- Rename member function size(). New name is length().
- Store string beginning and length. Earlier it used to store string end.
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"private" symbols which the assember shouldn't strip, but which the linker may
remove after evaluation. This is mostly useful for Objective-C metadata.
This is plumbing, so we don't have a use of it yet. More to come, etc.
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of the bitcode reader and ASM parser APIs, as well as supporting it in all of the tools.
Patches for Clang and LLVM-GCC to follow.
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The problem was that BitcodeReader::materializeModule would read functions
from the bc file in densemap pointer key order (doubly non-deterministic!),
which would cause the use-def chains to be set up for globals in
non-determinstic order. Non-determinstic use/def chains can cause
nondeterminism in many places down-stream.
Many thanks to Julien Lerouge for putting together the pass in the PR that
shows the issue!
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integer and floating-point opcodes, introducing
FAdd, FSub, and FMul.
For now, the AsmParser, BitcodeReader, and IRBuilder all preserve
backwards compatability, and the Core LLVM APIs preserve backwards
compatibility for IR producers. Most front-ends won't need to change
immediately.
This implements the first step of the plan outlined here:
http://nondot.org/sabre/LLVMNotes/IntegerOverflow.txt
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state out of the BitstreamReader class into a BitstreamCursor class.
Doing this allows the client to have multiple cursors into the same
file, each with potentially different live block stacks and
abbreviation records.
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to support C99 inline, GNU extern inline, etc. Related bugzilla's
include PR3517, PR3100, & PR2933. Nothing uses this yet, but it
appears to work.
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Constant, MDString and MDNode which can only be used by globals with a name
that starts with "llvm." or as arguments to a function with the same naming
restriction.
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same as a normal i80 {low64, high16} rather
than its own {high64, low16}. A depressing number
of places know about this; I think I got them all.
Bitcode readers and writers convert back to the old
form to avoid breaking compatibility.
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linkage: this linkage type only applies to declarations,
but ODR is only relevant to globals with definitions.
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and extern_weak_odr. These are the same as the non-odr versions,
except that they indicate that the global will only be overridden
by an *equivalent* global. In C, a function with weak linkage can
be overridden by a function which behaves completely differently.
This means that IP passes have to skip weak functions, since any
deductions made from the function definition might be wrong, since
the definition could be replaced by something completely different
at link time. This is not allowed in C++, thanks to the ODR
(One-Definition-Rule): if a function is replaced by another at
link-time, then the new function must be the same as the original
function. If a language knows that a function or other global can
only be overridden by an equivalent global, it can give it the
weak_odr linkage type, and the optimizers will understand that it
is alright to make deductions based on the function body. The
code generators on the other hand map weak and weak_odr linkage
to the same thing.
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callee will not introduce any new aliases of that pointer.
The attributes had all bits allocated already, so I decided to collapse
alignment. Alignment was previously stored as a 16-bit integer from bits 16 to
32 of the attribute, but it was required to be a power of 2. Now it's stored in
log2 encoded form in five bits from 16 to 21. That gives us 11 more bits of
space.
You may have already noticed that you only need four bits to encode a 16-bit
power of two, so why five bits? Because the AsmParser accepted 32-bit
alignments, even though we couldn't store them (they were silently discarded).
Now we can store them in memory, but not in the bitcode.
The bitcode format was already storing these as 64-bit VBR integers. So, the
bitcode format stays the same, keeping the alignment values stored as 16 bit
raw values. There's some hideous code in the reader and writer that deals with
this, waiting to be ripped out the moment we run out of bits again and have to
replace the parameter attributes table encoding.
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- return attributes - inreg, zext and sext
- parameter attributes
- function attributes - nounwind, readonly, readnone, noreturn
Return attributes use 0 as the index.
Function attributes use ~0U as the index.
This patch requires corresponding changes in llvm-gcc and clang.
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s/ParamAttr/Attribute/g
s/PAList/AttrList/g
s/FnAttributeWithIndex/AttributeWithIndex/g
s/FnAttr/Attribute/g
This sets the stage
- to implement function notes as function attributes and
- to distinguish between function attributes and return value attributes.
This requires corresponding changes in llvm-gcc and clang.
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bitcode reader/writer as follows:
- add and use new bitcode FUNC_CODE_INST_VSELECT to handle the llvm
select opcode using either i1 or [N x i1] as the selector.
- retain old BITCODE FUNC_CODE_INST_SELECT in the bitcode reader to
handle select on i1 for backwards compatibility with existing bitcode
files.
