are terminators without relying on the specific `TerminatorInst` type.
This required cleaning up two users of `InstVisitor`s usage of
`TerminatorInst` as well.
llvm-svn: 344503
by `getTerminator()` calls instead be declared as `Instruction`.
This is the biggest remaining chunk of the usage of `getTerminator()`
that insists on the narrow type and so is an easy batch of updates.
Several files saw more extensive updates where this would cascade to
requiring API updates within the file to use `Instruction` instead of
`TerminatorInst`. All of these were trivial in nature (pervasively using
`Instruction` instead just worked).
llvm-svn: 344502
This commit modifies an existing IR verifier check that
assumes all functions will be located in the default address
space 0.
Rather than using the default paramater value getPointerTo(AddrSpace=0),
explicitly specify the program memory address space from the data layout.
This only affects targets that specify a nonzero address space
in their data layouts. The only in-tree target that does this
is AVR.
llvm-svn: 344243
Currently running the @insertelem_after_gep function below through the InstCombine pass with opt produces invalid IR.
Input:
```
define void @insertelem_after_gep(<16 x i32>* %t0) {
%t1 = bitcast <16 x i32>* %t0 to [16 x i32]*
%t2 = addrspacecast [16 x i32]* %t1 to [16 x i32] addrspace(3)*
%t3 = getelementptr inbounds [16 x i32], [16 x i32] addrspace(3)* %t2, i64 0, i64 0
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
call void @extern_vec_pointers_func(<16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> %t4)
ret void
}
```
Output:
```
define void @insertelem_after_gep(<16 x i32>* %t0) {
%t3 = getelementptr inbounds <16 x i32>, <16 x i32>* %t0, i64 0, i64 0
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
call void @my_extern_func(<16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> %t4)
ret void
}
```
Which although causes no complaints when produced, isn't valid IR as the insertelement use of the %t3 GEP expects an address space.
```
opt: /tmp/bad.ll:52:73: error: '%t3' defined with type 'i32*' but expected 'i32 addrspace(3)*'
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
```
I've fixed this by adding an addrspacecast after the GEP in the InstCombine pass, and including a check for this type mismatch to the verifier.
Reviewers: spatel, lebedev.ri
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52294
llvm-svn: 343956
DWARF v5 introduces DW_AT_call_all_calls, a subprogram attribute which
indicates that all calls (both regular and tail) within the subprogram
have call site entries. The information within these call site entries
can be used by a debugger to populate backtraces with synthetic tail
call frames.
Tail calling frames go missing in backtraces because the frame of the
caller is reused by the callee. Call site entries allow a debugger to
reconstruct a sequence of (tail) calls which led from one function to
another. This improves backtrace quality. There are limitations: tail
recursion isn't handled, variables within synthetic frames may not
survive to be inspected, etc. This approach is not novel, see:
https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/summit2010?action=AttachFile&do=get&target=jelinek.pdf
This patch adds an IR-level flag (DIFlagAllCallsDescribed) which lowers
to DW_AT_call_all_calls. It adds the minimal amount of DWARF generation
support needed to emit standards-compliant call site entries. For easier
deployment, when the debugger tuning is LLDB, the DWARF requirement is
adjusted to v4.
Testing: Apart from check-{llvm, clang}, I built a stage2 RelWithDebInfo
clang binary. Its dSYM passed verification and grew by 1.4% compared to
the baseline. 151,879 call site entries were added.
rdar://42001377
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49887
llvm-svn: 343883
Summary: Add function name when verification fails as an initial breadcrumb for debugging.
Patch by David Callahan.
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, modocache
Reviewed By: modocache
Subscribers: llvm-commits, modocache
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51386
llvm-svn: 341974
This patch removes addBlockByrefAddress(), it is dead code as far as
clang is concerned: Every byref block capture is emitted with a
complex expression that is equivalent to what this function does.
rdar://problem/31629055
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51763
llvm-svn: 341737
Load Hardening.
Wires up the existing pass to work with a proper IR attribute rather
than just a hidden/internal flag. The internal flag continues to work
for now, but I'll likely remove it soon.
