If we're using clang-cl, that's a pretty good indication that we're
going to use MSVC's STL.
This simplifies the clang-cl ninja self-host configuration down to:
CC=clang-cl CXX=clang-cl cmake .. -GNinja
Modified version of zturner's patch:
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7824
llvm-svn: 230239
Summary:
-mno-odd-spreg prohibits the use of odd-numbered single-precision floating
point registers. However, vector insert/extract was still using them when
manipulating the subregisters of an MSA register. Fixed this by ensuring
that insertion/extraction is only performed on even-numbered vector
registers when -mno-odd-spreg is given.
Reviewers: vmedic, sstankovic
Reviewed By: sstankovic
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7672
llvm-svn: 230235
The natural way to handle this addressing mode would be to say that it has
8 bits and gets scaled by 4, but since the MC layer is expecting the scaling
to be already reflected in the immediate value, we have been setting the
Scale to 1. That's fine, but then NumBits needs to be adjusted to reflect
the effective increase in the range of the immediate. That adjustment was
missing.
The consequence is that the register scavenger can fail.
The estimateRSStackSizeLimit() function in ARMFrameLowering.cpp correctly
assumes that the AddrModeT2_i8s4 address mode can handle scaled offsets up to
1020. Under just the right circumstances, we fail to reserve space for the
scavenger because it thinks that nothing will be needed. However, the overly
pessimistic behavior in rewriteT2FrameIndex causes some frame indexes to be
out of range and require scavenged registers, and so the scavenger asserts.
Unfortunately I have not been able to come up with a testcase for this. I
can only reproduce it on an internal branch where the frame layout and
register allocation is slightly different than trunk. We really need a
way to serialize MachineInstr-level IR to write reasonable tests for things
like this.
rdar://problem/19909005
llvm-svn: 230233
This assumes that
a) finding the bucket containing the value is LIKELY
b) finding an empty bucket is LIKELY
c) growing the table is UNLIKELY
I also switched the a) and b) cases for SmallPtrSet as we seem to use
the set mostly more for insertion than for checking existence.
In a simple benchmark consisting of 2^21 insertions of 2^20 unique
pointers into a DenseMap or SmallPtrSet a few percent speedup on average,
but nothing statistically significant.
llvm-svn: 230232
Teach the peephole optimizer to work with MMX instructions by adding
entries into the foldable tables. This covers folding opportunities not
handled during isel.
llvm-svn: 230226
Add tests to cover the RR form of the pslli, psrli and psrai intrinsics.
In the next commit, the loads are going to be folded and the
instructions use the RM form.
llvm-svn: 230224
I made the templates general, no need to define pattern separately for each instruction/intrinsic.
Now only need to add r_Int pattern for AVX.
llvm-svn: 230221
This adds the --class-definitions flag. If specified, when dumping
types, instead of "class Foo" you will see the full class definition,
with member functions, constructors, access specifiers.
NOTE: Using this option can be very slow, as generating a full class
definition requires accessing many different parts of the PDB.
llvm-svn: 230203
I made my best guess at the Makefile, since I don't have a make build.
I'm not sure if it should be valid to add an empty list of things, but
it seemed the sort of degenerate case.
llvm-svn: 230196
This increases the flexibility of how to dump different
symbol types -- necessary for context-sensitive formatting of
symbol types -- and also improves the modularity by allowing
the dumping to be implemented in the actual dumper, as opposed
to in the PDB library.
llvm-svn: 230184
This removes a wealth of options, and instead now only provides
three options. -symbols, -types, and -compilands. This greatly
simplifies use of the tool, and makes it easier to understand
what you're going to see when you run the tool.
llvm-svn: 230182
While fuzzing LLVM bitcode files, I discovered that (1) the bitcode reader doesn't check that alignments are no larger than 2**29; (2) downstream code doesn't check the range; and (3) for values out of range, corresponding large memory requests (based on alignment size) will fail. This code fixes the bitcode reader to check for valid alignments, fixing this problem.
This CL fixes alignment value on global variables, functions, and instructions: alloca, load, load atomic, store, store atomic.
Patch by Karl Schimpf (kschimpf@google.com).
llvm-svn: 230180
This refactors the core functionality of LICM: HoistRegion, SinkRegion and
PromoteAliasSet (renamed to promoteLoopAccessesToScalars) as utility functions
in LoopUtils. This will enable other transformations to make use of them
directly.
Patch by Ashutosh Nema.
llvm-svn: 230178
The CONCAT_VECTORS combiner pass can transform the concat of two BUILD_VECTOR nodes into a single BUILD_VECTOR node.
This patch generalises this to support any number of BUILD_VECTOR nodes, and also permits UNDEF nodes to be included as well.
This was noticed as AVX vec128 -> vec256 canonicalization sometimes creates a CONCAT_VECTOR with a real vec128 lower and an vec128 UNDEF upper.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7816
llvm-svn: 230177
DAGCombine will rewrite an BUILD_VECTOR where all non-undef inputs some from
[US]INT_TO_FP, as a BUILD_VECTOR of integers with the conversion applied as a
vector operation. We check operation legality of the conversion, but fail to
check legality of the integer vector type itself. Because targets don't
normally override operation legality defaults for illegal types, we need to
check this also.
This came up in the context of the QPX vector entensions for PowerPC (which can
have legal floating-point vector types without corresponding legal integer
vector types). No in-tree test case for this yes, but one can be added once
the QPX support has been committed.
llvm-svn: 230176
When expanding a truncating store or extending load using vector extracts or
inserts and scalar stores and loads, we were giving each of these scalar stores
or loads the same alignment as the original vector operation. While this will
often be right (most vector operations, especially those produced by
autovectorization, have the alignment of the underlying scalar type), the
vector operation could certainly have a larger alignment.
No test case (yet); noticed by inspection.
llvm-svn: 230175
The issue was that the test Makefile had not been updated to
provide a value for HAVE_DIA_SDK, so it was being initialized
incorrectly. Hopefully this brings everything back to green.
llvm-svn: 230162
NOTE: This patch intentionally breaks the build. It attempts
to resubmit r230083, but with some debug logging in the CMake
and lit config files to determine why certain bots do not
correctly disable the DIA tests when DIA is not available.
After a sufficient number of bots fail, this patch will either
be reverted or, if the cause of the failure becomes obvious,
a fix submitted with the log statements removed.
llvm-svn: 230161
work with a non-canonical induction variable.
This is currently a non-functional change because we only ever call
computeSafeIterationSpace on a canonical induction variable; but the
generalization will be useful in a later commit.
llvm-svn: 230151
calculations. Semantically non-functional change.
This gets rid of some of the SCEV -> Value -> SCEV round tripping and
the Construct(SMin|SMax)Of and MaybeSimplify helper routines.
llvm-svn: 230150