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1975 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Cong Hou
16bf52a24c Pass BranchProbability/BlockMass by value instead of const& as they are small. NFC.
llvm-svn: 247357
2015-09-10 23:10:42 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
e9c3d2d316 [ADT] Fix a confusing interface spec and some annoying peculiarities
with the StringRef::split method when used with a MaxSplit argument
other than '-1' (which nobody really does today, but which should
actually work).

The spec claimed both to split up to MaxSplit times, but also to append
<= MaxSplit strings to the vector. One of these doesn't make sense.
Given the name "MaxSplit", let's go with it being a max over how many
*splits* occur, which means the max on how many strings get appended is
MaxSplit+1. I'm not actually sure the implementation correctly provided
this logic either, as it used a really opaque loop structure.

The implementation was also playing weird games with nullptr in the data
field to try to rely on a totally opaque hidden property of the split
method that returns a pair. Nasty IMO.

Replace all of this with what is (IMO) simpler code that doesn't use the
pair returning split method, and instead just finds each separator and
appends directly. I think this is a lot easier to read, and it most
definitely matches the spec. Added some tests that exercise the corner
cases around StringRef() and StringRef("") that all now pass.

I'll start using this in code in the next commit.

llvm-svn: 247249
2015-09-10 07:51:37 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
c484a28f0a [ADT] Switch a bunch of places in LLVM that were doing single-character
splits to actually use the single character split routine which does
less work, and in a debug build is *substantially* faster.

llvm-svn: 247245
2015-09-10 06:12:31 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
5e0afb35b0 [ADT] Add a single-character version of the small vector split routine
on StringRef. Finding and splitting on a single character is
substantially faster than doing it on even a single character StringRef
-- we immediately get to a *very* tuned memchr call this way.

Even nicer, we get to this even in a debug build, shaving 18% off the
runtime of TripleTest.Normalization, helping PR23676 some more.

llvm-svn: 247244
2015-09-10 06:07:03 +00:00
Mehdi Amini
f9dd260ee5 Add makeArrayRef() overload for ArrayRef input (no-op/identity) NFC
The purpose is to allow templated wrapper to work with either
ArrayRef or any convertible operation:

template<typename Container>
void wrapper(const Container &Arr) {
  impl(makeArrayRef(Arr));
}

with Container being a std::vector, a SmallVector, or an ArrayRef.

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 247214
2015-09-10 00:05:04 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
d7003090ac [PM/AA] Rebuild LLVM's alias analysis infrastructure in a way compatible
with the new pass manager, and no longer relying on analysis groups.

This builds essentially a ground-up new AA infrastructure stack for
LLVM. The core ideas are the same that are used throughout the new pass
manager: type erased polymorphism and direct composition. The design is
as follows:

- FunctionAAResults is a type-erasing alias analysis results aggregation
  interface to walk a single query across a range of results from
  different alias analyses. Currently this is function-specific as we
  always assume that aliasing queries are *within* a function.

- AAResultBase is a CRTP utility providing stub implementations of
  various parts of the alias analysis result concept, notably in several
  cases in terms of other more general parts of the interface. This can
  be used to implement only a narrow part of the interface rather than
  the entire interface. This isn't really ideal, this logic should be
  hoisted into FunctionAAResults as currently it will cause
  a significant amount of redundant work, but it faithfully models the
  behavior of the prior infrastructure.

- All the alias analysis passes are ported to be wrapper passes for the
  legacy PM and new-style analysis passes for the new PM with a shared
  result object. In some cases (most notably CFL), this is an extremely
  naive approach that we should revisit when we can specialize for the
  new pass manager.

- BasicAA has been restructured to reflect that it is much more
  fundamentally a function analysis because it uses dominator trees and
  loop info that need to be constructed for each function.

All of the references to getting alias analysis results have been
updated to use the new aggregation interface. All the preservation and
other pass management code has been updated accordingly.

