This also improves the logic of what is an error:
* getSection(uint_32): only return an error if the index is out of bounds. The
index 0 corresponds to a perfectly valid entry.
* getSection(Elf_Sym): Returns null for symbols that normally don't have
sections and error for out of bound indexes.
In many places this just moves the report_fatal_error up the stack, but those
can then be fixed in smaller patches.
llvm-svn: 241156
Function static variables, typedefs and records (class, struct or union) declared inside
a lexical scope were associated with the function as their parent scope, rather than the
lexical scope they are defined or declared in.
This fixes PR19238
Patch by: amjad.aboud@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9758
llvm-svn: 241153
The incoming EBP value established by the runtime is actually a pointer
to the end of the EH registration object, and not the true parent
function frame pointer. Clang doesn't need llvm.x86.seh.exceptioninfo
anymore because we know that the exception info pointer is at a fixed
offset from this incoming EBP.
The llvm.x86.seh.recoverfp intrinsic takes an EBP value provided by the
EH runtime and returns a pointer that is usable with llvm.framerecover.
The llvm.x86.seh.restoreframe intrinsic is inserted by the 32-bit
specific preparation pass in blocks targetted by the EH runtime. It
re-establishes any physical registers used by the parent function to
address the stack, such as the frame, base, and stack pointers.
Neither of these intrinsics correctly handle stack realignment prologues
yet, but it's possible to add that later.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10848
llvm-svn: 241125
This is part of an effort to pack the average MCSymbol down to 24 bytes.
The HasName bit was pushing the size of the bitfield over to another word,
so this change uses a PointerIntPair to fit in it to unused bits of a
PointerUnion.
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola
llvm-svn: 241115
IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(BB, BB::iterator) is an older version of
IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(Instruction). However, the latter updates
the current debug location of emitted instruction, while the former
doesn't, which is confusing.
Unify the behavior of these methods: now they both set current debug
location to the debug location of instruction at insertion point.
The callers of IRBuilder::SetInsertPoint(BB, BB::iterator) doesn't
seem to depend on the old behavior (keeping the original debug info
location). On the contrary, sometimes they (e.g. SCEV) *should* be
updating debug info location, but don't. I'll look at gdb bots after
the commit to check that we don't regress on debug info somewhere.
This change may make line table more fine-grained, thus increasing
debug info size. I haven't observed significant increase, though:
it varies from negligible to 0.3% on several binaries and self-hosted
Clang.
This is yet another change targeted at resolving PR23837.
llvm-svn: 241101
This commit implements serialization of the machine basic block successors. It
uses a YAML flow sequence that contains strings that have the MBB references.
The MBB references in those strings use the same syntax as the MBB machine
operands in the machine instruction strings.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10699
llvm-svn: 241093
represented by uint64_t, this patch replaces these
usages with the FeatureBitset (std::bitset) type.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10542
llvm-svn: 241058
This unbreaks TripleTest.Normalization. We'll have to come up with a new
plan for the OS component of the target triple for WebAssembly.
llvm-svn: 241041
Realistically, this will be returning ErrorOr for some time as refactoring the
user code to check once per section will take some time.
Given that, use it for checking if a relocation has addend or not.
While at it, add ELFRelocationRef to simplify the users.
llvm-svn: 241028
If you only need Name and Value fields in the COFF symbol,
you don't need to distinguish 32 bit and 64 bit COFF symbols.
These fields start at the same offsets and have the same size.
This data strucutre is one pointer smaller than COFFSymbolRef
thus slightly efficient. I'll use this class in LLD as we create
millions of LLD symbol objects that currently contain COFFSymbolRef.
Shaving off 8 byte (or 4 byte on 32 bit) from that class actually
matters becasue of the number of objects we create in LLD.
llvm-svn: 241024
If a section is not SHT_REL or SHT_RELA, we never create a valid iterator,
so the getRelocation* methods should always see a section with the correct type.
llvm-svn: 241023
Specifically, remove the dependent library interface and replace the existing
linker option interface with a new one that returns a single list of flags.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10820
llvm-svn: 241018
It is meant to be used to record modules @imported by the current
compile unit, so a debugger an import the same modules to replicate this
environment before dropping into the expression evaluator.
DIModule is a sibling to DINamespace and behaves quite similarly.
In addition to the name of the module it also records the module
configuration details that are necessary to uniquely identify the module.
This includes the configuration macros (e.g., -DNDEBUG), the include path
where the module.map file is to be found, and the isysroot.
The idea is that the backend will turn this into a DW_TAG_module.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9614
rdar://problem/20965932
llvm-svn: 241017
This change unifies how LTOModule and the backend obtain linker flags
for globals: via a new TargetLoweringObjectFile member function named
emitLinkerFlagsForGlobal. A new function LTOModule::getLinkerOpts() returns
the list of linker flags as a single concatenated string.
This change affects the C libLTO API: the function lto_module_get_*deplibs now
exposes an empty list, and lto_module_get_*linkeropts exposes a single element
which combines the contents of all observed flags. libLTO should never have
tried to parse the linker flags; it is the linker's job to do so. Because
linkers will need to be able to parse flags in regular object files, it
makes little sense for libLTO to have a redundant mechanism for doing so.
The new API is compatible with the old one. It is valid for a user to specify
multiple linker flags in a single pragma directive like this:
#pragma comment(linker, "/defaultlib:foo /defaultlib:bar")
The previous implementation would not have exposed
either flag via lto_module_get_*deplibs (as the test in
TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF::getDepLibFromLinkerOpt was case sensitive)
and would have exposed "/defaultlib:foo /defaultlib:bar" as a single flag via
lto_module_get_*linkeropts. This may have been a bug in the implementation,
but it does give us a chance to fix the interface.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10548
llvm-svn: 241010
This commit implements serialization of the register mask machine
operands. This commit serializes only the call preserved register
masks that are defined by a target, it doesn't serialize arbitrary
register masks.
