Update testcases that rely on malloc insts being present.
Also prematurely remove MallocInst handling from IndMemRemoval and RaiseAllocations to help pass tests in this incremental step.
llvm-svn: 84292
identifying the malloc as a non-array malloc. This broke GlobalOpt's optimization of stores of mallocs
to global variables.
The fix is to classify malloc's into 3 categories:
1. non-array mallocs
2. array mallocs whose array size can be determined
3. mallocs that cannot be determined to be of type 1 or 2 and cannot be optimized
getMallocArraySize() returns NULL for category 3, and all users of this function must avoid their
malloc optimization if this function returns NULL.
Eventually, currently unexpected codegen for computing the malloc's size argument will be supported in
isArrayMalloc() and getMallocArraySize(), extending malloc optimizations to those examples.
llvm-svn: 84199
so get rid of eh.selector.i64 and rename eh.selector.i32 to eh.selector.
Likewise for eh.typeid.for. This aligns us with gcc, which always uses a
32 bit value for the selector on all platforms. My understanding is that
the register allocator used to assert if the selector intrinsic size didn't
match the pointer size, and this was the reason for introducing the two
variants. However my testing shows that this is no longer the case (I
fixed some bugs in selector lowering yesterday, and some more today in the
fastisel path; these might have caused the original problems).
llvm-svn: 84106
truncating an SDValue (depending on whether the target
type is bigger or smaller than the value's type); or zero
extending or truncating it. Use it in a few places (this
seems to be a popular operation, but I only modified cases
of it in SelectionDAGBuild). In particular, the eh_selector
lowering was doing this wrong due to a repeated rather than
inverted test, fixed with this change.
llvm-svn: 84027
bootstrap of FSF-style PPC, so there is some
reason to believe the original bug (which was
never analyzed) has been fixed, probably by
82266.
llvm-svn: 83871
is trivially rematerializable and integrate it into
TargetInstrInfo::isTriviallyReMaterializable. This way, all places that
need to know whether an instruction is rematerializable will get the
same answer.
This enables the useful parts of the aggressive-remat option by
default -- using AliasAnalysis to determine whether a memory location
is invariant, and removes the questionable parts -- rematting operations
with virtual register inputs that may not be live everywhere.
llvm-svn: 83687
While recording beginning of a function, use scope info from the first location entry instead of just relying on first location entry itself.
llvm-svn: 83684
mappings, which could cause errors and assert-failures. This patch fixes that,
adds a test, and refactors the global-mapping-removal code into a single place.
llvm-svn: 83678
to declare that they preserve other passes without needing to pull in
additional header file or library dependencies. Convert MachineFunctionPass
and CodeGenLICM to make use of this.
llvm-svn: 83555
implementations with a new MachineInstr::isInvariantLoad, which uses
MachineMemOperands and is target-independent. This brings MachineLICM
and other functionality to targets which previously lacked an
isInvariantLoad implementation.
llvm-svn: 83475
a virtual register to eliminate a frame index, it can return that register
and the constant stored there to PEI to track. When scavenging to allocate
for those registers, PEI then tracks the last-used register and value, and
if it is still available and matches the value for the next index, reuses
the existing value rather and removes the re-materialization instructions.
Fancier tracking and adjustment of scavenger allocations to keep more
values live for longer is possible, but not yet implemented and would likely
be better done via a different, less special-purpose, approach to the
problem.
eliminateFrameIndex() is modified so the target implementations can return
the registers they wish to be tracked for reuse.
ARM Thumb1 implements and utilizes the new mechanism. All other targets are
simply modified to adjust for the changed eliminateFrameIndex() prototype.
llvm-svn: 83467
intuitive.
It does NOT update the value if the key is already in the map,
it also returns false if the key is already in the map, regardless
if the value matched.
llvm-svn: 83458
spill slot. When frame references are via the frame pointer, they will be
negative, but Thumb1 load/store instructions only allow positive immediate
offsets. Instead, Thumb1 will spill to R12.
llvm-svn: 83336
question, can we get rid of the BasicBlock versions of all inserters
and use Head == 0 to indicate the old case when GetInsertBlock == 0?
llvm-svn: 83216
set, these flags indicate the instructions source / def operands have special
register allocation requirement that are not captured in their register classes.
Post-allocation passes (e.g. post-alloc scheduler) should not change their
allocations. e.g. ARM::LDRD require the two definitions to be allocated
even / odd register pair.
llvm-svn: 83196
to emit target-specific things at the beginning of the asm output. This
fixes a problem for PPC, where the text sections are not being kept together
as expected. The base class doInitialization code calls DW->BeginModule()
which emits a bunch of DWARF section directives. The PPC doInitialization
code then emits all the TEXT section directives, with the intention that they
will be kept together. But as I understand it, the Darwin assembler treats
the default TEXT section as a special case and moves it to the beginning of
the file, which means that all those DWARF sections are in the middle of
the text. With this change, the EmitStartOfAsmFile hook is called before
the DWARF section directives are emitted, so that all the PPC text section
directives come out right at the beginning of the file.
llvm-svn: 83176
basic blocks that are so long that their size overflows a short.
Also assert that overflow does not happen in the future, as requested by Evan.
This fixes PR4401.
llvm-svn: 83159
information. This allows arbitrary code involving DW_OP_plus_uconst
and DW_OP_deref. The scheme allows for easy extention to include,
any, or all of the DW_OP_ opcodes. I thought about just exposing all
of them, but, wasn't sure if people wanted the dwarf opcodes exposed
in the api. Is that a layering violation?
With this scheme, the entire existing block scheme used by llvm-gcc
can be switched over to the new scheme. I think that would be
cleaner, as then the compiler specific bits are not present in llvm
proper. Before the old code can be yanked however, similar code in
clang would have to be removed.
Next up, more testing.
llvm-svn: 83120
unused DECLARE instruction.
KILL is not yet used anywhere, it will replace TargetInstrInfo::IMPLICIT_DEF
in the places where IMPLICIT_DEF is just used to alter liveness of physical
registers.
llvm-svn: 83006
the PassManager code into a regular verifyAnalysis method.
Also, reorganize loop verification. Make the LoopPass infrastructure
call verifyLoop as needed instead of having LoopInfo::verifyAnalysis
check every loop in the function after each looop pass. Add a new
command-line argument, -verify-loop-info, to enable the expensive
full checking.
llvm-svn: 82952
code that stops the timer doesn't have to search to find the timer
object before it stops the timer. This avoids a lock acquisition
and a few other things done with the timer running.
llvm-svn: 82949