A subclass is allowed to have a larger spill size than the superclass, and the
spill alignment must be a multiple of the superclass alignment. This causes
the following new subclass relations:
=== Alpha ===
F4RC -> F8RC
=== PPC ===
F4RC -> F8RC
=== SPU ===
R8C -> R16C -> R32C/R32FP -> R64C/R64FP -> GPRC/VECREG
=== X86 ===
FR32 -> FR64 -> VR128
RFP32 -> RFP64 -> RFP80
These subclass relations are consistent with the behaviour of -join-cross-class-copies.
llvm-svn: 70511
compute an upper-bound value for the trip count, in addition to
the actual trip count. Use this to allow getZeroExtendExpr and
getSignExtendExpr to fold casts in more cases.
This may eventually morph into a more general value-range
analysis capability; there are certainly plenty of places where
more complete value-range information would allow more folding.
llvm-svn: 70509
This is *not* turned on by default. Testing indicates this is just as likely to pessimize code. The main issue seems to be allocation preference doesn't work effectively. That will change once I've taught register allocator "swapping".
llvm-svn: 70503
so that it doesn't shadow the instance variable of the same name.
Make the parameter names in method declarations match the definitions.
llvm-svn: 70502
run when assembling.
Wire this up to the gold plugin. You can now pass --plugin-opt gcc=/foo/bar/gcc
and it will run that gcc instead of looking for it on the path.
llvm-svn: 70490
memory operands otherwise the writebacks get lost when the inline asm
doesn't otherwise have side effects. This fixes rdar://6839427, though
clang really shouldn't generate these anymore.
llvm-svn: 70455
(sext i8 {-128,+,1} to i64) to i64 {-128,+,1}, where the iteration
crosses from negative to positive, but is still safe if the trip
count is within range.
llvm-svn: 70421
anything larger than 64-bits, avoiding a crash. This should
really be fixed to use APInts, though type legalization happens
to help us out and we get good code on the attached testcase at
least.
This fixes rdar://6836460
llvm-svn: 70360
Massive check in. This changes the "-fast" flag to "-O#" in llc. If you want to
use the old behavior, the flag is -O0. This change allows for finer-grained
control over which optimizations are run at different -O levels.
Most of this work was pretty mechanical. The majority of the fixes came from
verifying that a "fast" variable wasn't used anymore. The JIT still uses a
"Fast" flag. I'll change the JIT with a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 70343