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Commit Graph

45235 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Krzysztof Parzyszek
f7732c65f0 Revert "Delay initialization of OptBisect"
This reverts commit ec91df8d8195b8b759a89734dba227da1eaa729f.

It was committed by accident.
2021-06-18 13:16:45 -05:00
Krzysztof Parzyszek
de5add3739 Delay initialization of OptBisect
When LLVM is used in other projects, it may happen that global cons-
tructors will execute before the call to ParseCommandLineOptions.
Since OptBisect is initialized via a constructor, and has no ability
to be updated at a later time, passing "-opt-bisect-limit" to the
parse function may have no effect.

To avoid this problem use a cl::cb (callback) to set the bisection
limit when the option is actually processed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104551
2021-06-18 13:15:19 -05:00
Lang Hames
d2647ecc04 [ORC][C-bindings] Re-order object transform function arguments.
ObjInOut is an in-out parameter not a return value argument, so by convention
it should come after the context value (Ctx).
2021-06-18 22:12:39 +10:00
Lang Hames
eb023bd323 [ORC] Use uint8_t rather than char for RPC wrapper-function calls.
This partially reverts 838490de7ed, which broke some Solaris bots. Apparently
Solaris defines int8_t as char rather than signed char, which made the
SerializationTypeName<char> specialization a redefinition.

This partial revert isolates use of uint8_t buffers to ORC-RPC handling of
wrapper functions only. The TargetProcessControl::runWrapper method will
continue to use char buffers.
2021-06-18 21:56:09 +10:00
Lang Hames
04c9dcdc5d [ORC] Add support for dumping objects to the C API.
Provides ObjectTransformLayer APIs, a getter to access the
ObjectTransformLayer member of LLJIT, and the DumpObjects utility
to make construction of a dump-to-disk transform easy.

An example showing how the new APIs can be used has been added in
llvm/examples/OrcV2Examples/OrcV2CBindingsDumpObjects.
2021-06-18 20:56:45 +10:00
Johannes Doerfert
4b0523df3a [Attributor] Allow to skip the initial update for a new AA
Users might want to run initialize for a set of AAs without an
intermediate update step. Running update eagerly is not a requirement
anyway so we make it optional.
2021-06-18 01:07:53 -05:00
Johannes Doerfert
c50c80812f [Attributor] Use a centralized value simplification interface
To allow outside AAs that simplify values we need to ensure all value
simplification goes through the Attributor, not AAValueSimplify (or any
of the other AAs we have already like AAPotentialValues). This patch
also introduces an interface for the outside AAs to register
simplification callbacks for an IRPosition. To make this work as
expected we have to pass IRPositions instead of Values in
AAValueSimplify, which makes sense by itself.
2021-06-18 01:07:53 -05:00
Johannes Doerfert
99cca18714 [Attributor] Make sure Heap2Stack works properly on a GPU target
If the target stack is not accessible between different running
"threads" we have to make sure not to create allocas for mallocs
that might be used by multiple "threads". The "use check" is
sufficient to prevent this but if we apply the "free check" we have
to make sure the pointer is not communicated to others before
the free is reached.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98608
2021-06-18 01:07:52 -05:00
Johannes Doerfert
1d462a0452 [OpenMP][NFC] Expose AAExecutionDomain and rename its getter
The initial use for AAExecutionDomain was to determine if a single
thread executes a block. While this is sometimes informative most
of the time, and for other reasons, we actually want to know if it
is the "initial thread". Thus, the thread that started execution on
the current device. The deduction needs to be adjusted in a follow
up as the methods we use right not are looking for the OpenMP thread
id which is resets whenever a thread enters a parallel region. What
we basically want is to look for `llvm.nvvm.read.ptx.sreg.ntid.x` and
equivalent functions.
2021-06-18 01:07:52 -05:00
Johannes Doerfert
ffbe2b6b3c [Attributor][NFC] AAReachability is currently stateless, don't invalidate it
We invalidated AAReachabilityImpl directly which is not helpful and
confusing as we still used it regardless. We now avoid invalidating it
(not needed anyway) and add checks for the state. This has by itself no
actual effect but prepares for later extensions.
2021-06-18 01:07:51 -05:00
Heejin Ahn
f7b0205560 [WebAssembly] Rename event to tag
We recently decided to change 'event' to 'tag', and 'event section' to
'tag section', out of the rationale that the section contains a
generalized tag that references a type, which may be used for something
other than exceptions, and the name 'event' can be confusing in the web
context.

