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llvm-mirror/lib/Target/Sparc/SparcCallingConv.td

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//===-- SparcCallingConv.td - Calling Conventions Sparc ----*- tablegen -*-===//
//
// Part of the LLVM Project, under the Apache License v2.0 with LLVM Exceptions.
// See https://llvm.org/LICENSE.txt for license information.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 WITH LLVM-exception
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This describes the calling conventions for the Sparc architectures.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// SPARC v8 32-bit.
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
def CC_Sparc32 : CallingConv<[
// Custom assign SRet to [sp+64].
CCIfSRet<CCCustom<"CC_Sparc_Assign_SRet">>,
// i32 f32 arguments get passed in integer registers if there is space.
CCIfType<[i32, f32], CCAssignToReg<[I0, I1, I2, I3, I4, I5]>>,
// f64 arguments are split and passed through registers or through stack.
[Sparc] Implement i64 load/store support for 32-bit sparc. The LDD/STD instructions can load/store a 64bit quantity from/to memory to/from a consecutive even/odd pair of (32-bit) registers. They are part of SparcV8, and also present in SparcV9. (Although deprecated there, as you can store 64bits in one register). As recommended on llvmdev in the thread "How to enable use of 64bit load/store for 32bit architecture" from Apr 2015, I've modeled the 64-bit load/store operations as working on a v2i32 type, rather than making i64 a legal type, but with few legal operations. The latter does not (currently) work, as there is much code in llvm which assumes that if i64 is legal, operations like "add" will actually work on it. The same assumption does not hold for v2i32 -- for vector types, it is workable to support only load/store, and expand everything else. This patch: - Adds a new register class, IntPair, for even/odd pairs of registers. - Modifies the list of reserved registers, the stack spilling code, and register copying code to support the IntPair register class. - Adds support in AsmParser. (note that in asm text, you write the name of the first register of the pair only. So the parser has to morph the single register into the equivalent paired register). - Adds the new instructions themselves (LDD/STD/LDDA/STDA). - Hooks up the instructions and registers as a vector type v2i32. Adds custom legalizer to transform i64 load/stores into v2i32 load/stores and bitcasts, so that the new instructions can actually be generated, and marks all operations other than load/store on v2i32 as needing to be expanded. - Copies the unfortunate SelectInlineAsm hack from ARMISelDAGToDAG. This hack undoes the transformation of i64 operands into two arbitrarily-allocated separate i32 registers in SelectionDAGBuilder. and instead passes them in a single IntPair. (Arbitrarily allocated registers are not useful, asm code expects to be receiving a pair, which can be passed to ldd/std.) Also adds a bunch of test cases covering all the bugs I've added along the way. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8713 llvm-svn: 244484
2015-08-10 21:11:39 +02:00
CCIfType<[f64], CCCustom<"CC_Sparc_Assign_Split_64">>,
// As are v2i32 arguments (this would be the default behavior for
// v2i32 if it wasn't allocated to the IntPair register-class)
CCIfType<[v2i32], CCCustom<"CC_Sparc_Assign_Split_64">>,
// Alternatively, they are assigned to the stack in 4-byte aligned units.
CCAssignToStack<4, 4>
]>;
def RetCC_Sparc32 : CallingConv<[
CCIfType<[i32], CCAssignToReg<[I0, I1, I2, I3, I4, I5]>>,
CCIfType<[f32], CCAssignToReg<[F0, F1, F2, F3]>>,
[Sparc] Implement i64 load/store support for 32-bit sparc. The LDD/STD instructions can load/store a 64bit quantity from/to memory to/from a consecutive even/odd pair of (32-bit) registers. They are part of SparcV8, and also present in SparcV9. (Although deprecated there, as you can store 64bits in one register). As recommended on llvmdev in the thread "How to enable use of 64bit load/store for 32bit architecture" from Apr 2015, I've modeled the 64-bit load/store operations as working on a v2i32 type, rather than making i64 a legal type, but with few legal operations. The latter does not (currently) work, as there is much code in llvm which assumes that if i64 is legal, operations like "add" will actually work on it. The same assumption does not hold for v2i32 -- for vector types, it is workable to support only load/store, and expand everything else. This patch: - Adds a new register class, IntPair, for even/odd pairs of registers. - Modifies the list of reserved registers, the stack spilling code, and register copying code to support the IntPair register class. - Adds support in AsmParser. (note that in asm text, you write the name of the first register of the pair only. So the parser has to morph the single register into the equivalent paired register). - Adds the new instructions themselves (LDD/STD/LDDA/STDA). - Hooks up the instructions and registers as a vector type v2i32. Adds custom legalizer to transform i64 load/stores into v2i32 load/stores and bitcasts, so that the new instructions can actually be generated, and marks all operations other than load/store on v2i32 as needing to be expanded. - Copies the unfortunate SelectInlineAsm hack from ARMISelDAGToDAG. This hack undoes the transformation of i64 operands into two arbitrarily-allocated separate i32 registers in SelectionDAGBuilder. and instead passes them in a single IntPair. (Arbitrarily allocated registers are not useful, asm code expects to be receiving a pair, which can be passed to ldd/std.) Also adds a bunch of test cases covering all the bugs I've added along the way. Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8713 llvm-svn: 244484
2015-08-10 21:11:39 +02:00
CCIfType<[f64], CCAssignToReg<[D0, D1]>>,
CCIfType<[v2i32], CCCustom<"CC_Sparc_Assign_Ret_Split_64">>
]>;
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// SPARC v9 64-bit.
