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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On Darwin / Linux x86-32, v8i8, v4i16, v2i32 values are passed in MM[0-2].
On Darwin / Linux x86-32, v1i64 values are passed in memory.
On Darwin x86-64, v8i8, v4i16, v2i32 values are passed in XMM[0-7].
On Darwin x86-64, v1i64 values are passed in 64-bit GPRs.
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idea what this code (findNonImmUse) does, so I'm only guessing
that this is the right thing. It would be really really nice
if this had comments and perhaps switched to SmallPtrSet
(hint hint) :)
This fixes rdar://5886601, a crash on gcc.target/i386/sse4_1-pblendw.c
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argument. The x86-64 ABI requires the incoming value of %rdi to
be copied to %rax on exit from a function that is returning a
large C struct.
Also, add a README-X86-64 entry detailing the missed optimization
opportunity and proposing an alternative approach.
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memcpy lowering code; this ensures that the size node has the desired
result type. This fixes a regression from r49572 with @llvm.memcpy.i64
on x86-32.
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ScheduleDAG; they don't correspond to any actual instructions so they
don't need to be scheduled.
This fixes a bug where the EntryToken was being scheduled multiple
times in some cases, though it ended up not causing any trouble because
EntryToken doesn't expand into anything. With this fixed the schedulers
reliably schedule the expected number of units, so we can check this
with an assertion.
This requires a tweak to test/CodeGen/X86/loop-hoist.ll because it
ends up getting scheduled differently in a trivial way, though it was
enough to fool the prcontext+grep that the test does.
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optimized x86-64 (and x86) calls so that they work (... at least for
my test cases).
Should fix the following problems:
Problem 1: When i introduced the optimized handling of arguments for
tail called functions (using a sequence of copyto/copyfrom virtual
registers instead of always lowering to top of the stack) i did not
handle byval arguments correctly e.g they did not work at all :).
Problem 2: On x86-64 after the arguments of the tail called function
are moved to their registers (which include ESI/RSI etc), tail call
optimization performs byval lowering which causes xSI,xDI, xCX
registers to be overwritten. This is handled in this patch by moving
the arguments to virtual registers first and after the byval lowering
the arguments are moved from those virtual registers back to
RSI/RDI/RCX.
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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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MOVZQI2PQIrr. This would be better handled as a dag combine
(with the goal of eliminating the bitconvert) but I don't know
how to do that safely. Thoughts welcome.
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If it cannot be expanded, it will keep the old behaviour and try to shrink the constant.
Part of enhancement for PR2191.
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EH info for these functions causes the tests to fail for
random reasons (e.g. looking for 'or' or counting lines
with asm-printer; labels count as lines.)
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llvm's output .s files will go through gcc -std=c99
without triggering preprocesser errors. Approach
suggested by Daveed Vandevoorde.
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