Most of the churn here is adding the IR attribute. I talked about this
Kristof Beyls and he seemed at least initially OK with this direction.
The idea of using a full attribute here is that we *do* expect at least
some forms of this for other architectures. There isn't anything
*inherently* x86-specific about this technique, just that we only have
an implementation for x86 at the moment.
While we could potentially expose this as a Clang-level attribute as
well, that seems like a good question to defer for the moment as it
isn't 100% clear whether that or some other programmer interface (or
both?) would be best. We'll defer the programmer interface side of this
for now, but at least get to the point where the feature can be enabled
without relying on implementation details.
This also allows us to do something that was really hard before: we can
enable *just* the indirect call retpolines when using SLH. For x86, we
don't have any other way to mitigate indirect calls. Other architectures
may take a different approach of course, and none of this is surfaced to
user-level flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51157
llvm-svn: 341363
Flags in DIBasicType will be used to pass attributes used in
DW_TAG_base_type, such as DW_AT_endianity.
Patch by Chirag Patel!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49610
llvm-svn: 339714
In the past, DbgInfoIntrinsic has a strong assumption that these
intrinsics all have variables and expressions attached to them.
However, it is too strong to derive the class for other debug entities.
Now, it has problems for debug labels.
In order to make DbgInfoIntrinsic as a base class for 'debug info', I
create a class for 'variable debug info', DbgVariableIntrinsic.
DbgDeclareInst, DbgAddrIntrinsic, and DbgValueInst will be derived from it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50220
llvm-svn: 338984
It's a bit neater to write T.isIntOrPtrTy() over `T.isIntegerTy() ||
T.isPointerTy()`.
I used Python's re.sub with this regex to update users:
r'([\w.\->()]+)isIntegerTy\(\)\s*\|\|\s*\1isPointerTy\(\)'
llvm-svn: 336462
=== Generating the CG Profile ===
The CGProfile module pass simply gets the block profile count for each BB and scans for call instructions. For each call instruction it adds an edge from the current function to the called function with the current BB block profile count as the weight.
After scanning all the functions, it generates an appending module flag containing the data. The format looks like:
```
!llvm.module.flags = !{!0}
!0 = !{i32 5, !"CG Profile", !1}
!1 = !{!2, !3, !4} ; List of edges
!2 = !{void ()* @a, void ()* @b, i64 32} ; Edge from a to b with a weight of 32
!3 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @a, i64 11}
!4 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @b, i64 20}
```
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48105
llvm-svn: 335794
This is the first pass in the main pipeline to use the legacy PM's
ability to run function analyses "on demand". Unfortunately, it turns
out there are bugs in that somewhat-hacky approach. At the very least,
it leaks memory and doesn't support -debug-pass=Structure. Unclear if
there are larger issues or not, but this should get the sanitizer bots
back to green by fixing the memory leaks.
llvm-svn: 335320
This patch adds support for generating a call graph profile from Branch Frequency Info.
The CGProfile module pass simply gets the block profile count for each BB and scans for call instructions. For each call instruction it adds an edge from the current function to the called function with the current BB block profile count as the weight.
After scanning all the functions, it generates an appending module flag containing the data. The format looks like:
!llvm.module.flags = !{!0}
!0 = !{i32 5, !"CG Profile", !1}
!1 = !{!2, !3, !4} ; List of edges
!2 = !{void ()* @a, void ()* @b, i64 32} ; Edge from a to b with a weight of 32
!3 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @a, i64 11}
!4 = !{void (i1)* @freq, void ()* @b, i64 20}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48105
llvm-svn: 335306
In order to set breakpoints on labels and list source code around
labels, we need collect debug information for labels, i.e., label
name, the function label belong, line number in the file, and the
address label located. In order to keep these information in LLVM
IR and to allow backend to generate debug information correctly.
We create a new kind of metadata for labels, DILabel. The format
of DILabel is
!DILabel(scope: !1, name: "foo", file: !2, line: 3)
We hope to keep debug information as much as possible even the
code is optimized. So, we create a new kind of intrinsic for label
metadata to avoid the metadata is eliminated with basic block.
