Summary:
This will allow us to handle f128 arguments without duplicating code from
CCState::AnalyzeFormalArguments() or CCState::AnalyzeCallOperands().
No functional change.
Reviewers: vmedic
Reviewed By: vmedic
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5292
llvm-svn: 218509
Summary:
The N32/N64 ABI's return f128 values in $f0 and $f2 for hard-float and $v0 and
$a0 for soft-float. The registers used in the soft-float case differ from the
usual $v0, and $v1 specified for return values.
Both cases were previously handled by duplicating the CCState::AnalyzeReturn()
and CCState::AnalyzeCallReturn() functions and modifying them to delegate to
a different assignment function for f128 and further replace the register type
for the hard-float case. There is a simpler way to do both of these.
We now use the common functions and select an initial assignment function based
on whether the original type is f128 or not. We then handle the hard-float case
using CCBitConvertToType<>.
No functional change.
Reviewers: vmedic
Reviewed By: vmedic
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5269
llvm-svn: 218036
Summary:
The GPR size is more a property of the subtarget than that of the ABI so move
this information to the MipsSubtarget.
No functional change.
Reviewers: vmedic
Reviewed By: vmedic
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5009
llvm-svn: 217436
Add header guards to files that were missing guards. Remove #endif comments
as they don't seem common in LLVM (we can easily add them back if we decide
they're useful)
Changes made by clang-tidy with minor tweaks.
llvm-svn: 215558
Summary:
Big-endian mode was not correctly adjusting the offset for types smaller
than an ABI slot.
Fixes PR19612
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: sstankovic, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4556
llvm-svn: 214493
Summary:
The linked-load, store-conditional operations have been re-encoded such
that have a 9-bit offset instead of the 16-bit offset they have prior to
MIPS32r6/MIPS64r6.
While implementing this, I noticed that the atomic load/store pseudos always
emit a sign extension using sll and sra. I have improved this to use seb/seh
when they are available (MIPS32r2/MIPS64r2 and above).
Depends on D4118
Reviewers: jkolek, zoran.jovanovic, vmedic
Reviewed By: vmedic
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4119
llvm-svn: 211018
Summary:
c.cond.fmt has been replaced by cmp.cond.fmt. Where c.cond.fmt wrote to
dedicated condition registers, cmp.cond.fmt writes 1 or 0 to normal FGR's
(like the GPR comparisons).
mov[fntz] have been replaced by seleqz and selnez. These instructions
conditionally zero a register based on a bool in a GPR. The results can
then be or'd together to act as a select without, for example, requiring a third
register read port.
mov[fntz].[ds] have been replaced with sel.[ds]
MIPS64r6 currently generates unnecessary sign-extensions for most selects.
This is because the result of a SETCC is currently an i32. Bits 32-63 are
undefined in i32 and the behaviour of seleqz/selnez would otherwise depend
on undefined bits. Later, we will fix this by making the result of SETCC an
i64 on MIPS64 targets.
Depends on D3958
Reviewers: jkolek, vmedic, zoran.jovanovic
Reviewed By: vmedic, zoran.jovanovic
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4003
llvm-svn: 210777
Summary:
Highlights:
- Registers are resolved much later (by the render method).
Prior to that point, GPR32's/GPR64's are GPR's regardless of register
size. Similarly FGR32's/FGR64's/AFGR64's are FGR's regardless of register
size or FR mode. Numeric registers can be anything.
- All registers are parsed the same way everywhere (even when handling
symbol aliasing)
- One consequence is that all registers can be specified numerically
almost anywhere (e.g. $fccX, $wX). The exception is symbol aliasing
but that can be easily resolved.
- Removes the need for the hasConsumedDollar hack
- Parenthesis and Bracket suffixes are handled generically
- Micromips instructions are parsed directly instead of going through the
standard encodings first.
- rdhwr accepts all 32 registers, and the following instructions that previously
xfailed now work:
ddiv, ddivu, div, divu, cvt.l.[ds], se[bh], wsbh, floor.w.[ds], c.ngl.d,
c.sf.s, dsbh, dshd, madd.s, msub.s, nmadd.s, nmsub.s, swxc1
- Diagnostics involving registers point at the correct character (the $)
- There's only one kind of immediate in MipsOperand. LSA immediates are handled
by the predicate and renderer.
