These used to be referenced by the CGI->AWI map (in AsmWriterEmitter), but
stored in a vector local to EmitPrintInstruction. Move the vector to
AsmWriterEmitter too.
llvm-svn: 193525
The old code skipped one of the sorting criteria if either pattern had
no types. This could lead to cycles of the form X < Y, Y < Z, Z < X.
llvm-svn: 191735
Add VEX_LIG to scalar FMA4 instructions.
Use VEX_LIG in some of the inheriting checks in disassembler table generator.
Make use of VEX_L_W, VEX_L_W_XS, VEX_L_W_XD contexts.
Don't let VEX_L_W, VEX_L_W_XS, VEX_L_W_XD, VEX_L_W_OPSIZE inherit from their non-L forms unless VEX_LIG is set.
Let VEX_L_W, VEX_L_W_XS, VEX_L_W_XD, VEX_L_W_OPSIZE inherit from all of their non-L or non-W cases.
Increase ranking on VEX_L_W, VEX_L_W_XS, VEX_L_W_XD, VEX_L_W_OPSIZE so they get chosen over non-L/non-W forms.
llvm-svn: 191649
Ideally, the machinel model is added at the time the instructions are
defined. But many instructions in X86InstrSSE.td still need a model.
Without this workaround the scheduler asserts because x86 already has
itinerary classes for these instructions, indicating they should be
modeled by the scheduler. Since we use the new machine model for other
instructions, it expects a new machine model for these too.
llvm-svn: 191391
Patch by Ana Pazos.
1.Added support for v1ix and v1fx types.
2.Added Scalar Pairwise Reduce instructions.
3.Added initial implementation of Scalar Arithmetic instructions.
llvm-svn: 191263
This makes using array_pod_sort significantly safer. The implementation relies
on function pointer casting but that should be safe as we're dealing with void*
here.
llvm-svn: 191175
TableGen was sorting the entries in some of its internal data
structures by pointer. This order filtered through to the final
matching table and affected the diagnostics produced on bad assembly
occasionally.
It also turns out STL algorithms are ridiculously easy to misuse on
containers with custom order methods. (No bugs before, or now that I
know of, but plenty in the middle).
This should fix the sanitizer bot, which ends up with weird pointers.
llvm-svn: 190793
The 'Deprecated' class allows you to specify a SubtargetFeature that the
instruction is deprecated on.
The 'ComplexDeprecationPredicate' class allows you to define a custom
predicate that is called to check for deprecation.
For example:
ComplexDeprecationPredicate<"MCR">
would mean you would have to define the following function:
bool getMCRDeprecationInfo(MCInst &MI, MCSubtargetInfo &STI,
std::string &Info)
Which returns 'false' for not deprecated, and 'true' for deprecated
and store the warning message in 'Info'.
The MCTargetAsmParser constructor was chaned to take an extra argument of
the MCInstrInfo class, so out-of-tree targets will need to be changed.
llvm-svn: 190598
Link.exe's command line options are case-insensitive. This patch
adds a new attribute to OptTable to let the option parser to compare
options, ignoring case.
Command lines are generally case-insensitive on Windows. CL.exe is an
exception. So this new attribute should be useful for other commands
running on Windows.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1485
llvm-svn: 189416
This field specifies registers that are preserved across function calls,
but that should not be included in the generates SaveList array.
This can be used ot generate regmasks for architectures that save
registers through other means, like SPARC's register windows.
llvm-svn: 189084
Back in the mists of time (2008), it seems TableGen couldn't handle the
patterns necessary to match ARM's CMOV node that we convert select operations
to, so we wrote a lot of fairly hairy C++ to do it for us.
TableGen can deal with it now: there were a few minor differences to CodeGen
(see tests), but nothing obviously worse that I could see, so we should
probably address anything that *does* come up in a localised manner.
llvm-svn: 188995
clang bootstraps intermittently failed for me due a difference in
the MCK_Reg ordering in ARMGenAsmMatcher.inc. E.g. in my latest
run the stage 1 and stage 3 versions were the same but the stage 2
one was different (though still functionally correct). This meant
that the .o comparison failed.