The intrinsic will keep existing if we keep it from optimized out.
The format of the intrinsic is
llvm.dbg.label(metadata !1)
It has only one argument, that is the DILabel metadata. The
intrinsic will follow the label immediately. Backend could get the
label metadata through the intrinsic's parameter.
We also create DIBuilder API for labels to be used by Frontend.
Frontend could use createLabel() to allocate DILabel objects, and use
insertLabel() to insert llvm.dbg.label intrinsic in LLVM IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45024
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331841
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
Summary:
The verification rules for the intrinsics for atomic memcpy, atomic memmove,
and atomic memset are basically code clones. This change merges their verification
rules into a single block to remove duplication.
llvm-svn: 329753
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to
llvm::sort. Refer D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
llvm-svn: 329353
Summary:
Introduce the ShadowCallStack function attribute. It's added to
functions compiled with -fsanitize=shadow-call-stack in order to mark
functions to be instrumented by a ShadowCallStack pass to be submitted
in a separate change.
Reviewers: pcc, kcc, kubamracek
Reviewed By: pcc, kcc
Subscribers: cryptoad, mehdi_amini, javed.absar, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44800
llvm-svn: 329108
Summary:
When building with libFuzzer, converting control flow to selects or
obscuring the original operands of CMPs reduces the effectiveness of
libFuzzer's heuristics.
This patch provides an attribute to disable or modify certain optimizations
for optimal fuzzing signal.
Provides a less aggressive alternative to https://reviews.llvm.org/D44057.
Reviewers: vitalybuka, davide, arsenm, hfinkel
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Subscribers: junbuml, mehdi_amini, wdng, javed.absar, hiraditya, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44232
llvm-svn: 328214
X86 Supports Indirect Branch Tracking (IBT) as part of Control-Flow Enforcement Technology (CET).
IBT instruments ENDBR instructions used to specify valid targets of indirect call / jmp.
The `nocf_check` attribute has two roles in the context of X86 IBT technology:
1. Appertains to a function - do not add ENDBR instruction at the beginning of the function.
2. Appertains to a function pointer - do not track the target function of this pointer by adding nocf_check prefix to the indirect-call instruction.
This patch implements `nocf_check` context for Indirect Branch Tracking.
It also auto generates `nocf_check` prefixes before indirect branchs to jump tables that are guarded by range checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41879
llvm-svn: 327767
The retpoline mitigation for variant 2 of CVE-2017-5715 inhibits the
branch predictor, and as a result it can lead to a measurable loss of
performance. We can reduce the performance impact of retpolined virtual
calls by replacing them with a special construct known as a branch
funnel, which is an instruction sequence that implements virtual calls
to a set of known targets using a binary tree of direct branches. This
allows the processor to speculately execute valid implementations of the
virtual function without allowing for speculative execution of of calls
to arbitrary addresses.
This patch extends the whole-program devirtualization pass to replace
certain virtual calls with calls to branch funnels, which are
represented using a new llvm.icall.jumptable intrinsic. It also extends
the LowerTypeTests pass to recognize the new intrinsic, generate code
for the branch funnels (x86_64 only for now) and lay out virtual tables
as required for each branch funnel.
The implementation supports full LTO as well as ThinLTO, and extends the
ThinLTO summary format used for whole-program devirtualization to
support branch funnels.
For more details see RFC:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120672.html
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42453
llvm-svn: 327163
Summary:
This patch adds verification logic for DICompositeType vectors, ensuring that they only have one element, and that element is of type subrange.
This patch complements https://reviews.llvm.org/D44048
Reviewers: aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44262
llvm-svn: 327048
Rather than encode the absence of a checksum with a Kind variant, instead put
both the kind and value in a struct and wrap it in an Optional.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D43043
llvm-svn: 324928
n Rust, an enum that carries data in the variants is, essentially, a
discriminated union. Furthermore, the Rust compiler will perform
space optimizations on such enums in some situations. Previously,
DWARF for these constructs was emitted using a hack (a magic field
name); but this approach stopped working when more space optimizations
were added in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/45225.
