This removes all the _8, _16, _32, and _64 opcodes and replaces each
group with an unsuffixed opcode. The MemoryVT field of the AtomicSDNode
is now used to carry the size information. In tablegen, the size-specific
opcodes are replaced by size-independent opcodes that utilize the
ability to compose them with predicates.
This shrinks the per-opcode tables and makes the code that handles
atomics much more concise.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@61389 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
The EH_frame and .eh symbols are now private, except for darwin9 and earlier.
The patch also fixes the definition of PrivateGlobalPrefix on pcc linux.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@61242 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
target-independent way of determining overflow on multiplication. It's very
tricky. Patch by Zoltan Varga!
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AND. This is speedup on any reasonable target, but particularly
on 32-bit targets where this often turns into a libcall like udivdi3.
We know that alignments are a power of two but the compiler doesn't.
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foldMemoryOperand how to "fold" them, by converting them into constant-pool
loads. When they aren't folded, they use xorps/cmpeqd, but for example when
register pressure is high, they may now be folded as memory operands, which
reduces register pressure.
Also, mark V_SET0 isAsCheapAsAMove so that two-address-elimination will
remat it instead of copying zeros around (V_SETALLONES was already marked).
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ReplaceNodeResults: rather than returning a node which
must have the same number of results as the original
node (which means mucking around with MERGE_VALUES,
and which is also easy to get wrong since SelectionDAG
folding may mean you don't get the node you expect),
return the results in a vector.
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(this doesn't happen that often, since most code
does not use illegal types) then follow it by a
DAG combiner run that is allowed to generate
illegal operations but not illegal types. I didn't
modify the target combiner code to distinguish like
this between illegal operations and illegal types,
so it will not produce illegal operations as well
as not producing illegal types.
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some of the latency computation logic out of the SDNode
ScheduleDAG code into a TargetInstrItineraries helper method
to help with this.
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(actually, code already all worked, only the comment
changed). Use this to implement 'A' constraint on x86.
Fixes PR 1779.
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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.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@58688 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
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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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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sensible for vectors being scalarized. Note
that this method can't return anything very
sensible when splitting non-power-of-two vectors.
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and add a TargetLowering hook for it to use to determine when this
is legal (i.e. not in PIC mode, etc.)
This allows instruction selection to emit folded constant offsets
in more cases, such as the included testcase, eliminating the need
for explicit arithmetic instructions.
This eliminates the need for the C++ code in X86ISelDAGToDAG.cpp
that attempted to achieve the same effect, but wasn't as effective.
Also, fix handling of offsets in GlobalAddressSDNodes in several
places, including changing GlobalAddressSDNode's offset from
int to int64_t.
The Mips, Alpha, Sparc, and CellSPU targets appear to be
unaware of GlobalAddress offsets currently, so set the hook to
false on those targets.
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array. Improve some minor comments, refactor some helpers in
AsmOperandInfo. No functionality change for valid code.
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i.e. conditions that cannot be checked with a single instruction. For example,
SETONE and SETUEQ on x86.
- Teach legalizer to implement *illegal* setcc as a and / or of a number of
legal setcc nodes. For now, only implement FP conditions. e.g. SETONE is
implemented as SETO & SETNE, SETUEQ is SETUO | SETEQ.
- Move x86 target over.
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- Move the EH landing-pad code and adjust it so that it works
with FastISel as well as with SDISel.
- Add FastISel support for @llvm.eh.exception and
@llvm.eh.selector.
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`-fno-builtin' flag. Currently, it's used to replace "memset" with "_bzero"
instead of "__bzero" on Darwin10+. This arguably violates the meaning of this
flag, but is currently sufficient. The meaning of this flag should become more
specific over time.
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its size). Adjust various lowering functions to
pass this info through from CallInst. Use it to
implement sseregparm returns on X86. Remove
X86_ssecall calling convention.
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a separate function, eliminating duplication between the
add-passes-for-file and add-passes-for-machine-code code.
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Currently it just holds the calling convention and flags
for isVarArgs and isTailCall.
And it has several utility methods, which eliminate magic
5+2*i and similar index computations in several places.
CallSDNodes are not CSE'd. Teach UpdateNodeOperands to handle
nodes that are not CSE'd gracefully.
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UsedDirective for some symbols in llvm.used into
Darwin-specific code. I've decided LessPrivateGlobal
is potentially a useful abstraction and left it in
the target-independent area, with improved comment.
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objects in llvm.used (thanks Anton). Makes visible
the magic 'l' prefix for symbols on Darwin which are
to be passed through the assembler, then removed at
linktime (previously all references to this had been
hidden in the ObjC FE code, oh well).
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HandlePHINodesInSuccessorBlocks that works FastISel-style. This
allows PHI nodes to be updated correctly while using FastISel.
This also involves some code reorganization; ValueMap and
MBBMap are now members of the FastISel class, so they needn't
be passed around explicitly anymore. Also, SelectInstructions
is changed to SelectInstruction, and only does one instruction
at a time.
