This is the major rename patch that prior patches have built towards.
The DPValue class is being renamed to DbgVariableRecord, which reflects
the updated terminology for the "final" implementation of the RemoveDI
feature. This is a pure string substitution + clang-format patch. The
only manual component of this patch was determining where to perform
these string substitutions: `DPValue` and `DPV` are almost exclusively
used for DbgRecords, *except* for:
- llvm/lib/target, where 'DP' is used to mean double-precision, and so
appears as part of .td files and in variable names. NB: There is a
single existing use of `DPValue` here that refers to debug info, which
I've manually updated.
- llvm/tools/gold, where 'LDPV' is used as a prefix for symbol
visibility enums.
Outside of these places, I've applied several basic string
substitutions, with the intent that they only affect DbgRecord-related
identifiers; I've checked them as I went through to verify this, with
reasonable confidence that there are no unintended changes that slipped
through the cracks. The substitutions applied are all case-sensitive,
and are applied in the order shown:
```
DPValue -> DbgVariableRecord
DPVal -> DbgVarRec
DPV -> DVR
```
Following the previous rename patches, it should be the case that there
are no instances of any of these strings that are meant to refer to the
general case of DbgRecords, or anything other than the DPValue class.
The idea behind this patch is therefore that pure string substitution is
correct in all cases as long as these assumptions hold.
This patch continues the ongoing rename work, replacing DPValue with
DbgRecord in comments and the names of variables, both members and
fn-local. This is the most labour-intensive part of the rename, as it is
where the most decisions have to be made about whether a given comment
or variable is referring to DPValues (equivalent to debug variable
intrinsics) or DbgRecords (a catch-all for all debug intrinsics); these
decisions are not individually difficult, but comprise a fairly large
amount of text to review.
This patch still largely performs basic string substitutions followed by
clang-format; there are almost* no places where, for example, a comment
has been expanded or modified to reflect the semantic difference between
DPValues and DbgRecords. I don't believe such a change is generally
necessary in LLVM, but it may be useful in the docs, and so I'll be
submitting docs changes as a separate patch.
*In a few places, `dbg.values` was replaced with `debug intrinsics`.
NOTE: For brevity the following talks about ConstantInt but
everything extends to cover ConstantFP as well.
Whilst ConstantInt::get() supports the creation of vectors whereby
each lane has the same value, it achieves this via other constants:
* ConstantVector for fixed-length vectors
* ConstantExprs for scalable vectors
However, ConstantExprs are being deprecated and ConstantVector is
not space efficient for larger vector types. By extending ConstantInt
we can represent vector splats by only storing the underlying scalar
value.
More specifically:
* ConstantInt gains an ElementCount variant of get().
* LLVMContext is extended to map <EC,APInt>->ConstantInt.
* BitcodeReader/Writer support is extended to allow vector types.
Whilst this patch adds the base support, more work is required
before it's production ready. For example, there's likely to be
many places where isa<ConstantInt> assumes a scalar type. Accordingly
the default behaviour of ConstantInt::get() remains unchanged but a
set of flags are added to allow wider testing and thus help with the
migration:
--use-constant-int-for-fixed-length-splat
--use-constant-fp-for-fixed-length-splat
--use-constant-int-for-scalable-splat
--use-constant-fp-for-scalable-splat
NOTE: No change is required to the bitcode format because types and
values are handled separately.
NOTE: For similar reasons as above, code generation doesn't work
out-the-box.
This reverts commit 0fd5dc94380d5fe666dc6c603b4bb782cef743e7.
The original commit removed DIArgLists from being in an MDNode map, but did
not insert a new `delete` in the LLVMContextImpl destructor. This
reapply adds that call to delete, preventing a memory leak.
This patch changes the `DIArgList` class's inheritance from `MDNode` to
`Metadata, ReplaceableMetadataImpl`, and ensures that it is always
unique, i.e. a distinct DIArgList should never be produced.
This should not result in any changes to IR or bitcode parsing and
printing, as the format for DIArgList is unchanged, and the order in which it
appears should also be identical. As a minor note, this patch also fixes
a gap in the verifier, where the ValueAsMetadata operands to a DIArgList
would not be visited.