This patch changes LLVM to allow discriminated unions to be
represented in DWARF. It adds createDiscriminatedUnionType and
createDiscriminatedMemberType to DIBuilder and then arranges for this
to be emitted using DWARF's DW_TAG_variant_part and DW_TAG_variant.
Note that DWARF requires that a discriminated union be represented as
a structure with a variant part. However, as Rust only needs to emit
pure discriminated unions, this is what I chose to expose on
DIBuilder.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42082
llvm-svn: 324426
Summary:
This change is step two in the series of changes to remove alignment argument from
memcpy/memmove/memset in favour of alignment attributes. Steps:
Step 1) Remove alignment parameter and create alignment parameter attributes for
memcpy/memmove/memset. ( rL322965 )
Step 2) Expand the IRBuilder API to allow creation of memcpy/memmove with differing
source and dest alignments.
Step 3) Update Clang to use the new IRBuilder API.
Step 4) Update Polly to use the new IRBuilder API.
Step 5) Update LLVM passes that create memcpy/memmove calls to use the new IRBuilder API,
and those that use use MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() to use
getDestAlignment() and getSourceAlignment() instead.
Step 6) Remove the single-alignment IRBuilder API for memcpy/memmove, and the
MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() methods.
Reference
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-August/089384.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
llvm-svn: 323597
Summary:
This patch extends the DISubrange 'count' field to take either a
(signed) constant integer value or a reference to a DILocalVariable
or DIGlobalVariable.
This is patch [1/3] in a series to extend LLVM's DISubrange Metadata
node to support debugging of C99 variable length arrays and vectors with
runtime length like the Scalable Vector Extension for AArch64. It is
also a first step towards representing more complex cases like arrays
in Fortran.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl, dexonsmith, clayborg, kristof.beyls, dblaikie
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: rnk, probinson, fhahn, aemerson, rengolin, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41695
llvm-svn: 323313
Normally when llvm-as sees only debug info errors in LLVM assembly, it simply
drops the debug info and outputs a valid LLVM bitcode and returns 0.
There is a bug in LLVM verifier which incorrectly treats a debug info error
as non-debug info error, which causes llvm-as returns 1 even though llvm-as
can drop the invalid debug info and outputs a valid LLVM bitcode.
This patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42391
llvm-svn: 323216
This is similar to r322317, but for visibility. It is not as neat
because we have to special case extern_weak.
The idea is the same as the previous change, make the transition to
explicit dso_local easier for the frontends. With this they only have
to add dso_local to symbols where we need some external information to
decide if it is dso_local (like it being part of an ELF executable).
llvm-svn: 322806
Summary:
In preparation for https://reviews.llvm.org/D41675 this NFC changes this
prototype of MemIntrinsicInst::setAlignment() to accept an unsigned instead
of a Constant.
llvm-svn: 322403
While updating clang tests for having clang set dso_local I noticed
that:
- There are *a lot* of tests to update.
- Many of the updates are redundant.
They are redundant because a GV is "obviously dso_local". This patch
starts formalizing that a bit by requiring that internal and private
GVs be dso_local too. Since they all are, we don't have to print
dso_local to the textual representation, making it a bit more compact
and easier to read.
llvm-svn: 322317
Summary:
This pass synthesizes function entry counts by traversing the callgraph
and using the relative block frequencies of the callsites. The intended
use of these counts is in inlining to determine hot/cold callsites in
the absence of profile information.
The pass is split into two files with the code that propagates the
counts in a callgraph in a Utils file. I plan to add support for
propagation in the thinlto link phase and the propagation code will be
shared and hence this split. I did not add support to the old PM since
hot callsite determination in inlining is not possible in old PM
(although we could use hot callee heuristic with synthetic counts in the
old PM it is not worth the effort tuning it)
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41604
llvm-svn: 322110
This implements the DWARF 5 feature described at
http://www.dwarfstd.org/ShowIssue.php?issue=141215.1
This allows a consumer to understand whether a composite data type is
trivially copyable and thus should be passed by value instead of by
reference. The canonical example is being able to distinguish the
following two types:
// S is not trivially copyable because of the explicit destructor.
struct S {
~S() {}
};
// T is a POD type.
struct T {
~T() = default;
};
This patch adds two new (DI)flags to LLVM metadata: TypePassByValue
and TypePassByReference.
