llvm-6502/include/llvm/Target/TargetLowering.h
Nate Begeman 405e3ecb56 Invert the TargetLowering flag that controls divide by consant expansion.
Add a new flag to TargetLowering indicating if the target has really cheap
  signed division by powers of two, make ppc use it.  This will probably go
  away in the future.
Implement some more ISD::SDIV folds in the dag combiner
Remove now dead code in the x86 backend.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@23853 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2005-10-21 00:02:42 +00:00

508 lines
23 KiB
C++

//===-- llvm/Target/TargetLowering.h - Target Lowering Info -----*- C++ -*-===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file was developed by the LLVM research group and is distributed under
// the University of Illinois Open Source License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file describes how to lower LLVM code to machine code. This has two
// main components:
//
// 1. Which ValueTypes are natively supported by the target.
// 2. Which operations are supported for supported ValueTypes.
// 3. Cost thresholds for alternative implementations of certain operations.
//
// In addition it has a few other components, like information about FP
// immediates.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#ifndef LLVM_TARGET_TARGETLOWERING_H
#define LLVM_TARGET_TARGETLOWERING_H
#include "llvm/Type.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/ValueTypes.h"
#include <vector>
namespace llvm {
class Value;
class Function;
class TargetMachine;
class TargetData;
class TargetRegisterClass;
class SDNode;
class SDOperand;
class SelectionDAG;
class MachineBasicBlock;
class MachineInstr;
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// TargetLowering - This class defines information used to lower LLVM code to
/// legal SelectionDAG operators that the target instruction selector can accept
/// natively.
///
/// This class also defines callbacks that targets must implement to lower
/// target-specific constructs to SelectionDAG operators.
///
class TargetLowering {
public:
/// LegalizeAction - This enum indicates whether operations are valid for a
/// target, and if not, what action should be used to make them valid.
enum LegalizeAction {
Legal, // The target natively supports this operation.
Promote, // This operation should be executed in a larger type.
Expand, // Try to expand this to other ops, otherwise use a libcall.
Custom, // Use the LowerOperation hook to implement custom lowering.
};
enum OutOfRangeShiftAmount {
Undefined, // Oversized shift amounts are undefined (default).
Mask, // Shift amounts are auto masked (anded) to value size.
Extend, // Oversized shift pulls in zeros or sign bits.
};
enum SetCCResultValue {
UndefinedSetCCResult, // SetCC returns a garbage/unknown extend.
ZeroOrOneSetCCResult, // SetCC returns a zero extended result.
ZeroOrNegativeOneSetCCResult, // SetCC returns a sign extended result.
};
TargetLowering(TargetMachine &TM);
virtual ~TargetLowering();
TargetMachine &getTargetMachine() const { return TM; }
const TargetData &getTargetData() const { return TD; }
bool isLittleEndian() const { return IsLittleEndian; }
MVT::ValueType getPointerTy() const { return PointerTy; }
MVT::ValueType getShiftAmountTy() const { return ShiftAmountTy; }
OutOfRangeShiftAmount getShiftAmountFlavor() const {return ShiftAmtHandling; }
/// isSetCCExpensive - Return true if the setcc operation is expensive for
/// this target.
bool isSetCCExpensive() const { return SetCCIsExpensive; }
/// isIntDivCheap() - Return true if integer divide is usually cheaper than
/// a sequence of several shifts, adds, and multiplies for this target.
bool isIntDivCheap() const { return IntDivIsCheap; }
/// isPow2DivCheap() - Return true if pow2 div is cheaper than a chain of
/// srl/add/sra.
bool isPow2DivCheap() const { return Pow2DivIsCheap; }
/// getSetCCResultTy - Return the ValueType of the result of setcc operations.
///
MVT::ValueType getSetCCResultTy() const { return SetCCResultTy; }
/// getSetCCResultContents - For targets without boolean registers, this flag
/// returns information about the contents of the high-bits in the setcc
/// result register.
SetCCResultValue getSetCCResultContents() const { return SetCCResultContents;}
/// getRegClassFor - Return the register class that should be used for the
/// specified value type. This may only be called on legal types.
