Only IA32 version for now. I'll start porting.
Strict mode functions are to get 'undefined' as the receiver when
called with an implicit receiver. Modes are bad! It forces us to have
checks on all function calls.
This change attempts to limit the cost by passing information about
whether or not a call is with an implicit or explicit receiver in ecx
as part of the calling convention. The cost is setting ecx on all
calls and checking ecx on entry to strict mode functions.
Implicit/explicit receiver state has to be maintained by ICs. Various
stubs have to not clobber ecx or save and restore it.
CallFunction stub needs to check if the receiver is implicit when it
doesn't know from the context.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/7039036
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@8040 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
- mutual inlining strict and non-strict functions in crankshaft.
- assignment to undefined variable with eval in scope.
- propagation of strict mode through lazy compilation.
BUG=
TEST=test/mjsunit/strict-mode.js test/mjsunit/strict-mode-opt.js
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6814012
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@7561 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
While trying to fix Mac and Windows versions for this change:
http://codereview.chromium.org/6771047/, I figured out, that we
already store an isolate in StackFrameIterator, so we can use it in
frame objects, instead of requiring it from caller.
I've changed iterators usage to the following scheme: whenever a
caller maintains an isolate pointer, it just passes it to stack
iterator, and no more worries about passing it to frame content
accessors. If a caller uses current isolate, it can omit passing it
to iterator, in this case, an iterator will use the current isolate,
too.
There was a special case with LiveEdit, which creates
detached copies of frame objects.
R=vitalyr@chromium.org
BUG=none
TEST=none
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6794019
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@7499 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Crankshaft is now the default on all platforms. This is the first
patch on the way to removing the classic code generator from the
system.
This time with no removal of the crankshaft flag. --nocrankshaft is
not at all the same as --always-full-compiler which I had used instead
for testing. That was what caused timeouts on the buildbots because of
repeated attempts to optimize hot functions. It makes sense to keep
the crankshaft flag in case you want to run only with the full
compiler and with no adaptive compilation.
R=vitalyr@chromium.org
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6759070
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@7486 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Because we might throw away code when doing code flushing we need to
set the optimizable flag to false in CompileLaze if this has been set
on the shared function info. This is the only place where this can
happen, since we always exchange the code with the laze compile stub
when doing code flushing.
The comment in AbortAndDisable actually states that this is already
the case (and that comment should now be ok).
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6685044
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@7378 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Change the way we construct the graph for polymorphic loads to match that of
polymorphic stores.
Introduce a stack-allocated helper for saving and restoring all the
function-specific graph builder state that needs to change when we begin
translating an inlined function. Make this class authoritative by moving
redundant state out of the builder and deferring to the current function's
state.
Ensure that we always print a tracing message when abandoning an inlining
attempt.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6628012
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@7074 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
The main issue was due to multiple recompilations of functions. Now
code objects are grouped by function using SFI object address.
JSFunction objects are no longer tracked, instead we track SFI object
moves. To pick a correct code version, we now sample return addresses
instead of JSFunction addresses.
tools/{linux|mac|windows}-tickprocessor scripts differentiate
between code optimization states for the same function
(using * and ~ prefixes introduced earlier).
DevTools CPU profiler treats all variants of function code as
a single function.
ll_prof treats each optimized variant as a separate entry, because
it can disassemble each one of them.
tickprocessor.py not updated -- it is deprecated and will be removed.
BUG=v8/1087,b/3178160
TEST=all existing tests pass, including Chromium layout tests
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/6551011
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@6902 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
Change more functions used by the Compiler class to have a uniform
interface: they get passed as argument an input/output pointer to a
CompilationInfo that they mutate if they succeed, and they return a
flag telling whether they succeeded.
Also, remove some unnecessary timers.
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/3561012
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@5583 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00
The plan is to use the CompilationInfo class to communicate inputs and
outputs to compilation pipeline phases, which each return a boolean
success/failure flag.
The intent is to make it easier to compose small pieces of the
pipeline without having to grow a custom function each time, each
taking a half dozen arguments.
This change modifies the very front end (the parser).
Review URL: http://codereview.chromium.org/3586006
git-svn-id: http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/branches/bleeding_edge@5581 ce2b1a6d-e550-0410-aec6-3dcde31c8c00