<rdar://problem/36034922>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41743
llvm-svn: 321844
Summary:
This is LLVM instrumentation for the new HWASan tool. It is basically
a stripped down copy of ASan at this point, w/o stack or global
support. Instrumenation adds a global constructor + runtime callbacks
for every load and store.
HWASan comes with its own IR attribute.
A brief design document can be found in
clang/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.rst (submitted earlier).
Reviewers: kcc, pcc, alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, eraman, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40932
llvm-svn: 320217
Summary:
For reference, see: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-August/116589.html
This patch fleshes out the instruction class hierarchy with respect to atomic and
non-atomic memory intrinsics. With this change, the relevant part of the class
hierarchy becomes:
IntrinsicInst
-> MemIntrinsicBase (methods-only class)
-> MemIntrinsic (non-atomic intrinsics)
-> MemSetInst
-> MemTransferInst
-> MemCpyInst
-> MemMoveInst
-> AtomicMemIntrinsic (atomic intrinsics)
-> AtomicMemSetInst
-> AtomicMemTransferInst
-> AtomicMemCpyInst
-> AtomicMemMoveInst
-> AnyMemIntrinsic (both atomicities)
-> AnyMemSetInst
-> AnyMemTransferInst
-> AnyMemCpyInst
-> AnyMemMoveInst
This involves some class renaming:
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemCpyInst -> AtomicMemCpyInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemMoveInst -> AtomicMemMoveInst
ElementUnorderedAtomicMemSetInst -> AtomicMemSetInst
A script for doing this renaming in downstream trees is included below.
An example of where the Any* classes should be used in LLVM is when reasoning
about the effects of an instruction (ex: aliasing).
---
Script for renaming AtomicMem* classes:
PREFIXES="[<,([:space:]]"
CLASSES="MemIntrinsic|MemTransferInst|MemSetInst|MemMoveInst|MemCpyInst"
SUFFIXES="[;)>,[:space:]]"
REGEX="(${PREFIXES})ElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})(${SUFFIXES})"
REGEX2="visitElementUnorderedAtomic(${CLASSES})"
FILES=$( grep -E "(${REGEX}|${REGEX2})" -r . | tr ':' ' ' | awk '{print $1}' | sort | uniq )
SED_SCRIPT="s~${REGEX}~\1Atomic\2\3~g"
SED_SCRIPT2="s~${REGEX2}~visitAtomic\1~g"
for f in $FILES; do
echo "Processing: $f"
sed -i ".bak" -E "${SED_SCRIPT};${SED_SCRIPT2};${EA_SED_SCRIPT};${EA_SED_SCRIPT2}" $f
done
Reviewers: sanjoy, deadalnix, apilipenko, anna, skatkov, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: hfinkel, jholewinski, arsenm, sdardis, nhaehnle, JDevlieghere, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38419
llvm-svn: 316950
Currently we do not represent runtime preemption in the IR, which has several
drawbacks:
1) The semantics of GlobalValues differ depending on the object file format
you are targeting (as well as the relocation-model and -fPIE value).
2) We have no way of disabling inlining of run time interposable functions,
since in the IR we only know if a function is link-time interposable.
Because of this llvm cannot support elf-interposition semantics.
3) In LTO builds of executables we will have extra knowledge that a symbol
resolved to a local definition and can't be preemptable, but have no way to
propagate that knowledge through the compiler.
This patch adds preemptability specifiers to the IR with the following meaning:
dso_local --> means the compiler may assume the symbol will resolve to a
definition within the current linkage unit and the symbol may be accessed
directly even if the definition is not within this compilation unit.
dso_preemptable --> means that the compiler must assume the GlobalValue may be
replaced with a definition from outside the current linkage unit at runtime.
