Fixing a heisenbug where the memory dependence analysis behaves differently
with and without -g.
Adding a test case to make sure that the threshold used in the memory
dependence analysis is respected. The test case also checks that debug
intrinsics are not counted towards this threshold.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2141
llvm-svn: 194646
diff --git a/llvm/lib/Analysis/MemoryDependenceAnalysis.cpp b/llvm/lib/Analysis/MemoryDependenceAnalysis.cpp
index fe1c874..84ff2ee 100644
--- a/llvm/lib/Analysis/MemoryDependenceAnalysis.cpp
+++ b/llvm/lib/Analysis/MemoryDependenceAnalysis.cpp
@@ -371,18 +371,19 @@
// Walk backwards through the basic block, looking for dependencies.
while (ScanIt != BB->begin()) {
+ Instruction *Inst = --ScanIt;
+
+ if (IntrinsicInst *II = dyn_cast<IntrinsicInst>(Inst))
+ // Debug intrinsics don't (and can't) cause dependencies.
+ if (isa<DbgInfoIntrinsic>(II)) continue;
+
// Limit the amount of scanning we do so we don't end up with quadratic
// running time on extreme testcases.
--Limit;
if (!Limit)
return MemDepResult::getUnknown();
- Instruction *Inst = --ScanIt;
-
if (IntrinsicInst *II = dyn_cast<IntrinsicInst>(Inst)) {
- // Debug intrinsics don't (and can't) cause dependences.
- if (isa<DbgInfoIntrinsic>(II)) continue;
-
// If we reach a lifetime begin or end marker, then the query ends here
// because the value is undefined.
if (II->getIntrinsicID() == Intrinsic::lifetime_start) {