Lowlights:
- Hardcoded '$zero' in the div patterns is handled with a hack.
MipsOperand::isReg() will return true for a k_RegisterIndex token
with Index == 0 and getReg() will return ZERO for this case. Note that it
doesn't return ZERO_64 on isGP64() targets.
- I haven't cleaned up all of the now-unused functions.
Some more of the generic parser could be removed too (integers and relocs
for example).
- insve.df needed a custom decoder to handle the implicit fourth operand that
was needed to make it parse correctly. The difficulty was that the matcher
expected a Token<'0'> but gets an Imm<0>. Adding an implicit zero solved this.
Reviewers: matheusalmeida, vmedic
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3222
llvm-svn: 205292
Summary:
Highlights:
- Registers are resolved much later (by the render method).
Prior to that point, GPR32's/GPR64's are GPR's regardless of register
size. Similarly FGR32's/FGR64's/AFGR64's are FGR's regardless of register
size or FR mode. Numeric registers can be anything.
- All registers are parsed the same way everywhere (even when handling
symbol aliasing)
- One consequence is that all registers can be specified numerically
almost anywhere (e.g. $fccX, $wX). The exception is symbol aliasing
but that can be easily resolved.
- Removes the need for the hasConsumedDollar hack
- Parenthesis and Bracket suffixes are handled generically
- Micromips instructions are parsed directly instead of going through the
standard encodings first.
- rdhwr accepts all 32 registers, and the following instructions that previously
xfailed now work:
ddiv, ddivu, div, divu, cvt.l.[ds], se[bh], wsbh, floor.w.[ds], c.ngl.d,
c.sf.s, dsbh, dshd, madd.s, msub.s, nmadd.s, nmsub.s, swxc1
- Diagnostics involving registers point at the correct character (the $)
- There's only one kind of immediate in MipsOperand. LSA immediates are handled
by the predicate and renderer.
Lowlights:
- Hardcoded '$zero' in the div patterns is handled with a hack.
MipsOperand::isReg() will return true for a k_RegisterIndex token
with Index == 0 and getReg() will return ZERO for this case. Note that it
doesn't return ZERO_64 on isGP64() targets.
- I haven't cleaned up all of the now-unused functions.
Some more of the generic parser could be removed too (integers and relocs
for example).
- insve.df needed a custom decoder to handle the implicit fourth operand that
was needed to make it parse correctly. The difficulty was that the matcher
expected a Token<'0'> but gets an Imm<0>. Adding an implicit zero solved this.
Reviewers: matheusalmeida, vmedic
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3222
llvm-svn: 205229
Summary:
No functional change since these predicates are (currently) synonymous.
Extracted from a patch by David Chisnall
His work was sponsored by: DARPA, AFRL
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3202
llvm-svn: 204943
Summary:
The short name is quite convenient so provide an accessor for them instead.
No functional change
Depends on D3177
Reviewers: matheusalmeida
Reviewed By: matheusalmeida
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3178
llvm-svn: 204911
After some discussion on IRC, emitting a call to the library function seems
like a better default, since it will move from a compiler internal error to
a linker error, that the user can work around until LLVM is fixed.
I'm also adding a note on the responsibility of the user to confirm that
the cache was cleared on platforms where nothing is done.
llvm-svn: 204806
Implementing the LLVM part of the call to __builtin___clear_cache
which translates into an intrinsic @llvm.clear_cache and is lowered
by each target, either to a call to __clear_cache or nothing at all
incase the caches are unified.
Updating LangRef and adding some tests for the implemented architectures.
Other archs will have to implement the method in case this builtin
has to be compiled for it, since the default behaviour is to bail
unimplemented.
A Clang patch is required for the builtin to be lowered into the
llvm intrinsic. This will be done next.
llvm-svn: 204802
subsequent changes are easier to review. About to fix some layering
issues, and wanted to separate out the necessary churn.
