getIntPtrType support for multiple address spaces via a pointer type,
and also introduced a crasher bug in the constant folder reported in
PR14233.
These commits also contained several problems that should really be
addressed before they are re-committed. I have avoided reverting various
cleanups to the DataLayout APIs that are reasonable to have moving
forward in order to reduce the amount of churn, and minimize the number
of commits that were reverted. I've also manually updated merge
conflicts and manually arranged for the getIntPtrType function to stay
in DataLayout and to be defined in a plausible way after this revert.
Thanks to Duncan for working through this exact strategy with me, and
Nick Lewycky for tracking down the really annoying crasher this
triggered. (Test case to follow in its own commit.)
After discussing with Duncan extensively, and based on a note from
Micah, I'm going to continue to back out some more of the more
problematic patches in this series in order to ensure we go into the
LLVM 3.2 branch with a reasonable story here. I'll send a note to
llvmdev explaining what's going on and why.
Summary of reverted revisions:
r166634: Fix a compiler warning with an unused variable.
r166607: Add some cleanup to the DataLayout changes requested by
Chandler.
r166596: Revert "Back out r166591, not sure why this made it through
since I cancelled the command. Bleh, sorry about this!
r166591: Delete a directory that wasn't supposed to be checked in yet.
r166578: Add in support for getIntPtrType to get the pointer type based
on the address space.
llvm-svn: 167221
parameters. Examples of these are:
struct { } a;
union { } b[256];
int a[0];
An empty aggregate has an address, although dereferencing that address is
pointless. When passed as a parameter, an empty aggregate does not consume
a protocol register, nor does it consume a doubleword in the parameter save
area. Passing an empty aggregate by reference passes an address just as
for any other aggregate. Returning an empty aggregate uses GPR3 as a hidden
address of the return value location, just as for any other aggregate.
The patch modifies PPCTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4 and
PPCTargetLowering::LowerCall_64SVR4 to properly skip empty aggregate
parameters passed by value. The handling of return values and by-reference
parameters was already correct.
Built on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu and tested with no new regressions.
A test case is included to test proper handling of empty aggregate
parameters on both sides of the function call protocol.
llvm-svn: 167090
This patch adds more support for vector type comparisons using altivec.
It adds correct support for v16i8, v8i16, v4i32, and v4f32 vector
types for comparison operators ==, !=, >, >=, <, and <=.
llvm-svn: 167015
ELF ABI.
A varargs parameter consisting of a single-precision floating-point value,
or of a single-element aggregate containing a single-precision floating-point
value, must be passed in the low-order (rightmost) four bytes of the
doubleword stack slot reserved for that parameter. If there are GPR protocol
registers remaining, the parameter must also be mirrored in the low-order
four bytes of the reserved GPR.
Prior to this patch, such parameters were being passed in the high-order
four bytes of the stack slot and the mirrored GPR.
The patch adds a new test case to verify the correct code generation.
llvm-svn: 166968
structs having size 3, 5, 6, or 7. Such a struct must be passed and received
as right-justified within its register or memory slot. The problem is only
present for structs that are passed in registers.
Previously, as part of a patch handling all structs of size less than 8, I
added logic to rotate the incoming register so that the struct was left-
justified prior to storing the whole register. This was incorrect because
the address of the parameter had already been adjusted earlier to point to
the right-adjusted value in the storage slot. Essentially I had accidentally
accounted for the right-adjustment twice.
In this patch, I removed the incorrect logic and reorganized the code to make
the flow clearer.
The removal of the rotates changes the expected code generation, so test case
structsinregs.ll has been modified to reflect this. I also added a new test
case, jaggedstructs.ll, to demonstrate that structs of these sizes can now
be properly received and passed.
I've built and tested the code on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu with no new
regressions. I also ran the GCC compatibility test suite and verified that
earlier problems with these structs are now resolved, with no new regressions.
llvm-svn: 166680
for the PowerPC target, and factoring the results. This will ease future
maintenance of both subtargets.
PPCTargetLowering::LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4() has grown a lot of special-case
code for the different ABIs, making maintenance difficult. This is getting
worse as we repair errors in the 64-bit ELF ABI implementation, while avoiding
changes to the Darwin ABI logic. This patch splits the routine into
LowerCall_Darwin() and LowerCall_64SVR4(), allowing both versions to be
significantly simplified. I've factored out chunks of similar code where it
made sense to do so. I also performed similar factoring on
LowerFormalArguments_Darwin() and LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4().
