llvm-project/llvm/lib/CodeGen/MIRParser/MIParser.cpp

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//===- MIParser.cpp - Machine instructions parser implementation ----------===//
//
// The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
//
// This file is distributed under the University of Illinois Open Source
// License. See LICENSE.TXT for details.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
//
// This file implements the parsing of machine instructions.
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
#include "MIParser.h"
#include "MILexer.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/APInt.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/APSInt.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/ArrayRef.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/DenseMap.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/None.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/Optional.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/StringMap.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/StringSwitch.h"
#include "llvm/ADT/Twine.h"
#include "llvm/Analysis/MemoryLocation.h"
#include "llvm/AsmParser/Parser.h"
#include "llvm/AsmParser/SlotMapping.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MIRPrinter.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineBasicBlock.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFrameInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineFunction.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineInstr.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineInstrBuilder.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineMemOperand.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineOperand.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/MachineRegisterInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/TargetInstrInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/TargetRegisterInfo.h"
#include "llvm/CodeGen/TargetSubtargetInfo.h"
#include "llvm/IR/BasicBlock.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Constants.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DataLayout.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DebugInfoMetadata.h"
#include "llvm/IR/DebugLoc.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Function.h"
#include "llvm/IR/InstrTypes.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Instructions.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Intrinsics.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Metadata.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Module.h"
#include "llvm/IR/ModuleSlotTracker.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Type.h"
#include "llvm/IR/Value.h"
#include "llvm/IR/ValueSymbolTable.h"
#include "llvm/MC/LaneBitmask.h"
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
#include "llvm/MC/MCContext.h"
#include "llvm/MC/MCDwarf.h"
#include "llvm/MC/MCInstrDesc.h"
#include "llvm/MC/MCRegisterInfo.h"
#include "llvm/Support/AtomicOrdering.h"
#include "llvm/Support/BranchProbability.h"
#include "llvm/Support/Casting.h"
#include "llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h"
#include "llvm/Support/LowLevelTypeImpl.h"
#include "llvm/Support/MemoryBuffer.h"
#include "llvm/Support/SMLoc.h"
#include "llvm/Support/SourceMgr.h"
#include "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h"
#include "llvm/Target/TargetIntrinsicInfo.h"
#include "llvm/Target/TargetMachine.h"
#include <algorithm>
#include <cassert>
#include <cctype>
#include <cstddef>
#include <cstdint>
#include <limits>
#include <string>
#include <utility>
using namespace llvm;
PerFunctionMIParsingState::PerFunctionMIParsingState(MachineFunction &MF,
SourceMgr &SM, const SlotMapping &IRSlots,
const Name2RegClassMap &Names2RegClasses,
const Name2RegBankMap &Names2RegBanks)
: MF(MF), SM(&SM), IRSlots(IRSlots), Names2RegClasses(Names2RegClasses),
Names2RegBanks(Names2RegBanks) {
}
VRegInfo &PerFunctionMIParsingState::getVRegInfo(unsigned Num) {
auto I = VRegInfos.insert(std::make_pair(Num, nullptr));
if (I.second) {
MachineRegisterInfo &MRI = MF.getRegInfo();
VRegInfo *Info = new (Allocator) VRegInfo;
Info->VReg = MRI.createIncompleteVirtualRegister();
I.first->second = Info;
}
return *I.first->second;
}
VRegInfo &PerFunctionMIParsingState::getVRegInfoNamed(StringRef RegName) {
assert(RegName != "" && "Expected named reg.");
auto I = VRegInfosNamed.insert(std::make_pair(RegName.str(), nullptr));
if (I.second) {
VRegInfo *Info = new (Allocator) VRegInfo;
Info->VReg = MF.getRegInfo().createIncompleteVirtualRegister(RegName);
I.first->second = Info;
}
return *I.first->second;
}
namespace {
/// A wrapper struct around the 'MachineOperand' struct that includes a source
/// range and other attributes.
struct ParsedMachineOperand {
MachineOperand Operand;
StringRef::iterator Begin;
StringRef::iterator End;
Optional<unsigned> TiedDefIdx;
ParsedMachineOperand(const MachineOperand &Operand, StringRef::iterator Begin,
StringRef::iterator End, Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx)
: Operand(Operand), Begin(Begin), End(End), TiedDefIdx(TiedDefIdx) {
if (TiedDefIdx)
assert(Operand.isReg() && Operand.isUse() &&
"Only used register operands can be tied");
}
};
class MIParser {
MachineFunction &MF;
SMDiagnostic &Error;
StringRef Source, CurrentSource;
MIToken Token;
PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS;
/// Maps from instruction names to op codes.
StringMap<unsigned> Names2InstrOpCodes;
/// Maps from register names to registers.
StringMap<unsigned> Names2Regs;
/// Maps from register mask names to register masks.
StringMap<const uint32_t *> Names2RegMasks;
/// Maps from subregister names to subregister indices.
StringMap<unsigned> Names2SubRegIndices;
/// Maps from slot numbers to function's unnamed basic blocks.
DenseMap<unsigned, const BasicBlock *> Slots2BasicBlocks;
/// Maps from slot numbers to function's unnamed values.
DenseMap<unsigned, const Value *> Slots2Values;
/// Maps from target index names to target indices.
StringMap<int> Names2TargetIndices;
/// Maps from direct target flag names to the direct target flag values.
StringMap<unsigned> Names2DirectTargetFlags;
/// Maps from direct target flag names to the bitmask target flag values.
StringMap<unsigned> Names2BitmaskTargetFlags;
/// Maps from MMO target flag names to MMO target flag values.
StringMap<MachineMemOperand::Flags> Names2MMOTargetFlags;
public:
MIParser(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS, SMDiagnostic &Error,
StringRef Source);
/// \p SkipChar gives the number of characters to skip before looking
/// for the next token.
void lex(unsigned SkipChar = 0);
/// Report an error at the current location with the given message.
///
/// This function always return true.
bool error(const Twine &Msg);
/// Report an error at the given location with the given message.
///
/// This function always return true.
bool error(StringRef::iterator Loc, const Twine &Msg);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
bool
parseBasicBlockDefinitions(DenseMap<unsigned, MachineBasicBlock *> &MBBSlots);
bool parseBasicBlocks();
bool parse(MachineInstr *&MI);
bool parseStandaloneMBB(MachineBasicBlock *&MBB);
bool parseStandaloneNamedRegister(unsigned &Reg);
bool parseStandaloneVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info);
bool parseStandaloneRegister(unsigned &Reg);
bool parseStandaloneStackObject(int &FI);
bool parseStandaloneMDNode(MDNode *&Node);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
bool
parseBasicBlockDefinition(DenseMap<unsigned, MachineBasicBlock *> &MBBSlots);
bool parseBasicBlock(MachineBasicBlock &MBB,
MachineBasicBlock *&AddFalthroughFrom);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
bool parseBasicBlockLiveins(MachineBasicBlock &MBB);
bool parseBasicBlockSuccessors(MachineBasicBlock &MBB);
bool parseNamedRegister(unsigned &Reg);
bool parseVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info);
bool parseNamedVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info);
bool parseRegister(unsigned &Reg, VRegInfo *&VRegInfo);
bool parseRegisterFlag(unsigned &Flags);
bool parseRegisterClassOrBank(VRegInfo &RegInfo);
bool parseSubRegisterIndex(unsigned &SubReg);
bool parseRegisterTiedDefIndex(unsigned &TiedDefIdx);
bool parseRegisterOperand(MachineOperand &Dest,
Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx, bool IsDef = false);
bool parseImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseIRConstant(StringRef::iterator Loc, StringRef StringValue,
const Constant *&C);
bool parseIRConstant(StringRef::iterator Loc, const Constant *&C);
bool parseLowLevelType(StringRef::iterator Loc, LLT &Ty);
bool parseTypedImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseFPImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseMBBReference(MachineBasicBlock *&MBB);
bool parseMBBOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseStackFrameIndex(int &FI);
bool parseStackObjectOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseFixedStackFrameIndex(int &FI);
bool parseFixedStackObjectOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseGlobalValue(GlobalValue *&GV);
bool parseGlobalAddressOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseConstantPoolIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseSubRegisterIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseJumpTableIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseExternalSymbolOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
bool parseMCSymbolOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseMDNode(MDNode *&Node);
bool parseDIExpression(MDNode *&Expr);
bool parseDILocation(MDNode *&Expr);
bool parseMetadataOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseCFIOffset(int &Offset);
bool parseCFIRegister(unsigned &Reg);
bool parseCFIEscapeValues(std::string& Values);
bool parseCFIOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseIRBlock(BasicBlock *&BB, const Function &F);
bool parseBlockAddressOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseIntrinsicOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parsePredicateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseTargetIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseCustomRegisterMaskOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseLiveoutRegisterMaskOperand(MachineOperand &Dest);
bool parseMachineOperand(MachineOperand &Dest,
Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx);
bool parseMachineOperandAndTargetFlags(MachineOperand &Dest,
Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx);
bool parseOffset(int64_t &Offset);
bool parseAlignment(unsigned &Alignment);
bool parseAddrspace(unsigned &Addrspace);
bool parseOperandsOffset(MachineOperand &Op);
bool parseIRValue(const Value *&V);
bool parseMemoryOperandFlag(MachineMemOperand::Flags &Flags);
bool parseMemoryPseudoSourceValue(const PseudoSourceValue *&PSV);
bool parseMachinePointerInfo(MachinePointerInfo &Dest);
bool parseOptionalScope(LLVMContext &Context, SyncScope::ID &SSID);
bool parseOptionalAtomicOrdering(AtomicOrdering &Order);
bool parseMachineMemoryOperand(MachineMemOperand *&Dest);
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
bool parsePreOrPostInstrSymbol(MCSymbol *&Symbol);
private:
/// Convert the integer literal in the current token into an unsigned integer.
///
/// Return true if an error occurred.
bool getUnsigned(unsigned &Result);
/// Convert the integer literal in the current token into an uint64.
///
/// Return true if an error occurred.
bool getUint64(uint64_t &Result);
/// Convert the hexadecimal literal in the current token into an unsigned
/// APInt with a minimum bitwidth required to represent the value.
///
/// Return true if the literal does not represent an integer value.
bool getHexUint(APInt &Result);
/// If the current token is of the given kind, consume it and return false.
/// Otherwise report an error and return true.
bool expectAndConsume(MIToken::TokenKind TokenKind);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
/// If the current token is of the given kind, consume it and return true.
/// Otherwise return false.
bool consumeIfPresent(MIToken::TokenKind TokenKind);
void initNames2InstrOpCodes();
/// Try to convert an instruction name to an opcode. Return true if the
/// instruction name is invalid.
bool parseInstrName(StringRef InstrName, unsigned &OpCode);
bool parseInstruction(unsigned &OpCode, unsigned &Flags);
bool assignRegisterTies(MachineInstr &MI,
ArrayRef<ParsedMachineOperand> Operands);
bool verifyImplicitOperands(ArrayRef<ParsedMachineOperand> Operands,
const MCInstrDesc &MCID);
void initNames2Regs();
/// Try to convert a register name to a register number. Return true if the
/// register name is invalid.
bool getRegisterByName(StringRef RegName, unsigned &Reg);
void initNames2RegMasks();
/// Check if the given identifier is a name of a register mask.
