defs or uses. The regular def and use checking below covers them, and
can be more precise. It's safe to hoist an instruction with a dead
implicit def if the register isn't live into the loop header.
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for alignment into the LSDA. If the TType base offset is emitted, then put the
padding there. Otherwise, put it in the call site table length. There will be no
conflict between the two sites when placing the padding in one place.
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The PowerPC floating point registers can represent both f32 and f64 via the
two register classes F4RC and F8RC. F8RC is considered a subclass of F4RC to
allow cross-class coalescing. This coalescing only affects whether registers
are spilled as f32 or f64.
Spill slots must be accessed with load/store instructions corresponding to the
class of the spilled register. PPCInstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl was looking
at the instruction opcode which is wrong.
X86 has similar floating point register classes, but doesn't try to fold
memory operands, so there is no problem there.
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the alignment requirement, if it no longer makes the TType base offset overflow
into extra bytes, then we need to pad to those bytes ourselves.
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will eliminate the need for padding in the "Call site table length". E.g., if
we have this:
GCC_except_table1:
Lexception1:
.byte 0xff ## @LPStart Encoding = omit
.byte 0x9b ## @TType Encoding = indirect pcrel sdata4
.byte 0x7f ## @TType base offset
.byte 0x03 ## Call site Encoding = udata4
.byte 0x89 ## Call site table length
with padding of 1. We want to emit the padding like this:
GCC_except_table1:
Lexception1:
.byte 0xff ## @LPStart Encoding = omit
.byte 0x9b ## @TType Encoding = indirect pcrel sdata4
.byte 0xff ## @TType base offset
.space 1,0 ## Padding
.byte 0x03 ## Call site Encoding = udata4
.byte 0x89 ## Call site table length
and not with padding on the "Call site table length" entry.
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terms of store and load, which means bitcasting between scalar
integer and vector has endian-specific results, which undermines
this whole approach.
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GCC_except_table label but before the Lexception, which the FDE references.
This causes problems as the FDE does not point to the start of an LSDA chunk.
Use an unnormalized uleb128 for the call-site table length that includes the
padding.
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the number of value bits, not the number of bits of allocation for in-memory
storage.
Make getTypeStoreSize and getTypeAllocSize work consistently for arrays and
vectors.
Fix several places in CodeGen which compute offsets into in-memory vectors
to use TargetData information.
This fixes PR1784.
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necessary to swap the operands to handle NaN and negative zero properly.
Also, reintroduce logic for checking for NaN conditions when forming
SSE min and max instructions, fixed to take into consideration NaNs and
negative zeros. This allows forming min and max instructions in more
cases.
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to adding them in a determinstic order (bottom up from
the root) based on the structure of the graph itself.
This updates tests for some random changes, interesting
bits: CodeGen/Blackfin/promote-logic.ll no longer crashes.
I have no idea why, but that's good right?
CodeGen/X86/2009-07-16-LoadFoldingBug.ll also fails, but
now compiles to have one fewer constant pool entry, making
the expected load that was being folded disappear. Since it
is an unreduced mass of gnast, I just removed it.
This fixes PR6370
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Previously, LiveIntervalAnalysis would infer phi joins by looking for multiply
defined registers. That doesn't work if the phi join is implicitly defined in
all but one of the predecessors.
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no id's would cause early exit allowing IsLegalToFold to return true
instead of false, producing a cyclic dag.
This was striking the new isel because it isn't using SelectNodeTo yet,
which theoretically is just an optimization.
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126.gcc nightly tests. These failures uncovered latent bugs that machine DCE
could remove one half of a stack adjust down/up pair, causing PEI to assert.
This update fixes that, and the tests now pass.
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dragonegg self-host build. I reverted 96640 in order to revert
96556 (96640 goes on top of 96556), but it also looks like with
both of them applied the breakage happens even earlier. The
symptom of the 96556 miscompile is the following crash:
llvm[3]: Compiling AlphaISelLowering.cpp for Release build
cc1plus: /home/duncan/tmp/tmp/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:4982: void llvm::SelectionDAG::ReplaceAllUsesWith(llvm::SDNode*, llvm::SDNode*, llvm::SelectionDAG::DAGUpdateListener*): Assertion `(!From->hasAnyUseOfValue(i) || From->getValueType(i) == To->getValueType(i)) && "Cannot use this version of ReplaceAllUsesWith!"' failed.
Stack dump:
0. Running pass 'X86 DAG->DAG Instruction Selection' on function '@_ZN4llvm19AlphaTargetLowering14LowerOperationENS_7SDValueERNS_12SelectionDAGE'
g++: Internal error: Aborted (program cc1plus)
This occurs when building LLVM using LLVM built by LLVM (via
dragonegg). Probably LLVM has miscompiled itself, though it
may have miscompiled GCC and/or dragonegg itself: at this point
of the self-host build, all of GCC, LLVM and dragonegg were built
using LLVM. Unfortunately this kind of thing is extremely hard
to debug, and while I did rummage around a bit I didn't find any
smoking guns, aka obviously miscompiled code.
Found by bisection.
r96556 | evancheng | 2010-02-18 03:13:50 +0100 (Thu, 18 Feb 2010) | 5 lines
Some dag combiner goodness:
Transform br (xor (x, y)) -> br (x != y)
Transform br (xor (xor (x,y), 1)) -> br (x == y)
Also normalize (and (X, 1) == / != 1 -> (and (X, 1)) != / == 0 to match to "test on x86" and "tst on arm"
r96640 | evancheng | 2010-02-19 01:34:39 +0100 (Fri, 19 Feb 2010) | 16 lines
Transform (xor (setcc), (setcc)) == / != 1 to
(xor (setcc), (setcc)) != / == 1.
e.g. On x86_64
%0 = icmp eq i32 %x, 0
%1 = icmp eq i32 %y, 0
%2 = xor i1 %1, %0
br i1 %2, label %bb, label %return
=>
testl %edi, %edi
sete %al
testl %esi, %esi
sete %cl
cmpb %al, %cl
je LBB1_2
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for ARM to just check if a function has a FP to determine if it's safe
to simplify the stack adjustment pseudo ops prior to eliminating frame
indices. Allow targets to override the default behavior and does so for ARM
and Thumb2.
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