I think, in principle, intrinsics_gen may be added explicitly.
That said, it can be added incidentally, since each target already has dependencies to llvm-tblgen.
Almost all source files depend on both CommonTaleGen and intrinsics_gen.
Explicit add_dependencies() have been pruned under lib/Target.
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add_public_tablegen_target adds *CommonTableGen to LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS.
LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS affects add_llvm_library (and other add_target stuff) within its scope.
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This change converts the NVPTX target to use the MC infrastructure
instead of directly emitting MachineInstr instances. This brings
the target more up-to-date with LLVM TOT, and should fix PR15175
and PR15958 (libNVPTXInstPrinter is empty) as a side-effect.
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Without explicit dependencies, both per-file action and in-CommonTableGen action could run in parallel.
It races to emit *.inc files simultaneously.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@187780 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Now that 3.3 is branched, we are re-enabling virtual registers to help
iron out bugs before the next release. Some of the post-RA passes do
not play well with virtual registers, so we disable them for now. The
needed functionality of the PrologEpilogInserter pass is copied to a
new backend-specific NVPTXPrologEpilog pass.
The test for this commit is not breaking the existing tests.
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This converter currently only handles global variables in address space 0. For
these variables, they are promoted to address space 1 (global memory), and all
uses are updated to point to the result of a cvta.global instruction on the new
variable.
The motivation for this is address space 0 global variables are illegal since we
cannot declare variables in the generic address space. Instead, we place the
variables in address space 1 and explicitly convert the pointer to address
space 0. This is primarily intended to help new users who expect to be able to
place global variables in the default address space.
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specific code paths.
This allows us to write code like:
if (__nvvm_reflect("FOO"))
// Do something
else
// Do something else
and compile into a library, then give "FOO" a value at kernel
compile-time so the check becomes a no-op.
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Vectors were being manually scalarized by the backend. Instead,
let the target-independent code do all of the work. The manual
scalarization was from a time before good target-independent support
for scalarization in LLVM. However, this forces us to specially-handle
vector loads and stores, which we can turn into PTX instructions that
produce/consume multiple operands.
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The new target machines are:
nvptx (old ptx32) => 32-bit PTX
nvptx64 (old ptx64) => 64-bit PTX
The sources are based on the internal NVIDIA NVPTX back-end, and
contain more functionality than the current PTX back-end currently
provides.
NV_CONTRIB
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