The most complex aspect of the convention is the handling of homogeneous
vector and floating point aggregates. Reuse the homogeneous aggregate
classification code that we use on PPC64 and ARM for this.
This convention also has a C mangling, and we apparently implement that
in both Clang and LLVM.
Reviewed By: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6063
llvm-svn: 221006
Now that we have initial support for VSX, we can begin adding
intrinsics for programmer access to VSX instructions. This patch
performs the necessary enablement in the front end, and tests it by
implementing intrinsics for minimum and maximum using the vector
double data type.
The main change in the front end is to no longer disallow "vector" and
"double" in the same declaration (lib/Sema/DeclSpec.cpp), but "vector"
and "long double" must still be disallowed. The new intrinsics are
accessed via vec_max and vec_min with changes in
lib/Headers/altivec.h. Note that for v4f32, we already access
corresponding VMX builtins, but with VSX enabled we should use the
forms that allow all 64 vector registers.
The new built-ins are defined in include/clang/Basic/BuiltinsPPC.def.
I've added a new test in test/CodeGen/builtins-ppc-vsx.c that is
similar to, but much smaller than, builtins-ppc-altivec.c. This
allows us to test VSX IR generation without duplicating CHECK lines
for the existing bazillion Altivec tests.
Since vector double is now legal when VSX is available, I've modified
the error message, and changed where we test for it and for vector
long double, since the target machine isn't visible in the old place.
This serendipitously removed a not-pertinent warning about 'long'
being deprecated when used with 'vector', when "vector long double" is
encountered and we just want to issue an error. The existing tests
test/Parser/altivec.c and test/Parser/cxx-altivec.cpp have been
updated accordingly, and I've added test/Parser/vsx.c to verify that
"vector double" is now legitimate with VSX enabled.
There is a companion patch for LLVM.
llvm-svn: 220989
Wire it through everywhere we have support for fastcall, essentially.
This allows us to parse the MSVC "14" CTP headers, but we will
miscompile them because LLVM doesn't support __vectorcall yet.
Reviewed By: Aaron Ballman
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5808
llvm-svn: 220573
This is long-since overdue, and matches GCC 5.0. This should also be
backwards-compatible, because we already supported all of C11 as an extension
in C99 mode.
llvm-svn: 220244
Thumb1 has legitimate reasons for preferring 32-bit alignment of types
i1/i8/i16, since the 16-bit encoding of "add rD, sp, #imm" requires #imm to be
a multiple of 4. However, this is a trade-off betweem code size and RAM usage;
the DataLayout string is not the best place to represent it even if desired.
So this patch removes the extra Thumb requirements, hopefully making ARM and
Thumb completely compatible in this respect.
llvm-svn: 219735
Before, ARM and Thumb mode code had different preferred alignments, which could
lead to some rather unexpected results. There's justification for reducing it
from the default 64-bits (wasted space), but I don't think there is for going
below 32-bits.
There's no actual ABI change here, just to reassure people.
llvm-svn: 219720
The current VSX feature for PowerPC specifies availability of the VSX
instructions added with the 2.06 architecture version. With 2.07, the
architecture adds new instructions to both the Category:Vector and
Category:VSX instruction sets. Additionally, unaligned vector storage
operations have improved performance.
This patch adds a feature to provide access to the new instructions
and performance capabilities of Power8. For compatibility with GCC,
the feature is controlled via a new -mpower8-vector switch, and the
feature causes the __POWER8_VECTOR__ builtin define to be generated by
the preprocessor.
There is a companion patch for llvm being committed at the same time.
llvm-svn: 219502
The Cortex-M7 has 3 options for its FPU: none, FPv5-SP-D16 and
FPv5-DP-D16. FPv5 has the same instructions as FP-ARMv8, so it can be
modeled using the same target feature, and all double-precision
operations are already disabled by the fp-only-sp target features.
llvm-svn: 218748
The ARM ACLE describes the values as hex constants rather than numeric
constants; follow suit. Address post-commit review comments from Jon Roelofs.
llvm-svn: 218009
Extend ARM ACLE support (Section 6.5.1) for AArch32. Define __ARM_FP if
hardware floating point support is available as per the value defined by the
ACLE.
llvm-svn: 217957
Summary:
le64 is a generic little-endian 64-bit processor, mimicking le32.
Also see the associated LLVM change.
Test Plan: make check-all
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5318
llvm-svn: 217694
This warning is basically useless because the "previous versions" being referred to is MSVC 2005 and earlier, and we obviously do not care about them. However, this warning isn't particularly chatty (I don't recall ever seeing it previously), and it has the opportunity to point out cases where the cv-qualifiers differ unintentionally (like this case), so I am leaving it enabled for now.
llvm-svn: 216267
variable that has regiser constraint "r" is not 64-bit.
General register operands are output using 64-bit "x" register names, regardless
of the size of the variable, unless the asm operand is prefixed with the "%w"
modifier. This surprises and confuses many users who aren't familiar with
aarch64 inline assembly rules.
With this commit, a note and fixit hint are printed which tell the users that
they need modifier "%w" in order to output a "w" register instead of an "x"
register.
