llvm-6502/include/llvm/CodeGen/ISDOpcodes.h
Bruno Cardoso Lopes 3157ef1c13 This is the first step towards refactoring the x86 vector shuffle code. The
general idea here is to have a group of x86 target specific nodes which are
going to be selected during lowering and then directly matched in isel.

The commit includes the addition of those specific nodes and a *bunch* of
patterns, and incrementally we're going to switch between them and what we
have right now. Both the patterns and target specific nodes can change as
we move forward with this work.



git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@111691 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2010-08-20 22:55:05 +00:00

776 lines
34 KiB
C++

//===-- llvm/CodeGen/ISDOpcodes.h - CodeGen opcodes -------------*- C++ -*-===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file declares codegen opcodes and related utilities.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_CODEGEN_ISDOPCODES_H
#define LLVM_CODEGEN_ISDOPCODES_H
namespace llvm {
/// ISD namespace - This namespace contains an enum which represents all of the
/// SelectionDAG node types and value types.
///
namespace ISD {
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// ISD::NodeType enum - This enum defines the target-independent operators
/// for a SelectionDAG.
///
/// Targets may also define target-dependent operator codes for SDNodes. For
/// example, on x86, these are the enum values in the X86ISD namespace.
/// Targets should aim to use target-independent operators to model their
/// instruction sets as much as possible, and only use target-dependent
/// operators when they have special requirements.
///
/// Finally, during and after selection proper, SNodes may use special
/// operator codes that correspond directly with MachineInstr opcodes. These
/// are used to represent selected instructions. See the isMachineOpcode()
/// and getMachineOpcode() member functions of SDNode.
///
enum NodeType {
// DELETED_NODE - This is an illegal value that is used to catch
// errors. This opcode is not a legal opcode for any node.
DELETED_NODE,
// EntryToken - This is the marker used to indicate the start of the region.
EntryToken,
// TokenFactor - This node takes multiple tokens as input and produces a
// single token result. This is used to represent the fact that the operand
// operators are independent of each other.
TokenFactor,
// AssertSext, AssertZext - These nodes record if a register contains a
// value that has already been zero or sign extended from a narrower type.
// These nodes take two operands. The first is the node that has already
// been extended, and the second is a value type node indicating the width
// of the extension
AssertSext, AssertZext,
// Various leaf nodes.
BasicBlock, VALUETYPE, CONDCODE, Register,
Constant, ConstantFP,
GlobalAddress, GlobalTLSAddress, FrameIndex,
JumpTable, ConstantPool, ExternalSymbol, BlockAddress,
// The address of the GOT
GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE,
// FRAMEADDR, RETURNADDR - These nodes represent llvm.frameaddress and
// llvm.returnaddress on the DAG. These nodes take one operand, the index
// of the frame or return address to return. An index of zero corresponds
// to the current function's frame or return address, an index of one to the
// parent's frame or return address, and so on.
FRAMEADDR, RETURNADDR,
// FRAME_TO_ARGS_OFFSET - This node represents offset from frame pointer to
// first (possible) on-stack argument. This is needed for correct stack
// adjustment during unwind.
FRAME_TO_ARGS_OFFSET,
// RESULT, OUTCHAIN = EXCEPTIONADDR(INCHAIN) - This node represents the
// address of the exception block on entry to an landing pad block.
EXCEPTIONADDR,
// RESULT, OUTCHAIN = LSDAADDR(INCHAIN) - This node represents the
// address of the Language Specific Data Area for the enclosing function.
LSDAADDR,
// RESULT, OUTCHAIN = EHSELECTION(INCHAIN, EXCEPTION) - This node represents
// the selection index of the exception thrown.
EHSELECTION,
// OUTCHAIN = EH_RETURN(INCHAIN, OFFSET, HANDLER) - This node represents
// 'eh_return' gcc dwarf builtin, which is used to return from
// exception. The general meaning is: adjust stack by OFFSET and pass
// execution to HANDLER. Many platform-related details also :)
EH_RETURN,
// OUTCHAIN = EH_SJLJ_SETJMP(INCHAIN, buffer)
// This corresponds to the eh.sjlj.setjmp intrinsic.
