This builds off of the current scheme, but instead of llvm.eh.exception and
llvm.eh.selector, it uses the landingpad instruction. And instead of
llvm.eh.resume, it uses the resume instruction.
Because of the invariants in the landing pad instruction, a lot of code that's
currently needed to find the appropriate intrinsic calls for an invoke
instruction won't be needed once we go to the new EH scheme. The "FIXME"s tell
us what to remove after we switch.
llvm-svn: 137576
Apparently we never added code to expand these pseudo instructions, and in
over a year, no one has noticed. Our register allocator must be awesome!
llvm-svn: 137551
This caused a race condition where a thread calls ~LLVMContextImpl which calls
Module::dropAllReferences which calls begin() on an empty ilist that would
create the sentinel, which racily accesses the global context.
This can not be fixed by locking inside createSentinel because the lock would
need to be shared with all users of the global context, including those that
reside outside LLVM's own code.
llvm-svn: 137546
of the instruction.
Note that this change affects the existing non-atomic load and store
instructions; the parser now accepts both forms, and the change is noted
in the release notes.
llvm-svn: 137527
Tidy up the code a bit and push the definition of the value next to the uses
to try to minimize this sort of issue from arising again while I'm at it.
rdar://9945172
llvm-svn: 137525
vectors. It operates on 128-bit elements instead of regular scalar
types. Recognize shuffles that are suitable for VPERM2F128 and teach
the x86 legalizer how to handle them.
llvm-svn: 137519
This implements the 'landingpad' instruction. It's used to indicate that a basic
block is a landing pad. There are several restrictions on its use (see
LangRef.html for more detail). These restrictions allow the exception handling
code to gather the information it needs in a much more sane way.
This patch has the definition, implementation, C interface, parsing, and bitcode
support in it.
llvm-svn: 137501
integer register to a floating point register. It is not valid to interpret
the value of a floating pointer register as part of a double precision
floating point value after a single precision floating point computational
or move instruction stores its result to the register.
- In the test case, the following code is generated before this patch is
applied:
mtc1 $zero, $f2 ; unformatted copy to $f2
mov.s $f0, $f2 ; $f0 is in single format
sdc1 $f12, 0($sp)
mov.s $f1, $f2 ; $f1 is in single format
c.eq.d $f12, $f0 ; $f0 cannot be interpreted as double
- The following code is generated after this patch is applied:
mtc1 $zero, $f0 ; unformatted copy to $f0
mtc1 $zero, $f1 ; unformatted copy to $f1
c.eq.d $f12, $f0 ; $f0 can be interpreted as double
Bhanu Chetlapalli and Chris Dearman at MIPS technologies reported this bug and
provided the test case.
llvm-svn: 137484