The issue is uncovered by #47698: for IR files without a target triple,
-mtriple= specifies the full target triple while -march= merely sets the
architecture part of the default target triple, leaving a target triple which
may not make sense, e.g. riscv64-apple-darwin.
Therefore, -march= is error-prone and not recommended for tests without a target
triple. The issue has been benign as we recognize $unknown-apple-darwin as ELF instead
of rejecting it outrightly.
Currently the default C calling convention functions are treated
the same as compute kernels. Make this explicit so the default
calling convention can be changed to a non-kernel.
Converted with perl -pi -e 's/define void/define amdgpu_kernel void/'
on the relevant test directories (and undoing in one place that actually
wanted a non-kernel).
llvm-svn: 298444
This switches to the workaround that HSA defaults to
for the mesa path.
This should be applied to the 4.0 branch.
Patch by Vedran Miletić <vedran@miletic.net>
llvm-svn: 292982
There are a lot of different kinds of loads to test for,
and these were scattered around inconsistently with
some redundancy. Try to comprehensively test all loads
in a consistent way.
llvm-svn: 271571
I don't think this test was intending to test unaligned load/store.
Change it to use the natural alignment to avoid regressing.
Also adds missing SI checks.
llvm-svn: 261571