There are no functional changes in this patch, and therefore no new test
cases have been developed.
Built and tested on powerpc64-unknown-linux-gnu with no new regressions.
llvm-svn: 166480
test case on PowerPC caused by rounding errors when converting from a 64-bit
integer to a single-precision floating point. The reason for this are
double-rounding effects, since on PowerPC we have to convert to an
intermediate double-precision value first, which gets rounded to the
final single-precision result.
The patch fixes the problem by preparing the 64-bit integer so that the
first conversion step to double-precision will always be exact, and the
final rounding step will result in the correctly-rounded single-precision
result. The generated code sequence is equivalent to what GCC would generate.
When -enable-unsafe-fp-math is in effect, that extra effort is omitted
and we accept possible rounding errors (just like GCC does as well).
llvm-svn: 166178
For the PowerPC 64-bit ELF Linux ABI, aggregates of size less than 8
bytes are to be passed in the low-order bits ("right-adjusted") of the
doubleword register or memory slot assigned to them. A previous patch
addressed this for aggregates passed in registers. However, small
aggregates passed in the overflow portion of the parameter save area are
still being passed left-adjusted.
The fix is made in PPCTargetLowering::LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4 on the
caller side, and in PPCTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments_64SVR4 on
the callee side. The main fix on the callee side simply extends
existing logic for 1- and 2-byte objects to 1- through 7-byte objects,
and correcting a constant left over from 32-bit code. There is also a
fix to a bogus calculation of the offset to the following argument in
the parameter save area.
On the caller side, again a constant left over from 32-bit code is
fixed. Additionally, some code for 1, 2, and 4-byte objects is
duplicated to handle the 3, 5, 6, and 7-byte objects for SVR4 only. The
LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4 logic is getting fairly convoluted trying to
handle both ABIs, and I propose to separate this into two functions in a
future patch, at which time the duplication can be removed.
The patch adds a new test (structsinmem.ll) to demonstrate correct
passing of structures of all seven sizes. Eight dummy parameters are
used to force these structures to be in the overflow portion of the
parameter save area.
As a side effect, this corrects the case when aggregates passed in
registers are saved into the first eight doublewords of the parameter
save area: Previously they were stored left-justified, and now are
properly stored right-justified. This requires changing the expected
output of existing test case structsinregs.ll.
llvm-svn: 166022
For function calls on the 64-bit PowerPC SVR4 target, each parameter
is mapped to as many doublewords in the parameter save area as
necessary to hold the parameter. The first 13 non-varargs
floating-point values are passed in registers; any additional
floating-point parameters are passed in the parameter save area. A
single-precision floating-point parameter (32 bits) must be mapped to
the second (rightmost, low-order) word of its assigned doubleword
slot.
Currently LLVM violates this ABI requirement by mapping such a
parameter to the first (leftmost, high-order) word of its assigned
doubleword slot. This is internally self-consistent but will not
interoperate correctly with libraries compiled with an ABI-compliant
compiler.
This patch corrects the problem by adjusting the parameter addressing
on both sides of the calling convention.
llvm-svn: 165714
We use the enums to query whether an Attributes object has that attribute. The
opaque layer is responsible for knowing where that specific attribute is stored.
llvm-svn: 165488
Vector compare using altivec 'vcmpxxx' instructions have as third argument
a vector register instead of CR one, different from integer and float-point
compares. This leads to a failure in code generation, where 'SelectSETCC'
expects a DAG with a CR register and gets vector register instead.
This patch changes the behavior by just returning a DAG with the
vector compare instruction based on the type. The patch also adds a testcase
for all vector types llvm defines.
It also included a fix on signed 5-bits predicates printing, where
signed values were not handled correctly as signed (char are unsigned by
default for PowerPC). This generates 'vspltisw' (vector splat)
instruction with SIM out of range.
llvm-svn: 165419
into separate versions for the Darwin and 64-bit SVR4 ABIs. This will
facilitate doing more major surgery on the 64-bit SVR4 ABI in the near future.
llvm-svn: 165336
lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelLowering.{h,cpp}
Rename LowerFormalArguments_Darwin to LowerFormalArguments_Darwin_Or_64SVR4.
Rename LowerFormalArguments_SVR4 to LowerFormalArguments_32SVR4.
Receive small structs right-justified in LowerFormalArguments_Darwin_Or_64SVR4.
Rename LowerCall_Darwin to LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4.
