We would like to move ThinLTO’s battle-tested file caching mechanism to
the LLVM Support library so that we can use it elsewhere in LLVM.
Patch By: noajshu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111371
RISCVISAInfo::toFeatures needs to allocate strings using
ArgList::MakeArgString, but toFeatures lives in Support and
MakeArgString lives in Option.
toFeature only has one caller, so the simple fix is to have that
caller pass a lamdba that wraps MakeArgString to break the
dependency.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112032
We would like to move ThinLTO’s battle-tested file caching mechanism to
the LLVM Support library so that we can use it elsewhere in LLVM.
Patch By: noajshu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111371
How many place you need to modify when implementing a new extension for RISC-V?
At least 7 places as I know:
- Add new SubtargetFeature at RISCV.td
- -march parser in RISCV.cpp
- RISCVTargetInfo::initFeatureMap@RISCV.cpp for handling feature vector.
- RISCVTargetInfo::getTargetDefines@RISCV.cpp for pre-define marco.
- Arch string parser for ELF attribute in RISCVAsmParser.cpp
- ELF attribute emittion in RISCVAsmParser.cpp, and make sure it's in
canonical order...
- ELF attribute emittion in RISCVTargetStreamer.cpp, and again, must in
canonical order...
And now, this patch provide an unified infrastructure for handling (almost)
everything of RISC-V arch string.
After this patch, you only need to update 2 places for implement an extension
for RISC-V:
- Add new SubtargetFeature at RISCV.td, hmmm, it's hard to avoid.
- Add new entry to RISCVSupportedExtension@RISCVISAInfo.cpp or
SupportedExperimentalExtensions@RISCVISAInfo.cpp .
Most codes are come from existing -march parser, but with few new feature/bug
fixes:
- Accept version for -march, e.g. -march=rv32i2p0.
- Reject version info with `p` but without minor version number like `rv32i2p`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105168
The sdiv used to check for overflow can itself overflow if the
LHS is signed min and the RHS is -1. The code tried to account for
this by also checking the commuted version. However, for 1-bit
values, signed min and -1 are the same value, so both divisions
overflow. As such, the overflow for -1 * -1 was not detected
(which results in -1 rather than 1 for 1-bit values). Fix this by
explicitly checking for this case instead.
Noticed while adding exhaustive test coverage for smul_ov(),
which is also part of this commit.
Also sort ERROR_BAD_NETPATH correctly.
Compared with the similar error code mapping in
libcxx/src/filesystem/operations.cpp, I'm leaving out
mappings for ERROR_NOT_SAME_DEVICE and ERROR_OPERATION_ABORTED.
They map nicely to std::errc::cross_device_link and
std::errc::operation_canceled, but those aren't available in
llvm::errc, as they aren't available across all platforms.
Also, the libcxx version maps ERROR_INVALID_NAME to
no_such_file_or_directory instead of invalid_argument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111874
After 8fc7a907b93a8e9eef96e872f8f926db3ebfe9b6, this loop does
the same as a plain `std::replace`.
Also clarify the comment about what this function does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111730
The mips-specific includes have been unnecessary ever since the
__clear_cache() builtin replaced cacheflush().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111486
This reverts commits f9aba9a5afe09788eceb9879aa5c3ad345e0f1e9 and
035217ff515b8ecdc871e39fa840f3cba1b9cec7.
As explained in the original commit message, this didn't have the
intended effect of improving the common LLDB use case, but still
provided a marginal improvement for the places where LLDB creates a
scoped time with a string literal.
The reason for the revert is that this change pulls in the os/signpost.h
header in Signposts.h. The former transitively includes loader.h, which
contains a series of macro defines that conflict with MachO.h. There are
ways to work around that, but Adrian and I concluded that none of them
are worth the trade-off in complicating Signposts.h even further.
armv9-a, armv9.1-a and armv9.2-a can be targeted using the -march option
both in ARM and AArch64.
- Armv9-A maps to Armv8.5-A.
