Jingyue Wu e08f05f3a5 [NVPTX] expand extload/truncstore for vectors of floats
Summary:
According to PTX ISA:

For convenience, ld, st, and cvt instructions permit source and destination data operands to be wider than the instruction-type size, so that narrow values may be loaded, stored, and converted using regular-width registers. For example, 8-bit or 16-bit values may be held directly in 32-bit or 64-bit registers when being loaded, stored, or converted to other types and sizes. The operand type checking rules are relaxed for bit-size and integer (signed and unsigned) instruction types; floating-point instruction types still require that the operand type-size matches exactly, unless the operand is of bit-size type.

So, the ISA does not support load with extending/store with truncatation for floating numbers. This is reflected in setting the loadext/truncstore actions to expand in the code for floating numbers, but vectors of floating numbers are not taken care of.

As a result, loading a vector of floats followed by a fp_extend may be combined by DAGCombiner to a extload, and the extload may be lowered to NVPTXISD::LoadV2 with extending information. However, NVPTXISD::LoadV2 does not perform extending, and no extending instructions are inserted. Finally, PTX instructions with mismatched types are generated, like
ld.v2.f32 {%fd3, %fd4}, [%rd2]

This patch adds the correct actions for vectors of floats, so DAGCombiner would not create loads with extending, and correct code is generated.

Patched by Gang Hu. 

Test Plan: Test case attached.

Reviewers: jingyue

Reviewed By: jingyue

Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10876

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@241191 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2015-07-01 21:32:42 +00:00
2015-07-01 13:41:18 +00:00
2015-07-01 12:56:27 +00:00

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

This directory and its subdirectories contain source code for LLVM,
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 documentation provided in docs/ for further
assistance with LLVM, and in particular docs/GettingStarted.rst for getting
started with LLVM and docs/README.txt for an overview of LLVM's
documentation setup.

If you're writing a package for LLVM, see docs/Packaging.rst for our
suggestions.
Description
LLVM backend for 6502
Readme 277 MiB
Languages
C++ 48.7%
LLVM 38.5%
Assembly 10.2%
C 0.9%
Python 0.4%
Other 1.2%