///
/// Return null if the identifier isn't a register mask.
const uint32_t *getRegMask(StringRef Identifier);
void initNames2SubRegIndices();
/// Check if the given identifier is a name of a subregister index.
///
/// Return 0 if the name isn't a subregister index class.
unsigned getSubRegIndex(StringRef Name);
const BasicBlock *getIRBlock(unsigned Slot);
const BasicBlock *getIRBlock(unsigned Slot, const Function &F);
const Value *getIRValue(unsigned Slot);
void initNames2TargetIndices();
/// Try to convert a name of target index to the corresponding target index.
///
/// Return true if the name isn't a name of a target index.
bool getTargetIndex(StringRef Name, int &Index);
void initNames2DirectTargetFlags();
/// Try to convert a name of a direct target flag to the corresponding
/// target flag.
///
/// Return true if the name isn't a name of a direct flag.
bool getDirectTargetFlag(StringRef Name, unsigned &Flag);
void initNames2BitmaskTargetFlags();
/// Try to convert a name of a bitmask target flag to the corresponding
/// target flag.
///
/// Return true if the name isn't a name of a bitmask target flag.
bool getBitmaskTargetFlag(StringRef Name, unsigned &Flag);
void initNames2MMOTargetFlags();
/// Try to convert a name of a MachineMemOperand target flag to the
/// corresponding target flag.
///
/// Return true if the name isn't a name of a target MMO flag.
bool getMMOTargetFlag(StringRef Name, MachineMemOperand::Flags &Flag);
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
/// Get or create an MCSymbol for a given name.
MCSymbol *getOrCreateMCSymbol(StringRef Name);
/// parseStringConstant
/// ::= StringConstant
bool parseStringConstant(std::string &Result);
};
} // end anonymous namespace
MIParser::MIParser(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS, SMDiagnostic &Error,
StringRef Source)
: MF(PFS.MF), Error(Error), Source(Source), CurrentSource(Source), PFS(PFS)
{}
void MIParser::lex(unsigned SkipChar) {
CurrentSource = lexMIToken(
CurrentSource.data() + SkipChar, Token,
[this](StringRef::iterator Loc, const Twine &Msg) { error(Loc, Msg); });
}
bool MIParser::error(const Twine &Msg) { return error(Token.location(), Msg); }
bool MIParser::error(StringRef::iterator Loc, const Twine &Msg) {
const SourceMgr &SM = *PFS.SM;
assert(Loc >= Source.data() && Loc <= (Source.data() + Source.size()));
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
const MemoryBuffer &Buffer = *SM.getMemoryBuffer(SM.getMainFileID());
if (Loc >= Buffer.getBufferStart() && Loc <= Buffer.getBufferEnd()) {
// Create an ordinary diagnostic when the source manager's buffer is the
// source string.
Error = SM.GetMessage(SMLoc::getFromPointer(Loc), SourceMgr::DK_Error, Msg);
return true;
}
// Create a diagnostic for a YAML string literal.
Error = SMDiagnostic(SM, SMLoc(), Buffer.getBufferIdentifier(), 1,
Loc - Source.data(), SourceMgr::DK_Error, Msg.str(),
Source, None, None);
return true;
}
static const char *toString(MIToken::TokenKind TokenKind) {
switch (TokenKind) {
case MIToken::comma:
return "','";
case MIToken::equal:
return "'='";
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
case MIToken::colon:
return "':'";
case MIToken::lparen:
return "'('";
case MIToken::rparen:
return "')'";
default:
return "<unknown token>";
}
}
bool MIParser::expectAndConsume(MIToken::TokenKind TokenKind) {
if (Token.isNot(TokenKind))
return error(Twine("expected ") + toString(TokenKind));
lex();
return false;
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
bool MIParser::consumeIfPresent(MIToken::TokenKind TokenKind) {
if (Token.isNot(TokenKind))
return false;
lex();
return true;
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlockDefinition(
DenseMap<unsigned, MachineBasicBlock *> &MBBSlots) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel));
unsigned ID = 0;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto Loc = Token.location();
auto Name = Token.stringValue();
lex();
bool HasAddressTaken = false;
bool IsLandingPad = false;
unsigned Alignment = 0;
BasicBlock *BB = nullptr;
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::lparen)) {
do {
// TODO: Report an error when multiple same attributes are specified.
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_address_taken:
HasAddressTaken = true;
lex();
break;
case MIToken::kw_landing_pad:
IsLandingPad = true;
lex();
break;
case MIToken::kw_align:
if (parseAlignment(Alignment))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::IRBlock:
// TODO: Report an error when both name and ir block are specified.
if (parseIRBlock(BB, MF.getFunction()))
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return true;
lex();
break;
default:
break;
}
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (!Name.empty()) {
BB = dyn_cast_or_null<BasicBlock>(
MF.getFunction().getValueSymbolTable()->lookup(Name));
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
if (!BB)
return error(Loc, Twine("basic block '") + Name +
"' is not defined in the function '" +
MF.getName() + "'");
}
auto *MBB = MF.CreateMachineBasicBlock(BB);
MF.insert(MF.end(), MBB);
bool WasInserted = MBBSlots.insert(std::make_pair(ID, MBB)).second;
if (!WasInserted)
return error(Loc, Twine("redefinition of machine basic block with id #") +
Twine(ID));
if (Alignment)
MBB->setAlignment(Alignment);
if (HasAddressTaken)
MBB->setHasAddressTaken();
MBB->setIsEHPad(IsLandingPad);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlockDefinitions(
DenseMap<unsigned, MachineBasicBlock *> &MBBSlots) {
lex();
// Skip until the first machine basic block.
while (Token.is(MIToken::Newline))
lex();
if (Token.isErrorOrEOF())
return Token.isError();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel))
return error("expected a basic block definition before instructions");
unsigned BraceDepth = 0;
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
do {
if (parseBasicBlockDefinition(MBBSlots))
return true;
bool IsAfterNewline = false;
// Skip until the next machine basic block.
while (true) {
if ((Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel) && IsAfterNewline) ||
Token.isErrorOrEOF())
break;
else if (Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel))
return error("basic block definition should be located at the start of "
"the line");
else if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::Newline)) {
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
IsAfterNewline = true;
continue;
}
IsAfterNewline = false;
if (Token.is(MIToken::lbrace))
++BraceDepth;
if (Token.is(MIToken::rbrace)) {
if (!BraceDepth)
return error("extraneous closing brace ('}')");
--BraceDepth;
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
lex();
}
// Verify that we closed all of the '{' at the end of a file or a block.
if (!Token.isError() && BraceDepth)
return error("expected '}'"); // FIXME: Report a note that shows '{'.
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
} while (!Token.isErrorOrEOF());
return Token.isError();
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlockLiveins(MachineBasicBlock &MBB) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_liveins));
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (Token.isNewlineOrEOF()) // Allow an empty list of liveins.
return false;
do {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister))
return error("expected a named register");
unsigned Reg = 0;
if (parseNamedRegister(Reg))
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return true;
lex();
LaneBitmask Mask = LaneBitmask::getAll();
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::colon)) {
// Parse lane mask.
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::HexLiteral))
return error("expected a lane mask");
static_assert(sizeof(LaneBitmask::Type) == sizeof(unsigned),
"Use correct get-function for lane mask");
LaneBitmask::Type V;
if (getUnsigned(V))
return error("invalid lane mask value");
Mask = LaneBitmask(V);
lex();
}
MBB.addLiveIn(Reg, Mask);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlockSuccessors(MachineBasicBlock &MBB) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_successors));
lex();
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (Token.isNewlineOrEOF()) // Allow an empty list of successors.
return false;
do {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::MachineBasicBlock))
return error("expected a machine basic block reference");
MachineBasicBlock *SuccMBB = nullptr;
if (parseMBBReference(SuccMBB))
return true;
lex();
unsigned Weight = 0;
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::lparen)) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::HexLiteral))
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return error("expected an integer literal after '('");
if (getUnsigned(Weight))
return true;
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
}
2015-12-01 13:29:22 +08:00
MBB.addSuccessor(SuccMBB, BranchProbability::getRaw(Weight));
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
2015-12-01 13:29:22 +08:00
MBB.normalizeSuccProbs();
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlock(MachineBasicBlock &MBB,
MachineBasicBlock *&AddFalthroughFrom) {
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
// Skip the definition.
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel));
lex();
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::lparen)) {
while (Token.isNot(MIToken::rparen) && !Token.isErrorOrEOF())
lex();
consumeIfPresent(MIToken::rparen);
}
consumeIfPresent(MIToken::colon);
// Parse the liveins and successors.
// N.B: Multiple lists of successors and liveins are allowed and they're
// merged into one.
// Example:
// liveins: %edi
// liveins: %esi
//
// is equivalent to
// liveins: %edi, %esi
bool ExplicitSuccessors = false;
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
while (true) {
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_successors)) {
if (parseBasicBlockSuccessors(MBB))
return true;
ExplicitSuccessors = true;
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_liveins)) {
if (parseBasicBlockLiveins(MBB))
return true;
} else if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::Newline)) {
continue;
} else
break;
if (!Token.isNewlineOrEOF())
return error("expected line break at the end of a list");
lex();
}
// Parse the instructions.
bool IsInBundle = false;
MachineInstr *PrevMI = nullptr;
while (!Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel) &&
!Token.is(MIToken::Eof)) {
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::Newline))
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
continue;
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::rbrace)) {
// The first parsing pass should verify that all closing '}' have an
// opening '{'.
assert(IsInBundle);
IsInBundle = false;
continue;
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
MachineInstr *MI = nullptr;
if (parse(MI))
return true;
MBB.insert(MBB.end(), MI);
if (IsInBundle) {
PrevMI->setFlag(MachineInstr::BundledSucc);
MI->setFlag(MachineInstr::BundledPred);
}
PrevMI = MI;
if (Token.is(MIToken::lbrace)) {
if (IsInBundle)
return error("nested instruction bundles are not allowed");
lex();
// This instruction is the start of the bundle.
MI->setFlag(MachineInstr::BundledSucc);
IsInBundle = true;
if (!Token.is(MIToken::Newline))
// The next instruction can be on the same line.
continue;
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
assert(Token.isNewlineOrEOF() && "MI is not fully parsed");
lex();
}
// Construct successor list by searching for basic block machine operands.
if (!ExplicitSuccessors) {
SmallVector<MachineBasicBlock*,4> Successors;
bool IsFallthrough;
guessSuccessors(MBB, Successors, IsFallthrough);
for (MachineBasicBlock *Succ : Successors)
MBB.addSuccessor(Succ);
if (IsFallthrough) {
AddFalthroughFrom = &MBB;
} else {
MBB.normalizeSuccProbs();
}
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseBasicBlocks() {
lex();
// Skip until the first machine basic block.
while (Token.is(MIToken::Newline))
lex();
if (Token.isErrorOrEOF())
return Token.isError();
// The first parsing pass should have verified that this token is a MBB label
// in the 'parseBasicBlockDefinitions' method.