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ATOMIC_LOAD_ADD_{8,16,32,64} instead of ATOMIC_LOAD_ADD.
Increased the Hardcoded Constant OpActionsCapacity to match.
Large but boring; no functional change.
This is to support partial-word atomics on ppc; i8 is
not a valid type there, so by the time we get to lowering, the
ATOMIC_LOAD nodes looks the same whether the type was i8 or i32.
The information can be added to the AtomicSDNode, but that is the
largest SDNode; I don't fully understand the SDNode allocation,
but it is sensitive to the largest node size, so increasing
that must be bad. This is the alternative.
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was inserted or not. This allows bitcast in fast isel to properly handle the case
where an appropriate reg-to-reg copy is not available.
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class hold a MachineRegisterInfo member, and make the
MachineBasicBlock be passed in to SelectInstructions rather
than the FastISel constructor.
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- Add a basic machine-level dead block eliminator.
These two have to go together, since many other parts of the code generator are unable to handle the unreachable blocks otherwise created.
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switches use the binary search algorithm) for
environments that don't support it. PPC64 JIT
is such an environment; turn the flag on for that.
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difference in purpose of TargetInstrInfo and TargetInstrDesc,
which isn't immediately obvious from the name.
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hook for each way in which a result type can be
legalized (promotion, expansion, softening etc),
just use one: ReplaceNodeResults, which returns
a node with exactly the same result types as the
node passed to it, but presumably with a bunch of
custom code behind the scenes. No change if the
new LegalizeTypes infrastructure is not turned on.
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moves in order to get correct debug info. Since
I can't imagine how any target could possibly
be any different, I've just stripped out the
option: now all the world's like Darwin!
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Also, if LV isn't around, then TwoAddr doesn't need to be updating flags, since they won't have been set in the first place.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@53058 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
- Use a more accurate heuristic for the size of the hashtable.
- Use bitwise and instead of modulo since the size is a power of two.
- Use new[] instead of malloc().
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@52951 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
the need for a flavor operand, and add a new SDNode subclass,
LabelSDNode, for use with them to eliminate the need for a label id
operand.
Change instruction selection to let these label nodes through
unmodified instead of creating copies of them. Teach the MachineInstr
emitter how to emit a MachineInstr directly from an ISD label node.
This avoids the need for allocating SDNodes for the label id and
flavor value, as well as SDNodes for each of the post-isel label,
label id, and label flavor.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@52943 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
SmallVectors. Change the signature of TargetLowering::LowerArguments
to avoid returning a vector by value, and update the two targets
which still use this directly, Sparc and IA64, accordingly.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@52917 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
<16 x float> is 64-byte aligned (for some reason),
which gets us into the stack realignment code. The
computation changing FP-relative offsets to SP-relative
was broken, assiging a spill temp to a location
also used for parameter passing. This
fixes it by rounding up the stack frame to a multiple
of the largest alignment (I concluded it wasn't fixable
without doing this, but I'm not very sure.)
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@52750 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
InvalidateInstructionCache method instead of calling through
a hook on the JIT. This is a host feature, not a target feature.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@52734 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
wrong for volatile loads and stores. In fact this
is almost all of them! There are three types of
problems: (1) it is wrong to change the width of
a volatile memory access. These may be used to
do memory mapped i/o, in which case a load can have
an effect even if the result is not used. Consider
loading an i32 but only using the lower 8 bits. It
is wrong to change this into a load of an i8, because
you are no longer tickling the other three bytes. It
is also unwise to make a load/store wider. For
example, changing an i16 load into an i32 load is
wrong no matter how aligned things are, since the
fact of loading an additional 2 bytes can have
i/o side-effects. (2) it is wrong to change the
number of volatile load/stores: they may be counted
by the hardware. (3) it is wrong to change a volatile
load/store that requires one memory access into one
that requires several. For example on x86-32, you
can store a double in one processor operation, but to
store an i64 requires two (two i32 stores). In a
multi-threaded program you may want to bitcast an i64
to a double and store as a double because that will
occur atomically, and be indivisible to other threads.
So it would be wrong to convert the store-of-double
into a store of an i64, because this will become two
i32 stores - no longer atomic. My policy here is
to say that the number of processor operations for
an illegal operation is undefined. So it is alright
to change a store of an i64 (requires at least two
stores; but could be validly lowered to memcpy for
example) into a store of double (one processor op).
In short, if the new store is legal and has the same
size then I say that the transform is ok. It would
also be possible to say that transforms are always
ok if before they were illegal, whether after they
are illegal or not, but that's more awkward to do
and I doubt it buys us anything much.
However this exposed an interesting thing - on x86-32
a store of i64 is considered legal! That is because
operations are marked legal by default, regardless of
whether the type is legal or not. In some ways this
is clever: before type legalization this means that
operations on illegal types are considered legal;
after type legalization there are no illegal types
so now operations are only legal if they really are.
But I consider this to be too cunning for mere mortals.
Better to do things explicitly by testing AfterLegalize.
