VECTOR_SHUFFLEs to REG_SEQUENCE instructions. The standard ISD::BUILD_VECTOR
node corresponds closely to REG_SEQUENCE but I couldn't use it here because
its operands do not get legalized. That is pretty awful, but I guess it
makes sense for other targets. Instead, I have added an ARM-specific version
of BUILD_VECTOR that will have its operands properly legalized.
This fixes the rest of Radar 7872877.
llvm-svn: 105439
Check that all the instructions are in the same basic block, that the
EXTRACT_SUBREGs write to the same subregs that are being extracted, and that
the source and destination registers are in the same regclass. Some of
these constraints can be relaxed with a bit more work. Jakob suggested
that the loop that checks for subregs when NewSubIdx != 0 should use the
"nodbg" iterator, so I made that change here, too.
llvm-svn: 105437
A temporary flag -arm-tail-calls defaults to off,
so there is no functional change by default.
Intrepid users may try this; simple cases work
but there are bugs.
llvm-svn: 105413
registers it defines then interfere with an existing preg live range.
For instance, if we had something like these machine instructions:
BB#0
... = imul ... EFLAGS<imp-def,dead>
test ..., EFLAGS<imp-def>
jcc BB#2 EFLAGS<imp-use>
BB#1
... ; fallthrough to BB#2
BB#2
... ; No code that defines EFLAGS
jcc ... EFLAGS<imp-use>
Machine sink will come along, see that imul implicitly defines EFLAGS, but
because it's "dead", it assumes that it can move imul into BB#2. But when it
does, imul's "dead" imp-def of EFLAGS is raised from the dead (a zombie) and
messes up the condition code for the jump (and pretty much anything else which
relies upon it being correct).
The solution is to know which pregs are live going into a basic block. However,
that information isn't calculated at this point. Nor does the LiveVariables pass
take into account non-allocatable physical registers. In lieu of this, we do a
*very* conservative pass through the basic block to determine if a preg is live
coming out of it.
llvm-svn: 105387
expansion is the same as that used by LegalizeDAG.
The resulting code sucks in terms of performance/codesize on x86-32 for a
64-bit operation; I haven't looked into whether different expansions might be
better in general.
llvm-svn: 105378
spills and reloads.
This means that a partial define of a register causes a reload so the other
parts of the register are preserved.
The reload can be prevented by adding an <imp-def> operand for the full
register. This is already done by the coalescer and live interval analysis where
relevant.
llvm-svn: 105369
register updates.
These operands tell the spiller that the other parts of the partially defined
register are don't-care, and a reload is not necessary.
llvm-svn: 105361
instruction defines subregisters.
Any existing subreg indices on the original instruction are preserved or
composed with the new subreg index.
Also substitute multiple operands mentioning the original register by using the
new MachineInstr::substituteRegister() function. This is necessary because there
will soon be <imp-def> operands added to non read-modify-write partial
definitions. This instruction:
%reg1234:foo = FLAP %reg1234<imp-def>
will reMaterialize(%reg3333, bar) like this:
%reg3333:bar-foo = FLAP %reg333:bar<imp-def>
Finally, replace the TargetRegisterInfo pointer argument with a reference to
indicate that it cannot be NULL.
llvm-svn: 105358
OSX users: make sure that CrashReporter is disabled when running unit tests.
Death tests are enabled now so you'll get a ton of message boxes.
llvm-svn: 105352