This reverts commit 957efa4ce4f0391147cec62746e997226ee2b836.
Original commit message below -- in this follow up, I've shifted
un-necessary inclusions of DebugProgramInstruction.h into being forward
declarations (fixes clang-compile time I hope), and a memory leak in the
DebugInfoTest.cpp IR unittests.
I also tracked a compile-time regression in D154080, more explanation
there, but the result of which is hiding some of the changes behind the
EXPERIMENTAL_DEBUGINFO_ITERATORS compile-time flag. This is tested by the
"new-debug-iterators" buildbot.
[DebugInfo][RemoveDIs] Add prototype storage classes for "new" debug-info
This patch adds a variety of classes needed to record variable location
debug-info without using the existing intrinsic approach, see the rationale
at [0].
The two added files and corresponding unit tests are the majority of the
plumbing required for this, but at this point isn't accessible from the
rest of LLVM as we need to stage it into the repo gently. An overview is
that classes are added for recording variable information attached to Real
(TM) instructions, in the form of DPValues and DPMarker objects. The
metadata-uses of DPValues is plumbed into the metadata hierachy, and a
field added to class Instruction, which are all stimulated in the unit
tests. The next few patches in this series add utilities to convert to/from
this new debug-info format and add instruction/block utilities to have
debug-info automatically updated in the background when various operations
occur.
This patch was reviewed in Phab in D153990 and D154080, I've squashed them
together into this commit as there are dependencies between the two
patches, and there's little profit in landing them separately.
[0] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-instruction-api-changes-needed-to-eliminate-debug-intrinsics-from-ir/68939
And some intervening fixups. There are two remaining problems:
* A memory leak via https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/236/builds/7120/steps/10/logs/stdio
* A performance slowdown with -g where I'm not completely sure what the cause it
These might be fairly straightforwards to fix, but it's the end of the day
hear, so I figure I'll clear the buildbots til tomorrow.
This reverts commit 7d77bbef4ad9230f6f427649373fe46a668aa909.
This reverts commit 9026f35afe6ffdc5e55b6615efcbd36f25b11558.
This reverts commit d97b2b389a0e511c65af6845119eb08b8a2cb473.
This patch adds a variety of classes needed to record variable location
debug-info without using the existing intrinsic approach, see the rationale
at [0].
The two added files and corresponding unit tests are the majority of the
plumbing required for this, but at this point isn't accessible from the
rest of LLVM as we need to stage it into the repo gently. An overview is
that classes are added for recording variable information attached to Real
(TM) instructions, in the form of DPValues and DPMarker objects. The
metadata-uses of DPValues is plumbed into the metadata hierachy, and a
field added to class Instruction, which are all stimulated in the unit
tests. The next few patches in this series add utilities to convert to/from
this new debug-info format and add instruction/block utilities to have
debug-info automatically updated in the background when various operations
occur.
This patch was reviewed in Phab in D153990 and D154080, I've squashed them
together into this commit as there are dependencies between the two
patches, and there's little profit in landing them separately.
[0] https://discourse.llvm.org/t/rfc-instruction-api-changes-needed-to-eliminate-debug-intrinsics-from-ir/68939
The test migration to opaque pointers has finished, so we can finally
drop typed pointer support from LLVM \o/
This removes the ability to disable typed pointers, as well as the
-opaque-pointers option, but otherwise doesn't yet touch any API
surface. I'll leave deprecation/removal of compatibility APIs to
future changes.
This also drops a few tests: These are either testing errors that
only occur with typed pointers, or type linking behavior that, to
the best of my knowledge, only applies to typed pointers.
Note that this will break some tests in the experimental SPIRV
backend, because the maintainers have failed to update their tests
in a reasonable time-frame, despite multiple warnings. In accordance
with our experimental target policy, this is not a blocking concern.
This issue is tracked at https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/60133.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D155079
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
value() has undesired exception checking semantics and calls
__throw_bad_optional_access in libc++. Moreover, the API is unavailable without
_LIBCPP_NO_EXCEPTIONS on older Mach-O platforms (see
_LIBCPP_AVAILABILITY_BAD_OPTIONAL_ACCESS).
This commit fixes LLVMAnalysis and its dependencies.
