| ; RUN: llvm-as <%s -bitcode-mdindex-threshold=0 | llvm-bcanalyzer -dump | FileCheck %s |
| ; Check that distinct nodes break uniquing cycles, so that uniqued subgraphs |
| ; are always in post-order. |
| ; |
| ; It may not be immediately obvious why this is an interesting graph. There |
| ; are three nodes in a cycle, and one of them (!1) is distinct. Because the |
| ; entry point is !2, a naive post-order traversal would give !3, !1, !2; but |
| ; this means when !3 is parsed the reader will need a forward reference for !2. |
| ; Forward references for uniqued node operands are expensive, whereas they're |
| ; cheap for distinct node operands. If the distinct node is emitted first, the |
| ; uniqued nodes don't need any forward references at all. |
| |
| ; Nodes in this testcase are numbered to match how they are referenced in |
| ; bitcode. !3 is referenced as opN=3. |
| |
| ; CHECK: <DISTINCT_NODE op0=3/> |
| !1 = distinct !{!3} |
| |
| ; CHECK-NEXT: <NODE op0=1/> |
| !2 = !{!1} |
| |
| ; CHECK-NEXT: <NODE op0=2/> |
| !3 = !{!2} |
| |
| ; Before the named records we emit the index containing the position of the |
| ; previously emitted records |
| ; CHECK-NEXT: <INDEX {{.*}} (offset match) |
| |
| ; Note: named metadata nodes are not cannot reference null so their operands |
| ; are numbered off-by-one. |
| ; CHECK-NEXT: <NAME |
| ; CHECK-NEXT: <NAMED_NODE op0=1/> |
| !named = !{!2} |