As discussed heavily in the original review (D70157), there's a need for the compiler to be able to selective suppress padding (either nop or prefix) to respect assumptions about the meaning of labels and instructions in generated code.
Rather than wait for syntax to be finalized - which appears to be a very slow process - this patch focuses on the compiler use case and *only* worries about the integrated assembler. To my knowledge, this covers all cases mentioned to date for clang/JIT support.
For testing purposes, I wired it up so that if the integrated assembler was using autopadding for branch alignment (e.g. enabled at command line) then the textual assembly output would contain a comment for each location where padding was enabled or disabled. This seemed like the least painful choice overall.
Note that the result of this patch effective disables the jcc errata mitigation for many constructs (statepoints, implicit null checks, xray, etc...) which is non ideal. It is at least *correct* and should allow us to enable the mitigation for the compiler. Once that's done, and a few other items are worked through, we probably want to come back to this an explore a bundling based approach instead so that we can pad instructions while keeping labels in the right place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72303
printInst prints a branch/call instruction as `b offset` (there are many
variants on various targets) instead of `b address`.
It is a convention to use address instead of offset in most external
symbolizers/disassemblers. This difference makes `llvm-objdump -d`
output unsatisfactory.
Add `uint64_t Address` to printInst(), so that it can pass the argument to
printInstruction(). `raw_ostream &OS` is moved to the last to be
consistent with other print* methods.
The next step is to pass `Address` to printInstruction() (generated by
tablegen from the instruction set description). We can gradually migrate
targets to print addresses instead of offsets.
In any case, downstream projects which don't know `Address` can pass 0 as
the argument.
Reviewed By: jhenderson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72172
Change the type of X86AlignBranchBoundary from cl::opt<uint64_t> to
cl::opt<unsigned> since the template class cl::opt is only instantiated with
type unsigned, int, std::string, char and bool.
1. Remove function is64BitMode() and use STI.hasFeature(X86::Mode16Bit) directly
2. Use Doxygen features in comment
3. Rename functions to make them start with a lower case letter
4. Format the code with clang-format
Demote member functions to static functions where possible
Use early continue/early return to reduce nesting
Clarify comments slightly.
Reuse previously define expression in one case.
Should have caught this in review, but only noticed when addressing post commit style items. We were creating a new instance of the X86MCInstrInfo class, and then never reclaiming the memory. This wasn't even conditional on the new off by default flags, so it was an unconditional leak.
WARNING: If you're looking at this patch because you're looking for a full
performace mitigation of the Intel JCC Erratum, this is not it!
This is a preliminary patch on the patch towards mitigating the performance
regressions caused by Intel's microcode update for Jump Conditional Code
Erratum. For context, see:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/support/articles/000055650.html
The patch adds the required assembler infrastructure and command line options
needed to exercise the logic for INTERNAL TESTING. These are NOT public flags,
and should not be used for anything other than LLVM's own testing/debugging
purposes. They are likely to change both in spelling and meaning.
WARNING: This patch is knowingly incorrect in some cornercases. We need, and
do not yet provide, a mechanism to selective enable/disable the padding.
Conversation on this will continue in parellel with work on extending this
infrastructure to support prefix padding.
The goal here is to have the assembler align specific instructions such that
they neither cross or end at a 32 byte boundary. The impacted instructions are:
a. Conditional jump.
b. Fused conditional jump.
c. Unconditional jump.
d. Indirect jump.
e. Ret.
f. Call.
The new options for llvm-mc are:
-x86-align-branch-boundary=NUM aligns branches within NUM byte boundary.
-x86-align-branch=TYPE[+TYPE...] specifies types of branches to align.
A new MCFragment type, MCBoundaryAlignFragment, is added, which may emit
NOP to align the fused/unfused branch.
alignBranchesBegin inserts MCBoundaryAlignFragment before instructions,
alignBranchesEnd marks the end of the branch to be aligned,
relaxBoundaryAlign grows or shrinks sizes of NOP to align the target branch.
Nop padding is disabled when the instruction may be rewritten by the linker,
such as TLS Call.
Process Note: I am landing a patch by skan as it has been LGTMed, and
continuing to iterate on the review is simply slowing us down at this point.
We can and will continue to iterate in tree.
Patch By: skan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70157
Fix for PR24072:
X86 instructions jrcxz/jecxz/jcxz performs short jumps if rcx/ecx/cx register is 0
The maximum relative offset for a forward short jump is 127 Bytes (0x7F).
The maximum relative offset for a backward short jump is 128 Bytes (0x80).
Gnu assembler warns when the distance of the jump exceeds the maximum but llvm-as does not.
Patch by Konstantin Belochapka and Alexey Lapshin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70652
Summary:
Most libraries are defined in the lib/ directory but there are also a
few libraries defined in tools/ e.g. libLLVM, libLTO. I'm defining
"Component Libraries" as libraries defined in lib/ that may be included in
libLLVM.so. Explicitly marking the libraries in lib/ as component
libraries allows us to remove some fragile checks that attempt to
differentiate between lib/ libraries and tools/ libraires:
1. In tools/llvm-shlib, because
llvm_map_components_to_libnames(LIB_NAMES "all") returned a list of
all libraries defined in the whole project, there was custom code
needed to filter out libraries defined in tools/, none of which should
be included in libLLVM.so. This code assumed that any library
defined as static was from lib/ and everything else should be
excluded.
With this change, llvm_map_components_to_libnames(LIB_NAMES, "all")
only returns libraries that have been added to the LLVM_COMPONENT_LIBS
global cmake property, so this custom filtering logic can be removed.
Doing this also fixes the build with BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
and LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON.
