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Commit Graph

3895 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Hal Finkel
e6580e744f [PowerPC] PPCTTI Cleanup
Remove the declaration of an unimplemented function.

llvm-svn: 205657
2014-04-04 23:51:11 +00:00
Hal Finkel
e63f5074c7 [PowerPC] Add a full condition code register to make the "cc" clobber work
gcc inline asm supports specifying "cc" as a clobber of all condition
registers. Add just enough modeling of the full register to make this work.
Fixed PR19326.

llvm-svn: 205630
2014-04-04 15:15:57 +00:00
Craig Topper
694437e2ef Make consistent use of MCPhysReg instead of uint16_t throughout the tree.
llvm-svn: 205610
2014-04-04 05:16:06 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7f4525afba [PowerPC] Make PPCTTI::getMemoryOpCost call BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost
PPCTTI::getMemoryOpCost will now make use of BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost to
calculate the base cost of the memory access, and then adjust on top of that.
There is no functionality change from this modification, but it will become
important so that PPCTTI can take advantage of scalarization information for which
BasicTTI::getMemoryOpCost will account in the near future.

llvm-svn: 205476
2014-04-02 22:43:49 +00:00
Jim Grosbach
f349849199 Simplify resolveFrameIndex() signature.
Just pass a MachineInstr reference rather than an MBB iterator.
Creating a MachineInstr& is the first thing every implementation did
anyway.

llvm-svn: 205453
2014-04-02 19:28:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3d67e62e4c [PowerPC] Add some missing VSX bitcast patterns
llvm-svn: 205352
2014-04-01 19:24:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0296ed914f [PowerPC] Don't ever expand BUILD_VECTOR of v2i64 with shuffles
If we have two unique values for a v2i64 build vector, this will always result
in two vector loads if we expand using shuffles. Only one is necessary.

llvm-svn: 205231
2014-03-31 17:48:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
09ae220a41 [PowerPC] Correct P7 dispatch unit allocation for vector instructions
llvm-svn: 205222
2014-03-31 17:02:10 +00:00
Hal Finkel
d7201e5971 [PowerPC] Handle VSX v2i64 SIGN_EXTEND_INREG
sitofp from v2i32 to v2f64 ends up generating a SIGN_EXTEND_INREG v2i64 node
(and similarly for v2i16 and v2i8). Even though there are no sign-extension (or
algebraic shifts) for v2i64 types, we can handle v2i32 sign extensions by
converting two and from v2i64. The small trick necessary here is to shift the
i32 elements into the right lanes before the i32 -> f64 step. This is because
of the big Endian nature of the system, we need the i32 portion in the high
word of the i64 elements.

For v2i16 and v2i8 we can do the same, but we first use the default Altivec
shift-based expansion from v2i16 or v2i8 to v2i32 (by casting to v4i32) and
then apply the above procedure.

llvm-svn: 205146
2014-03-30 13:22:59 +00:00
Hal Finkel
92fc087786 [PowerPC] Handle v2i64 comparisons
v2i64 is a legal type under VSX, however we don't have native vector
comparisons. We can handle eq/ne by casting it to an Altivec type, but
everything else must be expanded.

llvm-svn: 205106
2014-03-29 16:04:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel
bac4772857 [PowerPC] VSX instruction latency corrections
The vector divide and sqrt instructions have high latencies, and the scalar
comparisons are like all of the others. On the P7, permutations take an extra
cycle over purely-simple vector ops.

llvm-svn: 205096
2014-03-29 13:20:31 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
0b8859a3e5 Completely rewrite ELFObjectWriter::RecordRelocation.
I started trying to fix a small issue, but this code has seen a small fix too
many.

The old code was fairly convoluted. Some of the issues it had:

* It failed to check if a symbol difference was in the some section when
  converting a relocation to pcrel.
* It failed to check if the relocation was already pcrel.
* The pcrel value computation was wrong in some cases (relocation-pc.s)
* It was missing quiet a few cases where it should not convert symbol
  relocations to section relocations, leaving the backends to patch it up.
* It would not propagate the fact that it had changed a relocation to pcrel,
  requiring a quiet nasty work around in ARM.
* It was missing comments.

llvm-svn: 205076
2014-03-29 06:26:49 +00:00
Hal Finkel
99fd50482e [PowerPC] Add subregister classes for f64 VSX values
We had stored both f64 values and v2f64, etc. values in the VSX registers. This
worked, but was suboptimal because we would always spill 16-byte values even
through we almost always had scalar 8-byte values. This resulted in an
increase in stack-size use, extra memory bandwidth, etc. To fix this, I've
added 64-bit subregisters of the Altivec registers, and combined those with the
existing scalar floating-point registers to form a class of VSX scalar
floating-point registers. The ABI code has also been enhanced to use this
register class and some other necessary improvements have been made.

llvm-svn: 205075
2014-03-29 05:29:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f15b90e07a [PowerPC] Fix VSX permutation isel
Not only did I invert the indices when I wrote the code, but I also did the
same thing when I wrote the regression test. Oops.

llvm-svn: 205046
2014-03-28 20:24:55 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c1ab8c2486 [PowerPC] v2[fi]64 need to be explicitly passed in VSX registers
v2[fi]64 values need to be explicitly passed in VSX registers. This is because
the code in TRI that finds the minimal register class given a register and a
value type will assert if given an Altivec register and a non-Altivec type.

llvm-svn: 205041
2014-03-28 19:58:11 +00:00
Hal Finkel
786d7d887a [PowerPC] Use a small cleanup pass to remove VSX self copies
As explained in r204976, because of how the allocation of VSX registers
interacts with the call-lowering code, we sometimes end up generating self VSX
copies. Specifically, things like this:
  %VSL2<def> = COPY %F2, %VSL2<imp-use,kill>
(where %F2 is really a sub-register of %VSL2, and so this copy is a nop)

This adds a small cleanup pass to remove these prior to post-RA scheduling.

llvm-svn: 204980
2014-03-27 23:12:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel
ee610c3b4d [PowerPC] Don't remove self VSX copies in PPCInstrInfo::copyPhysReg
Because of how the allocation of VSX registers interacts with the call-lowering
code, we sometimes end up generating self VSX copies. Specifically, things like
this:
  %VSL2<def> = COPY %F2, %VSL2<imp-use,kill>
(where %F2 is really a sub-register of %VSL2, and so this copy is a nop)

