CopyToReg/CopyFromReg/INLINEASM. These are annoying because
they have the same opcode before an after isel. Fix this by
setting their NodeID to -1 to indicate that they are selected,
just like what automatically happens when selecting things that
end up being machine nodes.
With that done, give IsLegalToFold a new flag that causes it to
ignore chains. This lets the HandleMergeInputChains routine be
the one place that validates chains after a match is successful,
enabling the new hotness in chain processing. This smarter
chain processing eliminates the need for "PreprocessRMW" in the
X86 and MSP430 backends and enables MSP to start matching it's
multiple mem operand instructions more aggressively.
I currently #if out the dead code in the X86 backend and MSP
backend, I'll remove it for real in a follow-on patch.
The testcase changes are:
test/CodeGen/X86/sse3.ll: we generate better code
test/CodeGen/X86/store_op_load_fold2.ll: PreprocessRMW was
miscompiling this before, we now generate correct code
Convert it to filecheck while I'm at it.
test/CodeGen/MSP430/Inst16mm.ll: Add a testcase for mem/mem
folding to make anton happy. :)
llvm-svn: 97596
to adding them in a determinstic order (bottom up from
the root) based on the structure of the graph itself.
This updates tests for some random changes, interesting
bits: CodeGen/Blackfin/promote-logic.ll no longer crashes.
I have no idea why, but that's good right?
CodeGen/X86/2009-07-16-LoadFoldingBug.ll also fails, but
now compiles to have one fewer constant pool entry, making
the expected load that was being folded disappear. Since it
is an unreduced mass of gnast, I just removed it.
This fixes PR6370
llvm-svn: 97023
the problem only shows for msp430 and pic16 which is why it specifies
them using -march. But it is wrong to put such tests in CodeGen/Generic,
since not everyone builds these targets. Put a copy of the test in each
of the target test directories.
llvm-svn: 90005
integer and floating-point opcodes, introducing
FAdd, FSub, and FMul.
For now, the AsmParser, BitcodeReader, and IRBuilder all preserve
backwards compatability, and the Core LLVM APIs preserve backwards
compatibility for IR producers. Most front-ends won't need to change
immediately.
This implements the first step of the plan outlined here:
http://nondot.org/sabre/LLVMNotes/IntegerOverflow.txt
llvm-svn: 72897
build an integer and cast that to a float. This fixes a crash
caused by trying to split an f32 into two f16's.
This changes the behavior in test/CodeGen/XCore/fneg.ll because that
testcase now triggers a DAGCombine which converts the fneg into an integer
operation. If someone is interested, it's probably possible to tweak
the test to generate an actual fneg.
llvm-svn: 72162