MCK_Regs were assigned by iterating over a std::set< std::set<Record*> >,
and since std::set is sorted lexicographically, the order depended on the
order of the pointer values. This patch replaces the pointer ordering
with LessRecordByID.
llvm-svn: 188164
LLVM's coding standards recommend raw_ostream and MemoryBuffer for
reading and writing text.
This has the side effect of allowing clang to compile more of Support
and TableGen in the Microsoft C++ ABI.
llvm-svn: 187826
This makes option aliases more powerful by enabling them to
pass along arguments to the option they're aliasing.
For example, if we have a joined option "-foo=", we can now
specify a flag option "-bar" to be an alias of that, with the
argument "baz".
This is especially useful for the cl.exe compatible clang driver,
where many options are aliases. For example, this patch enables
us to alias "/Ox" to "-O3" (-O is a joined option), and "/WX" to
"-Werror" (again, -W is a joined option).
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1245
llvm-svn: 187537
For two intrinsics 'llvm.nvvm.texsurf.handle' and 'llvm.nvvm.texsurf.handle.internal',
TableGen was emitting matching code like:
if (Name.startswith("llvm.nvvm.texsurf.handle")) ...
if (Name.startswith("llvm.nvvm.texsurf.handle.internal")) ...
We can never match "llvm.nvvm.texsurf.handle.internal" here because it will
always be erroneously matched by the first condition.
The fix is to sort the intrinsic names and emit them in reverse order.
llvm-svn: 187119
This removes the need to store the asm variant in each row of the single table that existed before. Shaves ~16K off the size of X86AsmParser.o.
llvm-svn: 187026
algorithm when assigning EnumValues to the synthesized registers.
The current algorithm, LessRecord, uses the StringRef compare_numeric
function. This function compares strings, while handling embedded numbers.
For example, the R600 backend registers are sorted as follows:
T1
T1_W
T1_X
T1_XYZW
T1_Y
T1_Z
T2
T2_W
T2_X
T2_XYZW
T2_Y
T2_Z
In this example, the 'scaling factor' is dEnum/dN = 6 because T0, T1, T2
have an EnumValue offset of 6 from one another. However, in other parts
of the register bank, the scaling factors are different:
dEnum/dN = 5:
KC0_128_W
KC0_128_X
KC0_128_XYZW
KC0_128_Y
KC0_128_Z
KC0_129_W
KC0_129_X
KC0_129_XYZW
KC0_129_Y
KC0_129_Z
The diff lists do not work correctly because different kinds of registers have
different 'scaling factors'. This new algorithm, LessRecordRegister, tries to
enforce a scaling factor of 1. For example, the registers are now sorted as
follows:
T1
T2
T3
...
T0_W
T1_W
T2_W
...
T0_X
T1_X
T2_X
...
KC0_128_W
KC0_129_W
KC0_130_W
...
For the Mips and R600 I see a 19% and 6% reduction in size, respectively. I
did see a few small regressions, but the differences were on the order of a
few bytes (e.g., AArch64 was 16 bytes). I suspect there will be even
greater wins for targets with larger register files.
Patch reviewed by Jakob.
rdar://14006013
llvm-svn: 185094
This patch modifies TableGen to generate a function in
${TARGET}GenInstrInfo.inc called getNamedOperandIdx(), which can be used
to look up indices for operands based on their names.
In order to activate this feature for an instruction, you must set the
UseNamedOperandTable bit.
For example, if you have an instruction like:
def ADD : TargetInstr <(outs GPR:$dst), (ins GPR:$src0, GPR:$src1)>;
You can look up the operand indices using the new function, like this:
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::dst) => 0
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src0) => 1
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src1) => 2
The operand names are case sensitive, so $dst and $DST are considered
different operands.
This change is useful for R600 which has instructions with a large number
of operands, many of which model single bit instruction configuration
values. These configuration bits are common across most instructions,
but may have a different operand index depending on the instruction type.
It is useful to have a convenient way to look up the operand indices,
so these bits can be generically set on any instruction.
llvm-svn: 184879
For decoding, keep the current behavior of always decoding these as their REP
versions. In the future, this could be improved to recognize the cases where
these behave as XACQUIRE and XRELEASE and decode them as such.
llvm-svn: 184207
Replace the ill-defined MinLatency and ILPWindow properties with
with straightforward buffer sizes:
MCSchedMode::MicroOpBufferSize
MCProcResourceDesc::BufferSize
These can be used to more precisely model instruction execution if desired.