// It takes an input chain and a pointer to the jump buffer as inputs
// and returns an outchain.
EH_SJLJ_SETJMP,
// OUTCHAIN = EH_SJLJ_LONGJMP(INCHAIN, buffer)
// This corresponds to the eh.sjlj.longjmp intrinsic.
// It takes an input chain and a pointer to the jump buffer as inputs
// and returns an outchain.
EH_SJLJ_LONGJMP,
// TargetConstant* - Like Constant*, but the DAG does not do any folding,
// simplification, or lowering of the constant. They are used for constants
// which are known to fit in the immediate fields of their users, or for
// carrying magic numbers which are not values which need to be materialized
// in registers.
TargetConstant,
TargetConstantFP,
// TargetGlobalAddress - Like GlobalAddress, but the DAG does no folding or
// anything else with this node, and this is valid in the target-specific
// dag, turning into a GlobalAddress operand.
TargetGlobalAddress,
TargetGlobalTLSAddress,
TargetFrameIndex,
TargetJumpTable,
TargetConstantPool,
TargetExternalSymbol,
TargetBlockAddress,
/// RESULT = INTRINSIC_WO_CHAIN(INTRINSICID, arg1, arg2, ...)
/// This node represents a target intrinsic function with no side effects.
/// The first operand is the ID number of the intrinsic from the
/// llvm::Intrinsic namespace. The operands to the intrinsic follow. The
/// node returns the result of the intrinsic.
INTRINSIC_WO_CHAIN,
/// RESULT,OUTCHAIN = INTRINSIC_W_CHAIN(INCHAIN, INTRINSICID, arg1, ...)
/// This node represents a target intrinsic function with side effects that
/// returns a result. The first operand is a chain pointer. The second is
/// the ID number of the intrinsic from the llvm::Intrinsic namespace. The
/// operands to the intrinsic follow. The node has two results, the result
/// of the intrinsic and an output chain.
INTRINSIC_W_CHAIN,
/// OUTCHAIN = INTRINSIC_VOID(INCHAIN, INTRINSICID, arg1, arg2, ...)
/// This node represents a target intrinsic function with side effects that
/// does not return a result. The first operand is a chain pointer. The
/// second is the ID number of the intrinsic from the llvm::Intrinsic
/// namespace. The operands to the intrinsic follow.
INTRINSIC_VOID,
// CopyToReg - This node has three operands: a chain, a register number to
// set to this value, and a value.
CopyToReg,
// CopyFromReg - This node indicates that the input value is a virtual or
// physical register that is defined outside of the scope of this
// SelectionDAG. The register is available from the RegisterSDNode object.
CopyFromReg,
// UNDEF - An undefined node
UNDEF,
// EXTRACT_ELEMENT - This is used to get the lower or upper (determined by
// a Constant, which is required to be operand #1) half of the integer or
// float value specified as operand #0. This is only for use before
// legalization, for values that will be broken into multiple registers.
EXTRACT_ELEMENT,
// BUILD_PAIR - This is the opposite of EXTRACT_ELEMENT in some ways. Given
// two values of the same integer value type, this produces a value twice as
// big. Like EXTRACT_ELEMENT, this can only be used before legalization.
BUILD_PAIR,
// MERGE_VALUES - This node takes multiple discrete operands and returns
// them all as its individual results. This nodes has exactly the same
// number of inputs and outputs. This node is useful for some pieces of the
// code generator that want to think about a single node with multiple
// results, not multiple nodes.
MERGE_VALUES,
// Simple integer binary arithmetic operators.
ADD, SUB, MUL, SDIV, UDIV, SREM, UREM,
// SMUL_LOHI/UMUL_LOHI - Multiply two integers of type iN, producing
// a signed/unsigned value of type i[2*N], and return the full value as
// two results, each of type iN.
SMUL_LOHI, UMUL_LOHI,
// SDIVREM/UDIVREM - Divide two integers and produce both a quotient and
// remainder result.
SDIVREM, UDIVREM,
// CARRY_FALSE - This node is used when folding other nodes,
// like ADDC/SUBC, which indicate the carry result is always false.
