The following is checked:
* Operand counts: All explicit operands must be present.
* Register classes: All physical and virtual register operands must be
compatible with the register class required by the instruction descriptor.
* Register live intervals: Registers must be defined only once, and must be
defined before use.
The machine code verifier is enabled with the command-line option
'-verify-machineinstrs', or by defining the environment variable
LLVM_VERIFY_MACHINEINSTRS to the name of a file that will receive all the
verifier errors.
llvm-svn: 71918
logical/sane approach to organizing all of the stuff that goes into writing out
DWARF information. Honestly? even this is too complex for what it's supposed to
be doing.
Trivia: It *looks* like there would be functionality changes, however there aren't!
llvm-svn: 71821
block with its unique predecessor. Change the code to assert if that is not
the case, instead of trying to handle situations where the block has
multiple predecessors.
llvm-svn: 71744
of exception handling builtin sjlj targets in functions turns out not to
be necessary. Marking the intrinsic implementation in the .td file as
defining all registers is sufficient to get the context saved properly by
the containing function.
llvm-svn: 71743
Dan was trying to catch the case where a basic block ends with a conditional
branch to the fall-through block. In this case, all the instructions have
been moved out of FromBBI, leaving it empty. It cannot end with a
conditional branch. As the existing comment indicates, it will always fall
through to the next block. If the block already had the next block (NBB)
listed as a successor, the preceding loop has a check for that and does not
remove it. Thus, we need to check and add the successor only when it is
not already listed.
With Dan's change, the empty block often ends up with the fall-through
successor listed twice. This exposed the problem in pr4195, where
CodePlacementOpt did not handle the same predecessor listed more than once.
It is also at least partially responsible for pr4202 and probably a similar
issue with Thumb branches being out of range.
llvm-svn: 71742
booleans. This gives a better indication of what the "addReg()" is
doing. Remembering what all of those booleans mean isn't easy, especially if you
aren't spending all of your time in that code.
I took Jakob's suggestion and made it illegal to pass in "true" for the
flag. This should hopefully prevent any unintended misuse of this (by reverting
to the old way of using addReg()).
llvm-svn: 71722
belonged. The variable declaration stuff wasn't happy with it where it
was. Sorry that the testcase is so big. Bugpoint wasn't able to reduce it
successfully.
llvm-svn: 71714
a supporting preliminary patch for GCC-compatible SjLJ exception handling. Note that these intrinsics are not designed to be invoked directly by the user, but
rather used by the front-end as target hooks for exception handling.
llvm-svn: 71610
- moved shrink wrapping code from PrologEpilogInserter.cpp to
new file ShrinkWrapping.cpp.
- moved PEI pass definition into new shared header PEI.h.
llvm-svn: 71588
after finding the (unique) layout predecessor. Sometimes a block may be listed
more than once, and processing it more than once in this loop can lead to
inconsistent values for FtTBB/FtFBB, since the AnalyzeBranch method does not
clear these values. There's no point in continuing the loop regardless.
The testcase for this is reduced from the 2003-05-02-DependentPHI SingleSource
test.
llvm-svn: 71536
type, rather than assume that it does. If the operand is not vector, it
shouldn't be run through ScalarizeVectorOp. This fixes one of the
testcases in PR3886.
llvm-svn: 71453
- reduces _static_ callee saved register spills
and restores similar to Chow's original algorithm.
- iterative implementation with simple heuristic
limits to mitigate compile time impact.
- handles placing spills/restores for multi-entry,
multi-exit regions in the Machine CFG without
splitting edges.
- passes test-suite in LLCBETA mode.
Added contains() method to ADT/SparseBitVector.
llvm-svn: 71438
The DwarfWriter expects DbgScopes and DIEs to behave themselves according to
DwarfWriter's rules. However, inlined functions violate these rules. There are
two different types of DIEs associated with an inlined function: an abstract
instance, which has information about the original source code for the function
being inlined; and concrete instances, which are created for each place the
function was inlined and point back to the abstract instance.
This patch tries to stay true to this schema. It bypasses how regular DbgScopes
and DIEs are created and used when necessary. It provides special handling for
DIEs of abstract and concrete instances.
This doesn't take care of all of the problems with debug info for inlined
functions, but it's a step in the right direction. For one thing, llvm-gcc
generates wrong IR (it's missing some llvm.dbg intrinsics at the point where the
function's inlined) for this example:
#include <stdio.h>
static __inline__ __attribute__((always_inline)) int bar(int x) { return 4; }
void foo() {
long long b = 1;
int Y = bar(4);
printf("%d\n", Y);
}
while clang generates correct IR.
llvm-svn: 71410
None. However, we were always recording the region end. There's no longer a good
reason for this code to be separated out between the different opt levels, as it
was doing pretty much the same thing anyway.
llvm-svn: 71370
inlined function or the end of a function. Before, this was never executing the
"inlined" version of the Record method.
This will become important once the inlined Dwarf writer patch lands.
llvm-svn: 71268