The problem is that ExpandPostRAPseudos always assumes that *some* instruction
has been inserted, and adds implicit defs to it. This is a problem if no copy
was inserted because it can cause subtle problems during post-RA scheduling.
These self copies will have to be removed some other way.

llvm-svn: 204976
2014-03-27 22:46:28 +00:00
Hal Finkel
f19bcef675 [PowerPC] Fix v2f64 vector extract and related patterns
First, v2f64 vector extract had not been declared legal (and so the existing
patterns were not being used). Second, the patterns for that, and for
scalar_to_vector, should really be a regclass copy, not a subregister
operation, because the VSX registers directly hold both the vector and scalar data.

llvm-svn: 204971
2014-03-27 22:22:48 +00:00
Hal Finkel
fa7f1597ca [PowerPC] Expand v2i64 shifts
These operations need to be expanded during legalization so that isel does not
crash. In theory, we might be able to custom lower some of these. That,
however, would need to be follow-up work.

llvm-svn: 204963
2014-03-27 21:26:33 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
d78485af3e Remove another unused argument.
llvm-svn: 204961
2014-03-27 20:49:35 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
4e5d391691 Remove unused argument.
llvm-svn: 204956
2014-03-27 20:41:17 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
5c8926deed Prevent alias from pointing to weak aliases.
This adds back r204781.

Original message:

Aliases are just another name for a position in a file. As such, the
regular symbol resolutions are not applied. For example, given

define void @my_func() {
  ret void
}
@my_alias = alias weak void ()* @my_func
@my_alias2 = alias void ()* @my_alias

We produce without this patch:

        .weak   my_alias
my_alias = my_func
        .globl  my_alias2
my_alias2 = my_alias

That is, in the resulting ELF file my_alias, my_func and my_alias are
just 3 names pointing to offset 0 of .text. That is *not* the
semantics of IR linking. For example, linking in a

@my_alias = alias void ()* @other_func

would require the strong my_alias to override the weak one and
my_alias2 would end up pointing to other_func.

There is no way to represent that with aliases being just another
name, so the best solution seems to be to just disallow it, converting
a miscompile into an error.

llvm-svn: 204934
2014-03-27 15:26:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel
ca154788e6 [PowerPC] Generate VSX permutations for v2[fi]64 vectors
llvm-svn: 204873
2014-03-26 22:58:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel
800564a97b [PowerPC] VSX loads and stores support unaligned access
I've not yet updated PPCTTI because I'm not sure what the actual relative cost
is compared to the aligned uses.

llvm-svn: 204848
2014-03-26 19:39:09 +00:00
Hal Finkel
ab7214ddc6 [PowerPC] Use v2f64 <-> v2i64 VSX conversion instructions
llvm-svn: 204843
2014-03-26 19:13:54 +00:00
Hal Finkel
49e186f6c1 [PowerPC] Remove some dead VSX v4f32 store patterns
These patterns are dead (because v4f32 stores are currently promoted to v4i32
and stored using Altivec instructions), and also are likely not correct
(because they'd store the vector elements in the opposite order from that
assumed by the rest of the Altivec code).

llvm-svn: 204839
2014-03-26 18:26:36 +00:00
Hal Finkel
11338e1f96 [PowerPC] Use VSX vector load/stores for v2[fi]64
These instructions have access to the complete VSX register file. In addition,
they "swap" the order of the elements so that element 0 (the scalar part) comes
first in memory and element 1 follows at a higher address.

llvm-svn: 204838
2014-03-26 18:26:30 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0bf7496bb8 [PowerPC] Add v2i64 as a legal VSX type
v2i64 needs to be a legal VSX type because it is the SetCC result type from
v2f64 comparisons. We need to expand all non-arithmetic v2i64 operations.

This fixes the lowering for v2f64 VSELECT.

llvm-svn: 204828
2014-03-26 16:12:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel
00925a52e5 [PowerPC] Lower VSELECT using xxsel when VSX is available
With VSX there is a real vector select instruction, and so we should use it.
Note that VSELECT will still scalarize for v2f64 because the corresponding
SetCC result type (v2i64) is not currently a legal type.

llvm-svn: 204801
2014-03-26 12:49:28 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
63a8ff6883 Revert "Prevent alias from pointing to weak aliases."
This reverts commit r204781.

I will follow up to with msan folks to see what is what they
were trying to do with aliases to weak aliases.

llvm-svn: 204784
2014-03-26 06:14:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel
7a700cc27d [PowerPC] Generate logical vector VSX instructions
These instructions are essentially the same as their Altivec counterparts, but
have access to the larger VSX register file.

llvm-svn: 204782
2014-03-26 04:55:40 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
c9179b8b50 Prevent alias from pointing to weak aliases.
Aliases are just another name for a position in a file. As such, the
regular symbol resolutions are not applied. For example, given

define void @my_func() {
  ret void
}
@my_alias = alias weak void ()* @my_func
@my_alias2 = alias void ()* @my_alias

We produce without this patch:

        .weak   my_alias
my_alias = my_func
        .globl  my_alias2
my_alias2 = my_alias

That is, in the resulting ELF file my_alias, my_func and my_alias are
just 3 names pointing to offset 0 of .text. That is *not* the
semantics of IR linking. For example, linking in a

@my_alias = alias void ()* @other_func

would require the strong my_alias to override the weak one and
my_alias2 would end up pointing to other_func.

There is no way to represent that with aliases being just another
name, so the best solution seems to be to just disallow it, converting
a miscompile into an error.

llvm-svn: 204781
2014-03-26 04:48:47 +00:00
Hal Finkel
066a5cfe42 [PowerPC] Select between VSX A-type and M-type FMA instructions just before RA
The VSX instruction set has two types of FMA instructions: A-type (where the
addend is taken from the output register) and M-type (where one of the product
operands is taken from the output register). This adds a small pass that runs
just after MI scheduling (and, thus, just before register allocation) that
mutates A-type instructions (that are created during isel) into M-type
instructions when:

 1. This will eliminate an otherwise-necessary copy of the addend

 2. One of the product operands is killed by the instruction

The "right" moment to make this decision is in between scheduling and register
allocation, because only there do we know whether or not one of the product
operands is killed by any particular instruction. Unfortunately, this also
makes the implementation somewhat complicated, because the MIs are not in SSA
form and we need to preserve the LiveIntervals analysis.