TargetRegisterClass *getRegClassFor(MVT::ValueType VT) const {
TargetRegisterClass *RC = RegClassForVT[VT];
assert(RC && "This value type is not natively supported!");
return RC;
}
/// isTypeLegal - Return true if the target has native support for the
/// specified value type. This means that it has a register that directly
/// holds it without promotions or expansions.
bool isTypeLegal(MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return RegClassForVT[VT] != 0;
}
/// getTypeAction - Return how we should legalize values of this type, either
/// it is already legal (return 'Legal') or we need to promote it to a larger
/// type (return 'Promote'), or we need to expand it into multiple registers
/// of smaller integer type (return 'Expand'). 'Custom' is not an option.
LegalizeAction getTypeAction(MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return (LegalizeAction)((ValueTypeActions >> (2*VT)) & 3);
}
unsigned getValueTypeActions() const { return ValueTypeActions; }
/// getTypeToTransformTo - For types supported by the target, this is an
/// identity function. For types that must be promoted to larger types, this
/// returns the larger type to promote to. For types that are larger than the
/// largest integer register, this contains one step in the expansion to get
/// to the smaller register.
MVT::ValueType getTypeToTransformTo(MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return TransformToType[VT];
}
typedef std::vector<double>::const_iterator legal_fpimm_iterator;
legal_fpimm_iterator legal_fpimm_begin() const {
return LegalFPImmediates.begin();
}
legal_fpimm_iterator legal_fpimm_end() const {
return LegalFPImmediates.end();
}
/// getOperationAction - Return how this operation should be treated: either
/// it is legal, needs to be promoted to a larger size, needs to be
/// expanded to some other code sequence, or the target has a custom expander
/// for it.
LegalizeAction getOperationAction(unsigned Op, MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return (LegalizeAction)((OpActions[Op] >> (2*VT)) & 3);
}
/// isOperationLegal - Return true if the specified operation is legal on this
/// target.
bool isOperationLegal(unsigned Op, MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return getOperationAction(Op, VT) == Legal;
}
/// getTypeToPromoteTo - If the action for this operation is to promote, this
/// method returns the ValueType to promote to.
MVT::ValueType getTypeToPromoteTo(unsigned Op, MVT::ValueType VT) const {
assert(getOperationAction(Op, VT) == Promote &&
"This operation isn't promoted!");
MVT::ValueType NVT = VT;
do {
NVT = (MVT::ValueType)(NVT+1);
assert(MVT::isInteger(NVT) == MVT::isInteger(VT) && NVT != MVT::isVoid &&
"Didn't find type to promote to!");
} while (!isTypeLegal(NVT) ||
getOperationAction(Op, NVT) == Promote);
return NVT;
}
/// getValueType - Return the MVT::ValueType corresponding to this LLVM type.
/// This is fixed by the LLVM operations except for the pointer size.
MVT::ValueType getValueType(const Type *Ty) const {
switch (Ty->getTypeID()) {
default: assert(0 && "Unknown type!");
case Type::VoidTyID: return MVT::isVoid;
case Type::BoolTyID: return MVT::i1;
case Type::UByteTyID:
case Type::SByteTyID: return MVT::i8;
case Type::ShortTyID:
case Type::UShortTyID: return MVT::i16;
case Type::IntTyID:
case Type::UIntTyID: return MVT::i32;
case Type::LongTyID:
case Type::ULongTyID: return MVT::i64;
case Type::FloatTyID: return MVT::f32;
case Type::DoubleTyID: return MVT::f64;
case Type::PointerTyID: return PointerTy;
}
}
/// getNumElements - Return the number of registers that this ValueType will
/// eventually require. This is always one for all non-integer types, is
/// one for any types promoted to live in larger registers, but may be more
/// than one for types (like i64) that are split into pieces.
unsigned getNumElements(MVT::ValueType VT) const {
return NumElementsForVT[VT];
}
/// This function returns the maximum number of store operations permitted
/// to replace a call to llvm.memset. The value is set by the target at the
/// performance threshold for such a replacement.
/// @brief Get maximum # of store operations permitted for llvm.memset
unsigned getMaxStoresPerMemSet() const { return maxStoresPerMemSet; }
/// This function returns the maximum number of store operations permitted
/// to replace a call to llvm.memcpy. The value is set by the target at the
/// performance threshold for such a replacement.
