Summary:
The `"patchable-function"` attribute can be used by an LLVM client to
influence LLVM's code generation in ways that makes the generated code
easily patchable at runtime (for instance, to redirect control).
Right now only one patchability scheme is supported,
`"prologue-short-redirect"`, but this can be expanded in the future.
Reviewers: joker.eph, rnk, echristo, dberris
Subscribers: joker.eph, echristo, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19046
llvm-svn: 266715
This required changing several places to print VT enums as strings instead of raw ints since the proper method to use to print became ambiguous. This is probably an improvement anyway.
This also appears to save ~8K from an x86 self host build of llc.
llvm-svn: 266562
Currently you can't specify node properties like commutativity on
a PatFrag. If you want to create a PatFrag on a commutative node
with a hasOneUse predicate, this enables you to specify that the
PatFrag is also commutable.
llvm-svn: 260404
The AMDGPU backend was the last user of the old StringMatcher
recognition code. Move it over to the new lookupLLVMIntrinsicName
funciton, which is now improved to handle all of the interesting edge
cases exposed by AMDGPU intrinsic names.
llvm-svn: 258875
The selection process being split into separate passes, we need generic opcodes
to translate the LLVM IR to target independent code.
This patch adds an opcode for addition: G_ADD.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15472
llvm-svn: 258333
Summary:
Add the necessary plumbing so that llvm_token_ty can be used as an
argument/return type in intrinsic definitions and correspondingly require
TokenTy in function types. TokenTy is an opaque type that has no target
lowering, but can be used in machine-independent intrinsics. It is
required for the upcoming llvm.eh.padparam intrinsic.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: stoklund, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12532
llvm-svn: 246651
This is to fix an incorrect error when trying to initialize
DwarfNumbers with a !cast<int> of a bits initializer.
getValuesAsListOfInts("DwarfNumbers") would not see an IntInit
and instead the cast, so would give up.
It seems likely that this could be generalized to attempt
the convertInitializerTo for any type. I'm not really sure
why the existing code seems to special case the string cast cases
when convertInitializerTo seems like it should generally handle this
sort of thing.
llvm-svn: 243722
When FixedLenDecoder matches an input bitpattern of form [01]+ with an
instruction bitpattern of form [01?]+ (where 0/1 are static bits and ? are
mixed/variable bits) it passes the input bitpattern to a specific instruction
decoder method which then makes a final decision whether the bitpattern is a
valid instruction or not. This means the decoder must handle all possible
values of the variable bits which sometimes leads to opcode rewrites in the
decoder method when the instructions are not fully orthogonal.
The patch provides a way for the decoder method to say that when it returns
Fail it does not necessarily mean the bitpattern is invalid, but rather that
the bitpattern is definitely not an instruction that is recognized by the
decoder method. The decoder can then try to match the input bitpattern with
other possible instruction bitpatterns.
For example, this allows to solve a situation on AArch64 where the `MSR
(immediate)` instruction has form:
1101 0101 0000 0??? 0100 ???? ???1 1111
but not all values of the ? bits are allowed. The rejected values should be
handled by the `extended MSR (register)` instruction:
1101 0101 000? ???? ???? ???? ???? ????
The decoder will first try to decode an input bitpattern that matches both
bitpatterns as `MSR (immediate)` but currently this puts the decoder method of
`MSR (immediate)` into a situation when it must be able to decode all possible
values of the ? bits, i.e. it would need to rewrite the instruction to `MSR
(register)` when it is not `MSR (immediate)`.
The patch allows to specify that the decoder method cannot determine if the
instruction is valid for all variable values. The decoder method can simply
return Fail when it knows it is definitely not `MSR (immediate)`. The decoder
will then backtrack the decoding and find that it can match the input
bitpattern with the more generic `MSR (register)` bitpattern too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7174
llvm-svn: 242274
Previously, subtarget features were a bitfield with the underlying type being uint64_t.
Since several targets (X86 and ARM, in particular) have hit or were very close to hitting this bound, switching the features to use a bitset.
No functional change.
The first several times this was committed (e.g. r229831, r233055), it caused several buildbot failures.
Apparently the reason for most failures was both clang and gcc's inability to deal with large numbers (> 10K) of bitset constructor calls in tablegen-generated initializers of instruction info tables.
