regex and matching it instead of trying to match chunks at a time.
Matching chunks at a time broke with check lines like
CHECK: foo {{.*}}bar
because the .* would eat the entire rest of the line and bar would
never match.
Now we just escape the fixed strings for the user, so that something
like:
CHECK: a() {{.*}}???
is matched as:
CHECK: {{a\(\) .*\?\?\?}}
transparently "under the covers".
llvm-svn: 82779
allows appropriate backends to generate a sqrt instruction.
On x86, this isn't done at -O0 because we go through
FastISel instead. This is a behavior change from before
this series of sqrt patches started. I think this is OK
considering that compile speed is most important at -O0, but
could be convinced otherwise.
llvm-svn: 82778
DEBUG_RUNTIME Makefile variable to pass -g to gcc when building LLVM's objects.
Without this, it's very hard to debug crashes that happen in Release-Asserts
mode but not Debug mode.
llvm-svn: 82775
For the AAPCS ABI, SP must always be 4-byte aligned, and at any "public
interface" it must be 8-byte aligned. For the older ARM APCS ABI, the stack
alignment is just always 4 bytes. For X86, we currently align SP at
entry to a function (e.g., to 16 bytes for Darwin), but no stack alignment
is needed at other times, such as for a leaf function.
After discussing this with Dan, I decided to go with the approach of adding
a new "TransientStackAlignment" field to TargetFrameInfo. This value
specifies the stack alignment that must be maintained even in between calls.
It defaults to 1 except for ARM, where it is 4. (Some other targets may
also want to set this if they have similar stack requirements. It's not
currently required for PPC because it sets targetHandlesStackFrameRounding
and handles the alignment in target-specific code.) The existing StackAlignment
value specifies the alignment upon entry to a function, which is how we've
been using it anyway.
llvm-svn: 82767
this adjustment does not change the direction or the signs of the object
offsets, and the details of the offset calculations can be target-specific.
Also mention that for most targets this value is only used to generate debug
info.
llvm-svn: 82750
interest for this, as it currently reserves a register rather than using
the scavenger for matierializing constants as needed.
Instead of scavenging registers on the fly while eliminating frame indices,
new virtual registers are created, and then a scavenged collectively in a
post-pass over the function. This isolates the bits that need to interact
with the scavenger, and sets the stage for more intelligent use, and reuse,
of scavenged registers.
For the time being, this is disabled by default. Once the bugs are worked out,
the current scavenging calls in replaceFrameIndices() will be removed and
the post-pass scavenging will be the default. Until then,
-enable-frame-index-scavenging enables the new code. Currently, only the
Thumb1 back end is set up to use it.
llvm-svn: 82734
CHECK strings, instead of canonicalizing the patterns directly. This allows
Pattern to just contain a StringRef instead of std::string.
llvm-svn: 82713
LocalAreaOffset. (We don't have any of those right now.)
PEI::calculateFrameObjectOffsets includes the absolute value of the
LocalAreaOffset in the cumulative offset value used to calculate the
stack frame size. It then adds the raw value of the LocalAreaOffset
to the stack size. For a StackGrowsDown target, that raw value is negative
and has the effect of cancelling out the absolute value that was added
earlier, but that obviously won't work for a StackGrowsUp target. Change
to subtract the absolute value of the LocalAreaOffset.
llvm-svn: 82693
LiveVariables add implicit kills to correctly track partial register kills. This works well enough and is fairly accurate. But coalescer can make it impossible to maintain these markers. e.g.
BL <ga:sss1>, %R0<kill,undef>, %S0<kill>, %R0<imp-def>, %R1<imp-def,dead>, %R2<imp-def,dead>, %R3<imp-def,dead>, %R12<imp-def,dead>, %LR<imp-def,dead>, %D0<imp-def>, ...
...
%reg1031<def> = FLDS <cp#1>, 0, 14, %reg0, Mem:LD4[ConstantPool]
...
%S0<def> = FCPYS %reg1031<kill>, 14, %reg0, %D0<imp-use,kill>
When reg1031 and S0 are coalesced, the copy (FCPYS) will be eliminated the the implicit-kill of D0 is lost. In this case it's possible to move the marker to the FLDS. But in many cases, this is not possible. Suppose
%reg1031<def> = FOO <cp#1>, %D0<imp-def>
...
%S0<def> = FCPYS %reg1031<kill>, 14, %reg0, %D0<imp-use,kill>
When FCPYS goes away, the definition of S0 is the "FOO" instruction. However, transferring the D0 implicit-kill to FOO doesn't work since it is the def of D0 itself. We need to fix this in another time by introducing a "kill" pseudo instruction to track liveness.
Disabling the assertion is not ideal, but machine verifier is doing that job now. It's important to know double-def is not a miscomputation since it means a register should be free but it's not tracked as free. It's a performance issue instead.
llvm-svn: 82677