See
- https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/issues/159#issuecomment-857910130
- https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling/pull/161

Reviewed By: tlively

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104423
2021-06-17 20:34:19 -07:00
Kuter Dinel
319a05fb4c [FIX][Attributor] Fix broken build due to missing virtual deconstructors.
The lack some virtual deconstructors where causing some builds bots to fail.
This patch fixes that.

Problematic commit:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rGeaf1b6810ce0f40008b2b1d902750eafa3e198d3

Build bot:
https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/18/builds/1741
2021-06-18 07:32:51 +03:00
Kuter Dinel
5e7d306b6b [Attributor] Derive AACallEdges attribute
This attribute computes the optimistic live call edges using the attributor
liveness information. This attribute will be used for deriving a
inter-procedural function reachability attribute.

Reviewed By: jdoerfert

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104059
2021-06-18 03:29:22 +03:00
Jon Roelofs
921bd72ae7 [GISel] Eliminate redundant bitmasking
This was a GISel vs SDAG regression that showed up at -Os on arm64 in:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Adobe-C++/simple_types_constant_folding.test

https://llvm.godbolt.org/z/aecjodsjG

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103334
2021-06-17 12:53:00 -07:00
Jorge Gorbe Moya
70dce4754b Revert "[NFC] Remove checking pointee type for byval/preallocated type"
This reverts commit 738abfdbea21acd2597d83ad3390daf5696b6d07.
2021-06-17 12:29:23 -07:00
Saleem Abdulrasool
f56e4f6d3d RISCV: adjust handling of relocation emission for RISCV
This re-architects the RISCV relocation handling to bring the
implementation closer in line with the implementation in binutils.  We
would previously aggressively resolve the relocation.  With this
restructuring, we always will emit a paired relocation for any symbolic
difference of the type of S±T[±C] where S and T are labels and C is a
constant.

GAS has a special target hook controlled by `RELOC_EXPANSION_POSSIBLE`
which indicates that a fixup may be expanded into multiple relocations.
This is used by the RISCV backend to always emit a paired relocation -
either ADD[WIDTH] + SUB[WIDTH] for text relocations or SET[WIDTH] +
SUB[WIDTH] for a debug info relocation.  Irrespective of whether linker
relaxation support is enabled, symbolic difference is always emitted as
a paired relocation.

This change also sinks the target specific behaviour down into the
target specific area rather than exposing it to the shared relocation
handling.  In the process, we also sink the "special" handling for debug
information down into the RISCV target.  Although this improves the path
for the other targets, this is not necessarily entirely ideal either.
The changes in the debug info emission could be done through another
type of hook as this functionality would be required by any other target
which wishes to do linker relaxation.  However, as there are no other
targets in LLVM which currently do this, this is a reasonable thing to
do until such time as the code needs to be shared.

Improve the handling of the relocation (and add a reduced test case from
the Linux kernel) to ensure that we handle complex expressions for
symbolic difference.  This ensures that we correct relocate symbols with
the adddends normalized and associated with the addition portion of the
paired relocation.

This change also addresses some review comments from Alex Bradbury about
the relocations meant for use in the DWARF CFA being named incorrectly
(using ADD6 instead of SET6) in the original change which introduced the
relocation type.

This resolves the issues with the symbolic difference emission
sufficiently to enable building the Linux kernel with clang+IAS+lld
(without linker relaxation).

Resolves PR50153, PR50156!
Fixes: ClangBuiltLinux/linux#1023, ClangBuiltLinux/linux#1143

Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, maskray

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103539
2021-06-17 08:20:02 -07:00
Stephen Tozer
84970078e4 Reapply "[DebugInfo] Prevent non-determinism when updating DIArgList users of a value"
Reapply the commit which previously caused build failures due to the
mismatched template arguments between the return type and the returned
SmallVector.