(Reapply after revert in e9ce1a588030d8d4004f5d7e443afe46245e9a92 due to
Fuchsia test failures. Removed changes in lib/ExecutionEngine/ other
than error categories, to be checked in more detail and reapplied
separately.)
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
Bulk remove many of the more trivial uses of ManagedStatic in the llvm
directory, either by defining a new getter function or, in many cases,
moving the static variable directly into the only function that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D129120
This enabled opaque pointers by default in LLVM. The effect of this
is twofold:
* If IR that contains *neither* explicit ptr nor %T* types is passed
to tools, we will now use opaque pointer mode, unless
-opaque-pointers=0 has been explicitly passed.
* Users of LLVM as a library will now default to opaque pointers.
It is possible to opt-out by calling setOpaquePointers(false) on
LLVMContext.
A cmake option to toggle this default will not be provided. Frontends
or other tools that want to (temporarily) keep using typed pointers
should disable opaque pointers via LLVMContext.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126689
This allows both explicitly enabling and explicitly disabling
opaque pointers, in anticipation of the default switching at some
point.
This also slightly changes the rules by allowing calls if either
the opaque pointer mode has not yet been set (explicitly or
implicitly) or if the value remains unchanged.
This reverts commit 295172ef51c6b9a73bc0fdcfd25f8c41ead9034a.
Reason: Broke the ASan buildbot. More details are available on the
original Phab review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D119482.
This allows us to not have to specify -opaque-pointers when updating
IR tests from typed pointers to opaque pointers.
We detect opaque pointers in .ll files by looking for relevant tokens,
either "ptr" or "*".
Reviewed By: #opaque-pointers, nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119482
Based on the output of include-what-you-use.
This is a big chunk of changes. It is very likely to break downstream code
unless they took a lot of care in avoiding hidden ehader dependencies, something
the LLVM codebase doesn't do that well :-/
I've tried to summarize the biggest change below:
- llvm/include/llvm-c/Core.h: no longer includes llvm-c/ErrorHandling.h
- llvm/IR/DIBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h
- llvm/IR/IRBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h
- llvm/IR/LLVMRemarkStreamer.h no longer includes llvm/Support/ToolOutputFile.h
- llvm/IR/LegacyPassManager.h no longer include llvm/Pass.h
- llvm/IR/Type.h no longer includes llvm/ADT/SmallPtrSet.h
- llvm/IR/PassManager.h no longer includes llvm/Pass.h nor llvm/Support/Debug.h
And the usual count of preprocessed lines:
$ clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/IR/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 6400831
after: 6189948
200k lines less to process is no that bad ;-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118652
Add UNIQUED and DISTINCT properties in Metadata.def and use them to
implement restrictions on the `distinct` property of MDNodes:
* DIExpression can currently be parsed from IR or read from bitcode
as `distinct`, but this property is silently dropped when printing
to IR. This causes accepted IR to fail to round-trip. As DIExpression
appears inline at each use in the canonical form of IR, it cannot
actually be `distinct` anyway, as there is no syntax to describe it.
* Similarly, DIArgList is conceptually always uniqued. It is currently
restricted to only appearing in contexts where there is no syntax for
`distinct`, but for consistency it is treated equivalently to
DIExpression in this patch.
* DICompileUnit is already restricted to always being `distinct`, but
along with adding general support for the inverse restriction I went
ahead and described this in Metadata.def and updated the parser to be
general. Future nodes which have this restriction can share this
support.
The new UNIQUED property applies to DIExpression and DIArgList, and
forbids them to be `distinct`. It also implies they are canonically
printed inline at each use, rather than via MDNode ID.
The new DISTINCT property applies to DICompileUnit, and requires it to
be `distinct`.
A potential alternative change is to forbid the non-inline syntax for
DIExpression entirely, as is done with DIArgList implicitly by requiring
it appear in the context of a function. For example, we would forbid:
!named = !{!0}
!0 = !DIExpression()
Instead we would only accept the equivalent inlined version:
!named = !{!DIExpression()}
This essentially removes the ability to create a `distinct` DIExpression
by construction, as there is no syntax for `distinct` inline. If this
patch is accepted as-is, the result would be that the non-canonical
version is accepted, but the following would be an error and produce a diagnostic:
!named = !{!0}
; error: 'distinct' not allowed for !DIExpression()
!0 = distinct !DIExpression()
Also update some documentation to consistently use the inline syntax for
DIExpression, and to describe the restrictions on `distinct` for nodes
where applicable.