- re-enable the vector-select.ll test program.
Also, rename the recently added bitcode opcode FUNC_CODE_INST_VCMP to
FUNC_CODE_INST_CMP2 and make the bitcode writer use it to handle
fcmp/icmp on scalars or vectors. In the bitcode writer, use
FUNC_CODE_INST_CMP for vfcmp/vicmp only. In the bitcode reader, have
FUNC_CODE_INST_CMP handle icmp/fcmp returning bool, for backwards
compatibility with existing bitcode files.
Patch by Preston Gurd!
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way it handles the type of the condition is breaking plain
scalar select in the case that the value is a
forward-reference.
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and, if so, to return a vector of boolean as a result;
Extend the select LLVM IR instruction to allow you to specify a result
type which is a vector of boolean, in which case the result will be an
element-wise selection instead of choosing one vector or the other; and
Update LangRef.html to describe these changes.
This patch was contributed by Preston Gurd!
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In particular, Collector was confusing to implementors. Several
thought that this compile-time class was the place to implement
their runtime GC heap. Of course, it doesn't even exist at runtime.
Specifically, the renames are:
Collector -> GCStrategy
CollectorMetadata -> GCFunctionInfo
CollectorModuleMetadata -> GCModuleInfo
CollectorRegistry -> GCRegistry
Function::getCollector -> getGC (setGC, hasGC, clearGC)
Several accessors and nested types have also been renamed to be
consistent. These changes should be obvious.
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Remove the GetResultInst instruction. It is still accepted in LLVM assembly
and bitcode, where it is now auto-upgraded to ExtractValueInst. Also, remove
support for return instructions with multiple values. These are auto-upgraded
to use InsertValueInst instructions.
The IRBuilder still accepts multiple-value returns, and auto-upgrades them
to InsertValueInst instructions.
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folded. Remove code that handled the case where they aren't
folded, and remove bitcode reader/writer support for them.
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bc files for modules with a target triple that indicates they are for
darwin. The reader unconditionally handles this, and the writer could
turn this on for more targets if we care.
This change has two benefits for darwin:
1) it allows us to encode the cpu type of the file in an easy to read
place that doesn't require decoding the bc file.
2) it works around a bug (IMO) in darwin's AR where it is incapable of
handling files that are not a multiple of 8 bytes long. BC files
are only guaranteed to be multiples of 4 bytes long.
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insertvalue and extractvalue to use constant indices instead of
Value* indices. And begin updating LangRef.html.
There's definately more to come here, but I'm checking this
basic support in now to make it available to people who are
interested.
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and bitcode support for the extractvalue and insertvalue
instructions and constant expressions.
Note that this does not yet include CodeGen support.
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are represented as "weak", but there are subtle differences
in some cases on Darwin, so we need both. The intent
is that "common" will behave identically to "weak" unless
somebody changes their target to do something else.
No functional change as yet.
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Specifically, introduction of XXX::Create methods
for Users that have a potentially variable number of
Uses.
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1. There is now a "PAListPtr" class, which is a smart pointer around
the underlying uniqued parameter attribute list object, and manages
its refcount. It is now impossible to mess up the refcount.
2. PAListPtr is now the main interface to the underlying object, and
the underlying object is now completely opaque.
3. Implementation details like SmallVector and FoldingSet are now no
longer part of the interface.
4. You can create a PAListPtr with an arbitrary sequence of
ParamAttrsWithIndex's, no need to make a SmallVector of a specific
size (you can just use an array or scalar or vector if you wish).
5. All the client code that had to check for a null pointer before
dereferencing the pointer is simplified to just access the
PAListPtr directly.
6. The interfaces for adding attrs to a list and removing them is a
bit simpler.
Phase #2 will rename some stuff (e.g. PAListPtr) and do other less
invasive changes.
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regions of memory that have a target specific relationship, as described in the
Embedded C Technical Report.
This also implements the 2007-12-11-AddressSpaces test,
which demonstrates how address space attributes can be used in LLVM IR.
In addition, this patch changes the bitcode signature for stores (in a backwards
compatible manner), such that the pointer type, rather than the pointee type, is
encoded. This permits type information in the pointer (e.g. address space) to be
preserved for stores.
LangRef updates are forthcoming.
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methods are new to Function:
bool hasCollector() const;
const std::string &getCollector() const;
void setCollector(const std::string &);
void clearCollector();
The assembly representation is as such:
define void @f() gc "shadow-stack" { ...