Also comment and sink the include of "Windows.h" in three .inc files to
match the usage in Memory.inc.
llvm-svn: 198685
accumulator instead of its sub-registers, $hi and $lo.
We need this change to prevent a mflo following a mtlo from reading an
unpredictable/undefined value, as shown in the following example:
mult $6, $7 // result of $6 * $7 is written to $lo and $hi.
mflo $2 // read lower 32-bit result from $lo.
mtlo $4 // write to $lo. the content of $hi becomes unpredictable.
mfhi $3 // read higher 32-bit from $hi, which has an unpredictable value.
I don't have a test case for this change that reliably reproduces the problem.
llvm-svn: 192119
of loops.
Previously, two consecutive calls to function "func" would result in the
following sequence of instructions:
1. load $16, %got(func)($gp) // load address of lazy-binding stub.
2. move $25, $16
3. jalr $25 // jump to lazy-binding stub.
4. nop
5. move $25, $16
6. jalr $25 // jump to lazy-binding stub again.
With this patch, the second call directly jumps to func's address, bypassing
the lazy-binding resolution routine:
1. load $25, %got(func)($gp) // load address of lazy-binding stub.
2. jalr $25 // jump to lazy-binding stub.
3. nop
4. load $25, %got(func)($gp) // load resolved address of func.
5. jalr $25 // directly jump to func.
llvm-svn: 191591
Most constant BUILD_VECTOR's are matched using ComplexPatterns which cover
bitcasted as well as normal vectors. However, it doesn't seem to be possible to
match ldi.[bhwd] in a type-agnostic manner (e.g. to support the widest range of
immediates, it should be possible to use ldi.b to load v2i64) using TableGen so
ldi.[bhwd] is matched using custom code in MipsSEISelDAGToDAG.cpp
This made the majority of the constant splat BUILD_VECTOR lowering redundant.
The only transformation remaining for constant splats is when an (up-to) 32-bit
constant splat is possible but the value does not fit into a 10-bit signed
integer. In this case, the BUILD_VECTOR is transformed into a bitcasted
BUILD_VECTOR so that fill.[bhw] can be used to splat the vector from a GPR32
register (which is initialized using the usual lui/addui sequence).
There are no additional tests since this is a re-implementation of previous
functionality. The change is intended to make it easier to implement some of
the upcoming instruction selection patches since they can rely on existing
support for BUILD_VECTOR's in the DAGCombiner.
compare_float.ll changed slightly because a BITCAST is no longer
introduced during legalization.
llvm-svn: 191299
Changes to MIPS SelectionDAG:
* Added nodes VEXTRACT_[SZ]EXT_ELT to represent extract and extend in a single
operation and implemented the DAG combines necessary to fold sign/zero
extends into the extract.
llvm-svn: 191199
Note: There's a later patch on my branch that re-implements this to select
build_vector without the custom SelectionDAG nodes. The future patch avoids
the constant-folding problems stemming from the custom node (i.e. it doesn't
need to re-implement all the DAG combines related to BUILD_VECTOR).
Changes to MIPS specific SelectionDAG nodes:
* Added VSPLAT
This is a special case of BUILD_VECTOR that covers the case the
BUILD_VECTOR is a splat operation.
* Added VSPLATD
This is a special case of VSPLAT that handles the cases when v2i64 is legal
llvm-svn: 191191
precision loads and stores as well as reg+imm double precision loads and stores.
Previously, expansion of loads and stores was done after register allocation,
but now it takes place during legalization. As a result, users will see double
precision stores and loads being emitted to spill and restore 64-bit FP registers.
llvm-svn: 190235
These intrinsics are legalized to V(ALL|ANY)_(NON)?ZERO nodes,
are matched as SN?Z_[BHWDV]_PSEUDO pseudo's, and emitted as
a branch/mov sequence to evaluate to 0 or 1.
Note: The resulting code is sub-optimal since it doesnt seem to be possible
to feed the result of an intrinsic directly into a brcond. At the moment
it uses (SETCC (VALL_ZERO $ws), 0, SETEQ) and similar which unnecessarily
evaluates the boolean twice.
llvm-svn: 189478