In Bazel, Clang current separates the clang executable into a
clang-driver library, and the actual clang executable. This allows
downstream users to make their own variations of clang, without having
to redo/maintain separate build pipelines.
This adds the same for opt for both CMake and Bazel.
This flag (--try-experimental-debuginfo-iterators) only exists for testing
purposes, to get some RUNlines running in new-debug-info mode before it's
properly supported. The flag isn't something that's going to be useful to
people using llvm 18, so hide it from the options list.
This patch replaces uses of StringRef::{starts,ends}with with
StringRef::{starts,ends}_with for consistency with
std::{string,string_view}::{starts,ends}_with in C++20.
I'm planning to deprecate and eventually remove
StringRef::{starts,ends}with.
Our option to turn on the non-intrinsic form of debug-info
(`--experimental-debuginfo-iterators`) currently requires that LLVM is
built with the `LLVM_EXPERIMENTAL_DEBUGINFO_ITERATORS` cmake flag
enabled, so that some (slight) performance regressions aren't
on-by-default during the prototype/testing period. However, we still
want to be able to _optionally_ run tests, if support is built into
LLVM.
To allow optionally exercising the non-intrinsic debug-info code, this
patch adds `--try-experimental-debuginfo-iterators` to opt, which turns
the `--experimental-debuginfo-iterators` flag on if support is built in,
or leaves it off. This means we can run tests that:
* Use normal dbg.value intrinsics if there's no support, or
* Uses non-instruction DPValues if there is support.
Which means we can start getting test coverage of DPValues/RemoveDIs
behaviour, from in-tree tests, on our RemoveDIs buildbot. All the code
to do with automagically converting from one form to the other landed in
10a9e7442c.
There are many tests that specify a target triple/CPU flags but no
DataLayout which can lead to IR being generated that has unusual
behaviour. This commit attempts to use the default DataLayout based
on the relevant flags if there is no explicit override on the command
line or in the IR file.
One thing that is not currently possible to differentiate from a missing
datalayout `target datalayout = ""` in the IR file since the current
APIs don't allow detecting this case. If it is considered useful to
support this case (instead of passing "-data-layout=" on the command
line), I can change IR parsers to track whether they have seen such a
directive and change the callback type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141060
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D125075, we switched to use
FastPreTileConfig in O0 and abandoned X86PreAMXConfigPass.
we can remove related code of X86PreAMXConfigPass safely.
This creates a TargetMachine with the default options (from the command
line flags). This allows us to share a bit more code between tools.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D141057
Implement a new pass to combine multiple image_load_2dmsaa and
2darraymsaa intrinsic calls into a single image_msaa_load if:
- they refer to the same vaddr except for sample_id,
- they use a constant sample_id and they fall into the same group,
- they have the same dmask and the number of instructions and the
number of vaddr/vdata dword transfers is reduced by the combine
This should be valid on all GFX11 but a hardware bug renders it
unworkable on GFX11.0.* so it is only enabled for GFX11.5.
Based on a patch by Rodrigo Dominguez!
Discussion about this approach: https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-safer-whole-program-class-hierarchy-analysis/65144/18
When enabling WPD in an environment where native binaries are present, types we want to optimize can be derived from inside these native files and devirtualizing them can lead to correctness issues. RTTI can be used as a way to determine all such types in native files and exclude them from WPD providing a safe checked way to enable WPD.
The approach is:
1. In the linker, identify if RTTI is available for all native types. If not, under `--lto-validate-all-vtables-have-type-infos` `--lto-whole-program-visibility` is automatically disabled. This is done by examining all .symtab symbols in object files and .dynsym symbols in DSOs for vtable (_ZTV) and typeinfo (_ZTI) symbols and ensuring there's always a match for every vtable symbol.
2. During thinlink, if `--lto-validate-all-vtables-have-type-infos` is set and RTTI is available for all native types, identify all typename (_ZTS) symbols via their corresponding typeinfo (_ZTI) symbols that are used natively or outside of our summary and exclude them from WPD.
Testing:
ninja check-all
large Meta service that uses boost, glog and libstdc++.so runs successfully with WPD via --lto-whole-program-visibility. Previously, native types in boost caused incorrect devirtualization that led to crashes.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D155659
This will make it easy for callers to see issues with and fix up calls
to createTargetMachine after a future change to the params of
TargetMachine.
This matches other nearby enums.
For downstream users, this should be a fairly straightforward
replacement,
e.g. s/CodeGenOpt::Aggressive/CodeGenOptLevel::Aggressive
or s/CGFT_/CodeGenFileType::
Here's a high level summary of the changes in this patch. For more
information on rational, see the RFC.