The implementation uses an on-the-side table to map Functions to
collector names, such that there is no overhead. A StringPool is
further used to unique collector names, which are extremely
likely to be unique per process.
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the function type, instead they belong to functions
and function calls. This is an updated and slightly
corrected version of Reid Spencer's original patch.
The only known problem is that auto-upgrading of
bitcode files doesn't seem to work properly (see
test/Bitcode/AutoUpgradeIntrinsics.ll). Hopefully
a bitcode guru (who might that be? :) ) will fix it.
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any sense it is important that ParamAttr::None gets
treated the same as not supplying an attribute at
all. Rather than stripping ParamAttr::None out of
the list of attributes, assert if ParamAttr::None
is seen. Fix up the bitcode reader which liked to
insert ParamAttr::None all over the place. Patch
based on one by Török Edwin.
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No compile-time support for constant operations yet,
just format transformations. Make readers and
writers work. Split constants into 2 doubles in
Legalize.
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access to bits). Use them in place of float and
double interfaces where appropriate.
First bits of x86 long double constants handling
(untested, probably does not work).
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Use APFloat in UpgradeParser and AsmParser.
Change all references to ConstantFP to use the
APFloat interface rather than double. Remove
the ConstantFP double interfaces.
Use APFloat functions for constant folding arithmetic
and comparisons.
(There are still way too many places APFloat is
just a wrapper around host float/double, but we're
getting there.)
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to handle values bigger than double. If we assume host==target and host
long double works correctly, this is not too bad, but we don't want to
have that limitation longterm. I could implement accepting double
constants as long double or something like that, which would lead to
incorrect codegen with no errors; the more I think about that the worse
it seems. Rather than do such a hack that would be backed out later,
I'm settling for giving reasonable error messages, for now.
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This also changes the syntax for llvm.bswap, llvm.part.set, llvm.part.select, and llvm.ct* intrinsics. They are automatically upgraded by both the LLVM ASM reader and the bitcode reader. The test cases have been updated, with special tests added to ensure the automatic upgrading is supported.
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pr1146 in llvm 2.1 without ugly code to emulate old behavior. This should
be merged into the 2.0 release branch.
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relieves us from having to emit the abbrevs into each instance of the block.
This shrinks kc.bit from 3368K to 3333K, but will be a more significant win
once instructions are abbreviated.
The VST went from:
Block ID #14 (VALUE_SYMTAB):
Num Instances: 2345
Total Size: 1.29508e+07b/1.61885e+06B/404713W
Average Size: 5522.73b/690.342B/172.585W
% of file: 48.0645
Tot/Avg SubBlocks: 0/0
Tot/Avg Abbrevs: 7035/3
Tot/Avg Records: 120924/51.5667
% Abbrev Recs: 100
to:
Block ID #14 (VALUE_SYMTAB):
Num Instances: 2345
Total Size: 1.26713e+07b/1.58391e+06B/395978W
Average Size: 5403.53b/675.442B/168.86W
% of file: 47.5198
Tot/Avg SubBlocks: 0/0
Tot/Avg Abbrevs: 0/0
Tot/Avg Records: 120924/51.5667
% Abbrev Recs: 100
because we didn't emit the same 3 abbrevs 2345 times :)
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trip function bodies like this:
define <2 x i64> @foo(<2 x i64> %x, <2 x i64> %y) {
%tmp4 = bitcast <2 x i64> %y to <8 x i16> ; <<8 x i16>> [#uses=1]
%tmp5 = bitcast <2 x i64> %x to <8 x i16> ; <<8 x i16>> [#uses=1]
%tmp = add <8 x i16> %tmp5, %tmp4 ; <<8 x i16>> [#uses=1]
%tmp6 = bitcast <8 x i16> %tmp to <2 x i64> ; <<2 x i64>> [#uses=1]
ret <2 x i64> %tmp6
}
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anything about disk I/O itself. This greatly simplifies its interface -
eliminating the need for the ReaderWrappers.cpp file.
This adds a new option to llvm-dis (-bitcode) which instructs it to read
the input file as bitcode. Until/unless the bytecode reader is taught to
read from MemoryBuffer, there is no way to handle stdin reading without it.
I don't plan to switch the bytecode reader over, I'd rather delete it :),
so the option will stay around temporarily.
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I just introduced), stub out function reading, purge aggregate values from
the value table before reading functions.
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easy breakpointing).
Fix bugs reading constantexpr geps. We now can disassemble kc++ global
initializers.
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the type symtab, and global/function protos, and are missing the important
size optimization, but it is a place to start.
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