CARRY_FALSE,
// Carry-setting nodes for multiple precision addition and subtraction.
// These nodes take two operands of the same value type, and produce two
// results. The first result is the normal add or sub result, the second
// result is the carry flag result.
ADDC, SUBC,
// Carry-using nodes for multiple precision addition and subtraction. These
// nodes take three operands: The first two are the normal lhs and rhs to
// the add or sub, and the third is the input carry flag. These nodes
// produce two results; the normal result of the add or sub, and the output
// carry flag. These nodes both read and write a carry flag to allow them
// to them to be chained together for add and sub of arbitrarily large
// values.
ADDE, SUBE,
// RESULT, BOOL = [SU]ADDO(LHS, RHS) - Overflow-aware nodes for addition.
// These nodes take two operands: the normal LHS and RHS to the add. They
// produce two results: the normal result of the add, and a boolean that
// indicates if an overflow occured (*not* a flag, because it may be stored
// to memory, etc.). If the type of the boolean is not i1 then the high
// bits conform to getBooleanContents.
// These nodes are generated from the llvm.[su]add.with.overflow intrinsics.
SADDO, UADDO,
// Same for subtraction
SSUBO, USUBO,
// Same for multiplication
SMULO, UMULO,
// Simple binary floating point operators.
FADD, FSUB, FMUL, FDIV, FREM,
// FCOPYSIGN(X, Y) - Return the value of X with the sign of Y. NOTE: This
// DAG node does not require that X and Y have the same type, just that they
// are both floating point. X and the result must have the same type.
// FCOPYSIGN(f32, f64) is allowed.
FCOPYSIGN,
// INT = FGETSIGN(FP) - Return the sign bit of the specified floating point
// value as an integer 0/1 value.
FGETSIGN,
/// BUILD_VECTOR(ELT0, ELT1, ELT2, ELT3,...) - Return a vector with the
/// specified, possibly variable, elements. The number of elements is
/// required to be a power of two. The types of the operands must all be
/// the same and must match the vector element type, except that integer
/// types are allowed to be larger than the element type, in which case
/// the operands are implicitly truncated.
BUILD_VECTOR,
/// INSERT_VECTOR_ELT(VECTOR, VAL, IDX) - Returns VECTOR with the element
/// at IDX replaced with VAL. If the type of VAL is larger than the vector
/// element type then VAL is truncated before replacement.
INSERT_VECTOR_ELT,
/// EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT(VECTOR, IDX) - Returns a single element from VECTOR
/// identified by the (potentially variable) element number IDX. If the
/// return type is an integer type larger than the element type of the
/// vector, the result is extended to the width of the return type.
EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT,
/// CONCAT_VECTORS(VECTOR0, VECTOR1, ...) - Given a number of values of
/// vector type with the same length and element type, this produces a
/// concatenated vector result value, with length equal to the sum of the
/// lengths of the input vectors.
CONCAT_VECTORS,
/// EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR(VECTOR, IDX) - Returns a subvector from VECTOR (an
/// vector value) starting with the (potentially variable) element number
/// IDX, which must be a multiple of the result vector length.
EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR,
/// VECTOR_SHUFFLE(VEC1, VEC2) - Returns a vector, of the same type as
/// VEC1/VEC2. A VECTOR_SHUFFLE node also contains an array of constant int
/// values that indicate which value (or undef) each result element will
/// get. These constant ints are accessible through the
/// ShuffleVectorSDNode class. This is quite similar to the Altivec
/// 'vperm' instruction, except that the indices must be constants and are
/// in terms of the element size of VEC1/VEC2, not in terms of bytes.
VECTOR_SHUFFLE,
/// SCALAR_TO_VECTOR(VAL) - This represents the operation of loading a
/// scalar value into element 0 of the resultant vector type. The top
/// elements 1 to N-1 of the N-element vector are undefined. The type
/// of the operand must match the vector element type, except when they
/// are integer types. In this case the operand is allowed to be wider
/// than the vector element type, and is implicitly truncated to it.
SCALAR_TO_VECTOR,
// MULHU/MULHS - Multiply high - Multiply two integers of type iN, producing
// an unsigned/signed value of type i[2*N], then return the top part.