- Armv9.1-A maps to Armv8.6-A.
- Armv9.2-A maps to Armv8.7-A.
- The SVE2 extension is enabled by default on these architectures.
- The cryptographic extensions are disabled by default on these
architectures.
The Armv9-A architecture is described in the Arm® Architecture Reference
Manual Supplement Armv9, for Armv9-A architecture profile
(https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0608/latest).
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109517
566690b0 uses size information in float semantics, but PPCDoubleDouble
left them empty.
As follow-up, we can consider remove PPCDoubleDoubleLegacy and fill
other fields in the future.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111398
This moves the registry higher in the LLVM library dependency stack.
Every client of the target registry needs to link against MC anyway to
actually use the target, so we might as well move this out of Support.
This allows us to ensure that Support doesn't have includes from MC/*.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111454
The RISCV target doesn't define a "generic" cpu, only "generic-rv32" and
"generic-rv64". Define sys::getHostCPUName for RISC-V that returns the
correct cpu for the host.
Reviewed By: craig.topper, MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105274
isAllOnes() should return true for zero bit values because
there are no zeros in it.
Thanks to Jay Foad for pointing this out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111241
As described on D111049, removing the <string> dependency from error handling removes considerable build overhead, its recommended that the report_fatal_error(Twine) variant is used instead.
As described on D111049, we're trying to remove the <string> dependency from error handling and replace uses of report_fatal_error(const std::string&) with the Twine() variant which can be forward declared.
As described on D111049, we're trying to remove the <string> dependency from error handling and replace uses of report_fatal_error(const std::string&) with the Twine() variant which can be forward declared.
These should both clearly work with our current model for zero width
integers, but don't until now!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111113
https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html
Excessive use of the <string> header has a massive impact on compile time; its most commonly included via the ErrorHandling.h header, which has to be included in many key headers, impacting many source files that have no need for std::string.
As an initial step toward removing the <string> include from ErrorHandling.h, this patch proposes to update the fatal_error_handler_t handler to just take a raw const char* instead.
The next step will be to remove the report_fatal_error std::string variant, which will involve a lot of cleanup and better use of Twine/StringRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111049
Stop using APInt constructors and methods that were soft-deprecated in
D109483. This fixes all the uses I found in llvm, except for the APInt
unit tests which should still test the deprecated methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110807
While these functions are only used in one location in upstream,
it has been reused in multiple downstreams. Restore this file to
a globally visibile location (outside of APInt.h) to eliminate
donwstream breakage and enable potential future reuse.
Additionally, this patch renames types and cleans up
clang-tidy issues.
This ensures that re-creating "the same" FS results in the same UIDs for files.
In turn, this means that creating a clang module (preamble) using one in-memory
filesystem and consuming it using another doesn't create duplicate FileEntrys
for files that are the same in both FSes.
It's tempting to give the creator control over the UIDs instead. However that
requires fiddly API changes, e.g. what should the UIDs of intermediate
directories be?
This change is more "magic" but seems safe given:
- InMemoryFilesystem is used in testing more than production
- comparing UIDs across filesystems is unusual
- files with the same path and content are usually logically equivalent
(The usual reason for re-creating virtual filesystems rather than reusing them
is that typical use involves mutating their CWD and so is not threadsafe).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110711
The MSP430 ABI supports build attributes for specifying
the ISA, code model, data model and enum size in ELF object files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107969
That macro was being defined but not used anywhere in libc++, so it
must be safe to remove it.
As a fly-by fix, also remove mentions of this macro in other places
in LLVM, to make sure they were not depending on the value defined in
libc++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110289
Most PDB fields on disk are 32-bit but describe the file in terms of MSF
blocks, which are 4 kiB by default.
So PDB files can be a bit larger than 4 GiB, and much larger if you create them
with a block size > 4 kiB.
This is a first (necessary, but by far not not sufficient) step towards
supporting such PDB files. Now we don't truncate in-memory file offsets (which
are in terms of bytes, not in terms of blocks).
