IR: Change inalloca's grammar a bit

The grammar for LLVM IR is not well specified in any document but seems
to obey the following rules:

 - Attributes which have parenthesized arguments are never preceded by
   commas.  This form of attribute is the only one which ever has
   optional arguments.  However, not all of these attributes support
   optional arguments: 'thread_local' supports an optional argument but
   'addrspace' does not.  Interestingly, 'addrspace' is documented as
   being a "qualifier".  What constitutes a qualifier?  I cannot find a
   definition.

 - Some attributes use a space between the keyword and the value.
   Examples of this form are 'align' and 'section'.  These are always
   preceded by a comma.

 - Otherwise, the attribute has no argument.  These attributes do not
   have a preceding comma.

Sometimes an attribute goes before the instruction, between the
instruction and it's type, or after it's type.  'atomicrmw' has
'volatile' between the instruction and the type while 'call' has 'tail'
preceding the instruction.

With all this in mind, it seems most consistent for 'inalloca' on an
'inalloca' instruction to occur before between the instruction and the
type.  Unlike the current formulation, there would be no preceding
comma.  The combination 'alloca inalloca' doesn't look particularly
appetizing, perhaps a better spelling of 'inalloca' is down the road.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@203376 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This commit is contained in:
David Majnemer
2014-03-09 06:41:58 +00:00
parent 3e07f8a03d
commit 39a09d2b7c
12 changed files with 35 additions and 40 deletions
+2 -2
View File
@@ -1946,9 +1946,9 @@ void AssemblyWriter::printInstruction(const Instruction &I) {
} else if (const AllocaInst *AI = dyn_cast<AllocaInst>(&I)) {
Out << ' ';
TypePrinter.print(AI->getAllocatedType(), Out);
if (AI->isUsedWithInAlloca())
Out << ", inalloca";
Out << "inalloca ";
TypePrinter.print(AI->getAllocatedType(), Out);
if (!AI->getArraySize() || AI->isArrayAllocation()) {
Out << ", ";
writeOperand(AI->getArraySize(), true);