MULHU, MULHS,
// Bitwise operators - logical and, logical or, logical xor, shift left,
// shift right algebraic (shift in sign bits), shift right logical (shift in
// zeroes), rotate left, rotate right, and byteswap.
AND, OR, XOR, SHL, SRA, SRL, ROTL, ROTR, BSWAP,
// Counting operators
CTTZ, CTLZ, CTPOP,
// Select(COND, TRUEVAL, FALSEVAL). If the type of the boolean COND is not
// i1 then the high bits must conform to getBooleanContents.
SELECT,
// Select with condition operator - This selects between a true value and
// a false value (ops #2 and #3) based on the boolean result of comparing
// the lhs and rhs (ops #0 and #1) of a conditional expression with the
// condition code in op #4, a CondCodeSDNode.
SELECT_CC,
// SetCC operator - This evaluates to a true value iff the condition is
// true. If the result value type is not i1 then the high bits conform
// to getBooleanContents. The operands to this are the left and right
// operands to compare (ops #0, and #1) and the condition code to compare
// them with (op #2) as a CondCodeSDNode.
SETCC,
// RESULT = VSETCC(LHS, RHS, COND) operator - This evaluates to a vector of
// integer elements with all bits of the result elements set to true if the
// comparison is true or all cleared if the comparison is false. The
// operands to this are the left and right operands to compare (LHS/RHS) and
// the condition code to compare them with (COND) as a CondCodeSDNode.
VSETCC,
// SHL_PARTS/SRA_PARTS/SRL_PARTS - These operators are used for expanded
// integer shift operations, just like ADD/SUB_PARTS. The operation
// ordering is:
// [Lo,Hi] = op [LoLHS,HiLHS], Amt
SHL_PARTS, SRA_PARTS, SRL_PARTS,
// Conversion operators. These are all single input single output
// operations. For all of these, the result type must be strictly
// wider or narrower (depending on the operation) than the source
// type.
// SIGN_EXTEND - Used for integer types, replicating the sign bit
// into new bits.
SIGN_EXTEND,
// ZERO_EXTEND - Used for integer types, zeroing the new bits.
ZERO_EXTEND,
// ANY_EXTEND - Used for integer types. The high bits are undefined.
ANY_EXTEND,
// TRUNCATE - Completely drop the high bits.
TRUNCATE,
// [SU]INT_TO_FP - These operators convert integers (whose interpreted sign
// depends on the first letter) to floating point.
SINT_TO_FP,
UINT_TO_FP,
// SIGN_EXTEND_INREG - This operator atomically performs a SHL/SRA pair to
// sign extend a small value in a large integer register (e.g. sign
// extending the low 8 bits of a 32-bit register to fill the top 24 bits
// with the 7th bit). The size of the smaller type is indicated by the 1th
// operand, a ValueType node.
SIGN_EXTEND_INREG,
/// FP_TO_[US]INT - Convert a floating point value to a signed or unsigned
/// integer.
FP_TO_SINT,
FP_TO_UINT,
/// X = FP_ROUND(Y, TRUNC) - Rounding 'Y' from a larger floating point type
/// down to the precision of the destination VT. TRUNC is a flag, which is
/// always an integer that is zero or one. If TRUNC is 0, this is a
/// normal rounding, if it is 1, this FP_ROUND is known to not change the
/// value of Y.
///
/// The TRUNC = 1 case is used in cases where we know that the value will
/// not be modified by the node, because Y is not using any of the extra
/// precision of source type. This allows certain transformations like
/// FP_EXTEND(FP_ROUND(X,1)) -> X which are not safe for
/// FP_EXTEND(FP_ROUND(X,0)) because the extra bits aren't removed.
FP_ROUND,
// FLT_ROUNDS_ - Returns current rounding mode:
// -1 Undefined
// 0 Round to 0
// 1 Round to nearest
// 2 Round to +inf
// 3 Round to -inf
FLT_ROUNDS_,
/// X = FP_ROUND_INREG(Y, VT) - This operator takes an FP register, and
/// rounds it to a floating point value. It then promotes it and returns it
/// in a register of the same size. This operation effectively just
/// discards excess precision. The type to round down to is specified by
/// the VT operand, a VTSDNode.