No effective behavior change. lld-link will still error out if it were to
produce PDBs > 4 GiB.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109923
Three unrelated changes:
1) Add a concat method as a convenience to help write bitvector
use cases in a nicer way.
2) Use LLVM_UNLIKELY as suggested by @xbolva00 in a previous patch.
3) Fix casing of some "slow" methods to follow naming standards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109620
APInt is used to describe a bit mask in a variety of value tracking and demanded bits/elts functions.
When traversing through dst/src operands, we have a number of places where these masks need to widened/narrowed to translate through bitcasts, reductions etc. to a different type.
This patch add a APIntOps::ScaleBitMask common helper, adds unit test coverage, and updates a number of cases to use the the helper instead of their own implementation.
This came up on D109065 where we currently have to add yet another implementation of the same code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109683
Motivation: APInt not supporting zero bit values leads to
a lot of special cases in various bits of code, particularly
when using APInt as a bit vector (where you want to start with
zero bits and then concat on more. This is particularly
challenging in the CIRCT project, where the absence of zero-bit
ConstantOp forces duplication of ops and makes instcombine-like
logic far more complicated.
Approach: zero bit integers are weird. There are two reasonable
approaches: either make it illegal to do general arithmetic on
them (e.g. sign extends), or treat them as as implicitly having
a zero value. This patch takes the conservative approach, which
enables their use in bitvector applications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109555
This renames the primary methods for creating a zero value to `getZero`
instead of `getNullValue` and renames predicates like `isAllOnesValue`
to simply `isAllOnes`. This achieves two things:
1) This starts standardizing predicates across the LLVM codebase,
following (in this case) ConstantInt. The word "Value" doesn't
convey anything of merit, and is missing in some of the other things.
2) Calling an integer "null" doesn't make any sense. The original sin
here is mine and I've regretted it for years. This moves us to calling
it "zero" instead, which is correct!
APInt is widely used and I don't think anyone is keen to take massive source
breakage on anything so core, at least not all in one go. As such, this
doesn't actually delete any entrypoints, it "soft deprecates" them with a
comment.
Included in this patch are changes to a bunch of the codebase, but there are
more. We should normalize SelectionDAG and other APIs as well, which would
make the API change more mechanical.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109483
This moves one mid-size function out of line, inlines the
trivial tcAnd/tcOr/tcXor/tcComplement methods into their only
caller, and moves the magic/umagic functions into SelectionDAG
since they are implementation details of its algorithm. This
also removes the unit tests for magic, but these are already
tested in the divide lowering logic for various targets.
This also upgrades some C style comments to C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109476
Many `flang` tests currently `FAIL` on Solaris because the module files
aren't found. I could trace this to `sys::fs::getMainExecutable` not being
implemented.
This patch does this and fixes all affected `flang` tests.
Tested on `amd64-pc-solaris2.11`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109374
Add KnownBits handling and unit tests for X*X self-multiplication cases which guarantee that bit1 of their results will be zero - see PR48683.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/NN_eaR
The next step will be to add suitable test coverage so this can be enabled in ValueTracking/DAG/GlobalISel - currently only a single Analysis/ScalarEvolution test is affected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108992
d8faf03807ac implemented general-regs-only for X86 by disabling all features
with vector instructions. But the CRC32 instruction in SSE4.2 ISA, which uses
only GPRs, also becomes unavailable. This patch adds a CRC32 feature for this
instruction and allows it to be used with general-regs-only.
Reviewed By: pengfei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105462
When building LLVM with Open XL and -Werror is specified, the -Waix-compat warning becomes an error. This patch updates the SmallVector class to suppress the -Waix-compat warning/error on AIX.
Reviewed By: daltenty
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108577
Reset cl::Positional, cl::Sink and cl::ConsumeAfter options as well in cl::ResetCommandLineParser().
Reviewed By: rriddle, sammccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103356