Disabled some misched tests temporarily. They'll be reenabled in a few commits.
llvm-svn: 184032
The element passed to push_back is not copied before the vector reallocates.
The client needs to copy the element first before passing it to push_back.
No test case, will be tested by follow-up swift scheduler model change (it
segfaults without this change).
llvm-svn: 183459
Don't output data if we are supposed to ignore the record.
Reapply of 183255, I don't think this was causing the tablegen segfault on linux
testers.
llvm-svn: 183311
This fixes some of the ridiculously complex code for optimizing the
machine model tables that are shared among all processors of a given
target. A9 and Swift both use the "special" feature that maps old
itinerary classes to new machine model defs. They map different
overlapping subsets of instructions, which wasn't handled correctly.
llvm-svn: 183302
NOTE: If this broke your out-of-tree backend, in *RegisterInfo.td, change
the instances of SubRegIndex that have a comps template arg to use the
ComposedSubRegIndex class instead.
In TableGen land, this adds Size and Offset attributes to SubRegIndex,
and the ComposedSubRegIndex class, for which the Size and Offset are
computed by TableGen. This also adds an accessor in MCRegisterInfo, and
Size/Offsets for the X86 and ARM subreg indices.
llvm-svn: 183020
The size reduction in the RegDiffLists are rather dramatic. Here are a few
size differences for MCTargetDesc.o files (before and after) in bytes:
R600 - 36160B - 11184B - 69% reduction
ARM - 28480B - 8368B - 71% reduction
Mips - 816B - 576B - 29% reduction
One side effect of dynamically computing the aliases is that the iterator does
not guarantee that the entries are ordered or that duplicates have been removed.
The documentation implies this is a safe assumption and I found no clients that
requires these attributes (i.e., strict ordering and uniqueness).
My local LNT tester results showed no execution-time failures or significant
compile-time regressions (i.e., beyond what I would consider noise) for -O0g,
-O2 and -O3 runs on x86_64 and i386 configurations.
rdar://12906217
llvm-svn: 182783
Currently the fast-isel table generator recognizes registers, register
classes, and immediates for source pattern operands. ValueType
operands are not recognized. This is not a problem for existing
targets with fast-isel support, but will not work for targets like
PowerPC and SPARC that use types in source patterns.
The proposed patch allows ValueType operands and treats them in the
same manner as register classes. There is no convenient way to map
from a ValueType to a register class, but there's no need to do so.
The table generator already requires that all types in the source
pattern be identical, and we know the register class of the output
operand already. So we just assign that register class to any
ValueType operands we encounter.
No functional effect on existing targets. Testing deferred until the
PowerPC target implements fast-isel.
llvm-svn: 182512
This lane mask provides information about which register lanes
completely cover super-registers. See the block comment before
getCoveringLanes().
llvm-svn: 182034
The problem this patch addresses is the handling of register tie
constraints in AsmMatcherEmitter, where one operand is tied to a
sub-operand of another operand. The typical scenario for this to
happen is the tie between the "write-back" register of a pre-inc
instruction, and the base register sub-operand of the memory address
operand of that instruction.
The current AsmMatcherEmitter code attempts to handle tied
operands by emitting the operand as usual first, and emitting
a CVT_Tied node when handling the second (tied) operand. However,
this really only works correctly if the tied operand does not
have sub-operands (and isn't a sub-operand itself). Under those
circumstances, a wrong MC operand list is generated.
In discussions with Jim Grosbach, it turned out that the MC operand
list really ought not to contain tied operands in the first place;
instead, it ought to consist of exactly those operands that are
named in the AsmString. However, getting there requires significant
rework of (some) targets.
This patch fixes the immediate problem, and at the same time makes
one (small) step in the direction of the long-term solution, by
implementing two changes:
1. Restricts the AsmMatcherEmitter handling of tied operands to
apply solely to simple operands (not complex operands or
sub-operand of such).
This means that at least we don't get silently corrupt MC operand
lists as output. However, if we do have tied sub-operands, they
would now no longer be handled at all, except for:
2. If we have an operand that does not occur in the AsmString,
and also isn't handled as tied operand, simply emit a dummy
MC operand (constant 0).