Reviewed By: StephenTozer, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104827
Currently, opaque pointers are supported in two forms: The
-force-opaque-pointers mode, where all pointers are opaque and
typed pointers do not exist. And as a simple ptr type that can
coexist with typed pointers.
This patch removes support for the mixed mode. You either get
typed pointers, or you get opaque pointers, but not both. In the
(current) default mode, using ptr is forbidden. In -opaque-pointers
mode, all pointers are opaque.
The motivation here is that the mixed mode introduces additional
issues that don't exist in fully opaque mode. D105155 is an example
of a design problem. Looking at D109259, it would probably need
additional work to support mixed mode (e.g. to generate GEPs for
typed base but opaque result). Mixed mode will also end up
inserting many casts between i8* and ptr, which would require
significant additional work to consistently avoid.
I don't think the mixed mode is particularly valuable, as it
doesn't align with our end goal. The only thing I've found it to
be moderately useful for is adding some opaque pointer tests in
between typed pointer tests, but I think we can live without that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109290
We have a large compile showing occasional non-deterministic behavior
that is due to DIArgList not being properly uniqued in some cases. I
tracked this down to handleChangedOperands, for which there is a custom
implementation for DIArgList, that does not take care of re-uniquing
after updating the DIArgList Args, unlike the default version of
handleChangedOperands for MDNode.
Since the Args in the DIArgList form the key for the store, this seems
to be occasionally breaking the lookup in that DenseSet. Specifically,
when invoking DIArgList::get() from replaceVariableLocationOp, very
occasionally it returns a new DIArgList object, when one already exists
having the same exact Args pointers. This in turn causes a subsequent
call to Instruction::isIdenticalToWhenDefined on those two otherwise
identical DIArgList objects during a later pass to return false, leading
to different IR in those rare cases.
I modified DIArgList::handleChangedOperands to perform similar
re-uniquing as the MDNode version used by other metadata node types.
This also necessitated a change to the context destructor, since in some
cases we end up with DIArgList as distinct nodes: DIArgList is the only
metadata node type to have a custom dropAllReferences, so we need to
invoke that version on DIArgList in the DistinctMDNodes store to clean
it up properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108968
This reverts commit 8cd35ad854ab4458fd509447359066ea3578b494.
It breaks `TestMembersAndLocalsWithSameName.py` on GreenDragon and
Mikael Holmén points out in D104827 that bitcode files created with the
patch cannot be parsed with binaries built before it.
Add UNIQUED and DISTINCT properties in Metadata.def and use them to
implement restrictions on the `distinct` property of MDNodes:
* DIExpression can currently be parsed from IR or read from bitcode
as `distinct`, but this property is silently dropped when printing
to IR. This causes accepted IR to fail to round-trip. As DIExpression
appears inline at each use in the canonical form of IR, it cannot
actually be `distinct` anyway, as there is no syntax to describe it.
* Similarly, DIArgList is conceptually always uniqued. It is currently
restricted to only appearing in contexts where there is no syntax for
`distinct`, but for consistency it is treated equivalently to
DIExpression in this patch.
* DICompileUnit is already restricted to always being `distinct`, but
along with adding general support for the inverse restriction I went
ahead and described this in Metadata.def and updated the parser to be
general. Future nodes which have this restriction can share this
support.
The new UNIQUED property applies to DIExpression and DIArgList, and
forbids them to be `distinct`. It also implies they are canonically
printed inline at each use, rather than via MDNode ID.
The new DISTINCT property applies to DICompileUnit, and requires it to
be `distinct`.
