Prior to CMAKE 2.8.4 that was covered by the WIN32 conditional but
from 2.8.4 CMAKE no longer defined WIN32 when running under Cygwin
and it needs its own test.
Patch by Martell Malone!
http://reviews.llvm.org/D11347
llvm-svn: 242993
This commit broke the build. Numerous build bots broken, and it was
blocking my progress so reverting.
It should be trivial to reproduce -- enable the BPF backend and it
should fail when running llvm-tblgen.
llvm-svn: 242992
more dense datastructure. We actually only have 3 bits of information
and an often-null pointer here. This fits very nicely into a
pointer-size value in the DenseMap from Function -> Info. Then we take
one more pointer hop to get to a secondary DenseMap from GlobalValue ->
ModRefInfo when we actually have precise info for particular globals.
This is more code than I would really like to do this packing, but it
ended up reasonably cleanly laid out. It should ensure we don't hit
scaling limitations with more widespread use of GMR.
llvm-svn: 242991
While theoratically required in pre-C++11 to avoid re-allocation upon call,
C++11 guarantees that c_str() returns a pointer to the internal array so
pre-calling c_str() is no longer required.
llvm-svn: 242983
This takes the operation of merging a callee's information into the
current information and embeds it into the FunctionInfo type itself.
This is much cleaner as now we don't need to expose iteration of the
globals, etc.
Also, switched all the uses of a raw integer two maintain the mod/ref
info during the SCC walk into just directly manipulating it in the
FunctionInfo object.
llvm-svn: 242976
typed interface as a precursor to rewriting how it is stored.
This way we know that the access paths are controlled and it should be
easy to store these bits in a different way.
No functionality changed.
llvm-svn: 242974
The debug map contains the timestamp of the object files in references.
We do not check these in the general case, but it's really useful if
you have archives where different versions of an object file have been
appended. This allows llvm-dsymutil to find the right one.
llvm-svn: 242965
interface prior to making more substantial and invasive changes.
No functionality changed, and should hopefully keep subsequent patches
as clean and focused as possible in addition to making the comments and
such more clear.
llvm-svn: 242964
preparation for de-coupling the AA implementations.
In order to do this, they had to become fake-scoped using the
traditional LLVM pattern of a leading initialism. These can't be actual
scoped enumerations because they're bitfields and thus inherently we use
them as integers.
I've also renamed the behavior enums that are specific to reasoning
about the mod/ref behavior of functions when called. This makes it more
clear that they have a very narrow domain of applicability.
I think there is a significantly cleaner API for all of this, but
I don't want to try to do really substantive changes for now, I just
want to refactor the things away from analysis groups so I'm preserving
the exact original design and just cleaning up the names, style, and
lifting out of the class.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10564
llvm-svn: 242963
This replaces the next-to-last std::map with a DenseMap. While DenseMap
doesn't yet make tons of sense (there are 32 bytes or so in the value
type), my next change will reduce the value type to a single pointer --
we only need a pointer and 3 bits, and that is exactly what we can have.
llvm-svn: 242956
The MSVC ABI requires that we generate an alias for the vtable which
means looking through a GlobalAlias which cannot be overridden improves
our ability to devirtualize.
Found while investigating PR20801.
Patch by Andrew Zhogin!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11306
llvm-svn: 242955
efficient, NFC.
Previously, we built up vectors of function pointers to track readers
and writers. The primary problem here is that we would add the same
function to this vector every time we found an instruction that reads or
writes to the pointer. This could be a *lot* of redudant function
pointers. Instead of doing that, we can use a SmallPtrSet.
This does more than just reduce the size of the list of readers or
writers. We walk the entire lists of each and do a map lookup for each
one. By having sets, we will only do one map lookup per reader or writer
function.
But only one user of the pointer analyzer actually needs this
information, so we can also skip accumulating it (and doing a lot of
heap allocations) for all the other pointer analysis. This is
particularly useful because there are very many more pointers in some of
the other cases.
llvm-svn: 242950
This was affecting test/asan/TestCases/Windows/coverage-basic.cc in
compiler-rt. It does something like:
cd %T/mydir
%clang %s -o t.exe
./t.exe
Previously, we'd end up looking for t.exe relative to the cwd of the lit
process, not the cwd of the test.
llvm-svn: 242941
Reapply r242294.
- Create a new CopyRewriter for Uncoalescable copy-like instructions
- Change the ValueTracker to return a ValueTrackerResult
This makes optimizeUncoalescable looks more like optimizeCoalescable and
use the CopyRewritter infrastructure.