The way the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass works is to detect the
available alias analyses when run, and add them to the results object.
This means that we should be able to continue to respect when various
passes are added to the pipeline, for example adding CFL or adding TBAA
passes should just cause their results to be available and to get folded
into this. The exception to this rule is BasicAA which really needs to
be a function pass due to using dominator trees and loop info. As
a consequence, the FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass directly depends on
BasicAA and always includes it in the aggregation.

This has significant implications for preserving analyses. Generally,
most passes shouldn't bother preserving FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass
because rebuilding the results just updates the set of known AA passes.
The exception to this rule are LoopPass instances which need to preserve
all the function analyses that the loop pass manager will end up
needing. This means preserving both BasicAAWrapperPass and the
aggregating FunctionAAResultsWrapperPass.

Now, when preserving an alias analysis, you do so by directly preserving
that analysis. This is only necessary for non-immutable-pass-provided
alias analyses though, and there are only three of interest: BasicAA,
GlobalsAA (formerly GlobalsModRef), and SCEVAA. Usually BasicAA is
preserved when needed because it (like DominatorTree and LoopInfo) is
marked as a CFG-only pass. I've expanded GlobalsAA into the preserved
set everywhere we previously were preserving all of AliasAnalysis, and
I've added SCEVAA in the intersection of that with where we preserve
SCEV itself.

One significant challenge to all of this is that the CGSCC passes were
actually using the alias analysis implementations by taking advantage of
a pretty amazing set of loop holes in the old pass manager's analysis
management code which allowed analysis groups to slide through in many
cases. Moving away from analysis groups makes this problem much more
obvious. To fix it, I've leveraged the flexibility the design of the new
PM components provides to just directly construct the relevant alias
analyses for the relevant functions in the IPO passes that need them.
This is a bit hacky, but should go away with the new pass manager, and
is already in many ways cleaner than the prior state.

Another significant challenge is that various facilities of the old
alias analysis infrastructure just don't fit any more. The most
significant of these is the alias analysis 'counter' pass. That pass
relied on the ability to snoop on AA queries at different points in the
analysis group chain. Instead, I'm planning to build printing
functionality directly into the aggregation layer. I've not included
that in this patch merely to keep it smaller.

Note that all of this needs a nearly complete rewrite of the AA
documentation. I'm planning to do that, but I'd like to make sure the
new design settles, and to flesh out a bit more of what it looks like in
the new pass manager first.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12080

llvm-svn: 247167
2015-09-09 17:55:00 +00:00
Alex Lorenz
683352c838 Fix PR 24633 - Handle undef values when parsing standalone constants.
llvm-svn: 247145
2015-09-09 13:44:33 +00:00
Ben Craig
108dbc7c6d Adding full stops to comments
Also, test commit

llvm-svn: 246855
2015-09-04 15:28:13 +00:00
Richard Smith
e8f2654b47 Fix APInt value initialization to give a zero value as any sane integer type
should, rather than giving a broken value that doesn't even zero/sign-extend
properly.

llvm-svn: 246836
2015-09-04 04:08:36 +00:00
Douglas Katzman
f33b44fd2f Move twice-repeated clang path operation into a new function.
And make it more robust in the edge case of exactly "./" as input.

llvm-svn: 246711
2015-09-02 21:02:10 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
fded9fa4a4 [RemoveDuplicatePHINodes] Start over after removing a PHI.
This makes RemoveDuplicatePHINodes more effective and fixes an assertion
failure. Triggering the assertions requires a DenseSet reallocation
so this change only contains a constructive test.

