- Apr 17, 2013
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Peter Collingbourne authored
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D598 llvm-svn: 179725
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- Apr 05, 2013
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Hal Finkel authored
BCL is normally a conditional branch-and-link instruction, but has an unconditional form (which is used in the SjLj code, for example). To make clear that this BCL instruction definition is specifically the special unconditional form (which does not meaningfully take a condition-register input), rename it to BCLalways. No functionality change intended. llvm-svn: 178803
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- Mar 26, 2013
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Ulrich Weigand authored
The LDrs pattern is a duplicate of LD, except that it accepts memory addresses where the displacement is a symbolLo64. An operand type "memrs" is defined for just that purpose. However, this wouldn't be necessary if the default "memrix" operand type were to simply accept 64-bit symbolic addresses directly. The only problem with that is that it uses "symbolLo", which is hardcoded to 32-bit. To fix this, this commit changes "memri" and "memrix" to use new operand types for the memory displacement, which allow iPTR instead of i32. This will also make address parsing easier to implment in the asm parser. No change in generated code. llvm-svn: 178005
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Ulrich Weigand authored
The ADDI/ADDI8 patterns are currently duplicated into ADDIL/ADDI8L, which describe the same instruction, except that they accept a symbolLo[64] operand instead of a s16imm[64] operand. This duplication confuses the asm parser, and it actually not really needed, since symbolLo[64] already accepts immediate operands anyway. So this commit removes the duplicate patterns. No change in generated code. llvm-svn: 178004
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- Mar 23, 2013
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Hal Finkel authored
I recently added a BCL instruction definition as part of implementing SjLj support. This can also be used to MCize bcl emission in the asm printer. No functionality change intended. llvm-svn: 177830
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- Mar 22, 2013
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Ulrich Weigand authored
We currently have a duplicated set of call instruction patterns depending on the ABI to be followed (Darwin vs. Linux). This is a bit odd; while the different ABIs will result in different instruction sequences, the actual instructions themselves ought to be independent of the ABI. And in fact it turns out that the only nontrivial difference between the two sets of patterns is that in the PPC64 Linux ABI, the instruction used for indirect calls is marked to take X11 as extra input register (which is indeed used only with that ABI to hold an incoming environment pointer for nested functions). However, this does not need to be hard-coded at the .td pattern level; instead, the C++ code expanding calls can simply add that use, just like it adds uses for argument registers anyway. No change in generated code expected. llvm-svn: 177735
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- Feb 21, 2013
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Bill Schmidt authored
Large code model is identical to medium code model except that the addis/addi sequence for "local" accesses is never used. All accesses use the addis/ld sequence. The coding changes are straightforward; most of the patch is taken up with creating variants of the medium model tests for large model. llvm-svn: 175767
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- Feb 04, 2013
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NAKAMURA Takumi authored
llvm-svn: 174298
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NAKAMURA Takumi authored
llvm-svn: 174297
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- Jan 09, 2013
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Adhemerval Zanella authored
This patch adjust the r171506 to make all DWARF enconding pc-relative for PPC64. It also adds the R_PPC64_REL32 relocation handling in MCJIT (since the eh_frame will not generate PIC-relative relocation) and also adds the emission of stubs created by the TTypeEncoding. llvm-svn: 171979
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Eric Christopher authored
them. llvm-svn: 171933
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- Jan 07, 2013
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Bill Schmidt authored
code generation. Variables addressed through a GlobalAlias were not being handled, and variables with available_externally linkage were treated incorrectly. The patch contains two new tests to verify the correct code generation for these cases. llvm-svn: 171778
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- Jan 02, 2013
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Chandler Carruth authored
into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point of file layout clutter in LLVM. There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each layer easier. The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today. I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my tests think, but I may have missed something). I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily. llvm-svn: 171366
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- Dec 14, 2012
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Bill Schmidt authored
for a wider range of GOT entries that can hold thread-relative offsets. This matches the behavior of GCC, which was not documented in the PPC64 TLS ABI. The ABI will be updated with the new code sequence. Former sequence: ld 9,x@got@tprel(2) add 9,9,x@tls New sequence: addis 9,2,x@got@tprel@ha ld 9,x@got@tprel@l(9) add 9,9,x@tls Note that a linker optimization exists to transform the new sequence into the shorter sequence when appropriate, by replacing the addis with a nop and modifying the base register and relocation type of the ld. llvm-svn: 170209