2. There was some code in llvm_add_library that assumed that
libraries defined in lib/ would not have LLVM_LINK_COMPONENTS or
ARG_LINK_COMPONENTS set. This is only true because libraries
defined lib lib/ use LLVMBuild.txt and don't set these values.
This code has been fixed now to check if the library has been
explicitly marked as a component library, which should now make it
easier to remove LLVMBuild at some point in the future.
I have tested this patch on Windows, MacOS and Linux with release builds
and the following combinations of CMake options:
- "" (No options)
- -DLLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -DLLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
- -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=ON -DLLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON
Reviewers: beanz, smeenai, compnerd, phosek
Reviewed By: beanz
Subscribers: wuzish, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, mgorny, mehdi_amini, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, steven_wu, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, dexonsmith, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, dang, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70179
MipsMCAsmInfo was using '$' prefix for Mips32 and '.L' for Mips64
regardless of -target-abi option. By passing MCTargetOptions to MCAsmInfo
we can find out Mips ABI and pick appropriate prefix.
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66795
We need to encode bit 4 into the EVEX.V' bit. We do this right
for regular gather/scatter which use either MRMSrcMem or MRMDestMem
formats. The prefetches use MRM*m formats.
Fixes an issue recently added to PR36202.
llvm-svn: 374849
Summary:
The functions different in two ways:
- getLLVMRegNum could return both "eh" and "other" dwarf register
numbers, while getLLVMRegNumFromEH only returned the "eh" number.
- getLLVMRegNum asserted if the register was not found, while the second
function returned -1.
The second distinction was pretty important, but it was very hard to
infer that from the function name. Aditionally, for the use case of
dumping dwarf expressions, we needed a function which can work with both
kinds of number, but does not assert.
This patch solves both of these issues by merging the two functions into
one, returning an Optional<unsigned> value. While the same thing could
be achieved by adding an "IsEH" argument to the (renamed)
getLLVMRegNumFromEH function, it seemed better to avoid the confusion of
two functions and put the choice of asserting into the hands of the
caller -- if he checks the Optional value, he can safely process
"untrusted" input, and if he blindly dereferences the Optional, he gets
the assertion.
I've updated all call sites to the new API, choosing between the two
options according to the function they were calling originally, except
that I've updated the usage in DWARFExpression.cpp to use the "safe"
method instead, and added a test case which would have previously
triggered an assertion failure when processing (incorrect?) dwarf
expressions.
Reviewers: dsanders, arsenm, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: wdng, aprantl, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67154
llvm-svn: 372710
Summary:
There is no reason to differ in assembler behavior here between -msvc
and -gnu targets. Without this setting, the text after the '@' is
interpreted as a symbol variable, like foo@IMGREL.
Reviewers: mstorsjo
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66974
llvm-svn: 370408
Prefer `MCFixupKind` where possible and add getTargetKind() to
convert to `unsigned` when needed rather than scattering cast
operators around the place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59890
llvm-svn: 369720
On Jaguar, CMPXCHG has a latency of 11cy, and a maximum throughput of 0.33 IPC.
Throughput is superiorly limited to 0.33 because of the implicit in/out
dependency on register EAX. In the case of repeated non-atomic CMPXCHG with the
same memory location, store-to-load forwarding occurs and values for sequent
loads are quickly forwarded from the store buffer.
Interestingly, the functionality in LLVM that computes the reciprocal throughput
doesn't seem to know about RMW instructions. That functionality only looks at
the "consumed resource cycles" for the throughput computation. It should be
fixed/improved by a future patch. In particular, for RMW instructions, that
logic should also take into account for the write latency of in/out register
operands.
An atomic CMPXCHG has a latency of ~17cy. Throughput is also limited to
~17cy/inst due to cache locking, which prevents other memory uOPs to start
executing before the "lock releasing" store uOP.
CMPXCHG8rr and CMPXCHG8rm are treated specially because they decode to one less
macro opcode. Their latency tend to be the same as the other RR/RM variants. RR
variants are relatively fast 3cy (but still microcoded - 5 macro opcodes).
CMPXCHG8B is 11cy and unfortunately doesn't seem to benefit from store-to-load
forwarding. That means, throughput is clearly limited by the in/out dependency
on GPR registers. The uOP composition is sadly unknown (due to the lack of PMCs
for the Integer pipes). I have reused the same mix of consumed resource from the
other CMPXCHG instructions for CMPXCHG8B too.
LOCK CMPXCHG8B is instead 18cycles.
CMPXCHG16B is 32cycles. Up to 38cycles when the LOCK prefix is specified. Due to
the in/out dependencies, throughput is limited to 1 instruction every 32 (or 38)
cycles dependeing on whether the LOCK prefix is specified or not.
I wouldn't be surprised if the microcode for CMPXCHG16B is similar to 2x
microcode from CMPXCHG8B. So, I have speculatively set the JALU01 consumption to
2x the resource cycles used for CMPXCHG8B.
The two new hasLockPrefix() functions are used by the btver2 scheduling model
check if a MCInst/MachineInst has a LOCK prefix. Calls to hasLockPrefix() have
been encoded in predicates of variant scheduling classes that describe lat/thr
of CMPXCHG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66424
llvm-svn: 369365
This was a quick pass through some obvious places. I haven't tried the clang-tidy check.
I also replaced the zeroes in getX86SubSuperRegister with X86::NoRegister which is the real sentinel name.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66363
llvm-svn: 369151
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
llvm-svn: 369013
Summary:
Add a new method which tries to compute the target address referenced by an operand.
This patch supports x86_64 RIP-relative addressing for now.
It is necessary to print referenced symbol names in llvm-objdump.
