top bit of a ValueType to be zero. Enforce this by ensuring
an assertion failure if someone tries to create a ValueType
without this property. I chose this minimal approach rather
than a more official integration of the notion of reserved
bits into ValueType because I'm hoping that the verifier will
be changed to no longer require this :)
llvm-svn: 43031
codegen support. This should have no effect on codegen
for other types. Debatable bits: (1) the use (abuse?)
of a set in SDNode::getValueTypeList; (2) the length of
getTypeToTransformTo, which maybe should be refactored
with a non-inline part for extended value types.
llvm-svn: 43030
was stored to the acutal stack slot before the parameters were
lowered to their stack slot. This could cause arguments to be
overwritten by the return address if the called function had less
parameters than the caller function. The update should remove the
last failing test case of llc-beta: SPASS.
llvm-svn: 43027
This makes the typecheck much happier. Without this change, the type checker would have to special case "struct __builtin_CFString *". This change does assume the interface for NSConstantString is declared in the translation unit.
I left ASTContext::getCFConstantStringType() around for now (with a comment that says it is currently unused).
llvm-svn: 43021
This allowed me to fix the following hack from this weekend...
// FIXME: Devise a way to do this without using strcmp.
// Would like to say..."return getAsStructureType() == IdStructType;", but
// we don't have a pointer to ASTContext.
bool Type::isObjcIdType() const {
if (const RecordType *RT = getAsStructureType())
return !strcmp(RT->getDecl()->getName(), "objc_object");
return false;
}
...which is now...
bool isObjcIdType(QualType T) const {
return T->getAsStructureType() == IdStructType;
}
Side notes:
- I had to remove a convenience function from the TypesCompatibleExpr class.
int typesAreCompatible() const {return Type::typesAreCompatible(Type1,Type2);}
Which required a couple clients get a little more verbose...
- Result = TCE->typesAreCompatible();
+ Result = Ctx.typesAreCompatible(TCE->getArgType1(), TCE->getArgType2());
Overall, I think this change also makes sense for a couple reasons...
1) Since ASTContext vends types, it makes sense for the type compatibility API to be there.
2) This allows the type compatibility predeciates to refer to data not strictly present in the AST (which I have found problematic on several occasions).
llvm-svn: 43009
unconditionally creating an i64 bitcast. With the future legalizer
design, operation legalization can't introduce new nodes with illegal
types.
This fixes the rest of olden on ppc32.
llvm-svn: 43005
integer conversion. In some such cases this makes us one or two orders
of magnitude faster than NetBSD's libc. Glibc seems to have a similar
fast path.
Also, tighten up some upper bounds to save a bit of memory.
llvm-svn: 42984
getTypeToExpandTo. The difference is that
getTypeToExpandTo gives the final result of expansion
(eg: i128 -> i32 on a 32 bit machine) while
getTypeToTransformTo does just one step (i128 -> i64).
llvm-svn: 42982
take a deleted nodes vector, instead of requiring it.
One more significant change: Implement the start of a legalizer that
just works on types. This legalizer is designed to run before the
operation legalizer and ensure just that the input dag is transformed
into an output dag whose operand and result types are all legal, even
if the operations on those types are not.
This design/impl has the following advantages:
1. When finished, this will *significantly* reduce the amount of code in
LegalizeDAG.cpp. It will remove all the code related to promotion and
expansion as well as splitting and scalarizing vectors.
2. The new code is very simple, idiomatic, and modular: unlike
LegalizeDAG.cpp, it has no 3000 line long functions. :)
3. The implementation is completely iterative instead of recursive, good
for hacking on large dags without blowing out your stack.
4. The implementation updates nodes in place when possible instead of
deallocating and reallocating the entire graph that points to some
mutated node.
5. The code nicely separates out handling of operations with invalid
results from operations with invalid operands, making some cases
simpler and easier to understand.
6. The new -debug-only=legalize-types option is very very handy :),
allowing you to easily understand what legalize types is doing.
This is not yet done. Until the ifdef added to SelectionDAGISel.cpp is
enabled, this does nothing. However, this code is sufficient to legalize
all of the code in 186.crafty, olden and freebench on an x86 machine. The
biggest issues are:
1. Vectors aren't implemented at all yet
2. SoftFP is a mess, I need to talk to Evan about it.
3. No lowering to libcalls is implemented yet.
4. Various operations are missing etc.
5. There are FIXME's for stuff I hax0r'd out, like softfp.
Hey, at least it is a step in the right direction :). If you'd like to help,
just enable the #ifdef in SelectionDAGISel.cpp and compile code with it. If
this explodes it will tell you what needs to be implemented. Help is
certainly appreciated.
Once this goes in, we can do three things:
1. Add a new pass of dag combine between the "type legalizer" and "operation
legalizer" passes. This will let us catch some long-standing isel issues
that we miss because operation legalization often obfuscates the dag with
target-specific nodes.
2. We can rip out all of the type legalization code from LegalizeDAG.cpp,
making it much smaller and simpler. When that happens we can then
reimplement the core functionality left in it in a much more efficient and
non-recursive way.
3. Once the whole legalizer is non-recursive, we can implement whole-function
selectiondags maybe...
llvm-svn: 42981
Make two changes:
1) only xform "store of f32" if i32 is a legal type for the target.
2) only xform "store of f64" if either i64 or i32 are legal for the target.
3) if i64 isn't legal, manually lower to 2 stores of i32 instead of letting a
later pass of legalize do it. This is ugly, but helps future changes I'm
about to commit.
llvm-svn: 42980