This commit also extends the TargetRegisterInfo class and TableGen so that
the users of TRI can get the list of all the call preserved register masks and
their names.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10673
llvm-svn: 240966
The expressions we delinearize do not necessarily have to have a SCEVAddRecExpr
at the outermost level. At this moment, the additional flexibility is not
exploited in LLVM itself, but in Polly we will soon soonish use this
functionality. For LLVM, this change should not affect existing functionality
(which is covered by test/Analysis/Delinearization/)
llvm-svn: 240952
This moves the error checking for string tables to getStringTable which returns
an ErrorOr<StringRef>.
This improves error checking, makes it uniform across all string tables and
makes it possible to check them once instead of once per name.
llvm-svn: 240950
It was a fairly broken concept for an ELF only class.
An ELF file can have two symbol tables, but they have exactly the same
format. There is no concept of a dynamic or a static symbol. Storing this
on the iterator also makes us do more work per symbol than necessary. To fetch
a name we would:
* Find if we had a static or a dynamic symbol.
* Look at the corresponding symbol table and find the string table section.
* Look at the string table section to fetch its contents.
* Compute the name as a substring of the string table.
All but the last step can be done per symbol table instead of per symbol. This
is a step in that direction.
llvm-svn: 240939
Some of the the permissible ARM -mfpu options, which are supported in GCC,
are currently not present in llvm/clang.This patch adds the options:
'neon-fp16', 'vfpv3-fp16', 'vfpv3-d16-fp16', 'vfpv3xd' and 'vfpv3xd-fp16.
These are related to half-precision floating-point and single precision.
Reviewers: rengolin, ranjeet.singh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10645
llvm-svn: 240930
We had a hack in SDAGBuilder in place to work around this but now we
can avoid that. Call BuildExactSDIV from BuildSDIV so DAGCombiner can
perform this trick automatically.
The added check in DAGCombiner is necessary to prevent exact sdiv by pow2
from regressing as the target-specific pow2 lowering is not aware of
exact bits yet.
This is mostly covered by existing tests. One side effect is that we
get the better lowering for exact vector sdivs now too :)
llvm-svn: 240891
There are two main reasons why a linked-list makes sense for
`DIEValueList`.
1. We want `DIE` to be on a `BumpPtrAllocator` to improve teardown
efficiency. Making `DIEValueList` array-based would make that much
more complicated.
2. The singly-linked list is fairly memory efficient. The histogram
[1] shows that most DIEs have relatively few values, so we often pay
less than the 2/3-pointer static overhead of a vector. Furthermore,
we don't know ahead of time exactly how many values a `DIE` needs,
so a vector-like scheme will on average over-allocate by ~50%. As
it happens, that's the same memory overhead as the linked list node.
[1]: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2015-May/085910.html
The comment I added to the code is a little more succinct, but I think
it's enough to give the idea.
llvm-svn: 240868
Allow callers of `Value::print()` and `Metadata::print()` to pass in a
`ModuleSlotTracker`. This allows them to pay only once for calculating
module-level slots (such as Metadata).
This is related to PR23865, where there was a huge cost for
`MachineFunction::print()`. Although I don't have a *particular* user
in mind for this new code, I have hit big slowdowns before when running
`opt -debug`, and I think this will be useful. Going forward, if
someone hits a big slowdown with `print()` statements, they can create a
`ModuleSlotTracker` and send it through. Similarly, adding support to
`Value::dump()` and `Metadata::dump()` should be trivial.
I added unit tests to be sure the `print()` functions actually behave
the same way with and without the slot tracker.
llvm-svn: 240867
The parser provides a convenient interface for reading llvm stackmap v1 sections
in object files.
This patch also includes a new option for llvm-readobj, '-stackmap', which uses
the parser to pretty-print stackmap sections for debugging/testing purposes.
llvm-svn: 240860
For another 1% speedup on the testcase in PR23865, push the
`ModuleSlotTracker` through to metadata-related printing in
`MachineBasicBlock::print()`.
llvm-svn: 240848
Push `ModuleSlotTracker` through `MachineOperand`s, dropping the time
for `llc -print-machineinstrs` on the testcase in PR23865 from ~13
seconds to ~9 seconds. Now `SlotTracker::processFunctionMetadata()`
accounts for only 8% of the runtime, which seems reasonable.
llvm-svn: 240845
Expose enough of the IR-level `SlotTracker` so that
`MachineFunction::print()` can use a single one for printing
`BasicBlock`s. Next step would be to lift this through a few more APIs
so that we can make other print methods faster.
Fixes PR23865, changing the runtime of `llc -print-machineinstrs` from
many minutes (killed after 3 minutes, but it wasn't very close) to
13 seconds for a 502185 line dump.
llvm-svn: 240842
We support invoking a subset of llvm's intrinsics, but the verifier didn't account for this. We had previously added a special case to verify invokes of statepoints. By generalizing the code in terms of CallSite, we can verify invokes of other intrinsics as well. Interestingly, this found one test case which was invalid.
Note: I'm deliberately leaving the naming change from CI to CS to a follow up change. That will happen shortly, I just wanted to reduce the diff to make it clear what was happening with this one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10118
llvm-svn: 240836
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10638
This is the back end portion of patch
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10637
It just adds the code gen and intrinsic functions necessary to support that patch to the back end.
llvm-svn: 240820
SDNode already had ops() which would iterate over the operands and return
SDUse*. This version instead gets the SDValue's out of the SDUse's so that
we can use foreach in more places.
