Since D140504, GCStrategy is available for use in opt.
Now we can move statepoint correctness checks from
StatepointLowering.cpp to Verifier.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141948
This copies existing behaviour from other debug intrinsics to `dbg.assign`s.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141140
appendToGlobalCtors implicitly assumes this is the case, since it
deletes and recreates without trying to update any uses.
This ran into an interesting problem in a few linker tests. During the
link, ConstantExpr casts were speculatively created to replace any
uses that might need them for replacement. These unused ConstantExprs
would hang around and still appear on the use list. It seems like a
bug that those stick around, but I'm not sure where those are supposed
to be cleaned up. Avoid this by not creating the casts for appending
linkage.
Delete one of the casts entirely as it breaks no tests. The verifier
has enforced a specific type for these since 2011, so I don't see why
we would need to handle linking modules with a wrong types. One test
does fail without the second cast (Linker/appending-global-proto.ll,
added by D95126). This test looks contrived; it's using appending
linkage with a regular variable. The LangRef suggests this is illegal
(and suggests another missing verifier check).
Use deduction guides instead of helper functions.
The only non-automatic changes have been:
1. ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, 0) needs to be changed into ArrayRef(some_uint8_pointer, (size_t)0) to avoid an ambiguous call with ArrayRef((uint8_t*), (uint8_t*))
2. CVSymbol sym(makeArrayRef(symStorage)); needed to be rewritten as CVSymbol sym{ArrayRef(symStorage)}; otherwise the compiler is confused and thinks we have a (bad) function prototype. There was a few similar situation across the codebase.
3. ADL doesn't seem to work the same for deduction-guides and functions, so at some point the llvm namespace must be explicitly stated.
4. The "reference mode" of makeArrayRef(ArrayRef<T> &) that acts as no-op is not supported (a constructor cannot achieve that).
Per reviewers' comment, some useless makeArrayRef have been removed in the process.
This is a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D140896 that introduced
the deduction guides.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140955
Target-extension types represent types that need to be preserved through
optimization, but otherwise are not introspectable by target-independent
optimizations. This patch doesn't add any uses of these types by an existing
backend, it only provides basic infrastructure such that these types would work
correctly.
Reviewed By: nikic, barannikov88
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135202
This operand bundle on an assume informs alias analysis that the
arguments point to regions of memory that were allocated separately
(i.e. different heap allocations, different allocas, or different
globals).
As a safety measure, we leave the analysis flag-disabled by default.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136514
This change:
- Modifies the ACLE code to allow the new SLC value (3) for the prefetch
target.
- Introduces a new intrinsic, @llvm.aarch64.prefetch which matches the
PRFM family instructions much more closely, and can represent all
values for the PRFM immediate.
The target-independent @llvm.prefetch intrinsic does not have enough
information for us to be able to lower to it from the ACLE intrinsics
correctly.
- Lowers the acle calls to the new intrinsic on aarch64 (the ARM
lowering is unchanged).
- Implements code generation for the new intrinsic in both SelectionDAG
and GlobalISel. We specifically choose to continue to support lowering
the target-independent @llvm.prefetch intrinsic so that other
frontends can continue to use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139443
Clang and gcc both reject trying to use ifunc with a function which
doesn't return a pointer type. Some opaque pointer tests were using
this, apparently by accident.
Previously reverted in 41f5a0004e442ae71c8e754fdadb4bd1e172fb2d. Fold in
D133576 previously reverted in d29d5ffb6332569e85d5eda5130603bbd8664635.
---
The Assignment Tracking debug-info feature is outlined in this RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/
rfc-assignment-tracking-a-better-way-of-specifying-variable-locations-in-ir
Overview
It's possible to find intrinsics linked to an instruction by looking at the
MetadataAsValue uses of the attached DIAssignID. That covers instruction ->
intrinsic(s) lookup. Add a global DIAssignID -> instruction(s) map which gives
us the ability to perform intrinsic -> instruction(s) lookup. Add plumbing to
keep the map up to date through optimisations and add utility functions
including two that perform those lookups. Finally, add a unittest.
Details
In llvm/lib/IR/LLVMContextImpl.h add AssignmentIDToInstrs which maps DIAssignID
* attachments to Instruction *s. Because the DIAssignID * is the key we can't
use a TrackingMDNodeRef for it, and therefore cannot easily update the mapping
when a temporary DIAssignID is replaced.
Temporary DIAssignID's are only used in IR parsing to deal with metadata
forward references. Update llvm/lib/AsmParser/LLParser.cpp to avoid using
temporary DIAssignID's for attachments.
