Test the range of float constants to ensure we are not attempting to create a \
float constant using a double value that is out of range for a float
llvm-svn: 18585
well as a vector of constant*'s. It turns out that this is more efficient
and all of the clients want to do that, so we should cater to them.
llvm-svn: 16923
Move include/Config and include/Support into include/llvm/Config,
include/llvm/ADT and include/llvm/Support. From here on out, all LLVM
public header files must be under include/llvm/.
llvm-svn: 16137
initializers for constant structs and arrays take constant space, instead of
space proportinal to the number of elements. This reduces the memory usage of
the LLVM compiler by hundreds of megabytes when compiling some nasty SPEC95
benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 11470
'Constant', instead of specific subclass pointers. In the future, these will
return an instance of ConstantAggregateZero if all of the inputs are zeros.
llvm-svn: 11467
Basically we store floating point values as their integral components, instead of relying
on the semantics of floating point < to differentiate between values. This is likely to
make the map search be faster anyway.
llvm-svn: 11064
out that the problem was actually the writer writing out a 'null' value
because it didn't normalize it. This fixes:
test/Regression/Assembler/2004-01-22-FloatNormalization.ll
llvm-svn: 10967
Move a bunch of (now) private stuff from ConstantFolding.h into
ConstantFolding.cpp.
This _finally_ gets us to a place where we have a sane constant folder. The
rules are:
1. LLVM clients now use ConstantExpr::get* methods to fold constants. If they
cannot be folded, a constantexpr is created, so these methods always return
valid Constant*'s.
2. The implementation of ConstantExpr::get* uses the functions exposed by
ConstantFolding.h to try to fold constants. If they cannot be folded,
they should return a null pointer.
3. The implementation of ConstantFolding can do whatever it wants, and only
has one client (Constants.cpp)
This cuts down on the wierd dependencies, and eliminates the two interfaces.
The old constanthandling interface was especially bad for clients to use
because almost none of them took the failure condition into consideration,
thus leading to obscure problems.
llvm-svn: 10807