parses the .word directive as 4 bytes and ARMAsmParser::ParseInstruction will
give an error is called. Broke out the test of the .word directive into two
different test cases, one for x86 and one for arm.
llvm-svn: 81817
symbol as the symbol name itself, not the expression it was defined to. These
have different semantics due to the quirky .set behavior (which absolutizes an
expression that would otherwise be treated as a relocation).
llvm-svn: 79025
specific printer (this only works on x86, for now).
- This makes it possible to do some correctness checking of the parsing and
matching, since we can compare the results of 'as' on the original input, to
those of 'as' on the output from llvm-mc.
- In theory, we could now have an easy ATT -> Intel syntax converter. :)
llvm-svn: 78986
- This doesn't actually improve the algorithm (its still linear), but the
generated (match) code is now fairly compact and table driven. Still need a
generic string matcher.
- The table still needs to be compressed, this is quite simple to do and should
shrink it to under 16k.
- This also simplifies and restructures the code to make the match classes more
explicit, in anticipation of resolving ambiguities.
llvm-svn: 78461
I can clean this up a bit more and do way with the TheCondState and just use
the top element on the TheCondStack if not empty. Also may tweak the code
around ParseConditionalAssemblyDirectives() to simplify the AsmParser code.
llvm-svn: 78423
- Still not very sane, but a least its not 60k lines on X86. :)
- In terms of correctness, currently some things are hard wired for X86, and we
still don't properly resolve ambiguities (this is ignoring the instructions
we don't even match due to funny .td stuff or other corner cases).
The high level changes:
1. Represent tokens which are significant for matching explicitly as separate
operands. This uniformly handles not only the instruction mnemonic, but
also 'signficiant' syntax like the '*' in "call * ...".
2. Separate the matching of operands to an instruction from the construction of
the MCInst. In theory this can be done during matching, but since the number
of variations is small I think it makes sense to decompose the problems.
3. Improved a few of the mechanisms to at least successfully flatten / tokenize
the assembly strings for PowerPC and ARM.
4. The comment at the top of AsmMatcherEmitter.cpp explains the approach I'm
moving towards for handling ambiguous instructions. The high-bit is to infer
a partial ordering of the operand classes (and force the user to specify one
if we can't) and use that to resolve ambiguities.
llvm-svn: 78378
- Operands which are just a label should be parsed as immediates, not memory
operands (from the assembler perspective).
- Match a few more flavors of immediates.
- Distinguish match functions for memory operands which don't take a segment
register.
- We match the .s for "hello world" now!
llvm-svn: 77745
- Uses MCAsmToken::getIdentifier which returns the (sub)string representing the
meaningfull contents a string or identifier token.
- Directives aren't done yet.
llvm-svn: 77739
- This is "experimental" code, I am feeling my way around and working out the
best way to do things (and learning tblgen in the process). Comments welcome,
but keep in mind this stuff will change radically.
- This is enough to match "subb" and friends, but not much else. The next step is to
automatically generate the matchers for individual operands.
llvm-svn: 77657
the parsing of the .dump and .load should be done in the assembly parser and
not have any need for an MCStreamer API. Changed the code for now so these
just produce an error saying these specific directives are not yet implemented
since they are likely no longer used and may never need to be implemented.
llvm-svn: 76462