in favor of the widespread llvm style. Capitalize variables and add
newlines for visual parsing. Rename variables for readability.
And other cleanup.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@120490 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
may-aliasing stores that partially overlap with different base
pointers. This implements PR6043 and the non-variable part of
PR8657
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t_addrmode_s4, but with a different scaling factor.
* Encode the Thumb1 load and store instructions. This involved a bit of
refactoring (hi, Chris! :-). Some of the patterns became dead afterwards and
were removed.
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Thumb2 encoding to share code with the ARM encoding, which gets use fixup support for free.
It also allows us to fold away at least one codegen-only pattern.
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1. if the underlying pointer passed in can be resolved
to any argument or alloca, then we don't need to scan.
Previously we would only avoid the scan if the alloca
or byval was actually considered dead.
2. The dead store processing code is itself completely
dead and didn't handle volatile stores right anyway,
so delete it. This allows simplifying the interface
to RemoveAccessedObjects.
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made sense to me. We now have a set of dead stack objects, and
they become live when loaded. Fix a theoretical problem where
we'd pass in the wrong pointer to the alias query.
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If the call might read all the allocas, stop scanning early.
Convert a vector to smallvector, shrink SmallPtrSet to 16 instead
of 64 to avoid crazy linear scans.
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now that DSE hacks on them. This fixes a regression I introduced,
by generalizing DSE to hack on transfers.
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certainly be made more generic. But it does allow us to parse something like:
ldr r3, [r2, r4]
correctly in Thumb mode.
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support register and register-immediate addressing mode
todo: immediate and register-register addressing mode
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about pairs of AA::Location's instead of looking for MemDep's
"Def" predicate. This is more powerful and general, handling
memset/memcpy/store all uniformly, and implementing PR8701 and
probably obsoleting parts of memcpyoptimizer.
This also fixes an obscure bug with init.trampoline and i8
stores, but I'm not surprised it hasn't been hit yet. Enhancing
init.trampoline to carry the size that it stores would allow
DSE to be much more aggressive about optimizing them.
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This analysis is going to run immediately after LiveIntervals. It will stay
alive during register allocation and keep track of user variables mentioned in
DBG_VALUE instructions.
When the register allocator is moving values between registers and the stack, it
is very hard to keep track of DBG_VALUE instructions. We usually get it wrong.
This analysis maintains a data structure that makes it easy to update DBG_VALUE
instructions.
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is trivially dead, since these have side effects. This makes the
(misnamed) MemoryUseIntrinsic class dead, so remove it.
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