Rename LowerCall_SVR4 to LowerCall_32SVR4.
Pass small structs right-justified in LowerCall_Darwin_Or_64SVR4.
test/CodeGen/PowerPC/structsinregs.ll
New test.
llvm-svn: 164228
- BlockAddress has no support of BA + offset form and there is no way to
propagate that offset into machine operand;
- Add BA + offset support and a new interface 'getTargetBlockAddress' to
simplify target block address forming;
- All targets are modified to use new interface and X86 backend is enhanced to
support BA + offset addressing.
llvm-svn: 163743
[Tobias von Koch] What's happening here is that the CR6SET/CR6UNSET is breaking the chain of register copies glued to the function call (BL_SVR4 node). The scheduler then moves other instructions in between those and the function call, which isn't good!
Right. That's the case where there is no chain of register copies before the call, so InFlag == 0... Attached is a new revision of the patch which should fix this for good.
llvm-svn: 162916
The 32-bit ABI requires CR bit 6 to be set if the call has fp arguments and
unset if it doesn't. The solution up to now was to insert a MachineNode to
set/unset the CR bit, which produces a CR vreg. This vreg was then copied
into CR bit 6. When the register allocator saw a bunch of these in the same
function, it allocated the set/unset CR bit in some random CR register (1
extra instruction) and then emitted CR moves before every vararg function
call, rather than just setting and unsetting CR bit 6 directly before every
vararg function call. This patch instead inserts a PPCcrset/PPCcrunset
instruction which are then matched by a dedicated instruction pattern.
Patch by Tobias von Koch.
llvm-svn: 162725
On PPC64, this can be done with a simple TableGen pattern.
To enable this, I've added the (otherwise missing) readcyclecounter
SDNode definition to TargetSelectionDAG.td.
llvm-svn: 161302
Over the entire test-suite, this has an insignificantly negative average
performance impact, but reduces some of the worst slowdowns from the
anti-dep. change (r158294).
Largest speedups:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Stanford/Quicksort - 28%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Stanford/Towers - 24%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/matrix - 23%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/SciMark2-C/scimark2 - 19%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-bitcount/automotive-bitcount - 15%
(matrix and automotive-bitcount were both in the top-5 slowdown list from the
anti-dep. change)
Largest slowdowns:
MultiSource/Benchmarks/McCat/03-testtrie/testtrie - 28%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/mediabench/gsm/toast/toast - 26%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-susan/automotive-susan - 21%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/lpbench - 20%
MultiSource/Applications/d/make_dparser - 16%
llvm-svn: 158296
It seems that this no longer causes test suite failures on PPC64 (after r157159),
and often gives a performance benefit, so it can be enabled by default.
llvm-svn: 157911
to pass around a struct instead of a large set of individual values. This
cleans up the interface and allows more information to be added to the struct
for future targets without requiring changes to each and every target.
NV_CONTRIB
llvm-svn: 157479
(load only has one operand) and smuggle in some whitespace changes too
NB: I am obviously testing the water here, and believe that the unguarded
cast is still wrong, but why is the getZExtValue of the load's operand
tested against zero here? Any review is appreciated.
llvm-svn: 155190
This allows us to keep passing reduced masks to SimplifyDemandedBits, but
know about all the bits if SimplifyDemandedBits fails. This allows instcombine
to simplify cases like the one in the included testcase.
llvm-svn: 154011
Dynamic linking on PPC64 has had problems since we had to move the top-down
hazard-detection logic post-ra. For dynamic linking to work there needs to be
a nop placed after every call. It turns out that it is really hard to guarantee
that nothing will be placed in between the call (bl) and the nop during post-ra
scheduling. Previous attempts at fixing this by placing logic inside the
hazard detector only partially worked.
This is now fixed in a different way: call+nop codegen-only instructions. As far
as CodeGen is concerned the pair is now a single instruction and cannot be split.
This solution works much better than previous attempts.
The scoreboard hazard detector is also renamed to be more generic, there is currently
no cpu-specific logic in it.
llvm-svn: 153816
The PPC64 SVR4 ABI requires integer stack arguments, and thus the var. args., that
are smaller than 64 bits be zero extended to 64 bits.
llvm-svn: 153373
the processor keeps a return addresses stack (RAS) which stores the address
and the instruction execution state of the instruction after a function-call
type branch instruction.