Reviewed by David Blaikie.
llvm-svn: 240805
This commit serializes machine basic block operands. The
machine basic block operands use the following syntax:
%bb.<id>[.<name>]
This commit also modifies the YAML representation for the
machine basic blocks - a new, required field 'id' is added
to the MBB YAML mapping.
The id is used to resolve the MBB references to the
actual MBBs. And while the name of the MBB can be
included in a MBB reference, this name isn't used to
resolve MBB references - as it's possible that multiple
MBBs will reference the same BB and thus they will have the
same name. If the name is specified, the parser will verify
that it is equal to the name of the MBB with the specified id.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10608
llvm-svn: 240792
This is still a really odd function. Most calls are in object format specific
contexts and should probably be replaced with a more direct query, but at least
now this is not too obnoxious to use.
llvm-svn: 240777
E.g. An interleaved load (Factor = 2):
%wide.vec = load <8 x i32>, <8 x i32>* %ptr
%v0 = shuffle <8 x i32> %wide.vec, <8 x i32> undef, <0, 2, 4, 6>
%v1 = shuffle <8 x i32> %wide.vec, <8 x i32> undef, <1, 3, 5, 7>
It can be transformed into a ld2 intrinsic in AArch64 backend or a vld2 intrinsic in ARM backend.
E.g. An interleaved store (Factor = 3):
%i.vec = shuffle <8 x i32> %v0, <8 x i32> %v1, <0, 4, 8, 1, 5, 9, 2, 6, 10, 3, 7, 11>
store <12 x i32> %i.vec, <12 x i32>* %ptr
It can be transformed into a st3 intrinsic in AArch64 backend or a vst3 intrinsic in ARM backend.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10533
llvm-svn: 240751
Replace the `std::vector<>` for `DIE::Children` with an intrusively
linked list. This is a strict memory improvement: it requires no
auxiliary storage, and reduces `sizeof(DIE)` by one pointer. It also
factors out the DIE-related malloc traffic.
This drops llc memory usage from 735 MB down to 718 MB, or ~2.3%.
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`;
see r236629 for details.)
llvm-svn: 240736
Change `DIE::Values` to a singly linked list, where each node is
allocated on a `BumpPtrAllocator`. In order to support `push_back()`,
the list is circular, and points at the tail element instead of the
head. I abstracted the core list logic out to `IntrusiveBackList` so
that it can be reused for `DIE::Children`, which also cares about
`push_back()`.
This drops llc memory usage from 799 MB down to 735 MB, about 8%.
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`;
see r236629 for details.)
llvm-svn: 240733
Summary:
This is a utility for clients that want to insert a layer that modifies
each ObjectFile and then passes it along to the next layer.
Reviewers: lhames
Reviewed By: lhames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10456
llvm-svn: 240640
Summary:
In an expression such as "(((a+b)+c)+d)", parseParenExpression() would only parse the "a+b)+c", which would result in an error later on in the parser.
This means that we can only parse one level of inner parentheses.
In order to fix this, I added a new function called parseParenExprOfDepth(), which parses a specified number of trailing parenthesis expressions
(except for the outermost parenthesis), and changed MipsAsmParser to use it in parseMemOffset instead of parseParenExpression().
Reviewers: dsanders, rafael
Reviewed By: dsanders, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9742
llvm-svn: 240625
r240214 fixed some UB in IndVarSimplify, and it needed a temporary
`WeakVH` to do it. Add `simplify_type<const WeakVH>` so that this
temporary isn't necessary.
llvm-svn: 240599
On ELF that was already the case since getting the size of a symbol
never fails.
On MachO and COFF we could fail trying to get the section of a symbol. But
we don't really need the section, just the section number to know if two
symbols are in the same section or not.
llvm-svn: 240580
This commit serializes the 3 scalar boolean attributes from the
MachineRegisterInfo class: IsSSA, TracksRegLiveness, and
TracksSubRegLiveness. These attributes are serialized as part
of the machine function YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10618
llvm-svn: 240579
This returns either the symbol offset or address. Since it is not defined which
one, it never has to lookup the section and so never fails.
I will add users in the next commit.
llvm-svn: 240569
This is part of the work to devirtualize Value.
The old pattern was to call replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant which was overridden by
subclasses. Those could then call replaceUsesOfWithOnConstantImpl on Constant
to handle deleting the current value.
To be consistent with other parts of the code, this has been changed so that we
call the method on Constant, and that dispatches to an Impl on subclasses.
As part of this, it made sense to rename the methods to be more descriptive. The
new name is Constant::handleOperandChange, and it requires that all subclasses of
Constant implement handleOperandChangeImpl, even if they just throw an error if
they shouldn't be called.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 240567
Stop taking a `dwarf::Form` in `DIEValue::EmitValue()` and
`DIEValue::SizeOf()`, since they're always passed `DIEValue::getForm()`
anyway. This is just left over from when `DIEValue` didn't know its own
form.
llvm-svn: 240566
CaptureTracking becomes very expensive in large basic blocks while
calling PointerMayBeCaptured. PointerMayBeCaptured scans the BB the
number of times equal to the number of uses of 'BeforeHere', which is
currently capped at 20 and bails out with Tracker->tooManyUses().
The bottleneck here is the number of calls to PointerMayBeCaptured * the
basic block scan. In a testcase with a 82k instruction BB,
PointerMayBeCaptured is called 130k times, leading to 'shouldExplore'
taking 527k runs, this currently takes ~12min.