I'll explain the issue with a small example. In the following function
there's a duplicate PHI, %4 and %5 are identical. When this is found
the DenseSet in RemoveDuplicatePHINodes contains %2, %3 and %4.

define void @F() {
  br label %1

; <label>:1                                       ; preds = %1, %0
  %2 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ %4, %1 ]
  %3 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ %5, %1 ]
  %4 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ 23, %1 ]
  %5 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ 23, %1 ]
  br label %1
}

after RemoveDuplicatePHINodes runs the function looks like this. %3 has
changed and is now identical to %2, but RemoveDuplicatePHINodes never
saw this.

define void @F() {
  br label %1

; <label>:1                                       ; preds = %1, %0
  %2 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ %4, %1 ]
  %3 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ %4, %1 ]
  %4 = phi i32 [ 42, %0 ], [ 23, %1 ]
  br label %1
}

If the DenseSet does a reallocation now it will reinsert all
keys and stumble over %3 now having a different hash value than it had
when inserted into the map for the first time. This change clears the
set whenever a PHI is deleted and starts the progress from the
beginning, allowing %3 to be deleted and avoiding inconsistent DenseSet
state. This potentially has a negative performance impact because
it rescans all PHIs, but I don't think that this ever makes a difference
in practice.

llvm-svn: 246694
2015-09-02 19:52:23 +00:00
James Molloy
4012d66e46 [ValueTracking] Minor comment change in test
This test was updated in r246678 - fix a copypasta in a comment noticed post-commit.

llvm-svn: 246679
2015-09-02 17:29:54 +00:00
James Molloy
eacb992ece [ValueTracking] Look through casts when both operands are casts.
We only looked through casts when one operand was a constant. We can also look through casts when both operands are non-constant, but both are in fact the same cast type. For example:

%1 = icmp ult i8 %a, %b
%2 = zext i8 %a to i32
%3 = zext i8 %b to i32
%4 = select i1 %1, i32 %2, i32 %3

llvm-svn: 246678
2015-09-02 17:25:25 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
f0232a2a7f Teach the target parsing framework to directly compute the length of all
of its strings when expanding the string literals from the macros, and
push all of the APIs to be StringRef instead of C-string APIs.

This (remarkably) removes a very non-trivial number of strlen calls. It
even deletes code and complexity from one of the primary users -- Clang.

llvm-svn: 246374
2015-08-30 07:51:04 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
cb7b943e2e DI: Set DILexicalBlock columns >= 65536 to 0/unknown
This fixes PR24621 and matches what we do for `DILocation`.  Although
the limit seems somewhat artificial, there are places in the backend
that also assume 16-bit columns, so we may as well just be consistent
about the limits.

llvm-svn: 246349
2015-08-28 22:58:50 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
01dd525060 DI: Add Function::getSubprogram()
Add `Function::setSubprogram()` and `Function::getSubprogram()`,
convenience methods to forward to `setMetadata()` and `getMetadata()`,
respectively, and deal in `DISubprogram` instead of `MDNode`.

Also add a verifier check to enforce that `!dbg` attachments are always
subprograms.

Originally (when I had the llvm-dev discussion back in April) I thought
I'd store a pointer directly on `llvm::Function` for these attachments
-- we frequently have debug info, and that's much cheaper than using map
in the context if there are no other function-level attachments -- but
for now I'm just using the generic infrastructure.  Let's add the extra
complexity only if this shows up in a profile.

llvm-svn: 246339
2015-08-28 21:55:35 +00:00
Lang Hames
20373f3760 Add a global mapping layer for Orc. Adapted from a patch by Andy Somogyi.
Thanks Andy!

llvm-svn: 246226
2015-08-27 22:20:05 +00:00
Alex Lorenz
6fab7d4ea6 AsmParser: Save and restore the parsing state for types using SlotMapping.
This commit extends the 'SlotMapping' structure and includes mappings for named
and numbered types in it. The LLParser is extended accordingly to fill out
those mappings at the end of module parsing.

This information is useful when we want to parse standalone constant values
at a later stage using the 'parseConstantValue' method. The constant values
can be constant expressions, which can contain references to types. In order
to parse such constant values, we have to restore the internal named and
numbered mappings for the types in LLParser, otherwise the parser will report
a parsing error. Therefore, this commit also introduces a new method called
'restoreParsingState' to LLParser, which uses the slot mappings to restore
some of its internal parsing state.

This commit is required to serialize constant value pointers in the machine
memory operands for the MIR format.

Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 245740
2015-08-21 21:32:39 +00:00
David Blaikie
bdabca9432 Allow Optionals to be compared to None
This is something like nullopt in std::experimental::optional. Optional
could already be constructed from None, so this seems like an obvious
extension from there.

I have a use in a future patch for Clang, though it may not go that
way/end up used - so this seemed worth committing now regardless.

llvm-svn: 245518
2015-08-19 23:07:27 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
bf271cc4e6 [PM/AA] Remove the last relics of the separate IPA library from LLVM,
folding the code into the main Analysis library.

There already wasn't much of a distinction between Analysis and IPA.
A number of the passes in Analysis are actually IPA passes, and there
doesn't seem to be any advantage to separating them.

Moreover, it makes it hard to have interactions between analyses that
are both local and interprocedural. In trying to make the Alias Analysis
infrastructure work with the new pass manager, it becomes particularly
awkward to navigate this split.

I've tried to find all the places where we referenced this, but I may
have missed some. I have also adjusted the C API to continue to be
equivalently functional after this change.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12075

llvm-svn: 245318
2015-08-18 17:51:53 +00:00
Yaron Keren
60a96994e9 Add unit test for isLayoutIdentical(empty, empty).
It was previously asserting in Visual C++ debug mode on a null
iterator passed to std::equal.

Test by Hans Wennborg!

llvm-svn: 245270
2015-08-18 07:59:09 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
4d1e1851a4 [PM] Port ScalarEvolution to the new pass manager.
This change makes ScalarEvolution a stand-alone object and just produces
one from a pass as needed. Making this work well requires making the
object movable, using references instead of overwritten pointers in
a number of places, and other refactorings.

I've also wired it up to the new pass manager and added a RUN line to
a test to exercise it under the new pass manager. This includes basic
printing support much like with other analyses.

But there is a big and somewhat scary change here. Prior to this patch
ScalarEvolution was never *actually* invalidated!!! Re-running the pass
just re-wired up the various other analyses and didn't remove any of the
existing entries in the SCEV caches or clear out anything at all. This
might seem OK as everything in SCEV that can uses ValueHandles to track
updates to the values that serve as SCEV keys. However, this still means
that as we ran SCEV over each function in the module, we kept
accumulating more and more SCEVs into the cache. At the end, we would
have a SCEV cache with every value that we ever needed a SCEV for in the
entire module!!! Yowzers. The releaseMemory routine would dump all of
this, but that isn't realy called during normal runs of the pipeline as
far as I can see.

To make matters worse, there *is* actually a key that we don't update
with value handles -- there is a map keyed off of Loop*s. Because
LoopInfo *does* release its memory from run to run, it is entirely
possible to run SCEV over one function, then over another function, and
then lookup a Loop* from the second function but find an entry inserted
for the first function! Ouch.

To make matters still worse, there are plenty of updates that *don't*
trip a value handle. It seems incredibly unlikely that today GVN or
another pass that invalidates SCEV can update values in *just* such
a way that a subsequent run of SCEV will incorrectly find lookups in
a cache, but it is theoretically possible and would be a nightmare to
debug.

With this refactoring, I've fixed all this by actually destroying and
recreating the ScalarEvolution object from run to run. Technically, this
could increase the amount of malloc traffic we see, but then again it is
also technically correct. ;] I don't actually think we're suffering from
tons of malloc traffic from SCEV because if we were, the fact that we
never clear the memory would seem more likely to have come up as an
actual problem before now. So, I've made the simple fix here. If in fact
there are serious issues with too much allocation and deallocation,
I can work on a clever fix that preserves the allocations (while
clearing the data) between each run, but I'd prefer to do that kind of
optimization with a test case / benchmark that shows why we need such
cleverness (and that can test that we actually make it faster). It's
possible that this will make some things faster by making the SCEV
caches have higher locality (due to being significantly smaller) so
until there is a clear benchmark, I think the simple change is best.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12063

llvm-svn: 245193
2015-08-17 02:08:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
ac11f6dc12 [PM/AA] Hoist the interface to TBAA into a dedicated header along with
its creation function. Update the relevant includes accordingly.