In llvm/lib/IR/Metadata.cpp add Instruction::updateDIAssignIDMapping which is
called to remove or add an entry (or both) to AssignmentIDToInstrs. Call this
from Instruction::setMetadata and add a call to setMetadata in Intruction's
dtor that explicitly unsets the DIAssignID so that the mappging gets updated.
In llvm/lib/IR/DebugInfo.cpp and DebugInfo.h add utility functions:
getAssignmentInsts(const DbgAssignIntrinsic *DAI)
getAssignmentMarkers(const Instruction *Inst)
RAUW(DIAssignID *Old, DIAssignID *New)
deleteAll(Function *F)
deleteAssignmentMarkers(const Instruction *Inst)
These core utils are tested in llvm/unittests/IR/DebugInfoTest.cpp.
Reviewed By: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132224
This reverts commit 171f7024cc82e8702abebdedb699d37b50574be7.
Reverting this patch because it causes a cyclic dependency in the module build
https://green.lab.llvm.org/green/view/LLDB/job/lldb-cmake/48197/consoleFull#-69937453049ba4694-19c4-4d7e-bec5-911270d8a58c
In file included from <module-includes>:1:
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/IR/Argument.h:18:10: fatal error: cyclic dependency in module 'LLVM_IR': LLVM_IR -> LLVM_intrinsic_gen -> LLVM_IR
^
While building module 'LLVM_MC' imported from /Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/lib/MC/MCAsmInfoCOFF.cpp:14:
While building module 'LLVM_IR' imported from /Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/MC/MCPseudoProbe.h:57:
In file included from <module-includes>:12:
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h:24:10: fatal error: could not build module 'LLVM_intrinsic_gen'
~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
While building module 'LLVM_MC' imported from /Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/lib/MC/MCAsmInfoCOFF.cpp:14:
In file included from <module-includes>:15:
In file included from /Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/MC/MCContext.h:23:
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/MC/MCPseudoProbe.h:57:10: fatal error: could not build module 'LLVM_IR'
~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/lldb-cmake/llvm-project/llvm/lib/MC/MCAsmInfoCOFF.cpp:14:10: fatal error: could not build module 'LLVM_MC'
~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
4 errors generated.
GlobalVariable and Function can be available_externally. GlobalAlias is used
similarly. Allowing available_externally is a natural extension and helps
ThinLTO discard GlobalAlias in a non-prevailing COMDAT (see D135427).
For now, available_externally GlobalAlias must point to an
available_externally GlobalValue (not ConstantExpr).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137441
The Assignment Tracking debug-info feature is outlined in this RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/
rfc-assignment-tracking-a-better-way-of-specifying-variable-locations-in-ir
Overview
It's possible to find intrinsics linked to an instruction by looking at the
MetadataAsValue uses of the attached DIAssignID. That covers instruction ->
intrinsic(s) lookup. Add a global DIAssignID -> instruction(s) map which gives
us the ability to perform intrinsic -> instruction(s) lookup. Add plumbing to
keep the map up to date through optimisations and add utility functions
including two that perform those lookups. Finally, add a unittest.
Details
In llvm/lib/IR/LLVMContextImpl.h add AssignmentIDToInstrs which maps DIAssignID
* attachments to Instruction *s. Because the DIAssignID * is the key we can't
use a TrackingMDNodeRef for it, and therefore cannot easily update the mapping
when a temporary DIAssignID is replaced.
Temporary DIAssignID's are only used in IR parsing to deal with metadata
forward references. Update llvm/lib/AsmParser/LLParser.cpp to avoid using
temporary DIAssignID's for attachments.
In llvm/lib/IR/Metadata.cpp add Instruction::updateDIAssignIDMapping which is
called to remove or add an entry (or both) to AssignmentIDToInstrs. Call this
from Instruction::setMetadata and add a call to setMetadata in Intruction's
dtor that explicitly unsets the DIAssignID so that the mappging gets updated.
In llvm/lib/IR/DebugInfo.cpp and DebugInfo.h add utility functions:
getAssignmentInsts(const DbgAssignIntrinsic *DAI)
getAssignmentMarkers(const Instruction *Inst)
RAUW(DIAssignID *Old, DIAssignID *New)
deleteAll(Function *F)
These core utils are tested in llvm/unittests/IR/DebugInfoTest.cpp.
Reviewed By: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132224
The Assignment Tracking debug-info feature is outlined in this RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/
rfc-assignment-tracking-a-better-way-of-specifying-variable-locations-in-ir
Add the llvm.dbg.assign intrinsic boilerplate. This updates the textual-bitcode
roundtrip test to also check that round-tripping with the intrinsic works.
The intrinsic marks the position of a source level assignment.
