Implement the TLS relocation optimization for 32-bit x86 that is described in
"ELF Handling For Thread-Local Storage" by Ulrich Drepper, chapter 5,
"IA-32 Linker Optimizations". Specifically, this patch implements these
optimizations: LD->LE, GD->IE, GD->LD, and IE->LE.
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15292
llvm-svn: 255103
loading the source Module, linking the function in the destination
module, and destroying the source Module before repeating with the
next function to import (potentially from the same Module).
Ideally we would keep the source Module alive and import the next
Function needed from this Module. Unfortunately this is not possible
because the linker does not leave it in a usable state.
However we can do better by first computing the list of all candidates
per Module, and only then load the source Module and import all the
function we need for it.
The trick to process callees is to materialize function in the source
module when building the list of function to import, and inspect them
in their source module, collecting the list of callees for each
callee.
When we move the the actual import, we will import from each source
module exactly once. Each source module is loaded exactly once.
The only drawback it that it requires to have all the lazy-loaded
source Module in memory at the same time.
Currently this patch already improves considerably the link time,
a multithreaded link of llvm-dis on my laptop was:
real 1m12.175s user 6m32.430s sys 0m10.529s
and is now:
real 0m40.697s user 2m10.237s sys 0m4.375s
Note: this is the full link time (linker+Import+Optimizer+CodeGen)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15178
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 255100
The results formatter system is now fed timeouts and exceptional process
exits (i.e. inferior dotest.py process that exited by signal on POSIX
systems).
If a timeout or exceptional exit happens while a test method is running
on the worker queue, the timeout or exceptional exit is charged and
reported against that test method. Otherwise, if no test method was
running at the time of the timeout or exceptional exit, only the test
filename will be reported as the TIMEOUT or ERROR.
Implements:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=24830https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25703
In support of:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=25450
llvm-svn: 255097
methods - lldb can still crash pretty easily on corrupt JSON text,
and these will help eliminate a bunch of cases where that would
result in a crash. Some of the methods would check that e.g.
GetItemAtIndex would actually return an item before dereferencing it,
some would not, that kind of thing.
<rdar://problem/23768693>
llvm-svn: 255093
Summary:
The order of destructors in LTOCodeGenerator gets changed in r254696.
It is possible for LTOCodeGenerator to have a MergedModule created in
the OwnedContext, in which case the module must be destructed before
the context.
Reviewers: rafael, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits, joker.eph
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15346
llvm-svn: 255092
Otherwise, we think that most types that look like they'd fit in a
legal vector type are legal (so, basically, *any* vector type with a
size between 33 and 128 bits, I think, since we use pow2 alignment;
e.g., v2i25, v3f32, ...).
DataLayout::getTypeAllocSize rounds up based on alignment.
When checking for target intrinsic legality, that's not what we want:
if rounding makes a difference, the type isn't legal, and the
target intrinsics shouldn't be used, as they are always assumed legal.
One could make the argument that alloc size is ultimately the most
relevant here, since we're dealing with LD/ST intrinsics. That's only
true if we did legalize them though; that's a problem for another day.
Use DataLayout::getTypeSizeInBits instead of getTypeAllocSizeInBits.
Type::getSizeInBits can't be used because that'd gratuitously break
pointer vector support.
Some of these uses are currently fine, because we only hit them when
the type is already known legal (e.g., r114454). Update them for
consistency. It's faster to avoid the rounding anyway!
llvm-svn: 255089
Test case attached (test case also checks that we don't drop the calling
convention, but that functionality was correct before this patch).
llvm-svn: 255088
The gcc_except_tab was generating these references to point to the typeinfo in the data section.
gcc_except_tab also had the DW_EH_PE_indirect flag set which means that at runtime we are going
to dereference this entry as if it is in the GOT.
Reviewed by Nick Kledzik in http://reviews.llvm.org/D15360.
llvm-svn: 255085
Let unrecoverable handlers be responsbile for killing the
program with Die(), and let functions which print the error
report know if it's going to happen. Re-write the comments to
describe the situation.
llvm-svn: 255081
Currently, this is an NFC. However, knowing out the kind of error
report before we bring up all the reporting machinery (implemented in
ScopedReport class) is important once we teach UBSan runtime
suppressions.
llvm-svn: 255074
For an invoke with operand bundles, the [op_begin(), op_end()-3] range
can contain things other than invoke arguments. This change teaches
PruneEH to use arg_begin() and arg_end() explicitly.
llvm-svn: 255073
Summary:
This fixes failure when trying to select
insertelement <4 x half> undef, half %a, i64 0
which gets transformed to a scalar_to_vector node.
The accompanying v4 and v8 tests fail instruction selection without this
patch.
Reviewers: ab, jmolloy
Subscribers: srhines, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15322
llvm-svn: 255072
The code used "isa" to check the type and then "getAs" to look through
sugar; we need to look through the sugar when checking, too, otherwise
any kind of sugar (nullability qualifiers in the example; or a
typedef) will thwart this semantic check. Fixes rdar://problem/23804250.
llvm-svn: 255066
On AVX and AVX2, BROADCAST instructions can load a scalar into all elements of a target vector.
This patch improves the lowering of 'splat' shuffles of a loaded vector into a broadcast - currently the lowering only works for cases where we are splatting the zero'th element, which is now generalised to any element.
Fix for PR23022
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15310
llvm-svn: 255061
This seems to be a legacy relic from days gone by where the
remote test suite runner operated completely differently than it
does today. git blames and comments traced this functionality
back to about 2012, and nobody seems to know anything about it
now.
llvm-svn: 255060
This patch provides the assembly support for setjmp/longjmp for use
with the thread sanitizer. This is a big more complicated than for
aarch64, because sibcalls are only legal under our ABIs if the TOC
pointer is unchanged. Since the true setjmp function trashes the TOC
pointer, and we have to leave the stack in a correct state, we emulate
the setjmp function rather than branching to it.
We also need to materialize the TOC for cases where the _setjmp code
is called from libc. This is done differently under the ELFv1 and
ELFv2 ABIs.
llvm-svn: 255059
Currently, we emit warnings in some cases where nonnull function
parameters are compared against null. This patch extends this support
to warn when comparing the result of `returns_nonnull` functions
against null.
More specifically, we will now warn cases like:
int *foo() __attribute__((returns_nonnull));
int main() {
if (foo() == NULL) {} // warning: will always evaluate to false
}
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15324
llvm-svn: 255058
This patch is by Simone Atzeni with portions by Adhemerval Zanella.
This contains the LLVM patches to enable the thread sanitizer for
PPC64, both big- and little-endian. Two different virtual memory
sizes are supported: Old kernels use a 44-bit address space, while
newer kernels require a 46-bit address space.
There are two companion patches that will be added shortly. There is
a Clang patch to actually turn on the use of the thread sanitizer for
PPC64. There is also a patch that I wrote to provide interceptor
support for setjmp/longjmp on PPC64.
Patch discussion at reviews.llvm.org/D12841.
llvm-svn: 255057