Summary:
It always makes NewBB the entry of the region instead of OldBB. This breaks if there are edges from inside the region to OldBB. OldBB is moved out of the region and hence there are exiting edges to OldBB and the region's exit block, contradicting the single-exit condition for regions.
The only use from Polly is going to be removed, hence I propose to remove the function completely.
Reviewers: grosser
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11873
llvm-svn: 245092
This patch makes the Darwin ARM backend take advantage of TargetParser. It
also teaches TargetParser about ARMV7K for the first time. This makes target
triple parsing more consistent across llvm.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11996
llvm-svn: 245081
This patch fixes the x86 implementation of allowsMisalignedMemoryAccess() to correctly
return the 'Fast' output parameter for 32-byte accesses. To test that, an existing load
merging optimization is changed to use the TLI hook. This exposes a shortcoming in the
current logic and results in the regression test update. Changing other direct users of
the isUnalignedMem32Slow() x86 CPU attribute would be a follow-on patch.
Without the fix in allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses(), we will infinite loop when targeting
SandyBridge because LowerINSERT_SUBVECTOR() creates 32-byte loads from two 16-byte loads
while PerformLOADCombine() splits them back into 16-byte loads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10662
llvm-svn: 245075
Summary: Similar to the change we applied to ASan. The same test case works.
Reviewers: samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11961
llvm-svn: 245067
This change adds RTTI and Exception flags to llvm-config's cxxflags. This solution is a minimal patch to solve the issue, and is recommended for the 3.7 release branch. Tom Stellard's outstanding work is the longer term solution.
Patch By: David Wiberg
llvm-svn: 245064
This reverts commit r245047.
It was failing on the darwin bots. The problem was that when running
./bin/llc -march=msp430
llc gets to
if (TheTriple.getTriple().empty())
TheTriple.setTriple(sys::getDefaultTargetTriple());
Which means that we go with an arch of msp430 but a triple of
x86_64-apple-darwin14.4.0 which fails badly.
That code has to be updated to select a triple based on the value of
march, but that is not a trivial fix.
llvm-svn: 245062
Other than some places that were handling unknown as ELF, this should
have no change. The test updates are because we were detecting
arm-coff or x86_64-win64-coff as ELF targets before.
It is not clear if the enum should live on the Triple. At least now it lives
in a single location and should be easier to move somewhere else.
llvm-svn: 245047
Spotted by Ahmed - in r244594 I inadvertently marked f16 min/max as legal.
I've reverted it here, and marked min/max on scalar f16's as promote. I've also added a testcase. The test just checks that the compiler doesn't fall over - it doesn't create fmin nodes for f16 yet.
llvm-svn: 245035
Code-section alignment should be at least as high as the minimum
stub alignment. If the section alignment is lower it can cause
padding to be emitted resulting in alignment errors if the section
is mapped to a higher alignment on the target.
E.g. If a text section with a 4-byte alignment gets 4-bytes of
padding to guarantee 8-byte alignment for stubs but is re-mapped to
an 8-byte alignment on the target, the 4-bytes of padding will push
the stubs to 4-byte alignment causing a crash.
No test case: There is currently no way to control host section
alignment in llvm-rtdyld. This could be made testable by adding
a custom memory manager. I'll look at that in a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 245031
This introduces the basic functionality to support "token types".
The motivation stems from the need to perform operations on a Value
whose provenance cannot be obscured.
There are several applications for such a type but my immediate
motivation stems from WinEH. Our personality routine enforces a
single-entry - single-exit regime for cleanups. After several rounds of
optimizations, we may be left with a terminator whose "cleanup-entry
block" is not entirely clear because control flow has merged two
cleanups together. We have experimented with using labels as operands
inside of instructions which are not terminators to indicate where we
came from but found that LLVM does not expect such exotic uses of
BasicBlocks.
Instead, we can use this new type to clearly associate the "entry point"
and "exit point" of our cleanup. This is done by having the cleanuppad
yield a Token and consuming it at the cleanupret.
The token type makes it impossible to obscure or otherwise hide the
Value, making it trivial to track the relationship between the two
points.
What is the burden to the optimizer? Well, it turns out we have already
paid down this cost by accepting that there are certain calls that we
are not permitted to duplicate, optimizations have to watch out for
such instructions anyway. There are additional places in the optimizer
that we will probably have to update but early examination has given me
the impression that this will not be heroic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11861
llvm-svn: 245029
its creation function.
This required shifting a bunch of method definitions to be out-of-line
so that we could leave most of the implementation guts in the .cpp file.
llvm-svn: 245021
I've used forward declarations and reorderd the source code some to make
this reasonably clean and keep as much of the code as possible in the
source file, including all the stratified set details. Just the basic AA
interface and the create function are in the header file, and the header
file is now included into the relevant locations.
llvm-svn: 245009
the AA counter pass.
For pointsToConstantMemory, I think this is a "bug fix" as I think the
code as written will actually infloop if ever reached. For the
getModRefInfo, this is a no-op change but with a significantly simpler
form.
llvm-svn: 245007
.cpp file to make the header much less noisy.
Also makes it easy to use a static helper rather than a public method
for printing lines of stats.
llvm-svn: 245006
pattern.
Also hoist the creation routine out of the generic header and into the
pass header now that we have one.
I've worked to not make any changes, even formatting ones here. I'll
clean up the formatting and other things in a follow-up patch now that
the code is in the right place.
llvm-svn: 245004
Summary:
This patch implements my promised optimization to reunites certain sexts from
operands after we extract the constant offset. See the header comment of
reuniteExts for its motivation.
One key building block that enables this optimization is Bjarke's poison value
analysis (D11212). That helps to prove "a +nsw b" can't overflow.
Reviewers: broune
Subscribers: jholewinski, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12016
llvm-svn: 245003