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel));
MachineBasicBlock *AddFalthroughFrom = nullptr;
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
do {
MachineBasicBlock *MBB = nullptr;
if (parseMBBReference(MBB))
return true;
if (AddFalthroughFrom) {
if (!AddFalthroughFrom->isSuccessor(MBB))
AddFalthroughFrom->addSuccessor(MBB);
AddFalthroughFrom->normalizeSuccProbs();
AddFalthroughFrom = nullptr;
}
if (parseBasicBlock(*MBB, AddFalthroughFrom))
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
return true;
// The method 'parseBasicBlock' should parse the whole block until the next
// block or the end of file.
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel) || Token.is(MIToken::Eof));
} while (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof));
return false;
}
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
bool MIParser::parse(MachineInstr *&MI) {
// Parse any register operands before '='
MachineOperand MO = MachineOperand::CreateImm(0);
SmallVector<ParsedMachineOperand, 8> Operands;
while (Token.isRegister() || Token.isRegisterFlag()) {
auto Loc = Token.location();
Optional<unsigned> TiedDefIdx;
if (parseRegisterOperand(MO, TiedDefIdx, /*IsDef=*/true))
return true;
Operands.push_back(
ParsedMachineOperand(MO, Loc, Token.location(), TiedDefIdx));
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
break;
lex();
}
if (!Operands.empty() && expectAndConsume(MIToken::equal))
return true;
unsigned OpCode, Flags = 0;
if (Token.isError() || parseInstruction(OpCode, Flags))
return true;
// Parse the remaining machine operands.
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
while (!Token.isNewlineOrEOF() && Token.isNot(MIToken::kw_pre_instr_symbol) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::kw_post_instr_symbol) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::kw_debug_location) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::coloncolon) && Token.isNot(MIToken::lbrace)) {
auto Loc = Token.location();
Optional<unsigned> TiedDefIdx;
if (parseMachineOperandAndTargetFlags(MO, TiedDefIdx))
return true;
if (OpCode == TargetOpcode::DBG_VALUE && MO.isReg())
MO.setIsDebug();
Operands.push_back(
ParsedMachineOperand(MO, Loc, Token.location(), TiedDefIdx));
if (Token.isNewlineOrEOF() || Token.is(MIToken::coloncolon) ||
Token.is(MIToken::lbrace))
break;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
return error("expected ',' before the next machine operand");
lex();
}
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
MCSymbol *PreInstrSymbol = nullptr;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_pre_instr_symbol))
if (parsePreOrPostInstrSymbol(PreInstrSymbol))
return true;
MCSymbol *PostInstrSymbol = nullptr;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_post_instr_symbol))
if (parsePreOrPostInstrSymbol(PostInstrSymbol))
return true;
DebugLoc DebugLocation;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_debug_location)) {
lex();
MDNode *Node = nullptr;
if (Token.is(MIToken::exclaim)) {
if (parseMDNode(Node))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::md_dilocation)) {
if (parseDILocation(Node))
return true;
} else
return error("expected a metadata node after 'debug-location'");
if (!isa<DILocation>(Node))
return error("referenced metadata is not a DILocation");
DebugLocation = DebugLoc(Node);
}
// Parse the machine memory operands.
SmallVector<MachineMemOperand *, 2> MemOperands;
if (Token.is(MIToken::coloncolon)) {
lex();
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
while (!Token.isNewlineOrEOF()) {
MachineMemOperand *MemOp = nullptr;
if (parseMachineMemoryOperand(MemOp))
return true;
MemOperands.push_back(MemOp);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
if (Token.isNewlineOrEOF())
break;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
return error("expected ',' before the next machine memory operand");
lex();
}
}
const auto &MCID = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo()->get(OpCode);
if (!MCID.isVariadic()) {
// FIXME: Move the implicit operand verification to the machine verifier.
if (verifyImplicitOperands(Operands, MCID))
return true;
}
// TODO: Check for extraneous machine operands.
MI = MF.CreateMachineInstr(MCID, DebugLocation, /*NoImplicit=*/true);
MI->setFlags(Flags);
for (const auto &Operand : Operands)
MI->addOperand(MF, Operand.Operand);
if (assignRegisterTies(*MI, Operands))
return true;
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
if (PreInstrSymbol)
MI->setPreInstrSymbol(MF, PreInstrSymbol);
if (PostInstrSymbol)
MI->setPostInstrSymbol(MF, PostInstrSymbol);
if (!MemOperands.empty())
MI->setMemRefs(MF, MemOperands);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneMBB(MachineBasicBlock *&MBB) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::MachineBasicBlock))
return error("expected a machine basic block reference");
if (parseMBBReference(MBB))
return true;
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error(
"expected end of string after the machine basic block reference");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneNamedRegister(unsigned &Reg) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister))
return error("expected a named register");
if (parseNamedRegister(Reg))
return true;
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error("expected end of string after the register reference");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::VirtualRegister))
return error("expected a virtual register");
if (parseVirtualRegister(Info))
return true;
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error("expected end of string after the register reference");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneRegister(unsigned &Reg) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::VirtualRegister))
return error("expected either a named or virtual register");
VRegInfo *Info;
if (parseRegister(Reg, Info))
return true;
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error("expected end of string after the register reference");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneStackObject(int &FI) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::StackObject))
return error("expected a stack object");
if (parseStackFrameIndex(FI))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error("expected end of string after the stack object reference");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStandaloneMDNode(MDNode *&Node) {
lex();
if (Token.is(MIToken::exclaim)) {
if (parseMDNode(Node))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::md_diexpr)) {
if (parseDIExpression(Node))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::md_dilocation)) {
if (parseDILocation(Node))
return true;
} else
return error("expected a metadata node");
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Eof))
return error("expected end of string after the metadata node");
return false;
}
static const char *printImplicitRegisterFlag(const MachineOperand &MO) {
assert(MO.isImplicit());
return MO.isDef() ? "implicit-def" : "implicit";
}
static std::string getRegisterName(const TargetRegisterInfo *TRI,
unsigned Reg) {
assert(TargetRegisterInfo::isPhysicalRegister(Reg) && "expected phys reg");
return StringRef(TRI->getName(Reg)).lower();
}
/// Return true if the parsed machine operands contain a given machine operand.
static bool isImplicitOperandIn(const MachineOperand &ImplicitOperand,
ArrayRef<ParsedMachineOperand> Operands) {
for (const auto &I : Operands) {
if (ImplicitOperand.isIdenticalTo(I.Operand))
return true;
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::verifyImplicitOperands(ArrayRef<ParsedMachineOperand> Operands,
const MCInstrDesc &MCID) {
if (MCID.isCall())
// We can't verify call instructions as they can contain arbitrary implicit
// register and register mask operands.
return false;
// Gather all the expected implicit operands.
SmallVector<MachineOperand, 4> ImplicitOperands;
if (MCID.ImplicitDefs)
for (const MCPhysReg *ImpDefs = MCID.getImplicitDefs(); *ImpDefs; ++ImpDefs)
ImplicitOperands.push_back(
MachineOperand::CreateReg(*ImpDefs, true, true));
if (MCID.ImplicitUses)
for (const MCPhysReg *ImpUses = MCID.getImplicitUses(); *ImpUses; ++ImpUses)
ImplicitOperands.push_back(
MachineOperand::CreateReg(*ImpUses, false, true));
const auto *TRI = MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
assert(TRI && "Expected target register info");
for (const auto &I : ImplicitOperands) {
if (isImplicitOperandIn(I, Operands))
continue;
return error(Operands.empty() ? Token.location() : Operands.back().End,
Twine("missing implicit register operand '") +
printImplicitRegisterFlag(I) + " $" +
getRegisterName(TRI, I.getReg()) + "'");
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseInstruction(unsigned &OpCode, unsigned &Flags) {
// Allow frame and fast math flags for OPCODE
while (Token.is(MIToken::kw_frame_setup) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_frame_destroy) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_nnan) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_ninf) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_nsz) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_arcp) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_contract) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_afn) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_reassoc) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_nuw) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_nsw) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_exact)) {
// Mine frame and fast math flags
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_frame_setup))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FrameSetup;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_frame_destroy))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FrameDestroy;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_nnan))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmNoNans;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_ninf))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmNoInfs;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_nsz))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmNsz;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_arcp))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmArcp;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_contract))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmContract;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_afn))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmAfn;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_reassoc))
Flags |= MachineInstr::FmReassoc;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_nuw))
Flags |= MachineInstr::NoUWrap;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_nsw))
Flags |= MachineInstr::NoSWrap;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_exact))
Flags |= MachineInstr::IsExact;
lex();
}
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected a machine instruction");
StringRef InstrName = Token.stringValue();
if (parseInstrName(InstrName, OpCode))
return error(Twine("unknown machine instruction name '") + InstrName + "'");
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseNamedRegister(unsigned &Reg) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::NamedRegister) && "Needs NamedRegister token");
StringRef Name = Token.stringValue();
if (getRegisterByName(Name, Reg))
return error(Twine("unknown register name '") + Name + "'");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseNamedVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::NamedVirtualRegister) && "Expected NamedVReg token");
StringRef Name = Token.stringValue();
// TODO: Check that the VReg name is not the same as a physical register name.
// If it is, then print a warning (when warnings are implemented).
Info = &PFS.getVRegInfoNamed(Name);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseVirtualRegister(VRegInfo *&Info) {
if (Token.is(MIToken::NamedVirtualRegister))
return parseNamedVirtualRegister(Info);
assert(Token.is(MIToken::VirtualRegister) && "Needs VirtualRegister token");
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
Info = &PFS.getVRegInfo(ID);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseRegister(unsigned &Reg, VRegInfo *&Info) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::underscore:
Reg = 0;
return false;
case MIToken::NamedRegister:
return parseNamedRegister(Reg);
case MIToken::NamedVirtualRegister:
case MIToken::VirtualRegister:
if (parseVirtualRegister(Info))
return true;
Reg = Info->VReg;
return false;
// TODO: Parse other register kinds.