Calling a "noreturn" function with normal call instructions (e.g. bl) can
corrupt RAS and causes 100% return misprediction so LLVM should use a
unconditional branch instead. i.e.
mov lr, pc
b _foo
The "mov lr, pc" is issued in order to get proper backtrace.
rdar://8979299
llvm-svn: 151623
undefined result. This adds new ISD nodes for the new semantics,
selecting them when the LLVM intrinsic indicates that the undef behavior
is desired. The new nodes expand trivially to the old nodes, so targets
don't actually need to do anything to support these new nodes besides
indicating that they should be expanded. I've done this for all the
operand types that I could figure out for all the targets. Owners of
various targets, please review and let me know if any of these are
incorrect.
Note that the expand behavior is *conservatively correct*, and exactly
matches LLVM's current behavior with these operations. Ideally this
patch will not change behavior in any way. For example the regtest suite
finds the exact same instruction sequences coming out of the code
generator. That's why there are no new tests here -- all of this is
being exercised by the existing test suite.
Thanks to Duncan Sands for reviewing the various bits of this patch and
helping me get the wrinkles ironed out with expanding for each target.
Also thanks to Chris for clarifying through all the discussions that
this is indeed the approach he was looking for. That said, there are
likely still rough spots. Further review much appreciated.
llvm-svn: 146466
change, now you need a TargetOptions object to create a TargetMachine. Clang
patch to follow.
One small functionality change in PTX. PTX had commented out the machine
verifier parts in their copy of printAndVerify. That now calls the version in
LLVMTargetMachine. Users of PTX who need verification disabled should rely on
not passing the command-line flag to enable it.
llvm-svn: 145714
When this field is true it means that the load is from constant (runt-time or compile-time) and so can be hoisted from loops or moved around other memory accesses
llvm-svn: 144100
with a vector condition); such selects become VSELECT codegen nodes.
This patch also removes VSETCC codegen nodes, unifying them with SETCC
nodes (codegen was actually often using SETCC for vector SETCC already).
This ensures that various DAG combiner optimizations kick in for vector
comparisons. Passes dragonegg bootstrap with no testsuite regressions
(nightly testsuite as well as "make check-all"). Patch mostly by
Nadav Rotem.
llvm-svn: 139159
init.trampoline and adjust.trampoline intrinsics, into two intrinsics
like in GCC. While having one combined intrinsic is tempting, it is
not natural because typically the trampoline initialization needs to
be done in one function, and the result of adjust trampoline is needed
in a different (nested) function. To get around this llvm-gcc hacks the
nested function lowering code to insert an additional parent variable
holding the adjust.trampoline result that can be accessed from the child
function. Dragonegg doesn't have the luxury of tweaking GCC code, so it
stored the result of adjust.trampoline in the memory GCC set aside for
the trampoline itself (this is always available in the child function),
and set up some new memory (using an alloca) to hold the trampoline.
Unfortunately this breaks Go which allocates trampoline memory on the
heap and wants to use it even after the parent has exited (!). Rather
than doing even more hacks to get Go working, it seemed best to just use
two intrinsics like in GCC. Patch mostly by Sanjoy Das.
llvm-svn: 139140
- Check for MTCTR8 in addition to MTCTR when looking up a hazard.
- When lowering an indirect call use CTR8 when targeting 64bit.
- Introduce BCTR8 that uses CTR8 and use it on 64bit when expanding ISD::BRIND.
The last change fixes PR8487. With those changes, we are able to compile a
running "ls" and "sh" on FreeBSD/PowerPC64.
llvm-svn: 132552
In other words, do not keep track of argument's location. The debugger (gdb) is not prepared to see line table entries for arguments. For the debugger, "second" line table entry marks beginning of function body.
This requires some coordination with debugger to get this working.
- The debugger needs to be aware of prolog_end attribute attached with line table entries.
- The compiler needs to accurately mark prolog_end in line table entries (at -O0 and at -O1+)
llvm-svn: 126155
different ways. Add $non_lazy_ptr support, and proper lowering for
global values.
Now all the ppc regression tests pass with the new instruction printer.
llvm-svn: 119106
nodes to indicate when ha16/lo16 modifiers should be used. This lets
us pass PowerPC/indirectbr.ll.
The one annoying thing about this patch is that the MCSymbolExpr isn't
expressive enough to represent ha16(label1-label2) which we need on
PowerPC. I have a terrible hack in the meantime, but this will have
to be revisited at some point.