To fix this we locally (within PointerMayBeCaptured) number the
instructions in the basic block using a DenseMap to cache instruction
positions/numbers. We build the cache incrementally every time we need
to scan an unexplored part of the BB, improving compile time to only
take ~2min.
This triggers in the flow: DeadStoreElimination -> MepDepAnalysis ->
CaptureTracking.
Side note: after multiple runs in the test-suite I've seen no
performance nor compile time regressions, but could note a couple of
compile time improvements:
Performance Improvements - Compile Time Delta Previous Current StdDev
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/bigfib -4.48% 0.8547 0.8164 0.0022
MultiSource/Benchmarks/TSVC/LoopRerolling-dbl/LoopRerolling-dbl -1.47% 1.3912 1.3707 0.0056
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7010
llvm-svn: 240560
COFF and MachO only define symbol sizes for common symbols. Reflect that
in the class hierarchy by having a method for common symbols only in the base
and a general one in ELF.
This avoids the need of using a magic value for the size, which had a few
problems
* Most callers didn't check for it.
* The ones that did could not tell the magic value from a file actually having
that value.
llvm-svn: 240529
While often you want to use something specialized like StringMap, when
the strings already have persistent storage a normal densemap over them
can be more efficient.
This can't go into StringRef.h because of really obnoxious header chains
from the hashing code to the endian detection code to CPU feature
detection code to StringMap.
llvm-svn: 240528
The only caller of this method is Value::replaceAllUsesWith which
explicitly checks that we are not a GlobalValue. So replace the
body with an unreachable to ensure that we never call it.
The unreachable itself is moved to GlobalValue not GlobalVariable
as that is the base class of all the globals we don't want to call
this method on.
Note, this patch is short lived as i'll soon refactor all callers
of this method.
llvm-svn: 240486
This commit translates the source locations for MIParser diagnostics from
the locations in the machine instruction string to the locations in the
MIR file.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10574
llvm-svn: 240474
This reorganizes destroyConstant and destroyConstantImpl.
Now there is only destroyConstant in Constant itself, while
subclasses are required to implement destroyConstantImpl.
destroyConstantImpl no longer calls delete but is instead only
responsible for removing the constant from any maps in which it
is contained.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 240471
Currently some users of this function do this explicitly, and all the
rest forget to do this.
ThreadSanitizer was one of such users, and had missing debug
locations for calls into TSan runtime handling atomic operations,
eventually leading to poorly symbolized stack traces and malfunctioning
suppressions.
This is another change relevant to PR23837.
llvm-svn: 240460
This commit moves the APSInt initialization code that's used by
the LLLexer class into a new APSInt constructor that constructs
APSInts from strings.
This change is useful for MIR Serialization, as it would allow
the MILexer class to use the same APSInt initialization as
LLexer when parsing immediate machine operands.
llvm-svn: 240436
This commit creates a new structure called 'SlotMapping' in the AsmParser library.
This structure can be passed into the public parsing APIs from the AsmParser library
in order to extract the data structures that map from slot numbers to unnamed global
values and metadata nodes.
This change is useful for MIR Serialization, as the MIR Parser has to lookup the
unnamed global values and metadata nodes by their slot numbers.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10551
llvm-svn: 240427
The class has a non-trivial dtor so we have to clean up before we move
in new members. Remove misleading comment as a default move assignment
operator will never be synthesized for this class.
llvm-svn: 240417
The summary is that it moves the mangling earlier and replaces a few
calls to .addExternalSymbol with addSym.
I originally wanted to replace all the uses of addExternalSymbol with
addSym, but noticed it was a lot of work and doesn't need to be done
all at once.
llvm-svn: 240395
This causes errors like:
ld: error: blah.o: requires dynamic R_X86_64_PC32 reloc against '' which
may overflow at runtime; recompile with -fPIC
blah.cc:function f(): error: undefined reference to ''
blah.o:g(): error: undefined reference to ''
I have not yet come up with an appropriate reproduction.
llvm-svn: 240394
Summary:
That way llvm-objdump can rely on it without adding an extra dependency
on CodeGen.
This change duplicates the FaultKind enum and the code that serializes
it to a string. I could not figure out a way to get around this without
adding a new dependency to Object
Reviewers: rafael, ab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10619
llvm-svn: 240364
This version fixes a missing include that MSVC noticed and
clarifies the ownership of the counter buffer that's passed to
InstrProfRecord.
This restores r240206, which was reverted in r240208.
Patch by Betul Buyukkurt.
llvm-svn: 240360
This is similar to Metadata.def and Instructions.def but for Value's.
It will be used in upcoming commits to devirtualize the Value class.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 240358
The one caller that does anything other than keep this variable on the
stack is the single use of DerivedArgList in Clang, which is a bit more
interesting but can probably be cleaned up/simplified a bit further
(have DerivedArgList take ownership of the InputArgList rather than
needing to reference its Args indirectly) which I'll try to after this.
llvm-svn: 240345
The reason we need to search by name rather than by Triple::ArchType
is to handle subarchitecture correclty. There is no different ArchType
for the x86_64h architecture (it identifies itself as x86_64), or for
the various ARM subarches. The only way to get to the subarch slice
in an universal binary is to search by name.
This issue led to hard to debug and transient symbolication failures
in Asan tests (it mostly works, because the files are very similar).
This also affects the Profiling infrastucture as it is the other user
of that API.
Reviewers: samsonov, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10604
llvm-svn: 240339
Summary: This will be used by the R600 backend.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10389
llvm-svn: 240329
This is a reapplication of r239440 which was reverted in r239441.
There are no changes to this patch from then, but this had instead exposed
a bug in .thumb_set which was fixed in r240318. Having fixed that bug, it
is now safe to re-apply this code.
