It has only one user. This eliminates the last include of
config.h from the public headers -- ideally, config.h
shouldn't even be installed by `make install` anymore.
llvm-svn: 133713
Replace it with llvm-config.h, which defines a subset of
config.h's macros "so that they can be in exported headers
and won't override package specific directives", e.g.,
PACKAGE_NAME.
Endian.h wasn't using any macros at all though, so just delete
the include there instead.
llvm-svn: 133712
"Reinstate r133435 and r133449 (reverted in r133499) now that the clang
self-hosted build failure has been fixed (r133512)."
Due to some additional warnings.
llvm-svn: 133700
If the linker supports it, this will hold the CIE and FDE information in a
compact format. The implementation of the compact unwinding emission is coming
soon.
llvm-svn: 133658
representing a constant reference to ValType. Normally this is just
"const ValType &", but when ValType is a std::vector we want to use
ArrayRef as the reference type.
llvm-svn: 133611
Change PHINodes to store simple pointers to their incoming basic blocks,
instead of full-blown Uses.
Note that this loses an optimization in SplitCriticalEdge(), because we
can no longer walk the use list of a BasicBlock to find phi nodes. See
the comment I removed starting "However, the foreach loop is slow for
blocks with lots of predecessors".
Extend replaceAllUsesWith() on a BasicBlock to also update any phi
nodes in the block's successors. This mimics what would have happened
when PHINodes were proper Users of their incoming blocks. (Note that
this only works if OldBB->replaceAllUsesWith(NewBB) is called when
OldBB still has a terminator instruction, so it still has some
successors.)
llvm-svn: 133435
I don't think the AugmentedUse struct buys us much, either in
correctness or in ease of use. Ditch it, and simplify Use::getUser() and
User::allocHungoffUses().
llvm-svn: 133433
all over the place in different styles and variants. Standardize on two
preferred entrypoints: one that takes a StructType and ArrayRef, and one that
takes StructType and varargs.
In cases where there isn't a struct type convenient, we now add a
ConstantStruct::getAnon method (whose name will make more sense after a few
more patches land).
It would be "really really nice" if the ConstantStruct::get and
ConstantVector::get methods didn't make temporary std::vectors.
llvm-svn: 133412
A RegisterTuples instance is used to synthesize super-registers by
zipping together lists of sub-registers. This is useful for generating
pseudo-registers representing register sequence constraints like 'two
consecutive GPRs', or 'an even-odd pair of floating point registers'.
The RegisterTuples def can be used in register set operations when
building register classes. That is the only way of accessing the
synthesized super-registers.
For example, the ARM QQ register class of pseudo-registers could have
been formed like this:
// Form pairs Q0_Q1, Q2_Q3, ...
def QQPairs : RegisterTuples<[qsub_0, qsub_1],
[(decimate QPR, 2),
(decimate (shl QPR, 1), 2)]>;
def QQ : RegisterClass<..., (add QQPairs)>;
Similarly, pseudo-registers representing '3 consecutive D-regs with
wraparound' look like:
// Form D0_D1_D2, D1_D2_D3, ..., D30_D31_D0, D31_D0_D1.
def DSeqTriples : RegisterTuples<[dsub_0, dsub_1, dsub_2],
[(rotl DPR, 0),
(rotl DPR, 1),
(rotl DPR, 2)]>;
TableGen automatically computes aliasing information for the synthesized
registers.
Register tuples are still somewhat experimental. We still need to see
how they interact with MC.
llvm-svn: 133407
Targets that need to change the default allocation order should use the
AltOrders mechanism instead. See the X86 and ARM targets for examples.
The allocation_order_begin() and allocation_order_end() methods have been
replaced with getRawAllocationOrder(), and there is further support
functions in RegisterClassInfo.
It is no longer possible to insert arbitrary code into generated
register classes. This is a feature.
llvm-svn: 133332
A register class can define AltOrders and AltOrderSelect instead of
defining method protos and bodies. The AltOrders lists can be defined
with set operations, and TableGen can verify that the alternative
allocation orders only contain valid registers.
This is currently an opt-in feature, and it is still possible to
override allocation_order_begin/end. That will not be true for long.
llvm-svn: 133320
The LSDA is a bit difficult for the non-initiated to read. Even with comments,
it's not always clear what's going on. This wraps the ASM streamer in a class
that retains the LSDA and then emits a human-readable description of what's
going on in it.
So instead of having to make sense of:
Lexception1:
.byte 255
.byte 155
.byte 168
.space 1
.byte 3
.byte 26
Lset0 = Ltmp7-Leh_func_begin1
.long Lset0
Lset1 = Ltmp812-Ltmp7
.long Lset1
Lset2 = Ltmp913-Leh_func_begin1
.long Lset2
.byte 3
Lset3 = Ltmp812-Leh_func_begin1
.long Lset3
Lset4 = Leh_func_end1-Ltmp812
.long Lset4
.long 0
.byte 0
.byte 1
.byte 0
.byte 2
.byte 125
.long __ZTIi@GOTPCREL+4
.long __ZTIPKc@GOTPCREL+4
you can read this instead:
## Exception Handling Table: Lexception1
## @LPStart Encoding: omit
## @TType Encoding: indirect pcrel sdata4
## @TType Base: 40 bytes
## @CallSite Encoding: udata4
## @Action Table Size: 26 bytes
## Action 1:
## A throw between Ltmp7 and Ltmp812 jumps to Ltmp913 on an exception.
## For type(s): __ZTIi@GOTPCREL+4 __ZTIPKc@GOTPCREL+4
## Action 2:
## A throw between Ltmp812 and Leh_func_end1 does not have a landing pad.
llvm-svn: 133286
Also switch the return type to ArrayRef<unsigned> which works out nicely
for ARM's implementation of this function because of the clever ArrayRef
constructors.
The name change indicates that the returned allocation order may contain
reserved registers as has been the case for a while.
llvm-svn: 133216