These were the cause of a verifier error when building 7zip with
-verify-machineinstrs. Running 'make check' with the verifier
triggered the same error on the test here so i've updated the test
to run the verifier on one of its runs instead of adding a new one.
While looking at this code, there was a stale comment that these
instructions were only used for disassembly. This probably used to
be the case, but they are now used in the 'ARM load / store optimization pass' too.
This reapplies r242300 which was reverted in r242428 due to bot failures.
Ultimately those failures were spurious and completely unrelated to this commit. I reverted this
at the time because it was thought to be at fault.
llvm-svn: 250969
Currently, the availability of DSP instructions (ACLE 6.4.7) is handled in a
hand-rolled tricky condition block in tools/clang/lib/Basic/Targets.cpp, with
a FIXME: attached.
This patch changes the handling of +t2dsp to be in line with other
architecture extensions.
Following a revert of r248152 and new review comments, this patch also includes
renaming FeatureDSPThumb2 -> FeatureDSP, hasThumb2DSP() -> hasDSP(), etc.
The spelling of "t2dsp" is preserved, pending a further investigation of its
possible external usage.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12937
llvm-svn: 248519
SelectT2ShifterOperandReg has identical behaviour to SelectImmShifterOperand,
so get rid of it and use SelectImmShifterOperand instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12195
llvm-svn: 246962
This reverts commit r242300.
This is causing buildbot failures which we are investigating.
I'll reapply once we know whats going on, but for now want to
get the bots green.
llvm-svn: 242428
These were the cause of a verifier error when building 7zip with
-verify-machineinstrs. Running 'make check' with the verifier
triggered the same error on the test here so i've updated the test
to run the verifier on one of its runs instead of adding a new one.
While looking at this code, there was a stale comment that these
instructions were only used for disassembly. This probably used to
be the case, but they are now used in the 'ARM load / store optimization pass' too.
llvm-svn: 242300
The original version didn't properly account for the base register
being modified before the final jump, so caused miscompilations in
Chromium and LLVM. I've fixed this and tested with an LLVM self-host
(I don't have the means to build & test Chromium).
The general idea remains the same: in pathological cases jump tables
can be too far away from the instructions referencing them (like other
constants) so they need to be movable.
Should fix PR23627.
llvm-svn: 238680
Previously, they were forced to immediately follow the actual branch
instruction. This was usually OK (the LEAs actually accessing them got emitted
nearby, and weren't usually separated much afterwards). Unfortunately, a
sufficiently nasty phi elimination dumps many instructions right before the
basic block terminator, and this can increase the range too much.
This patch frees them up to be placed as usual by the constant islands pass,
and consequently has to slightly modify the form of TBB/TBH tables to refer to
a PC-relative label at the final jump. The other jump table formats were
already position-independent.
rdar://20813304
llvm-svn: 237590
This patch implements LLVM support for the ACLE special register intrinsics in
section 10.1, __arm_{w,r}sr{,p,64}.
This patch is intended to lower the read/write_register instrinsics, used to
implement the special register intrinsics in the clang patch for special
register intrinsics (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D9697), to ARM specific
instructions MRC,MCR,MSR etc. to allow reading an writing of coprocessor
registers in AArch32 and AArch64. This is done by inspecting the register
string passed to the intrinsic and then lowering to the appropriate
instruction.
Patch by Luke Cheeseman.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9699
llvm-svn: 237579
We were creating and propagating two separate indices for each jump table (from
back in the mists of time). However, the generic index used by other backends
is sufficient to emit a unique symbol so this was unneeded.
llvm-svn: 237294
[DebugInfo] Add debug locations to constant SD nodes
This adds debug location to constant nodes of Selection DAG and updates
all places that create constants to pass debug locations
(see PR13269).
Can't guarantee that all locations are correct, but in a lot of cases choice
is obvious, so most of them should be. At least all tests pass.
Tests for these changes do not cover everything, instead just check it for
SDNodes, ARM and AArch64 where it's easy to get incorrect locations on
constants.
This is not complete fix as FastISel contains workaround for wrong debug
locations, which drops locations from instructions on processing constants,
but there isn't currently a way to use debug locations from constants there
as llvm::Constant doesn't cache it (yet). Although this is a bit different
issue, not directly related to these changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9084
llvm-svn: 235989
This adds debug location to constant nodes of Selection DAG and updates
all places that create constants to pass debug locations
(see PR13269).
Can't guarantee that all locations are correct, but in a lot of cases choice
is obvious, so most of them should be. At least all tests pass.
Tests for these changes do not cover everything, instead just check it for
SDNodes, ARM and AArch64 where it's easy to get incorrect locations on
constants.
This is not complete fix as FastISel contains workaround for wrong debug
locations, which drops locations from instructions on processing constants,
but there isn't currently a way to use debug locations from constants there
as llvm::Constant doesn't cache it (yet). Although this is a bit different
issue, not directly related to these changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9084
llvm-svn: 235977
BXJ was incorrectly said to be unsupported in ARMv8-A. It is not
supported in the A64 instruction set, but it is supported in the T32
and A32 instruction sets, because it's listed as an instruction in the
ARM ARM section F7.1.28.