(https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-a-unified-lto-bitcode-frontend/61774).
- Add config parameter to LTO backend, specifying which LTO mode is
desired when using unified LTO.
- Add unified LTO flag to the summary index for efficiency. Unified
LTO modules can be detected without parsing the module.
- Make sure that the ModuleID is generated by incorporating more types
of symbols.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D123803
SubtargetFeature.h is currently part of MC while it doesn't depend on
anything in MC. Since some LLVM components might have the need to work
with target features without necessarily needing MC, it might be
worthwhile to move SubtargetFeature.h to a different location. This will
reduce the dependencies of said components.
Note that I choose TargetParser as the destination because that's where
Triple lives and SubtargetFeatures feels related to that.
This issues came up during a JITLink review (D149522). JITLink would
like to avoid a dependency on MC while still needing to store target
features.
Reviewed By: MaskRay, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D150549
Remove dead code related to "FPasses". This was a leftover from
commit 7a5332b9b5.
Do not mention -enable-new-pm in error messages. The option does
not exist any longer.
Remove the addPass helper. Only one use remained, so we can just
"inline" it manually to keep the code related to legacy PM a bit
less spread out.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148082
This removed the option print-breakpoints-for-testing in opt, as well
as the related BreakpointPrinter pass.
The functionality only existed for the legacy PM, but was not verified
to be working by any test cases. And the named "llvm.dbg.sp" metadata
that the pass was looking for is not something that I really can find
any information about (unless perhaps if I dive really deep into the
commit history), so not sure exactly if this functionality has been
relevant for several years.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D148080
-enable-new-pm is no longer necessary except for bugpoint. Make the name more clunky so it hopefully won't be used.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D146103
With the NPM, we're now defaulting to preserving LCSSA, so a couple
of tests have changed slightly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140982
The forwarding header is left in place because of its use in
`polly/lib/External/isl/interface/extract_interface.cc`, but I have
added a GCC warning about the fact it is deprecated, because it is used
in `isl` from where it is included by Polly.
When opaque pointers are enabled and old IR with typed pointers is read,
the BitcodeReader automatically upgrades all typed pointers to opaque
pointers. This is a lossy conversion, i.e. when a function argument is a
pointer and unused, it’s impossible to reconstruct the original type
behind the pointer.
There are cases where the type information of pointers is needed. One is
reading DXIL, which is bitcode of old LLVM IR and makes a lot of use of
pointers in function signatures.
We’d like to keep using up-to-date llvm to read in and process DXIL, so
in the face of opaque pointers, we need some way to access the type
information of pointers from the read bitcode.
This patch allows extracting type information by supplying functions to
parseBitcodeFile that get called for each function signature or metadata
value. The function can access the type information via the reader’s
type IDs and the getTypeByID and getContainedTypeID functions.
The tests exemplarily shows how type info from pointers can be stored in
metadata for use after the BitcodeReader finished.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127728
This reverts commit b56df190b0.
The unit tests are implemented in a way that requires support for
writing typed pointer bitcode, which is going away soon. Please
rewrite it in a way that not have requirement, e.g. by shipping
pre-compiled bitcode, as we do for integration tests.
When opaque pointers are enabled and old IR with typed pointers is read,
the BitcodeReader automatically upgrades all typed pointers to opaque
pointers. This is a lossy conversion, i.e. when a function argument is a
pointer and unused, it’s impossible to reconstruct the original type
behind the pointer.
There are cases where the type information of pointers is needed. One is
reading DXIL, which is bitcode of old LLVM IR and makes a lot of use of
pointers in function signatures.
We’d like to keep using up-to-date llvm to read in and process DXIL, so
in the face of opaque pointers, we need some way to access the type
information of pointers from the read bitcode.
This patch allows extracting type information by supplying functions to
parseBitcodeFile that get called for each function signature or metadata
value. The function can access the type information via the reader’s
type IDs and the getTypeByID and getContainedTypeID functions.
The tests exemplarily shows how type info from pointers can be stored in
metadata for use after the BitcodeReader finished.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D127728
Use the existing mechanism to change the data layout using callbacks.
Before this patch, we had a callback type DataLayoutCallbackTy that receives
a single StringRef specifying the target triple, and optionally returns
the data layout string to be used. Module loaders (both IR and BC) then
apply the callback to potentially override the module's data layout,
after first having imported and parsed the data layout from the file.
We can't do the same to fix invalid data layouts, because the import will already
fail, before the callback has a chance to fix it.