Original commit message below:
It wasn't possible to have a variable Symbol with offset or 'isCommon' so
this just enables better packing of the MCSymbol class.
Reviewed by Rafael Espindola.
llvm-svn: 240320
According to the documentation, .thumb_set is 'the equivalent of a .set directive'.
We didn't have equivalent behaviour in terms of all the errors we could throw, for
example, when a symbol is redefined.
This change refactors parseAssignment so that it can be used by .set and .thumb_set
and implements tests for .thumb_set for all the errors thrown by that method.
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola.
llvm-svn: 240318
Summary:
The parser is exercised by llvm-objdump using -print-fault-maps. As is
probably obvious, the code itself was "heavily inspired" by
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10434.
Reviewers: reames, atrick, JosephTremoulet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10491
llvm-svn: 240304
Now that pr23900 is fixed, we can bring it back with no changes.
Original message:
Make all temporary symbols unnamed.
What this does is make all symbols that would otherwise start with a .L
(or L on MachO) unnamed.
Some of these symbols still show up in the symbol table, but we can just
make them unnamed.
In order to make sure we produce identical results when going thought assembly,
all .L (not just the compiler produced ones), are now unnamed.
Running llc on llvm-as.opt.bc, the peak memory usage goes from 208.24MB to
205.57MB.
llvm-svn: 240302
Before this we were producing a TargetExternalSymbol from a MCSymbol.
That meant extracting the symbol name and fetching the symbol again
down the pipeline.
This patch adds a DAG.getMCSymbol that lets the MCSymbol pass unchanged on the
DAG.
Doing so removes the need for MO_NOPREFIX and fixes the root cause of pr23900,
allowing r240130 to be committed again.
llvm-svn: 240300
This commit implements initial machine instruction serialization. It
serializes machine instruction names. The instructions are represented
using a YAML sequence of string literals and are a part of machine
basic block YAML mapping.
This commit introduces a class called 'MIParser' which will be used to
parse the machine instructions and operands.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10481
llvm-svn: 240295
Summary:
This is an implementation of RuntimeDyld::SymbolResolver that simply
rejects all resolution requests; useful for clients that do not have any
cross-object symbol references.
Reviewers: lhames
Reviewed By: lhames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10455
llvm-svn: 240288
This will allow classes to implement the AA interface without deriving
from the class or referencing an internal enum of some other class as
their return types.
Also, to a pretty fundamental extent, concepts such as 'NoAlias',
'MayAlias', and 'MustAlias' are first class concepts in LLVM and we
aren't saving anything by scoping them heavily.
My mild preference would have been to use a scoped enum, but that
feature is essentially completely broken AFAICT. I'm extremely
disappointed. For example, we cannot through any reasonable[1] means
construct an enum class (or analog) which has scoped names but converts
to a boolean in order to test for the possibility of aliasing.
[1]: Richard Smith came up with a "solution", but it requires class
templates, and lots of boilerplate setting up the enumeration multiple
times. Something like Boost.PP could potentially bundle this up, but
even that would be quite painful and it doesn't seem realistically worth
it. The enum class solution would probably work without the need for
a bool conversion.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10495
llvm-svn: 240255
accurately describe what is being tracked.
While these two enums do track mod/ref information and aliasing
information, they don't represent the exact same things as either the
mod/ref enums or the alias result enum in AA. They're definitions are
dominated by the structure of their lattice and the bit's various
semantics. This patch just calls them what they are and tries to spell
out usefully distinct names for these things.
This will clear the path for using a raw unscoped enum to represent some
of these concepts across LLVM's analysis library.
No functionality changed here.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10494
llvm-svn: 240254
Seems like MSVC doesn't like this:
InstrProf.h(49) : error C2614: 'llvm::InstrProfRecord' : illegal member initialization: 'Hash' is not a base or member
This reverts r240206.
llvm-svn: 240208
This consolidates the logic to read instrprof records into the on disk
hash table's lookup trait and makes us copy the counter data instead
of taking references to it as we read. This will simplify further
changes to the format.
Patch by Betul Buyukkurt.
llvm-svn: 240206
Summary: This adds FindGlobalVariableNamed to ExecutionEngine
(plus implementation in MCJIT), which is an analog of
FindFunctionNamed for GlobalVariables.
Reviewers: lhames
Reviewed By: lhames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10421
llvm-svn: 240202
This patch changes getRelocationAddend to use ErrorOr and considers it an error
to try to get the addend of a REL section.
If, for example, a x86_64 file has a REL section, that file is corrupted and
we should reject it.
Using ErrorOr is not ideal since we check the section type once per relocation
instead of once per section.
Checking once per section would involve getRelocationAddend just asserting and
callers checking the section before iterating over the relocations.
In any case, this is an improvement and includes a test.
llvm-svn: 240176
There are 3 types of relocations on MachO
* Scattered
* Section based
* Symbol based
On ELF and COFF relocations are symbol based.
We were in the strange situation that we abstracted over two of them. This makes
section based relocations MachO only.
llvm-svn: 240149
This commit implements the initial serialization of machine basic blocks in a
machine function. Only the simple, scalar MBB attributes are serialized. The
reference to LLVM IR's basic block is preserved when that basic block has a name.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10465
llvm-svn: 240145
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
This patch adds initial support for the -fsanitize=kernel-address flag to Clang.
Right now it's quite restricted: only out-of-line instrumentation is supported, globals are not instrumented, some GCC kasan flags are not supported.
Using this patch I am able to build and boot the KASan tree with LLVMLinux patches from github.com/ramosian-glider/kasan/tree/kasan_llvmlinux.