This reverts commit e8991caea8690ec2d17b0b7e1c29bf0da6609076.
2021-06-17 16:16:55 +01:00
Guillaume Chatelet
913b337ddc [llvm] fix typo in comment 2021-06-17 14:30:52 +00:00
David Green
751ee64aee [InterleaveAccess] Copy fast math flags when adjusting binary operators in interleave access pass
The Interleave Access pass will convert shuffle(binop(load, load)) to
binop(shuffle(load), shuffle(load)), in order to create more
interleaving load patterns (VLD2/3/4) that might have been messed up by
instcombine. As shown in D104247 we were missing copying IR flags to the
new instruction though, which should just be kept the same as the
original instruction.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104255
2021-06-17 09:53:33 +01:00
Bjorn Pettersson
29ffba4b56 Update @llvm.powi to handle different int sizes for the exponent
This can be seen as a follow up to commit 0ee439b705e82a4fe20e2,
that changed the second argument of __powidf2, __powisf2 and
__powitf2 in compiler-rt from si_int to int. That was to align with
how those runtimes are defined in libgcc.
One thing that seem to have been missing in that patch was to make
sure that the rest of LLVM also handle that the argument now depends
on the size of int (not using the si_int machine mode for 32-bit).
When using __builtin_powi for a target with 16-bit int clang crashed.
And when emitting libcalls to those rtlib functions, typically when
lowering @llvm.powi), the backend would always prepare the exponent
argument as an i32 which caused miscompiles when the rtlib was
compiled with 16-bit int.

The solution used here is to use an overloaded type for the second
argument in @llvm.powi. This way clang can use the "correct" type
when lowering __builtin_powi, and then later when emitting the libcall
it is assumed that the type used in @llvm.powi matches the rtlib
function.

One thing that needed some extra attention was that when vectorizing
calls several passes did not support that several arguments could
be overloaded in the intrinsics. This patch allows overload of a
scalar operand by adding hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd, with
an entry for powi.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439
2021-06-17 09:38:28 +02:00
Lang Hames
9d62b78ea1 [ORC] Switch from uint8_t to char buffers for TargetProcessControl::runWrapper.
This matches WrapperFunctionResult's char buffer, cutting down on the number of
pointer casts needed.
2021-06-17 13:27:09 +10:00
Adrian Prantl
be89f7fc66 Move the definition of LLVM_SUPPORT_XCODE_SIGNPOSTS into llvm-config.h
since it is now used by a public header file (Signposts.h).
This fixes the standalone LLDB build.
2021-06-16 14:40:37 -07:00
Min-Yih Hsu
341aadfd56 [MCA] Anchoring the vtable of CustomBehaviour
Put the dtor of mca::CustomBehaviour into the cpp file to avoid
undefined vtable when linking libLLVMMCACustomBehaviourAMDGPU as shared
library.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104401
2021-06-16 12:43:58 -07:00
Hongtao Yu
45a66978f9 [CSSPGO] Report zero-count probe in profile instead of dangling probes.
Previously dangling samples were represented by INT64_MAX in sample profile while probes never executed were not reported. This was based on an observation that dangling probes were only at a smaller portion than zero-count probes. However, with compiler optimizations, dangling probes end up becoming at large portion of all probes in general and reporting them does not make sense from profile size point of view. This change flips sample reporting by reporting zero-count probes instead. This enabled dangling probe to be represented by none (missing entry in profile). This has a couple benefits:

1. Reducing sample profile size in optimize mode, even when the number of non-executed probes outperform the number of dangling probes, since INT64_MAX takes more space over 0 to encode.

2. Binary size savings. No need to encode dangling probe anymore, since missing probes are treated as dangling in the profile reader.

3. Reducing compiler work to track dangling probes. However, for probes that are real dead and removed, we still need the compiler to identify them so that they can be reported as zero-count, instead of mistreated as dangling probes.

4. Improving counts quality by respecting the counts already collected on the non-dangling copy of a probe. A probe, when duplicated, gets two copies at runtime. If one of them is dangling while the other is not, merging the two probes at profile generation time will cause the real samples collected on the non-dangling one to be discarded. Not reporting the dangling counterpart will keep the real samples.