llvm-svn: 245019
2015-08-14 03:33:48 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
de2ec4a63f There is only one saver of strings.
llvm-svn: 244854
2015-08-13 01:07:02 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
7937d8a6c3 Return ErrorOr from FileOutputBuffer::create. NFC.
llvm-svn: 244848
2015-08-13 00:31:39 +00:00
David Blaikie
2063494b0a Simplify PackedVector by removing user-defined special members that aren't any different than the defaults
This causes the other special members (like move and copy construction,
and move assignment) to come through for free. Some code in clang was
depending on the (deprecated, in the original code) copy ctor. Now that
there's no user-defined special members, they're all available without
any deprecation concerns.

llvm-svn: 244835
2015-08-12 23:26:12 +00:00
David Blaikie
2be0223b90 Fix UB in MCJIT test cases that relied on union type punning
Reviewers: lhames, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11779

llvm-svn: 244644
2015-08-11 18:17:45 +00:00
Yaron Keren
89e34e6618 Add SmallString test trying to exercise the realloc() code path
by allocating a small size (will go through malloc) and then large size.

llvm-svn: 244637
2015-08-11 17:35:49 +00:00
James Molloy
ecd6525b24 Add support for floating-point minnum and maxnum
The select pattern recognition in ValueTracking (as used by InstCombine
and SelectionDAGBuilder) only knew about integer patterns. This teaches
it about minimum and maximum operations.

matchSelectPattern() has been extended to return a struct containing the
existing Flavor and a new enum defining the pattern's behavior when
given one NaN operand.

C minnum() is defined to return the non-NaN operand in this case, but
the idiomatic C "a < b ? a : b" would return the NaN operand.

ARM and AArch64 at least have different instructions for these different cases.

llvm-svn: 244580
2015-08-11 09:12:57 +00:00
Frederic Riss
6027545a69 Thread premissions through sys::fs::create_director{y|ies}
llvm-svn: 244268
2015-08-06 21:04:55 +00:00
Yaron Keren
6670ac798b Fix Visual C++ error C2248:
'llvm::TrailingObjects<`anonymous-namespace'::Class1,short,llvm::NoTrailingTypeArg>::additionalSizeToAlloc' :
cannot access protected member declared in class
 'llvm::TrailingObjects<`anonymous-namespace'::Class1,short,llvm::NoTrailingTypeArg>'

 I'm not sure how this compiles with gcc.
 Aren't protecteded members accessible only with protected or public inheritance?
 

llvm-svn: 244199
2015-08-06 07:59:26 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
a0655c50ee [PM/AA] Hoist the interface for BasicAA into a header file.
This is the first mechanical step in preparation for making this and all
the other alias analysis passes available to the new pass manager. I'm
factoring out all the totally boring changes I can so I'm moving code
around here with no other changes. I've even minimized the formatting
churn.

I'll reformat and freshen comments on the interface now that its located
in the right place so that the substantive changes don't triger this.

llvm-svn: 244197
2015-08-06 07:33:15 +00:00
James Y Knight
45f6b5bc69 Add a TrailingObjects template class.
This is intended to help support the idiom of a class that has some
other objects (or multiple arrays of different types of objects)
appended on the end, which is used quite heavily in clang.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11272

llvm-svn: 244164
2015-08-05 22:57:34 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
214753cf47 [ArrayRefTest] Work around a GCC 4.8 internal compiler error.
llvm-svn: 244023
2015-08-05 09:39:41 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
84cfaa9d50 unittests/ADT/ArrayRefTest.cpp: Suppress r243995 on g++-4.8 for now to unbreak bots.
For example of mingw-w64-g++-4.8.1,

  llvm/unittests/ADT/ArrayRefTest.cpp: In member function 'virtual void {anonymous}::ArrayRefTest_AllocatorCopy_Test::TestBody()':
  llvm/unittests/ADT/ArrayRefTest.cpp:56:40: internal compiler error: in count_type_elements, at expr.c:5523
     } Array3Src[] = {{"hello"}, {"world"}};
                                          ^
  Please submit a full bug report,
  with preprocessed source if appropriate.

