but codegen'd differently. This really wanted to use some
sort of subreg to get the low 4 bytes of the G8RC register
or something. However, it's invalid and nothing is testing
it, so I'm just zapping the bogosity.
llvm-svn: 97345
This is possible because F8RC is a subclass of F4RC. We keep FMRSD around so
fextend has a pattern.
Also allow folding of memory operands on FMRSD.
llvm-svn: 97275
The PowerPC floating point registers can represent both f32 and f64 via the
two register classes F4RC and F8RC. F8RC is considered a subclass of F4RC to
allow cross-class coalescing. This coalescing only affects whether registers
are spilled as f32 or f64.
Spill slots must be accessed with load/store instructions corresponding to the
class of the spilled register. PPCInstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl was looking
at the instruction opcode which is wrong.
X86 has similar floating point register classes, but doesn't try to fold
memory operands, so there is no problem there.
llvm-svn: 97262
stack frame, the prolog/epilog code was using the same
register for the copy of CR and the address of the save slot. Oops.
This is fixed here for Darwin, sort of, by reserving R2 for this case.
A better way would be to do the store before the decrement of SP,
which is safe on Darwin due to the red zone.
SVR4 probably has the same problem, but I don't know how to fix it;
there is no red zone and R2 is already used for something else.
I'm going to leave it to someone interested in that target.
Better still would be to rewrite the CR-saving code completely;
spilling each CR subregister individually is horrible code.
llvm-svn: 96015
into TargetOpcodes.h. #include the new TargetOpcodes.h
into MachineInstr. Add new inline accessors (like isPHI())
to MachineInstr, and start using them throughout the
codebase.
llvm-svn: 95687
the end of the instruction instead of expecting the caller to
do it. This currently causes the asm-verbose instruction
comments to be on the next line.
llvm-svn: 95178
Move the X86 implementation of function body emission up to
AsmPrinter::EmitFunctionBody, which works by calling the virtual
EmitInstruction method.
llvm-svn: 94716
Modules and ModuleProviders. Because the "ModuleProvider" simply materializes
GlobalValues now, and doesn't provide modules, it's renamed to
"GVMaterializer". Code that used to need a ModuleProvider to materialize
Functions can now materialize the Functions directly. Functions no longer use a
magic linkage to record that they're materializable; they simply ask the
GVMaterializer.
Because the C ABI must never change, we can't remove LLVMModuleProviderRef or
the functions that refer to it. Instead, because Module now exposes the same
functionality ModuleProvider used to, we store a Module* in any
LLVMModuleProviderRef and translate in the wrapper methods. The bindings to
other languages still use the ModuleProvider concept. It would probably be
worth some time to update them to follow the C++ more closely, but I don't
intend to do it.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR5737 and http://llvm.org/PR5735.
llvm-svn: 94686
Target independent isel should always pass along the "tail call" property. Change
target hook LowerCall's parameter "isTailCall" into a refernce. If the target
decides it's impossible to honor the tail call request, it should set isTailCall
to false to make target independent isel happy.
llvm-svn: 94626
Default HasSetDirective to true, since most targets have it.
The targets that claim to not have it probably do, or it is
spelled differently. These include Blackfin, Mips, Alpha, and
PIC16. All of these except pic16 are normal ELF targets, so
they almost certainly have it.
llvm-svn: 94585
It looks like linux/arm and linux/mips have the same setting, which
are probably wrong. Someone who cares about ARM and MIPS should
investigate with the testcase in PR6129.
llvm-svn: 94381
"sext cond" instead of a select. This simplifies some instcombine
code, matches the policy for zext (cond ? 1 : 0 -> zext), and allows
us to generate better code for a testcase on ppc.
llvm-svn: 94339