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be a register");
}
}
bool MIParser::parseRegisterClassOrBank(VRegInfo &RegInfo) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier) && Token.isNot(MIToken::underscore))
return error("expected '_', register class, or register bank name");
StringRef::iterator Loc = Token.location();
StringRef Name = Token.stringValue();
// Was it a register class?
auto RCNameI = PFS.Names2RegClasses.find(Name);
if (RCNameI != PFS.Names2RegClasses.end()) {
lex();
const TargetRegisterClass &RC = *RCNameI->getValue();
switch (RegInfo.Kind) {
case VRegInfo::UNKNOWN:
case VRegInfo::NORMAL:
RegInfo.Kind = VRegInfo::NORMAL;
if (RegInfo.Explicit && RegInfo.D.RC != &RC) {
const TargetRegisterInfo &TRI = *MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
return error(Loc, Twine("conflicting register classes, previously: ") +
Twine(TRI.getRegClassName(RegInfo.D.RC)));
}
RegInfo.D.RC = &RC;
RegInfo.Explicit = true;
return false;
case VRegInfo::GENERIC:
case VRegInfo::REGBANK:
return error(Loc, "register class specification on generic register");
}
llvm_unreachable("Unexpected register kind");
}
// Should be a register bank or a generic register.
const RegisterBank *RegBank = nullptr;
if (Name != "_") {
auto RBNameI = PFS.Names2RegBanks.find(Name);
if (RBNameI == PFS.Names2RegBanks.end())
return error(Loc, "expected '_', register class, or register bank name");
RegBank = RBNameI->getValue();
}
lex();
switch (RegInfo.Kind) {
case VRegInfo::UNKNOWN:
case VRegInfo::GENERIC:
case VRegInfo::REGBANK:
RegInfo.Kind = RegBank ? VRegInfo::REGBANK : VRegInfo::GENERIC;
if (RegInfo.Explicit && RegInfo.D.RegBank != RegBank)
return error(Loc, "conflicting generic register banks");
RegInfo.D.RegBank = RegBank;
RegInfo.Explicit = true;
return false;
case VRegInfo::NORMAL:
return error(Loc, "register bank specification on normal register");
}
llvm_unreachable("Unexpected register kind");
}
bool MIParser::parseRegisterFlag(unsigned &Flags) {
const unsigned OldFlags = Flags;
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_implicit:
Flags |= RegState::Implicit;
break;
case MIToken::kw_implicit_define:
Flags |= RegState::ImplicitDefine;
break;
case MIToken::kw_def:
Flags |= RegState::Define;
break;
case MIToken::kw_dead:
Flags |= RegState::Dead;
break;
case MIToken::kw_killed:
Flags |= RegState::Kill;
break;
case MIToken::kw_undef:
Flags |= RegState::Undef;
break;
case MIToken::kw_internal:
Flags |= RegState::InternalRead;
break;
case MIToken::kw_early_clobber:
Flags |= RegState::EarlyClobber;
break;
case MIToken::kw_debug_use:
Flags |= RegState::Debug;
break;
case MIToken::kw_renamable:
Flags |= RegState::Renamable;
break;
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be a register flag");
}
if (OldFlags == Flags)
// We know that the same flag is specified more than once when the flags
// weren't modified.
return error("duplicate '" + Token.stringValue() + "' register flag");
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseSubRegisterIndex(unsigned &SubReg) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::dot));
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected a subregister index after '.'");
auto Name = Token.stringValue();
SubReg = getSubRegIndex(Name);
if (!SubReg)
return error(Twine("use of unknown subregister index '") + Name + "'");
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseRegisterTiedDefIndex(unsigned &TiedDefIdx) {
if (!consumeIfPresent(MIToken::kw_tied_def))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral))
return error("expected an integer literal after 'tied-def'");
if (getUnsigned(TiedDefIdx))
return true;
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::assignRegisterTies(MachineInstr &MI,
ArrayRef<ParsedMachineOperand> Operands) {
SmallVector<std::pair<unsigned, unsigned>, 4> TiedRegisterPairs;
for (unsigned I = 0, E = Operands.size(); I != E; ++I) {
if (!Operands[I].TiedDefIdx)
continue;
// The parser ensures that this operand is a register use, so we just have
// to check the tied-def operand.
unsigned DefIdx = Operands[I].TiedDefIdx.getValue();
if (DefIdx >= E)
return error(Operands[I].Begin,
Twine("use of invalid tied-def operand index '" +
Twine(DefIdx) + "'; instruction has only ") +
Twine(E) + " operands");
const auto &DefOperand = Operands[DefIdx].Operand;
if (!DefOperand.isReg() || !DefOperand.isDef())
// FIXME: add note with the def operand.
return error(Operands[I].Begin,
Twine("use of invalid tied-def operand index '") +
Twine(DefIdx) + "'; the operand #" + Twine(DefIdx) +
" isn't a defined register");
// Check that the tied-def operand wasn't tied elsewhere.
for (const auto &TiedPair : TiedRegisterPairs) {
if (TiedPair.first == DefIdx)
return error(Operands[I].Begin,
Twine("the tied-def operand #") + Twine(DefIdx) +
" is already tied with another register operand");
}
TiedRegisterPairs.push_back(std::make_pair(DefIdx, I));
}
// FIXME: Verify that for non INLINEASM instructions, the def and use tied
// indices must be less than tied max.
for (const auto &TiedPair : TiedRegisterPairs)
MI.tieOperands(TiedPair.first, TiedPair.second);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseRegisterOperand(MachineOperand &Dest,
Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx,
bool IsDef) {
unsigned Flags = IsDef ? RegState::Define : 0;
while (Token.isRegisterFlag()) {
if (parseRegisterFlag(Flags))
return true;
}
if (!Token.isRegister())
return error("expected a register after register flags");
unsigned Reg;
VRegInfo *RegInfo;
if (parseRegister(Reg, RegInfo))
return true;
lex();
unsigned SubReg = 0;
if (Token.is(MIToken::dot)) {
if (parseSubRegisterIndex(SubReg))
return true;
if (!TargetRegisterInfo::isVirtualRegister(Reg))
return error("subregister index expects a virtual register");
}
if (Token.is(MIToken::colon)) {
if (!TargetRegisterInfo::isVirtualRegister(Reg))
return error("register class specification expects a virtual register");
lex();
if (parseRegisterClassOrBank(*RegInfo))
return true;
}
MachineRegisterInfo &MRI = MF.getRegInfo();
if ((Flags & RegState::Define) == 0) {
if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::lparen)) {
unsigned Idx;
if (!parseRegisterTiedDefIndex(Idx))
TiedDefIdx = Idx;
else {
// Try a redundant low-level type.
LLT Ty;
if (parseLowLevelType(Token.location(), Ty))
return error("expected tied-def or low-level type after '('");
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
if (MRI.getType(Reg).isValid() && MRI.getType(Reg) != Ty)
return error("inconsistent type for generic virtual register");
MRI.setType(Reg, Ty);
}
}
} else if (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::lparen)) {
// Virtual registers may have a tpe with GlobalISel.
if (!TargetRegisterInfo::isVirtualRegister(Reg))
return error("unexpected type on physical register");
LLT Ty;
if (parseLowLevelType(Token.location(), Ty))
return true;
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
if (MRI.getType(Reg).isValid() && MRI.getType(Reg) != Ty)
return error("inconsistent type for generic virtual register");
MRI.setType(Reg, Ty);
} else if (TargetRegisterInfo::isVirtualRegister(Reg)) {
// Generic virtual registers must have a type.
// If we end up here this means the type hasn't been specified and
// this is bad!
if (RegInfo->Kind == VRegInfo::GENERIC ||
RegInfo->Kind == VRegInfo::REGBANK)
return error("generic virtual registers must have a type");
}
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateReg(
Reg, Flags & RegState::Define, Flags & RegState::Implicit,
Flags & RegState::Kill, Flags & RegState::Dead, Flags & RegState::Undef,
Flags & RegState::EarlyClobber, SubReg, Flags & RegState::Debug,
Flags & RegState::InternalRead, Flags & RegState::Renamable);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::IntegerLiteral));
const APSInt &Int = Token.integerValue();
if (Int.getMinSignedBits() > 64)
return error("integer literal is too large to be an immediate operand");
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateImm(Int.getExtValue());
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseIRConstant(StringRef::iterator Loc, StringRef StringValue,
const Constant *&C) {
auto Source = StringValue.str(); // The source has to be null terminated.
SMDiagnostic Err;
C = parseConstantValue(Source, Err, *MF.getFunction().getParent(),
&PFS.IRSlots);
if (!C)
return error(Loc + Err.getColumnNo(), Err.getMessage());
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseIRConstant(StringRef::iterator Loc, const Constant *&C) {
if (parseIRConstant(Loc, StringRef(Loc, Token.range().end() - Loc), C))
return true;
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseLowLevelType(StringRef::iterator Loc, LLT &Ty) {
if (Token.range().front() == 's' || Token.range().front() == 'p') {
StringRef SizeStr = Token.range().drop_front();
if (SizeStr.size() == 0 || !llvm::all_of(SizeStr, isdigit))
return error("expected integers after 's'/'p' type character");
}
if (Token.range().front() == 's') {
Ty = LLT::scalar(APSInt(Token.range().drop_front()).getZExtValue());
lex();
return false;
} else if (Token.range().front() == 'p') {
const DataLayout &DL = MF.getDataLayout();
unsigned AS = APSInt(Token.range().drop_front()).getZExtValue();
Ty = LLT::pointer(AS, DL.getPointerSizeInBits(AS));
lex();
return false;
}
// Now we're looking for a vector.
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::less))
return error(Loc,
"expected sN, pA, <M x sN>, or <M x pA> for GlobalISel type");
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral))
return error(Loc, "expected <M x sN> or <M x pA> for vector type");
uint64_t NumElements = Token.integerValue().getZExtValue();
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier) || Token.stringValue() != "x")
return error(Loc, "expected <M x sN> or <M x pA> for vector type");
lex();
if (Token.range().front() != 's' && Token.range().front() != 'p')
return error(Loc, "expected <M x sN> or <M x pA> for vector type");
StringRef SizeStr = Token.range().drop_front();
if (SizeStr.size() == 0 || !llvm::all_of(SizeStr, isdigit))
return error("expected integers after 's'/'p' type character");
if (Token.range().front() == 's')
Ty = LLT::scalar(APSInt(Token.range().drop_front()).getZExtValue());
else if (Token.range().front() == 'p') {
const DataLayout &DL = MF.getDataLayout();
unsigned AS = APSInt(Token.range().drop_front()).getZExtValue();
Ty = LLT::pointer(AS, DL.getPointerSizeInBits(AS));
} else
return error(Loc, "expected <M x sN> or <M x pA> for vector type");
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::greater))
return error(Loc, "expected <M x sN> or <M x pA> for vector type");
lex();
Ty = LLT::vector(NumElements, Ty);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseTypedImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::Identifier));
StringRef TypeStr = Token.range();
if (TypeStr.front() != 'i' && TypeStr.front() != 's' &&
TypeStr.front() != 'p')
return error(
"a typed immediate operand should start with one of 'i', 's', or 'p'");
StringRef SizeStr = Token.range().drop_front();
if (SizeStr.size() == 0 || !llvm::all_of(SizeStr, isdigit))
return error("expected integers after 'i'/'s'/'p' type character");
auto Loc = Token.location();
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral)) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier) ||
!(Token.range() == "true" || Token.range() == "false"))
return error("expected an integer literal");
}
const Constant *C = nullptr;
if (parseIRConstant(Loc, C))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateCImm(cast<ConstantInt>(C));
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseFPImmediateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
auto Loc = Token.location();
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::FloatingPointLiteral) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::HexLiteral))
return error("expected a floating point literal");
const Constant *C = nullptr;
if (parseIRConstant(Loc, C))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateFPImm(cast<ConstantFP>(C));
return false;
}
bool MIParser::getUnsigned(unsigned &Result) {
if (Token.hasIntegerValue()) {
const uint64_t Limit = uint64_t(std::numeric_limits<unsigned>::max()) + 1;
uint64_t Val64 = Token.integerValue().getLimitedValue(Limit);
if (Val64 == Limit)
return error("expected 32-bit integer (too large)");
Result = Val64;
return false;
}
if (Token.is(MIToken::HexLiteral)) {
APInt A;
if (getHexUint(A))
return true;
if (A.getBitWidth() > 32)
return error("expected 32-bit integer (too large)");
Result = A.getZExtValue();
return false;
}
return true;
}
bool MIParser::parseMBBReference(MachineBasicBlock *&MBB) {
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlock) ||
Token.is(MIToken::MachineBasicBlockLabel));
unsigned Number;
if (getUnsigned(Number))
return true;
auto MBBInfo = PFS.MBBSlots.find(Number);
if (MBBInfo == PFS.MBBSlots.end())
return error(Twine("use of undefined machine basic block #") +
Twine(Number));
MBB = MBBInfo->second;
// TODO: Only parse the name if it's a MachineBasicBlockLabel. Deprecate once
// we drop the <irname> from the bb.<id>.<irname> format.
