a load/store of i64. The later prevents promotion/scalarrepl of the
source and dest in many cases.
This fixes the 300% performance regression of the byval stuff on
stepanov_v1p2.
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realize that ne & sgt was a signed comparison (it was only
looking at whether the left compare was signed).
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if this becomes a varargs call then deal correctly with any
parameter attributes on the newly vararg call arguments.
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inlining a function if we know that the function does not write
to *any* memory. This implements test/Transforms/Inline/byval2.ll
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This allows us to sink things like:
cvtsi2sd 32(%esp), %xmm1
when reading from the argument area, for example.
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has no stores between the load and the end of block. This works
great and sinks hundreds of stores, but we can't turn it on because
machineinstrs don't have volatility information and we don't want to
sink volatile stores :(
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parameter, even if it is a varargs function. Do
allow attributes on the varargs part of a call,
but not beyond the last argument. Only allow
selected attributes to be on the varargs part of
a call (currently only 'byval' is allowed). The
reasoning here is that most attributes, eg inreg,
simply make no sense here.
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get away with it, which exposes opportunities to eliminate the memory
objects entirely. For example, we now compile byval.ll to:
define internal void @f1(i32 %b.0, i64 %b.1) {
entry:
%tmp2 = add i32 %b.0, 1 ; <i32> [#uses=0]
ret void
}
define i32 @main() nounwind {
entry:
call void @f1( i32 1, i64 2 )
ret i32 0
}
This seems like it would trigger a lot for code that passes around small
structs (e.g. SDOperand's or _Complex)...
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- struct_2.ll: Completely unaligned load/store testing
- call_indirect.ll, struct_1.ll: Add test lines to exercise
X-form [$reg($reg)] addressing
At this point, loads and stores should be under control (he says
in an optimistic tone of voice.)
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Actually were not riding any arguments. Sadly there is no semantic spell checker that is going to safe you from such a mistake.
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commit all arguments where moved to the stack slot where they would
reside on a normal function call before the lowering to the tail call
stack slot. This was done to prevent arguments overwriting each other.
Now only arguments sourcing from a FORMAL_ARGUMENTS node or a
CopyFromReg node with virtual register (could also be a caller's
argument) are lowered indirectly.
--This line, and those below, will be ignored--
M X86/X86ISelLowering.cpp
M X86/README.txt
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