To disable KASan instrumentation for a certain function attribute((no_sanitize("kernel-address"))) can be used.
llvm-svn: 240131
What this does is make all symbols that would otherwise start with a .L
(or L on MachO) unnamed.
Some of these symbols still show up in the symbol table, but we can just
make them unnamed.
In order to make sure we produce identical results when going thought assembly,
all .L (not just the compiler produced ones), are now unnamed.
Running llc on llvm-as.opt.bc, the peak memory usage goes from 208.24MB to
205.57MB.
llvm-svn: 240130
My commit r239790 which introduced serialization for simple machine function attributes didn't
initialize them when parsing because I have misread the documentation for YAML IO's mapOptional
method. The mapOptional method doesn't actually set the values to the values returned by the
default constructor for that type when the key value pair is missing, it just doesn't modify
those values, so they still contain the value that was set during initialization by the default
constructor. But the fields in yaml::MachineFunction with types like unsigned and bool are not
initialized by default, and thus they can still be uninitialized after mapOptional during parsing.
This commit adds default initialization for those fields to prevent this.
llvm-svn: 240054
Summary:
Currently intrinsics don't affect the creation of the call graph.
This is not accurate with respect to statepoint and patchpoint
intrinsics -- these do call (or invoke) LLVM level functions.
This change fixes this inconsistency by adding a call to the external
node for call sites that call these non-leaf intrinsics. This coupled
with the fact that these intrinsics also escape the function pointer
they call gives us a conservatively correct call graph.
Reviewers: reames, chandlerc, atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10526
llvm-svn: 240039
They had been getting emitted as a section + offset reference, which
is bogus since the value needs to be the offset within the GOT, not
the actual address of the symbol's object.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10441
llvm-svn: 240020
any tests and I even don't know how to run the tests. This seems like a
minimal change to make them work again, although I can't really verify
at this point. Additionally, it probably makes sense to propagate the
personality parameter removal further.
llvm-svn: 240010
This commit ensures that a value that's passed into YAML's IO mapOptional method
is going to be assigned a value returned by the default constructor for that
value's type when the appropriate key is not present in the YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10492
llvm-svn: 239972
MCFragment didn't really need vtables. The majority of virtual methods were just getters and setters.
This removes the vtables and uses dispatch on the kind to do things like delete which needs to
get the appropriate class.
This reduces memory on the verify use list order test case by about 2MB out of 800MB.
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola
llvm-svn: 239952
The personality routine currently lives in the LandingPadInst.
This isn't desirable because:
- All LandingPadInsts in the same function must have the same
personality routine. This means that each LandingPadInst beyond the
first has an operand which produces no additional information.
- There is ongoing work to introduce EH IR constructs other than
LandingPadInst. Moving the personality routine off of any one
particular Instruction and onto the parent function seems a lot better
than have N different places a personality function can sneak onto an
exceptional function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10429
llvm-svn: 239940
Directional labels can show up in symbol tables (and we have a llvm-mc test for
that). Given that, we need to make sure they are named.
With that out of the way, use setUseNamesOnTempLabels in llvm-mc so that it
too benefits from the memory saving.
llvm-svn: 239914
Change builtin function name and signature ( add third parameter - rounding mode ).
Added tests for intrinsics.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10473
llvm-svn: 239888
This is now living in MemoryLocation, which is what it pertains to. It
is also an enum there rather than a static data member which is left
never defined.
llvm-svn: 239886
that it is its own entity in the form of MemoryLocation, and update all
the callers.
This is an entirely mechanical change. References to "Location" within
AA subclases become "MemoryLocation", and elsewhere
"AliasAnalysis::Location" becomes "MemoryLocation". Hope that helps
out-of-tree folks update.
llvm-svn: 239885
virtual interface on AliasAnalysis only deals with ModRef information.
This interface was both computing memory locations by using TLI and
other tricks to estimate the size of memory referenced by an operand,
and computing ModRef information through similar investigations. This
change narrows the scope of the virtual interface on AliasAnalysis
slightly.
Note that all of this code could live in BasicAA, and be done with
a single investigation of the argument, if it weren't for the fact that
the generic code in AliasAnalysis::getModRefBehavior for a callsite
calls into the virtual aspect of (now) getArgModRefInfo. But this
patch's arrangement seems a not terrible way to go for now.
The other interesting wrinkle is how we could reasonably extend LLVM
with support for custom memory location sizes and mod/ref behavior for
library routines. After discussions with Hal on the review, the
conclusion is that this would be best done by fleshing out the much
desired support for extensions to TLI, and support these types of
queries in that interface where we would likely be doing other library
API recognition and analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10259
llvm-svn: 239884
Adds static_asserts to ensure alignment of concatenated objects is
correct, and fixes them where they are not.
Also changes the definition of AlignOf to use constexpr, except on
MSVC, to avoid enum comparison warnings from GCC.
(There's not too much of this in llvm itself, most of the fun is in
clang).
This seems to make LLVM actually work without Bus Error on 32bit
sparc.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10271
llvm-svn: 239872
Different object formats represent references from dwarf in different ways.
ELF uses a relocation to the referenced point (except for .dwo) and
COFF/MachO use the offset of the referenced point inside its section.
This patch renames emitSectionOffset because
* It doesn't produce an offset on ELF.
* It changes behavior depending on how DWARF is represented, so adding
dwarf to its name is probably a good thing.
The patch also adds an option to force the use of offsets.That avoids
funny looking code like
if (!UseOffsets)
Asm->emitSectionOffset....