The llvm.dbg.assign interface looks like this (each parameter is wrapped in
MetadataAsValue, and Value * type parameters are first wrapped in
ValueAsMetadata):
void @llvm.dbg.assign(Value *Value,
DIExpression *ValueExpression,
DILocalVariable *Variable,
DIAssignID *ID,
Value *Address,
DIExpression *AddressExpression)
The first three parameters look and behave like an llvm.dbg.value. ID is a
reference to a store. The intrinsic is "linked to" instructions in the same
function that use the same ID as an attachment. That is mostly conceptual at
this point; the two-way link infrastructure will come in another patch. Address
is the destination address of the store and it is modified by
AddressExpression. LLVM currently encodes variable fragment information in
DIExpressions, so as an implementation quirk the FragmentInfo for Variable is
contained within ValueExpression only.
Reviewed By: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132223
The Assignment Tracking debug-info feature is outlined in this RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/
rfc-assignment-tracking-a-better-way-of-specifying-variable-locations-in-ir
Add the DIAssignID metadata attachment boilerplate. Includes a textual-bitcode
roundtrip test and tests that the verifier and parser catch badly formed IR.
This piece of metadata links together stores (used as an attachment) and the
yet-to-be-added llvm.dbg.assign debug intrinsic (used as an operand).
Reviewed By: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132222
This switches everything to use the memory attribute proposed in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-unify-memory-effect-attributes/65579.
The old argmemonly, inaccessiblememonly and inaccessiblemem_or_argmemonly
attributes are dropped. The readnone, readonly and writeonly attributes
are restricted to parameters only.
The old attributes are auto-upgraded both in bitcode and IR.
The bitcode upgrade is a policy requirement that has to be retained
indefinitely. The IR upgrade is mainly there so it's not necessary
to update all tests using memory attributes in this patch, which
is already large enough. We could drop that part after migrating
tests, or retain it longer term, to make it easier to import IR
from older LLVM versions.
High-level Function/CallBase APIs like doesNotAccessMemory() or
setDoesNotAccessMemory() are mapped transparently to the memory
attribute. Code that directly manipulates attributes (e.g. via
AttributeList) on the other hand needs to switch to working with
the memory attribute instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D135780
If a programmer incorrectly `Switch->setOperand()` and `Verifier` will pass, causing problems when dumping this `Module`
This patch aligns SwitchInst's check with LLParser. It also includes a test to justify the patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136656
The Assignment Tracking debug-info feature is outlined in this RFC:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/
rfc-assignment-tracking-a-better-way-of-specifying-variable-locations-in-ir
Add the DIAssignID metadata attachment boilerplate. Includes a textual-bitcode
roundtrip test and tests that the verifier and parser catch badly formed IR.
This piece of metadata links together stores (used as an attachment) and the
yet-to-be-added llvm.dbg.assign debug intrinsic (used as an operand).
Reviewed By: jmorse
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132222
Callsite `DISubprogram` entries are not generated for:
- builtin functions;
- external functions with reserved names (e.g. names starting from "__").
This limitation was added by the commit [1] as a workaround for the
situation described in [2] that triggered the IR verifier error.
The goal of the present commit is to lift this limitation by adjusting
the IR verifier logic.
The logic behind [1] is to avoid the following situation:
- a `DISubprogram` is added for some builtin function;
- there is some location where this builtin is also emitted by a
transformation (w/o debug location);
- the `Verifier::visitCallBase` sees a call to a function with
`DISubprogram` but w/o debug location and emits an error.
Here is an updated example of such situation taken from [2]:
```
extern "C" int memcmp(void *, void *, long);
struct a { int b; int c; int d; };
struct e { int f[1000]; };
bool foo(e g, e &h) {
// DISubprogram for memcmp is created here when [1] is commented out
return memcmp(&g, &h, sizeof(e));
}
bool bar(a &g, a &h) {
// memcmp might be generated here by MergeICmps
return g.b == h.b && g.c == h.c && g.d == h.d;
}
```
This triggers the verifier error when:
- compiled for AArch64:
`clang++ -c -g -Oz -target aarch64-unknown-linux-android21 test.cpp`;
- [1] check is commented out.
Instead of forbidding generation of `DISubprogram` entries as in [1]
one can instead adjust the verifier to additionally check if callee
has a body. Functions w/o bodies cannot be inlined and thus verifier
warning is not necessary.
E.g. `llvm::InlineFunction` requires functions for which
`GlobalValue::isDeclaration() == false`.