To ease transitioning dso_preemptable is treated as a 'default' in that
low-level codegen will still do the same checks it did previously to see if a
symbol should be accessed indirectly. Eventually when IR producers emit the
specifiers on all Globalvalues we can change dso_preemptable to mean 'always
access indirectly', and remove the current logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D20217
llvm-svn: 316668
When more than one Module is imported into the same context, such as during
an LTO build before linking the modules, ODR type uniquing may cause types
to point to a different CU. This check does not make sense in this case.
This fixes the error reported in PR34944.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34944
rdar://problem/34940685
This reapplies a cleaner implementation of r316049.
llvm-svn: 316052
When more than one Module is imported into the same context, such as during
an LTO build before linking the modules, ODR type uniquing may cause types
to point to a different CU. This check does not make sense in this case.
This fixes the error reported in PR34944.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34944
rdar://problem/34940685
llvm-svn: 316049
This came out of a recent discussion on llvm-dev
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D38042). Currently the Verifier will strip
the debug info metadata from a module if it finds the dbeug info to be
malformed. This feature is very valuable since it allows us to improve
the Verifier by making it stricter without breaking bcompatibility,
but arguable the Verifier pass should not be modifying the IR. This
patch moves the stripping of broken debug info into AutoUpgrade
(UpgradeDebugInfo to be precise), which is a much better location for
this since the stripping of malformed (i.e., produced by older, buggy
versions of Clang) is a (harsh) form of AutoUpgrade.
This change is mostly NFC in nature, the one big difference is the
behavior when LLVM module passes are introducing malformed debug
info. Prior to this patch, a NoAsserts build would have printed a
warning and stripped the debug info, after this patch the Verifier
will report a fatal error. I believe this behavior is actually more
desirable anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38184
llvm-svn: 314699
The code wasn't yelling at the user when there's a reference
from a DIGlobalVariableExpression. Thanks to Adrian for the
reduced testcase. Fixes PR34672.
llvm-svn: 314069
The fix is to avoid invalidating our insertion point in
replaceDbgDeclare:
Builder.insertDeclare(NewAddress, DIVar, DIExpr, Loc, InsertBefore);
+ if (DII == InsertBefore)
+ InsertBefore = &*std::next(InsertBefore->getIterator());
DII->eraseFromParent();
I had to write a unit tests for this instead of a lit test because the
use list order matters in order to trigger the bug.
The reduced C test case for this was:
void useit(int*);
static inline void inlineme() {
int x[2];
useit(x);
}
void f() {
inlineme();
inlineme();
}
llvm-svn: 313905
.. as well as the two subsequent changes r313826 and r313875.
This leads to segfaults in combination with ASAN. Will forward repro
instructions to the original author (rnk).
llvm-svn: 313876
Summary:
This implements the design discussed on llvm-dev for better tracking of
variables that live in memory through optimizations:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-September/117222.html
This is tracked as PR34136
llvm.dbg.addr is intended to be produced and used in almost precisely
the same way as llvm.dbg.declare is today, with the exception that it is
control-dependent. That means that dbg.addr should always have a
position in the instruction stream, and it will allow passes that
optimize memory operations on local variables to insert llvm.dbg.value
calls to reflect deleted stores. See SourceLevelDebugging.rst for more
details.
The main drawback to generating DBG_VALUE machine instrs is that they
usually cause LLVM to emit a location list for DW_AT_location. The next
step will be to teach DwarfDebug.cpp how to recognize more DBG_VALUE
ranges as not needing a location list, and possibly start setting
DW_AT_start_offset for variables whose lifetimes begin mid-scope.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, probinson
Subscribers: eraman, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37768
llvm-svn: 313825
In the last half-dozen commits to LLVM I removed code that became dead
after removing the offset parameter from llvm.dbg.value gradually
proceeding from IR towards the backend. Before I can move on to
DwarfDebug and friends there is one last side-called offset I need to
remove: This patch modifies PrologEpilogInserter's use of the
DBG_VALUE's offset argument to use a DIExpression instead. Because the
PrologEpilogInserter runs at the Machine level I had to play a little
trick with a named llvm.dbg.mir node to get the DIExpressions to print
in MIR dumps (which print the llvm::Module followed by the
MachineFunction dump).
