Summary:
Intel's i5-6300U CPU is reporting to have a model id of 78 (4e).
The Host detection assumes that to be Skylake Xeon (with AVX512 support),
instead of a normal Skylake machine.
Patch by: Valentin Churavy
Reviewers: nalimilan, craig.topper
Subscribers: hfinkel, tkelman, craig.topper, nalimilan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28221
llvm-svn: 291084
Set up basic YAML I/O support for module summaries, plumb the summary into
the pass and add a few command line flags to test YAML I/O support. Bitcode
support to come separately, as will the code in LowerTypeTests that actually
uses the summary. Also add a couple of tests that pass by virtue of the pass
doing nothing with the summary (which happens to be the correct thing to do
for those tests).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28041
llvm-svn: 291069
a cxxabi.h in the include search paths.
This comes up when libc++ is installed with some other abi library. At
some points in time in history we have had CMake hackery to try and get
a cxxabi.h installed that would work, but there are lots of examples
lacking this. Also, the just-built tree with libc++ seems to not quite
get this right.
To let folks make progress, we can easily work around this by detecting
that the header is missing and disabling the relevant parts of gtest.
This should fix the last remainging build bot failures. While these
failures are typically indicative of a questionable install, I don't
think gtest should be the thing that surfaces those issues and I don't
want folks blocked on this.
llvm-svn: 291063
Summary:
This covers most of PassManager.h, up to the introduction of inner/outer
analysis proxies.
If there's a theme to these changes, it's simplifying the language. For
example:
* PreservedAnalyses is a "set of analyses", not an "abstract set".
"Abstract" doesn't have any particular meaning here.
* "Build types for the concept types" becomes "define the concept types".
* Instead of "data structures optimized for pointer-like types using
the alignment-provided low bits", say "data structures that use the
low bits of pointers."
* "Clear the map pointing into the results list" becomes
"Delete the map entries that point into the results list."
This patch also fixes a few places where we referred to "function" and
"module" pass/analysis managers, instead of the more abstract "IRUnitT"
PM/AMs we have now.
Subscribers: mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27367
llvm-svn: 291040
performing partial redundancy elimination (PRE). Not doing so can cause jumpy line
tables and confusing (though correct) source attributions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27857
llvm-svn: 291037
I somehow wrote this fix and then lost it prior to commit. Really sorry
about the noise. This should fix some issues with hacking add_definition
to do things with warning flags.
llvm-svn: 291033
This required re-working the streaming support and lit's support for
'--gtest_list_tests' but otherwise seems to be a clean upgrade.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28154
llvm-svn: 291029
Summary:
This is a relatively simple scheme: we use the index emitted in the
bitcode to avoid loading all the global metadata. Instead we load
the index with their position in the bitcode so that we can load each
of them individually. Materializing the global metadata block in this
condition only triggers loading the named metadata, and the ones
referenced from there (transitively). When materializing a function,
metadata from the global block are loaded lazily as they are
referenced.
Two main current limitations are:
1) Global values other than functions are not materialized on demand,
so we need to eagerly load METADATA_GLOBAL_DECL_ATTACHMENT records
(and their transitive dependencies).
2) When we load a single metadata, we don't recurse on the operands,
instead we use a placeholder or a temporary metadata. Unfortunately
tepmorary nodes are very expensive. This is why we don't have it
always enabled and only for importing.
These two limitations can be lifted in a subsequent improvement if
needed.
With this change, the total link time of opt with ThinLTO and Debug
Info enabled is going down from 282s to 224s (~20%).
Reviewers: pcc, tejohnson, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28113
llvm-svn: 291027
If this is a problem for anyone (shared_ptr is two pointers in size,
whereas IntrusiveRefCntPtr is 1 - and the ref count control block that
make_shared adds is probably larger than the one int in RefCountedBase)
I'd prefer to address this by adding a lower-overhead version of
shared_ptr (possibly refactoring IntrusiveRefCntPtr into such a thing)
to avoid the intrusiveness - this allows memory ownership to remain
orthogonal to types and at least to me, seems to make code easier to
understand (since no implicit ownership acquisition can happen).
This recommits 291006, reverted in r291007.
llvm-svn: 291016
Summary:
When promoting fp-to-uint16 to fp-to-sint32, the result is actually zero
extended. For example, given double 65534.0, without legalization:
fp-to-uint16: 65534.0 -> 0xfffe
With the legalization:
fp-to-sint32: 65534.0 -> 0x0000fffe
Without this patch, legalization wrongly emits a signed extend assertion,
which is consumed by later icmp instruction, and cause miscompile.
