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
DAG arguments can optionally be named:
(dag node, node:$name)
With this change, the node is also optional:
(dag node, node:$name, $name)
The missing node is treated as an UnsetInit, so the above is equivalent
to:
(dag node, node:$name, ?:$name)
This syntax is useful in output patterns where we currently require the
types of variables to be repeated:
def : Pat<(subc i32:$b, i32:$c), (SUBCCrr i32:$b, i32:$c)>;
This is preferable:
def : Pat<(subc i32:$b, i32:$c), (SUBCCrr $b, $c)>;
llvm-svn: 177843
These tests in particular try to use escaped square brackets as an
argument to grep, which is failing for me with native win32 python. It
appears the backslash is being lost near the CreateProcess*() call.
llvm-svn: 173506
- This patch is inspired by the failure of the following code snippet
which is used to convert enumerable values into encoding bits to
improve the readability of td files.
class S<int s> {
bits<2> V = !if(!eq(s, 8), {0, 0},
!if(!eq(s, 16), {0, 1},
!if(!eq(s, 32), {1, 0},
!if(!eq(s, 64), {1, 1}, {?, ?}))));
}
Later, PR8330 is found to report not exactly the same bug relevant
issue to bit/bits values.
- Instead of resolving bit/bits values separately through
resolveBitReference(), this patch adds getBit() for all Inits and
resolves bit value by resolving plus getting the specified bit. This
unifies the resolving of bit with other values and removes redundant
logic for resolving bit only. In addition,
BitsInit::resolveReferences() is optimized to take advantage of this
origanization by resolving VarBitInit's variable reference first and
then getting bits from it.
- The type interference in '!if' operator is revised to support possible
combinations of int and bits/bit in MHS and RHS.
- As there may be illegal assignments from integer value to bit, says
assign 2 to a bit, but we only check this during instantiation in some
cases, e.g.
bit V = !if(!eq(x, 17), 0, 2);
Verbose diagnostic message is generated when invalid value is
resolveed to help locating the error.
- PR8330 is fixed as well.
llvm-svn: 163360
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.
If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.
Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.
Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s
llvm-svn: 159525
Add some data structures to represent for loops. These will be
referenced during object processing to do any needed iteration and
instantiation.
Add foreach keyword support to the lexer.
Add a mode to indicate that we're parsing a foreach loop. This allows
the value parser to early-out when processing the foreach value list.
Add a routine to parse foreach iteration declarations. This is
separate from ParseDeclaration because the type of the named value
(the iterator) doesn't match the type of the initializer value (the
value list). It also needs to add two values to the foreach record:
the iterator and the value list.
Add parsing support for foreach.
Add the code to process foreach loops and create defs based
on iterator values.
Allow foreach loops to be matched at the top level.
When parsing an IDValue check if it is a foreach loop iterator for one
of the active loops. If so, return a VarInit for it.
Add Emacs keyword support for foreach.
Add VIM keyword support for foreach.
Add tests to check foreach operation.
Add TableGen documentation for foreach.
Support foreach with multiple objects.
Support non-braced foreach body with one object.
Do not require types for the foreach declaration. Assume the iterator
type from the iteration list element type.
llvm-svn: 151164
Add a Value named "NAME" to each Record. This will be set to the def or defm
name when instantiating multiclasses. This will replace the #NAME# processing
hack once paste functionality is in place.
llvm-svn: 142518
Multidefs are a bit unwieldy and incomplete. Remove them in favor of
another mechanism, probably for loops.
Revert "Make Test More Thorough"
Revert "Fix a typo."
Revert "Vim Support for Multidefs"
Revert "Emacs Support for Multidefs"
Revert "Document Multidefs"
Revert "Add a Multidef Test"
Revert "Update Test for Multidefs"
Revert "Process Multidefs"
Revert "Parser Multidef Support"
Revert "Lexer Support for Multidefs"
Revert "Add Multidef Data Structures"
llvm-svn: 141378
Add a test to do list manipulation and pass the result as arguments.
This tests the new list element operator resolve code and provides an
example of using list manipulation to do instruction pattern
substitution.
llvm-svn: 141102
A TableGen backend can define how certain classes can be expanded into
ordered sets of defs, typically by evaluating a specific field in the
record. The SetTheory class can then evaluate DAG expressions that refer
to these named sets.
A number of standard set and list operations are predefined, and the
backend can add more specialized operators if needed. The -print-sets
backend is used by SetTheory.td to provide examples.
This is intended to simplify how register classes are defined:
def GR32_NOSP : RegisterClass<"X86", [i32], 32, (sub GR32, ESP)>;
llvm-svn: 132621
class A<bit a, bits<3> x, bits<3> y> {
bits<3> z;
let z = !if(a, x, y);
}
The variable z will get the value of x when 'a' is 1 and 'y' when a is '0'.
llvm-svn: 121666
as the operator of the dag. Specifically, this allows parsing things
like (F.x 4) in addition to just (a 4).
Unfortunately, this runs afoul of an idiom being used by llvmc. It
is using dags like (foo [1,2,3]) to represent a list of stuff being
passed into foo. With this change, this is parsed as a [1,2,3]
subscript on foo instead of being the first argument to the dag.
Cope with this in the short term by requiring a "-llvmc-temp-hack"
argument to tblgen to get the old parsing behavior.
llvm-svn: 115742
Targets must now implement TargetInstrInfo::copyPhysReg instead. There is no
longer a default implementation forwarding to copyRegToReg.
llvm-svn: 108095
Given the pattern below as an example:
list<dag> Pattern = [(set RC:$dst, (v4f32 (shufp:src3 RC:$src1,
(mem_frag addr:$src2))))];
The right reference resolving should lead to:
list<dag> Pattern = [(set VR128:$dst, (v4f32 (shufp:src3 VR128:$src1,
(mem_frag addr:$src2))))];
But was yielding:
list<dag> Pattern = [(set VR128:$dst, (v4f32 (shufp VR128:$src1,
(mem_frag addr:$src2))))];
Fix this by passing the right name when creating a new DagInit node.
llvm-svn: 106670