- added processors k8-sse3, opteron-sse3, athlon64-sse3, amdfam10, and
barcelona with appropriate sse3/4a levels
- added FeatureSSE4A for amdfam10 processors
in X86Subtarget:
- added hasSSE4A
- updated AutoDetectSubtargetFeatures to detect SSE4A
- updated GetCurrentX86CPU to detect family 15 with sse3 as k8-sse3 and
family 10h as amdfam10
New processor names match those used by gcc.
Patch by Paul Redmond!
llvm-svn: 72434
and extern_weak_odr. These are the same as the non-odr versions,
except that they indicate that the global will only be overridden
by an *equivalent* global. In C, a function with weak linkage can
be overridden by a function which behaves completely differently.
This means that IP passes have to skip weak functions, since any
deductions made from the function definition might be wrong, since
the definition could be replaced by something completely different
at link time. This is not allowed in C++, thanks to the ODR
(One-Definition-Rule): if a function is replaced by another at
link-time, then the new function must be the same as the original
function. If a language knows that a function or other global can
only be overridden by an equivalent global, it can give it the
weak_odr linkage type, and the optimizers will understand that it
is alright to make deductions based on the function body. The
code generators on the other hand map weak and weak_odr linkage
to the same thing.
llvm-svn: 66339
is given, override the subtarget settings and enable 64-bit support.
This restores the earlier behavior, and fixes regressions on
Non-64-bit-capable x86-32 hosts.
This isn't necessarily the best approach, but the most obvious
alternative is to require -mcpu=x86-64 or -mattr=+64bit to be used
with -march=x86-64 when the host doesn't have 64-bit support. This
makes things little more consistent, but it's less convenient, and
it has the practical drawback of requiring lots of test changes, so
I opted for the above approach for now.
llvm-svn: 63642
SSE2, however it's possible to disable SSE2, and the subtarget support
code thinks that if 64-bit implies SSE2 and SSE2 is disabled then
64-bit should also be disabled. Instead, just mark all the 64-bit
subtargets as explicitly supporting SSE2.
Also, move the code that makes -march=x86-64 enable 64-bit support by
default to only apply when there is no explicit subtarget. If you
need to specify a subtarget and you want 64-bit code, you'll need to
select a subtarget that supports 64-bit code.
llvm-svn: 63575
loops when they can be subsumed into addressing modes.
Change X86 addressing mode check to realize that
some PIC references need an extra register.
(I believe this is correct for Linux, if not, I'm sure
someone will tell me.)
llvm-svn: 60608
instead of requiring all "short description" strings to begin with
two spaces. This makes these strings less mysterious, and it fixes
some cases where short description strings mistakenly did not
begin with two spaces.
llvm-svn: 57521
`-fno-builtin' flag. Currently, it's used to replace "memset" with "_bzero"
instead of "__bzero" on Darwin10+. This arguably violates the meaning of this
flag, but is currently sufficient. The meaning of this flag should become more
specific over time.
llvm-svn: 56885
are represented as "weak", but there are subtle differences
in some cases on Darwin, so we need both. The intent
is that "common" will behave identically to "weak" unless
somebody changes their target to do something else.
No functional change as yet.
llvm-svn: 51118