FP_ROUND_INREG,
/// X = FP_EXTEND(Y) - Extend a smaller FP type into a larger FP type.
FP_EXTEND,
// BIT_CONVERT - This operator converts between integer, vector and FP
// values, as if the value was stored to memory with one type and loaded
// from the same address with the other type (or equivalently for vector
// format conversions, etc). The source and result are required to have
// the same bit size (e.g. f32 <-> i32). This can also be used for
// int-to-int or fp-to-fp conversions, but that is a noop, deleted by
// getNode().
BIT_CONVERT,
// CONVERT_RNDSAT - This operator is used to support various conversions
// between various types (float, signed, unsigned and vectors of those
// types) with rounding and saturation. NOTE: Avoid using this operator as
// most target don't support it and the operator might be removed in the
// future. It takes the following arguments:
// 0) value
// 1) dest type (type to convert to)
// 2) src type (type to convert from)
// 3) rounding imm
// 4) saturation imm
// 5) ISD::CvtCode indicating the type of conversion to do
CONVERT_RNDSAT,
// FP16_TO_FP32, FP32_TO_FP16 - These operators are used to perform
// promotions and truncation for half-precision (16 bit) floating
// numbers. We need special nodes since FP16 is a storage-only type with
// special semantics of operations.
FP16_TO_FP32, FP32_TO_FP16,
// FNEG, FABS, FSQRT, FSIN, FCOS, FPOWI, FPOW,
// FLOG, FLOG2, FLOG10, FEXP, FEXP2,
// FCEIL, FTRUNC, FRINT, FNEARBYINT, FFLOOR - Perform various unary floating
// point operations. These are inspired by libm.
FNEG, FABS, FSQRT, FSIN, FCOS, FPOWI, FPOW,
FLOG, FLOG2, FLOG10, FEXP, FEXP2,
FCEIL, FTRUNC, FRINT, FNEARBYINT, FFLOOR,
// LOAD and STORE have token chains as their first operand, then the same
// operands as an LLVM load/store instruction, then an offset node that
// is added / subtracted from the base pointer to form the address (for
// indexed memory ops).
LOAD, STORE,
// DYNAMIC_STACKALLOC - Allocate some number of bytes on the stack aligned
// to a specified boundary. This node always has two return values: a new
// stack pointer value and a chain. The first operand is the token chain,
// the second is the number of bytes to allocate, and the third is the
// alignment boundary. The size is guaranteed to be a multiple of the stack
// alignment, and the alignment is guaranteed to be bigger than the stack
// alignment (if required) or 0 to get standard stack alignment.
DYNAMIC_STACKALLOC,
// Control flow instructions. These all have token chains.
// BR - Unconditional branch. The first operand is the chain
// operand, the second is the MBB to branch to.
BR,
// BRIND - Indirect branch. The first operand is the chain, the second
// is the value to branch to, which must be of the same type as the target's
// pointer type.
BRIND,
// BR_JT - Jumptable branch. The first operand is the chain, the second
// is the jumptable index, the last one is the jumptable entry index.
BR_JT,
// BRCOND - Conditional branch. The first operand is the chain, the
// second is the condition, the third is the block to branch to if the
// condition is true. If the type of the condition is not i1, then the
// high bits must conform to getBooleanContents.
BRCOND,
// BR_CC - Conditional branch. The behavior is like that of SELECT_CC, in
// that the condition is represented as condition code, and two nodes to
// compare, rather than as a combined SetCC node. The operands in order are
// chain, cc, lhs, rhs, block to branch to if condition is true.
BR_CC,
// INLINEASM - Represents an inline asm block. This node always has two
// return values: a chain and a flag result. The inputs are as follows:
// Operand #0 : Input chain.
// Operand #1 : a ExternalSymbolSDNode with a pointer to the asm string.
// Operand #2 : a MDNodeSDNode with the !srcloc metadata.
// After this, it is followed by a list of operands with this format:
// ConstantSDNode: Flags that encode whether it is a mem or not, the
// of operands that follow, etc. See InlineAsm.h.
