A register unit may be allocatable and non-reserved but some of the
register(tuples) built with it are reserved. We still need to calculate
liveness in this case.
Note to out of tree targets: If you start seeing machine verifier errors
with this commit, it probably means that you do not properly mark super
registers of reserved register as reserved. See for example r292836 or
r292870 for example on how to fix that.
rdar://29996737
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28881
llvm-svn: 292871
When a register like R1 is reserved, X1 should be reserved as well. This
was already done "manually" when 64bit code was enabled, however using
the markSuperRegs() function on the base register is more convenient and
allows to use the checksAllSuperRegsMarked() function even in 32bit mode
to avoid accidental breakage in the future.
This is also necessary to allow https://reviews.llvm.org/D28881
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29056
llvm-svn: 292870
Summary:
This patch changes TableGen-generated code in AttrPCHRead to call functions on
ASTRecordReader, instead of passing separate parameters to ASTReader. This is a
follow-up to r290217.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28007
llvm-svn: 292868
Running non-LCSSA-preserving LoopSimplify followed by LCSSA on (roughly) the
same loop is incorrect, since LoopSimplify may break LCSSA arbitrarily higher
in the loop nest. Instead, run LCSSA first, and then run LCSSA-preserving
LoopSimplify on the result.
This fixes PR31718.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29055
llvm-svn: 292854
Summary: promoteIndirectCall should be a utility function that could be invoked by other optimization passes.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29051
llvm-svn: 292850
Summary:
The LibFunc::Func enum holds enumerators named for libc functions.
Unfortunately, there are real situations, including libc implementations, where
function names are actually macros (musl uses "#define fopen64 fopen", for
example; any other transitively visible macro would have similar effects).
Strictly speaking, a conforming C++ Standard Library should provide any such
macros as functions instead (via <cstdio>). However, there are some "library"
functions which are not part of the standard, and thus not subject to this
rule (fopen64, for example). So, in order to be both portable and consistent,
the enum should not use the bare function names.
The old enum naming used a namespace LibFunc and an enum Func, with bare
enumerators. This patch changes LibFunc to be an enum with enumerators prefixed
with "LF_". (Unfortunately, a scoped enum is not sufficient to override macros.)
These changes are for clang. See https://reviews.llvm.org/D28476 for LLVM.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28477
llvm-svn: 292849
Summary:
The LibFunc::Func enum holds enumerators named for libc functions.
Unfortunately, there are real situations, including libc implementations, where
function names are actually macros (musl uses "#define fopen64 fopen", for
example; any other transitively visible macro would have similar effects).
Strictly speaking, a conforming C++ Standard Library should provide any such
macros as functions instead (via <cstdio>). However, there are some "library"
functions which are not part of the standard, and thus not subject to this
rule (fopen64, for example). So, in order to be both portable and consistent,
the enum should not use the bare function names.
The old enum naming used a namespace LibFunc and an enum Func, with bare
enumerators. This patch changes LibFunc to be an enum with enumerators prefixed
with "LibFFunc_". (Unfortunately, a scoped enum is not sufficient to override
macros.)
There are additional changes required in clang.
Reviewers: rsmith
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mzolotukhin, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28476
llvm-svn: 292848
When calculating kills, a register may be considered live because a part
of it is live, but if there is a use of that (whole) register, the whole
register (and its subregisters) need to be added to the live set.
llvm-svn: 292845
Breaks tests on i686/Linux due to missing clang driver support:
error: unsupported option '-fsanitize=leak' for target 'i386-unknown-linux-gnu'
llvm-svn: 292844
Summary:
This patch changes the layout of DoubleAPFloat, and adjust all
operations to do either:
1) (IEEEdouble, IEEEdouble) -> (uint64_t, uint64_t) -> PPCDoubleDoubleImpl,
then run the old algorithm.
2) Do the right thing directly.
1) includes multiply, divide, remainder, mod, fusedMultiplyAdd, roundToIntegral,
convertFromString, next, convertToInteger, convertFromAPInt,
convertFromSignExtendedInteger, convertFromZeroExtendedInteger,
convertToHexString, toString, getExactInverse.
