The long awaited CAST patch. This introduces 12 new instructions into LLVM
to replace the cast instruction. Corresponding changes throughout LLVM are
provided. This passes llvm-test, llvm/test, and SPEC CPUINT2000 with the
exception of 175.vpr which fails only on a slight floating point output
difference.
llvm-svn: 31931
This patch converts the old SHR instruction into two instructions,
AShr (Arithmetic) and LShr (Logical). The Shr instructions now are not
dependent on the sign of their operands.
llvm-svn: 31542
Turn on -Wunused and -Wno-unused-parameter. Clean up most of the resulting
fall out by removing unused variables. Remaining warnings have to do with
unused functions (I didn't want to delete code without review) and unused
variables in generated code. Maintainers should clean up the remaining
issues when they see them. All changes pass DejaGnu tests and Olden.
llvm-svn: 31380
Make necessary changes to support DIV -> [SUF]Div. This changes llvm to
have three division instructions: signed, unsigned, floating point. The
bytecode and assembler are bacwards compatible, however.
llvm-svn: 31195
This patch implements the first increment for the Signless Types feature.
All changes pertain to removing the ConstantSInt and ConstantUInt classes
in favor of just using ConstantInt.
llvm-svn: 31063
a better encoding of the targets data layout, rather than trying to guess it
from the endianness and pointersize like before.
Update the generated files.
llvm-svn: 31031
The result of yyparse() was not being checked. When YYERROR or YYABORT is
called it causes yyparse() to return 1 to indicate the error. The code was
silently ignoring this situation because it previously expected either an
exception or a null ParserResult to indicate an error. The patch corrects
this situation.
llvm-svn: 30834
Errors are generated with the YYERROR macro which can only be called from
a production (inside yyparse) because of the goto statement in the macro.
This lead to several situations where GEN_ERROR was not called but
GenerateError was used instead (because it doesn't use YYERROR). However,
in such situations, catching the error much later (e.g. at the end of
the production) is not sufficient because LLVM can assert on invalid data
before the end of the production is reached. The solution is to ensure that
the CHECK_FOR_ERROR macro (which invokes YYERROR if there's an error) is
used as soon as possible after a call to GenerateError has been made.
llvm-svn: 30650
Rid the Assembly Parser of exceptions. This is a really gross hack but it
will do until the Assembly Parser is re-written as a recursive descent.
The basic premise is that wherever the old "ThrowException" function was
called (new name: GenerateError) we set a flag (TriggerError). Every
production checks that flag and calls YYERROR if it is set. Additionally,
each call to ThrowException in the grammar is replaced with GEN_ERROR
which calls GenerateError and then YYERROR immediately. This prevents
the remaining production from continuing after an error condition.
llvm-svn: 29763