This will currently accept the old number of bytes syntax, and convert
it to a scalar. This should be removed in the near future (I think I
converted all of the tests already, but likely missed a few).
Not sure what the exact syntax and policy should be. We can continue
printing the number of bytes for non-generic instructions to avoid
test churn and only allow non-scalar types for generic instructions.
This will currently print the LLT in parentheses, but accept parsing
the existing integers and implicitly converting to scalar. The
parentheses are a bit ugly, but the parser logic seems unable to deal
without either parentheses or some keyword to indicate the start of a
type.
Summary:
[Thumb] set code alignment for 16-bit load from constant pool
LLVM miscompiles this code when compiling for a target with v8.2-A FP16 and the Thumb ISA at -O0:
extern void bar(__fp16 P5);
int main() {
__fp16 P5 = 1.96875;
bar(P5);
}
The code section containing main has 2 byte alignment.
It needs to have 4 byte alignment,
because the load literal instruction has an offset from the
load address with the low 2 bits zeroed.
I do not include a test case in this check-in.
llc and llvm-mc do not exhibit this bug. They do not set code section alignment
in the same manner as clang.
Reviewers: dnsampaio
Reviewed By: dnsampaio
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84169