// ... however many operands ...
// Operand #last: Optional, an incoming flag.
//
// The variable width operands are required to represent target addressing
// modes as a single "operand", even though they may have multiple
// SDOperands.
INLINEASM,
// EH_LABEL - Represents a label in mid basic block used to track
// locations needed for debug and exception handling tables. These nodes
// take a chain as input and return a chain.
EH_LABEL,
// STACKSAVE - STACKSAVE has one operand, an input chain. It produces a
// value, the same type as the pointer type for the system, and an output
// chain.
STACKSAVE,
// STACKRESTORE has two operands, an input chain and a pointer to restore to
// it returns an output chain.
STACKRESTORE,
// CALLSEQ_START/CALLSEQ_END - These operators mark the beginning and end of
// a call sequence, and carry arbitrary information that target might want
// to know. The first operand is a chain, the rest are specified by the
// target and not touched by the DAG optimizers.
// CALLSEQ_START..CALLSEQ_END pairs may not be nested.
CALLSEQ_START, // Beginning of a call sequence
CALLSEQ_END, // End of a call sequence
// VAARG - VAARG has four operands: an input chain, a pointer, a SRCVALUE,
// and the alignment. It returns a pair of values: the vaarg value and a
// new chain.
VAARG,
// VACOPY - VACOPY has five operands: an input chain, a destination pointer,
// a source pointer, a SRCVALUE for the destination, and a SRCVALUE for the
// source.
VACOPY,
// VAEND, VASTART - VAEND and VASTART have three operands: an input chain, a
// pointer, and a SRCVALUE.
VAEND, VASTART,
// SRCVALUE - This is a node type that holds a Value* that is used to
// make reference to a value in the LLVM IR.
SRCVALUE,
// MDNODE_SDNODE - This is a node that holdes an MDNode*, which is used to
// reference metadata in the IR.
MDNODE_SDNODE,
// PCMARKER - This corresponds to the pcmarker intrinsic.
PCMARKER,
// READCYCLECOUNTER - This corresponds to the readcyclecounter intrinsic.
// The only operand is a chain and a value and a chain are produced. The
// value is the contents of the architecture specific cycle counter like
// register (or other high accuracy low latency clock source)
READCYCLECOUNTER,
// HANDLENODE node - Used as a handle for various purposes.
HANDLENODE,
// TRAMPOLINE - This corresponds to the init_trampoline intrinsic.
// It takes as input a token chain, the pointer to the trampoline,
// the pointer to the nested function, the pointer to pass for the
// 'nest' parameter, a SRCVALUE for the trampoline and another for
// the nested function (allowing targets to access the original
// Function*). It produces the result of the intrinsic and a token
// chain as output.
TRAMPOLINE,
// TRAP - Trapping instruction
TRAP,
// PREFETCH - This corresponds to a prefetch intrinsic. It takes chains are
// their first operand. The other operands are the address to prefetch,
// read / write specifier, and locality specifier.
PREFETCH,
// OUTCHAIN = MEMBARRIER(INCHAIN, load-load, load-store, store-load,
// store-store, device)
// This corresponds to the memory.barrier intrinsic.
// it takes an input chain, 4 operands to specify the type of barrier, an
// operand specifying if the barrier applies to device and uncached memory
// and produces an output chain.
MEMBARRIER,
// Val, OUTCHAIN = ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP(INCHAIN, ptr, cmp, swap)
// this corresponds to the atomic.lcs intrinsic.
// cmp is compared to *ptr, and if equal, swap is stored in *ptr.
// the return is always the original value in *ptr
ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP,
// Val, OUTCHAIN = ATOMIC_SWAP(INCHAIN, ptr, amt)
// this corresponds to the atomic.swap intrinsic.
// amt is stored to *ptr atomically.
// the return is always the original value in *ptr
ATOMIC_SWAP,
// Val, OUTCHAIN = ATOMIC_LOAD_[OpName](INCHAIN, ptr, amt)
// this corresponds to the atomic.load.[OpName] intrinsic.
// op(*ptr, amt) is stored to *ptr atomically.