Last major conversion item left is global variable references.
llvm-svn: 119105
and have isel apply to to call operands as required. This allows
us to get $stub suffixes on label references on ppc/tiger with the
new instprinter, fixing two tests. Only 2 to go.
llvm-svn: 119093
value type, so there is no point in passing it around using
an EVT. Use the simpler MVT everywhere. Rather than trying
to propagate this information maximally in all the code that
using the calling convention stuff, I chose to do a mainly
low impact change instead.
llvm-svn: 118167
alignment for PPC32/64, avoiding some masking operations.
llvm-gcc expands vaarg inline instead of using the instruction
so it has never hit this.
llvm-svn: 116168
See PR5201. There is no way to know if direct calls will be within the allowed
range for BL. Hence emit all calls as indirect when in JIT mode.
Without this long-running applications will fail to JIT on PowerPC with a
relocation failure.
llvm-svn: 110246
for an "i" constraint should get lowered; PR 6309. While
this argument was passed around a lot, this is the only
place it was used, so it goes away from a lot of other
places.
llvm-svn: 106893
const_casts, and it reinforces the design of the Target classes being
immutable.
SelectionDAGISel::IsLegalToFold is now a static member function, because
PIC16 uses it in an unconventional way. There is more room for API
cleanup here.
And PIC16's AsmPrinter no longer uses TargetLowering.
llvm-svn: 101635
Added support for address spaces and added a isVolatile field to memcpy, memmove, and memset,
e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
llvm-svn: 100304
Added support for address spaces and added a isVolatile field to memcpy, memmove, and memset,
e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
llvm-svn: 100191
1. Makes it possible to lower with floating point loads and stores.
2. Avoid unaligned loads / stores unless it's fast.
3. Fix some memcpy lowering logic bug related to when to optimize a
load from constant string into a constant.
4. Adjust x86 memcpy lowering threshold to make it more sane.
5. Fix x86 target hook so it uses vector and floating point memory
ops more effectively.
rdar://7774704
llvm-svn: 100090
e.g., llvm.memcpy.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32) -> llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i32(i8*, i8*, i32, i32, i1)
A update of langref will occur in a subsequent checkin.
llvm-svn: 99928
LSDA into the TEXT section. We need to generate non-lazy pointers to it on
Mach-O. However, the object the NLP points to may be local to the translation
unit. If so, then the NLP needs to have the value of that object specified
instead of "0", which the linker interprets as "external".
llvm-svn: 98325
Make it so. (This patch is in LowerCall_Darwin, which seems
to be used by SVR4 code as well; since that doesn't belong here,
I haven't worried about this case.)
llvm-svn: 98077
Target independent isel should always pass along the "tail call" property. Change
target hook LowerCall's parameter "isTailCall" into a refernce. If the target
decides it's impossible to honor the tail call request, it should set isTailCall
to false to make target independent isel happy.
llvm-svn: 94626
return partial registers. This affected the back-end lowering code some.
Also patch up some places I missed before in the "get" functions.
llvm-svn: 91880
Note that "hasDotLocAndDotFile"-style debug info was already broken;
people wanting this functionality should implement it in the
AsmPrinter/DwarfWriter code.
llvm-svn: 89711
slots. The AsmPrinter will use this information to determine whether to
print a spill/reload comment.
Remove default argument values. It's too easy to pass a wrong argument
value when multiple arguments have default values. Make everything
explicit to trap bugs early.
Update all targets to adhere to the new interfaces..
llvm-svn: 87022
stack slots and giving them different PseudoSourceValue's did not fix the
problem of post-alloc scheduling miscompiling llvm itself.
- Apply Dan's conservative workaround by assuming any non fixed stack slots can
alias other memory locations. This means a load from spill slot #1 cannot
move above a store of spill slot #2.
- Enable post-alloc scheduling for x86 at optimization leverl Default and above.
llvm-svn: 84424
- Allocate MachineMemOperands and MachineMemOperand lists in MachineFunctions.
This eliminates MachineInstr's std::list member and allows the data to be
created by isel and live for the remainder of codegen, avoiding a lot of
copying and unnecessary translation. This also shrinks MemSDNode.
- Delete MemOperandSDNode. Introduce MachineSDNode which has dedicated
fields for MachineMemOperands.
- Change MemSDNode to have a MachineMemOperand member instead of its own
fields with the same information. This introduces some redundancy, but
it's more consistent with what MachineInstr will eventually want.