5. Better readability.

6. Be consistent with non-CS dwarf line number based profile. Zero counts are trusted by the compiler counts inferencer while missing counts will be inferred by the compiler.

Note that the current patch does include any work for #3. There will be follow-up changes.

For #1, I've seen for a large Facebook service, the text profile is reduced by 7%. For extbinary profile, the size of  LBRProfileSection is reduced by 35%.

For #4, I have seen general counts quality for SPEC2017 is improved by 10%.

Reviewed By: wenlei, wlei, wmi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104129
2021-06-16 11:45:29 -07:00
Sushma Unnibhavi
900cbf02d0 [M68k][GloballSel] Adding initial GlobalISel infrastructure
Wiring up GlobalISel for the M68k backend

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101819
2021-06-16 10:48:38 -06:00
Patrick Holland
449e2cbd5e Reapply "[MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca".
The original change was pushed in main as commit f7a23ecece52.
It was then reverted by commit a04f01bab2 because it caused linker failures
on buildbots that don't build the AMDGPU target.

--

Some instructions are not defined well enough within the target’s scheduling
model for llvm-mca to be able to properly simulate its behaviour. The ideal
solution to this situation is to modify the scheduling model, but that’s not
always a viable strategy. Maybe other parts of the backend depend on that
instruction being modelled the way that it is. Or maybe the instruction is quite
complex and it’s difficult to fully capture its behaviour with tablegen. The
CustomBehaviour class (which I will refer to as CB frequently) is designed to
provide intuitive scaffolding for developers to implement the correct modelling
for these instructions.

More details are available in the original commit log message (f7a23ecece52).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104149
2021-06-16 16:54:48 +01:00
David Spickett
0a8120a8f5 [llvm][AArch64] Handle arrays of struct properly (from IR)
This only applies to FastIsel. GlobalIsel seems to sidestep
the issue.

This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46996

One of the things we do in llvm is decide if a type needs
consecutive registers. Previously, we just checked if it
was an array or not.
(plus an SVE specific check that is not changing here)

This causes some confusion when you arbitrary IR like:
```
%T1 = type { double, i1 };
define [ 1 x %T1 ] @foo() {
entry:
  ret [ 1 x %T1 ] zeroinitializer
}
```

We see it is an array so we call CC_AArch64_Custom_Block
which bails out when it sees the i1, a type we don't want
to put into a block.

This leaves the location of the double in some kind of
intermediate state and leads to odd codegen. Which then crashes
the backend because it doesn't know how to implement
what it's been asked for.

You get this:
```
  renamable $d0 = FMOVD0
  $w0 = COPY killed renamable $d0
```

Rather than this:
```
  $d0 = FMOVD0
  $w0 = COPY $wzr
```

The backend knows how to copy 64 bit to 64 bit registers,
but not 64 to 32. It can certainly be taught how but the real
issue seems to be us even trying to assign a register block
in the first place.

This change makes the logic of
AArch64TargetLowering::functionArgumentNeedsConsecutiveRegisters
a bit more in depth. If we find an array, also check that all the
nested aggregates in that array have a single member type.

Then CC_AArch64_Custom_Block's assumption of a type that looks
like [ N x type ] will be valid and we get the expected codegen.

New tests have been added to exercise these situations. Note that
some of the output is not ABI compliant. The aim of this change is
to simply handle these situations and not to make our processing
of arbitrary IR ABI compliant.

Reviewed By: efriedma

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104123
2021-06-16 13:56:01 +00:00
Andrea Di Biagio
a8b232ce81 [MCA][InstrBuilder] Always check for implicit uses of resource units (PR50725).
When instructions are issued to the underlying pipeline resources, the
mca::ResourceManager should also check for the presence of extra uses induced by
the explicit consumption of multiple partially overlapping group resources.

Fixes PR50725
2021-06-16 14:51:12 +01:00
James Henderson
a516a14043 [yaml2obj][obj2yaml] Support custom ELF section header string table name
This patch adds support for a new field in the FileHeader, which states
the name to use for the section header string table. This also allows
combining the string table with another string table in the object, e.g.
the symbol name string table. The field is optional. By default,
.shstrtab will continue to be used.