Reviewers: andreadb, MaskRay, grosbach, jgalenson, craig.topper
Reviewed By: MaskRay, craig.topper
Subscribers: bcain, rupprecht, jhenderson, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63847
llvm-svn: 366987
Rename the old versions that use FR32/FR64 to MOVSSrm_alt/MOVSDrm_alt.
Use the new versions in patterns that previously used a COPY_TO_REGCLASS
to VR128. These patterns expect the upper bits to be zero. The
current set up appears to work, but I'm not sure we should be
enforcing upper bits being zero through a COPY_TO_REGCLASS.
I wanted to flip the arrangement and use a COPY_TO_REGCLASS to
FR32/FR64 for the patterns that need an f32/f64 result, but that
complicated fastisel and globalisel.
I've been doing some experiments with reducing some isel patterns
and ended up in a situation where I had a
(SUBREG_TO_REG (COPY_TO_RECLASS (VMOVSSrm), VR128)) and our
post-isel peephole was unable to avoid using an instruction for
the SUBREG_TO_REG due to the COPY_TO_REGCLASS. Having a VR128
instruction removes the COPY_TO_REGCLASS that was breaking this.
llvm-svn: 363643
This reverts r362990 (git commit 374571301d)
This was causing linker warnings on Darwin:
ld: warning: direct access in function 'llvm::initializeEvexToVexInstPassPass(llvm::PassRegistry&)'
from file '../../lib/libLLVMX86CodeGen.a(X86EvexToVex.cpp.o)' to global weak symbol
'void std::__1::__call_once_proxy<std::__1::tuple<void* (&)(llvm::PassRegistry&),
std::__1::reference_wrapper<llvm::PassRegistry>&&> >(void*)' from file '../../lib/libLLVMCore.a(Verifier.cpp.o)'
means the weak symbol cannot be overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by different translation
units being compiled with different visibility settings.
llvm-svn: 363028
Summary:
For builds with LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF
this change makes all symbols in the target specific libraries hidden
by default.
A new macro called LLVM_EXTERNAL_VISIBILITY has been added to mark symbols in these
libraries public, which is mainly needed for the definitions of the
LLVMInitialize* functions.
This patch reduces the number of public symbols in libLLVM.so by about
25%. This should improve load times for the dynamic library and also
make abi checker tools, like abidiff require less memory when analyzing
libLLVM.so
One side-effect of this change is that for builds with
LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON some unittests that
access symbols that are no longer public will need to be statically linked.
Before and after public symbol counts (using gcc 8.2.1, ld.bfd 2.31.1):
nm before/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
36221
nm after/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
26278
Reviewers: chandlerc, beanz, mgorny, rnk, hans
Reviewed By: rnk, hans
Subscribers: Jim, hiraditya, michaelplatings, chapuni, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, kristina, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54439
llvm-svn: 362990
D18885 emitted 5 bytes for call *foo@tlsdesc(%rax). It should use the
2-byte form instead and let R_X86_64_TLSDESC_CALL apply to the beginning
of the call instruction.
The 2-byte form was deliberately chosen to make ->LE and ->IE relaxation work:
0: 48 8d 05 00 00 00 00 lea 0x0(%rip),%rax # 7 <.text+0x7>
3: R_X86_64_GOTPC32_TLSDESC a-0x4
7: ff 10 callq *(%rax)
7: R_X86_64_TLSDESC_CALL a
=>
0: 48 c7 c0 fc ff ff ff mov $0xfffffffffffffffc,%rax
7: 66 90 xchg %ax,%ax
Also change the symbol type to STT_TLS when VK_TLSCALL or VK_TLSDESC is
seen.
Reviewed By: compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62512
llvm-svn: 361910
This can be used to create references among sections. When --gc-sections
is used, the referenced section will be retained if the origin section
is retained.
See R_MIPS_NONE (D13659), R_ARM_NONE (D61992), R_AARCH64_NONE (D61973) for similar changes.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62014
llvm-svn: 360983
Move the declarations of getThe<Name>Target() functions into a new header in
TargetInfo and make users of these functions include this new header.
This fixes a layering problem.
llvm-svn: 360736
For some targets, there is a circular dependency between InstPrinter and
MCTargetDesc. Merging them together will fix this. For the other targets,
the merging is to maintain consistency so all targets will have the same
structure.
llvm-svn: 360484
These can be used to force the encoding used for instructions.
{vex2} will fail if the instruction is not VEX encoded, but otherwise won't do anything since we prefer vex2 when possible. Might need to skip use of the _REV MOV instructions for this too, but I haven't done that yet.
{vex3} will force the instruction to use the 3 byte VEX encoding or fail if there is no VEX form.
{evex} will force the instruction to use the EVEX version or fail if there is no EVEX version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59266
llvm-svn: 358029
Summary:
This avoids needing an isel pattern for each condition code. And it removes translation switches for converting between Jcc instructions and condition codes.
Now the printer, encoder and disassembler take care of converting the immediate. We use InstAliases to handle the assembly matching. But we print using the asm string in the instruction definition. The instruction itself is marked IsCodeGenOnly=1 to hide it from the assembly parser.
Reviewers: spatel, lebedev.ri, courbet, gchatelet, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: MatzeB, qcolombet, eraman, hiraditya, arphaman, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60228
llvm-svn: 357802
Summary:
This avoids needing an isel pattern for each condition code. And it removes translation switches for converting between SETcc instructions and condition codes.
Now the printer, encoder and disassembler take care of converting the immediate. We use InstAliases to handle the assembly matching. But we print using the asm string in the instruction definition. The instruction itself is marked IsCodeGenOnly=1 to hide it from the assembly parser.
Reviewers: andreadb, courbet, RKSimon, spatel, lebedev.ri
Reviewed By: andreadb
Subscribers: hiraditya, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60138
llvm-svn: 357801
Summary:
Reorder the condition code enum to match their encodings. Move it to MC layer so it can be used by the scheduler models.
