This is a slightly different approach to AArch64 (the base instruction
definitions aren't quite right for that to work), but achieves the
same thing and reduces C++ hackery in AsmParser.
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In terms of assembly, these have too much overlap to be neatly modelled as
disjoint classes: in many cases "lsl" is an acceptable alternative to either
"uxtw" or "uxtx".
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The parsing of ADD/SUB shifted immediates needs to be done explicitly so
that better diagnostics can be emitted, as a side effect this also
removes some of the hacks in the current method of handling this operand
type.
Additionally remove manual CMP aliasing to ADD/SUB and use InstAlias
instead.
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Previously, LLVM had no knowledge that these instructions actually
modified their address register: fine if they never end up in CodeGen,
but when I'd rather like to write some patterns for them it becomes a
disaster.
The change is mostly straightforward, I think the most significant
design decision was to *always* put the address write-back first. This
allows loads and stores to be accessed more uniformly, for example
permitting the continued sharing of the InstAlias definitions.
I also discovered that the custom Decode logic is no longer needed, so
I removed it.
No tests, because there should be no functionality change.
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It's been decided that in the future, the floating-point immediate in
instructions like "fcmeq v0.2s, v1.2s, #0.0" will be canonically "0.0", which
has been implemented on AArch64 already but not ARM64.
This fixes that issue.
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AArch64 does not have a CPSR register in the same way that AArch32 does. Most
of its compiler-relevant roles have been taken over by the more specific NZCV
register (representing just the flags set by normal instructions).
Its system control functions still remain, but are now under the
pseudo-register referred to as "PSTATE". They're accessed via various MRS & MSR
instructions described in the reference manual.
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Since these are mostly used in "lsl #16", "lsl #32", "lsl #48" combinations to
piece together an immediate in 16-bit chunks, hex is probably the most
appropriate format.
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This is mostly aimed at the NEON logical operations and MOVI/MVNI (since they
accept weird shifts which are more naturally understandable in hex notation).
Also changes BRK/HINT etc, which is probably a neutral change, but easier than
the alternative.
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These can have different relocations in ELF. In particular both:
b.eq global
ldr x0, global
are valid, giving different relocations. The only possible way to distinguish
them is via a different fixup, so the operands had to be separated throughout
the backend.
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AArch64 has feature predicates for NEON, FP and CRYPTO instructions.
This allows the compiler to generate code without using FP, NEON
or CRYPTO instructions.
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This brings it into line with the AArch64 behaviour and should open the way for
certain OpenCL features.
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Code is mostly copied directly across, with a slight extension of the
ISelDAGToDAG function so that it can cope with the floating-point constants
being behind a litpool.
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Switching between i32 and i64 based on the LHS type is a good idea in
theory, but pre-legalisation uses i64 regardless of our choice,
leading to potential ISel errors.
Should fix PR19294.
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