This should now be fixed.
llvm-svn: 238192
We had not been trying hard enough to resolve def names inside multiclasses
that had complex concatenations, etc. Now we'll try harder.
Patch by Amaury Sechet!
llvm-svn: 237877
Previously, subtarget features were a bitfield with the underlying type being uint64_t.
Since several targets (X86 and ARM, in particular) have hit or were very close to hitting this bound, switching the features to use a bitset.
No functional change.
The first two times this was committed (r229831, r233055), it caused several buildbot failures.
At least some of the ARM and MIPS ones were due to gcc/binutils issues, and should now be fixed.
llvm-svn: 237234
The v1i128 type is needed for the quadword add/substract instructions introduced
in POWER8. Futhermore, the PowerPC ABI specifies that parameters of type v1i128
are to be passed in a single vector register, while parameters of type i128 are
passed in pairs of GPRs. Thus, it is necessary to be able to differentiate
between v1i128 and i128 in LLVM.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8564
llvm-svn: 235198
Summary:
The loop which emits AssemblerPredicate conditions also links them together by emitting a '&&'.
If the 1st predicate is not an AssemblerPredicate, while the 2nd one is, nothing gets emitted for the 1st one, but we still emit the '&&' because of the 2nd predicate.
This generated code looks like "( && Cond2)" and is invalid.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: dsanders, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8294
llvm-svn: 234312
By class-instance values I mean 'Class<Arg>' in 'Class<Arg>.Field' or in
'Other<Class<Arg>>' (syntactically s SimpleValue). This is to differentiate
from unnamed/anonymous record definitions (syntactically an ObjectBody) which
are not affected by this change.
Consider the testcase:
class Struct<int i> {
int I = !shl(i, 1);
int J = !shl(I, 1);
}
class Class<Struct s> {
int Class_J = s.J;
}
multiclass MultiClass<int i> {
def Def : Class<Struct<i>>;
}
defm Defm : MultiClass<2>;
Before this fix, DefmDef.Class_J yields !shl(I, 1) instead of 8.
This is the sequence of events. We start with this:
multiclass MultiClass<int i> {
def Def : Class<Struct<i>>;
}
During ParseDef the anonymous object for the class-instance value is created:
multiclass Multiclass<int i> {
def anonymous_0 : Struct<i>;
def Def : Class<NAME#anonymous_0>;
}
Then class Struct<i> is added to anonymous_0. Also Class<NAME#anonymous_0> is
added to Def:
multiclass Multiclass<int i> {
def anonymous_0 {
int I = !shl(i, 1);
int J = !shl(I, 1);
}
def Def {
int Class_J = NAME#anonymous_0.J;
}
}
So far so good but then we move on to instantiating this in the defm
by substituting the template arg 'i'.
This is how the anonymous prototype looks after fully instantiating.
defm Defm = {
def Defmanonymous_0 {
int I = 4;
int J = !shl(I, 1);
}
Note that we only resolved the reference to the template arg. The
non-template-arg reference in 'J' has not been resolved yet.
Then we go on to instantiating the Def prototype:
def DefmDef {
int Class_J = NAME#anonymous_0.J;
}
Which is resolved to Defmanonymous_0.J and then to !shl(I, 1).
When we fully resolve each record in a defm, Defmanonymous_0.J does get set
to 8 but that's too late for its use.
The patch adds a new attribute to the Record class that indicates that this
def is actually a class-instance value that may be *used* by other defs in a
multiclass. (This is unlike regular defs which don't reference each other and
thus can be resolved indepedently.) They are then fully resolved before the
other defs while the multiclass is instantiated.
I added vg_leak to the new test. I am not sure if this is necessary but I
don't think I have a way to test it. I can also check in without the XFAIL
and let the bots test this part.
Also tested that X86.td.expanded and AAarch64.td.expanded were unchange before
and after this change. (This issue triggering this problem is a WIP patch.)
Part of <rdar://problem/17688758>
llvm-svn: 217886
It also allows nested { } expressions, as now that they are sized, we can merge pull bits from the nested value.
In the current behaviour, everything in { } must have been convertible to a single bit.
However, now that binary literals are sized, its useful to be able to initialize a range of bits.
