Notable upstream commits (upstream revision in parens):
- Add a JSON producer to LLDB (228636)
- Don't crash on bad DWARF expression (228729)
- Add support of DWARFv3 DW_OP_form_tls_address (231342)
- Assembly profiler for MIPS64 (232619)
- Handle FreeBSD/arm64 core files (233273)
- Read/Write register for MIPS64 (233685)
- Rework LLDB system initialization (233758)
- SysV ABI for aarch64 (236098)
- MIPS software single stepping (236696)
- FreeBSD/arm live debugging support (237303)
- Assembly profiler for mips32 (237420)
- Parse function name from DWARF DW_AT_abstract_origin (238307)
- Improve LLDB prompt handling (238313)
- Add real time signals support to FreeBSDSignals (238316)
- Fix race in IOHandlerProcessSTDIO (238423)
- MIPS64 Branch instruction emulation for SW single stepping (238820)
- Improve OSType initialization in elf object file's arch_spec (239148)
- Emulation of MIPS64 floating-point branch instructions (239996)
- ABI Plugin for MIPS32 (239997)
- ABI Plugin for MIPS64 (240123)
- MIPS32 branch emulation and single stepping (240373)
- Improve instruction emulation based stack unwinding on ARM (240533)
- Add branch emulation to aarch64 instruction emulator (240769)
to ease any rework of how clang is built to take arm64 in to account.
Submitted by: andrew
Reviewed by: andrew, emaste
Differential Revision: https://reviews.freebsd.org/D1446
and MK_LLDB=no, so set those explicitly (now that we can do
that). Simplify tests for these variables as well, since we know they
will always be defined regardless of the phase of the build.
all the SUBDIR entries in parallel, instead of serially. Apply this
option to a selected number of Makefiles, which can greatly speed up the
build on multi-core machines, when using make -j.
This can be extended to more Makefiles later on, whenever they are
verified to work correctly with parallel building.
I tested this on a 24-core machine, with make -j48 buildworld (N = 6):
before stddev after stddev
======= ====== ======= ======
real time 1741.1 16.5 959.8 2.7
user time 12468.7 16.4 14393.0 16.8
sys time 1825.0 54.8 2110.6 22.8
(user+sys)/real 8.2 17.1
E.g. the build was approximately 45% faster in real time. On machines
with less cores, or with lower -j settings, the speedup will not be as
impressive. But at least you can now almost max out a machine with
buildworld!
Submitted by: jilles
MFC after: 2 weeks
all of the features in the current working draft of the upcoming C++
standard, provisionally named C++1y.
The code generator's performance is greatly increased, and the loop
auto-vectorizer is now enabled at -Os and -O2 in addition to -O3. The
PowerPC backend has made several major improvements to code generation
quality and compile time, and the X86, SPARC, ARM32, Aarch64 and SystemZ
backends have all seen major feature work.
Release notes for llvm and clang can be found here:
<http://llvm.org/releases/3.4/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
<http://llvm.org/releases/3.4/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
MFC after: 1 month
This connects LLDB to the build, but it is disabled by default. Add
WITH_LLDB= to src.conf to build it.
Note that LLDB requires a C++11 compiler so is disabled on platforms
using GCC.
Approved by: re (gjb)
Sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
upcoming 3.3 release (branching and freezing expected in a few weeks).
Preliminary release notes can be found at the usual location:
<http://llvm.org/docs/ReleaseNotes.html>
An MFC is planned once the actual 3.3 release is finished.
Dont use/link ARCMT, StaticAnalyzer and Rewriter to clang when the user
specifies not to. Dont build ASTMatchers with Rewriter disabled and
StaticAnalyzer when it's disabled.
Without all those three, the clang binary shrinks (x86_64) from ~36MB
to ~32MB (unstripped).
To disable these clang components, and get a smaller clang binary built
and installed, set WITHOUT_CLANG_FULL in src.conf(5). During the
initial stages of buildworld, those extra components are already
disabled automatically, to save some build time.
MFC after: 1 week
This commit merges the latest LLVM sources from the vendor space. It
also updates the build glue to match the new sources. Clang's version
number is changed to match LLVM's, which means /usr/include/clang/2.0
has been renamed to /usr/include/clang/2.8.
Obtained from: projects/clangbsd