/// @brief Get maximum # of store operations permitted for llvm.memcpy
unsigned getMaxStoresPerMemCpy() const { return maxStoresPerMemCpy; }
/// This function returns the maximum number of store operations permitted
/// to replace a call to llvm.memmove. The value is set by the target at the
/// performance threshold for such a replacement.
/// @brief Get maximum # of store operations permitted for llvm.memmove
unsigned getMaxStoresPerMemMove() const { return maxStoresPerMemMove; }
/// This function returns true if the target allows unaligned memory accesses.
/// This is used, for example, in situations where an array copy/move/set is
/// converted to a sequence of store operations. It's use helps to ensure that
/// such replacements don't generate code that causes an alignment error
/// (trap) on the target machine.
/// @brief Determine if the target supports unaligned memory accesses.
bool allowsUnalignedMemoryAccesses() const
{ return allowUnalignedMemoryAccesses; }
/// usesUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp - Determine if we should use _setjmp or setjmp
/// to implement llvm.setjmp.
bool usesUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp() const {
return UseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp;
}
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// TargetLowering Configuration Methods - These methods should be invoked by
// the derived class constructor to configure this object for the target.
//
protected:
/// setShiftAmountType - Describe the type that should be used for shift
/// amounts. This type defaults to the pointer type.
void setShiftAmountType(MVT::ValueType VT) { ShiftAmountTy = VT; }
/// setSetCCResultType - Describe the type that shoudl be used as the result
/// of a setcc operation. This defaults to the pointer type.
void setSetCCResultType(MVT::ValueType VT) { SetCCResultTy = VT; }
/// setSetCCResultContents - Specify how the target extends the result of a
/// setcc operation in a register.
void setSetCCResultContents(SetCCResultValue Ty) { SetCCResultContents = Ty; }
/// setShiftAmountFlavor - Describe how the target handles out of range shift
/// amounts.
void setShiftAmountFlavor(OutOfRangeShiftAmount OORSA) {
ShiftAmtHandling = OORSA;
}
/// setUseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp - Indicate whether this target prefers to
/// use _setjmp and _longjmp to or implement llvm.setjmp/llvm.longjmp or
/// the non _ versions. Defaults to false.
void setUseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp(bool Val) {
UseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp = Val;
}
/// setSetCCIxExpensive - This is a short term hack for targets that codegen
/// setcc as a conditional branch. This encourages the code generator to fold
/// setcc operations into other operations if possible.
void setSetCCIsExpensive() { SetCCIsExpensive = true; }
/// setIntDivIsCheap - Tells the code generator that integer divide is
/// expensive, and if possible, should be replaced by an alternate sequence
/// of instructions not containing an integer divide.
void setIntDivIsCheap(bool isCheap = true) { IntDivIsCheap = isCheap; }
/// setPow2DivIsCheap - Tells the code generator that it shouldn't generate
/// srl/add/sra for a signed divide by power of two, and let the target handle
/// it.
void setPow2DivIsCheap(bool isCheap = true) { Pow2DivIsCheap = isCheap; }
/// addRegisterClass - Add the specified register class as an available
/// regclass for the specified value type. This indicates the selector can
/// handle values of that class natively.
void addRegisterClass(MVT::ValueType VT, TargetRegisterClass *RC) {
AvailableRegClasses.push_back(std::make_pair(VT, RC));
RegClassForVT[VT] = RC;
}
/// computeRegisterProperties - Once all of the register classes are added,
/// this allows us to compute derived properties we expose.
void computeRegisterProperties();
/// setOperationAction - Indicate that the specified operation does not work
/// with the specified type and indicate what to do about it.
void setOperationAction(unsigned Op, MVT::ValueType VT,
LegalizeAction Action) {
assert(VT < 16 && Op < sizeof(OpActions)/sizeof(OpActions[0]) &&
"Table isn't big enough!");
OpActions[Op] |= Action << VT*2;
}
/// addLegalFPImmediate - Indicate that this target can instruction select
/// the specified FP immediate natively.
void addLegalFPImmediate(double Imm) {
LegalFPImmediates.push_back(Imm);
}
public:
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Lowering methods - These methods must be implemented by targets so that
// the SelectionDAGLowering code knows how to lower these.