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- Dec 12, 2012
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Bill Schmidt authored
PowerPC target. This is the last of the four models, so we now have full TLS support. This is mostly a straightforward extension of the general dynamic model. I had to use an additional Chain operand to tie ADDIS_DTPREL_HA to the register copy following ADDI_TLSLD_L; otherwise everything above the ADDIS_DTPREL_HA appeared dead and was removed. As before, there are new test cases to test the assembly generation, and the relocations output during integrated assembly. The expected code gen sequence can be read in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/tls-ld.ll. There are a couple of things I think can be done more efficiently in the overall TLS code, so there will likely be a clean-up patch forthcoming; but for now I want to be sure the functionality is in place. Bill llvm-svn: 170003
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- Dec 11, 2012
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Bill Schmidt authored
Given a thread-local symbol x with global-dynamic access, the generated code to obtain x's address is: Instruction Relocation Symbol addis ra,r2,x@got@tlsgd@ha R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_HA x addi r3,ra,x@got@tlsgd@l R_PPC64_GOT_TLSGD16_L x bl __tls_get_addr(x@tlsgd) R_PPC64_TLSGD x R_PPC64_REL24 __tls_get_addr nop <use address in r3> The implementation borrows from the medium code model work for introducing special forms of ADDIS and ADDI into the DAG representation. This is made slightly more complicated by having to introduce a call to the external function __tls_get_addr. Using the full call machinery is overkill and, more importantly, makes it difficult to add a special relocation. So I've introduced another opcode GET_TLS_ADDR to represent the function call, and surrounded it with register copies to set up the parameter and return value. Most of the code is pretty straightforward. I ran into one peculiarity when I introduced a new PPC opcode BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD, which is just like BL8_NOP_ELF except that it takes another parameter to represent the symbol ("x" above) that requires a relocation on the call. Something in the TblGen machinery causes BL8_NOP_ELF and BL8_NOP_ELF_TLSGD to be treated identically during the emit phase, so this second operand was never visited to generate relocations. This is the reason for the slightly messy workaround in PPCMCCodeEmitter.cpp:getDirectBrEncoding(). Two new tests are included to demonstrate correct external assembly and correct generation of relocations using the integrated assembler. Comments welcome! Thanks, Bill llvm-svn: 169910
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- Dec 04, 2012
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Bill Schmidt authored
on 64-bit PowerPC ELF. The patch includes code to handle external assembly and MC output with the integrated assembler. It intentionally does not support the "old" JIT. For the initial-exec TLS model, the ABI requires the following to calculate the address of external thread-local variable x: Code sequence Relocation Symbol ld 9,x@got@tprel(2) R_PPC64_GOT_TPREL16_DS x add 9,9,x@tls R_PPC64_TLS x The register 9 is arbitrary here. The linker will replace x@got@tprel with the offset relative to the thread pointer to the generated GOT entry for symbol x. It will replace x@tls with the thread-pointer register (13). The two test cases verify correct assembly output and relocation output as just described. PowerPC-specific selection node variants are added for the two instructions above: LD_GOT_TPREL and ADD_TLS. These are inserted when an initial-exec global variable is encountered by PPCTargetLowering::LowerGlobalTLSAddress(), and later lowered to machine instructions LDgotTPREL and ADD8TLS. LDgotTPREL is a pseudo that uses the same LDrs support added for medium code model's LDtocL, with a different relocation type. The rest of the processing is straightforward. llvm-svn: 169281
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- Dec 03, 2012
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Chandler Carruth authored
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes. I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything (I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the API being implemented. Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main module rule does in fact have its merits. =] llvm-svn: 169131
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- Nov 27, 2012
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Bill Schmidt authored
The default for 64-bit PowerPC is small code model, in which TOC entries must be addressable using a 16-bit offset from the TOC pointer. Additionally, only TOC entries are addressed via the TOC pointer. With medium code model, TOC entries and data sections can all be addressed via the TOC pointer using a 32-bit offset. Cooperation with the linker allows 16-bit offsets to be used when these are sufficient, reducing the number of extra instructions that need to be executed. Medium code model also does not generate explicit TOC entries in ".section toc" for variables that are wholly internal to the compilation unit. Consider a load of an external 4-byte integer. With small code model, the compiler generates: ld 3, .LC1@toc(2) lwz 4, 0(3) .section .toc,"aw",@progbits .LC1: .tc ei[TC],ei With medium model, it instead generates: addis 3, 2, .LC1@toc@ha ld 3, .LC1@toc@l(3) lwz 4, 0(3) .section .toc,"aw",@progbits .LC1: .tc ei[TC],ei Here .LC1@toc@ha is a relocation requesting the upper 16 bits of the 32-bit offset of ei's TOC entry from the TOC base pointer. Similarly, .LC1@toc@l is a relocation requesting the lower 16 bits. Note that if the linker determines that ei's TOC entry is within a 16-bit offset of the TOC base pointer, it will replace the "addis" with a "nop", and replace