It was correct, but read as if the ! was inverted.
llvm-svn: 239866
The original change broke clang side tests. I will be submitting those momentarily. This change includes post commit feedback on the original change from from Pete Cooper.
Original Submission comments:
If a parameter to a function is known non-null, use the existing parameter attributes to record that fact at the call site. This has no optimization benefit by itself - that I know of - but is an enabling change for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9129.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9132
llvm-svn: 239849
Summary:
When propagating mass through irregular loops, the mass flowing through
each loop header may not be equal. This was causing wrong frequencies
to be computed for irregular loop headers.
Fixed by keeping track of masses flowing through each of the headers in
an irregular loop. To do this, we now keep track of per-header backedge
weights. After the loop mass is distributed through the loop, the
backedge weights are used to re-distribute the loop mass to the loop
headers.
Since each backedge will have a mass proportional to the different
branch weights, the loop headers will end up with a more approximate
weight distribution (as opposed to the current distribution that assumes
that every loop header is the same).
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10348
llvm-svn: 239843
LaneMasks as given by getSubRegIndexLaneMask() have a limited number of
of bits, so for targets with more than 31 disjunct subregister there may
be cases where:
getSubReg(Reg,A) does not overlap getSubReg(Reg,B)
but we still have
(getSubRegIndexLaneMask(A) & getSubRegIndexLaneMask(B)) != 0.
I had hoped to keep this an implementation detail of the tablegen but as
my next commit shows we can avoid unnecessary imp-defs operands if we
know that the lane masks in use are precise.
This is in preparation to http://reviews.llvm.org/D10470.
llvm-svn: 239837
A reduction is a special kind of recurrence. In the loop vectorizer we currently
identify basic reductions. Future patches will extend this to identifying basic
recurrences.
llvm-svn: 239835
This is an updated version of the patch that was checked in at:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL237046
but subsequently reverted because it exposed a bug in the DAG Combiner:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9893
This time, there's an enablement flag ("EnableFMFInDAG") around the code in
SelectionDAGBuilder where we copy the set of FP optimization flags from IR
instructions to DAG nodes. So, in theory, there should be no functional change
from this patch as-is, but it will allow testing with the added functionality
to proceed via "-enable-fmf-dag" passed to llc.
This patch adds the minimum plumbing necessary to use IR-level
fast-math-flags (FMF) in the backend without actually using
them for anything yet. This is a follow-on to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL235997
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10403
llvm-svn: 239828
Summary:
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10381
llvm-svn: 239815
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
The first time this was committed it accidentally fixed an inconsistency in
triples in llvm-mc and this caused a failure. This inconsistency was fixed in
r239808.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239812
If a parameter to a function is known non-null, use the existing parameter attributes to record that fact at the call site. This has no optimization benefit by itself - that I know of - but is an enabling change for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9129.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9132
llvm-svn: 239795
This commit serializes the simple, scalar attributes from the
'MachineFunction' class.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10449
llvm-svn: 239790
constants in commented-out part of LLVMAttribute enum. Add tests that verify
that the safestack attribute is only allowed as a function attribute.
llvm-svn: 239772
This patch adds the safe stack instrumentation pass to LLVM, which separates
the program stack into a safe stack, which stores return addresses, register
spills, and local variables that are statically verified to be accessed
in a safe way, and the unsafe stack, which stores everything else. Such
separation makes it much harder for an attacker to corrupt objects on the
safe stack, including function pointers stored in spilled registers and
return addresses. You can find more information about the safe stack, as
well as other parts of or control-flow hijack protection technique in our
OSDI paper on code-pointer integrity (http://dslab.epfl.ch/pubs/cpi.pdf)
and our project website (http://levee.epfl.ch).
The overhead of our implementation of the safe stack is very close to zero
(0.01% on the Phoronix benchmarks). This is lower than the overhead of
stack cookies, which are supported by LLVM and are commonly used today,
yet the security guarantees of the safe stack are strictly stronger than
stack cookies. In some cases, the safe stack improves performance due to
better cache locality.
Our current implementation of the safe stack is stable and robust, we
used it to recompile multiple projects on Linux including Chromium, and
we also recompiled the entire FreeBSD user-space system and more than 100
packages. We ran unit tests on the FreeBSD system and many of the packages
and observed no errors caused by the safe stack. The safe stack is also fully
binary compatible with non-instrumented code and can be applied to parts of
a program selectively.
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of LLVM. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add the safestack function attribute, similar to the ssp, sspstrong and
sspreq attributes.
- Add the SafeStack instrumentation pass that applies the safe stack to all
functions that have the safestack attribute. This pass moves all unsafe local
variables to the unsafe stack with a separate stack pointer, whereas all
safe variables remain on the regular stack that is managed by LLVM as usual.
- Invoke the pass as the last stage before code generation (at the same time
the existing cookie-based stack protector pass is invoked).
- Add unit tests for the safe stack.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
llvm-svn: 239761
This commit connects the machine function analysis pass (which creates machine
functions) to the MIR parser, which will initialize the machine functions
with the state from the MIR file and reconstruct the machine IR.
This commit introduces a new interface called 'MachineFunctionInitializer',
which can be used to provide custom initialization for the machine functions.
This commit also introduces a new diagnostic class called
'DiagnosticInfoMIRParser' which is used for MIR parsing errors.
This commit modifies the default diagnostic handling in LLVMContext - now the
the diagnostics are printed directly into llvm::errs() so that the MIR parsing
errors can be printed with colours.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9928
llvm-svn: 239753
Summary:
NFC: no one uses AnalyzeBranchPredicate yet.
Add TargetInstrInfo::AnalyzeBranchPredicate and implement for x86. A
later change adding support for page-fault based implicit null checks
depends on this.
