information output. However, many target specific tool chains prefer to encode
only one compile unit in an object file. In this situation, the LLVM code
generator will include debugging information entities in the compile unit
that is marked as main compile unit. The code generator accepts maximum one main
compile unit per module. If a module does not contain any main compile unit
then the code generator will emit multiple compile units in the output object
file.
[Part 1]
Update DebugInfo APIs to accept optional boolean value while creating DICompileUnit to mark the unit as "main" unit. By defaults all units are considered non-main. Update SourceLevelDebugging.html to document "main" compile unit.
Update DebugInfo APIs to not accept and encode separate source file/directory entries while creating various llvm.dbg.* entities. There was a recent, yet to be documented, change to include this additional information so no documentation changes are required here.
Update DwarfDebug to handle "main" compile unit. If "main" compile unit is seen then all DIEs are inserted into "main" compile unit. All other compile units are used to find source location for llvm.dbg.* values. If there is not any "main" compile unit then create unique compile unit DIEs for each llvm.dbg.compile_unit.
[Part 2]
Create separate llvm.dbg.compile_unit for each input file. Mark compile unit create for main_input_filename as "main" compile unit. Use appropriate compile unit, based on source location information collected from the tree node, while creating llvm.dbg.* values using DebugInfo APIs.
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This is Part 1.
llvm-svn: 63400
the LowerPartSet(). It didn't handle the situation correctly when
the low, high argument values are in reverse order (low > high)
with 'Val' type i32 (a corner case).
llvm-svn: 63388
If a MachineInstr doesn't have a memoperand but has an opcode that
is known to load or store, assume its memory reference may alias
*anything*, including stack slots which the compiler completely
controls.
To partially compensate for this, teach the ScheduleDAG building
code to do basic getUnderlyingValue analysis. This greatly
reduces the number of instructions that require restrictive
dependencies. This code will need to be revisited when we start
doing real alias analysis, but it should suffice for now.
llvm-svn: 63370