[1] 568db780bb7267651a902da8e85bc59fc89aea70
[2] https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1022296
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136041
In D121898 we restrict parameter alignment size in IR since DAGISel
only have 4 bits to hold the alignment value. However intrinsics
won't be lowered to call instruction, so we can remove the constrain
for intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D136330
As part of the optimization in the unreachable code, we remove
tokens, thereby replacing them with undef/poison in intrinsics.
But the verifier falls on the assertion, within of what it sees
token poison in unreachable code, which in turn is incorrect.
bug: 57871, https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/57871
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134427
As suggested on D135572, return Optional<> from getAllocSizeArgs()
rather than the peculiar pair(0, 0) sentinel.
The method on Attribute itself does not return Optional, because
the attribute must exist in that case.
This patch adds a utility class that will be used in subsequent patches
for parsing the function/callsite attributes and determining whether
changes to PSTATE.SM are needed, or whether a lazy-save mechanism is
required.
It also implements some of the restrictions on the SME attributes
in the IR Verifier pass.
More details about the SME attributes and design can be found
in D131562.
Reviewed By: david-arm, aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D131570
Add a visibility check for dllimport and dllexport. Note: dllimport with a
non-default visibility (implicit dso_local) is already rejected, but with a less
clear dso_local error.
The MC level visibility `MCSA_Exported` (D123951) is mapped from IR level
default visibility when dllexport is specified. The D123951 error is now very
difficult to trigger (needs to disable the IR verifier).
Reviewed By: mstorsjo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133267
If a callee function is not interposable, skip debug location check for its callsites. Doing this is instrumentation-friendly otherwise under some conditions this check triggers for some un-inlinable call sites.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133060
We currently instrument CallBrInst but do not annotate it with
the branch weight. This patch enables PGO annotation of CallBrInst.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D133040
The KCFI sanitizer, enabled with `-fsanitize=kcfi`, implements a
forward-edge control flow integrity scheme for indirect calls. It
uses a !kcfi_type metadata node to attach a type identifier for each
function and injects verification code before indirect calls.
Unlike the current CFI schemes implemented in LLVM, KCFI does not
require LTO, does not alter function references to point to a jump
table, and never breaks function address equality. KCFI is intended
to be used in low-level code, such as operating system kernels,
where the existing schemes can cause undue complications because
of the aforementioned properties. However, unlike the existing
schemes, KCFI is limited to validating only function pointers and is
not compatible with executable-only memory.
KCFI does not provide runtime support, but always traps when a
type mismatch is encountered. Users of the scheme are expected
to handle the trap. With `-fsanitize=kcfi`, Clang emits a `kcfi`
operand bundle to indirect calls, and LLVM lowers this to a
known architecture-specific sequence of instructions for each
callsite to make runtime patching easier for users who require this
functionality.
A KCFI type identifier is a 32-bit constant produced by taking the
lower half of xxHash64 from a C++ mangled typename. If a program
contains indirect calls to assembly functions, they must be
manually annotated with the expected type identifiers to prevent
errors. To make this easier, Clang generates a weak SHN_ABS
`__kcfi_typeid_<function>` symbol for each address-taken function
declaration, which can be used to annotate functions in assembly
as long as at least one C translation unit linked into the program
takes the function address. For example on AArch64, we might have
the following code:
```
.c:
int f(void);
int (*p)(void) = f;
p();
.s:
.4byte __kcfi_typeid_f
.global f
f:
...
```
Note that X86 uses a different preamble format for compatibility
with Linux kernel tooling. See the comments in
`X86AsmPrinter::emitKCFITypeId` for details.
As users of KCFI may need to locate trap locations for binary
validation and error handling, LLVM can additionally emit the
locations of traps to a `.kcfi_traps` section.
Similarly to other sanitizers, KCFI checking can be disabled for a
function with a `no_sanitize("kcfi")` function attribute.
Relands 67504c95494ff05be2a613129110c9bcf17f6c13 with a fix for
32-bit builds.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, kees, joaomoreira, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119296
The KCFI sanitizer, enabled with `-fsanitize=kcfi`, implements a
forward-edge control flow integrity scheme for indirect calls. It
uses a !kcfi_type metadata node to attach a type identifier for each
function and injects verification code before indirect calls.
Unlike the current CFI schemes implemented in LLVM, KCFI does not
require LTO, does not alter function references to point to a jump
table, and never breaks function address equality. KCFI is intended
to be used in low-level code, such as operating system kernels,
where the existing schemes can cause undue complications because
of the aforementioned properties. However, unlike the existing
schemes, KCFI is limited to validating only function pointers and is
not compatible with executable-only memory.