This avoids needing an isel pattern for each condition code. And it removes
translation switches for converting between CMOV instructions and condition
codes.
Now the printer, encoder and disassembler take care of converting the immediate.
We use InstAliases to handle the assembly matching. But we print using the
asm string in the instruction definition. The instruction itself is marked
IsCodeGenOnly=1 to hide it from the assembly parser.
This does complicate the scheduler models a little since we can't assign the
A and BE instructions to a separate class now.
I plan to make similar changes for SETcc and Jcc.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, lebedev.ri, andreadb, courbet
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: gchatelet, hiraditya, kristina, lebedev.ri, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60041
llvm-svn: 357800
This should allow llvm-exegesis to intelligently constrain the rounding mode.
The mask in the encoder shouldn't be necessary any more. We used to allow codegen to use 8-11 for rounding mode and the assembler would use 0-3 to mean the same thing so we masked here and in the printer. Codegen now matches the assembler and the printer was updated, but I forgot to update the encoder.
llvm-svn: 357419
Add break statements in Object/ELF.cpp since the code should consider the
generic tags for Hexagon, MIPS, and PPC. Add a test (copied from llvm-readobj)
to show that this works correctly (earlier versions of this patch would have
asserted).
The warnings in X86ELFObjectWriter.cpp are actually false-positives since
the nested switch() handles all possible values and returns in all cases.
Make this explicit by adding llvm_unreachable's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58837
llvm-svn: 356037
Many of our tests were not using valid rounding mode immediates. Clang verifies this in the frontend when it creates the intrinsics from builtins, but the backend would still lower invalid immediates.
With this change we will now leave them as intrinsics if the immediate is invalid. This will cause an isel selection failure.
llvm-svn: 355789
This patch removes hidden codegen flag -print-schedule effectively reverting the
logic originally committed as r300311
(https://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=300311).
Flag -print-schedule was originally introduced by r300311 to address PR32216
(https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32216). That bug was about adding "Better
testing of schedule model instruction latencies/throughputs".
These days, we can use llvm-mca to test scheduling models. So there is no longer
a need for flag -print-schedule in LLVM. The main use case for PR32216 is
now addressed by llvm-mca.
Flag -print-schedule is mainly used for debugging purposes, and it is only
actually used by x86 specific tests. We already have extensive (latency and
throughput) tests under "test/tools/llvm-mca" for X86 processor models. That
means, most (if not all) existing -print-schedule tests for X86 are redundant.
When flag -print-schedule was first added to LLVM, several files had to be
modified; a few APIs gained new arguments (see for example method
MCAsmStreamer::EmitInstruction), and MCSubtargetInfo/TargetSubtargetInfo gained
a couple of getSchedInfoStr() methods.
Method getSchedInfoStr() had to originally work for both MCInst and
MachineInstr. The original implmentation of getSchedInfoStr() introduced a
subtle layering violation (reported as PR37160 and then fixed/worked-around by
r330615).
In retrospect, that new API could have been designed more optimally. We can
always query MCSchedModel to get the latency and throughput. More importantly,
the "sched-info" string should not have been generated by the subtarget.
Note, r317782 fixed an issue where "print-schedule" didn't work very well in the
presence of inline assembly. That commit is also reverted by this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57244
llvm-svn: 353043
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
For stack frames on the size of a register in x86, a code size optimization
emits "push rax/eax" instead of "sub" for stack allocation. For example:
foo:
.cfi_startproc
BB#0:
pushq %rax
Ltmp0:
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 16
...
.cfi_endproc
However, we are falling back to DWARF in this case because we cannot
encode %rax as a saved register.
This requirement is wrong, since we don't care about the contents of
%rax, it is the equivalent of a sub.
In order to specify that we care about the contents of %rax, we would
need a .cfi_offset %rax, <offset>.
It's also overzealous in the case where there are pushes for callee saved
registers followed by a "push rax/eax" instead of "sub", in which case we should
also be able to encode the callee saved regs and everything else using compact
unwind.
Patch authored by Bruno Cardoso Lopes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D13793
llvm-svn: 350623
This can happen if assembling a reference to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.
While it doesn't make sense to try to assemble that for COFF,
the fact that we previously used llvm_unreachable meant that the code
had undefined behaviour if something tried to assemble that.
The configure script of libgmp would try to assemble such a snippet
(which should signal a failure). If llvm is built without assertions,
the undefined behaviour meant a (near) infinite loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52903
llvm-svn: 343811
Add the .cv_fpo_stackalign directive so that we can define $T0, or the
VFRAME virtual register, with it. This was overlooked in the initial
implementation because unlike MSVC, we push CSRs before allocating stack
space, so this value is only needed to describe local variable
locations. Variables that the compiler now addresses via ESP are instead
described as being stored at offsets from VFRAME, which for us is ESP
after alignment in the prologue.
This adds tests that show that we use the VFRAME register properly in
our S_DEFRANGE records, and that we emit the correct FPO data to define
it.
Fixes PR38857
llvm-svn: 343603
This patch adds the ability for processor models to describe dependency breaking
instructions.
Different processors may specify a different set of dependency-breaking
instructions.
That means, we cannot assume that all processors of the same target would use
the same rules to classify dependency breaking instructions.
The main goal of this patch is to provide the means to describe dependency
breaking instructions directly via tablegen, and have the following
TargetSubtargetInfo hooks redefined in overrides by tabegen'd
XXXGenSubtargetInfo classes (here, XXX is a Target name).