- Ignore alignment when searching for redundant loads for CSE, but remember
the greatest alignment.
Target-specific code which previously used MemOperandSDNodes with generic
SDNodes now use MemIntrinsicSDNodes, with opcodes in a designated range
so that the SelectionDAG framework knows that MachineMemOperand information
is available.
llvm-svn: 82794
naming scheme used in SelectionDAG, where there are multiple kinds
of "target" nodes, but "machine" nodes are nodes which represent
a MachineInstr.
llvm-svn: 82790
encodings.
- Make some of the values emitted by the FDEs dependent upon the pointer
size. This is in line with how GCC does things. And it has the benefit of
working for Darwin in 64-bit mode now.
llvm-svn: 80428
The Link Register is volatile when using the 32-bit SVR4 ABI.
Make it possible to use the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.
Add non-volatile registers for the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.
Make sure r2 is a reserved register when using the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.
Update PPCFrameInfo for the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.
Add FIXME for 64-bit Darwin PPC.
Insert NOP instruction after direct function calls.
Emit official procedure descriptors.
Create TOC entries for GlobalAddress references.
Spill 64-bit non-volatile registers to the correct slots.
Only custom lower VAARG when using the 32-bit SVR4 ABI.
Use simple VASTART lowering for the 64-bit SVR4 ABI.
llvm-svn: 79091
2. Move section switch printing to MCSection virtual method which takes a
TAI. This eliminates textual formatting stuff from TLOF.
3. Eliminate SwitchToSectionDirective, getSectionFlagsAsString, and
TLOFELF::AtIsCommentChar.
llvm-svn: 78510
Instead of awkwardly encoding calling-convention information with ISD::CALL,
ISD::FORMAL_ARGUMENTS, ISD::RET, and ISD::ARG_FLAGS nodes, TargetLowering
provides three virtual functions for targets to override:
LowerFormalArguments, LowerCall, and LowerRet, which replace the custom
lowering done on the special nodes. They provide the same information, but
in a more immediately usable format.
This also reworks much of the target-independent tail call logic. The
decision of whether or not to perform a tail call is now cleanly split
between target-independent portions, and the target dependent portion
in IsEligibleForTailCallOptimization.
This also synchronizes all in-tree targets, to help enable future
refactoring and feature work.
llvm-svn: 78142
Module*.
Also, dropped uses of TargetMachine where unnecessary. The only target which
still takes a TargetMachine& is Mips, I would appreciate it if someone would
normalize this to match other targets.
llvm-svn: 77918
it is highly specific to the object file that will be generated in the end,
this introduces a new TargetLoweringObjectFile interface that is implemented
for each of ELF/MachO/COFF/Alpha/PIC16 and XCore.
Though still is still a brutal and ugly refactoring, this is a major step
towards goodness.
This patch also:
1. fixes a bunch of dangling pointer problems in the PIC16 backend.
2. disables the TargetLowering copy ctor which PIC16 was accidentally using.
3. gets us closer to xcore having its own crazy target section flags and
pic16 not having to shadow sections with its own objects.
4. fixes wierdness where ELF targets would set CStringSection but not
CStringSection_. Factor the code better.
5. fixes some bugs in string lowering on ELF targets.
llvm-svn: 77294
This adds location info for all llvm_unreachable calls (which is a macro now) in
!NDEBUG builds.
In NDEBUG builds location info and the message is off (it only prints
"UREACHABLE executed").
llvm-svn: 75640
Make llvm_unreachable take an optional string, thus moving the cerr<< out of
line.
LLVM_UNREACHABLE is now a simple wrapper that makes the message go away for
NDEBUG builds.
llvm-svn: 75379
Make CalculateParameterAndLinkageAreaSize() Darwin-specific.
Remove SVR4 specific code from LowerCALL_Darwin() and LowerFORMAL_ARGUMENTS_Darwin().
Rename MachoABI to DarwinABI for consistency.
Rename ELF ABI to SVR4 ABI for consistency.
Factor out common call return lowering between the Darwin and SVR4 ABI.
Factor out common call lowering between the Darwin and SVR4 ABI.
llvm-svn: 74766
Implement LowerFORMAL_ARGUMENTS_SVR4().
Implement LowerCALL_SVR4().
Add support for split arguments.
Implement by value parameter passing for aggregates.
Add support for variable argument lists.
Create the spill area for argument registers of variable argument functions no longer at a fixed offset.
Make sure callee saved registers are spilled to the correct stack offsets.