// the return is always the original value in *ptr
ATOMIC_LOAD_ADD,
ATOMIC_LOAD_SUB,
ATOMIC_LOAD_AND,
ATOMIC_LOAD_OR,
ATOMIC_LOAD_XOR,
ATOMIC_LOAD_NAND,
ATOMIC_LOAD_MIN,
ATOMIC_LOAD_MAX,
ATOMIC_LOAD_UMIN,
ATOMIC_LOAD_UMAX,
/// BUILTIN_OP_END - This must be the last enum value in this list.
/// The target-specific pre-isel opcode values start here.
BUILTIN_OP_END
};
/// FIRST_TARGET_MEMORY_OPCODE - Target-specific pre-isel operations
/// which do not reference a specific memory location should be less than
/// this value. Those that do must not be less than this value, and can
/// be used with SelectionDAG::getMemIntrinsicNode.
static const int FIRST_TARGET_MEMORY_OPCODE = BUILTIN_OP_END+150;
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// MemIndexedMode enum - This enum defines the load / store indexed
/// addressing modes.
///
/// UNINDEXED "Normal" load / store. The effective address is already
/// computed and is available in the base pointer. The offset
/// operand is always undefined. In addition to producing a
/// chain, an unindexed load produces one value (result of the
/// load); an unindexed store does not produce a value.
///
/// PRE_INC Similar to the unindexed mode where the effective address is
/// PRE_DEC the value of the base pointer add / subtract the offset.
/// It considers the computation as being folded into the load /
/// store operation (i.e. the load / store does the address
/// computation as well as performing the memory transaction).
/// The base operand is always undefined. In addition to
/// producing a chain, pre-indexed load produces two values
/// (result of the load and the result of the address
/// computation); a pre-indexed store produces one value (result
/// of the address computation).
///
/// POST_INC The effective address is the value of the base pointer. The
/// POST_DEC value of the offset operand is then added to / subtracted
/// from the base after memory transaction. In addition to
/// producing a chain, post-indexed load produces two values
/// (the result of the load and the result of the base +/- offset
/// computation); a post-indexed store produces one value (the
/// the result of the base +/- offset computation).
enum MemIndexedMode {
UNINDEXED = 0,
PRE_INC,
PRE_DEC,
POST_INC,
POST_DEC,
LAST_INDEXED_MODE
};
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// LoadExtType enum - This enum defines the three variants of LOADEXT
/// (load with extension).
///
/// SEXTLOAD loads the integer operand and sign extends it to a larger
/// integer result type.
/// ZEXTLOAD loads the integer operand and zero extends it to a larger
/// integer result type.
/// EXTLOAD is used for two things: floating point extending loads and
/// integer extending loads [the top bits are undefined].
enum LoadExtType {
NON_EXTLOAD = 0,
EXTLOAD,
SEXTLOAD,
ZEXTLOAD,
LAST_LOADEXT_TYPE
};
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// ISD::CondCode enum - These are ordered carefully to make the bitfields
/// below work out, when considering SETFALSE (something that never exists
/// dynamically) as 0. "U" -> Unsigned (for integer operands) or Unordered
/// (for floating point), "L" -> Less than, "G" -> Greater than, "E" -> Equal
/// to. If the "N" column is 1, the result of the comparison is undefined if
/// the input is a NAN.
///
/// All of these (except for the 'always folded ops') should be handled for
/// floating point. For integer, only the SETEQ,SETNE,SETLT,SETLE,SETGT,
/// SETGE,SETULT,SETULE,SETUGT, and SETUGE opcodes are used.