Using SP as an operand to BXJ changed from UNPREDICTABLE to
PREDICTABLE in v8-A. This patch reflects that update as well.
This was found by MCHammer.
llvm-svn: 235024
This shouldn't affect anything in-tree, as the OperandType users are
mostly smart disassemblers and such; more information is helpful there.
However, on the flip side, that + the fact that this is just hinting at
the meaning of operands makes this not really test-worthy or testable.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8620
llvm-svn: 234350
The current instruction selection patterns for SMULW[BT] and SMLAW[BT]
are incorrect. These instructions multiply a 32-bit and a 16-bit value
(both signed) and return the top 32 bits of the 48-bit result. This
preserves the 16 bits of overflow, whereas the patterns they currently
match truncate the result to 16 bits then sign extend.
To select these instructions, we would need to match an ISD::SMUL_LOHI,
a sign extend, two shifts and an or. There is no way to match SMUL_LOHI
in an instruction pattern as it defines multiple values, so this would
have to be done in C++. I have raised
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21297 to cover allowing correct
selection of these instructions.
This fixes http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=19396
llvm-svn: 220196
The Thumb2 BXJ instruction (Branch and Exchange Jazelle) is not
defined for v7M or v8A. It is defined for all other Thumb2-supporting
architectures (v6T2, v7A and v7R).
llvm-svn: 218445
v7M only allows the 16-bit encoding of the 'cps' (Change Processor
State) instruction, and does not have the 32-bit encoding which is
valid from v6T2 onwards.
llvm-svn: 218382
This patch implements a few changes related to the Thumb2 M-class MSR instruction:
* better handling of unpredictable encodings,
* recognition of the _g and _nzcvqg variants by the asm parser only if the DSP
extension is available, preferred output of MSR APSR moves with the _<bits>
suffix for v7-M.
Patch by Petr Pavlu.
llvm-svn: 216874
These are system-only instructions for CPUs with virtualization
extensions, allowing a hypervisor easy access to all of the various
different AArch32 registers.
rdar://problem/17861345
llvm-svn: 215700
The commit after this changes { } and 0bxx literals to be of type bits<n> and not int. This means we need to write exactly the right number of bits, and not rely on the values being silently zero extended for us.
llvm-svn: 215082
Although the final shifter operand is a rotate, this actually only matters for
the half-word extends when the amount == 24. Otherwise folding a shift in is
just as good.
llvm-svn: 213753
This intrinsic permits the emission of platform specific undefined sequences.
ARM has reserved the 0xde opcode which takes a single integer parameter (ignored
by the CPU). This permits the operating system to implement custom behaviour on
this trap. The llvm.arm.undefined intrinsic is meant to provide a means for
generating the target specific behaviour from the frontend. This is
particularly useful for Windows on ARM which has made use of a series of these
special opcodes.
llvm-svn: 209390
The UDF instruction is a reserved undefined instruction space. The assembler
mnemonic was introduced with ARM ARM rev C.a. The instruction is not predicated
and the immediate constant is ignored by the CPU. Add support for the three
encodings for this instruction.
The changes to the invalid instruction test is due to the fact that the invalid
instructions actually overlap with the undefined instruction. Introduction of
the new instruction results in a partial decode as an undefined sequence. Drop
the tests as they are invalid instruction patterns anyways.
llvm-svn: 208751
Introduce the llvm.arm.hint(i32) intrinsic that can be used to inject hints into
the instruction stream. This is particularly useful for generating IR from a
compiler where the user may inject an intrinsic (e.g. __yield). These are then
pattern substituted into the correct instruction which already existed.
llvm-svn: 207242
We've already got versions without the barriers, so this just adds IR-level
support for generating the new v8 ones.
rdar://problem/16227836
llvm-svn: 204813
With constant-sharing, litpool loads consume 4 + N*2 bytes of code, but
movw/movt pairs consume 8*N. This means litpools are better than movw/movt even
with just one use. Other materialisation strategies can still be better though,
so the logic is a little odd.
llvm-svn: 199891
The ARM backend has been using most of the MachO related subtarget
checks almost interchangeably, and since the only target it's had to
run on has been IOS (which is all three of MachO, Darwin and IOS) it's
worked out OK so far.
But we'd like to support embedded targets under the "*-*-none-macho"
triple, which means everything starts falling apart and inconsistent
behaviours emerge.
This patch should pick a reasonably sensible set of behaviours for the
new triple (and any others that come along, with luck). Some choices
were debatable (notably FP == r7 or r11), but we can revisit those
later when deficiencies become apparent.
llvm-svn: 198617
These are handled almost identically to static mode (and ELF's global address
materialisation), except that a symbol may have "$non_lazy_ptr" appended. This
can be handled by passing appropriate flags along with the instruction instead
of using entirely separate pseudo-instructions.
llvm-svn: 195655
There is no sane way for an LEApcrel (= single ADR) instruction to generate a
global address on any ARM target I know of. Fortunately, no-one was trying to
any more, but there were vestigial patterns.
llvm-svn: 195644
Cortex-M0 supports these 32-bit instructions despite being Thumb1 only
(mostly). We knew about that but not that the aliases without the default "sy"
operand were also permitted.
llvm-svn: 194094