As a simple example, if we have:

%vreg5<def> = COPY %vreg9; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg9
%vreg5<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg5<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg16,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg17,%vreg16
  ...
  %vreg9<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg9<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg19,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg9,%vreg17,%vreg19
  ...

We can eliminate the copy by changing from the A-type to the
M-type instruction. This means:

  %vreg5<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg5<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg16,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg17,%vreg16

is replaced by:

  %vreg16<def,tied1> = XSMADDMDP %vreg16<tied0>, %vreg18, %vreg9,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg16,%vreg18,%vreg9

and we remove: %vreg5<def> = COPY %vreg9; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg9

llvm-svn: 204768
2014-03-25 23:29:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel
b10ebe6ad3 [PowerPC] Correct commutable indices for VSX FMA instructions
Although the first two operands are the ones that can be swapped, the tied
input operand is listed before them, so we need to adjust for that.

I have a test case for this, but it goes along with an upcoming commit (so it
will come soon).

llvm-svn: 204748
2014-03-25 19:26:43 +00:00
Hal Finkel
41960891a5 [PowerPC] Add a TableGen relation for A-type and M-type VSX FMA instructions
TableGen will create a lookup table for the A-type FMA instructions providing
their corresponding M-form opcodes. This will be used by upcoming commits.

llvm-svn: 204746
2014-03-25 18:55:11 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
f2e33e8135 [PowerPC] Generate little-endian object files
As a first step towards real little-endian code generation, this patch
changes the PowerPC MC layer to actually generate little-endian object
files.  This involves passing the little-endian flag through the various
layers, including down to createELFObjectWriter so we actually get basic
little-endian ELF objects, emitting instructions in little-endian order,
and handling fixups and relocations as appropriate for little-endian.

The bulk of the patch is to update most test cases in test/MC/PowerPC
to verify both big- and little-endian encodings.  (The only test cases
*not* updated are those that create actual big-endian ABI code, like
the TLS tests.)

Note that while the object files are now little-endian, the generated
code itself is not yet updated, in particular, it still does not adhere
to the ELFv2 ABI.

llvm-svn: 204634
2014-03-24 18:16:09 +00:00
Will Schmidt
8fe019f872 [PPC64LE] ELFv2 ABI updates for the .opd section
[PPC64LE] ELFv2 ABI updates for the .opd section
The PPC64 Little Endian (PPC64LE) target supports the ELFv2 ABI, and as
such, does not have a ".opd" section.  This is keyed off a _CALL_ELF=2
macro check.

The CALL_ELF check is not clearly documented at this time.  The basis
for usage in this patch is from the gcc thread here:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2013-11/msg01144.html

> Adding comment from Uli:
Looks good to me.  I think the old-style JIT doesn't really work
anyway for 64-bit, but at least with this patch LLVM will compile
and link again on a ppc64le host ...

llvm-svn: 204614
2014-03-24 16:04:15 +00:00
Hal Finkel
feee356b52 [PowerPC] Mark many instructions as commutative
I'm under the impression that we used to infer the isCommutable flag from the
instruction-associated pattern. Regardless, we don't seem to do this (at least
by default) any more. I've gone through all of our instruction definitions, and
marked as commutative all of those that should be trivial to commute (by
exchanging the first two operands). There has been special code for the RL*
instructions, and that's not changed.

Before this change, we had the following commutative instructions:

 RLDIMI
 RLDIMIo
 RLWIMI
 RLWIMI8
 RLWIMI8o
 RLWIMIo
 XSADDDP
 XSMULDP
 XVADDDP
 XVADDSP
 XVMULDP
 XVMULSP

After:

 ADD4
 ADD4o
 ADD8
 ADD8o
 ADDC
 ADDC8
 ADDC8o
 ADDCo
 ADDE
 ADDE8
 ADDE8o
 ADDEo
 AND
 AND8
 AND8o
 ANDo
 CRAND
 CREQV
 CRNAND
 CRNOR
 CROR
 CRXOR
 EQV
 EQV8
 EQV8o
 EQVo
 FADD
 FADDS
 FADDSo
 FADDo
 FMADD
 FMADDS
 FMADDSo
 FMADDo
 FMSUB
 FMSUBS
 FMSUBSo
 FMSUBo
 FMUL
 FMULS
 FMULSo
 FMULo
 FNMADD
 FNMADDS
 FNMADDSo
 FNMADDo
 FNMSUB
 FNMSUBS
 FNMSUBSo
 FNMSUBo
 MULHD
 MULHDU
 MULHDUo
 MULHDo
 MULHW
 MULHWU
 MULHWUo
 MULHWo
 MULLD
 MULLDo
 MULLW
 MULLWo
 NAND
 NAND8
 NAND8o
 NANDo
 NOR
 NOR8
 NOR8o
 NORo
 OR
 OR8
 OR8o
 ORo
 RLDIMI
 RLDIMIo
 RLWIMI
 RLWIMI8
 RLWIMI8o
 RLWIMIo
 VADDCUW
 VADDFP
 VADDSBS
 VADDSHS
 VADDSWS
 VADDUBM
 VADDUBS
 VADDUHM
 VADDUHS
 VADDUWM
 VADDUWS
 VAND
 VAVGSB
 VAVGSH
 VAVGSW
 VAVGUB
 VAVGUH
 VAVGUW
 VMADDFP
 VMAXFP
 VMAXSB
 VMAXSH
 VMAXSW
 VMAXUB
 VMAXUH
 VMAXUW
 VMHADDSHS
 VMHRADDSHS
 VMINFP
 VMINSB
 VMINSH
 VMINSW
 VMINUB
 VMINUH
 VMINUW
 VMLADDUHM
 VMULESB
 VMULESH
 VMULEUB
 VMULEUH
 VMULOSB
 VMULOSH
 VMULOUB
 VMULOUH
 VNMSUBFP
 VOR
 VXOR
 XOR
 XOR8
 XOR8o
 XORo
 XSADDDP
 XSMADDADP
 XSMAXDP
 XSMINDP
 XSMSUBADP
 XSMULDP
 XSNMADDADP
 XSNMSUBADP
 XVADDDP
 XVADDSP
 XVMADDADP
 XVMADDASP
 XVMAXDP
 XVMAXSP
 XVMINDP
 XVMINSP
 XVMSUBADP
 XVMSUBASP
 XVMULDP
 XVMULSP
 XVNMADDADP
 XVNMADDASP
 XVNMSUBADP
 XVNMSUBASP
 XXLAND
 XXLNOR
 XXLOR
 XXLXOR

This is a by-inspection change, and I'm not sure how to write a reliable test
case. I would like advice on this, however.

llvm-svn: 204609
2014-03-24 15:07:28 +00:00
Hal Finkel
829bfc7c99 [PowerPC] Don't schedule VSX copy legalization unless VSX is enabled
There is no need to schedule this extra pass if it will have nothing to do.

llvm-svn: 204594
2014-03-24 09:51:41 +00:00
Hal Finkel
d4fe687c4a [PowerPC] Update comment re: VSX copy-instruction selection
I've done some experimentation with this, and it looks like using the
lower-latency (but lower throughput) copy instruction is essentially always the
right thing to do.