the "ld" with the identical "ld" instruction from the small code model example. Consider next a load of a function-scope static integer. For small code model, the compiler generates: ld 3, .LC1@toc(2) lwz 4, 0(3) .section .toc,"aw",@progbits .LC1: .tc test_fn_static.si[TC],test_fn_static.si .type test_fn_static.si,@object .local test_fn_static.si .comm test_fn_static.si,4,4 For medium code model, the compiler generates: addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha addi 3, 3, test_fn_static.si@toc@l lwz 4, 0(3) .type test_fn_static.si,@object .local test_fn_static.si .comm test_fn_static.si,4,4 Again, the linker may replace the "addis" with a "nop", calculating only a 16-bit offset when this is sufficient. Note that it would be more efficient for the compiler to generate: addis 3, 2, test_fn_static.si@toc@ha lwz 4, test_fn_static.si@toc@l(3) The current patch does not perform this optimization yet. This will be addressed as a peephole optimization in a later patch. For the moment, the default code model for 64-bit PowerPC will remain the small code model. We plan to eventually change the default to medium code model, which matches current upstream GCC behavior. Note that the different code models are ABI-compatible, so code compiled with different models will be linked and execute correctly. I've tested the regression suite and the application/benchmark test suite in two ways: Once with the patch as submitted here, and once with additional logic to force medium code model as the default. The tests all compile cleanly, with one exception. The mandel-2 application test fails due to an unrelated ABI compatibility with passing complex numbers. It just so happens that small code model was incredibly lucky, in that temporary values in floating-point registers held the expected values needed by the external library routine that was called incorrectly. My current thought is to correct the ABI problems with _Complex before making medium code model the default, to avoid introducing this "regression." Here are a few comments on how the patch works, since the selection code can be difficult to follow: The existing logic for small code model defines three pseudo-instructions: LDtoc for most uses, LDtocJTI for jump table addresses, and LDtocCPT for constant pool addresses. These are expanded by SelectCodeCommon(). The pseudo-instruction approach doesn't work for medium code model, because we need to generate two instructions when we match the same pattern. Instead, new logic in PPCDAGToDAGISel::Select() intercepts the TOC_ENTRY node for medium code model, and generates an ADDIStocHA followed by either a LDtocL or an ADDItocL. These new node types correspond naturally to the sequences described above. The addis/ld sequence is generated for the following cases: * Jump table addresses * Function addresses * External global variables * Tentative definitions of global variables (common linkage) The addis/addi sequence is generated for the following cases: * Constant pool entries * File-scope static global variables * Function-scope static variables Expanding to the two-instruction sequences at select time exposes the instructions to subsequent optimization, particularly scheduling. The rest of the processing occurs at assembly time, in PPCAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction. Each of the instructions is converted to a "real" PowerPC instruction. When a TOC entry needs to be created, this is done here in the same manner as for the existing LDtoc, LDtocJTI, and LDtocCPT pseudo-instructions (I factored out a new routine to handle this). I had originally thought that if a TOC entry was needed for LDtocL or ADDItocL, it would already have been generated for the previous ADDIStocHA. However, at higher optimization levels, the ADDIStocHA may appear in a different block, which may be assembled textually following the block containing the LDtocL or ADDItocL. So it is necessary to include the possibility of creating a new TOC entry for those two instructions. Note that for LDtocL, we generate a new form of LD called LDrs. This allows specifying the @toc@l relocation for the offset field of the LD instruction (i.e., the offset is replaced by a SymbolLo relocation). When the peephole optimization described above is added, we will need to do similar things for all immediate-form load and store operations. The seven "mcm-n.ll" test cases are kept separate because otherwise the intermingling of various TOC entries and so forth makes the tests fragile and hard to understand. The above assumes use of an external assembler. For use of the integrated assembler, new relocations are added and used by PPCELFObjectWriter. Testing is done with "mcm-obj.ll", which tests for proper generation of the various relocations for the same sequences tested with the external assembler. llvm-svn: 168708
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- Nov 26, 2012
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Benjamin Kramer authored
llvm-svn: 168597
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Benjamin Kramer authored
Simplify some repetitive code with it. No functionality change. llvm-svn: 168587
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- Nov 24, 2012
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Benjamin Kramer authored
The last remaining bit is "bcl 20, 31, AnonSymbol", which I couldn't find the instruction definition for. Only whitespace changes in assembly output. llvm-svn: 168541
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Benjamin Kramer authored
No functionality change. llvm-svn: 168539
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- Nov 12, 2012
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Ulrich Weigand authored
llvm-svn: 167737
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- Nov 05, 2012
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Hal Finkel authored
The Z constraint specifies an r+r memory address, and the y modifier expands to the "r, r" in the asm string. For this initial implementation, the base register is forced to r0 (which has the special meaning of 0 for r+r addressing on PowerPC) and the full address is taken in the second register. In the future, this should be improved. llvm-svn: 167388
