instcombine. =]

llvm-svn: 226160
2015-01-15 11:39:46 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
88fd126216 [PM] Separate the TargetLibraryInfo object from the immutable pass.
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.

Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.

llvm-svn: 226157
2015-01-15 10:41:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d706163e8b [PM] Clean up the TLI doxygen comments prior to refactoring this code
for the new pass manager.

llvm-svn: 226089
2015-01-15 03:51:04 +00:00