are still on the list. This might happen if a CallbackVH created some new value
handles for the old value when doing RAUW. Barf if it occurs, since it is almost
certainly a mistake.
llvm-svn: 109495
subregister operands like this:
%reg1040:sub_32bit<def> = MOV32rm <fi#-2>, 1, %reg0, 0, %reg0, %reg1040<imp-def>; mem:LD4[FixedStack-2](align=8)
Make them return false when subreg operands are present. VirtRegRewriter is
making bad assumptions otherwise.
This fixes PR7713.
llvm-svn: 109489
protectors, to be near the stack protectors on the stack. Accomplish this by
tagging the stack object with a predicate that indicates that it would trigger
this. In the prolog-epilog inserter, assign these objects to the stack after the
stack protector but before the other objects.
llvm-svn: 109481
we are using AVX and no AVX version of the desired intruction is present,
this is better for incremental dev (without fallbacks it's easier to spot
what's missing). Not sure this is the best hack thought (we can also disable
all HasSSE* predicates by dinamically marking them 'false' if AVX is present)
llvm-svn: 109434
This assumption is not satisfied due to global mergeing.
Workaround the issue by temporary disablinge mergeing of const globals.
Also, ignore LLVM "special" globals. This fixes PR7716
llvm-svn: 109423
it inserted rather than using LoopInfo::getCanonicalInductionVariable to
rediscover it, since that doesn't work on non-canonical loops. This fixes
infinite recurrsion on such loops; PR7562.
llvm-svn: 109419
dependence on DominanceFrontier. Instead, add an explicit DominanceFrontier
pass in StandardPasses.h to ensure that it gets scheduled at the right
time.
Declare that loop unrolling preserves ScalarEvolution, and shuffle some
getAnalysisUsages.
This eliminates one LoopSimplify and one LCCSA run in the standard
compile opts sequence.
llvm-svn: 109413
don't visit all blocks in the function, and don't iterate over the split blocks'
predecessor lists for each block visited.
Also, remove the special-case test for the entry block. Splitting the entry
block isn't common enough to make this worthwhile.
This fixes a major compile-time bottleneck which is exposed now that
LoopSimplify isn't being redundantly run both before and after
DominanceFrontier.
llvm-svn: 109408