This partially fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50506.

Reviewed by: Higuoxing

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104035
2021-06-16 10:02:23 +01:00
Lang Hames
5fecb17e96 [ORC] Switch to WrapperFunction utility for calls to registration functions.
Addresses FIXMEs in TPC-based EH-frame and debug object registration code by
replacing manual argument serialization with WrapperFunction utility calls.
2021-06-16 18:05:58 +10:00
Rong Xu
022ca8be28 [SampleFDO] Place the discriminator flag variable into the used list.
We create flag variable "__llvm_fs_discriminator__" in the binary
to indicate that FSAFDO hierarchical discriminators are used.

This variable might be GC'ed by the linker since it is not explicitly
reference. I initially added the var to the use list in pass
MIRFSDiscriminator but it did not work. It turned out the used global
list is collected in lowering (before MIR pass) and then emitted in
the end of pass pipeline.

Here I add the variable to the use list in IR level's AddDiscriminators
pass. The machine level code is still keep in the case IR's
AddDiscriminators is not invoked. If this is the case, this just use
-Wl,--export-dynamic-symbol=__llvm_fs_discriminator__
to force the emit.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103988
2021-06-15 21:51:04 -07:00
Andrea Di Biagio
f1dc7da2e3 Revert "[MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca"
This reverts commit f7a23ecece524564a0c3e09787142cc6061027bb.

It appears to breaks buildbots that don't build the AMDGPU backend.
2021-06-15 21:41:36 +01:00
Patrick Holland
e52d4f2208 [MCA] Adding the CustomBehaviour class to llvm-mca
Some instructions are not defined well enough within the target’s scheduling
model for llvm-mca to be able to properly simulate its behaviour. The ideal
solution to this situation is to modify the scheduling model, but that’s not
always a viable strategy. Maybe other parts of the backend depend on that
instruction being modelled the way that it is. Or maybe the instruction is quite
complex and it’s difficult to fully capture its behaviour with tablegen. The
CustomBehaviour class (which I will refer to as CB frequently) is designed to
provide intuitive scaffolding for developers to implement the correct modelling
for these instructions.

Implementation details:

llvm-mca does its best to extract relevant register, resource, and memory
information from every MCInst when lowering them to an mca::Instruction. It then
uses this information to detect dependencies and simulate stalls within the
pipeline. For some instructions, the information that gets captured within the
mca::Instruction is not enough for mca to simulate them properly. In these
cases, there are two main possibilities:

1. The instruction has a dependency that isn’t detected by mca.
2. mca is incorrectly enforcing a dependency that shouldn’t exist.

For the rest of this discussion, I will be focusing on (1), but I have put some
thought into (2) and I may revisit it in the future.

So we have an instruction that has dependencies that aren’t picked up by mca.
The basic idea for both pipelines in mca is that when an instruction wants to be
dispatched, we first check for register hazards and then we check for resource
hazards. This is where CB is injected. If no register or resource hazards have
been detected, we make a call to CustomBehaviour::checkCustomHazard() to give
the target specific CB the chance to detect and enforce any custom dependencies.

The return value for checkCustomHazaard() is an unsigned int representing the
(minimum) number of cycles that the instruction needs to stall for. It’s fine to
underestimate this value because when StallCycles gets down to 0, we’ll end up
checking for all the hazards again before the instruction is actually
dispatched. However, it’s important not to overestimate the value and the more
accurate your estimate is, the more efficient mca’s execution can be.

In general, for checkCustomHazard() to be able to detect these custom
dependencies, it needs information about the current instruction and also all of
the instructions that are still executing within the pipeline. The mca pipeline
uses mca::Instruction rather than MCInst and the current information encoded
within each mca::Instruction isn’t sufficient for my use cases. I had to add a
few extra attributes to the mca::Instruction class and have them get set by the
MCInst during instruction building. For example, the current mca::Instruction
doesn’t know its opcode, and it also doesn’t know anything about its immediate
operands (both of which I had to add to the class).