Instead, module loaders now tentatively parse the data layout into a string,
wait until the target triple has been parsed, apply the override callback
to the imported string and only then parse the tentative string as a data layout.
Moreover, add the old data layout string S as second argument to the callback,
in addition to the already existing target triple argument.
S is either the default data layout string in case none is specified, or the data
layout string specified in the module, possibly after auto-upgrades (for the BitcodeReader).
This allows callbacks to inspect the old data layout string,
and fix it instead of setting a fixed data layout.
Also allow to pass data layout override callbacks to lazy bitcode module
loader functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D140985
This is part of effort in removing -enable-new-pm flag.
As a prat of this effort one of example passes SimplifyCFG must
be ported to new PM which will allow to remove the flag
calls from the tests that are using this pass.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137103
This change is rather more invasive than intended. The main intention
here is to make CommandLine.cpp not rely on llvm/Support/Host.h. Right
now, this reliance is only in 3 superficial places:
- Choosing how to expand response files (in two places)
- Printing the default triple and current CPU in `--version` output.
The built in version system has a method for adding "extra version
printers", commonly used by several tools (such as llc) to report the
registered targets in the built version of LLVM. It was reasonably easy
to move the logic for printing the default triple and current CPU into
a similar function, and register it with any relevant binaries.
The incompatible change here is that now, even if
LLVM_VERSION_PRINTER_SHOW_HOST_TARGET_INFO is defined, most binaries
will no longer print out the default target triple and cpu when provided
with `--version`, for instance llvm-as and llvm-dis. This breakage is
intended, but the changes in this patch keep printing the default target
and detected in `llc` and `opt` as these were remarked as important
binaries in the LLVM install.
The change to expanding response files may also be controversial, but I
believe that these macros should correspond exactly to the host triple
introspection used before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137837
We've already verified the input module manually in opt so this is redundant.
Reviewed By: bjope
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139899
I've done final pass, and there are no more tests to update.
All other tests (=codegen tests) are using old pass manager.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139677
Over the past day or so, i've took a large swing at our tests,
and reduced the number of tests that were still using the old syntax
from ~1800 to just 200.
Left to handle: (as it is seen in this patch)
* Transforms/LSR
* Transforms/CGP
* Transforms/TypePromotion
* Transforms/HardwareLoops
* Analysis/*
* some misc.
I think this is the right point to start actively refusing
to honor the old syntax, except for the old tests,
to prevent the old syntax from creeping back in.
Thus, let's add temporary default-off flag,
and if it is not passed refuse to accept old syntax.
The tests that still need porting are annotated with this flag.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D139647
This patch mechanically replaces None with std::nullopt where the
compiler would warn if None were deprecated. The intent is to reduce
the amount of manual work required in migrating from Optional to
std::optional.
This is part of an effort to migrate from llvm::Optional to
std::optional:
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/deprecating-llvm-optional-x-hasvalue-getvalue-getvalueor/63716
As stated in
https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-llc-add-expandlargeintfpconvert-pass-for-fp-int-conversion-of-large-bitint/65528,
this implementation is very similar to ExpandLargeDivRem, which expands
‘fptoui .. to’, ‘fptosi .. to’, ‘uitofp .. to’, ‘sitofp .. to’ instructions
with a bitwidth above a threshold into auto-generated functions. This is
useful for targets like x86_64 that cannot lower fp convertions with more
than 128 bits. The expanded nodes are referring from the IR generated by
`compiler-rt/lib/builtins/floattidf.c`, `compiler-rt/lib/builtins/fixdfti.c`,
and etc.
Corner cases:
1. For fp16: as there is no related builtins added in compliler-rt. So I
mainly utilized the fp32 <-> fp16 lib calls to implement.
2. For fp80: as this pass is soft fp emulation and no fp80 instructions can
help in this problem. I recommend users to deprecate this usage. For now, the
implementation uses fp128 as the temporary conversion type and inserts
fptrunc/ext at top/end of the function.
3. For bf16: as clang FE currently doesn't support bf16 algorithm operations
(convert to int, float, +, -, *, ...), this patch doesn't consider bf16 for
now.
4. For unsigned FPToI: since both default hardware behaviors and libgcc are
ignoring "returns 0 for negative input" spec. This pass follows this old way
to ignore unsigned FPToI. See this example:
https://gcc.godbolt.org/z/bnv3jqW1M
The end-to-end tests are uploaded at https://reviews.llvm.org/D138261
Reviewed By: LuoYuanke, mgehre-amd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D137241