target directories themselves. This also means that VMCore no longer
needs to know about every target's list of intrinsics. Future work
will include converting the PowerPC target to this interface as an
example implementation.
llvm-svn: 63765
support GraphViz, I've been using the foo->dump() facility. This
patch is a minor rewrite to the SelectionDAG dump() stuff to make it a
little more helpful. The existing foo->dump() functionality does not
change; this patch adds foo->dumpr(). All of this is only useful when
running LLVM under a debugger.
llvm-svn: 63736
they are useful to analyses other than BasicAliasAnalysis.cpp. Include
the full comment for isIdentifiedObject in the header file. Thanks to
Chris for suggeseting this.
llvm-svn: 63589
information. This eliminates the need for the Flags field in MemSDNode,
so this makes LoadSDNode and StoreSDNode smaller. Also, it makes
FoldingSetNodeIDs for loads and stores two AddIntegers smaller.
llvm-svn: 63577
crashes or wrong code with codegen of large integers:
eliminate the legacy getIntegerVTBitMask and
getIntegerVTSignBit methods, which returned their
value as a uint64_t, so couldn't handle huge types.
llvm-svn: 63494
returned by getShiftAmountTy may be too small
to hold shift values (it is an i8 on x86-32).
Before and during type legalization, use a large
but legal type for shift amounts: getPointerTy;
afterwards use getShiftAmountTy, fixing up any
shift amounts with a big type during operation
legalization. Thanks to Dan for writing the
original patch (which I shamelessly pillaged).
llvm-svn: 63482
information output. However, many target specific tool chains prefer to encode
only one compile unit in an object file. In this situation, the LLVM code
generator will include debugging information entities in the compile unit
that is marked as main compile unit. The code generator accepts maximum one main
compile unit per module. If a module does not contain any main compile unit
then the code generator will emit multiple compile units in the output object
file.
[Part 1]
Update DebugInfo APIs to accept optional boolean value while creating DICompileUnit to mark the unit as "main" unit. By defaults all units are considered non-main. Update SourceLevelDebugging.html to document "main" compile unit.
Update DebugInfo APIs to not accept and encode separate source file/directory entries while creating various llvm.dbg.* entities. There was a recent, yet to be documented, change to include this additional information so no documentation changes are required here.
Update DwarfDebug to handle "main" compile unit. If "main" compile unit is seen then all DIEs are inserted into "main" compile unit. All other compile units are used to find source location for llvm.dbg.* values. If there is not any "main" compile unit then create unique compile unit DIEs for each llvm.dbg.compile_unit.
[Part 2]
Create separate llvm.dbg.compile_unit for each input file. Mark compile unit create for main_input_filename as "main" compile unit. Use appropriate compile unit, based on source location information collected from the tree node, while creating llvm.dbg.* values using DebugInfo APIs.
---
This is Part 1.
llvm-svn: 63400
If a MachineInstr doesn't have a memoperand but has an opcode that
is known to load or store, assume its memory reference may alias
*anything*, including stack slots which the compiler completely
controls.
To partially compensate for this, teach the ScheduleDAG building
code to do basic getUnderlyingValue analysis. This greatly
reduces the number of instructions that require restrictive
dependencies. This code will need to be revisited when we start
doing real alias analysis, but it should suffice for now.
llvm-svn: 63370
- Modify TableGen to add the DebugLoc when calling getTargetNode.
(The light-weight wrappers are only temporary. The non-DebugLoc version will be
removed once the whole debug info stuff is finished with.)
llvm-svn: 63273
dagcombines that help it match in several more cases. Add
several more cases to test/CodeGen/X86/bt.ll. This doesn't
yet include matching for BT with an immediate operand, it
just covers more register+register cases.
llvm-svn: 63266
new isOperationLegalOrCustom, which does what isOperationLegal
previously did.
Update a bunch of callers to use isOperationLegalOrCustom
instead of isOperationLegal. In some case it wasn't obvious
which behavior is desired; when in doubt I changed then to
isOperationLegalOrCustom as that preserves their previous
behavior.
This is for the second half of PR3376.
llvm-svn: 63212
a uint64_t to verify that the value is in range for the given type,
to help catch accidental overflow. Fix a few places that relied on
getConstant implicitly truncating the value.
llvm-svn: 63128
assignment operator) were returning a copy of the bit vector, instead of a
reference! This old semantics probably did not meet the expectations.
With this patch, chained assignments happen to the right object.
llvm-svn: 63012
tidy up SDUse and related code.
- Replace the operator= member functions with a set method, like
LLVM Use has, and variants setInitial and setNode, which take
care up updating use lists, like LLVM Use's does. This simplifies
code that calls these functions.
- getSDValue() is renamed to get(), as in LLVM Use, though most
places can either use the implicit conversion to SDValue or the
convenience functions instead.
- Fix some more node vs. value terminology issues.
Also, eliminate the one remaining use of SDOperandPtr, and
SDOperandPtr itself.
llvm-svn: 62995
of each use in the SelectionDAG ReplaceAllUses* functions. Thanks
to Chris for spotting this opportunity.
Also, factor out code from all 5 of the ReplaceAllUses* functions
into AddNonLeafNodeToCSEMaps, which is now renamed
AddModifiedNodeToCSEMaps to more accurately reflect its purpose.
llvm-svn: 62964
DW_AT_APPLE_optimized flag is set when a compile_unit is optimized. The debugger takes advantage of this information some way.