//
/// LowerArguments - This hook must be implemented to indicate how we should
/// lower the arguments for the specified function, into the specified DAG.
virtual std::vector<SDOperand>
LowerArguments(Function &F, SelectionDAG &DAG) = 0;
/// LowerCallTo - This hook lowers an abstract call to a function into an
/// actual call. This returns a pair of operands. The first element is the
/// return value for the function (if RetTy is not VoidTy). The second
/// element is the outgoing token chain.
typedef std::vector<std::pair<SDOperand, const Type*> > ArgListTy;
virtual std::pair<SDOperand, SDOperand>
LowerCallTo(SDOperand Chain, const Type *RetTy, bool isVarArg,
unsigned CallingConv, bool isTailCall, SDOperand Callee,
ArgListTy &Args, SelectionDAG &DAG) = 0;
/// LowerReturnTo - This hook lowers a return instruction into the appropriate
/// legal ISD::RET node for the target's current ABI. This method is optional
/// and is intended for targets that need non-standard behavior.
virtual SDOperand LowerReturnTo(SDOperand Chain, SDOperand Op,
SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerVAStart - This lowers the llvm.va_start intrinsic. If not
/// implemented, this method prints a message and aborts. This method should
/// return the modified chain value. Note that VAListPtr* correspond to the
/// llvm.va_start operand.
virtual SDOperand LowerVAStart(SDOperand Chain, SDOperand VAListP,
Value *VAListV, SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerVAEnd - This lowers llvm.va_end and returns the resultant chain. If
/// not implemented, this defaults to a noop.
virtual SDOperand LowerVAEnd(SDOperand Chain, SDOperand LP, Value *LV,
SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerVACopy - This lowers llvm.va_copy and returns the resultant chain.
/// If not implemented, this defaults to loading a pointer from the input and
/// storing it to the output.
virtual SDOperand LowerVACopy(SDOperand Chain, SDOperand SrcP, Value *SrcV,
SDOperand DestP, Value *DestV,
SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerVAArg - This lowers the vaarg instruction. If not implemented, this
/// prints a message and aborts.
virtual std::pair<SDOperand,SDOperand>
LowerVAArg(SDOperand Chain, SDOperand VAListP, Value *VAListV,
const Type *ArgTy, SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerFrameReturnAddress - This hook lowers a call to llvm.returnaddress or
/// llvm.frameaddress (depending on the value of the first argument). The
/// return values are the result pointer and the resultant token chain. If
/// not implemented, both of these intrinsics will return null.
virtual std::pair<SDOperand, SDOperand>
LowerFrameReturnAddress(bool isFrameAddr, SDOperand Chain, unsigned Depth,
SelectionDAG &DAG);
/// LowerOperation - For operations that are unsupported by the target, and
/// which are registered to use 'custom' lowering. This callback is invoked.
/// If the target has no operations that require custom lowering, it need not
/// implement this. The default implementation of this aborts.
virtual SDOperand LowerOperation(SDOperand Op, SelectionDAG &DAG);
//===--------------------------------------------------------------------===//
// Scheduler hooks
//
// InsertAtEndOfBasicBlock - This method should be implemented by targets that
// mark instructions with the 'usesCustomDAGSchedInserter' flag. These
// instructions are special in various ways, which require special support to
// insert. The specified MachineInstr is created but not inserted into any
// basic blocks, and the scheduler passes ownership of it to this method.
virtual MachineBasicBlock *InsertAtEndOfBasicBlock(MachineInstr *MI,
MachineBasicBlock *MBB);
private:
TargetMachine &TM;
const TargetData &TD;
/// IsLittleEndian - True if this is a little endian target.
///
bool IsLittleEndian;
/// PointerTy - The type to use for pointers, usually i32 or i64.
///
MVT::ValueType PointerTy;
/// ShiftAmountTy - The type to use for shift amounts, usually i8 or whatever
/// PointerTy is.