```
virtual bool isZeroIdiom(const MachineInstr *MI, APInt &Mask) const {
return false;
}
virtual bool isDependencyBreaking(const MachineInstr *MI, APInt &Mask) const {
return isZeroIdiom(MI);
}
```
An instruction MI is a dependency-breaking instruction if a call to method
isDependencyBreaking(MI) on the STI (TargetSubtargetInfo object) evaluates to
true. Similarly, an instruction MI is a special case of zero-idiom dependency
breaking instruction if a call to STI.isZeroIdiom(MI) returns true.
The extra APInt is used for those targets that may want to select which machine
operands have their dependency broken (see comments in code).
Note that by default, subtargets don't know about the existence of
dependency-breaking. In the absence of external information, those method calls
would always return false.
A new tablegen class named STIPredicate has been added by this patch to let
processor models classify instructions that have properties in common. The idea
is that, a MCInstrPredicate definition can be used to "generate" an instruction
equivalence class, with the idea that instructions of a same class all have a
property in common.
STIPredicate definitions are essentially a collection of instruction equivalence
classes.
Also, different processor models can specify a different variant of the same
STIPredicate with different rules (i.e. predicates) to classify instructions.
Tablegen backends (in this particular case, the SubtargetEmitter) will be able
to process STIPredicate definitions, and automatically generate functions in
XXXGenSubtargetInfo.
This patch introduces two special kind of STIPredicate classes named
IsZeroIdiomFunction and IsDepBreakingFunction in tablegen. It also adds a
definition for those in the BtVer2 scheduling model only.
This patch supersedes the one committed at r338372 (phabricator review: D49310).
The main advantages are:
- We can describe subtarget predicates via tablegen using STIPredicates.
- We can describe zero-idioms / dep-breaking instructions directly via
tablegen in the scheduling models.
In future, the STIPredicates framework can be used for solving other problems.
Examples of future developments are:
- Teach how to identify optimizable register-register moves
- Teach how to identify slow LEA instructions (each subtarget defining its own
concept of "slow" LEA).
- Teach how to identify instructions that have undocumented false dependencies
on the output registers on some processors only.
It is also (in my opinion) an elegant way to expose knowledge to both external
tools like llvm-mca, and codegen passes.
For example, machine schedulers in LLVM could reuse that information when
internally constructing the data dependency graph for a code region.
This new design feature is also an "opt-in" feature. Processor models don't have
to use the new STIPredicates. It has all been designed to be as unintrusive as
possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52174
llvm-svn: 342555
Variables declared with the dllimport attribute are accessed via a
stub variable named __imp_<var>. In MinGW configurations, variables that
aren't declared with a dllimport attribute might still end up imported
from another DLL with runtime pseudo relocs.
For x86_64, this avoids the risk that the target is out of range
for a 32 bit PC relative reference, in case the target DLL is loaded
further than 4 GB from the reference. It also avoids having to make the
text section writable at runtime when doing the runtime fixups, which
makes it worthwhile to do for i386 as well.
Add stub variables for all dso local data references where a definition
of the variable isn't visible within the module, since the DLL data
autoimporting might make them imported even though they are marked as
dso local within LLVM.
Don't do this for variables that actually are defined within the same
module, since we then know for sure that it actually is dso local.
Don't do this for references to functions, since there's no need for
runtime pseudo relocations for autoimporting them; if a function from
a different DLL is called without the appropriate dllimport attribute,
the call just gets routed via a thunk instead.
GCC does something similar since 4.9 (when compiling with -mcmodel=medium
or large; from that version, medium is the default code model for x86_64
mingw), but only for x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51288
llvm-svn: 340942
This adds a new method to ELFObjectFileBase that returns the symbols and addresses of PLT entries.
This design was suggested by pcc and eugenis in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49383.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50203
llvm-svn: 340610
Summary:
This prefix was added in r333421, and it changed our dumper output to
say things like "CVRegEAX" instead of just "EAX". That's a functional
change that I'd rather avoid.
I tested GCC, Clang, and MSVC, and all of them support #pragma
push_macro. They don't issue warnings whem the macro is not defined
either.
I don't have a Mac so I can't test the real termios.h header, but I
looked at the termios.h sources online and looked for other conflicts.
I saw only the CR* macros, so those are the ones we work around.
Reviewers: zturner, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50851
llvm-svn: 339907
Allow the comparison of x86 registers in the evaluation of assembler
directives. This generalizes and simplifies the extension from r334022
to catch another case found in the Linux kernel.
Reviewers: rnk, void
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, nickdesaulniers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50795
llvm-svn: 339895
When compiling with /arch:AVX512 and optimizations turned on,
we could crash while emitting debug info because we did not
have CodeView register constants for the AVX 512 register
set defined. This patch defines them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50819
llvm-svn: 339893
This patch teaches llvm-mca how to identify dependency breaking instructions on
btver2.
An example of dependency breaking instructions is the zero-idiom XOR (example:
`XOR %eax, %eax`), which always generates zero regardless of the actual value of
the input register operands.
Dependency breaking instructions don't have to wait on their input register
operands before executing. This is because the computation is not dependent on
the inputs.
Not all dependency breaking idioms are also zero-latency instructions. For
example, `CMPEQ %xmm1, %xmm1` is independent on
the value of XMM1, and it generates a vector of all-ones.
That instruction is not eliminated at register renaming stage, and its opcode is
issued to a pipeline for execution. So, the latency is not zero.
This patch adds a new method named isDependencyBreaking() to the MCInstrAnalysis
interface. That method takes as input an instruction (i.e. MCInst) and a
MCSubtargetInfo.
The default implementation of isDependencyBreaking() conservatively returns
false for all instructions. Targets may override the default behavior for
specific CPUs, and return a value which better matches the subtarget behavior.