With information about the current instruction, a list of all currently
executing instructions, and some target specific objects (MCSubtargetInfo and
MCInstrInfo which the base CB class has references to), developers should be
able to detect and enforce most custom dependencies within checkCustomHazard. If
you need more information than is present in the mca::Instruction, feel free to
add attributes to that class and have them set during the lowering sequence from
MCInst.

Fortunately, in the in-order pipeline, it’s very convenient for us to pass these
arguments to checkCustomHazard. The hazard checking is taken care of within
InOrderIssueStage::canExecute(). This function takes a const InstRef as a
parameter (representing the instruction that currently wants to be dispatched)
and the InOrderIssueStage class maintains a SmallVector<InstRef, 4> which holds
all of the currently executing instructions. For the out-of-order pipeline, it’s
a bit trickier to get the list of executing instructions and this is why I have
held off on implementing it myself. This is the main topic I will bring up when
I eventually make a post to discuss and ask for feedback.

CB is a base class where targets implement their own derived classes. If a
target specific CB does not exist (or we pass in the -disable-cb flag), the base
class is used. This base class trivially returns 0 from its checkCustomHazard()
implementation (meaning that the current instruction needs to stall for 0 cycles
aka no hazard is detected). For this reason, targets or users who choose not to
use CB shouldn’t see any negative impacts to accuracy or performance (in
comparison to pre-patch llvm-mca).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104149
2021-06-15 21:30:48 +01:00
Vitaly Buka
5f8c02be72 [NFC] Fix "unused variable" warning 2021-06-15 12:59:05 -07:00
Jinsong Ji
344955e439 [NFC] Update renamed option in comments
c98ebda325c996b3a12f4fded0368734dc0fe28a Rename fp-op fusion option (yet
again) for compatibility with GCC option.

The comment in the header should be updated too to avoid confusion.
2021-06-15 19:44:31 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
99e33d3043 Support: Remove F_{None,Text,Append} compatibility synonyms, NFC
Remove the compatibility spellings of `OF_{None,Text,Append}` that
were left behind by 1f67a3cba9b09636c56e2109d8a35ae96dc15782.

No functionality change here, just an API cleanup.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101506
2021-06-15 12:04:09 -07:00
Roman Lebedev
10ca53ce65 [NewPM] Remove SpeculateAroundPHIs pass
Addition of this pass has been botched.
There is no particular reason why it had to be sold as an inseparable part
of new-pm transition. It was added when old-pm was still the default,
and very *very* few users were actually tracking new-pm,
so it's effects weren't measured.

Which means, some of the turnoil of the new-pm transition
are actually likely regressions due to this pass.

Likewise, there has been a number of post-commit feedback
(post new-pm switch), namely
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D37467#2787157 (regresses HW-loops)
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D37467#2787259 (should not be in middle-end, should run after LSR, not before)
* https://reviews.llvm.org/D95789 (an attempt to fix bad loop backedge metadata)
and in the half year past, the pass authors (google) still haven't found time to respond to any of that.

Hereby it is proposed to backout the pass from the pipeline,
until someone who cares about it can address the issues reported,
and properly start the process of adding a new pass into the pipeline,
with proper performance evaluation.

Furthermore, neither google nor facebook reports any perf changes
from this change, so i'm dropping the pass completely.
It can always be re-reverted should/if anyone want to pick it up again.

Reviewed By: aeubanks

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104099
2021-06-15 20:35:55 +03:00
Lang Hames
792e37b227 [ORC] Fix missing std::move. 2021-06-15 21:42:58 +10:00
Lang Hames
0c8cd2ec6f [ORC] Fix narrowing-in-initializer-list warnings. 2021-06-15 21:39:16 +10:00
Lang Hames
8b99b0a62e [ORC] Fix missing function in unit test. 2021-06-15 21:39:00 +10:00
Lang Hames
8d05185ee9 [ORC] Make WrapperFunctionResult's ValuePtr member non-const.
The const qualifier was a hangover from an earlier iteration that allowed
wrapper functions to return pointers to const memory. This feature has
been removed, so there's no reason for this to be const any more, and
removing it eliminates const-cast warnings.
2021-06-15 21:24:12 +10:00
Lang Hames
e11b1aca83 [ORC] Port WrapperFunctionUtils and SimplePackedSerialization from ORC runtime.
Replace the existing WrapperFunctionResult type in
llvm/include/ExecutionEngine/Orc/Shared/TargetProcessControlTypes.h with a
version adapted from the ORC runtime's implementation.