Note that the floating point value must be in [0, 65535), otherwise the
behavior is undefined.
This patch reverts r279223 behavior and adds more tests and
documentations.
In PR29041's context, James Molloy mentioned that:
We don't need to mask because conversion from float->uint8_t is
undefined if the integer part of the float value is not representable in
uint8_t. Therefore we can assume this doesn't happen!
which is totally true and good, because fptoui is documented clearly to
have undefined behavior when overflow/underflow happens. We should take
the advantage of this behavior so that we can save unnecessary mask
instructions.
Reviewers: jmolloy, nadav, echristo, kbarton
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28284
llvm-svn: 291015
Summary:
Instead of matching:
(a + i) + 1 -> (a + i, undef, 1)
Now it matches:
(a + i) + 1 -> (a, i, 1)
Reviewers: rengolin
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D26367
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 291012
If this is a problem for anyone (shared_ptr is two pointers in size,
whereas IntrusiveRefCntPtr is 1 - and the ref count control block that
make_shared adds is probably larger than the one int in RefCountedBase)
I'd prefer to address this by adding a lower-overhead version of
shared_ptr (possibly refactoring IntrusiveRefCntPtr into such a thing)
to avoid the intrusiveness - this allows memory ownership to remain
orthogonal to types and at least to me, seems to make code easier to
understand (since no implicit ownership acquisition can happen).
llvm-svn: 291006
The intrusive nature of the reference counting is not required/used
here, so simplify the ownership model to make the code easier to
understand.
llvm-svn: 291005
This change aims to unify and correct our logic for when we need to allow for
the possibility of the linker adding a TOC restoration instruction after a
call. This comes up in two contexts:
1. When determining tail-call eligibility. If we make a tail call (i.e.
directly branch to a function) then there is no place for the linker to add
a TOC restoration.
2. When determining when we need to add a nop instruction after a call.
Likewise, if there is a possibility that the linker might need to add a
TOC restoration after a call, then we need to put a nop after the call
(the bl instruction).
First problem: We were using similar, but different, logic to decide (1) and
(2). This is just wrong. Both the resideInSameModule function (used when
determining tail-call eligibility) and the isLocalCall function (used when
deciding if the post-call nop is needed) were supposed to be determining the
same underlying fact (i.e. might a TOC restoration be needed after the call).
The same logic should be used in both places.
Second problem: The logic in both places was wrong. We only know that two
functions will share the same TOC when both functions come from the same
section of the same object. Otherwise the linker might cause the functions to
use different TOC base addresses (unless the multi-TOC linker option is
disabled, in which case only shared-library boundaries are relevant). There are
a number of factors that can cause functions to be placed in different sections
or come from different objects (-ffunction-sections, explicitly-specified
section names, COMDAT, weak linkage, etc.). All of these need to be checked.
The existing logic only checked properties of the callee, but the properties of
the caller must also be checked (for example, calling from a function in a
COMDAT section means calling between sections).
There was a conceptual error in the resideInSameModule function in that it
allowed tail calls to functions with weak linkage and protected/hidden
visibility. While protected/hidden visibility does prevent the function
implementation from being replaced at runtime (via interposition), it does not
prevent the linker from using an alternate implementation at link time (i.e.
using some strong definition to replace the provided weak one during linking).
If this happens, then we're still potentially looking at a required TOC
restoration upon return.
Otherwise, in general, the post-call nop is needed wherever ELF interposition
needs to be supported. We don't currently support ELF interposition at the IR
level (see http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-November/107625.html
for more information), and I don't think we should try to make it appear to
work in the backend in spite of that fact. Unfortunately, because of the way
that the ABI works, we need to generate code as if we supported interposition
whenever the linker might insert stubs for the purpose of supporting it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27231
llvm-svn: 291003
This roughly matches the semantics of std::enable_shared_from_this - that it
does not dictate the ownership model of all users, but constrains those users
taking advantage of the intrusive nature to do so only when there's a guarantee
that that's the ownership model being used for the object being passed.
Reviewers: jlebar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28245
llvm-svn: 290987
This test case has been reduced from test/Analysis/RegionInfo/mix_1.ll and
provides us with a minimal example of a test case which caused problems while
working on an improved version of the RegionInfo analysis. We upstream this
test case, as it certainly can be helpful in future debugging and optimization
tests.
Test case reduced by Pratik Bhatu <cs12b1010@iith.ac.in>
llvm-svn: 290974