My assumption is that, in order to be relatively sure that the higher-latency
copy will increase throughput, we'd want to have it unlikely to be in-flight
with its use. On the P7, the global completion table (GCT) can hold a maximum
of 120 instructions, shared among all active threads (up to 4), giving 30
instructions per thread.  So specifically, I'd require at least that many
instructions between the copy and the use before the high-latency variant is
used.

Trying this, however, over the entire test suite resulted in zero cases where
the high-latency form would be preferable. This may be a consequence of the
fact that the scheduler views copies as free, and so they tend to end up close
to their uses. For this experiment I created a function:

  unsigned chooseVSXCopy(MachineBasicBlock &MBB,
                         MachineBasicBlock::iterator I,
                         unsigned DestReg, unsigned SrcReg,
                         unsigned StartDist = 1,
                         unsigned Depth = 3) const;

with an implementation like:

  if (!Depth)
    return PPC::XXLOR;

  const unsigned MaxDist = 30;
  unsigned Dist = StartDist;
  for (auto J = I, JE = MBB.end(); J != JE && Dist <= MaxDist; ++J) {
    if (J->isTransient() && !J->isCopy())
      continue;

    if (J->isCall() || J->isReturn() || J->readsRegister(DestReg, TRI))
      return PPC::XXLOR;

    ++Dist;
  }

  // We've exceeded the required distance for the high-latency form, use it.
  if (Dist > MaxDist)
    return PPC::XVCPSGNDP;

  // If this is only an exit block, use the low-latency form.
  if (MBB.succ_empty())
    return PPC::XXLOR;

  // We've reached the end of the block, check the successor blocks (up to some
  // depth), and use the high-latency form if that is okay with all successors.
  for (auto J = MBB.succ_begin(), JE = MBB.succ_end(); J != JE; ++J) {
    if (chooseVSXCopy(**J, (*J)->begin(), DestReg, SrcReg,
                      Dist, --Depth) == PPC::XXLOR)
      return PPC::XXLOR;
  }

  // All of our successor blocks seem okay with the high-latency variant, so
  // we'll use it.
  return PPC::XVCPSGNDP;

and then changed the copy opcode selection from:
    Opc = PPC::XXLOR;
to:
    Opc = chooseVSXCopy(MBB, std::next(I), DestReg, SrcReg);

In conclusion, I'm removing the FIXME from the comment, because I believe that
there is, at least absent other examples, nothing to fix.

llvm-svn: 204591
2014-03-24 09:36:36 +00:00
Nuno Lopes
79d18a66ec remove a bunch of unused private methods
found with a smarter version of -Wunused-member-function that I'm playwing with.
Appologies in advance if I removed someone's WIP code.

 include/llvm/CodeGen/MachineSSAUpdater.h            |    1 
 include/llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h                         |    3 
 lib/CodeGen/MachineSSAUpdater.cpp                   |   10 --
 lib/CodeGen/PostRASchedulerList.cpp                 |    1 
 lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAGBuilder.cpp    |   10 --
 lib/IR/DebugInfo.cpp                                |   12 --
 lib/MC/MCAsmStreamer.cpp                            |    2 
 lib/Support/YAMLParser.cpp                          |   39 ---------
 lib/TableGen/TGParser.cpp                           |   16 ---
 lib/TableGen/TGParser.h                             |    1 
 lib/Target/AArch64/AArch64TargetTransformInfo.cpp   |    9 --
 lib/Target/ARM/ARMCodeEmitter.cpp                   |   12 --
 lib/Target/ARM/ARMFastISel.cpp                      |   84 --------------------
 lib/Target/Mips/MipsCodeEmitter.cpp                 |   11 --
 lib/Target/Mips/MipsConstantIslandPass.cpp          |   12 --
 lib/Target/NVPTX/NVPTXISelDAGToDAG.cpp              |   21 -----
 lib/Target/NVPTX/NVPTXISelDAGToDAG.h                |    2 
 lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCFastISel.cpp                  |    1 
 lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/AddressSanitizer.cpp |    2 
 lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/BoundsChecking.cpp   |    2 
 lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/MemorySanitizer.cpp  |    1 
 lib/Transforms/Scalar/LoopIdiomRecognize.cpp        |    8 -
 lib/Transforms/Scalar/SCCP.cpp                      |    1 
 utils/TableGen/CodeEmitterGen.cpp                   |    2 
 24 files changed, 2 insertions(+), 261 deletions(-)

llvm-svn: 204560
2014-03-23 17:09:26 +00:00
Hal Finkel
deec4f1f76 [PowerPC] Make use of VSX f64 <-> i64 conversion instructions
When VSX is available, these instructions should be used in preference to the
older variants that only have access to the scalar floating-point registers.

llvm-svn: 204559
2014-03-23 05:35:00 +00:00
Hal Finkel
47d76a6461 [PowerPC] Fix the VSX v2f64 return register
v2f64 values, like other 128-bit values, are returned under VSX in register
vs34 (Altivec register v2).

llvm-svn: 204543
2014-03-22 18:24:43 +00:00
Alexey Samsonov
f3333428a5 Add llvm_unreachable after fully-covered switches to appease GCC
llvm-svn: 204318
2014-03-20 07:30:40 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
9eed3f671f Look through variables when computing relocations.
Given

bar = foo + 4
	.long bar

MC would eat the 4. GNU as includes it in the relocation. The rule seems to be
that a variable that defines a symbol is used in the relocation and one that
does not define a symbol is evaluated and the result included in the relocation.