This works as long as target code never attempts to access
MC operands that do no not occur in the AsmString (and are
not tied simple operands), which happens to be the case for
all targets where this situation can occur (ARM and PowerPC).
[ Note that this change means that many of the ARM custom
converters are now superfluous, since the implement the
same "hack" now performed already by common code. ]
Longer term, we ought to fix targets to never access *any*
MC operand that does not occur in the AsmString (including
tied simple operands), and then finally completely remove
all such operands from the MC operand list.
Patch approved by Jim Grosbach.
llvm-svn: 180677
Super-resources and resource groups are two ways of expressing
overlapping sets of processor resources. Now we generate table entries
the same way for both so the scheduler never needs to explicitly check
for super-resources.
llvm-svn: 180162
variant/dialect. Addresses a FIXME in the emitMnemonicAliases function.
Use and test case to come shortly.
rdar://13688439 and part of PR13340.
llvm-svn: 179804
As these two instructions in AVX extension are privileged instructions for
special purpose, it's only expected to be used in inlined assembly.
llvm-svn: 179266
A9 uses itinerary classes, Swift uses RW lists. This tripped some
verification when we're expanding variants. I had to refine the
verification a bit.
llvm-svn: 178357
This syntax is now preferred:
def : Pat<(subc i32:$b, i32:$c), (SUBCCrr $b, $c)>;
There is no reason to repeat the types in the output pattern.
llvm-svn: 177844
This makes it possible to define instruction patterns like this:
def LDri : F3_2<3, 0b000000,
(outs IntRegs:$dst), (ins MEMri:$addr),
"ld [$addr], $dst",
[(set i32:$dst, (load ADDRri:$addr))]>;
~~~
llvm-svn: 177834
Just like register classes, value types can be used in two ways in
patterns:
(sext_inreg i32:$src, i16)
In a named leaf node like i32:$src, the value type simply provides the
type of the node directly. This simplifies type inference a lot compared
to the current practice of specifiying types indirectly with register
classes.
As an unnamed leaf node, like i16 above, the value type represents
itself as an MVT::Other immediate.
llvm-svn: 177828
A register class can appear as a leaf TreePatternNode with and without a
name:
(COPY_TO_REGCLASS GPR:$src, F8RC)
In a named leaf node like GPR:$src, the register class provides type
information for the named variable represented by the node. The TypeSet
for such a node is the set of value types that the register class can
represent.
In an unnamed leaf node like F8RC above, the register class represents
itself as a kind of immediate. Such a node has the type MVT::i32,
we'll never create a virtual register representing it.
This change makes it possible to remove the special handling of
COPY_TO_REGCLASS in CodeGenDAGPatterns.cpp.
llvm-svn: 177825
To use this in conjunction with exuberant ctags to generate a single
combined tags file, run tblgen first and then
$ ctags --append [...]
Since some identifiers have corresponding definitions in C++ code,
it can be useful (if using vim) to also use cscope, and
:set cscopetagorder=1
so that
:tag X
will preferentially select the tablegen symbol, while
:cscope find g X
will always find the C++ symbol.
Patch by Kevin Schoedel!
(a couple small formatting changes courtesy of clang-format)
llvm-svn: 177682
of complex instruction operands (e.g. address modes).
Currently, if a Pat pattern creates an instruction that has a complex
operand (i.e. one that consists of multiple sub-operands at the MI
level), this operand must match a ComplexPattern DAG pattern with the
correct number of output operands.
This commit extends TableGen to alternatively allow match a complex
operands against multiple separate operands at the DAG level.
This allows using Pat patterns to match pre-increment nodes like
pre_store (which must have separate operands at the DAG level) onto
an instruction pattern that uses a multi-operand memory operand,
like the following example on PowerPC (will be committed as a
follow-on patch):
def STWU : DForm_1<37, (outs ptr_rc:$ea_res), (ins GPRC:$rS, memri:$dst),
"stwu $rS, $dst", LdStStoreUpd, []>,
RegConstraint<"$dst.reg = $ea_res">, NoEncode<"$ea_res">;
def : Pat<(pre_store GPRC:$rS, ptr_rc:$ptrreg, iaddroff:$ptroff),
(STWU GPRC:$rS, iaddroff:$ptroff, ptr_rc:$ptrreg)>;
Here, the pair of "ptroff" and "ptrreg" operands is matched onto the
complex operand "dst" of class "memri" in the "STWU" instruction.