Change allocation order of non-volatile floating-point registers.
Add VRSAVE to the list of callee-saved registers, add CallConvLowering for vararg calls.
Add support for variable argument calls with Vector arguments.
Add support for VR and VRSAVE save area, improve allocation order for non-volatile vector registers.
Stop creating illegal i8 values in LowerVASTART().
Add memory access width hints.
Make sure to reserve space on the stack for the frame pointer.
When using the SVR4 ABI, reserve r13 for the Small Data Area pointer.
Assure that the frame pointer is spilled to the correct location on the stack.
Some FP registers were not marked as volatile.
Make sure the i64 words from a long double are passed either both in registers or both on the stack.
Only put integer arguments in registers which are not marked with the inreg flag.
llvm-svn: 74765
With the SVR4 ABI on PowerPC, vector arguments for vararg calls are passed differently depending on whether they are a fixed or a variable argument. Variable vector arguments always go into memory, fixed vector arguments are put
into vector registers. If there are no free vector registers available, fixed vector arguments are put on the stack.
The NumFixedArgs attribute allows to decide for an argument in a vararg call whether it belongs to the fixed or variable portion of the parameter list.
llvm-svn: 74764
Small refactoring in LowerFORMAL_ARGUMENTS().
Correct minor formatting issues.
Remove size argument of CreateCopyOfByValArgument().
Remove dead argument from CalculateStackSlotSize().
Remove unused variable ReturnAddrIndex from various targets.
llvm-svn: 74763
have the alignment be calculated up front, and have the back-ends obey whatever
alignment is decided upon.
This allows for future work that would allow for precise no-op placement and the
like.
llvm-svn: 74564
using Promote which won't work because i64 isn't
a legal type. It's easy enough to use Custom, but
then we have the problem that when the type
legalizer is promoting FP_TO_UINT->i16, it has no
way of telling it should prefer FP_TO_SINT->i32
to FP_TO_UINT->i32. I have uncomfortably hacked
this by making the type legalizer choose FP_TO_SINT
when both are Custom.
This fixes several regressions in the testsuite.
llvm-svn: 72891
PR2957
ISD::VECTOR_SHUFFLE now stores an array of integers representing the shuffle
mask internal to the node, rather than taking a BUILD_VECTOR of ConstantSDNodes
as the shuffle mask. A value of -1 represents UNDEF.
In addition to eliminating the creation of illegal BUILD_VECTORS just to
represent shuffle masks, we are better about canonicalizing the shuffle mask,
resulting in substantially better code for some classes of shuffles.
llvm-svn: 70225
ISD::VECTOR_SHUFFLE now stores an array of integers representing the shuffle
mask internal to the node, rather than taking a BUILD_VECTOR of ConstantSDNodes
as the shuffle mask. A value of -1 represents UNDEF.
In addition to eliminating the creation of illegal BUILD_VECTORS just to
represent shuffle masks, we are better about canonicalizing the shuffle mask,
resulting in substantially better code for some classes of shuffles.
A clean up of x86 shuffle code, and some canonicalizing in DAGCombiner is next.
llvm-svn: 69952
arbitrary vector sizes. Add an optional MinSplatBits parameter to specify
a minimum for the splat element size. Update the PPC target to use the
revised interface.
llvm-svn: 65899
instruction. The class also consolidates the code for detecting constant
splats that's shared across PowerPC and the CellSPU backends (and might be
useful for other backends.) Also introduces SelectionDAG::getBUID_VECTOR() for
generating new BUILD_VECTOR nodes.
llvm-svn: 65296
(Note: Eventually, commits like this will be handled via a pre-commit hook that
does this automagically, as well as expand tabs to spaces and look for 80-col
violations.)
llvm-svn: 64827
Many targets build placeholder nodes for special operands, e.g.
GlobalBaseReg on X86 and PPC for the PIC base. There's no
sensible way to associate debug info with these. I've left
them built with getNode calls with explicit DebugLoc::getUnknownLoc operands.
I'm not too happy about this but don't see a good improvement;
I considered adding a getPseudoOperand or something, but it
seems to me that'll just make it harder to read.
llvm-svn: 63992
promote from i1 all the way up to the canonical SetCC type.
In order to discover an appropriate type to use, pass
MVT::Other to getSetCCResultType. In order to be able to
do this, change getSetCCResultType to take a type as an
argument, not a value (this is also more logical).
llvm-svn: 61542