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// The 64-bit ABI conceptually assigns all function arguments to a parameter
// array starting at [%fp+BIAS+128] in the callee's stack frame. All arguments
// occupy a multiple of 8 bytes in the array. Integer arguments are extended to
// 64 bits by the caller. Floats are right-aligned in their 8-byte slot, the
// first 4 bytes in the slot are undefined.
//
// The integer registers %i0 to %i5 shadow the first 48 bytes of the parameter
// array at fixed offsets. Integer arguments are promoted to registers when
// possible.
//
// The floating point registers %f0 to %f31 shadow the first 128 bytes of the
// parameter array at fixed offsets. Float and double parameters are promoted
// to these registers when possible.
//
// Structs up to 16 bytes in size are passed by value. They are right-aligned
// in one or two 8-byte slots in the parameter array. Struct members are
// promoted to both floating point and integer registers when possible. A
// struct containing two floats would thus be passed in %f0 and %f1, while two
// float function arguments would occupy 8 bytes each, and be passed in %f1 and
// %f3.
//
// When a struct { int, float } is passed by value, the int goes in the high
// bits of an integer register while the float goes in a floating point
// register.
//
// The difference is encoded in LLVM IR using the inreg attribute on function
// arguments:
//
// C: void f(float, float);
// IR: declare void f(float %f1, float %f3)
//
// C: void f(struct { float f0, f1; });
// IR: declare void f(float inreg %f0, float inreg %f1)
//
// C: void f(int, float);
// IR: declare void f(int signext %i0, float %f3)
//
// C: void f(struct { int i0high; float f1; });
// IR: declare void f(i32 inreg %i0high, float inreg %f1)
//
// Two ints in a struct are simply coerced to i64:
//
// C: void f(struct { int i0high, i0low; });
// IR: declare void f(i64 %i0.coerced)
//
// The frontend and backend divide the task of producing ABI compliant code for
// C functions. The C frontend will:
//
// - Annotate integer arguments with zeroext or signext attributes.
//
// - Split structs into one or two 64-bit sized chunks, or 32-bit chunks with
// inreg attributes.
//
// - Pass structs larger than 16 bytes indirectly with an explicit pointer
// argument. The byval attribute is not used.
//
// The backend will:
//
// - Assign all arguments to 64-bit aligned stack slots, 32-bits for inreg.
//
// - Promote to integer or floating point registers depending on type.
//
// Function return values are passed exactly like function arguments, except a
// struct up to 32 bytes in size can be returned in registers.
// Function arguments AND most return values.
def CC_Sparc64 : CallingConv<[
// The frontend uses the inreg flag to indicate i32 and float arguments from
// structs. These arguments are not promoted to 64 bits, but they can still
// be assigned to integer and float registers.
CCIfInReg<CCIfType<[i32, f32], CCCustom<"CC_Sparc64_Half">>>,
// All integers are promoted to i64 by the caller.
CCIfType<[i32], CCPromoteToType<i64>>,
// Custom assignment is required because stack space is reserved for all
// arguments whether they are passed in registers or not.
CCCustom<"CC_Sparc64_Full">
]>;
def RetCC_Sparc64 : CallingConv<[
// A single f32 return value always goes in %f0. The ABI doesn't specify what
// happens to multiple f32 return values outside a struct.
CCIfType<[f32], CCCustom<"CC_Sparc64_Half">>,
// Otherwise, return values are passed exactly like arguments.
CCDelegateTo<CC_Sparc64>
]>;
// Callee-saved registers are handled by the register window mechanism.
def CSR : CalleeSavedRegs<(add)> {
let OtherPreserved = (add (sequence "I%u", 0, 7),
(sequence "L%u", 0, 7));
}
// Callee-saved registers for calls with ReturnsTwice attribute.
def RTCSR : CalleeSavedRegs<(add)> {
let OtherPreserved = (add I6, I7);
}