There have been a few times where I've wanted this but ended up leaving the
operand type unconstrained. It is easy to add this now and should help
catch errors in the future.
llvm-svn: 78849
pair instead of from a virtual method on TargetMachine. This cuts the final
ties of TargetAsmInfo to TargetMachine, meaning that MC can now use
TargetAsmInfo.
llvm-svn: 78802
the darwin version string. This should help consolidate
the variety of weird functions we have scattered around the
codebase that do stuff like this.
llvm-svn: 78792
- Used to mark fake instructions which don't correspond to an actual machine
instruction (or are duplicates of a real instruction). This is to be used for
"special cases" in the .td files, which should be ignored by things like the
assembler and disassembler. We still need a good solution to handle pervasive
duplication, like with the Int_ instructions.
- Set the bit on fake "mov 0" style instructions, which allows turning an
assembler matcher warning into a hard error.
- -2 FIXMEs.
llvm-svn: 78731
version. This allows TAI implementations to specify the directive to use
based on the mode being codegen'd for.
The real fix for this is to remove JumpTableDirective, but I don't feel
like diving into the jumptable snarl just now.
llvm-svn: 78709
The register scavenger maintains a DistanceMap that maps MI pointers to their
distance from the top of the current MBB. The DistanceMap is built
incrementally in forward() and in bulk in findFirstUse(). It is used by
scavengeRegister() to determine which candidate register has the longest
unused interval.
Unfortunately the DistanceMap contents can become outdated. The first time
scavengeRegister() is called, the DistanceMap is filled to cover the MBB. If
then instructions are inserted in the MBB (as they always are following
scavengeRegister()), the recorded distances are too short. This causes bad
behaviour in the included test case where a register use /after/ the current
position is ignored because findFirstUse() thinks is is /before/ the current
position. A "using an undefined register" assertion follows promptly.
The fix is to build a fresh DistanceMap at the top of scavengeRegister(), and
discard it after use. This means that DistanceMap is no longer needed as a
RegScavenger member variable, and forward() doesn't need to update it.
The fix then discloses issue number two in the same test case: The candidate
search in scavengeRegister() finds a CSR that has been saved in the prologue,
but is currently unused. It would be both inefficient and wrong to spill such
a register in the emergency spill slot. In the present case, the emergency
slot restore is placed immediately before the normal epilogue restore, leading
to a "Redefining a live register" assertion.
Fix number two: When scavengerRegister() stumbles upon an unused register that
is overwritten later in the MBB, return that register early. It is important
to verify that the register is defined later in the MBB, otherwise it might be
an unspilled CSR.
llvm-svn: 78650
the overloaded vector types allowed floating-point or integer vector elements.
Most of these operations actually depend on the element type, so bitcasting
was not an option.
If you include the vpadd intrinsics that I updated earlier, this gets rid
of 20 intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 78646
and short. Well, it's kinda short. Definitely nasty and brutish.
The front-end generates the register/unregister calls into the SjLj runtime,
call-site indices and landing pad dispatch. The back end fills in the LSDA
with the call-site information provided by the front end. Catch blocks are
not yet implemented.
Built on Darwin and verified no llvm-core "make check" regressions.
llvm-svn: 78625
This definitely slows down asm output so put it under an -asm-exuberant
flag.
This information is useful when doing static analysis of performance
issues.
llvm-svn: 78567
instead of syntactically as a string. This means that it keeps track of the
segment, section, flags, etc directly and asmprints them in the right format.
This also includes parsing and validation support for llvm-mc and
"attribute(section)", so we should now start getting errors about invalid
section attributes from the compiler instead of the assembler on darwin.
Still todo:
1) Uniquing of darwin mcsections
2) Move all the Darwin stuff out to MCSectionMachO.[cpp|h]
3) there are a few FIXMEs, for example what is the syntax to get the
S_GB_ZEROFILL segment type?
llvm-svn: 78547
2. Move section switch printing to MCSection virtual method which takes a
TAI. This eliminates textual formatting stuff from TLOF.
3. Eliminate SwitchToSectionDirective, getSectionFlagsAsString, and
TLOFELF::AtIsCommentChar.
llvm-svn: 78510
A TAI hook is appropriate in this case because this is just an
asm syntax issue, not a semantic difference. TLOF should model
the semantics of the section.
llvm-svn: 78498
- Part of optimal static profiling patch sequence by Andreas Neustifter.
- Store edge, block, and function information separately for each functions
(instead of in one giant map).
- Return frequencies as double instead of int, and use a sentinel value for
missing information.
llvm-svn: 78477
Handle large integers, x86_fp80, ConstantAggregateZero, and two more ConstantExpr:
GetElementPtr and IntToPtr
Set SHF_MERGE bit for mergeable strings
Avoid zero initialized strings to be classified as a bss symbol
Don't allow common symbols to be classified as STB_WEAK
Add a constant to be used as a global value offset in data relocations
llvm-svn: 78476
Now there is no special treatment of instructions that redefine part of a
super-register. Instead, the super-register is marked with <imp-use,kill> and
<imp-def>. For instance, from LowerSubregs on ARM:
subreg: CONVERTING: %Q1<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %Q1<undef>, %D1<kill>, 5
subreg: %D2<def> = FCPYD %D1<kill>, 14, %reg0, %Q1<imp-def>
subreg: CONVERTING: %Q1<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %Q1, %D0<kill>, 6
subreg: %D3<def> = FCPYD %D0<kill>, 14, %reg0, %Q1<imp-use,kill>, %Q1<imp-def>
llvm-svn: 78466
Verify that early clobber registers and their aliases are not used.
All changes to RegsAvailable are now done as a transaction so the order of
operands makes no difference.
The included test case is from PR4686. It has behaviour that was dependent on the order of operands.
llvm-svn: 78465
as vector shuffles did not work out well. Shuffles that produce double-wide
vectors accurately represent the operation but make it hard to do anything
with the results. I considered splitting them up into 2 shuffles, one to
write each register separately, but there doesn't seem to be a good way to
reunite them for codegen.
llvm-svn: 78437
driven by TAI to being static, driven by tblgen. This means that a
target doesn't get impacted by this stuff at all if it doesn't opt
into it.
llvm-svn: 78427
The use case is if you have a wrapper class:
class Base {
void *Ptr;
public:
Base() : Ptr(0) { }
operator bool() const { return Ptr; }
.....
}
and sub-wrappers that have exactly the same size:
class Sub : public Base {
public:
....
static bool classof(const Base*);
}
and in the code you would do:
void f(Base b) {
Sub sub = dyn_cast<Sub>(b);
if (sub) {
....
}
}
llvm-svn: 78424
http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=rev&revision=78127, I'm changing the
ExecutionEngine's global mappings to hold AssertingVH<const GlobalValue>. That
way, if unregistering a mapping fails to actually unregister it, we'll get an
assert. Running the jit nightly tests didn't uncover any actual instances of
the problem.
This also uncovered the fact that AssertingVH<const X> didn't work, so I fixed
that too.
llvm-svn: 78400
LoopDependenceAnalysis::getLoops is currently O(N*M) for a loop-nest of
depth N and a compound SCEV of M atomic SCEVs. As both N and M will
typically be very small, this should not be a problem. If it turns out
to be one, rewriting getLoops as SCEVVisitor will reduce complexity to
O(M).
llvm-svn: 78394