MVT::ValueType ShiftAmountTy;
OutOfRangeShiftAmount ShiftAmtHandling;
/// SetCCIsExpensive - This is a short term hack for targets that codegen
/// setcc as a conditional branch. This encourages the code generator to fold
/// setcc operations into other operations if possible.
bool SetCCIsExpensive;
/// IntDivIsCheap - Tells the code generator not to expand integer divides by
/// constants into a sequence of muls, adds, and shifts. This is a hack until
/// a real cost model is in place. If we ever optimize for size, this will be
/// set to true unconditionally.
bool IntDivIsCheap;
/// Pow2DivIsCheap - Tells the code generator that it shouldn't generate
/// srl/add/sra for a signed divide by power of two, and let the target handle
/// it.
bool Pow2DivIsCheap;
/// SetCCResultTy - The type that SetCC operations use. This defaults to the
/// PointerTy.
MVT::ValueType SetCCResultTy;
/// SetCCResultContents - Information about the contents of the high-bits in
/// the result of a setcc comparison operation.
SetCCResultValue SetCCResultContents;
/// UseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp - This target prefers to use _setjmp and
/// _longjmp to implement llvm.setjmp/llvm.longjmp. Defaults to false.
bool UseUnderscoreSetJmpLongJmp;
/// RegClassForVT - This indicates the default register class to use for
/// each ValueType the target supports natively.
TargetRegisterClass *RegClassForVT[MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE];
unsigned char NumElementsForVT[MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE];
/// ValueTypeActions - This is a bitvector that contains two bits for each
/// value type, where the two bits correspond to the LegalizeAction enum.
/// This can be queried with "getTypeAction(VT)".
unsigned ValueTypeActions;
/// TransformToType - For any value types we are promoting or expanding, this
/// contains the value type that we are changing to. For Expanded types, this
/// contains one step of the expand (e.g. i64 -> i32), even if there are
/// multiple steps required (e.g. i64 -> i16). For types natively supported
/// by the system, this holds the same type (e.g. i32 -> i32).
MVT::ValueType TransformToType[MVT::LAST_VALUETYPE];
/// OpActions - For each operation and each value type, keep a LegalizeAction
/// that indicates how instruction selection should deal with the operation.
/// Most operations are Legal (aka, supported natively by the target), but
/// operations that are not should be described. Note that operations on
/// non-legal value types are not described here.
unsigned OpActions[128];
std::vector<double> LegalFPImmediates;
std::vector<std::pair<MVT::ValueType,
TargetRegisterClass*> > AvailableRegClasses;
protected:
/// When lowering %llvm.memset this field specifies the maximum number of
/// store operations that may be substituted for the call to memset. Targets
/// must set this value based on the cost threshold for that target. Targets
/// should assume that the memset will be done using as many of the largest
/// store operations first, followed by smaller ones, if necessary, per
/// alignment restrictions. For example, storing 9 bytes on a 32-bit machine
/// with 16-bit alignment would result in four 2-byte stores and one 1-byte
/// store. This only applies to setting a constant array of a constant size.
/// @brief Specify maximum number of store instructions per memset call.
unsigned maxStoresPerMemSet;
/// When lowering %llvm.memcpy this field specifies the maximum number of
/// store operations that may be substituted for a call to memcpy. Targets
/// must set this value based on the cost threshold for that target. Targets
/// should assume that the memcpy will be done using as many of the largest
/// store operations first, followed by smaller ones, if necessary, per
/// alignment restrictions. For example, storing 7 bytes on a 32-bit machine
/// with 32-bit alignment would result in one 4-byte store, a one 2-byte store
/// and one 1-byte store. This only applies to copying a constant array of
/// constant size.
/// @brief Specify maximum bytes of store instructions per memcpy call.
unsigned maxStoresPerMemCpy;
/// When lowering %llvm.memmove this field specifies the maximum number of
/// store instructions that may be substituted for a call to memmove. Targets
/// must set this value based on the cost threshold for that target. Targets
/// should assume that the memmove will be done using as many of the largest
/// store operations first, followed by smaller ones, if necessary, per
/// alignment restrictions. For example, moving 9 bytes on a 32-bit machine
/// with 8-bit alignment would result in nine 1-byte stores. This only
/// applies to copying a constant array of constant size.
/// @brief Specify maximum bytes of store instructions per memmove call.
unsigned maxStoresPerMemMove;
/// This field specifies whether the target machine permits unaligned memory
/// accesses. This is used, for example, to determine the size of store
/// operations when copying small arrays and other similar tasks.
/// @brief Indicate whether the target permits unaligned memory accesses.
bool allowUnalignedMemoryAccesses;
};
} // end llvm namespace
#endif