libstdc++ (or in compilers, or somewhere, I can't track it down) that
causes unittests that use INITIALIZE_PASS to crash.
The analysis I've been able to do is that inside libstdc++'s
implementation of std::call_once, it uses pthread_once, and when that
returns an error code it throws std::system_error which then eventually
calls std::terminate.
Hopefully some of the folks who work on PPC can try to sort out what's
going on here. Until then, they'll have to use the fallback
implementation.
llvm-svn: 271821
CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with the new
llvm::call_once facility.
Nothing changed sicne the last attempt in r271781 which I reverted in
r271788. At least one of the failures I saw was spurious, and I want to
make sure the other failures are real before I work around them -- they
appeared to only effect ppc64le and ppc64be.
Original commit message of r271781:
----
[LPM] Reinstate r271652 to replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
This reverts commit r271657 and re-applies r271652 with a fix to
actually work with arguments. In the original version, we just ended up
directly calling std::call_once via ADL because of the std::once_flag
argument. The llvm::call_once never worked with arguments. Now,
llvm::call_once is a variadic template that perfectly forwards
everything. As a part of this it had to move to the header and we use
a generic functor rather than an explict function pointer. It would be
nice to use std::invoke here but we don't have it yet. That means
pointer to members won't work here, but that seems a tolerable
compromise.
I've also tested this by forcing the fallback path, so hopefully it
sticks this time.
----
Original commit message of r271652:
----
[LPM] Replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with
the new llvm::call_once facility.
This facility matches the standard APIs and when the platform supports
it actually directly uses the standard provided functionality. This is
both more efficient on some platforms and much more TSan friendly.
The only remaining user of the cas_flag and home-rolled atomics is the
fallback implementation of call_once. I have a patch that removes them
entirely, but it needs a Windows patch to land first.
This alone substantially cleans up the macros for the legacy pass
manager, and should subsume some of the work Mehdi was doing to clear
the path for TSan testing of ThinLTO, a really important step to have
reliable upstream testing of ThinLTO in all forms.
----
llvm-svn: 271800
There appears to be a strange exception thrown and crash using call_once
on a PPC build bot, and a *really* weird windows link error for
GCMetadata.obj. Still need to investigate the cause of both problems.
Original change summary:
[LPM] Reinstate r271652 to replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
llvm-svn: 271788
pass manager with the new llvm::call_once facility.
This reverts commit r271657 and re-applies r271652 with a fix to
actually work with arguments. In the original version, we just ended up
directly calling std::call_once via ADL because of the std::once_flag
argument. The llvm::call_once never worked with arguments. Now,
llvm::call_once is a variadic template that perfectly forwards
everything. As a part of this it had to move to the header and we use
a generic functor rather than an explict function pointer. It would be
nice to use std::invoke here but we don't have it yet. That means
pointer to members won't work here, but that seems a tolerable
compromise.
I've also tested this by forcing the fallback path, so hopefully it
sticks this time.
Original commit message:
----
[LPM] Replace the CALL_ONCE_... macro in the legacy pass manager with
the new llvm::call_once facility.
This facility matches the standard APIs and when the platform supports
it actually directly uses the standard provided functionality. This is
both more efficient on some platforms and much more TSan friendly.
The only remaining user of the cas_flag and home-rolled atomics is the
fallback implementation of call_once. I have a patch that removes them
entirely, but it needs a Windows patch to land first.
This alone substantially cleans up the macros for the legacy pass
manager, and should subsume some of the work Mehdi was doing to clear
the path for TSan testing of ThinLTO, a really important step to have
reliable upstream testing of ThinLTO in all forms.
llvm-svn: 271781
D19271.
Previous attempt was broken by NetBSD, so in this version I've made the
fallback path generic rather than Windows specific and sent both Windows
and NetBSD to it.
I've also re-formatted the code some, and used an exact clone of the
code in PassSupport.h for doing manual call-once using our atomics
rather than rolling a new one.
If this sticks, we can replace the fallback path for Windows with
a Windows-specific implementation that is more reliable.
Original commit message:
This patch adds an llvm_call_once which is a wrapper around
std::call_once on platforms where it is available and devoid
of bugs. The patch also migrates the ManagedStatic mutex to
be allocated using llvm_call_once.
These changes are philosophically equivalent to the changes
added in r219638, which were reverted due to a hang on Win32
which was the result of a bug in the Windows implementation
of std::call_once.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5922
llvm-svn: 271558
This reverts commit r221331 and reinstate r220932 as discussed in D19271.
Original commit message was:
This patch adds an llvm_call_once which is a wrapper around
std::call_once on platforms where it is available and devoid
of bugs. The patch also migrates the ManagedStatic mutex to
be allocated using llvm_call_once.
These changes are philosophically equivalent to the changes
added in r219638, which were reverted due to a hang on Win32
which was the result of a bug in the Windows implementation
of std::call_once.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5922
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 269577
The patch is generated using this command:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
llvm/lib/
Thanks to Eugene Kosov for the original patch!
llvm-svn: 240137
Commit 220932 caused crash when building clang-tblgen on aarch64 debian target,
so it's blocking all daily tests.
The std::call_once implementation in pthread has bug for aarch64 debian.
llvm-svn: 221331
Summary:
This patch adds an llvm_call_once which is a wrapper around std::call_once on platforms where it is available and devoid of bugs. The patch also migrates the ManagedStatic mutex to be allocated using llvm_call_once.
These changes are philosophically equivalent to the changes added in r219638, which were reverted due to a hang on Win32 which was the result of a bug in the Windows implementation of std::call_once.
Reviewers: aaron.ballman, chapuni, chandlerc, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5922
llvm-svn: 220932
This goes with the earlier commit to remove the static destructor from ManagedStatic.cpp by controlling the allocation and de-allocation of the mutex.
Summary: This is part of the ongoing work to remove static constructors and destructors.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5473
llvm-svn: 219640
This patch adds a new llvm_call_once function which is used by the ManagedStatic implementation to safely initialize a global to avoid static construction and destruction.
llvm-svn: 219638
After a number of previous small iterations, the functions
llvm_start_multithreaded() and llvm_stop_multithreaded() have
been reduced essentially to no-ops. This change removes them
entirely.
Reviewed by: rnk, dblaikie
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4216
llvm-svn: 211287
This patch removes the LLVM global lock, and updates all existing
users of the global lock to use their own mutex. None of the
existing users of the global lock were protecting code that was
mutually exclusive with any of the other users of the global
lock, so its purpose was not being met.
Reviewed by: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4142
llvm-svn: 211277
This patch removes the functions llvm_start_multithreaded() and
llvm_stop_multithreaded(), and changes llvm_is_multithreaded()
to return a constant value based on the value of the compile-time
definition LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS.
Previously, it was possible to have compile-time support for
threads on, and runtime support for threads off, in which case
certain mutexes were not allocated or ever acquired. Now, if the
build is created with threads enabled, mutexes are always acquired.
A test before/after patch of compiling a very large TU showed no
noticeable performance impact of this change.
Reviewers: rnk
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4076
llvm-svn: 210600
* wrap code blocks in \code ... \endcode;
* refer to parameter names in paragraphs correctly (\arg is not what most
people want -- it starts a new paragraph).
llvm-svn: 163790