Discussed here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120320.html
In preparation for adding support for named vregs we are changing the sigil for
physical registers in MIR to '$' from '%'. This will prevent name clashes of
named physical register with named vregs.
llvm-svn: 323922
Work towards the unification of MIR and debug output by printing
`@foo` instead of `<ga:@foo>`.
Also print target flags in the MIR format since most of them are used on
global address operands.
Only debug syntax is affected.
llvm-svn: 320682
As part of the unification of the debug format and the MIR format,
always print registers as lowercase.
* Only debug printing is affected. It now follows MIR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40417
llvm-svn: 319187
- MIParser: If the successor list is not specified successors will be
added based on basic block operands in the block and possible
fallthrough.
- MIRPrinter: Adds a new `simplify-mir` option, with that option set:
Skip printing of block successor lists in cases where the
parser is guaranteed to reconstruct it. This means we still print the
list if some successor cannot be determined (happens for example for
jump tables), if the successor order changes or branch probabilities
being unequal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31262
llvm-svn: 302289
Re-apply r288561: This time with a fix where the ADDs that are part of a
3 instruction LOH would not invalidate the "LastAdrp" state. This fixes
http://llvm.org/PR31361
Previously this pass was using up to 5% compile time in some cases which
is a bit much for what it is doing. The pass featured a full blown
data-flow analysis which in the default configuration was restricted to a
single block.
This rewrites the pass under the assumption that we only ever work on a
single block. This is done in a single pass maintaining a state machine
per general purpose register to catch LOH patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27329
This reverts commit 9e6cedb0a4f14364d6511597a9160305e7d34493.
llvm-svn: 291266
Re-apply r288561: Liveness tracking should be correct now after r290014.
Previously this pass was using up to 5% compile time in some cases which
is a bit much for what it is doing. The pass featured a full blown
data-flow analysis which in the default configuration was restricted to a
single block.
This rewrites the pass under the assumption that we only ever work on a
single block. This is done in a single pass maintaining a state machine
per general purpose register to catch LOH patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27329
llvm-svn: 290026
This is not always behaving as expected as it turns out block live-in
lists are only correct most of the time. Still waiting for reviews on
https://reviews.llvm.org/D27559 to have them correct all of the time.
See also http://llvm.org/PR31361, rdar://25117107
This reverts commit r288567.
This reverts commit r288561.
llvm-svn: 289570
Previously this pass was using up to 5% compile time in some cases which
is a bit much for what it is doing. The pass featured a full blown
data-flow analysis which in the default configuration was restricted to a
single block.
This rewrites the pass under the assumption that we only ever work on a
single block. This is done in a single pass maintaining a state machine
per general purpose register to catch LOH patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27329
llvm-svn: 288561