if (!Token.stringValue().empty() && Token.stringValue() != MBB->getName())
return error(Twine("the name of machine basic block #") + Twine(Number) +
" isn't '" + Token.stringValue() + "'");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMBBOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
MachineBasicBlock *MBB;
if (parseMBBReference(MBB))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateMBB(MBB);
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStackFrameIndex(int &FI) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::StackObject));
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto ObjectInfo = PFS.StackObjectSlots.find(ID);
if (ObjectInfo == PFS.StackObjectSlots.end())
return error(Twine("use of undefined stack object '%stack.") + Twine(ID) +
"'");
StringRef Name;
if (const auto *Alloca =
MF.getFrameInfo().getObjectAllocation(ObjectInfo->second))
Name = Alloca->getName();
if (!Token.stringValue().empty() && Token.stringValue() != Name)
return error(Twine("the name of the stack object '%stack.") + Twine(ID) +
"' isn't '" + Token.stringValue() + "'");
lex();
FI = ObjectInfo->second;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseStackObjectOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
int FI;
if (parseStackFrameIndex(FI))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateFI(FI);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseFixedStackFrameIndex(int &FI) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::FixedStackObject));
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto ObjectInfo = PFS.FixedStackObjectSlots.find(ID);
if (ObjectInfo == PFS.FixedStackObjectSlots.end())
return error(Twine("use of undefined fixed stack object '%fixed-stack.") +
Twine(ID) + "'");
lex();
FI = ObjectInfo->second;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseFixedStackObjectOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
int FI;
if (parseFixedStackFrameIndex(FI))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateFI(FI);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseGlobalValue(GlobalValue *&GV) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::NamedGlobalValue: {
const Module *M = MF.getFunction().getParent();
GV = M->getNamedValue(Token.stringValue());
if (!GV)
return error(Twine("use of undefined global value '") + Token.range() +
"'");
break;
}
case MIToken::GlobalValue: {
unsigned GVIdx;
if (getUnsigned(GVIdx))
return true;
if (GVIdx >= PFS.IRSlots.GlobalValues.size())
return error(Twine("use of undefined global value '@") + Twine(GVIdx) +
"'");
GV = PFS.IRSlots.GlobalValues[GVIdx];
break;
}
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be a global value");
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseGlobalAddressOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
GlobalValue *GV = nullptr;
if (parseGlobalValue(GV))
return true;
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateGA(GV, /*Offset=*/0);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseConstantPoolIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::ConstantPoolItem));
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto ConstantInfo = PFS.ConstantPoolSlots.find(ID);
if (ConstantInfo == PFS.ConstantPoolSlots.end())
return error("use of undefined constant '%const." + Twine(ID) + "'");
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateCPI(ID, /*Offset=*/0);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseJumpTableIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::JumpTableIndex));
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto JumpTableEntryInfo = PFS.JumpTableSlots.find(ID);
if (JumpTableEntryInfo == PFS.JumpTableSlots.end())
return error("use of undefined jump table '%jump-table." + Twine(ID) + "'");
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateJTI(JumpTableEntryInfo->second);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseExternalSymbolOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::ExternalSymbol));
const char *Symbol = MF.createExternalSymbolName(Token.stringValue());
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateES(Symbol);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
bool MIParser::parseMCSymbolOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::MCSymbol));
MCSymbol *Symbol = getOrCreateMCSymbol(Token.stringValue());
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateMCSymbol(Symbol);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseSubRegisterIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::SubRegisterIndex));
StringRef Name = Token.stringValue();
unsigned SubRegIndex = getSubRegIndex(Token.stringValue());
if (SubRegIndex == 0)
return error(Twine("unknown subregister index '") + Name + "'");
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateImm(SubRegIndex);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMDNode(MDNode *&Node) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::exclaim));
auto Loc = Token.location();
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) || Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected metadata id after '!'");
unsigned ID;
if (getUnsigned(ID))
return true;
auto NodeInfo = PFS.IRSlots.MetadataNodes.find(ID);
if (NodeInfo == PFS.IRSlots.MetadataNodes.end())
return error(Loc, "use of undefined metadata '!" + Twine(ID) + "'");
lex();
Node = NodeInfo->second.get();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseDIExpression(MDNode *&Expr) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::md_diexpr));
lex();
// FIXME: Share this parsing with the IL parser.
SmallVector<uint64_t, 8> Elements;
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::rparen)) {
do {
if (Token.is(MIToken::Identifier)) {
if (unsigned Op = dwarf::getOperationEncoding(Token.stringValue())) {
lex();
Elements.push_back(Op);
continue;
}
return error(Twine("invalid DWARF op '") + Token.stringValue() + "'");
}
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) ||
Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected unsigned integer");
auto &U = Token.integerValue();
if (U.ugt(UINT64_MAX))
return error("element too large, limit is " + Twine(UINT64_MAX));
Elements.push_back(U.getZExtValue());
lex();
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Expr = DIExpression::get(MF.getFunction().getContext(), Elements);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseDILocation(MDNode *&Loc) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::md_dilocation));
lex();
bool HaveLine = false;
unsigned Line = 0;
unsigned Column = 0;
MDNode *Scope = nullptr;
MDNode *InlinedAt = nullptr;
bool ImplicitCode = false;
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::rparen)) {
do {
if (Token.is(MIToken::Identifier)) {
if (Token.stringValue() == "line") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) ||
Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected unsigned integer");
Line = Token.integerValue().getZExtValue();
HaveLine = true;
lex();
continue;
}
if (Token.stringValue() == "column") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) ||
Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected unsigned integer");
Column = Token.integerValue().getZExtValue();
lex();
continue;
}
if (Token.stringValue() == "scope") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (parseMDNode(Scope))
return error("expected metadata node");
if (!isa<DIScope>(Scope))
return error("expected DIScope node");
continue;
}
if (Token.stringValue() == "inlinedAt") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (Token.is(MIToken::exclaim)) {
if (parseMDNode(InlinedAt))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::md_dilocation)) {
if (parseDILocation(InlinedAt))
return true;
} else
return error("expected metadata node");
if (!isa<DILocation>(InlinedAt))
return error("expected DILocation node");
continue;
}
if (Token.stringValue() == "isImplicitCode") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::colon))
return true;
if (!Token.is(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected true/false");
// As far as I can see, we don't have any existing need for parsing
// true/false in MIR yet. Do it ad-hoc until there's something else
// that needs it.
if (Token.stringValue() == "true")
ImplicitCode = true;
else if (Token.stringValue() == "false")
ImplicitCode = false;
else
return error("expected true/false");
lex();
continue;
}
}
return error(Twine("invalid DILocation argument '") +
Token.stringValue() + "'");
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
if (!HaveLine)
return error("DILocation requires line number");
if (!Scope)
return error("DILocation requires a scope");
Loc = DILocation::get(MF.getFunction().getContext(), Line, Column, Scope,
InlinedAt, ImplicitCode);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMetadataOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
MDNode *Node = nullptr;
if (Token.is(MIToken::exclaim)) {
if (parseMDNode(Node))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::md_diexpr)) {
if (parseDIExpression(Node))
return true;
}
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateMetadata(Node);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseCFIOffset(int &Offset) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral))
return error("expected a cfi offset");
if (Token.integerValue().getMinSignedBits() > 32)
return error("expected a 32 bit integer (the cfi offset is too large)");
Offset = (int)Token.integerValue().getExtValue();
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseCFIRegister(unsigned &Reg) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister))
return error("expected a cfi register");
unsigned LLVMReg;
if (parseNamedRegister(LLVMReg))
return true;
const auto *TRI = MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
assert(TRI && "Expected target register info");
int DwarfReg = TRI->getDwarfRegNum(LLVMReg, true);
if (DwarfReg < 0)
return error("invalid DWARF register");
Reg = (unsigned)DwarfReg;
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseCFIEscapeValues(std::string &Values) {
do {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::HexLiteral))
return error("expected a hexadecimal literal");
unsigned Value;
if (getUnsigned(Value))
return true;
if (Value > UINT8_MAX)
return error("expected a 8-bit integer (too large)");
Values.push_back(static_cast<uint8_t>(Value));
lex();
} while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma));
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseCFIOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
auto Kind = Token.kind();
lex();
int Offset;
unsigned Reg;
unsigned CFIIndex;
switch (Kind) {
case MIToken::kw_cfi_same_value:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createSameValue(nullptr, Reg));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_offset:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg) || expectAndConsume(MIToken::comma) ||
parseCFIOffset(Offset))
return true;
CFIIndex =
MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createOffset(nullptr, Reg, Offset));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_rel_offset:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg) || expectAndConsume(MIToken::comma) ||
parseCFIOffset(Offset))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(
MCCFIInstruction::createRelOffset(nullptr, Reg, Offset));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa_register:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg))
return true;
CFIIndex =
MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createDefCfaRegister(nullptr, Reg));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa_offset:
if (parseCFIOffset(Offset))
return true;
// NB: MCCFIInstruction::createDefCfaOffset negates the offset.
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(
MCCFIInstruction::createDefCfaOffset(nullptr, -Offset));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_adjust_cfa_offset:
if (parseCFIOffset(Offset))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(
MCCFIInstruction::createAdjustCfaOffset(nullptr, Offset));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg) || expectAndConsume(MIToken::comma) ||
parseCFIOffset(Offset))
return true;
// NB: MCCFIInstruction::createDefCfa negates the offset.
CFIIndex =
MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createDefCfa(nullptr, Reg, -Offset));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_remember_state:
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createRememberState(nullptr));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_restore:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createRestore(nullptr, Reg));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_restore_state:
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createRestoreState(nullptr));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_undefined:
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createUndefined(nullptr, Reg));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_register: {
unsigned Reg2;
if (parseCFIRegister(Reg) || expectAndConsume(MIToken::comma) ||
parseCFIRegister(Reg2))
return true;
CFIIndex =
MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createRegister(nullptr, Reg, Reg2));
break;
}
case MIToken::kw_cfi_window_save:
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createWindowSave(nullptr));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_aarch64_negate_ra_sign_state:
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createNegateRAState(nullptr));
break;
case MIToken::kw_cfi_escape: {
std::string Values;
if (parseCFIEscapeValues(Values))
return true;
CFIIndex = MF.addFrameInst(MCCFIInstruction::createEscape(nullptr, Values));
break;
}
default:
// TODO: Parse the other CFI operands.