So, for example, its now possible to do
bits<8> x = { 0, 1, { 0b1001 }, 0, 0b0 }
llvm-svn: 215086
Instead of these becoming an integer literal internally, they now become bits<n> values.
Prior to this change, 0b001 was 1 bit long. This is confusing as clearly the user gave 3 bits.
This new type holds both the literal value and the size, and so can ensure sizes match on initializers.
For example, this used to be legal
bits<1> x = 0b00;
but now it must be written as
bits<2> x = 0b00;
llvm-svn: 215084
Prior to this change, it was legal to do something like
bits<2> opc = { 0, 1 };
bits<2> opc2 = { 1, 0 };
bits<2> a = { opc, opc2 };
This involved silently dropping bits from opc and opc2 which is very hard to debug.
Now the above test would be an error. Having tested with an assert, none of LLVM/clang was relying on this behaviour.
Thanks to Adam Nemet for the above test.
llvm-svn: 215083
file not in the test/ area). Backing out now so that this test isn't part of
the 3.5 branch.
Original commit message: "TableGen: Allow AddedComplexity values to be negative
[...]"
llvm-svn: 213596
This is useful for cases when stand-alone patterns are preferred to the
patterns included in the instruction definitions. Instead of requiring
that stand-alone patterns set a larger AddedComplexity value, which
can be confusing to new developers, the allows us to reduce the
complexity of the included patterns to achieve the same result.
llvm-svn: 213521
Convert the operand to int if possible, i.e. if the value is properly
initialized. (I suppose there is further room for improvement here to also
peform the shift if the uninitialized bits are shifted out.)
With this little change we can now compute the scaling factor for compressed
displacement with pure tablegen code in the X86 backend. This is useful
because both the X86-disassembler-specific part of tablegen and the assembler
need this and TD is the natural sharing place.
The patch also adds the missing documentation for the shift and add operator.
llvm-svn: 213277
Summary:
It concatenates two or more lists. In addition to the !strconcat semantics
the lists must have the same element type.
My overall aim is to make it easy to append to Instruction.Predicates
rather than override it. This can be done by concatenating lists passed as
arguments, or by concatenating lists passed in additional fields.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3506
llvm-svn: 208183
Summary:
* Updated the documentation
* Added a test for >2 arguments
* Added a check for the lexical concatenation
* Made the existing test a bit stricter.
Reviewers: t.p.northover
Reviewed By: t.p.northover
Subscribers: t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3485
llvm-svn: 207865
Even within a multiclass, we had been generating concrete implicit anonymous
defs when parsing values (generally in value lists). This behavior was
incorrect, and led to errors when multiclass parameters were used in the
parameter list of the implicit anonymous def.
If we had some multiclass:
multiclass mc<string n> {
... : SomeClass<SomeOtherClass<n> >
The capture of the multiclass parameter 'n' would not work correctly, and
depending on how the implicit SomeOtherClass was used, either TableGen would
ignore something it shouldn't, or would crash.
To fix this problem, when inside a multiclass, we generate prototype anonymous
defs for implicit anonymous defs (just as we do for explicit anonymous defs).
Within the multiclass, the current record prototype is populated with a node
that is essentially: !cast<SomeOtherClass>(!strconcat(NAME, anon_value_name)).
This is then resolved to the correct concrete anonymous def, in the usual way,
when NAME is resolved during multiclass instantiation.
llvm-svn: 198348
TableGen had been generating a different name for an anonymous multiclass's
NAME for every def in the multiclass. This had an unfortunate side effect: it
was impossible to reference one def within the multiclass from another (in the
parameter list, for example). By making sure we only generate an anonymous name
once per multiclass (which, as it turns out, requires only changing the name
parameter to reference type), we can now concatenate NAME within the multiclass
with a def name in order to generate a reference to that def.
This does not matter so much, in and of itself, but is necessary for a
follow-up commit that will fix variable capturing in implicit anonymous
multiclass defs (and that is important).
llvm-svn: 198340
Backends like OptParserEmitter assume that record names can be used as valid
identifiers.
The period '.' in generated anonymous names broke that assumption, causing a
build-time error and in practice forcing all records to be named.
llvm-svn: 197869
In historical reason, tblgen is not strictly required to be free from memory leaks.
For now, I mark them as XFAIL, they could be fixed, though.
llvm-svn: 194353