promote from i1 all the way up to the canonical SetCC type.
In order to discover an appropriate type to use, pass
MVT::Other to getSetCCResultType. In order to be able to
do this, change getSetCCResultType to take a type as an
argument, not a value (this is also more logical).
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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.
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DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandShiftWithKnownAmountBit.
In terms of restoring the optimization, the best fix here isn't
obvious... any ideas?
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and insert vector element. Modified extract vector element to extend the
result to match the expected promoted type.
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for promoted integer types, eg: i16 on ppc-32, or
i24 on any platform. Complete support for arbitrary
precision integers would require handling expanded
integer types, eg: i128, but I couldn't be bothered.
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target-independent way of determining overflow on multiplication. It's very
tricky. Patch by Zoltan Varga!
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essential problem was that the DAG can contain
random unused nodes which were never analyzed.
When remapping a value of a node being processed,
such a node may become used and need to be analyzed;
however due to operands being transformed during
analysis the node may morph into a different one.
Users of the morphing node need to be updated, and
this wasn't happening. While there I added a bunch
of documentation and sanity checks, so I (or some
other poor soul) won't have to scratch their head
over this stuff so long trying to remember how it
was all supposed to work next time some obscure
problem pops up! The extra sanity checking exposed
a few places where invariants weren't being preserved,
so those are fixed too. Since some of the sanity
checking is expensive, I added a flag to turn it
on. It is also turned on when building with
ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS=1.
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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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"It simplifies the type legalization part a bit, and produces better code by
teaching SelectionDAG about the extra bits in an i8 SADDO/UADDO node. In
essence, I spontaneously decided that on x86 this i8 boolean result would be
either 0 or 1, and on other platforms 0/1 or 0/-1, depending on whether the
platform likes it's boolean zero extended or sign extended."
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and FP_ROUND. Not sure what these were doing
here - probably they were sometimes (wrongly)
created with integer operands somewhere that
has since been fixed.
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support targets that support these conversions. Users should avoid using
this node as the current targets don't generating code for it.
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inform the optimizers that the result must be zero/
sign extended from the smaller type. For example,
if a fp to unsigned i16 is promoted to fp to i32,
then we are allowed to assume that the extra 16 bits
are zero (because the result of fp to i16 is undefined
if the result does not fit in an i16). This is
quite aggressive, but should help the optimizers
produce better code. This requires correcting a
test which thought that fp_to_uint is some kind
of truncation, which it is not: in the testcase
(which does fp to i1), either the fp value converts
to 0 or 1 or the result is undefined, which is
quite different to truncation.
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the condition for a BRCOND, according to what is
returned by getSetCCResultContents. Since all
targets return the same thing (ZeroOrOneSetCCResult),
this should be harmless! The point is that all over
the place the result of SETCC is fed directly into
BRCOND. On machines for which getSetCCResultContents
returns ZeroOrNegativeOneSetCCResult, this is a
sign-extended boolean. So it seems dangerous to
also feed BRCOND zero-extended booleans in some
circumstances - for example, when promoting the
condition.
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sized integers like i129, and also reduce the number
of assumptions made about how vaarg is implemented.
This still doesn't work correctly for small integers
like (eg) i1 on x86, since x86 passes each of them
(essentially an i8) in a 4 byte stack slot, so the
pointer needs to be advanced by 4 bytes not by 1 byte
as now. But this is no longer a LegalizeTypes problem
(it was also wrong in LT before): it is a bug in the
operation expansion in LegalizeDAG: now LegalizeTypes
turns an i1 vaarg into an i8 vaarg which would work
fine if only the i8 vaarg was turned into correct code
later.
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may return i8, which can result in SELECT nodes for
which the type of the condition is i8, but there are
no patterns for select with i8 condition. Tweak the
LegalizeTypes logic to avoid this as much as possible.
This isn't a real fix because it is still perfectly
possible to end up with such select nodes - CellSPU
needs to be fixed IMHO.
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that is not of type MVT::i1 in SELECT and SETCC nodes.
Relax the LegalizeTypes SELECT condition promotion
sanity checks to allow other condition types than i1.
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the condition of a SELECT node. Make sure that the
correct extension type (any-, sign- or zero-extend)
is used.
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than the type an i1 is promoted to (eg: i8). Account
for this. Noticed by Tilmann Scheller on CellSPU; he
will hopefully take care of fixing this in LegalizeDAG
and adding a testcase!
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with ConstantInt. This led to fixing a bug in TargetLowering.cpp
using getValue instead of getAPIntValue.
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While this is not a wonderful organizing principle, it
does make it easy to find routines, and clear where to
insert new ones.
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In LegalizeDAG the value is zero-extended to
the new type before byte swapping. It doesn't
matter how the extension is done since the new
bits are shifted off anyway after the swap, so
extend by any old rubbish bits. This results
in the final assembler for the testcase being
one line shorter.
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