So I have changed things so that operations with illegal
types are considered illegal - indeed they can never
map to a machine operation. However this means that
the DAG combiner is more conservative because before
it was "accidentally" performing transforms where the
type was illegal because the operation was nonetheless
marked legal. So in a few such places I added a check
on AfterLegalize, which I suppose was actually just
forgotten before. This causes the DAG combiner to do
slightly more than it used to, which resulted in the X86
backend blowing up because it got a slightly surprising
node it wasn't expecting, so I tweaked it.
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of apint codegen failure is the DAG combiner doing
the wrong thing because it was comparing MVT's using
< rather than comparing the number of bits. Removing
the < method makes this mistake impossible to commit.
Instead, add helper methods for comparing bits and use
them.
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and better control the abstraction. Rename the type
to MVT. To update out-of-tree patches, the main
thing to do is to rename MVT::ValueType to MVT, and
rewrite expressions like MVT::getSizeInBits(VT) in
the form VT.getSizeInBits(). Use VT.getSimpleVT()
to extract a MVT::SimpleValueType for use in switch
statements (you will get an assert failure if VT is
an extended value type - these shouldn't exist after
type legalization).
This results in a small speedup of codegen and no
new testsuite failures (x86-64 linux).
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instruction to execute. This can be used for transformations (like two-address
conversion) to remat an instruction instead of generating a "move"
instruction. The idea is to decrease the live ranges and register pressure and
all that jazz.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@51660 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
on x86-64 linux. This causes no regressions on
32 bit linux and 32 bit ppc. More tests pass
on 64 bit ppc with no regressions. I didn't
turn on eh on 64 bit linux because the intrinsics
needed to compile the eh runtime aren't done
yet. But if you turn it on and link with the
mainline runtime then eh seems to work fine
on x86-64 linux with this patch. Thanks to
Dale for testing. The main point of the patch
is that if you output that some object is
encoded using 4 bytes you had better not output
8 bytes for it: the patch makes everything
consistent.
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the code being generated does not require an executable stack.
Also, add target-specific code to make use of this on Linux
on x86.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@50634 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Move platform independent code (lowering of possibly overwritten
arguments, check for tail call optimization eligibility) from
target X86ISelectionLowering.cpp to TargetLowering.h and
SelectionDAGISel.cpp.
Initial PowerPC tail call implementation:
Support ppc32 implemented and tested (passes my tests and
test-suite llvm-test).
Support ppc64 implemented and half tested (passes my tests).
On ppc tail call optimization is performed if
caller and callee are fastcc
call is a tail call (in tail call position, call followed by ret)
no variable argument lists or byval arguments
option -tailcallopt is enabled
Supported:
* non pic tail calls on linux/darwin
* module-local tail calls on linux(PIC/GOT)/darwin(PIC)
* inter-module tail calls on darwin(PIC)
If constraints are not met a normal call will be emitted.
A test checking the argument lowering behaviour on x86-64 was added.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@50477 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
When choosing between constraints with multiple options,
like "ir", test to see if we can use the 'i' constraint and
go with that if possible. This produces more optimal ASM in
all cases (sparing a register and an instruction to load it),
and fixes inline asm like this:
void test () {
asm volatile (" %c0 %1 " : : "imr" (42), "imr"(14));
}
Previously we would dump "42" into a memory location (which
is ok for the 'm' constraint) which would cause a problem
because the 'c' modifier is not valid on memory operands.
Isn't it great how inline asm turns 'missed optimization'
into 'compile failed'??
Incidentally, this was the todo in
PowerPC/2007-04-24-InlineAsm-I-Modifier.ll
Please do NOT pull this into Tak.
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- Make targetlowering.h fit in 80 cols.
- Make LowerAsmOperandForConstraint const.
- Make lowerXConstraint -> LowerXConstraint
- Make LowerXConstraint return a const char* instead of taking a string byref.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@50312 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
stack tracebacks on Darwin x86-64 won't work by default;
nevertheless, everybody but me thinks this is a good idea.
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on any current target and aren't optimized in DAGCombiner. Instead
of using intermediate nodes, expand the operations, choosing between
simple loads/stores, target-specific code, and library calls,
immediately.
Previously, the code to emit optimized code for these operations
was only used at initial SelectionDAG construction time; now it is
used at all times. This fixes some cases where rep;movs was being
used for small copies where simple loads/stores would be better.
This also cleans up code that checks for alignments less than 4;
let the targets make that decision instead of doing it in
target-independent code. This allows x86 to use rep;movs in
low-alignment cases.
Also, this fixes a bug that resulted in the use of rep;stos for
memsets of 0 with non-constant memory size when the alignment was
at least 4. It's better to use the library in this case, which
can be significantly faster when the size is large.
This also preserves more SourceValue information when memory
intrinsics are lowered into simple loads/stores.
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Note: the coalescer will have to be careful about this too, when it starts coalescing insert_subreg nodes.
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that merely add passes. This allows them to be used with either
FunctionPassManager or PassManager, or even with a custom new
kind of pass manager.
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