rip out the implementation of X86InstrInfo::GetInstSizeInBytes.
The code being ripped out just implemented a copy and hacked up
version of the (old) instruction encoder, and is buggy and
terrible in other ways. Since "GetInstSizeInBytes" is really
only there to support the JIT's "NeedsExactSize" hook (which
noone is using), just rip out the code. I will rip out the
NeedsExactSize hook next.
This resolves rdar://7617809 - switch X86InstrInfo::GetInstSizeInBytes to use X86MCCodeEmitter
llvm-svn: 109149
returns the start of the memory operand for an instruction.
Introduce a new "X86AddrSegment" enum to reduce # magic numbers
referring to X86 memory operand layout.
llvm-svn: 107916
- Add encode bits for VEX_W
- All 128-bit SSE 1 & SSE2 instructions that are described
in the .td file now have a AVX encoded form already working.
llvm-svn: 107365
addresses a longstanding deficiency noted in many FIXMEs scattered
across all the targets.
This effectively moves the problem up one level, replacing eleven
FIXMEs in the targets with eight FIXMEs in CodeGen, plus one path
through FastISel where we actually supply a DebugLoc, fixing Radar
7421831.
llvm-svn: 106243
In file included from X86InstrInfo.cpp:16:
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2789: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2790: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2792: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2793: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2808: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2809: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2816: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2817: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
llvm-svn: 105524
instruction defines subregisters.
Any existing subreg indices on the original instruction are preserved or
composed with the new subreg index.
Also substitute multiple operands mentioning the original register by using the
new MachineInstr::substituteRegister() function. This is necessary because there
will soon be <imp-def> operands added to non read-modify-write partial
definitions. This instruction:
%reg1234:foo = FLAP %reg1234<imp-def>
will reMaterialize(%reg3333, bar) like this:
%reg3333:bar-foo = FLAP %reg333:bar<imp-def>
Finally, replace the TargetRegisterInfo pointer argument with a reference to
indicate that it cannot be NULL.
llvm-svn: 105358
otherwise labels get incorrectly merged. We handled this by emitting a
".byte 0", but this isn't correct on thumb/arm targets where the text segment
needs to be a multiple of 2/4 bytes. Handle this by emitting a noop. This
is more gross than it should be because arm/ppc are not fully mc'ized yet.
This fixes rdar://7908505
llvm-svn: 102400
SSEDomainFix will collapse to the domain with the lower number when it has a
choice. The SSEPackedSingle domain often has smaller instructions, so prefer
that.
llvm-svn: 99952
On Nehalem and newer CPUs there is a 2 cycle latency penalty on using a register
in a different domain than where it was defined. Some instructions have
equvivalents for different domains, like por/orps/orpd.
The SSEDomainFix pass tries to minimize the number of domain crossings by
changing between equvivalent opcodes where possible.
This is a work in progress, in particular the pass doesn't do anything yet. SSE
instructions are tagged with their execution domain in TableGen using the last
two bits of TSFlags. Note that not all instructions are tagged correctly. Life
just isn't that simple.
The SSE execution domain issue is very similar to the ARM NEON/VFP pipeline
issue handled by NEONMoveFixPass. This pass may become target independent to
handle both.
llvm-svn: 99524
This is work in progress. So far, SSE execution domain tables are added to
X86InstrInfo, and a skeleton pass is enabled with -sse-domain-fix.
llvm-svn: 99345
For now, this pass is fairly conservative. It only perform the replacement when both the pre- and post- extension values are used in the block. It will miss cases where the post-extension values are live, but not used.
llvm-svn: 93278
instruction is copy like where the source and destination registers can
overlap. This is to be used by the coalescable to coalesce the source and
destination registers of instructions like X86::MOVSX64rr32. Apparently
some crazy people believe the coalescer is too simple.
llvm-svn: 93210
for all the processors where I have tried it, and even when it might not help
performance, the cost is quite low. The opportunities for duplicating
indirect branches are limited by other factors so code size does not change
much due to tail duplicating indirect branches aggressively.
llvm-svn: 90144
it is definitely profitable to tail duplicate indirect branches for x86.
This is likely to be true to various degrees for all modern x86 processors.
llvm-svn: 89865