A potential alternative change is to forbid the non-inline syntax for
DIExpression entirely, as is done with DIArgList implicitly by requiring
it appear in the context of a function. For example, we would forbid:
!named = !{!0}
!0 = !DIExpression()
Instead we would only accept the equivalent inlined version:
!named = !{!DIExpression()}
This essentially removes the ability to create a `distinct` DIExpression
by construction, as there is no syntax for `distinct` inline. If this
patch is accepted as-is, the result would be that the non-canonical
version is accepted, but the following would be an error and produce a diagnostic:
!named = !{!0}
; error: 'distinct' not allowed for !DIExpression()
!0 = distinct !DIExpression()
Also update some documentation to consistently use the inline syntax for
DIExpression, and to describe the restrictions on `distinct` for nodes
where applicable.
Reviewed By: StephenTozer, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104827
We don't want to start updating tests to use opaque pointers until we're
close to the opaque pointer transition. However, before the transition
we want to run tests as if pointers are opaque pointers to see if there
are any crashes.
At some point when we have a flag to only create opaque pointers in the
bitcode and textual IR readers, and when we have fixed all places that
try to read a pointee type, this flag will be useless. However, until
then, this can help us find issues more easily.
Since the cl::opt is read into LLVMContext, we need to make sure
LLVMContext is created after cl::ParseCommandLineOptions().
Previously ValueEnumerator would visit the value types of global values
via the pointer type, but with opaque pointers we have to manually visit
the value type.
Reviewed By: nikic, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103503
The x86_amx is used for AMX intrisics. <256 x i32> is bitcast to x86_amx when
it is used by AMX intrinsics, and x86_amx is bitcast to <256 x i32> when it
is used by load/store instruction. So amx intrinsics only operate on type x86_amx.
It can help to separate amx intrinsics from llvm IR instructions (+-*/).
Thank Craig for the idea. This patch depend on https://reviews.llvm.org/D87981.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91927
Currently there is an issue where the legacy pass manager uses a different OptBisect counter than the new pass manager.
This fix makes the npm OptBisectInstrumentation use the global OptBisect.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92897
Change `ConstantDataSequential::Next` to a
`unique_ptr<ConstantDataSequential>` and update `CDSConstants` to a
`StringMap<unique_ptr<ConstantDataSequential>>`, making the ownership
more obvious.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90083
Now there are two main classes in Value hierarchy, which support metadata,
these are Instruction and GlobalObject. They implement different APIs for
metadata manipulation, which however overlap. This change moves metadata
manipulation code into Value, so descendant classes can use this code for
their operations on metadata.
No functional changes intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67626
The history of dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays is like this. Because the appending linkage uses too much memory (http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20150105/251381.html), dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays was introduced (https://reviews.llvm.org/rG81f385b0c6ea37dd7195a65be162c75bbdef29d2) to release unused constant arrays. Recently, dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays was improved (https://reviews.llvm.org/rG81f385b0c6ea37dd7195a65be162c75bbdef29d2) to reduce its quadratic cost.
Our recent LTO profiling shows that when a target is large, 15-20% of time cost is from the SetVector::insert called by dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays.
A large application has hundreds or thousands of modules; each module calls dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays once for cleaning up tens of thousands of ConstantArrays a module has. In those ConstantArrays, usually around 5 can be deleted; a very very few deleted ConstantArrays reference other ConstantArrays: less than 10 out of millions.
Given this, the cost of SetVector::insert is mainly from the construction of WorkList from ArrayConstants. This motivated the fix that iterates ArrayConstants directly, and uses WorkList only when necessary.
Our evaluation shows that
1) The cumulative time percentage of dropTriviallyDeadConstantArrays is reduced from 15-17% to 4-6%.
2) For targets with LTO time > 20min, the time reduction is about 20%.
3) No observable performance impact for build without using LTO.
{F12506218}
{F12506221}
Reviewed By: mehdi_amini, tejohnson, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85379
Summary:
The BFloat IR type is introduced to provide support for, initially, the BFloat16
datatype introduced with the Armv8.6 architecture (optional from Armv8.2
onwards). It has an 8-bit exponent and a 7-bit mantissa and behaves like an IEEE
754 floating point IR type.
This is part of a patch series upstreaming Armv8.6 features. Subsequent patches
will upstream intrinsics support and C-lang support for BFloat.
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, rjmccall, rsmith, liutianle, RKSimon, craig.topper, jfb, LukeGeeson, sdesmalen, deadalnix, ctetreau
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, danielkiss, arphaman, kristof.beyls, dexonsmith
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78190