///
/// Note that these are laid out in a specific order to allow bit-twiddling
/// to transform conditions.
enum CondCode {
// Opcode N U L G E Intuitive operation
SETFALSE, // 0 0 0 0 Always false (always folded)
SETOEQ, // 0 0 0 1 True if ordered and equal
SETOGT, // 0 0 1 0 True if ordered and greater than
SETOGE, // 0 0 1 1 True if ordered and greater than or equal
SETOLT, // 0 1 0 0 True if ordered and less than
SETOLE, // 0 1 0 1 True if ordered and less than or equal
SETONE, // 0 1 1 0 True if ordered and operands are unequal
SETO, // 0 1 1 1 True if ordered (no nans)
SETUO, // 1 0 0 0 True if unordered: isnan(X) | isnan(Y)
SETUEQ, // 1 0 0 1 True if unordered or equal
SETUGT, // 1 0 1 0 True if unordered or greater than
SETUGE, // 1 0 1 1 True if unordered, greater than, or equal
SETULT, // 1 1 0 0 True if unordered or less than
SETULE, // 1 1 0 1 True if unordered, less than, or equal
SETUNE, // 1 1 1 0 True if unordered or not equal
SETTRUE, // 1 1 1 1 Always true (always folded)
// Don't care operations: undefined if the input is a nan.
SETFALSE2, // 1 X 0 0 0 Always false (always folded)
SETEQ, // 1 X 0 0 1 True if equal
SETGT, // 1 X 0 1 0 True if greater than
SETGE, // 1 X 0 1 1 True if greater than or equal
SETLT, // 1 X 1 0 0 True if less than
SETLE, // 1 X 1 0 1 True if less than or equal
SETNE, // 1 X 1 1 0 True if not equal
SETTRUE2, // 1 X 1 1 1 Always true (always folded)
SETCC_INVALID // Marker value.
};
/// isSignedIntSetCC - Return true if this is a setcc instruction that
/// performs a signed comparison when used with integer operands.
inline bool isSignedIntSetCC(CondCode Code) {
return Code == SETGT || Code == SETGE || Code == SETLT || Code == SETLE;
}
/// isUnsignedIntSetCC - Return true if this is a setcc instruction that
/// performs an unsigned comparison when used with integer operands.
inline bool isUnsignedIntSetCC(CondCode Code) {
return Code == SETUGT || Code == SETUGE || Code == SETULT || Code == SETULE;
}
/// isTrueWhenEqual - Return true if the specified condition returns true if
/// the two operands to the condition are equal. Note that if one of the two
/// operands is a NaN, this value is meaningless.
inline bool isTrueWhenEqual(CondCode Cond) {
return ((int)Cond & 1) != 0;
}
/// getUnorderedFlavor - This function returns 0 if the condition is always
/// false if an operand is a NaN, 1 if the condition is always true if the
/// operand is a NaN, and 2 if the condition is undefined if the operand is a
/// NaN.
inline unsigned getUnorderedFlavor(CondCode Cond) {
return ((int)Cond >> 3) & 3;
}
/// getSetCCInverse - Return the operation corresponding to !(X op Y), where
/// 'op' is a valid SetCC operation.
CondCode getSetCCInverse(CondCode Operation, bool isInteger);
/// getSetCCSwappedOperands - Return the operation corresponding to (Y op X)
/// when given the operation for (X op Y).
CondCode getSetCCSwappedOperands(CondCode Operation);
/// getSetCCOrOperation - Return the result of a logical OR between different
/// comparisons of identical values: ((X op1 Y) | (X op2 Y)). This
/// function returns SETCC_INVALID if it is not possible to represent the
/// resultant comparison.
CondCode getSetCCOrOperation(CondCode Op1, CondCode Op2, bool isInteger);
/// getSetCCAndOperation - Return the result of a logical AND between
/// different comparisons of identical values: ((X op1 Y) & (X op2 Y)). This
/// function returns SETCC_INVALID if it is not possible to represent the
/// resultant comparison.
CondCode getSetCCAndOperation(CondCode Op1, CondCode Op2, bool isInteger);
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// CvtCode enum - This enum defines the various converts CONVERT_RNDSAT
/// supports.
enum CvtCode {
CVT_FF, // Float from Float
CVT_FS, // Float from Signed
CVT_FU, // Float from Unsigned
CVT_SF, // Signed from Float
CVT_UF, // Unsigned from Float
CVT_SS, // Signed from Signed
CVT_SU, // Signed from Unsigned
CVT_US, // Unsigned from Signed
CVT_UU, // Unsigned from Unsigned
CVT_INVALID // Marker - Invalid opcode
};
} // end llvm::ISD namespace
} // end llvm namespace
#endif