Reviewers: reames, ab, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10200
llvm-svn: 239742
Summary:
TargetInstrInfo::getLdStBaseRegImmOfs to
TargetInstrInfo::getMemOpBaseRegImmOfs and implement for x86. The
implementation only handles a few easy cases now and will be made more
sophisticated in the future.
This is NFCI: the only user of `getLdStBaseRegImmOfs` (now
`getmemOpBaseRegImmOfs`) is `LoadClusterMotion` and `LoadClusterMotion`
is disabled for x86.
Reviewers: reames, ab, MatzeB, atrick
Reviewed By: MatzeB, atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10199
llvm-svn: 239741
Summary:
This instruction encodes a loading operation that may fault, and a label
to branch to if the load page-faults. The locations of potentially
faulting loads and their "handler" destinations are recorded in a
FaultMap section, meant to be consumed by LLVM's clients.
Nothing generates FAULTING_LOAD_OP instructions yet, but they will be
used in a future change.
The documentation (FaultMaps.rst) needs improvement and I will update
this diff with a more expanded version shortly.
Depends on D10196
Reviewers: rnk, reames, AndyAyers, ab, atrick, pgavlin
Reviewed By: atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10197
llvm-svn: 239740
Summary:
This affects other tools so the previous C++ API has been retained as a
deprecated function for the moment. Clang has been updated with a trivial
patch (not covered by the pre-commit review) to avoid breaking -Werror builds.
Other in-tree tools will be fixed with similar trivial patches.
This continues the patch series to eliminate StringRef forms of GNU triples
from the internals of LLVM that began in r239036.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10366
llvm-svn: 239721
StringSaver now always saves to a BumpPtrAllocator.
The only reason for having the virtual saveImpl is so lld can have a
thread safe version.
The reason for the distinct BumpPtrStringSaver class is to avoid the
virtual destructor.
llvm-svn: 239669
r213101 changed the behaviour of this method to not only affect the
PostMachineScheduler scheduler but also the PostRAScheduler scheduler,
renaming should make this fact clear. Also document that the preferred
way is to specify this in the scheduling model instead of overriding
this method.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10427
llvm-svn: 239659
This will use Itinieraries if available, but will also work if just a
MCSchedModel is available.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10428
llvm-svn: 239658
into partitions. Also, add an option to clone stub definitions (not just decls)
into partitions: these definitions could be inlined in some places to avoid the
overhead of calling via the stub.
Found by inspection - no test case yet, although I plan to add a unit test for
this once the CompileOnDemand layer refactoring settles down.
llvm-svn: 239640
Based on ArchType, Clang's driver can select a non-Clang compiler.
String parsing in Clang would have sufficed if it were only that,
however this change anticipates true llvm support.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10413
llvm-svn: 239631
For hung off uses, we need a Use* to tell use where the operands are.
This was User::OperandList but we want to remove that to save space
of all subclasses which aren't making use of 'hung off uses'.
Hung off uses now allocate their own 'OperandList' Use* in the
User::new which they call.
getOperandList() now uses the hung off uses bit to work out where the
Use* for the OperandList lives. If a User has hung off uses, then this
bit tells them to go back a single Use* from the User* and use that
value as the OperandList.
If a User has no hung off uses, then we get the first operand by
subtracting (NumOperands * sizeof(Use)) from the User this pointer.
This saves a pointer from User and all subclasses. Given the average
size of a subclass of User is 112 or 128 bytes, this saves around 7% of space
With malloc tending to align to 16-bytes the real saving is typically more like 3.5%.
On 'opt -O2 verify-uselistorder.lto.bc', peak memory usage prior to this change
is 149MB and after is 143MB so the savings are around 2.5% of peak.
Looking at some passes which allocate many Instructions and Values, parseIR drops
from 54.25MB to 52.21MB while the Inliner calls to Instruction::clone() drops
from 28.20MB to 27.05MB.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 239623
There are now 2 versions of User::new. The first takes a size_t and is the current
implementation for subclasses which need 0 or more Use's allocated for their operands.
The new version takes no extra arguments to say that this subclass needs 'hung off uses'.
The HungOffUses bool is now set in this version of User::new and we can assert in
allocHungOffUses that we are allowed to have hung off uses.
This ensures we call the correct version of User::new for subclasses which need hung off uses.
A future commit will then allocate space for a single Use* which will be used
in place of User::OperandList once that field has been removed.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 239622
This is to try make it very clear that subclasses shouldn't be changing
the value directly. Now that OperandList for normal instructions is computed
using the NumOperands, its critical that the NumOperands is accurate or we
could compute the wrong offset to the first operand.
I looked over all places which update NumOperands and they are all safe.
Hung off use User's don't use NumOperands to compute the OperandList so they
are safe to continue to manipulate it. The only other User which changed it
was GlobalVariable which has an optional init list but always allocated space
for a single Use. It was correctly setting NumOperands to 1 before setting an
initializer, and setting it to 0 after clearing the init list, so the order was safe.
Added some comments to that code to make sure that this isn't changed in future
without being aware of this constraint.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 239621
We don't want anyone to access OperandList directly as its going to be removed
and computed instead. This uses getter's and setter's instead in which we
can later change the underlying implementation of OperandList.
Reviewed by Duncan Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 239620
The underlaying issues is that this code can't really know if an OS specific or
processor specific section number should return true or false.
One option would be to assert or return an error, but that looks like over
engineering since extensions are not that common.
It seems better to have these be direct implementation of the ELF spec so that
they are natural for someone familiar with ELF reading the code.
Code that does have to handle OS/Architecture specific values can do it at
a higher level.
llvm-svn: 239618