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be a cfi operand");
}
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateCFIIndex(CFIIndex);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseIRBlock(BasicBlock *&BB, const Function &F) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::NamedIRBlock: {
BB = dyn_cast_or_null<BasicBlock>(
F.getValueSymbolTable()->lookup(Token.stringValue()));
if (!BB)
return error(Twine("use of undefined IR block '") + Token.range() + "'");
break;
}
case MIToken::IRBlock: {
unsigned SlotNumber = 0;
if (getUnsigned(SlotNumber))
return true;
BB = const_cast<BasicBlock *>(getIRBlock(SlotNumber, F));
if (!BB)
return error(Twine("use of undefined IR block '%ir-block.") +
Twine(SlotNumber) + "'");
break;
}
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be an IR block reference");
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseBlockAddressOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_blockaddress));
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::GlobalValue) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedGlobalValue))
return error("expected a global value");
GlobalValue *GV = nullptr;
if (parseGlobalValue(GV))
return true;
auto *F = dyn_cast<Function>(GV);
if (!F)
return error("expected an IR function reference");
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::comma))
return true;
BasicBlock *BB = nullptr;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IRBlock) && Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedIRBlock))
return error("expected an IR block reference");
if (parseIRBlock(BB, *F))
return true;
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateBA(BlockAddress::get(F, BB), /*Offset=*/0);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseIntrinsicOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_intrinsic));
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return error("expected syntax intrinsic(@llvm.whatever)");
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedGlobalValue))
return error("expected syntax intrinsic(@llvm.whatever)");
std::string Name = Token.stringValue();
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return error("expected ')' to terminate intrinsic name");
// Find out what intrinsic we're dealing with, first try the global namespace
// and then the target's private intrinsics if that fails.
const TargetIntrinsicInfo *TII = MF.getTarget().getIntrinsicInfo();
Intrinsic::ID ID = Function::lookupIntrinsicID(Name);
if (ID == Intrinsic::not_intrinsic && TII)
ID = static_cast<Intrinsic::ID>(TII->lookupName(Name));
if (ID == Intrinsic::not_intrinsic)
return error("unknown intrinsic name");
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateIntrinsicID(ID);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parsePredicateOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_intpred) || Token.is(MIToken::kw_floatpred));
bool IsFloat = Token.is(MIToken::kw_floatpred);
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return error("expected syntax intpred(whatever) or floatpred(whatever");
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("whatever");
CmpInst::Predicate Pred;
if (IsFloat) {
Pred = StringSwitch<CmpInst::Predicate>(Token.stringValue())
.Case("false", CmpInst::FCMP_FALSE)
.Case("oeq", CmpInst::FCMP_OEQ)
.Case("ogt", CmpInst::FCMP_OGT)
.Case("oge", CmpInst::FCMP_OGE)
.Case("olt", CmpInst::FCMP_OLT)
.Case("ole", CmpInst::FCMP_OLE)
.Case("one", CmpInst::FCMP_ONE)
.Case("ord", CmpInst::FCMP_ORD)
.Case("uno", CmpInst::FCMP_UNO)
.Case("ueq", CmpInst::FCMP_UEQ)
.Case("ugt", CmpInst::FCMP_UGT)
.Case("uge", CmpInst::FCMP_UGE)
.Case("ult", CmpInst::FCMP_ULT)
.Case("ule", CmpInst::FCMP_ULE)
.Case("une", CmpInst::FCMP_UNE)
.Case("true", CmpInst::FCMP_TRUE)
.Default(CmpInst::BAD_FCMP_PREDICATE);
if (!CmpInst::isFPPredicate(Pred))
return error("invalid floating-point predicate");
} else {
Pred = StringSwitch<CmpInst::Predicate>(Token.stringValue())
.Case("eq", CmpInst::ICMP_EQ)
.Case("ne", CmpInst::ICMP_NE)
.Case("sgt", CmpInst::ICMP_SGT)
.Case("sge", CmpInst::ICMP_SGE)
.Case("slt", CmpInst::ICMP_SLT)
.Case("sle", CmpInst::ICMP_SLE)
.Case("ugt", CmpInst::ICMP_UGT)
.Case("uge", CmpInst::ICMP_UGE)
.Case("ult", CmpInst::ICMP_ULT)
.Case("ule", CmpInst::ICMP_ULE)
.Default(CmpInst::BAD_ICMP_PREDICATE);
if (!CmpInst::isIntPredicate(Pred))
return error("invalid integer predicate");
}
lex();
Dest = MachineOperand::CreatePredicate(Pred);
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return error("predicate should be terminated by ')'.");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseTargetIndexOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_target_index));
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected the name of the target index");
int Index = 0;
if (getTargetIndex(Token.stringValue(), Index))
return error("use of undefined target index '" + Token.stringValue() + "'");
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateTargetIndex(unsigned(Index), /*Offset=*/0);
if (parseOperandsOffset(Dest))
return true;
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseCustomRegisterMaskOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.stringValue() == "CustomRegMask" && "Expected a custom RegMask");
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
uint32_t *Mask = MF.allocateRegMask();
while (true) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister))
return error("expected a named register");
unsigned Reg;
if (parseNamedRegister(Reg))
return true;
lex();
Mask[Reg / 32] |= 1U << (Reg % 32);
// TODO: Report an error if the same register is used more than once.
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
break;
lex();
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateRegMask(Mask);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseLiveoutRegisterMaskOperand(MachineOperand &Dest) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_liveout));
uint32_t *Mask = MF.allocateRegMask();
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
while (true) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedRegister))
return error("expected a named register");
unsigned Reg;
if (parseNamedRegister(Reg))
return true;
lex();
Mask[Reg / 32] |= 1U << (Reg % 32);
// TODO: Report an error if the same register is used more than once.
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
break;
lex();
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateRegLiveOut(Mask);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMachineOperand(MachineOperand &Dest,
Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_implicit:
case MIToken::kw_implicit_define:
case MIToken::kw_def:
case MIToken::kw_dead:
case MIToken::kw_killed:
case MIToken::kw_undef:
case MIToken::kw_internal:
case MIToken::kw_early_clobber:
case MIToken::kw_debug_use:
case MIToken::kw_renamable:
case MIToken::underscore:
case MIToken::NamedRegister:
case MIToken::VirtualRegister:
case MIToken::NamedVirtualRegister:
return parseRegisterOperand(Dest, TiedDefIdx);
case MIToken::IntegerLiteral:
return parseImmediateOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_half:
case MIToken::kw_float:
case MIToken::kw_double:
case MIToken::kw_x86_fp80:
case MIToken::kw_fp128:
case MIToken::kw_ppc_fp128:
return parseFPImmediateOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::MachineBasicBlock:
return parseMBBOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::StackObject:
return parseStackObjectOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::FixedStackObject:
return parseFixedStackObjectOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::GlobalValue:
case MIToken::NamedGlobalValue:
return parseGlobalAddressOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::ConstantPoolItem:
return parseConstantPoolIndexOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::JumpTableIndex:
return parseJumpTableIndexOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::ExternalSymbol:
return parseExternalSymbolOperand(Dest);
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
case MIToken::MCSymbol:
return parseMCSymbolOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::SubRegisterIndex:
return parseSubRegisterIndexOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::md_diexpr:
case MIToken::exclaim:
return parseMetadataOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_cfi_same_value:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_offset:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_rel_offset:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa_register:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa_offset:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_adjust_cfa_offset:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_escape:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_def_cfa:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_register:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_remember_state:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_restore:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_restore_state:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_undefined:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_window_save:
case MIToken::kw_cfi_aarch64_negate_ra_sign_state:
return parseCFIOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_blockaddress:
return parseBlockAddressOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_intrinsic:
return parseIntrinsicOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_target_index:
return parseTargetIndexOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_liveout:
return parseLiveoutRegisterMaskOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::kw_floatpred:
case MIToken::kw_intpred:
return parsePredicateOperand(Dest);
case MIToken::Error:
return true;
case MIToken::Identifier:
if (const auto *RegMask = getRegMask(Token.stringValue())) {
Dest = MachineOperand::CreateRegMask(RegMask);
lex();
break;
} else if (Token.stringValue() == "CustomRegMask") {
return parseCustomRegisterMaskOperand(Dest);
} else
return parseTypedImmediateOperand(Dest);
default:
// FIXME: Parse the MCSymbol machine operand.
return error("expected a machine operand");
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMachineOperandAndTargetFlags(
MachineOperand &Dest, Optional<unsigned> &TiedDefIdx) {
unsigned TF = 0;
bool HasTargetFlags = false;
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_target_flags)) {
HasTargetFlags = true;
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected the name of the target flag");
if (getDirectTargetFlag(Token.stringValue(), TF)) {
if (getBitmaskTargetFlag(Token.stringValue(), TF))
return error("use of undefined target flag '" + Token.stringValue() +
"'");
}
lex();
while (Token.is(MIToken::comma)) {
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return error("expected the name of the target flag");
unsigned BitFlag = 0;
if (getBitmaskTargetFlag(Token.stringValue(), BitFlag))
return error("use of undefined target flag '" + Token.stringValue() +
"'");
// TODO: Report an error when using a duplicate bit target flag.
TF |= BitFlag;
lex();
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
}
auto Loc = Token.location();
if (parseMachineOperand(Dest, TiedDefIdx))
return true;
if (!HasTargetFlags)
return false;
if (Dest.isReg())
return error(Loc, "register operands can't have target flags");
Dest.setTargetFlags(TF);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseOffset(int64_t &Offset) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::plus) && Token.isNot(MIToken::minus))
return false;
StringRef Sign = Token.range();
bool IsNegative = Token.is(MIToken::minus);
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral))
return error("expected an integer literal after '" + Sign + "'");
if (Token.integerValue().getMinSignedBits() > 64)
return error("expected 64-bit integer (too large)");
Offset = Token.integerValue().getExtValue();
if (IsNegative)
Offset = -Offset;
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseAlignment(unsigned &Alignment) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_align));
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) || Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected an integer literal after 'align'");
if (getUnsigned(Alignment))
return true;
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseAddrspace(unsigned &Addrspace) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::kw_addrspace));
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) || Token.integerValue().isSigned())
return error("expected an integer literal after 'addrspace'");
if (getUnsigned(Addrspace))
return true;
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseOperandsOffset(MachineOperand &Op) {
int64_t Offset = 0;
if (parseOffset(Offset))
return true;
Op.setOffset(Offset);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseIRValue(const Value *&V) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::NamedIRValue: {
V = MF.getFunction().getValueSymbolTable()->lookup(Token.stringValue());
break;
}
case MIToken::IRValue: {
unsigned SlotNumber = 0;
if (getUnsigned(SlotNumber))
return true;
V = getIRValue(SlotNumber);
break;
}
case MIToken::NamedGlobalValue:
case MIToken::GlobalValue: {
GlobalValue *GV = nullptr;
if (parseGlobalValue(GV))
return true;
V = GV;
break;
}
case MIToken::QuotedIRValue: {
const Constant *C = nullptr;
if (parseIRConstant(Token.location(), Token.stringValue(), C))
return true;
V = C;
break;
}
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be an IR block reference");
}
if (!V)
return error(Twine("use of undefined IR value '") + Token.range() + "'");
return false;
}
bool MIParser::getUint64(uint64_t &Result) {
if (Token.hasIntegerValue()) {
if (Token.integerValue().getActiveBits() > 64)
return error("expected 64-bit integer (too large)");
Result = Token.integerValue().getZExtValue();
return false;
}
if (Token.is(MIToken::HexLiteral)) {
APInt A;
if (getHexUint(A))
return true;
if (A.getBitWidth() > 64)
return error("expected 64-bit integer (too large)");
Result = A.getZExtValue();
return false;
}
return true;
}
bool MIParser::getHexUint(APInt &Result) {
assert(Token.is(MIToken::HexLiteral));
StringRef S = Token.range();
assert(S[0] == '0' && tolower(S[1]) == 'x');
// This could be a floating point literal with a special prefix.
