The main complication here is that TM and TMY (the memory forms) set
CC differently from the register forms. When the tested bits contain
some 0s and some 1s, the register forms set CC to 1 or 2 based on the
value the uppermost bit. The memory forms instead set CC to 1
regardless of the uppermost bit.
Until now, I've tried to make it so that a branch never tests for an
impossible CC value. E.g. NR only sets CC to 0 or 1, so branches on the
result will only test for 0 or 1. Originally I'd tried to do the same
thing for TM and TMY by using custom matching code in ISelDAGToDAG.
That ended up being very ugly though, and would have meant duplicating
some of the chain checks that the common isel code does.
I've therefore gone for the simpler alternative of adding an extra
operand to the TM DAG opcode to say whether a memory form would be OK.
This means that the inverse of a "TM;JE" is "TM;JNE" rather than the
more precise "TM;JNLE", just like the inverse of "TMLL;JE" is "TMLL;JNE".
I suppose that's arguably less confusing though...
llvm-svn: 190400
Fix XCoreLowerThreadLocal trying to initialise globals
which have no initializer.
Add handling of const expressions containing thread local variables.
These need to be replaced with instructions, as the thread ID is
used to access the thread local variable.
llvm-svn: 190300
This sidesteps a bug in PrescheduleNodesWithMultipleUses() which
does not check if callResources will be affected by the transformation.
llvm-svn: 190299
We used to generate the compact unwind encoding from the machine
instructions. However, this had the problem that if the user used `-save-temps'
or compiled their hand-written `.s' file (with CFI directives), we wouldn't
generate the compact unwind encoding.
Move the algorithm that generates the compact unwind encoding into the
MCAsmBackend. This way we can generate the encoding whether the code is from a
`.ll' or `.s' file.
<rdar://problem/13623355>
llvm-svn: 190290
precision loads and stores as well as reg+imm double precision loads and stores.
Previously, expansion of loads and stores was done after register allocation,
but now it takes place during legalization. As a result, users will see double
precision stores and loads being emitted to spill and restore 64-bit FP registers.
llvm-svn: 190235
Field 2 of DIType (Context), field 9 of DIDerivedType (TypeDerivedFrom),
field 12 of DICompositeType (ContainingType), fields 2, 7, 12 of DISubprogram
(Context, Type, ContainingType).
llvm-svn: 190205
Occasionally DAGCombiner can spot that a SETCC operation is completely
redundant and reduce it to "all true" or "all false". If this happens to a
vector, the value produced has to take account of what a normal comparison
would have produced, which may be an all-1s bitmask.
The fix in SelectionDAG.cpp is tested, however, as far as I can see the code in
TargetLowering.cpp is possibly unreachable and almost certainly irrelevant when
triggered so there are no tests. However, I believe it's still clearly the
right change and may save someone else some hassle if it suddenly becomes
reachable. So I'm doing it anyway.
llvm-svn: 190147
The architecture has many comparison instructions, including some that
extend one of the operands. The signed comparison instructions use sign
extensions and the unsigned comparison instructions use zero extensions.
In cases where we had a free choice between signed or unsigned comparisons,
we were trying to decide at lowering time which would best fit the available
instructions, taking things like extension type into account. The code
to do that was getting increasingly hairy and was also making some bad
decisions. E.g. when comparing the result of two LLCs, it is better to use
CR rather than CLR, since CR can be fused with a branch while CLR can't.
This patch removes the lowering code and instead adds an operand to
integer comparisons to say whether signed comparison is required,
whether unsigned comparison is required, or whether either is OK.
We can then leave the choice of instruction up to the normal isel code.
llvm-svn: 190138
If the DAG already has only legal types, then the second round of DAG combines
is skipped. In this case VSELECT+SETCC patterns that match a more efficient
instruction (e.g. min/max) are never recognized.
This fix allows VSELECT+SETCC combines if the types are already legal before DAG
type legalization.
Reviewer: Nadav
llvm-svn: 190105
Solution is not sufficient to prevent 'mov pc, lr' being emitted for jump table code.
Test case doesn't trigger the added functionality.
llvm-svn: 190047
This improves code generation for jump tables by avoiding the emission of "mov pc, lr" which could fool the processor into believing this is a return from a function causing mispredicts. The code generation logic for jump tables uses ADR to materialize the address of the jump target.
Patch by Daniel Stewart!
llvm-svn: 190043
In sparc, setjmp stores only the registers %fp, %sp, %i7 and %o7. longjmp restores
the stack, and the callee-saved registers (all local/in registers: %i0-%i7, %l0-%l7)
using the stored %fp and register windows. However, this does not guarantee that the longjmp
will restore the registers, as they were when the setjmp was called. This is because these
registers may be clobbered after returning from setjmp, but before calling longjmp.
This patch prevents the registers %i0-%i5, %l0-l7 to live across the setjmp call using the register mask.
llvm-svn: 190033
Fast register pressure tracking currently only takes effect during
bottom up scheduling. Forcing this is a bit faster and simpler for
targets that don't have many scheduling constraints and don't need
top-down scheduling.
llvm-svn: 190014
'Force' values in registers using the calling convention. Now, we only depend on
the calling convention and that the allocator performs copy coalescing.
llvm-svn: 189985