In future, we should teach to Tablegen how to automatically generate the body of
isDependencyBreaking from scheduling predicate definitions. This would allow us
to expose the knowledge about dependency breaking instructions to the machine
schedulers (and, potentially, other codegen passes).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49310
llvm-svn: 338372
This patch fixes the latency/throughput of LEA instructions in the BtVer2
scheduling model.
On Jaguar, A 3-operands LEA has a latency of 2cy, and a reciprocal throughput of
1. That is because it uses one cycle of SAGU followed by 1cy of ALU1. An LEA
with a "Scale" operand is also slow, and it has the same latency profile as the
3-operands LEA. An LEA16r has a latency of 3cy, and a throughput of 0.5 (i.e.
RThrouhgput of 2.0).
This patch adds a new TIIPredicate named IsThreeOperandsLEAFn to X86Schedule.td.
The tablegen backend (for instruction-info) expands that definition into this
(file X86GenInstrInfo.inc):
```
static bool isThreeOperandsLEA(const MachineInstr &MI) {
return (
(
MI.getOpcode() == X86::LEA32r
|| MI.getOpcode() == X86::LEA64r
|| MI.getOpcode() == X86::LEA64_32r
|| MI.getOpcode() == X86::LEA16r
)
&& MI.getOperand(1).isReg()
&& MI.getOperand(1).getReg() != 0
&& MI.getOperand(3).isReg()
&& MI.getOperand(3).getReg() != 0
&& (
(
MI.getOperand(4).isImm()
&& MI.getOperand(4).getImm() != 0
)
|| (MI.getOperand(4).isGlobal())
)
);
}
```
A similar method is generated in the X86_MC namespace, and included into
X86MCTargetDesc.cpp (the declaration lives in X86MCTargetDesc.h).
Back to the BtVer2 scheduling model:
A new scheduling predicate named JSlowLEAPredicate now checks if either the
instruction is a three-operands LEA, or it is an LEA with a Scale value
different than 1.
A variant scheduling class uses that new predicate to correctly select the
appropriate latency profile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49436
llvm-svn: 337469
I separated out the rounding and broadcast groups into their own tables because it made the ordering in the main table easier.
Further splitting of the tables might make it possible to directly index using bits from the TSFlags, but its probably not worth it right now.
llvm-svn: 336075
(%bp) can't be encoded without a displacement. The encoding is instead used for displacement alone. So a 1 byte displacement of 0 must be used. But if there is an index register we can encode without a displacement.
llvm-svn: 335379
This patch teaches llvm-mca how to identify register writes that implicitly zero
the upper portion of a super-register.
On X86-64, a general purpose register is implemented in hardware as a 64-bit
register. Quoting the Intel 64 Software Developer's Manual: "an update to the
lower 32 bits of a 64 bit integer register is architecturally defined to zero
extend the upper 32 bits". Also, a write to an XMM register performed by an AVX
instruction implicitly zeroes the upper 128 bits of the aliasing YMM register.
This patch adds a new method named clearsSuperRegisters to the MCInstrAnalysis
interface to help identify instructions that implicitly clear the upper portion
of a super-register. The rest of the patch teaches llvm-mca how to use that new
method to obtain the information, and update the register dependencies
accordingly.
I compared the kernels from tests clear-super-register-1.s and
clear-super-register-2.s against the output from perf on btver2. Previously
there was a large discrepancy between the estimated IPC and the measured IPC.
Now the differences are mostly in the noise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48225
llvm-svn: 335113
Summary:
This is similar to D46319 (ARM). x86-64 psABI p40 gives an example:
leaq _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE(%rip), %r15 # GOTPC32 reloc
GNU as creates R_X86_64_GOTPC32. However, MC currently emits R_X86_64_PC32.
Reviewers: javed.absar, echristo
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, peter.smith, grimar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47507
llvm-svn: 334515
On targets like Arm some relaxations may only be performed when certain
architectural features are available. As functions can be compiled with
differing levels of architectural support we must make a judgement on
whether we can relax based on the MCSubtargetInfo for the function. This
change passes through the MCSubtargetInfo for the function to
fixupNeedsRelaxation so that the decision on whether to relax can be made
per function. In this patch, only the ARM backend makes use of this
information. We must also pass the MCSubtargetInfo to applyFixup because
some fixups skip error checking on the assumption that relaxation has
occurred, to prevent code-generation errors applyFixup must see the same
MCSubtargetInfo as fixupNeedsRelaxation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44928
llvm-svn: 334078
Summary:
Allow extended parsing of variable assembler assignment syntax and modify X86 to permit
VAR = register assignment. As we emit these as .set directives when possible, we inline
such expressions in output assembly.
Fixes PR37425.
Reviewers: rnk, void, echristo
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: nickdesaulniers, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47545
llvm-svn: 334022
With this we gain a little flexibility in how the generic object
writer is created.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47045
llvm-svn: 332868
To make this work I needed to add an endianness field to MCAsmBackend
so that writeNopData() implementations know which endianness to use.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47035
llvm-svn: 332857
The idea is that a client that wants split dwarf would create a
specific kind of object writer that creates two files, and use it to
create the streamer.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47050
llvm-svn: 332749
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
Should be NFC since nothing used the enum value. The instruction descriptions are generated from tablegen which had the correct value.
llvm-svn: 328398
X86 Supports Indirect Branch Tracking (IBT) as part of Control-Flow Enforcement Technology (CET).
IBT instruments ENDBR instructions used to specify valid targets of indirect call / jmp.
The `nocf_check` attribute has two roles in the context of X86 IBT technology:
1. Appertains to a function - do not add ENDBR instruction at the beginning of the function.
2. Appertains to a function pointer - do not track the target function of this pointer by adding nocf_check prefix to the indirect-call instruction.
This patch implements `nocf_check` context for Indirect Branch Tracking.
