Bill Wendling e09b2a0d49 When inferring the pointer alignment, if the global doesn't have an initializer
and the alignment is 0 (i.e., it's defined globally in one file and declared in
another file) it could get an alignment which is larger than the ABI allows for
that type, resulting in aligned moves being used for unaligned loads.

For instance, in file A.c:

   struct S s;

In file B.c:
   struct {
     // something long
   };
   extern S s;

   void foo() {
     struct S p = s;
     // ...
   }

this copy is a 'memcpy' which is turned into a series of 'movaps' instructions
on X86. But this is wrong, because 'struct S' has alignment of 4, not 16.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@140902 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2011-09-30 23:19:55 +00:00
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2011-09-29 17:06:40 +00:00
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2011-09-24 01:37:58 +00:00
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2011-06-12 15:26:54 +00:00
2011-09-21 03:34:31 +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.

If you're writing a package for LLVM, see docs/Packaging.html for our
suggestions.
Description
LLVM backend for 6502
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