This is also the preparation for looking up into PHI nodes in the
ValueTracker.
rdar://problem/20404526
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11195
llvm-svn: 242940
Summary:
Add a basic CodeGen bitcode test which (for now) only prints out the function name and nothing else. The current code merely implements the basic needed for the test run to not crash / assert. Getting to that point required:
- Basic InstPrinter.
- Basic AsmPrinter.
- DiagnosticInfoUnsupported (not strictly required, but nice to have, duplicated from AMDGPU/BPF's ISelLowering).
- Some SP and register setup in WebAssemblyTargetLowering.
- Basic LowerFormalArguments.
- GenInstrInfo.
- Placeholder LowerFormalArguments.
- Placeholder CanLowerReturn and LowerReturn.
- Basic DAGToDAGISel::Select, which requiresGenDAGISel.inc as well as GET_INSTRINFO_ENUM with GenInstrInfo.inc.
- Remove WebAssemblyFrameLowering::determineCalleeSaves and rely on default.
- Implement WebAssemblyFrameLowering::hasFP, same as AArch64's implementation.
Follow-up patches will implement a real AsmPrinter, which will require adding MI opcodes specific to WebAssembly.
Reviewers: sunfish
Subscribers: aemerson, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11369
llvm-svn: 242939
And expose it in Signals.h, allowing clients to call it directly,
possibly LLVMErrorHandler which currently calls RunInterruptHandlers
but not RunSignalHandlers, thus for example not printing the stack
backtrace on Unixish OSes. On Windows it does happen because
RunInterruptHandlers ends up calling the callbacks as well via
Cleanup(). This difference in behaviour and code structures in
*/Signals.inc should be patched in the future.
llvm-svn: 242936
Summary:
While working on a project I wound up generating a fairly large lookup table (10k entries) of callbacks inside of a static constructor. Clang was taking upwards of ~10 minutes to compile the lookup table. I generated a smaller test case (http://www.inolen.com/static_initializer_test.ll) that, after running with -ftime-report, pointed fingers at GlobalOpt and MemCpyOptimizer.
Running globalopt took around ~9 minutes. The slowdown came from how GlobalOpt merged stores from static constructors individually into the global initializer in EvaluateStaticConstructor. For each store it discovered and wanted to commit, it would copy the existing global initializer and then merge in the individual store. I changed this so that stores are now grouped by global, and sorted from most significant to least significant by their GEP indexes (e.g. a store to GEP 0, 0 comes before GEP 0, 0, 1). With this representation, the existing initializer can be copied and all new stores merged into it in a single pass.
With this patch and http://reviews.llvm.org/D11198, the lookup table that was taking ~10 minutes to compile now compiles in around 5 seconds. I've ran 'make check' and the test-suite, which all passed.
I'm not really sure who to tag as a reviewer, Lang mentioned that Chandler may be appropriate.
Reviewers: chandlerc, nlewycky
Subscribers: nlewycky, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11200
llvm-svn: 242935
This change would allow the machine instruction parser to reuse this method when
parsing the metadata node for the machine instruction's debug location property.
llvm-svn: 242934
Move CallBacksToRun into the common Signals.cpp, create RunCallBacksToRun()
and use these in both Unix/Signals.inc and Windows/Signals.inc.
Lots of potential code to be merged here.
llvm-svn: 242925
Not all components build correctly on all targets and the release
script had no way to disable them other than editing the script locally.
This change provides a way to disable the test-suite, compiler-rt and
the libraries, as well as allowing you to re-run on the same directory
without checking out all sources again.
llvm-svn: 242919
pipeline.
Even before I started improving its runtime, it was already crazy fast
once the call graph exists, and if we can get it to be conservatively
correct, will still likely catch a lot of interesting and useful cases.
So it may well be useful to enable by default.
But more importantly for me, this should make it easier for me to test
that changes aren't breaking it in fundamental ways by enabling it for
normal builds.
llvm-svn: 242895
This almost certainly doesn't matter in some deep sense, but std::set is
essentially always going to be slower here. Now the alias query should
be essentially constant time instead of having to chase the set tree
each time.
llvm-svn: 242893
it wasn't one of the indirect globals (which clearly cannot be an
allocation function call). Also only do a single lookup into this map
instead of two. NFC.
llvm-svn: 242892
Since we have to iterate this map not that infrequently, we should use
a map that is efficient for iteration. It is also almost certainly much
faster for lookups as well. There is more to do in terms of reducing the
wasted overhead of GMR's runtime though. Not sure how much is worthwhile
though.
The loop improvements should hopefully address the code review that
Duncan gave when he saw this code as I moved it around.
llvm-svn: 242891