Approved by Jakob Stoklund Olesen.
llvm-svn: 177428
Properly handle cases where a group of instructions have different
SchedRW lists with the same itinerary class.
This was supposed to work, but I left in an early break.
llvm-svn: 177317
We always supported a mixture of the old itinerary model and new
per-operand model, but it required a level of indirection to map
itinerary classes to SchedRW lists. This was done for ARM A9.
Now we want to define x86 SchedRW lists, with the goal of removing its
itinerary classes, but still support the itineraries in the mean
time. When I original developed the model, Atom did not have
itineraries, so there was no reason to expect this requirement.
llvm-svn: 177226
Don't require instructions to inherit Sched<...>. Sometimes it is more
convenient to say:
let SchedRW = ... in {
...
}
Which is now possible.
llvm-svn: 177199
This allows abitrary groups of processor resources. Using something in
a subset automatically counts againts the superset. Currently, this
only works if the superset is also a ProcResGroup as opposed to a
SuperUnit.
This allows SandyBridge to be expressed naturally, which will be
checked in shortly.
def SBPort01 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1]>;
def SBPort15 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
def SBPort23 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort2, SBPort3]>;
def SBPort015 : ProcResGroup<[SBPort0, SBPort1, SBPort5]>;
llvm-svn: 177112
Fix the way resources are counted. I'm taking some time to cleanup the
way MachineScheduler handles in-order machine resources. Eventually
we'll need more PPC/Atom test cases in tree.
llvm-svn: 176390
For example, ARM has several instructions with a literal '#0' immediate in the syntax
that's not represented as an actual operand. The asm matcher is expected a token
operand, but the parser will have created an immediate operand. This is currently
handled by dedicated per-instruction C++ munging of the ParsedAsmOperand list, but
will be better handled by this hook.
llvm-svn: 174487
and enables the instruction printer to print aliased
instructions.
Due to usage of RegisterOperands a change in common
code (utils/TableGen/AsmWriterEmitter.cpp) is required
to get the correct register value if it is a RegisterOperand.
Contributer: Vladimir Medic
llvm-svn: 174358
Drive by fix. I noticed some missing logic that might bite future
users. This shouldn't affect the final output on currently modeled
targets.
llvm-svn: 174142
This patch adds support for AArch64 (ARM's 64-bit architecture) to
LLVM in the "experimental" category. Currently, it won't be built
unless requested explicitly.
This initial commit should have support for:
+ Assembly of all scalar (i.e. non-NEON, non-Crypto) instructions
(except the late addition CRC instructions).
+ CodeGen features required for C++03 and C99.
+ Compilation for the "small" memory model: code+static data <
4GB.
+ Absolute and position-independent code.
+ GNU-style (i.e. "__thread") TLS.
+ Debugging information.
The principal omission, currently, is performance tuning.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174054
In the future, AttributeWithIndex won't be used anymore. Besides, it exposes the
internals of the AttributeSet to outside users, which isn't goodness.
llvm-svn: 173606
// FIXME: Constraints are hard coded to 'm', but we need an 'r'
// constraint for addressof. This needs to be cleaned up!
Test cases are already in place. Specifically,
clang/test/CodeGen/ms-inline-asm.c t15(), t16(), and t24().
llvm-svn: 172569
The purpose of this patch is to allow PredicateMethods to be set to something
like "isUImm<8>", calling a C++ template method to reduce code duplication. For
this to work, the PredicateMethod must be mangled into a valid C++ identifier
for insertion into an enum.
llvm-svn: 172073
When processing possible aliases, TableGen assumes that if an operand *can* be
an immediate, then it always *will* be. This is incorrect for the AArch64
backend. This patch inserts a check in the generated code to make sure isImm is
true first.
llvm-svn: 171972
This was an experimental option, but needs to be defined
per-target. e.g. PPC A2 needs to aggressively hide latency.
I converted some in-order scheduling tests to A2. Hal is working on
more test cases.
llvm-svn: 171946
MC disassembler clients (LLDB) are interested in querying if an
instruction may affect control flow other than by virtue of being
an explicit branch instruction. For example, instructions which
write directly to the PC on some architectures.
llvm-svn: 170610
beyond array bounds.
