If TheModule is declared before LLVMContext then it will be destructed after it,
crashing when it tries to deregister itself from the destructed context.
llvm-svn: 270381
This isn't the complete fix, but it handles the trivial examples of duplicate vzero* ops in PR27823:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27823
...and amusingly, the bogus cases already exist as regression tests, so let's take this baby step.
We'll need to do more in the general case where there's legitimate AVX usage in the function + there's
already a vzero in the code.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20477
llvm-svn: 270378
We could try harder to handle non-splat vector constants too,
but that seems much rarer to me.
Note that the div test isn't resolved because there's a check
for isIntegerTy() guarding that transform.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20497
llvm-svn: 270369
This fixes a bug introduced in:
r262115 - CodeGen: Take MachineInstr& in SlotIndexes and LiveIntervals, NFC
The iterator End here might == MBB->end(), and so we can't unconditionally
dereference it. This often goes unnoticed (I don't have a test case that always
crashes, and ASAN does not catch it either) because the function call arguments are
turned right back into iterators. MachineInstrBundleIterator's constructor,
however, does have an assert which might randomly fire.
llvm-svn: 270323
Main problem here was that SHF_COMPRESSED has the same value with
XCORE_SHF_CP_SECTION, which was included as standart (common) flag.
As far I understand xCore is a family of controllers and it that
means it's constant should be processed separately,
only if e_machine == EM_XCORE, otherwise llvm-readobj would output
different constants twice for compressed section:
Flags [
..
SHF_COMPRESSED (0x800)
..
XCORE_SHF_CP_SECTION (0x800)
..
]
what probably does not make sence if you're not working with xcore file.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20273
llvm-svn: 270320
A cleanuppad is not cheap, they turn into many instructions and result
in additional spills and fills. It is not worth keeping a cleanuppad
around if all it does is hold a lifetime.end instruction.
N.B. We first try to merge the cleanuppad with another cleanuppad to
avoid dropping the lifetime and debug info markers.
llvm-svn: 270314
Allocating larger register classes first should give better allocation
results (and more importantly for myself, make the lit tests more stable
with respect to scheduler changes).
Patch by Matthias Braun
llvm-svn: 270312
The InductiveRangeCheck struct is only five words long; so passing these
around value is fine. The allocator makes the code look more complex
than it is.
llvm-svn: 270309
I had used `std::remove_if` under the assumption that it moves the
predicate matching elements to the end, but actaully the elements
remaining towards the end (after the iterator returned by
`std::remove_if`) are indeterminate. Fix the bug (and make the code
more straightforward) by using a temporary SmallVector, and add a test
case demonstrating the issue.
llvm-svn: 270306
Prior to this patch, we were using 1 for all the repairing costs.
Now, we use the information from the target to get this information.
llvm-svn: 270304
The current SGPR spilling test does not stress this
because it is using s_buffer_load instructions to
increase SGPR pressure and spill, but their output
operands have the same SReg_32_XM0 constraint. This fixes
an error when the SReg_32 output from most instructions
is spilled.
llvm-svn: 270301