This patch makes one change to GOT handling and two changes to N64's
relocation model handling. Furthermore, the jumptable encodings have
been corrected for static N64.
Big GOT handling is now done via a new SDNode MipsGotHi - this node is
unconditionally lowered to an lui instruction.
The first change to N64's relocation handling is the lifting of the
restriction that N64 always uses PIC. Now it is possible to target static
environments.
The second change adds support for 64 bit symbols and enables them by
default. Previously N64 had patterns for sym32 mode only. In this mode all
symbols are assumed to have 32 bit addresses. sym32 mode support
is selectable with attribute 'sym32'. A follow on patch for clang will
add the necessary frontend parameter.
This partially resolves PR/23485.
Thanks to Brooks Davis for reporting the issue!
This version corrects a "Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised
value(s)" error detected by valgrind present in the original commit.
Reviewers: dsanders, seanbruno, zoran.jovanovic, vkalintiris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23652
llvm-svn: 293279
This patch makes one change to GOT handling and two changes to N64's
relocation model handling. Furthermore, the jumptable encodings have
been corrected for static N64.
Big GOT handling is now done via a new SDNode MipsGotHi - this node is
unconditionally lowered to an lui instruction.
The first change to N64's relocation handling is the lifting of the
restriction that N64 always uses PIC. Now it is possible to target static
environments.
The second change adds support for 64 bit symbols and enables them by
default. Previously N64 had patterns for sym32 mode only. In this mode all
symbols are assumed to have 32 bit addresses. sym32 mode support
is selectable with attribute 'sym32'. A follow on patch for clang will
add the necessary frontend parameter.
This partially resolves PR/23485.
Thanks to Brooks Davis for reporting the issue!
Reviewers: dsanders, seanbruno, zoran.jovanovic, vkalintiris
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23652
llvm-svn: 293164
Summary:
N32 and N64 follow the standard ELF conventions (.L) whereas O32 uses its own
($).
This fixes the majority of object differences between -fintegrated-as and
-fno-integrated-as.
Reviewers: sdardis
Subscribers: dsanders, sdardis, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22412
llvm-svn: 275967
Summary:
For N32/N64, private labels begin with '.L' but for O32 they begin with '$'.
MCAsmInfo now has an initializer function which can be used to provide information from the TargetMachine to control the assembly syntax.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: jfb, sandeep, llvm-commits, rafael
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9821
llvm-svn: 237789
than on MipsSubtargetInfo.
This required a bit of massaging in the MC level to handle this since
MC is a) largely a collection of disparate classes with no hierarchy,
and b) there's no overarching equivalent to the TargetMachine, instead
only the subtarget via MCSubtargetInfo (which is the base class of
TargetSubtargetInfo).
We're now storing the ABI in both the TargetMachine level and in the
MC level because the AsmParser and the TargetStreamer both need to
know what ABI we have to parse assembly and emit objects. The target
streamer has a pointer to the one in the asm parser and is updated
when the asm parser is created. This is fragile as the FIXME comment
notes, but shouldn't be a problem in practice since we always
create an asm parser before attempting to emit object code via the
assembler. The TargetMachine now contains the ABI so that the DataLayout
can be constructed dependent upon ABI.
All testcases have been updated to use the -target-abi command line
flag so that we can set the ABI without using a subtarget feature.
Should be no change visible externally here.
llvm-svn: 227102
Summary:
This removes the need to coerce UnknownABI to the default ABI (O32 for
MIPS32, N64 for MIPS64 [*]) in both MipsSubtarget and MipsAsmParser.
Clang has been updated to disable both possible default ABI's before enabling
the ABI it intends to use.
[*] N64 being the default for MIPS64 is not actually correct.
However N32 is not fully implemented/tested yet.
Depends on: D2830
Reviewers: jacksprat, matheusalmeida
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2832
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2846
llvm-svn: 201792
Hard float for mips16 means essentially to compile as soft float but to
use a runtime library for soft float that is written with native mips32
floating point instructions (those runtime routines run in mips32 hard
float mode).
The patch reviewed by Reed Kotler.
llvm-svn: 195123