if (!isxdigit(S[2]))
return true;
StringRef V = S.substr(2);
APInt A(V.size()*4, V, 16);
// If A is 0, then A.getActiveBits() is 0. This isn't a valid bitwidth. Make
// sure it isn't the case before constructing result.
unsigned NumBits = (A == 0) ? 32 : A.getActiveBits();
Result = APInt(NumBits, ArrayRef<uint64_t>(A.getRawData(), A.getNumWords()));
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMemoryOperandFlag(MachineMemOperand::Flags &Flags) {
const auto OldFlags = Flags;
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_volatile:
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MOVolatile;
break;
case MIToken::kw_non_temporal:
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MONonTemporal;
break;
case MIToken::kw_dereferenceable:
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MODereferenceable;
break;
case MIToken::kw_invariant:
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MOInvariant;
break;
case MIToken::StringConstant: {
MachineMemOperand::Flags TF;
if (getMMOTargetFlag(Token.stringValue(), TF))
return error("use of undefined target MMO flag '" + Token.stringValue() +
"'");
Flags |= TF;
break;
}
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be a memory operand flag");
}
if (OldFlags == Flags)
// We know that the same flag is specified more than once when the flags
// weren't modified.
return error("duplicate '" + Token.stringValue() + "' memory operand flag");
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMemoryPseudoSourceValue(const PseudoSourceValue *&PSV) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_stack:
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getStack();
break;
case MIToken::kw_got:
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getGOT();
break;
case MIToken::kw_jump_table:
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getJumpTable();
break;
case MIToken::kw_constant_pool:
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getConstantPool();
break;
case MIToken::FixedStackObject: {
int FI;
if (parseFixedStackFrameIndex(FI))
return true;
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getFixedStack(FI);
// The token was already consumed, so use return here instead of break.
return false;
}
case MIToken::StackObject: {
int FI;
if (parseStackFrameIndex(FI))
return true;
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getFixedStack(FI);
// The token was already consumed, so use return here instead of break.
return false;
}
case MIToken::kw_call_entry:
lex();
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::GlobalValue:
case MIToken::NamedGlobalValue: {
GlobalValue *GV = nullptr;
if (parseGlobalValue(GV))
return true;
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getGlobalValueCallEntry(GV);
break;
}
case MIToken::ExternalSymbol:
PSV = MF.getPSVManager().getExternalSymbolCallEntry(
MF.createExternalSymbolName(Token.stringValue()));
break;
default:
return error(
"expected a global value or an external symbol after 'call-entry'");
}
break;
default:
llvm_unreachable("The current token should be pseudo source value");
}
lex();
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseMachinePointerInfo(MachinePointerInfo &Dest) {
if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_constant_pool) || Token.is(MIToken::kw_stack) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_got) || Token.is(MIToken::kw_jump_table) ||
Token.is(MIToken::FixedStackObject) || Token.is(MIToken::StackObject) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_call_entry)) {
const PseudoSourceValue *PSV = nullptr;
if (parseMemoryPseudoSourceValue(PSV))
return true;
int64_t Offset = 0;
if (parseOffset(Offset))
return true;
Dest = MachinePointerInfo(PSV, Offset);
return false;
}
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedIRValue) && Token.isNot(MIToken::IRValue) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::GlobalValue) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::NamedGlobalValue) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::QuotedIRValue))
return error("expected an IR value reference");
const Value *V = nullptr;
if (parseIRValue(V))
return true;
if (!V->getType()->isPointerTy())
return error("expected a pointer IR value");
lex();
int64_t Offset = 0;
if (parseOffset(Offset))
return true;
Dest = MachinePointerInfo(V, Offset);
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseOptionalScope(LLVMContext &Context,
SyncScope::ID &SSID) {
SSID = SyncScope::System;
if (Token.is(MIToken::Identifier) && Token.stringValue() == "syncscope") {
lex();
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return error("expected '(' in syncscope");
std::string SSN;
if (parseStringConstant(SSN))
return true;
SSID = Context.getOrInsertSyncScopeID(SSN);
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return error("expected ')' in syncscope");
}
return false;
}
bool MIParser::parseOptionalAtomicOrdering(AtomicOrdering &Order) {
Order = AtomicOrdering::NotAtomic;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier))
return false;
Order = StringSwitch<AtomicOrdering>(Token.stringValue())
.Case("unordered", AtomicOrdering::Unordered)
.Case("monotonic", AtomicOrdering::Monotonic)
.Case("acquire", AtomicOrdering::Acquire)
.Case("release", AtomicOrdering::Release)
.Case("acq_rel", AtomicOrdering::AcquireRelease)
.Case("seq_cst", AtomicOrdering::SequentiallyConsistent)
.Default(AtomicOrdering::NotAtomic);
if (Order != AtomicOrdering::NotAtomic) {
lex();
return false;
}
return error("expected an atomic scope, ordering or a size specification");
}
bool MIParser::parseMachineMemoryOperand(MachineMemOperand *&Dest) {
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::lparen))
return true;
MachineMemOperand::Flags Flags = MachineMemOperand::MONone;
while (Token.isMemoryOperandFlag()) {
if (parseMemoryOperandFlag(Flags))
return true;
}
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::Identifier) ||
(Token.stringValue() != "load" && Token.stringValue() != "store"))
return error("expected 'load' or 'store' memory operation");
if (Token.stringValue() == "load")
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MOLoad;
else
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MOStore;
lex();
// Optional 'store' for operands that both load and store.
if (Token.is(MIToken::Identifier) && Token.stringValue() == "store") {
Flags |= MachineMemOperand::MOStore;
lex();
}
// Optional synchronization scope.
SyncScope::ID SSID;
if (parseOptionalScope(MF.getFunction().getContext(), SSID))
return true;
// Up to two atomic orderings (cmpxchg provides guarantees on failure).
AtomicOrdering Order, FailureOrder;
if (parseOptionalAtomicOrdering(Order))
return true;
if (parseOptionalAtomicOrdering(FailureOrder))
return true;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::IntegerLiteral) &&
Token.isNot(MIToken::kw_unknown_size))
return error("expected the size integer literal or 'unknown-size' after "
"memory operation");
uint64_t Size;
if (Token.is(MIToken::IntegerLiteral)) {
if (getUint64(Size))
return true;
} else if (Token.is(MIToken::kw_unknown_size)) {
Size = MemoryLocation::UnknownSize;
}
lex();
MachinePointerInfo Ptr = MachinePointerInfo();
if (Token.is(MIToken::Identifier)) {
const char *Word =
((Flags & MachineMemOperand::MOLoad) &&
(Flags & MachineMemOperand::MOStore))
? "on"
: Flags & MachineMemOperand::MOLoad ? "from" : "into";
if (Token.stringValue() != Word)
return error(Twine("expected '") + Word + "'");
lex();
if (parseMachinePointerInfo(Ptr))
return true;
}
unsigned BaseAlignment = (Size != MemoryLocation::UnknownSize ? Size : 1);
AAMDNodes AAInfo;
MDNode *Range = nullptr;
while (consumeIfPresent(MIToken::comma)) {
switch (Token.kind()) {
case MIToken::kw_align:
if (parseAlignment(BaseAlignment))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::kw_addrspace:
if (parseAddrspace(Ptr.AddrSpace))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::md_tbaa:
lex();
if (parseMDNode(AAInfo.TBAA))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::md_alias_scope:
lex();
if (parseMDNode(AAInfo.Scope))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::md_noalias:
lex();
if (parseMDNode(AAInfo.NoAlias))
return true;
break;
case MIToken::md_range:
lex();
if (parseMDNode(Range))
return true;
break;
// TODO: Report an error on duplicate metadata nodes.
default:
return error("expected 'align' or '!tbaa' or '!alias.scope' or "
"'!noalias' or '!range'");
}
}
if (expectAndConsume(MIToken::rparen))
return true;
Dest = MF.getMachineMemOperand(Ptr, Flags, Size, BaseAlignment, AAInfo, Range,
SSID, Order, FailureOrder);
return false;
}
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
bool MIParser::parsePreOrPostInstrSymbol(MCSymbol *&Symbol) {
assert((Token.is(MIToken::kw_pre_instr_symbol) ||
Token.is(MIToken::kw_post_instr_symbol)) &&
"Invalid token for a pre- post-instruction symbol!");
lex();
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::MCSymbol))
return error("expected a symbol after 'pre-instr-symbol'");
Symbol = getOrCreateMCSymbol(Token.stringValue());
lex();
if (Token.isNewlineOrEOF() || Token.is(MIToken::coloncolon) ||
Token.is(MIToken::lbrace))
return false;
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::comma))
return error("expected ',' before the next machine operand");
lex();
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2InstrOpCodes() {
if (!Names2InstrOpCodes.empty())
return;
const auto *TII = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
assert(TII && "Expected target instruction info");
for (unsigned I = 0, E = TII->getNumOpcodes(); I < E; ++I)
Names2InstrOpCodes.insert(std::make_pair(StringRef(TII->getName(I)), I));
}
bool MIParser::parseInstrName(StringRef InstrName, unsigned &OpCode) {
initNames2InstrOpCodes();
auto InstrInfo = Names2InstrOpCodes.find(InstrName);
if (InstrInfo == Names2InstrOpCodes.end())
return true;
OpCode = InstrInfo->getValue();
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2Regs() {
if (!Names2Regs.empty())
return;
// The '%noreg' register is the register 0.
