priority function. Instead, just iterate over the AllNodes list, which is
already in topological order. This eliminates a fair amount of bookkeeping,
and speeds up the isel phase by about 15% on many testcases.
The impact on most targets is that AddToISelQueue calls can be simply removed.
In the x86 target, there are two additional notable changes.
The rule-bending AND+SHIFT optimization in MatchAddress that creates new
pre-isel nodes during isel is now a little more verbose, but more robust.
Instead of either creating an invalid DAG or creating an invalid topological
sort, as it has historically done, it can now just insert the new nodes into
the node list at a position where they will be consistent with the topological
ordering.
Also, the address-matching code has logic that checked to see if a node was
"already selected". However, when a node is selected, it has all its uses
taken away via ReplaceAllUsesWith or equivalent, so it won't recieve any
further visits from MatchAddress. This code is now removed.
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This is a short term workaround. The current solution is for the JIT memory manager to manage code and data memory separately.
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have its node id set. The new and and shift nodes are the nodes that need
the IDs. This fixes PR2982.
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callee-saved restore code. It could skip over conditional jumps
accidentally. Instead, just skip the "return" instructions.
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so that va_start/va_arg/et.al. will walk arguments correctly for Cell SPU.
N.B.: Because neither clang nor llvm-gcc-4.2 can be built for CellSPU, this is
still unexorcised code.
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allows ppcf128->int conversion to work with
DeadInstructionElimination. This is now turned
off but RM is harmless. It does not do a complete
job of modeling the rounding mode.
Revert marking MFCR as using all 7 CR subregisters;
while correct, this caused the problem in PR 2964,
plus the local RA crash noted in the comments.
This was needed to make DeadInstructionElimination,
but as we are not running that, it is backed out
for now. Eventually it should go back in and the
other problems fixed where they're broken.
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Since the ARM constant pool handling supercedes the standard LLVM constant
pool entirely, the JIT emitter does not allocate space for the constants,
nor initialize the memory. The constant pool is considered part of the
instruction stream.
Likewise, when resolving relocations into the constant pool, a hook into
the target back end is used to resolve from the constant ID# to the
address where the constant is stored.
For now, the support in the ARM emitter is limited to 32-bit integer. Future
patches will expand this to the full range of constants necessary.
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ppcf128 to i32 conversion and expand it into a code
sequence like in LegalizeDAG. This needs custom
ppc lowering of FP_ROUND_INREG, so turn that on and
make it work with LegalizeTypes. Probably PPC should
simply custom lower the original conversion.
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a memset using 16-byte XMM stores, but where the stack realignment code
didn't work. Until it does (PR2962) disable use of xmm regs in memcpy
and memset formation for linux and other targets with insufficiently
aligned stacks.
This is part of PR2888
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flag. Then in a debugger developers can set breakpoints at these calls
to see waht is about to be selected and what the resulting subgraph
looks like. This really helps when debugging instruction selection.
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target-independent code to target-specific code. This prevents it
from running on targets that aren't using fast-isel.
In addition to saving compile time, this addresses the problem
that not all targets are prepared for it. In order to use this
pass, all instructions must declare all their fixed uses and
defs of physical registers.
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variable is moved to the execution engine. The JIT calls the TargetJITInfo
to allocate thread local storage. Currently, only linux/x86 knows how to
allocate thread local global variables.
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