I also had to add rudimentary DwarfExpression support to CodeView and
as a side-effect also fixed a bug (CodeViewDebug::collectVariableInfo
was supposed to give up on variables with complex DIExpressions, but
would fail to do so for fragments, which are also modeled as
DIExpressions).
With this last holdover removed we will have only one canonical way of
representing offsets to debug locations which will simplify the code
in DwarfDebug (and future versions of CodeViewDebug once it starts
handling more complex expressions) and make it easier to reason about.
This patch is NFC-ish: All test case changes are for assembler
comments and the binary output does not change.
rdar://problem/33580047
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36125
llvm-svn: 309751
Summary: Continuing the work from https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240, this change introduces an element unordered-atomic memset intrinsic. This intrinsic is essentially memset with the implementation requirement that all stores used for the assignment are done with unordered-atomic stores of a given element size.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, reames, mkazantsev, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: jfb, dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, efriedma, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34885
llvm-svn: 307854
Summary: Continuing the work from https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240, this change introduces an element unordered-atomic memmove intrinsic. This intrinsic is essentially memmove with the implementation requirement that all loads/stores used for the copy are done with unordered-atomic loads/stores of a given element size.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, reames, mkazantsev, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34884
llvm-svn: 307796
OpenCL 2.0 introduces the notion of memory scopes in atomic operations to
global and local memory. These scopes restrict how synchronization is
achieved, which can result in improved performance.
This change extends existing notion of synchronization scopes in LLVM to
support arbitrary scopes expressed as target-specific strings, in addition to
the already defined scopes (single thread, system).
The LLVM IR and MIR syntax for expressing synchronization scopes has changed
to use *syncscope("<scope>")*, where <scope> can be "singlethread" (this
replaces *singlethread* keyword), or a target-specific name. As before, if
the scope is not specified, it defaults to CrossThread/System scope.
Implementation details:
- Mapping from synchronization scope name/string to synchronization scope id
is stored in LLVM context;
- CrossThread/System and SingleThread scopes are pre-defined to efficiently
check for known scopes without comparing strings;
- Synchronization scope names are stored in SYNC_SCOPE_NAMES_BLOCK in
the bitcode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21723
llvm-svn: 307722
Summary:
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
This change is to alter the prototype for the atomic memcpy intrinsic. The prototype itself is being changed to more closely resemble the semantics and parameters of the llvm.memcpy intrinsic -- to ease later combination of the llvm.memcpy and atomic memcpy intrinsics. Furthermore, the name of the atomic memcpy intrinsic is being changed to make it clear that it is not a generic atomic memcpy, but specifically a memcpy is unordered atomic.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy, efriedma
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, anna, llvm-commits, skatkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240
llvm-svn: 305558
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
Summary:
Before this change, AttributeLists stored a pair of index and
AttributeSet. This is memory efficient if most arguments do not have
attributes. However, it requires doing a search over the pairs to test
an argument or function attribute. Profiling shows that this loop was
0.76% of the time in 'opt -O2' of sqlite3.c, because LLVM constantly
tests values for nullability.
This was worth about 2.5% of mid-level optimization cycles on the
sqlite3 amalgamation. Here are the full perf results:
https://reviews.llvm.org/P7995
Here are just the before and after cycle counts:
```
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_before -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
13,274,181,184 cycles # 3.047 GHz ( +- 0.28% )
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_after -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
12,906,927,263 cycles # 3.043 GHz ( +- 0.51% )
```
This patch *does not* change the indices used to query attributes, as
requested by reviewers. Tracking whether an index is usable for array
indexing is a huge pain that affects many of the internal APIs, so it
would be good to come back later and do a cleanup to remove this
internal adjustment.
Reviewers: pete, chandlerc
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32819
llvm-svn: 303654
Summary:
Add Max ModFlagBehavior, which can be used to take the max of two
module flag values when merging modules. Use it for the PIE and PIC
levels.
This avoids an error when we try to import from a module built -fpic
into a module built -fPIC, for example. For both PIE and PIC levels,
this will be legal, since the code generation gets more conservative
as the level is increased. Therefore we can take the max instead of
somehow trying to block importing between modules compiled with
different levels.