Fixing this unfortunately required some other changes:

* Since the variable is now evaluated, it would prevent the ELF writer from
  noticing the weakref marker the elf streamer uses. This patch then replaces
  that with a VariantKind in MCSymbolRefExpr.

* Using VariantKind then requires us to look past other VariantKind to see

	.weakref	bar,foo
	call	bar@PLT

  doing this also fixes

	zed = foo +2
	call zed@PLT

  so that is a good thing.

* Looking past VariantKind means that the relocation selection has to use
  the fixup instead of the target.

This is a reboot of the previous fixes for MC. I will watch the sanitizer
buildbot and wait for a build before adding back the previous fixes.

llvm-svn: 204294
2014-03-20 02:12:01 +00:00
Bill Schmidt
ec1edc24b0 Fix PR19144: Incorrect offset generated for int-to-fp conversion at -O0.
When converting a signed 32-bit integer to double-precision floating point on
hardware without a lfiwax instruction, we have to instead use a lfd followed
by fcfid.  We were erroneously offsetting the address by 4 bytes in
preparation for either a lfiwax or lfiwzx when generating the lfd.  This fixes
that silly error.

This was not caught in the test suite since the conversion tests were run with
-mcpu=pwr7, which implies availability of lfiwax.  I've added another test
case for older hardware that checks the code we expect in the absence of
lfiwax and other flavors of fcfid.  There are fewer tests in this test case
because we punt to DAG selection in more cases on older hardware.  (We must
generate complex fiddly sequences in those cases, and there is marginal
benefit in duplicating that logic in fast-isel.)

llvm-svn: 204155
2014-03-18 14:32:50 +00:00
Craig Topper
f7e1d669fe [C++11] Mark the target fast isel classes as 'final' so that the compiler can de-virtualize some of the internal calls.
llvm-svn: 204123
2014-03-18 07:27:13 +00:00
Ulrich Weigand
59b05e81f9 [ppc64] Avoid copy relocs in named rodata sections
Commit r181723 introduced code to avoid placing initialized variables
needing relocations into the .rodata section, which avoid copy relocs
that do not work as expected on ppc64 function references.

The same treatment is also needed for *named* .rodata.XXX sections.
This patch changes PPC64LinuxTargetObjectFile::SelectSectionForGlobal
to modify "Kind" *before* calling the default SelectSectionForGlobal
routine, instead of first calling the default routine and then just
checking for the (main) .rodata section afterwards.

llvm-svn: 203921
2014-03-14 12:45:22 +00:00
Owen Anderson
e541764c5f Phase 2 of the great MachineRegisterInfo cleanup. This time, we're changing
operator* on the by-operand iterators to return a MachineOperand& rather than
a MachineInstr&.  At this point they almost behave like normal iterators!

Again, this requires making some existing loops more verbose, but should pave
the way for the big range-based for-loop cleanups in the future.

llvm-svn: 203865
2014-03-13 23:12:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel
8b6358ead9 [PowerPC] Initial support for the VSX instruction set
VSX is an ISA extension supported on the POWER7 and later cores that enhances
floating-point vector and scalar capabilities. Among other things, this adds
<2 x double> support and generally helps to reduce register pressure.

The interesting part of this ISA feature is the register configuration: there
are 64 new 128-bit vector registers, the 32 of which are super-registers of the
existing 32 scalar floating-point registers, and the second 32 of which overlap
with the 32 Altivec vector registers. This makes things like vector insertion
and extraction tricky: this can be free but only if we force a restriction to
the right register subclass when needed. A new "minipass" PPCVSXCopy takes care
of this (although it could do a more-optimal job of it; see the comment about
unnecessary copies below).

Please note that, currently, VSX is not enabled by default when targeting
anything because it is not yet ready for that.  The assembler and disassembler
are fully implemented and tested. However:

 - CodeGen support causes miscompiles; test-suite runtime failures:
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/distray/distray
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/McCat/08-main/main
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/Olden/voronoi/voronoi
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/mafft/pairlocalalign
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/tramp3d-v4/tramp3d-v4
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/almabench
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/matmul_f64_4x4

 - The lowering currently falls back to using Altivec instructions far more
   than it should. Worse, there are some things that are scalarized through the
   stack that shouldn't be.

 - A lot of unnecessary copies make it past the optimizers, and this needs to
   be fixed.

 - Many more regression tests are needed.

Normally, I'd fix these things prior to committing, but there are some
students and other contributors who would like to work this, and so it makes
sense to move this development process upstream where it can be subject to the
regular code-review procedures.

llvm-svn: 203768
2014-03-13 07:58:58 +00:00
Hal Finkel
68c9b6839e [TableGen] Optionally forbid overlap between named and positional operands
There are currently two schemes for mapping instruction operands to
instruction-format variables for generating the instruction encoders and
decoders for the assembler and disassembler respectively: a) to map by name and
b) to map by position.

In the long run, we'd like to remove the position-based scheme and use only
name-based mapping. Unfortunately, the name-based scheme currently cannot deal
with complex operands (those with suboperands), and so we currently must use
the position-based scheme for those. On the other hand, the position-based
scheme cannot deal with (register) variables that are split into multiple
ranges. An upcoming commit to the PowerPC backend (adding VSX support) will
require this capability. While we could teach the position-based scheme to
handle that, since we'd like to move away from the position-based mapping
generally, it seems silly to teach it new tricks now. What makes more sense is
to allow for partial transitioning: use the name-based mapping when possible,
and only use the position-based scheme when necessary.

Now the problem is that mixing the two sensibly was not possible: the
position-based mapping would map based on position, but would not skip those
variables that were mapped by name. Instead, the two sets of assignments would
overlap. However, I cannot currently change the current behavior, because there
are some backends that rely on it [I think mistakenly, but I'll send a message
to llvmdev about that]. So I've added a new TableGen bit variable:
noNamedPositionallyEncodedOperands, that can be used to cause the
position-based mapping to skip variables mapped by name.

llvm-svn: 203767
2014-03-13 07:57:54 +00:00
Roman Divacky
023131bd23 Allow exclamation and tilde to be parsed as a part of the ppc asm operand.
llvm-svn: 203699
2014-03-12 19:25:57 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
9eaa756fe4 Try harder to evaluate expressions when printing assembly.
When printing assembly we don't have a Layout object, but we can still
try to fold some constants.