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- Nov 01, 2012
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Chandler Carruth authored
r165941: Resubmit the changes to llvm core to update the functions to support different pointer sizes on a per address space basis. Despite this commit log, this change primarily changed stuff outside of VMCore, and those changes do not carry any tests for correctness (or even plausibility), and we have consistently found questionable or flat out incorrect cases in these changes. Most of them are probably correct, but we need to devise a system that makes it more clear when we have handled the address space concerns correctly, and ideally each pass that gets updated would receive an accompanying test case that exercises that pass specificaly w.r.t. alternate address spaces. However, from this commit, I have retained the new C API entry points. Those were an orthogonal change that probably should have been split apart, but they seem entirely good. In several places the changes were very obvious cleanups with no actual multiple address space code added; these I have not reverted when I spotted them. In a few other places there were merge conflicts due to a cleaner solution being implemented later, often not using address spaces at all. In those cases, I've preserved the new code which isn't address space dependent. This is part of my ongoing effort to clean out the partial address space code which carries high risk and low test coverage, and not likely to be finished before the 3.2 release looms closer. Duncan and I would both like to see the above issues addressed before we return to these changes. llvm-svn: 167222
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- Oct 25, 2012
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Adhemerval Zanella authored
This patch adds initial PPC64 TOC MC object creation using the small mcmodel (a single 64K TOC) adding the some TOC relocations (R_PPC64_TOC, R_PPC64_TOC16, and R_PPC64_TOC16DS). The addition of 'undefinedExplicitRelSym' hook on 'MCELFObjectTargetWriter' is meant to avoid the creation of an unreferenced ".TOC." symbol (used in the .odp creation) as well to set the R_PPC64_TOC relocation target as the temporary ".TOC." symbol. On PPC64 ABI, the R_PPC64_TOC relocation should not point to any symbol. llvm-svn: 166677
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- Oct 15, 2012
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Micah Villmow authored
Resubmit the changes to llvm core to update the functions to support different pointer sizes on a per address space basis. llvm-svn: 165941
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Adhemerval Zanella authored
This patch replaces the EmitRawText by a EmitTCEntry class (specialized for each Streamer) in PowerPC64 TOC entry creation. llvm-svn: 165940
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- Oct 11, 2012
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Micah Villmow authored
llvm-svn: 165747
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Micah Villmow authored
Add in the first iteration of support for llvm/clang/lldb to allow variable per address space pointer sizes to be optimized correctly. llvm-svn: 165726
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- Oct 08, 2012
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Micah Villmow authored
llvm-svn: 165402
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- Sep 18, 2012
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Roman Divacky authored
Patch by Adhemerval Zanella. llvm-svn: 164141
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Roman Divacky authored
llvm-svn: 164139
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- Sep 03, 2012
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Roman Divacky authored
llvm-svn: 163117
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- Aug 29, 2012
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Hal Finkel authored
We need to reserve space for the mandatory traceback fields, though leaving them as zero is appropriate for now. Although the ABI calls for these fields to be filled in fully, no compiler on Linux currently does this, and GDB does not read these fields. GDB uses the first word of zeroes during exception handling to find the end of the function and the size field, allowing it to compute the beginning of the function. DWARF information is used for everything else. We need the extra 8 bytes of pad so the size field is found in the right place. As a comparison, GCC fills in a few of the fields -- language, number of saved registers -- but ignores the rest. IBM's proprietary OSes do make use of the full traceback table facility. Patch by Bill Schmidt. llvm-svn: 162854
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- Aug 28, 2012
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Roman Divacky authored
traceback table on PowerPC64. This helps gdb handle exceptions. The other mandatory fields are ignored by gdb and harder to implement so just add there a FIXME. Patch by Bill Schmidt. PR13641. llvm-svn: 162778
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Hal Finkel authored
Add subtargets for Freescale e500mc (32-bit) and e5500 (64-bit) to the PowerPC backend. Patch by Tobias von Koch. llvm-svn: 162764
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- Aug 24, 2012
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Roman Divacky authored
In collaboration with Adhemerval Zanella. llvm-svn: 162562
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- Jun 28, 2012
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Bill Wendling authored
include/llvm/Analysis/DebugInfo.h to include/llvm/DebugInfo.h. The reasoning is because the DebugInfo module is simply an interface to the debug info MDNodes and has nothing to do with analysis. llvm-svn: 159312
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