Names2Regs.insert(std::make_pair("noreg", 0));
const auto *TRI = MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
assert(TRI && "Expected target register info");
for (unsigned I = 0, E = TRI->getNumRegs(); I < E; ++I) {
bool WasInserted =
Names2Regs.insert(std::make_pair(StringRef(TRI->getName(I)).lower(), I))
.second;
(void)WasInserted;
assert(WasInserted && "Expected registers to be unique case-insensitively");
}
}
bool MIParser::getRegisterByName(StringRef RegName, unsigned &Reg) {
initNames2Regs();
auto RegInfo = Names2Regs.find(RegName);
if (RegInfo == Names2Regs.end())
return true;
Reg = RegInfo->getValue();
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2RegMasks() {
if (!Names2RegMasks.empty())
return;
const auto *TRI = MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
assert(TRI && "Expected target register info");
ArrayRef<const uint32_t *> RegMasks = TRI->getRegMasks();
ArrayRef<const char *> RegMaskNames = TRI->getRegMaskNames();
assert(RegMasks.size() == RegMaskNames.size());
for (size_t I = 0, E = RegMasks.size(); I < E; ++I)
Names2RegMasks.insert(
std::make_pair(StringRef(RegMaskNames[I]).lower(), RegMasks[I]));
}
const uint32_t *MIParser::getRegMask(StringRef Identifier) {
initNames2RegMasks();
auto RegMaskInfo = Names2RegMasks.find(Identifier);
if (RegMaskInfo == Names2RegMasks.end())
return nullptr;
return RegMaskInfo->getValue();
}
void MIParser::initNames2SubRegIndices() {
if (!Names2SubRegIndices.empty())
return;
const TargetRegisterInfo *TRI = MF.getSubtarget().getRegisterInfo();
for (unsigned I = 1, E = TRI->getNumSubRegIndices(); I < E; ++I)
Names2SubRegIndices.insert(
std::make_pair(StringRef(TRI->getSubRegIndexName(I)).lower(), I));
}
unsigned MIParser::getSubRegIndex(StringRef Name) {
initNames2SubRegIndices();
auto SubRegInfo = Names2SubRegIndices.find(Name);
if (SubRegInfo == Names2SubRegIndices.end())
return 0;
return SubRegInfo->getValue();
}
static void initSlots2BasicBlocks(
const Function &F,
DenseMap<unsigned, const BasicBlock *> &Slots2BasicBlocks) {
ModuleSlotTracker MST(F.getParent(), /*ShouldInitializeAllMetadata=*/false);
MST.incorporateFunction(F);
for (auto &BB : F) {
if (BB.hasName())
continue;
int Slot = MST.getLocalSlot(&BB);
if (Slot == -1)
continue;
Slots2BasicBlocks.insert(std::make_pair(unsigned(Slot), &BB));
}
}
static const BasicBlock *getIRBlockFromSlot(
unsigned Slot,
const DenseMap<unsigned, const BasicBlock *> &Slots2BasicBlocks) {
auto BlockInfo = Slots2BasicBlocks.find(Slot);
if (BlockInfo == Slots2BasicBlocks.end())
return nullptr;
return BlockInfo->second;
}
const BasicBlock *MIParser::getIRBlock(unsigned Slot) {
if (Slots2BasicBlocks.empty())
initSlots2BasicBlocks(MF.getFunction(), Slots2BasicBlocks);
return getIRBlockFromSlot(Slot, Slots2BasicBlocks);
}
const BasicBlock *MIParser::getIRBlock(unsigned Slot, const Function &F) {
if (&F == &MF.getFunction())
return getIRBlock(Slot);
DenseMap<unsigned, const BasicBlock *> CustomSlots2BasicBlocks;
initSlots2BasicBlocks(F, CustomSlots2BasicBlocks);
return getIRBlockFromSlot(Slot, CustomSlots2BasicBlocks);
}
static void mapValueToSlot(const Value *V, ModuleSlotTracker &MST,
DenseMap<unsigned, const Value *> &Slots2Values) {
int Slot = MST.getLocalSlot(V);
if (Slot == -1)
return;
Slots2Values.insert(std::make_pair(unsigned(Slot), V));
}
/// Creates the mapping from slot numbers to function's unnamed IR values.
static void initSlots2Values(const Function &F,
DenseMap<unsigned, const Value *> &Slots2Values) {
ModuleSlotTracker MST(F.getParent(), /*ShouldInitializeAllMetadata=*/false);
MST.incorporateFunction(F);
for (const auto &Arg : F.args())
mapValueToSlot(&Arg, MST, Slots2Values);
for (const auto &BB : F) {
mapValueToSlot(&BB, MST, Slots2Values);
for (const auto &I : BB)
mapValueToSlot(&I, MST, Slots2Values);
}
}
const Value *MIParser::getIRValue(unsigned Slot) {
if (Slots2Values.empty())
initSlots2Values(MF.getFunction(), Slots2Values);
auto ValueInfo = Slots2Values.find(Slot);
if (ValueInfo == Slots2Values.end())
return nullptr;
return ValueInfo->second;
}
void MIParser::initNames2TargetIndices() {
if (!Names2TargetIndices.empty())
return;
const auto *TII = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
assert(TII && "Expected target instruction info");
auto Indices = TII->getSerializableTargetIndices();
for (const auto &I : Indices)
Names2TargetIndices.insert(std::make_pair(StringRef(I.second), I.first));
}
bool MIParser::getTargetIndex(StringRef Name, int &Index) {
initNames2TargetIndices();
auto IndexInfo = Names2TargetIndices.find(Name);
if (IndexInfo == Names2TargetIndices.end())
return true;
Index = IndexInfo->second;
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2DirectTargetFlags() {
if (!Names2DirectTargetFlags.empty())
return;
const auto *TII = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
assert(TII && "Expected target instruction info");
auto Flags = TII->getSerializableDirectMachineOperandTargetFlags();
for (const auto &I : Flags)
Names2DirectTargetFlags.insert(
std::make_pair(StringRef(I.second), I.first));
}
bool MIParser::getDirectTargetFlag(StringRef Name, unsigned &Flag) {
initNames2DirectTargetFlags();
auto FlagInfo = Names2DirectTargetFlags.find(Name);
if (FlagInfo == Names2DirectTargetFlags.end())
return true;
Flag = FlagInfo->second;
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2BitmaskTargetFlags() {
if (!Names2BitmaskTargetFlags.empty())
return;
const auto *TII = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
assert(TII && "Expected target instruction info");
auto Flags = TII->getSerializableBitmaskMachineOperandTargetFlags();
for (const auto &I : Flags)
Names2BitmaskTargetFlags.insert(
std::make_pair(StringRef(I.second), I.first));
}
bool MIParser::getBitmaskTargetFlag(StringRef Name, unsigned &Flag) {
initNames2BitmaskTargetFlags();
auto FlagInfo = Names2BitmaskTargetFlags.find(Name);
if (FlagInfo == Names2BitmaskTargetFlags.end())
return true;
Flag = FlagInfo->second;
return false;
}
void MIParser::initNames2MMOTargetFlags() {
if (!Names2MMOTargetFlags.empty())
return;
const auto *TII = MF.getSubtarget().getInstrInfo();
assert(TII && "Expected target instruction info");
auto Flags = TII->getSerializableMachineMemOperandTargetFlags();
for (const auto &I : Flags)
Names2MMOTargetFlags.insert(
std::make_pair(StringRef(I.second), I.first));
}
bool MIParser::getMMOTargetFlag(StringRef Name,
MachineMemOperand::Flags &Flag) {
initNames2MMOTargetFlags();
auto FlagInfo = Names2MMOTargetFlags.find(Name);
if (FlagInfo == Names2MMOTargetFlags.end())
return true;
Flag = FlagInfo->second;
return false;
}
[x86/MIR] Implement support for pre- and post-instruction symbols, as well as MIR parsing support for `MCSymbol` `MachineOperand`s. The only real way to test pre- and post-instruction symbol support is to use them in operands, so I ended up implementing that within the patch as well. I can split out the operand support if folks really want but it doesn't really seem worth it. The functional implementation of pre- and post-instruction symbols is now *completely trivial*. Two tiny bits of code in the (misnamed) AsmPrinter. It should be completely target independent as well. We emit these exactly the same way as we emit basic block labels. Most of the code here is to give full dumping, MIR printing, and MIR parsing support so that we can write useful tests. The MIR parsing of MC symbol operands still isn't 100%, as it forces the symbols to be non-temporary and non-local symbols with names. However, those names often can encode most (if not all) of the special semantics desired, and unnamed symbols seem especially annoying to serialize and de-serialize. While this isn't perfect or full support, it seems plenty to write tests that exercise usage of these kinds of operands. The MIR support for pre-and post-instruction symbols was quite straightforward. I chose to print them out in an as-if-operand syntax similar to debug locations as this seemed the cleanest way and let me use nice introducer tokens rather than inventing more magic punctuation like we use for memoperands. However, supporting MIR-based parsing of these symbols caused me to change the design of the symbol support to allow setting arbitrary symbols. Without this, I don't see any reasonable way to test things with MIR. Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50833 llvm-svn: 339962
2018-08-17 07:11:05 +08:00
MCSymbol *MIParser::getOrCreateMCSymbol(StringRef Name) {
// FIXME: Currently we can't recognize temporary or local symbols and call all
// of the appropriate forms to create them. However, this handles basic cases
// well as most of the special aspects are recognized by a prefix on their
// name, and the input names should already be unique. For test cases, keeping
// the symbol name out of the symbol table isn't terribly important.
return MF.getContext().getOrCreateSymbol(Name);
}
bool MIParser::parseStringConstant(std::string &Result) {
if (Token.isNot(MIToken::StringConstant))
return error("expected string constant");
Result = Token.stringValue();
lex();
return false;
}
bool llvm::parseMachineBasicBlockDefinitions(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
StringRef Src,
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseBasicBlockDefinitions(PFS.MBBSlots);
MIR Serialization: Change MIR syntax - use custom syntax for MBBs. This commit modifies the way the machine basic blocks are serialized - now the machine basic blocks are serialized using a custom syntax instead of relying on YAML primitives. Instead of using YAML mappings to represent the individual machine basic blocks in a machine function's body, the new syntax uses a single YAML block scalar which contains all of the machine basic blocks and instructions for that function. This is an example of a function's body that uses the old syntax: body: - id: 0 name: entry instructions: - '%eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags' - 'RETQ %eax' ... The same body is now written like this: body: | bb.0.entry: %eax = MOV32r0 implicit-def %eflags RETQ %eax ... This syntax change is motivated by the fact that the bundled machine instructions didn't map that well to the old syntax which was using a single YAML sequence to store all of the machine instructions in a block. The bundled machine instructions internally use flags like BundledPred and BundledSucc to determine the bundles, and serializing them as MI flags using the old syntax would have had a negative impact on the readability and the ease of editing for MIR files. The new syntax allows me to serialize the bundled machine instructions using a block construct without relying on the internal flags, for example: BUNDLE implicit-def dead %itstate, implicit-def %s1 ... { t2IT 1, 24, implicit-def %itstate %s1 = VMOVS killed %s0, 1, killed %cpsr, implicit killed %itstate } This commit also converts the MIR testcases to the new syntax. I developed a script that can convert from the old syntax to the new one. I will post the script on the llvm-commits mailing list in the thread for this commit. llvm-svn: 244982
2015-08-14 07:10:16 +08:00
}
bool llvm::parseMachineInstructions(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
StringRef Src, SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseBasicBlocks();
}
bool llvm::parseMBBReference(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
MachineBasicBlock *&MBB, StringRef Src,
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneMBB(MBB);
}
bool llvm::parseRegisterReference(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
unsigned &Reg, StringRef Src,
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneRegister(Reg);
}
bool llvm::parseNamedRegisterReference(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
unsigned &Reg, StringRef Src,
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneNamedRegister(Reg);
}
bool llvm::parseVirtualRegisterReference(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
VRegInfo *&Info, StringRef Src,
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneVirtualRegister(Info);
}
bool llvm::parseStackObjectReference(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
int &FI, StringRef Src,
SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneStackObject(FI);
}
bool llvm::parseMDNode(PerFunctionMIParsingState &PFS,
MDNode *&Node, StringRef Src, SMDiagnostic &Error) {
return MIParser(PFS, Error, Src).parseStandaloneMDNode(Node);
}