Also introduce the SimplePackedSerialization scheme (also adapted from the ORC
runtime's implementation) for wrapper functions to avoid manual serialization
and deserialization for calls to runtime functions involving common types.
2021-06-15 21:13:57 +10:00
Neil Henning
8521aa2a65 ABI breaking changes fixes.
This commit mostly just replaces bad uses of `NDEBUG` with uses of
`LLVM_ENABLE_ABI_BREAKING_CHANGES` - the safe way to include ABI
breaking changes (normally extra struct elements in headers).

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104216
2021-06-15 11:08:13 +01:00
Jay Foad
c3a38401e0 [IR] Remove forward declaration of GraphTraits from Type.h
This has been unnecessary since r352353 removed GraphTraits
specializations for Type, except that a couple of other headers were
accidentally relying on this declaration.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104119
2021-06-15 09:23:45 +01:00
Adrian Prantl
dfb1691713 Allow signposts to take advantage of deferred string substitution
One nice feature of the os_signpost API is that format string
substitutions happen in the consumer, not the logging
application. LLVM's current Signpost class doesn't take advantage of
this though and instead always uses a static "Begin/End %s" format
string.

This patch uses variadic macros to allow the API to be used as
intended. Unfortunately, the primary use-case I had in mind (the
LLDB_SCOPED_TIMER() macro) does not get much better from this, because
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ is *not* a macro, but a static string, so
signposts created by LLDB_SCOPED_TIMER() still use a static "%s"
format string. At least LLDB_SCOPED_TIMERF() works as intended.

This reapplies the previously reverted patch with additional include
order fixes for non-modular builds of LLDB.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103575
2021-06-14 16:53:41 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
299552b38b Revert "Allow signposts to take advantage of deferred string substitution"
This reverts commit 03841edde7eee21d1d450041ab9a113a7e1be869.

Unfortunately this still breaks the LLDB standalone bot.
2021-06-14 16:09:04 -07:00
Adrian Prantl
770268a3e9 Allow signposts to take advantage of deferred string substitution
One nice feature of the os_signpost API is that format string
substitutions happen in the consumer, not the logging
application. LLVM's current Signpost class doesn't take advantage of
this though and instead always uses a static "Begin/End %s" format
string.

This patch uses variadic macros to allow the API to be used as
intended. Unfortunately, the primary use-case I had in mind (the
LLDB_SCOPED_TIMER() macro) does not get much better from this, because
__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ is *not* a macro, but a static string, so
signposts created by LLDB_SCOPED_TIMER() still use a static "%s"
format string. At least LLDB_SCOPED_TIMERF() works as intended.

This reapplies the previsously reverted patch with additional MachO.h
macro #undefs.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103575
2021-06-14 14:19:41 -07:00
wlei
c4ed78c10b [CSSPGO] Aggregation by the last K context frames for cold profiles
This change provides the option to merge and aggregate cold context by the last k frames instead of context-less name. By default K = 1 means the context-less one.

This is for better perf tuning. The more selective merging and trimming will rely on llvm-profgen's preinliner.

Reviewed By: wenlei, hoy

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104131
2021-06-14 10:33:43 -07:00
zhijian
ad7e1ecf68 [AIX][XCOFF] emit vector info of traceback table.
Summary:

emit vector info of traceback table.

Reviewers: Jason Liu,Hubert Tong
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93659
2021-06-14 11:15:22 -04:00
Florian Hahn
bc6a656349 [ADT] Use unnamed argument for unused arg in StringMapEntryStorage.
This silences an 'unsused argument' warning.

Similar to c2006f857d80f54b90ed7d911d3e7acf4f46001b.
2021-06-14 15:54:57 +01:00