No test case since I cannot reproduce an ICE with this bug. According
to Carlos -- the bug reporter -- a segfault occurs only when LLVM is
compiled with a specific version of GCC.
llvm-svn: 169783
This is much simpler to reason about, more efficient, and
fixes some corner cases involving implicit super-register defs.
Fixed rdar://12797931.
llvm-svn: 169425
At build-time register pressure was always computed in terms of
register units. But the compile-time API was expressed in terms of
register classes because it was intended for virtual registers (and
physical register units weren't yet used anywhere in codegen).
Now that the codegen uses physreg units consistently, prepare for
tracking register pressure also in terms of live units, not live
registers.
llvm-svn: 169360
When code deletes the context, the AttributeImpls that the AttrListPtr points to
are now invalid. Therefore, instead of keeping a separate managed static for the
AttrListPtrs that's reference counted, move it into the LLVMContext and delete
it when deleting the AttributeImpls.
llvm-svn: 168354
This patch replaces the hard coded GPR pair [R0, R1] of
Intrinsic:arm_ldrexd and [R2, R3] of Intrinsic:arm_strexd with
even/odd GPRPair reg class.
Similar to the lowering of atomic_64 operation.
llvm-svn: 168207
- Add RTM code generation support throught 3 X86 intrinsics:
xbegin()/xend() to start/end a transaction region, and xabort() to abort a
tranaction region
llvm-svn: 167573
"../llvm-git/utils/TableGen/CodeGenSchedule.cpp", line 1594.12: 1540-0218 (S) The call does not match any parameter list for "operator+".
"../llvm-git/include/llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h", line 130.1: 1540-1283 (I) "template <class _Iterator, class Func> llvm::operator+(mapped_iterator<_Iterator,Func>::difference_type, const mapped_iterator<_Iterator,Func> &)" is not a viable candidate.
Patch by Kai.
llvm-svn: 167311
Explicitly allow composition of null sub-register indices, and handle
that common case in an inlinable stub.
Use a compressed table implementation instead of the previous nested
switches which generated pretty bad code.
llvm-svn: 167190
Most places can use PrintFatalError as the unwinding mechanism was not
used for anything other than printing the error. The single exception
was CodeGenDAGPatterns.cpp, where intermediate errors during type
resolution were ignored to simplify incremental platform development.
This use is replaced by an error flag in TreePattern and bailout earlier
in various places if it is set.
llvm-svn: 166712
Relationship maps are represented as InstrMapping records which are parsed by
TableGen and the information is used to construct mapping tables to represent
appropriate relations between instructions. These tables are emitted into
XXXGenInstrInfo.inc file along with the functions to query them.
Patch by Jyotsna Verma <jverma@codeaurora.org>.
llvm-svn: 166685
Convert the internal representation of the Attributes class into a pointer to an
opaque object that's uniqued by and stored in the LLVMContext object. The
Attributes class then becomes a thin wrapper around this opaque
object. Eventually, the internal representation will be expanded to include
attributes that represent code generation options, etc.
llvm-svn: 165917
Some of these dyn_cast<>'s would be better phrased as isa<> or cast<>.
That will happen in a future patch.
There are also two dyn_cast_or_null<>'s slipped in instead of
dyn_cast<>'s, since they were causing crashes with just dyn_cast<>.
llvm-svn: 165646
This is a mechanical change of dynamic_cast<> to dyn_cast<>. A number of
these uses are actually more like isa<> or cast<>, and will be changed
to the semanticaly appropriate one in a future patch.
llvm-svn: 165291
This allows the processor-specific machine model to override selected
base opcodes without any fanciness.
e.g. InstRW<[CoreXWriteVANDP], (instregex "VANDP")>.
llvm-svn: 165180
A processor can now arbitrarily alias one SchedWrite onto
another. Only the SchedAlias definition need be within the processor
model. The aliased SchedWrite may be a SchedVariant, WriteSequence, or
transitively refer to another alias.
llvm-svn: 165179
map constraints and MCInst operands to inline asm operands. This replaces the
getMCInstOperandNum() function.
The logic to determine the constraints are not in place, so we still default to
a register constraint (i.e., "r"). Also, we no longer build the MCInst but
rather return just the opcode to get the MCInstrDesc.
llvm-svn: 164979