Dimitry Andric 4f00c8c645 Pull in r196939 from upstream llvm trunk (by Reid Kleckner):
Reland "Fix miscompile of MS inline assembly with stack realignment"

  This re-lands commit r196876, which was reverted in r196879.

  The tests have been fixed to pass on platforms with a stack alignment
  larger than 4.

  Update to clang side tests will land shortly.

Pull in r196986 from upstream llvm trunk (by Reid Kleckner):

  Revert the backend fatal error from r196939

  The combination of inline asm, stack realignment, and dynamic allocas
  turns out to be too common to reject out of hand.

  ASan inserts empy inline asm fragments and uses aligned allocas.
  Compiling any trivial function containing a dynamic alloca with ASan is
  enough to trigger the check.

  XFAIL the test cases that would be miscompiled and add one that uses the
  relevant functionality.

Pull in r202930 from upstream llvm trunk (by Hans Wennborg):

  Check for dynamic allocas and inline asm that clobbers sp before building
  selection dag (PR19012)

  In X86SelectionDagInfo::EmitTargetCodeForMemcpy we check with MachineFrameInfo
  to make sure that ESI isn't used as a base pointer register before we choose to
  emit rep movs (which clobbers esi).

  The problem is that MachineFrameInfo wouldn't know about dynamic allocas or
  inline asm that clobbers the stack pointer until SelectionDAGBuilder has
  encountered them.

  This patch fixes the problem by checking for such things when building the
  FunctionLoweringInfo.

  Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2954

Together, these commits fix the problem encountered in the devel/emacs
port on the i386 architecture, where a combination of stack realignment,
alloca() and memcpy() could incidentally clobber the %esi register,
leading to segfaults in the temacs build-time utility.

See also: http://llvm.org/PR18171 and http://llvm.org/PR19012

Reported by:	ashish
PR:		ports/183064
MFC after:	1 week
2014-03-18 19:23:41 +00:00
2014-03-14 02:58:48 +00:00
2014-03-14 06:29:43 +00:00
2014-03-14 02:58:48 +00:00
2014-03-14 02:58:48 +00:00
2014-03-18 17:00:32 +00:00
2013-12-31 12:18:10 +00:00
2014-03-16 20:31:05 +00:00

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