It also auto generates `nocf_check` prefixes before indirect branchs to jump tables that are guarded by range checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41879
llvm-svn: 327767
For instructions like call foo and jmp foo patch changes
relocation produced from R_X86_64_PC32 to R_X86_64_PLT32.
Relocation can be used as a marker for 32-bit PC-relative branches.
Linker will reduce PLT32 relocation to PC32 if function is defined locally.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43383
llvm-svn: 325569
In the rare case where the input contains rip-relative addressing with
immediate displacements, *and* the instruction ends with an immediate,
we encode the instruction in the wrong way:
movl $12345678, 0x400(%rdi) // all good, no rip-relative addr
movl %eax, 0x400(%rip) // all good, no immediate at the end of the instruction
movl $12345678, 0x400(%rip) // fails, encodes address as 0x3fc(%rip)
Offset is a label:
movl $12345678, foo(%rip)
we want to account for the size of the immediate (in this case,
$12345678, 4 bytes).
Offset is an immediate:
movl $12345678, 0x400(%rip)
we should not account for the size of the immediate, assuming the
immediate offset is what the user wanted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43050
llvm-svn: 324772
We currently emit up to 15-byte NOPs on all targets (apart from Silvermont), which stalls performance on some targets with decoders that struggle with 2 or 3 more '66' prefixes.
This patch flags recent AMD targets (btver1/znver1) to still emit 15-byte NOPs and bdver* targets to emit 11-byte NOPs. All other targets now emit 10-byte NOPs apart from SilverMont CPUs which still emit 7-byte NOPS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42616
llvm-svn: 323693
After D41349, we can no get a MCSubtargetInfo into the MCAsmBackend constructor. This allows us to get NOPL from a subtarget feature rather than a CPU name blacklist.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41721
llvm-svn: 322227
Currently it's not possible to access MCSubtargetInfo from a TgtMCAsmBackend.
D20830 threaded an MCSubtargetInfo reference through
MCAsmBackend::relaxInstruction, but this isn't the only function that would
benefit from access. This patch removes the Triple and CPUString arguments
from createMCAsmBackend and replaces them with MCSubtargetInfo.
This patch just changes the interface without making any intentional
functional changes. Once in, several cleanups are possible:
* Get rid of the awkward MCSubtargetInfo handling in ARMAsmBackend
* Support 16-bit instructions when valid in MipsAsmBackend::writeNopData
* Get rid of the CPU string parsing in X86AsmBackend and just use a SubtargetFeature for HasNopl
* Emit 16-bit nops in RISCVAsmBackend::writeNopData if the compressed instruction set extension is enabled (see D41221)
This change initially exposed PR35686, which has since been resolved in r321026.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41349
llvm-svn: 321692
Empty string should be equivalent to "generic" which doesn't allow NOPL. Force tests to use specificy 'pentiumpro' to guarantee NOPL.
Fixes PR35686
llvm-svn: 321026
There was a top level "let Predicates =" in the .td file that was overriding the Requires on each instruction.
I've added an assert to the code emitter to catch more cases like this. I'm sure this isn't the only place where the right predicates aren't being applied. This assert already found that we don't block btq/btsq/btrq in 32-bit mode.
llvm-svn: 320830
These command line options are not intended for public use, and often
don't even make sense in the context of a particular tool anyway. About
90% of them are already hidden, but when people add new options they
forget to hide them, so if you were to make a brand new tool today, link
against one of LLVM's libraries, and run tool -help you would get a
bunch of junk that doesn't make sense for the tool you're writing.
This patch hides these options. The real solution is to not have
libraries defining command line options, but that's a much larger effort
and not something I'm prepared to take on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40674
llvm-svn: 319505
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCCodeEmitter -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove the last instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315531
Summary:
This adds a set of new directives that describe 32-bit x86 prologues.
The directives are limited and do not expose the full complexity of
codeview FPO data. They are merely a convenience for the compiler to
generate more readable assembly so we don't need to generate tons of
labels in CodeGen. If our prologue emission changes in the future, we
can change the set of available directives to suit our needs. These are
modelled after the .seh_ directives, which use a different format that
interacts with exception handling.
The directives are:
.cv_fpo_proc _foo
.cv_fpo_pushreg ebp/ebx/etc
.cv_fpo_setframe ebp/esi/etc
.cv_fpo_stackalloc 200
.cv_fpo_endprologue
.cv_fpo_endproc
.cv_fpo_data _foo
I tried to follow the implementation of ARM EHABI CFI directives by
sinking most directives out of MCStreamer and into X86TargetStreamer.
This helps avoid polluting non-X86 code with WinCOFF specific logic.
I used cdb to confirm that this can show locals in parent CSRs in a few
cases, most importantly the one where we use ESI as a frame pointer,
i.e. the one in http://crbug.com/756153#c28
Once we have cdb integration in debuginfo-tests, we can add integration
tests there.
Reviewers: majnemer, hans
Subscribers: aemerson, mgorny, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38776
llvm-svn: 315513
MCObjectStreamer owns its MCAsmBackend -- this fixes the types to reflect that,
and allows us to remove another instance of MCObjectStreamer's weird "holding
ownership via someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315410
functions.
This makes the ownership of the resulting MCObjectWriter clear, and allows us
to remove one instance of MCObjectStreamer's bizarre "holding ownership via
someone else's reference" trick.
llvm-svn: 315327
This makes the .seh_ directives slightly more usable from standalone
assembly files.
This removes a large number of report_fatal_errors and recovers from the
error by ignoring the directive.
llvm-svn: 315262
createWinCOFFObjectWriter to WinCOFFObjectWriter's constructor.