2) includes makeZero, makeLargest, makeSmallest, makeSmallestNormalized,
compare, bitwiseIsEqual, bitcastToAPInt, isDenormal, isSmallest,
isLargest, isInteger, ilogb, scalbn, frexp, hash_value, Profile.
I could split this into two patches, e.g. use
1) for all operatoins first, then incrementally change some of them to
2). I didn't do that, because 1) involves code that converts data between
PPCDoubleDoubleImpl and (IEEEdouble, IEEEdouble) back and forth, and may
pessimize the compiler. Instead, I find easy functions and use
approach 2) for them directly.
Next step is to implement move multiply and divide from 1) to 2). I don't
have plans for other functions in 1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27872
llvm-svn: 292839
<string> uses `decltype` in a way incompatible with `__typeof__`.
This is problematic when compiling <string> with Clang 3.4 because
even though it provides `__decltype` libc++ still used `__typeof__`
because clang 3.4 doesn't provide __is_identifier which libc++
uses to detect __decltype.
This patch manually detects Clang 3.4 and properly configures
for it.
llvm-svn: 292833
in llvm-objdump for Mach-O files add the printing of the
x86_thread_state32_t in the same format as
otool-classic(1) on darwin.
To do this the 32-bit x86 general tread state
needed to be defined in include/llvm/Support/MachO.h .
rdar://30110111
llvm-svn: 292829
Since we're now avoiding operations using narrow scalar integer types,
we have to legalize the integer side of the FP conversions.
This requires teaching the legalizer how to do that.
llvm-svn: 292828
Since r279760, we've been marking as legal operations on narrow integer
types that have wider legal equivalents (for instance, G_ADD s8).
Compared to legalizing these operations, this reduced the amount of
extends/truncates required, but was always a weird legalization decision
made at selection time.
So far, we haven't been able to formalize it in a way that permits the
selector generated from SelectionDAG patterns to be sufficient.
Using a wide instruction (say, s64), when a narrower instruction exists
(s32) would introduce register class incompatibilities (when one narrow
generic instruction is selected to the wider variant, but another is
selected to the narrower variant).
It's also impractical to limit which narrow operations are matched for
which instruction, as restricting "narrow selection" to ranges of types
clashes with potentially incompatible instruction predicates.
Concerns were also raised regarding MIPS64's sign-extended register
assumptions, as well as wrapping behavior.
See discussions in https://reviews.llvm.org/D26878.
Instead, legalize the operations.
Should we ever revert to selecting these narrow operations, we should
try to represent this more accurately: for instance, by separating
a "concrete" type on operations, and an "underlying" type on vregs, we
could move the "this narrow-looking op is really legal" decision to the
legalizer, and let the selector use the "underlying" vreg type only,
which would be guaranteed to map to a register class.
In any case, we eventually should mitigate:
- the performance impact by selecting no-op extract/truncates to COPYs
(which we currently do), and the COPYs to register reuses (which we
don't do yet).
- the compile-time impact by optimizing away extract/truncate sequences
in the legalizer.
llvm-svn: 292827
This is a series of patches to enable adding of machine sched
models for ARM processors easier and compact. They define new
sched-readwrites for groups of ARM instructions. This has been
missing so far, and as a consequence, machine scheduler models
for individual sub-targets have tended to be larger than they
needed to be.
The current patch focuses on floating-point instructions.
Reviewers: Diana Picus (rovka), Renato Golin (rengolin)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28194
llvm-svn: 292825
Summary:
Add a new load command LC_BUILD_VERSION. It is a generic version of
LC_*_VERSION_MIN load_command used on Apple platforms. Instead of having
a seperate load command for each platform, LC_BUILD_VERSION is recording
platform info as an enum. It also records SDK version, min_os, and tools
that used to build the binary.
rdar://problem/29781291
Reviewers: enderby
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29044
llvm-svn: 292824