Testcase by Ulrich Weigand.

llvm-svn: 203677
2014-03-12 16:55:59 +00:00
Will Schmidt
40cf50fd75 Update the datalayout string for ppc64LE.
Update the datalayout string for ppc64LE.

llvm-svn: 203664
2014-03-12 14:59:17 +00:00
Patrik Hagglund
f6f25d32ac Replace '#include ValueTypes.h' with forward declarations.
In some cases the include is pushed "downstream" (or removed if
unused).

llvm-svn: 203644
2014-03-12 08:00:24 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
8f25783c45 [TTI] There is actually no realistic way to pop TTI implementations off
the stack of the analysis group because they are all immutable passes.
This is made clear by Craig's recent work to use override
systematically -- we weren't overriding anything for 'finalizePass'
because there is no such thing.

This is kind of a lame restriction on the API -- we can no longer push
and pop things, we just set up the stack and run. However, I'm not
invested in building some better solution on top of the existing
(terrifying) immutable pass and legacy pass manager.

llvm-svn: 203437
2014-03-10 02:45:14 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
72416905a2 Don't avoid cfi instructions on the bg/p.
The integrated assembler now works for ppc. Since this was the last use of the
bg/p predicate and Hal says that it is now dead, drop the predicate too.

llvm-svn: 203269
2014-03-07 19:04:12 +00:00
David Majnemer
b702f79917 MC: Remove superfluous section attribute flag definitions
Summary:
llvm/MC/MCSectionMachO.h and llvm/Support/MachO.h both had the same
definitions for the section flags.  Instead, grab the definitions out of
support.

No functionality change.

Reviewers: grosbach, Bigcheese, rafael

Reviewed By: rafael

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2998

llvm-svn: 203211
2014-03-07 07:36:05 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
cb9ca86245 Replace PROLOG_LABEL with a new CFI_INSTRUCTION.
The old system was fairly convoluted:
* A temporary label was created.
* A single PROLOG_LABEL was created with it.
* A few MCCFIInstructions were created with the same label.

The semantics were that the cfi instructions were mapped to the PROLOG_LABEL
via the temporary label. The output position was that of the PROLOG_LABEL.
The temporary label itself was used only for doing the mapping.

The new CFI_INSTRUCTION has a 1:1 mapping to MCCFIInstructions and points to
one by holding an index into the CFI instructions of this function.

I did consider removing MMI.getFrameInstructions completelly and having
CFI_INSTRUCTION own a MCCFIInstruction, but MCCFIInstructions have non
trivial constructors and destructors and are somewhat big, so the this setup
is probably better.

The net result is that we don't create temporary labels that are never used.

llvm-svn: 203204
2014-03-07 06:08:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c86bafb5ea The PPC global base register cannot be r0
The global base register cannot be r0 because it might end up as the first
argument to addi or addis. Fixes PR18316.

I don't have a small stable test case.

llvm-svn: 203054
2014-03-06 01:28:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0873afae39 [Layering] Move DebugInfo.h into the IR library where its implementation
already lives.

llvm-svn: 203046
2014-03-06 00:46:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c04da1f4c7 Fixup PPC Darwin i1 argument handling
Like on other targets, we need to zero_extend/truncate i1 args before copying
them to GPRs.

llvm-svn: 203045
2014-03-06 00:45:19 +00:00
Hal Finkel
0373847793 When using CR bit registers on PPC32, handle the i1 vaarg case
When copying an i1 value into a GPR for a vaarg call, we need to explicitly
zero-extend the i1 value (otherwise an invalid CRBIT -> GPR copy will be
generated).

llvm-svn: 203041
2014-03-06 00:23:33 +00:00
Hal Finkel
18344a3ff6 With PPC CR bit registers, handle int_to_fp on older cores
On cores without fpcvt support, we cannot promote int_to_fp i1 operations,
because there is nothing to promote them to. The most straightforward
implementation of this uses a select to choose between the two possible
resulting floating-point values (and that's what is done here).

llvm-svn: 203015
2014-03-05 22:14:00 +00:00
Joerg Sonnenberger
b500454592 Enable integrated assembler on OpenBSD/PPC32 by default, too.
From Brad Smith.

llvm-svn: 202967
2014-03-05 11:37:04 +00:00
Will Schmidt
701f152950 [PowerPC] support powerpc64le as syntax-checking target (pass2)
Register the Asm Printer for the ppc64le target.

This fills in a spot that was missed in an earlier change (r187179).

llvm-svn: 202861
2014-03-04 16:51:52 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
649f6270aa [Modules] Move ValueHandle into the IR library where Value itself lives.
Move the test for this class into the IR unittests as well.

This uncovers that ValueMap too is in the IR library. Ironically, the
unittest for ValueMap is useless in the Support library (honestly, so
was the ValueHandle test) and so it already lives in the IR unittests.
Mmmm, tasty layering.

llvm-svn: 202821
2014-03-04 11:17:44 +00:00
Chandler Carruth
0bf5689f06 [Modules] Move GetElementPtrTypeIterator into the IR library. As its
name might indicate, it is an iterator over the types in an instruction
in the IR.... You see where this is going.

Another step of modularizing the support library.

llvm-svn: 202815
2014-03-04 10:40:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel
64680c3ba1 Add a PPC inline asm constraint type for single CR bits
Now that the PowerPC backend can track individual CR bits as first-class
registers, we should also have a way of allocating them for inline asm
statements. Because these registers are only one bit, if an output variable is
implicitly cast to a larger integer size, we'll get an any_extend to that
larger type (this is part of the existing target-independent logic). As a
result, regardless of the size of the output type, only the first bit is
meaningful.