KCFI does not provide runtime support, but always traps when a
type mismatch is encountered. Users of the scheme are expected
to handle the trap. With `-fsanitize=kcfi`, Clang emits a `kcfi`
operand bundle to indirect calls, and LLVM lowers this to a
known architecture-specific sequence of instructions for each
callsite to make runtime patching easier for users who require this
functionality.
A KCFI type identifier is a 32-bit constant produced by taking the
lower half of xxHash64 from a C++ mangled typename. If a program
contains indirect calls to assembly functions, they must be
manually annotated with the expected type identifiers to prevent
errors. To make this easier, Clang generates a weak SHN_ABS
`__kcfi_typeid_<function>` symbol for each address-taken function
declaration, which can be used to annotate functions in assembly
as long as at least one C translation unit linked into the program
takes the function address. For example on AArch64, we might have
the following code:
```
.c:
int f(void);
int (*p)(void) = f;
p();
.s:
.4byte __kcfi_typeid_f
.global f
f:
...
```
Note that X86 uses a different preamble format for compatibility
with Linux kernel tooling. See the comments in
`X86AsmPrinter::emitKCFITypeId` for details.
As users of KCFI may need to locate trap locations for binary
validation and error handling, LLVM can additionally emit the
locations of traps to a `.kcfi_traps` section.
Similarly to other sanitizers, KCFI checking can be disabled for a
function with a `no_sanitize("kcfi")` function attribute.
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, kees, joaomoreira, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119296
The current llvm.prefetch intrinsic docs state "The rw, locality and
cache type arguments must be constant integers."
This change:
- Makes arg 3 (cache type) an ImmArg
- Improves the verifier error messages to reference the incorrect
argument.
- Fixes two tests which contradict the docs.
This is needed as the lowering to GlobalISel is different for ImmArgs
compared to other constants. The non-ImmArgs create a G_CONSTANT MIR
instruction, the for ImmArgs the constant is put directly on the
intrinsic's MIR instruction as an immediate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D132042
Add basic support for the MemProf metadata (!memprof and !callsite)
which was initially described in "RFC: IR metadata format for MemProf"
(https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-ir-metadata-format-for-memprof/59165).
The bulk of the patch is verification support, along with some tests.
There are a couple of changes to the format described in the original
RFC:
Initial measurements suggested that a tree format for the stack ids in
the contexts would be more efficient, but subsequent evaluation with
large applications showed that in fact the cost of the additional
metadata nodes required by this deduplication scheme overwhelmed the
benefit from sharing stack id nodes. Therefore, the implementation here
and in follow on patches utilizes a simpler scheme of lists of stack id
integers in the memprof profile contexts and callsite metadata. The
follow on matching patch employs context trimming optimizations to
reduce the cost.
Secondly, instead of verbosely listing all profiled fields in each
profiled context (memory info block or MIB), and deferring the
interpretation of the profile data, the profile data is evaluated and
converted into string tags specifying the behavior (e.g. "cold") during
profile matching. This reduces the verbosity of the profile metadata,
and allows additional context trimming optimizations. As a result, the
named metadata schema description is also no longer needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128141
D123493 introduced llvm::Module::Min to encode module flags metadata for AArch64
BTI/PAC-RET. llvm::Module::Min does not take effect when the flag is absent in
one module. This behavior is misleading and does not address backward
compatibility problems (when a bitcode with "branch-target-enforcement"==1 and
another without the flag are merged, the merge result is 1 instead of 0).
To address the problems, require Min flags to be non-negative and treat absence
as having a value of zero. For an old bitcode without
"branch-target-enforcement"/"sign-return-address", its value is as if 0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129911
Undef tokens may appear in unreached code as result of RAUW of some optimization,
and it should not be considered as bad IR.
Patch by Dmitry Bakunevich!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D128904
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Following some recent discussions, this changes the representation
of callbrs in IR. The current blockaddress arguments are replaced
with `!` label constraints that refer directly to callbr indirect
destinations:
; Before:
%res = callbr i8* asm "", "=r,r,i"(i8* %x, i8* blockaddress(@test8, %foo))
to label %asm.fallthrough [label %foo]
; After:
%res = callbr i8* asm "", "=r,r,!i"(i8* %x)
to label %asm.fallthrough [label %foo]
The benefit of this is that we can easily update the successors of
a callbr, without having to worry about also updating blockaddress
references. This should allow us to remove some limitations:
* Allow unrolling/peeling/rotation of callbr, or any other
clone-based optimizations
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/41834)
* Allow duplicate successors
(https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/45248)
This is just the IR representation change though, I will follow up
with patches to remove limtations in various transformation passes
that are no longer needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129288
These intrinsics are now fundemental for SVE code generation and have been
present for a year and a half, hence move them out of the experimental
namespace.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127976