Reviewers: tmsriram, pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33418
llvm-svn: 303590
As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
general-purpose utility in DILocation.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
<rdar://problem/31926379>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
This reapplies r302469 with a fix for a bot failure (reparentDebugInfo
now checks for the case the orig and new function are identical).
llvm-svn: 302576
This caused PR32977.
Original commit message:
> Make it illegal for two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram
>
> As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
> two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
> FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
> to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
> out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
> general-purpose utility in DILocation.
>
> [1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
> <rdar://problem/31926379>
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
llvm-svn: 302533
As recently discussed on llvm-dev [1], this patch makes it illegal for
two Functions to point to the same DISubprogram and updates
FunctionCloner to also clone the debug info of a function to conform
to the new requirement. To simplify the implementation it also factors
out the creation of inlineAt locations from the Inliner into a
general-purpose utility in DILocation.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112661.html
<rdar://problem/31926379>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32975
llvm-svn: 302469
The method is called "get *Param* Alignment", and is only used for
return values exactly once, so it should take argument indices, not
attribute indices.
Avoids confusing code like:
IsSwiftError = CS->paramHasAttr(ArgIdx, Attribute::SwiftError);
Alignment = CS->getParamAlignment(ArgIdx + 1);
Add getRetAlignment to handle the one case in Value.cpp that wants the
return value alignment.
This is a potentially breaking change for out-of-tree backends that do
their own call lowering.
llvm-svn: 301682
For Swift we would like to be able to encode the error types that a
function may throw, so the debugger can display them alongside the
function's return value when finish-ing a function.
DWARF defines DW_TAG_thrown_type (intended to be used for C++ throw()
declarations) that is a perfect fit for this purpose. This patch wires
up support for DW_TAG_thrown_type in LLVM by adding a list of thrown
types to DISubprogram.
To offset the cost of the extra pointer, there is a follow-up patch
that turns DISubprogram into a variable-length node.
rdar://problem/29481673
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32559
llvm-svn: 301489
This avoids the confusing 'CS.paramHasAttr(ArgNo + 1, Foo)' pattern.
Previously we were testing return value attributes with index 0, so I
introduced hasReturnAttr() for that use case.
llvm-svn: 300367
Now that we have a type that can represent the attributes on a single
return, function, or parameter, we can pass it around directly rather
than passing around AttributeList and Idx. Removes some more one-based
argument attribute index counting.
NFC
llvm-svn: 300285
Add hasParamAttribute() and use it instead of hasAttribute(ArgNo+1,
Kind) everywhere.
The fact that the AttributeList index for an argument is ArgNo+1 should
be a hidden implementation detail.
NFC
llvm-svn: 300272
LLVM makes several assumptions about address space 0. However,
alloca is presently constrained to always return this address space.
There's no real way to avoid using alloca, so without this
there is no way to opt out of these assumptions.
The problematic assumptions include:
- That the pointer size used for the stack is the same size as
the code size pointer, which is also the maximum sized pointer.
- That 0 is an invalid, non-dereferencable pointer value.
These are problems for AMDGPU because alloca is used to
implement the private address space, which uses a 32-bit
index as the pointer value. Other pointers are 64-bit
and behave more like LLVM's notion of generic address
space. By changing the address space used for allocas,
we can change our generic pointer type to be LLVM's generic
pointer type which does have similar properties.
llvm-svn: 299888
Summary:
This class is a list of AttributeSetNodes corresponding the function
prototype of a call or function declaration. This class used to be
called ParamAttrListPtr, then AttrListPtr, then AttributeSet. It is
typically accessed by parameter and return value index, so
"AttributeList" seems like a more intuitive name.
Rename AttributeSetImpl to AttributeListImpl to follow suit.
It's useful to rename this class so that we can rename AttributeSetNode
to AttributeSet later. AttributeSet is the set of attributes that apply
to a single function, argument, or return value.
Reviewers: sanjoy, javed.absar, chandlerc, pete
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: pete, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, mehdi_amini, jfb, nhaehnle, sbc100, void, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31102
llvm-svn: 298393