The constraint identifier "wc" has been chosen for this purpose. Although gcc
does not currently support allocating individual CR bits, this identifier
choice has been coordinated with the gcc PowerPC team, and will be marked as
reserved for this purpose in the gcc constraints.md file.

llvm-svn: 202657
2014-03-02 18:23:39 +00:00
Benjamin Kramer
e4eb1b495f [C++11] Replace llvm::next and llvm::prior with std::next and std::prev.
Remove the old functions.

llvm-svn: 202636
2014-03-02 12:27:27 +00:00
Craig Topper
b0056a4ca7 Switch all uses of LLVM_OVERRIDE to just use 'override' directly.
llvm-svn: 202621
2014-03-02 09:09:27 +00:00
Craig Topper
c8a0b9e381 Switch all uses of LLVM_FINAL to just use 'final', and remove the macro.
llvm-svn: 202618
2014-03-02 08:08:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel
4937443651 Remove extra truncs/exts around i32 bit operations on PPC64
This generalizes the code to eliminate extra truncs/exts around i1 bit
operations to also do the same on PPC64 for i32 bit operations. This eliminates
a fairly prevalent code wart:

int foo(int a) {
  return a == 5 ? 7 : 8;
}

On PPC64, because of the extension implied by the ABI, this would generate:

	cmplwi 0, 3, 5
	li 12, 8
	li 4, 7
	isel 3, 4, 12, 2
	rldicl 3, 3, 0, 32
	blr

where the 'rldicl 3, 3, 0, 32', the extension, is completely unnecessary. At
least for the single-BB case (which is all that the DAG combine mechanism can
handle), this unnecessary extension is no longer generated.

llvm-svn: 202600
2014-03-01 21:36:57 +00:00
Hal Finkel
1970087008 Swap PPC isel operands to allow for 0-folding
The PPC isel instruction can fold 0 into the first operand (thus eliminating
the need to materialize a zero-containing register when the 'true' result of
the isel is 0). When the isel is fed by a bit register operation that we can
invert, do so as part of the bit-register-operation peephole routine.

llvm-svn: 202469
2014-02-28 06:11:16 +00:00
Hal Finkel
3bd3f4e287 Trying to unbreak the darwin11 builder
The CR bit tracking code broke PPC/Darwin; trying to get it working again...

(the darwin11 builder, which defaults to the darwin ABI when running PPC tests,
asserted when running test/CodeGen/PowerPC/inverted-bool-compares.ll)

llvm-svn: 202459
2014-02-28 01:17:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel
94f3724df6 Try to unbreak the C++11 build
Cannot use negative numbers in case statements without running afoul of -Wc++11-narrowing.

llvm-svn: 202455
2014-02-28 00:45:27 +00:00
Hal Finkel
883c64377d Add CR-bit tracking to the PowerPC backend for i1 values
This change enables tracking i1 values in the PowerPC backend using the
condition register bits. These bits can be treated on PowerPC as separate
registers; individual bit operations (and, or, xor, etc.) are supported.
Tracking booleans in CR bits has several advantages:

 - Reduction in register pressure (because we no longer need GPRs to store
   boolean values).

 - Logical operations on booleans can be handled more efficiently; we used to
   have to move all results from comparisons into GPRs, perform promoted
   logical operations in GPRs, and then move the result back into condition
   register bits to be used by conditional branches. This can be very
   inefficient, because the throughput of these CR <-> GPR moves have high
   latency and low throughput (especially when other associated instructions
   are accounted for).

 - On the POWER7 and similar cores, we can increase total throughput by using
   the CR bits. CR bit operations have a dedicated functional unit.

Most of this is more-or-less mechanical: Adjustments were needed in the
calling-convention code, support was added for spilling/restoring individual
condition-register bits, and conditional branch instruction definitions taking
specific CR bits were added (plus patterns and code for generating bit-level
operations).

This is enabled by default when running at -O2 and higher. For -O0 and -O1,
where the ability to debug is more important, this feature is disabled by
default. Individual CR bits do not have assigned DWARF register numbers,
and storing values in CR bits makes them invisible to the debugger.

It is critical, however, that we don't move i1 values that have been promoted
to larger values (such as those passed as function arguments) into bit
registers only to quickly turn around and move the values back into GPRs (such
as happens when values are returned by functions). A pair of target-specific
DAG combines are added to remove the trunc/extends in:
  trunc(binary-ops(binary-ops(zext(x), zext(y)), ...)
and:
  zext(binary-ops(binary-ops(trunc(x), trunc(y)), ...)
In short, we only want to use CR bits where some of the i1 values come from
comparisons or are used by conditional branches or selects. To put it another
way, if we can do the entire i1 computation in GPRs, then we probably should
(on the POWER7, the GPR-operation throughput is higher, and for all cores, the
CR <-> GPR moves are expensive).

POWER7 test-suite performance results (from 10 runs in each configuration):

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/mandel-2: 35% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Prolangs-C++/city/city: 21% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-susan: 23% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/huffbench: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/Large/sphereflake: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/mandel-text: 10% speedup

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++-EH/spirit: 10% slowdown
MultiSource/Applications/lemon/lemon: 8% slowdown

llvm-svn: 202451
2014-02-28 00:27:01 +00:00
Aaron Ballman
9e5315239d Silencing an MSVC signed comparison warning.
llvm-svn: 202295
2014-02-26 20:22:20 +00:00
Hal Finkel
08c64addef Account for 128-bit integer operations in PPCCTRLoops
We need to abort the formation of counter-register-based loops where there are
128-bit integer operations that might become function calls.

llvm-svn: 202192
2014-02-25 20:51:50 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
32da4bdd4b Make DataLayout a plain object, not a pass.
Instead, have a DataLayoutPass that holds one. This will allow parts of LLVM
don't don't handle passes to also use DataLayout.

llvm-svn: 202168
2014-02-25 17:30:31 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
6c834371d9 Make some DataLayout pointers const.
No functionality change. Just reduces the noise of an upcoming patch.

llvm-svn: 202087
2014-02-24 23:12:18 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
1f7e9d4bed Rename a few more DataLayout variables.
llvm-svn: 201833
2014-02-21 01:53:35 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
60133f3afe move getNameWithPrefix and getSymbol to TargetMachine.
TargetLoweringBase is implemented in CodeGen, so before this patch we had
a dependency fom Target to CodeGen. This would show up as a link failure of
llvm-stress when building with -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON.

This fixes pr18900.

llvm-svn: 201711
2014-02-19 20:30:41 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
aea6192f20 Add back r201608, r201622, r201624 and r201625
r201608 made llvm corretly handle private globals with MachO. r201622 fixed
a bug in it and r201624 and r201625 were changes for using private linkage,
assuming that llvm would do the right thing.

