commit | c61902e072ee8cfdfde58642a3638f402021f579 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | machenbach <machenbach@chromium.org> | Wed Nov 02 07:48:47 2016 |
committer | Commit bot <commit-bot@chromium.org> | Wed Nov 02 07:49:17 2016 |
tree | 5419029fcec93b539b3108f4e5045c1e983a11e7 | |
parent | 5ef1bddf80d176c3f882b699e65f48fba1af3da5 [diff] |
Revert of [turbofan] Support variable size argument popping in TF-generated functions (patchset #13 id:240001 of https://codereview.chromium.org/2446543002/ ) Reason for revert: Seems to break arm64 sim debug and blocks roll: https://build.chromium.org/p/client.v8.ports/builders/V8%20Linux%20-%20arm64%20-%20sim%20-%20debug/builds/3294 Original issue's description: > [turbofan] Support variable size argument removal in TF-generated functions > > This is preparation for using TF to create builtins that handle variable number of > arguments and have to remove these arguments dynamically from the stack upon > return. > > The gist of the changes: > - Added a second argument to the Return node which specifies the number of stack > slots to pop upon return in addition to those specified by the Linkage of the > compiled function. > - Removed Tail -> Non-Tail fallback in the instruction selector. Since TF now should > handles all tail-call cases except where the return value type differs, this fallback > was not really useful and in fact caused unexpected behavior with variable > sized argument popping, since it wasn't possible to materialize a Return node > with the right pop count from the TailCall without additional context. > - Modified existing Return generation to pass a constant zero as the additional > pop argument since the variable pop functionality > > LOG=N TBR=bmeurer@chromium.org,mstarzinger@chromium.org,epertoso@chromium.org,danno@chromium.org # Not skipping CQ checks because original CL landed more than 1 days ago. NOPRESUBMIT=true Review-Url: https://codereview.chromium.org/2473643002 Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#40691}
V8 is Google's open source JavaScript engine.
V8 implements ECMAScript as specified in ECMA-262.
V8 is written in C++ and is used in Google Chrome, the open source browser from Google.
V8 can run standalone, or can be embedded into any C++ application.
V8 Project page: https://github.com/v8/v8/wiki
Checkout depot tools, and run
fetch v8
This will checkout V8 into the directory v8
and fetch all of its dependencies. To stay up to date, run
git pull origin gclient sync
For fetching all branches, add the following into your remote configuration in .git/config
:
fetch = +refs/branch-heads/*:refs/remotes/branch-heads/* fetch = +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*
Please follow the instructions mentioned on the V8 wiki.