Fixes the same ownership issue for COFF that r315245 did for MachO:
WinCOFFObjectWriter takes ownership of its MCWinCOFFObjectTargetWriter, so we
want to pass this through to the constructor via a unique_ptr, rather than a
raw ptr.
llvm-svn: 315257
ELFObjectWriter's constructor.
Fixes the same ownership issue for ELF that r315245 did for MachO:
ELFObjectWriter takes ownership of its MCELFObjectTargetWriter, so we want to
pass this through to the constructor via a unique_ptr, rather than a raw ptr.
llvm-svn: 315254
to MCObjectWriter's constructor.
MCObjectWriter takes ownership of its MCMachObjectTargetWriter argument -- this
patch plumbs that ownership relationship through the constructor (which
previously took raw MCMachObjectTargetWriter*) and the createMachObjectWriter
function.
llvm-svn: 315245
The list of register ids was previously written out in a couple of dirrent
places. This puts it in a .def file and also adds a few more registers (e.g.
the x87 regs) which should lead to more readable dumps, but I didn't include
the whole list since that seems unnecessary.
X86_MC::initLLVMToSEHAndCVRegMapping is pretty ugly, but at least it's not
relying on magic constants anymore. The TODO of using tablegen still stands.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38480
llvm-svn: 314821
Summary:
Intel documentation shows the memory operand as the first operand. But we currently treat it as the second operand. Conceptually the order doesn't matter since it doesn't write memory. We have aliases to parse with the operands in either order and the isel matching is commutable.
For the register®ister form order does matter for the assembly parser. PR22995 was previously filed and fixed by changing the register®ister form from MRMSrcReg to MRMDestReg to match gas. Ideally the memory form should match by using MRMDestMem.
I believe this supercedes D38025 which was trying to switch the register®ister form back to pre-PR22995.
Reviewers: aymanmus, RKSimon, zvi
Reviewed By: aymanmus
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38120
llvm-svn: 314639
IMHO it is an antipattern to have a enum value that is Default.
At any given piece of code it is not clear if we have to handle
Default or if has already been mapped to a concrete value. In this
case in particular, only the target can do the mapping and it is nice
to make sure it is always done.
This deletes the two default enum values of CodeModel and uses an
explicit Optional<CodeModel> when it is possible that it is
unspecified.
llvm-svn: 309911
The issue is not if the value is pcrel. It is whether we have a
relocation or not.
If we have a relocation, the static linker will select the upper
bits. If we don't have a relocation, we have to do it.
llvm-svn: 307730
processFixupValue is called on every relaxation iteration. applyFixup
is only called once at the very end. applyFixup is then the correct
place to do last minute changes and value checks.
While here, do proper range checks again for fixup_arm_thumb_bl. We
used to do it, but dropped because of thumb2. We now do it again, but
use the thumb2 range.
llvm-svn: 306177
X86_64 COFF only has support for 32 bit pcrel relocations. Produce an
error on all others.
Note that gnu as has extended the relocation values to support
this. It is not clear if we should support the gnu extension.
llvm-svn: 306082
This creates a new library called BinaryFormat that has all of
the headers from llvm/Support containing structure and layout
definitions for various types of binary formats like dwarf, coff,
elf, etc as well as the code for identifying a file from its
magic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33843
llvm-svn: 304864
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
A number of backends (AArch64, MIPS, ARM) have been using
MCContext::reportError to report issues such as out-of-range fixup values in
their TgtAsmBackend. This is great, but because MCContext couldn't easily be
threaded through to the adjustFixupValue helper function from its usual
callsite (applyFixup), these backends ended up adding an MCContext* argument
and adding another call to applyFixup to processFixupValue. Adding an
MCContext parameter to applyFixup makes this unnecessary, and even better -
applyFixup can take a reference to MCContext rather than a potentially null
pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30264
llvm-svn: 299529
@ABS8 can be applied to symbols which appear as immediate operands to
instructions that have a 8-bit immediate form for that operand. It causes
the assembler to use the 8-bit form and an 8-bit relocation (e.g. R_386_8
or R_X86_64_8) for the symbol.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28688
llvm-svn: 293667
not all lakemont MCU support long nop.
we can't assume we can generate long nop by default for MCU.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26895
llvm-svn: 288363
The core of the change is supposed to be NFC, however it also fixes
what I believe was an undefined behavior when calling:
va_start(ValueArgs, Desc);
with Desc being a StringRef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25342
llvm-svn: 283671
VPTERNLOG is a ternary instruction with an immediate specifying the logical operation to perform. For each bit position in the 3 source vectors the bit from each source is concatenated together and the resulting 3-bit value is used to select a bit in the immediate. This bit value is written to the result vector.
We can commute this by swapping operands and modifying the immediate. To modify the immediate we need to swap two pairs of bits. The pairs correspond to the locations in the immediate where the commuted operands bits have opposite values and the uncommuted operand has the same value. Bits 0 and 7 will never be swapped since the relevant bits from all sources are the same value.
This refactors and reuses parts of the FMA3 commuting code which is also a three operand instruction.
llvm-svn: 282132
We would assert that the FP setup CFI used esp/rsp always. This held up in
practice when the code was generated from IR. However, with the integrated
assembler, it is possible to have the input be user specified assembly. In such
a case, we cannot assume that the function implementation has a compact unwind
representation. Loosen the assertion into a check and bail if we cannot
represent the frame pointer in the compact unwinding.
Addresses PR30453!
llvm-svn: 281986
There's no reason for it to return a signed type. Just return the operand bias in each if instead of starting from 0 and adding in the 'if'.
llvm-svn: 279720
This tries to keep all the ModRM memory and register forms in their own regions of the encodings. Hoping to make it simple on some of the switch statements that operate on these encodings.
llvm-svn: 279422