It appears that the backend does not handle all cases that were handled by clang.
In particular, it does not handle structs as used in
SingleSource/UnitTests/2003-05-07-VarArgs.
llvm-svn: 214512
Summary:
There are no tests as it is dependant upon the environment variables
XCC_C_INCLUDE_PATH & XCC_CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH being set.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4621
llvm-svn: 214510
Note: The current code in DecodeMSRMask() rejects the unpredictable A/R MSR mask '0000' with Fail. The code in the patch follows this style and rejects unpredictable M-class MSR masks also with Fail (instead of SoftFail). If SoftFail is preferred in this case then additional changes to ARMInstPrinter (to print non-symbolic masks) and ARMAsmParser (to parse non-symbolic masks) will be needed.
Patch by Petr Pavlu!
llvm-svn: 214505
The ARM ARM prohibits LDRB/LDRSB instructions with writeback into the destination register. With this commit this constraint is now enforced and we stop assembling LDRH/LDRSH instructions with unpredictable behavior.
llvm-svn: 214500
The ARM ARM prohibits LDRH/LDRSH instructions with writeback into the source register. With this commit this constraint is now enforced and we stop assembling LDRH/LDRSH instructions with unpredictable behavior.
llvm-svn: 214499
The ARM ARM prohibits LDR instructions with writeback into the destination register. With this commit this constraint is now enforced and we stop assembling LDR instructions with unpredictable behavior.
llvm-svn: 214498
Summary:
This patch causes clang to emit va_arg instructions to the backend instead of
expanding them into an implementation itself. The backend already implements
va_arg since this is necessary for NaCl so this patch is removing redundant
code.
Together with the llvm patch (D4556) that accounts for the effect of endianness
on the expansion of va_arg, this fixes PR19612.
Depends on D4556
Reviewers: sstankovic, dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rnk, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4742
llvm-svn: 214497
Summary:
Big-endian mode was not correctly adjusting the offset for types smaller
than an ABI slot.
Fixes PR19612
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: sstankovic, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4556
llvm-svn: 214493
+ Split all reduction dependences and map them to the causing memory accesses.
+ Print the types & base addresses of broken reductions for each "reduction
parallel" marked loop (OpenMP style).
+ 3 test cases to show how reductions are now represented in the isl ast.
The mapping "(ast) loops -> broken reductions" is also needed to find the
memory accesses we need to privatize in a loop.
llvm-svn: 214489
The functions isParallel, isInnermostParallel and IsOutermostParallel in
IslAstInfo will now return true even in the presence of broken reductions.
To compensate for this change the negated result of isReductionParallel can
be used.
llvm-svn: 214488
"Create a default symver on Linux like ELF OSes."
Fails the build under Debian with ld.gold:
/usr/bin/ld.gold: --default-symver: unknown option
llvm-svn: 214482
Altivec vector loads on PowerPC have an interesting property: They always load
from an aligned address (by rounding down the address actually provided if
necessary). In order to generate an actual unaligned load, you can generate two
load instructions, one with the original address, one offset by one vector
length, and use a special permutation to extract the bytes desired.
When this was originally implemented, I generated these two loads using regular
ISD::LOAD nodes, now marked as aligned. Unfortunately, there is a problem with
this:
The alignment of a load does not contribute to its identity, and SDNodes
are uniqued. So, imagine that we have some unaligned load, L1, that is not
aligned. The routine will create two loads, L1(aligned) and (L1+16)(aligned).
Further imagine that there had already existed a load (L1+16)(unaligned) with
the same chain operand as the load L1. When (L1+16)(aligned) is created as part
of the lowering of L1, this load *is* also the (L1+16)(unaligned) node, just
now marked as aligned (because the new alignment overwrites the old). But the
original users of (L1+16)(unaligned) now get the data intended for the
permutation yielding the data for L1, and (L1+16)(unaligned) no longer exists
to get its own permutation-based expansion. This was PR19991.
A second potential problem has to do with the MMOs on these loads, which can be
used by AA during instruction scheduling to break chain-based dependencies. If
the new "aligned" loads get the MMO from the original unaligned load, this does
not represent the fact that it will load data from below the original address.
Normally, this would not matter, but this load might be combined with another
load pair for a previous vector, and then the dependency on the otherwise-
ignored lower bytes can matter.
To fix both problems, instead of generating the necessary loads using regular
ISD::LOAD instructions, ppc_altivec_lvx intrinsics are used instead. These are
provided with MMOs with a conservative address range.
Unfortunately, I no longer have a failing test case (since PR19991 was
reported, other changes in CodeGen have forced this bug back into hiding it
again). Nevertheless, this should fix the underlying problem.
llvm-svn: 214481
they're somehow missing a body. Looks like this was left behind when the loop
was generalized, and it's not been problematic before because without modules,
a used, implicit special member function declaration must be a definition.
This was resulting in us trying to emit a constructor declaration rather than
a definition, and producing a constructor missing its member initializers.
llvm-svn: 214473
this pointer is always non-null. If the this pointer is null, it is undefined
and the compiler may optimize it away by assuming it is non-null. The null
checks are pushed into the callers.
llvm-svn: 214471
ADDS and SUBS cannot encode negative immediates or immediates larger than 12bit.
This fix checks if the immediate version can be used under this constraints and
if we can convert ADDS to SUBS or vice versa to support negative immediates.
Also update the test cases to test the immediate versions.
llvm-svn: 214470
When generating unaligned vector loads, we need to search for other loads or
stores nearby offset by one vector width. If we find one, then we know that we
can safely generate another aligned load at that address. Otherwise, we must
generate the next load using an offset of the vector width minus one byte (so
we don't read off the end of the allocation if the base unaligned address
happened to be aligned at runtime). We had previously done this using only
other vector loads and stores, but did not consider the PowerPC-specific vector
load/store intrinsics. Now we'll also consider vector intrinsics. By itself,
this change is a feature enhancement, but is a necessary step toward fixing the
underlying problem behind PR19991.
llvm-svn: 214469
This improves the diagnostics from the regular assembler, but more
importantly it fixes an assertion when parsing inline assembly. Test
landing in Clang.
llvm-svn: 214468
Abs/neg folding has moved out of foldOperands and into the instruction
selection phase using complex patterns. As a consequence of this
change, we now prefer to select the 64-bit encoding for most
instructions and the modifier operands have been dropped from
integer VOP3 instructions.
llvm-svn: 214467
This is useful for cases when stand-alone patterns are preferred to the
patterns included in the instruction definitions. Instead of requiring
that stand-alone patterns set a larger AddedComplexity value, which
can be confusing to new developers, the allows us to reduce the
complexity of the included patterns to achieve the same result.
There will be test cases for this added to the R600 backend in a
future commit.
llvm-svn: 214466
We were incorrectly assuming that all VOP2 instructions can read SGPRs
in Src0, but this is not true for instructions that read carry-in from
VCC.
The old logic has been replaced with new logic which checks the defined
register classes of the VOP2 instruction to determine whether or not to
legalize the operands.
llvm-svn: 214465