<rdar://problem/12764785>
llvm-svn: 216260
The previous encoding only allowed a single digit for the minor version
number. This changes it to use 2 digits for both the minor version and the
revision number.
llvm-svn: 215245
Embedded systems seem to have inherited Darwin's choise of "unsigned long" for
size_t (via a bunch of headers), so we should respect that.
rdar://problem/17872787
llvm-svn: 214854
Summary:
Adding __int128 support explicitly for x86_64 because currently it's on
only when pointer size >= 64 which is not the case for x32.
Test Plan: One of the tests using __int128 is updated
Reviewers: atanasyan, chandlerc
Subscribers: cfe-commits, rob.khasanov, zinovy.nis, dschuff
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4755
llvm-svn: 214710
a) add SKX support to Clang driver;
b) add tests for SKX target and AVX512BW, AVX512DQ, AVX512VL features into clang driver tests
Patch by Zinovy Nis <zinovy.y.nis@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 214306
While Clang now supports both ELFv1 and ELFv2 ABIs, their use is currently
hard-coded via the target triple: powerpc64-linux is always ELFv1, while
powerpc64le-linux is always ELFv2.
These are of course the most common scenarios, but in principle it is
possible to support the ELFv2 ABI on big-endian or the ELFv1 ABI on
little-endian systems (and GCC does support that), and there are some
special use cases for that (e.g. certain Linux kernel versions could
only be built using ELFv1 on LE).
This patch implements the Clang side of supporting this, based on the
LLVM commit 214072. The command line options -mabi=elfv1 or -mabi=elfv2
select the desired ABI if present. (If not, Clang uses the same default
rules as now.)
Specifically, the patch implements the following changes based on the
presence of the -mabi= option:
In the driver:
- Pass the appropiate -target-abi flag to the back-end
- Select the correct dynamic loader version (/lib64/ld64.so.[12])
In the preprocessor:
- Define _CALL_ELF to the appropriate value (1 or 2)
In the compiler back-end:
- Select the correct ABI in TargetInfo.cpp
- Select the desired ABI for LLVM via feature (elfv1/elfv2)
llvm-svn: 214074
Specifically the part where we removed a warning to be compatible with GCC, which has been widely regarded as a bad idea.
I'm not quite happy with how obtuse this warning is, especially in the fairly common case of a 32-bit integer literal, so I've got another patch awaiting review that adds a fixit to reduce confusion.
llvm-svn: 213935
The main subtlety here is that the Darwin tools still need to be given "-arch
arm64" rather than "-arch aarch64". Fortunately this already goes via a custom
function to handle weird edge-cases in other architectures, and it tested.
I removed a few arm64_be tests because that really isn't an interesting thing
to worry about. No-one using big-endian is also referring to the target as
arm64 (at least as far as toolchains go). Mostly they date from when arm64 was
a separate target and we *did* need a parallel name simply to test it at all.
Now aarch64_be is sufficient.
llvm-svn: 213744
1. Revert "Add default feature for CPUs on AArch64 target in Clang"
at r210625. Then, all enabled feature will by passed explicitly by
-target-feature in -cc1 option.
2. Get "-mfpu" deprecated.
3. Implement support of "-march". Usage is:
-march=armv8-a+[no]feature
For instance, "-march=armv8-a+neon+crc+nocrypto". Here "armv8-a" is
necessary, and CPU names are not acceptable. Candidate features are
fp, neon, crc and crypto. Where conflicting feature modifiers are
specified, the right-most feature is used.
4. Implement support of "-mtune". Usage is:
-march=CPU_NAME
For instance, "-march=cortex-a57". This option will ONLY get
micro-architectural feature enabled specifying to target CPU,
like "+zcm" and "+zcz" for cyclone. Any architectural features
WON'T be modified.
5. Change usage of "-mcpu" to "-mcpu=CPU_NAME+[no]feature", which is
an alias to "-march={feature of CPU_NAME}+[no]feature" and
"-mtune=CPU_NAME" together. Where this option is used in conjunction
with -march or -mtune, those options take precedence over the
appropriate part of this option.
llvm-svn: 213353
This restores the original behaviour of -fmsc-version. The older option
remains as a mechanism for specifying the basic version information. A
secondary option, -fms-compatibility-version permits the user to specify an
extended version to the driver.
The new version takes the value as a dot-separated value rather than the
major * 100 + minor format that -fmsc-version format. This makes it easier to
specify the value as well as a more flexible manner for specifying the value.
Specifying both values is considered an error.
The older parameter is left solely as a driver option, which is normalised into
the newer parameter. This allows us to retain a single code path in the
compiler itself whilst preserving the semantics of the old parameter as well as
avoid having to determine which of two formats are being used by the invocation.
The test changes are due to the fact that the compiler no longer supports the
old option, and is a direct conversion to the new option.
llvm-svn: 213119
corresponding AST context function, only restricted to basic integer
types. Use this to ensure getUIntPtrType() gives types consistent with
getIntPtrType(). Fix NVPTX backend to give signed intptr_t.
llvm-svn: 212982