DW_AT_APPLE_flags encodes command line options when certain env. variable is set. This is used by build engineers to track various gcc command lines used by by a project, irrespective of whether the project used makefile, Xcode or something else.
llvm-gcc patch is next.
llvm-svn: 62888
There is now a direct way from value-use-iterator to incoming block in PHINode's API.
This way we avoid the iterator->index->iterator trip, and especially the costly
getOperandNo() invocation. Additionally there is now an assertion that the iterator
really refers to one of the PHI's Uses.
llvm-svn: 62869
ASCII IR; loading and storing these can change the
bits of NaNs on some hosts. Remove or add warnings
at a few other places using host floating point;
this is a bad thing to do in general.
llvm-svn: 62712
SDNode subclasses to keep state that requires non-trivial
destructors, however it was already effectively impossible,
since the destructor isn't actually ever called. There currently
aren't any SDNode subclasses affected by this, and in general
it's desireable to keep SDNode objects light-weight.
This eliminates the last virtual member function in the SDNode
class, so it eliminates the need for a vtable pointer, making
SDNode smaller.
llvm-svn: 62539
doing very similar pointer capture analysis.
Factor out the common logic. The new version
is from FunctionAttrs since it does a better
job than the version in BasicAliasAnalysis
llvm-svn: 62461
and every other instruction in their blocks to keep the terminator
instructions at the end, teach the post-RA scheduler how to operate
on ranges of instructions, and exclude terminators from the range
of instructions that get scheduled.
Also, exclude mid-block labels, such as EH_LABEL instructions, and
schedule code before them separately from code after them. This
fixes problems with the post-RA scheduler moving code past
EH_LABELs.
llvm-svn: 62366
For example, PIC16 needs to break a long or int constant into mulitple parts and emit multiple directives. So Allow targets to overried EmitConstantValueOnly().
llvm-svn: 62301
a new toy hazard recognizier heuristic which attempts to direct the
scheduler to avoid clumping large groups of loads or stores too densely.
llvm-svn: 62291
loops, hoisting instructions all the way out in one step rather
than hoisting them one nest level at a time. Also, make a few
other code simplifications. This speeds up MachineLICM
by several fold.
llvm-svn: 62283
and into the ScheduleDAGInstrs class, so that they don't get
destructed and re-constructed for each block. This fixes a
compile-time hot spot in the post-pass scheduler.
To help facilitate this, tidy and do some minor reorganization
in the scheduler constructor functions.
llvm-svn: 62275
my earlier patch to this file.
The issue there was that all uses of an IV inside a loop
are actually references to Base[IV*2], and there was one
use outside that was the same but LSR didn't see the base
or the scaling because it didn't recurse into uses outside
the loop; thus, it used base+IV*scale mode inside the loop
instead of pulling base out of the loop. This was extra bad
because register pressure later forced both base and IV into
memory. Doing that recursion, at least enough
to figure out addressing modes, is a good idea in general;
the change in AddUsersIfInteresting does this. However,
there were side effects....
It is also possible for recursing outside the loop to
introduce another IV where there was only 1 before (if
the refs inside are not scaled and the ref outside is).
I don't think this is a common case, but it's in the testsuite.
It is right to be very aggressive about getting rid of
such introduced IVs (CheckForIVReuse and the handling of
nonzero RewriteFactor in StrengthReduceStridedIVUsers).
In the testcase in question the new IV produced this way
has both a nonconstant stride and a nonzero base, neither
of which was handled before. And when inserting
new code that feeds into a PHI, it's right to put such
code at the original location rather than in the PHI's
immediate predecessor(s) when the original location is outside
the loop (a case that couldn't happen before)
(RewriteInstructionToUseNewBase); better to avoid making
multiple copies of it in this case.
Also, the mechanism for keeping SCEV's corresponding to GEP's
no longer works, as the GEP might change after its SCEV
is remembered, invalidating the SCEV, and we might get a bad
SCEV value when looking up the GEP again for a later loop.
This also couldn't happen before, as we weren't recursing
into GEP's outside the loop.
Also, when we build an expression that involves a (possibly
non-affine) IV from a different loop as well as an IV from
the one we're interested in (containsAddRecFromDifferentLoop),
don't recurse into that. We can't do much with it and will
get in trouble if we try to create new non-affine IVs or something.
More testcases are coming.
llvm-svn: 62212
opcode on each delegation.
Instead the information is cached on construction and the cached flag used thereafter.
Introduced two predicates: isCall and isInvoke.
llvm-svn: 62055
functions that don't already have a (dynamic) alloca.
Dynamic allocas cause inefficient codegen and we shouldn't
propagate this (behavior follows gcc). Two existing tests
assumed such inlining would be done; they are hacked by
adding an alloca in the caller, preserving the point of
the tests.
llvm-svn: 61946
StringMapEntryInitializer classes. Leave it for the compiler to figure out what
the type is and what "0" should be transformed into.
* Un-disable the unit tests which test the StringMapEntryInitializer class.
llvm-svn: 61922
v1024 = EDI // not killed
=
= EDI
One possible solution is for the coalescer to examine the sub-register live intervals in the same manner as the physical register. Another possibility is to examine defs and uses (when needed) of sub-registers. Both solutions are too expensive. For now, look for "short virtual intervals" and scan instructions to look for conflict instead.
This is a small win on x86-64. e.g. It shaves 403.gcc by ~80 instructions.
llvm-svn: 61847
to handle LLVMMatchType intrinsic parameters, and by adding new subclasses
of LLVMMatchType to match vector types with integral elements that are
either twice as wide or half as wide as the elements of the matched type.
llvm-svn: 61834