llvm-svn: 244017
2015-08-05 06:11:23 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
73b65dd362 [ArrayRef] Make copy use std::uninitialized_copy.
std::copy does not work for non-trivially copyable classes when we're
copying into uninitialized memory.

llvm-svn: 243995
2015-08-04 15:52:56 +00:00
David Blaikie
95e59129ca -Wdeprecated-clean: Fix cases of violating the rule of 5 in ways that are deprecated in C++11
Various value handles needed to be copy constructible and copy
assignable (mostly for their use in DenseMap). But to avoid an API that
might allow accidental slicing, make these members protected in the base
class and make derived classes final (the special members become
implicitly public there - but disallowing further derived classes that
might be sliced to the intermediate type).

Might be worth having a warning a bit like -Wnon-virtual-dtor that
catches public move/copy assign/ctors in classes with virtual functions.
(suppressable in the same way - by making them protected in the base,
and making the derived classes final) Could be fancier and only diagnose
them when they're actually called, potentially.

Also allow a few default implementations where custom implementations
(especially with non-standard return types) were implemented.

llvm-svn: 243909
2015-08-03 22:30:24 +00:00
Derek Schuff
499fede2fc Fix memory leak in unit test of Bitcode/BitReaderTest.cpp
Fixes obvious memory leak in test
TestForEofAfterReadFailureOnDataStreamer.  Also removes constexpr use
from same test.

Patch by Karl Schimpf.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11735

llvm-svn: 243904
2015-08-03 21:23:51 +00:00
Lang Hames
f6229dbc63 [MCJIT] Fix a cast warning in the unit-test introduced in r243589.
Thanks to Aaron Ballman for spotting this.

llvm-svn: 243891
2015-08-03 18:03:40 +00:00
Derek Schuff
6203009638 Fix testing for end of stream in bitstream reader.
This fixes a bug found while working on the bitcode reader. In
particular, the method BitstreamReader::AtEndOfStream doesn't always
behave correctly when processing a data streamer. The method
fillCurWord doesn't properly set CurWord/BitsInCurWord if the data
streamer was already at eof, but GetBytes had not yet set the
ObjectSize field of the streaming memory object.

This patch fixes this problem, and provides a test to show that
this problem has been fixed.

Patch by Karl Schimpf.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11391

llvm-svn: 243890
2015-08-03 18:01:50 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
87c77233df DI: Disallow uniquable DICompileUnits
Since r241097, `DIBuilder` has only created distinct `DICompileUnit`s.
The backend is liable to start relying on that (if it hasn't already),
so make uniquable `DICompileUnit`s illegal and automatically upgrade old
bitcode.  This is a nice cleanup, since we can remove an unnecessary
`DenseSet` (and the associated uniquing info) from `LLVMContextImpl`.

Almost all the testcases were updated with this script:

    git grep -e '= !DICompileUnit' -l -- test |
    grep -v test/Bitcode |
    xargs sed -i '' -e 's,= !DICompileUnit,= distinct !DICompileUnit,'

I imagine something similar should work for out-of-tree testcases.

llvm-svn: 243885
2015-08-03 17:26:41 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
a6c2e1e60b Linker: Move distinct MDNodes instead of cloning
Instead of cloning distinct `MDNode`s when linking in a module, just
move them over.  The module linker destroys the source module, so the
old node would otherwise just be leaked on the context.  Create the new
node in place.  This also reduces the number of cloned uniqued nodes
(since it's less likely their operands have changed).

This mapping strategy is only correct when we're discarding the source,
so the linker turns it on via a ValueMapper flag, `RF_MoveDistinctMDs`.

There's nothing observable in terms of `llvm-link` output here: the
linked module should be semantically identical.

