Chris Lattner 18c5987fa3 Reimplement rip-relative addressing in the X86-64 backend. The new
implementation primarily differs from the former in that the asmprinter
doesn't make a zillion decisions about whether or not something will be
RIP relative or not.  Instead, those decisions are made by isel lowering
and propagated through to the asm printer.  To achieve this, we:

1. Represent RIP relative addresses by setting the base of the X86 addr
   mode to X86::RIP.
2. When ISel Lowering decides that it is safe to use RIP, it lowers to
   X86ISD::WrapperRIP.  When it is unsafe to use RIP, it lowers to
   X86ISD::Wrapper as before.
3. This removes isRIPRel from X86ISelAddressMode, representing it with
   a basereg of RIP instead.
4. The addressing mode matching logic in isel is greatly simplified.
5. The asmprinter is greatly simplified, notably the "NotRIPRel" predicate
   passed through various printoperand routines is gone now.
6. The various symbol printing routines in asmprinter now no longer infer
   when to emit (%rip), they just print the symbol.

I think this is a big improvement over the previous situation.  It does have
two small caveats though: 1. I implemented a horrible "no-rip" modifier for
the inline asm "P" constraint modifier.  This is a short term hack, there is
a much better, but more involved, solution.  2. I had to xfail an 
-aggressive-remat testcase because it isn't handling the use of RIP in the
constant-pool reading instruction.  This specific test is easy to fix without
-aggressive-remat, which I intend to do next.



git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@74372 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2009-06-27 04:16:01 +00:00
2009-06-24 05:29:56 +00:00
2009-06-26 06:57:16 +00:00
2009-06-23 22:01:43 +00:00
2009-06-23 17:03:23 +00:00
2009-06-25 01:07:00 +00:00

Low Level Virtual Machine (LLVM)
================================

This directory and its subdirectories contain source code for the Low Level 
Virtual Machine, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers,
optimizers, and runtime environments. 

LLVM is open source software. You may freely distribute it under the terms of
the license agreement found in LICENSE.txt.

Please see the HTML documentation provided in docs/index.html for further
assistance with LLVM.

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LLVM backend for 6502
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