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fix some typos in the doc
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@292014 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
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@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ SOPP Instruction Examples
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For full list of supported instructions, refer to "SOPP Instructions" in ISA Manual.
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Unless otherwise mentioned, little verification is performed on the operands
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of SOPP Instrucitons, so it is up to the programmer to be familiar with the
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of SOPP Instructions, so it is up to the programmer to be familiar with the
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range or acceptable values.
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Vector ALU Instruction Examples
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@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ to know how it works under the hood. A prior knowledge of how Clang's profile
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guided optimization works is useful, but not required.
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We start by showing how to use LLVM and Clang for code coverage analysis,
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then we briefly desribe LLVM's code coverage mapping format and the
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then we briefly describe LLVM's code coverage mapping format and the
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way that Clang and LLVM's code coverage tool work with this format. After
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the basics are down, more advanced features of the coverage mapping format
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are discussed - such as the data structures, LLVM IR representation and
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@ -738,7 +738,7 @@ to your path, you can push committed changes upstream with `git llvm push`.
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While this is using SVN under the hood, it does not require any interaction from
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you with git-svn.
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After a few minutes, `git pull` should get back the changes as they were
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commited. Note that a current limitation is that `git` does not directly record
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committed. Note that a current limitation is that `git` does not directly record
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file rename, and thus it is propagated to SVN as a combination of delete-add
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instead of a file rename.
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@ -864,7 +864,7 @@ completing the walk over the archive they could use the ``joinErrors`` utility:
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The ``joinErrors`` routine builds a special error type called ``ErrorList``,
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which holds a list of user defined errors. The ``handleErrors`` routine
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recognizes this type and will attempt to handle each of the contained erorrs in
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recognizes this type and will attempt to handle each of the contained errors in
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order. If all contained errors can be handled, ``handleErrors`` will return
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``Error::success()``, otherwise ``handleErrors`` will concatenate the remaining
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errors and return the resulting ``ErrorList``.
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@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ This proposal relates only to moving the hosting of our source-code repository
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from SVN hosted on our own servers to Git hosted on GitHub. We are not proposing
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using GitHub's issue tracker, pull-requests, or code-review.
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Contributers will continue to earn commit access on demand under the Developer
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Contributors will continue to earn commit access on demand under the Developer
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Policy, except that that a GitHub account will be required instead of SVN
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username/password-hash.
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@ -433,7 +433,7 @@ Concerns
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* Using the monolithic repository may add overhead for those *integrating* a
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standalone sub-project, even if they aren't contributing to it, due to the
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same disk space concern as the point above. The availability of the
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sub-project Git mirror addesses this, even without SVN access.
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sub-project Git mirror addresses this, even without SVN access.
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* Preservation of the existing read/write SVN-based workflows relies on the
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GitHub SVN bridge, which is an extra dependency. Maintaining this locks us
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into GitHub and could restrict future workflow changes.
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@ -313,7 +313,7 @@ default outputs a ``ModuleID``:
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ret i32 0
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}
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``ModuleID`` can unexpetedly match against ``CHECK`` lines. For example:
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``ModuleID`` can unexpectedly match against ``CHECK`` lines. For example:
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.. code-block:: llvm
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@ -593,12 +593,12 @@ the order in the definition of ``IntRegs`` in the target description file.
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FPRegsClass FPRegsRegClass;
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IntRegsClass IntRegsRegClass;
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...
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// IntRegs Sub-register Classess...
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// IntRegs Sub-register Classes...
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static const TargetRegisterClass* const IntRegsSubRegClasses [] = {
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NULL
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};
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...
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// IntRegs Super-register Classess...
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// IntRegs Super-register Classes..
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static const TargetRegisterClass* const IntRegsSuperRegClasses [] = {
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NULL
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};
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@ -731,7 +731,7 @@ it is parsed. This allows dynamic types of nodes. But the YAML I/O model uses
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static typing, so there are limits to how you can use tags with the YAML I/O
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model. Recently, we added support to YAML I/O for checking/setting the optional
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tag on a map. Using this functionality it is even possbile to support different
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mappings, as long as they are convertable.
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mappings, as long as they are convertible.
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To check a tag, inside your mapping() method you can use io.mapTag() to specify
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what the tag should be. This will also add that tag when writing yaml.
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