I'll be adding more 'distinct' nodes to the debug info metadata graph in
order to break uniquing cycles, so the benefits of this will partly come
in future commits.  However, we should get some gains immediately, since
we have a fair number of 'distinct' `DILocation`s being linked in.

llvm-svn: 243883
2015-08-03 17:09:38 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
08a36a35c8 DI: Remove DW_TAG_arg_variable and DW_TAG_auto_variable
Remove the fake `DW_TAG_auto_variable` and `DW_TAG_arg_variable` tags,
using `DW_TAG_variable` in their place Stop exposing the `tag:` field at
all in the assembly format for `DILocalVariable`.

Most of the testcase updates were generated by the following sed script:

    find test/ -name "*.ll" -o -name "*.mir" |
    xargs grep -l 'DILocalVariable' |
    xargs sed -i '' \
      -e 's/tag: DW_TAG_arg_variable, //' \
      -e 's/tag: DW_TAG_auto_variable, //'

There were only a handful of tests in `test/Assembly` that I needed to
update by hand.

(Note: a follow-up could change `DILocalVariable::DILocalVariable()` to
set the tag to `DW_TAG_formal_parameter` instead of `DW_TAG_variable`
(as appropriate), instead of having that logic magically in the backend
in `DbgVariable`.  I've added a FIXME to that effect.)

llvm-svn: 243774
2015-07-31 18:58:39 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
80ade4fb4d DI: Rewrite the DIBuilder local variable API
Replace the general `createLocalVariable()` with two more specific
functions: `createParameterVariable()` and `createAutoVariable()`, and
rewrite the documentation.

Besides cleaning up the API, this avoids exposing the fake DWARF tags
`DW_TAG_arg_variable` and `DW_TAG_auto_variable` to frontends, and is
preparation for removing them completely.

llvm-svn: 243764
2015-07-31 17:55:53 +00:00
NAKAMURA Takumi
8d3f0a8c24 MCJITTests/MCJITCAPITest.cpp: Try to appease i686-win32.
llvm-svn: 243639
2015-07-30 13:06:53 +00:00
Matt Arsenault
591931d078 Add amdopencl environment to triple
This is used by the AMD x86 OpenCL implementation
to change some ABI details on Windows and Linux.

llvm-svn: 243627
2015-07-30 08:16:51 +00:00
Lang Hames
1dbdf92b9c [MCJIT] Fix a memory leak in a unit test that was introduced in r243589.
llvm-svn: 243609
2015-07-30 02:05:37 +00:00
Lang Hames
ccd56c36bb [MCJIT] Fix PR20656 by teaching MCJIT to honor ExecutionEngine's global mapping.
This is important for users of the C API who can't supply custom symbol
resolvers yet.

llvm-svn: 243589
2015-07-29 23:12:33 +00:00
Pete Cooper
37a409c394 Reapply "Add reverse(ContainerTy) range adapter."
This reverts commit r243567, which ultimately reapplies r243563.

The fix here was to use std::enable_if for overload resolution.  Thanks to David
Blaikie for lots of help on this, and for the extra tests!

Original commit message follows:

For cases where we needed a foreach loop in reverse over a container,
we had to do something like

 for (const GlobalValue *GV : make_range(TypeInfos.rbegin(),
                                         TypeInfos.rend())) {

This provides a convenience method which shortens this to

 for (const GlobalValue *GV : reverse(TypeInfos)) {

There are 2 versions of this, with a preference to the rbegin() version.

The first uses rbegin() and rend() to construct an iterator_range.

The second constructs an iterator_range from the begin() and end() methods
wrapped in std::reverse_iterator's.

Reviewed by David Blaikie.

llvm-svn: 243581
2015-07-29 22:19:09 +00:00
Pete Cooper
a0dfca2294 Revert "Add reverse(ContainerTy) range adapter."
This reverts commit r243563.

The GCC buildbots were extremely unhappy about this.  Reverting while
we discuss a better way of doing overload resolution.

llvm-svn: 243567
2015-07-29 20:29:10 +00:00