They all got reverted because r201608 introduced a crash in LTO. This patch
includes a fix for that. The issue was that TargetLoweringObjectFile now has
to be initialized before we can mangle names of private globals. This is
trivially true during the normal codegen pipeline (the asm printer does it),
but LTO has to do it manually.

llvm-svn: 201700
2014-02-19 17:23:20 +00:00
Daniel Jasper
bf4e7d8ac3 Revert r201622 and r201608.
This causes the LLVMgold plugin to segfault. More information on the
replies to r201608.

llvm-svn: 201669
2014-02-19 12:26:01 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
d39a573c72 Fix PR18743.
The IR
@foo = private constant i32 42

is valid, but before this patch we would produce an invalid MachO from it. It
was invalid because it would use an L label in a section where the liker needs
the labels in order to atomize it.

One way of fixing it would be to just reject this IR in the backend, but that
would not be very front end friendly.

What this patch does is use an 'l' prefix in sections that we know the linker
requires symbols for atomizing them. This allows frontends to just use
private and not worry about which sections they go to or how the linker handles
them.

One small issue with this strategy is that now a symbol name depends on the
section, which is not available before codegen. This is not a problem in
practice. The reason is that it only happens with private linkage, which will
be ignored by the non codegen users (llvm-nm and llvm-ar).

llvm-svn: 201608
2014-02-18 22:24:57 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
c898de3245 Rename a DebugLoc variable to DbgLoc and a DataLayout to DL.
This is quiet a bit less confusing now that TargetData was renamed DataLayout.

llvm-svn: 201606
2014-02-18 22:05:46 +00:00
Daniel Sanders
7a3a160940 Re-commit: Demote EmitRawText call in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() and remove hasRawTextSupport() call
Summary:
AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() will no longer use the EmitRawText() call for
targets with mature MC support. Such targets will always parse the inline
assembly (even when emitting assembly). Targets without mature MC support
continue to use EmitRawText() for assembly output.

The hasRawTextSupport() check in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() has been replaced
with MCAsmInfo::UseIntegratedAs which when true, causes the integrated assembler
to parse inline assembly (even when emitting assembly output). UseIntegratedAs
is set to true for targets that consider any failure to parse valid assembly
to be a bug. Target specific subclasses generally enable the integrated
assembler in their constructor. The default value can be overridden with
-no-integrated-as.

All tests that rely on inline assembly supporting invalid assembly (for example,
those that use mnemonics such as 'foo' or 'hello world') have been updated to
disable the integrated assembler.

Changes since review (and last commit attempt):
- Fixed test failures that were missed due to configuration of local build.
  (fixes crash.ll and a couple others).
- Fixed tests that happened to pass because the local build was on X86
  (should fix 2007-12-17-InvokeAsm.ll)
- mature-mc-support.ll's should no longer require all targets to be compiled.
  (should fix ARM and PPC buildbots)
- Object output (-filetype=obj and similar) now forces the integrated assembler
  to be enabled regardless of default setting or -no-integrated-as.
  (should fix SystemZ buildbots)

Reviewers: rafael

Reviewed By: rafael

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2686

llvm-svn: 201333
2014-02-13 14:44:26 +00:00
Daniel Sanders
656c4d360b Revert r201237+r201238: Demote EmitRawText call in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() and remove hasRawTextSupport() call
It introduced multiple test failures in the buildbots.

llvm-svn: 201241
2014-02-12 15:39:20 +00:00
Daniel Sanders
e647d6441b Demote EmitRawText call in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() and remove hasRawTextSupport() call
Summary:
AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() will no longer use the EmitRawText() call for targets with mature MC support. Such targets will always parse the inline assembly (even when emitting assembly). Targets without mature MC support continue to use EmitRawText() for assembly output.

The hasRawTextSupport() check in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() has been replaced with MCAsmInfo::UseIntegratedAs which when true, causes the integrated assembler to parse inline assembly (even when emitting assembly output). UseIntegratedAs is set to true for targets that consider any failure to parse valid assembly to be a bug. Target specific subclasses generally enable the integrated assembler in their constructor. The default value can be overridden with -no-integrated-as.

All tests that rely on inline assembly supporting invalid assembly (for example, those that use mnemonics such as 'foo' or 'hello world') have been updated to disable the integrated assembler.

Reviewers: rafael

Reviewed By: rafael

CC: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2686

llvm-svn: 201237
2014-02-12 14:44:54 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
8d47aa1e4e Pass the Mangler by reference.
It is never null and it is not used in casts, so there is no reason to use a
pointer. This matches how we pass TM.

llvm-svn: 201025
2014-02-08 14:53:28 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
1d50d1310d Add LLVM_OVERRIDE to a few declarations.
llvm-svn: 201022
2014-02-08 06:07:27 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
c27ddf11ba Just returning false is the default.
llvm-svn: 200890
2014-02-06 00:03:15 +00:00
Matt Arsenault
7b69102edb Add address space argument to allowsUnalignedMemoryAccess.
On R600, some address spaces have more strict alignment
requirements than others.

llvm-svn: 200887
2014-02-05 23:15:53 +00:00
Rafael Espindola
98165a6a91 Remove support for not using .loc directives.
Clang itself was not using this. The only way to access it was via llc.

llvm-svn: 200862
2014-02-05 18:00:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel
c649b3ff57 Replace PPC instruction-size code with MCInstrDesc getSize
As part of the cleanup done to enable the disassembler, the PPC instructions
now have a valid Size description field. This can now be used to replace some
custom logic in a few places to compute instruction sizes.

Patch by David Wiberg!

llvm-svn: 200623
2014-02-02 06:12:27 +00:00
David Woodhouse
6c8fefd999 Delete MCSubtargetInfo data members from target MCCodeEmitter classes
The subtarget info is explicitly passed to the EncodeInstruction
method and we should use that subtarget info to influence any
encoding decisions.

llvm-svn: 200350
2014-01-28 23:13:25 +00:00
David Woodhouse
a79a37b435 Propagate MCSubtargetInfo through TableGen's getBinaryCodeForInstr()
llvm-svn: 200349
2014-01-28 23:13:18 +00:00
David Woodhouse
4a4c611e36 Explictly pass MCSubtargetInfo to MCCodeEmitter::EncodeInstruction()
llvm-svn: 200348
2014-01-28 23:13:07 +00:00
David Woodhouse
5d0b529d58 Change MCStreamer EmitInstruction interface to take subtarget info
llvm-svn: 200345
2014-01-28 23:12:42 +00:00