This is a follow-up to r203635. Saleem pointed out that since symbolic register
names are much easier to read, it would be good if we could turn them off only
when we really need to because we're using an external assembler.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3056
llvm-svn: 203806
Support to the IAS was added to actually parse and handle the complex SO
expressions. However, the object file lowering was not updated to compensate
for the fact that the shift operand may be an absolute expression.
When trying to assemble to an object file, the lowering would fail while
succeeding when emitting purely assembly. Add an appropriate test.
The test case is inspired by the test case provided by Jiangning Liu who also
brought the issue to light.
llvm-svn: 203762
It seems gas can't handle CFI directives with VFP register names ("d12", etc.).
This broke us trying to build Chromium for Android after 201423.
A gas bug has been filed: https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=16694
compnerd suggested making this conditional on whether we're using the integrated
assembler or not. I'll look into that in a follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D3049
llvm-svn: 203635
This commit moves getSLEB128Size() and getULEB128Size() from
MCAsmInfo to LEB128.h and removes some copy-and-paste code.
Besides, this commit also adds some unit tests for the LEB128
functions.
llvm-svn: 201937
Summary:
AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() will no longer use the EmitRawText() call for
targets with mature MC support. Such targets will always parse the inline
assembly (even when emitting assembly). Targets without mature MC support
continue to use EmitRawText() for assembly output.
The hasRawTextSupport() check in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() has been replaced
with MCAsmInfo::UseIntegratedAs which when true, causes the integrated assembler
to parse inline assembly (even when emitting assembly output). UseIntegratedAs
is set to true for targets that consider any failure to parse valid assembly
to be a bug. Target specific subclasses generally enable the integrated
assembler in their constructor. The default value can be overridden with
-no-integrated-as.
All tests that rely on inline assembly supporting invalid assembly (for example,
those that use mnemonics such as 'foo' or 'hello world') have been updated to
disable the integrated assembler.
Changes since review (and last commit attempt):
- Fixed test failures that were missed due to configuration of local build.
(fixes crash.ll and a couple others).
- Fixed tests that happened to pass because the local build was on X86
(should fix 2007-12-17-InvokeAsm.ll)
- mature-mc-support.ll's should no longer require all targets to be compiled.
(should fix ARM and PPC buildbots)
- Object output (-filetype=obj and similar) now forces the integrated assembler
to be enabled regardless of default setting or -no-integrated-as.
(should fix SystemZ buildbots)
Reviewers: rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2686
llvm-svn: 201333
Summary:
AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() will no longer use the EmitRawText() call for targets with mature MC support. Such targets will always parse the inline assembly (even when emitting assembly). Targets without mature MC support continue to use EmitRawText() for assembly output.
The hasRawTextSupport() check in AsmPrinter::EmitInlineAsm() has been replaced with MCAsmInfo::UseIntegratedAs which when true, causes the integrated assembler to parse inline assembly (even when emitting assembly output). UseIntegratedAs is set to true for targets that consider any failure to parse valid assembly to be a bug. Target specific subclasses generally enable the integrated assembler in their constructor. The default value can be overridden with -no-integrated-as.
All tests that rely on inline assembly supporting invalid assembly (for example, those that use mnemonics such as 'foo' or 'hello world') have been updated to disable the integrated assembler.
Reviewers: rafael
Reviewed By: rafael
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2686
llvm-svn: 201237
In Thumb1 mode, bl instruction might be selected for branches between
basic blocks in the function if the offset is greater than 2KB.
However, this might cause SEGV because the destination symbol
is not marked as thumb function and the execution mode will be reset
to ARM mode.
Since we are sure that these symbols are in the same data fragment, we
can simply resolve these local symbols, and don't emit any relocation
information for this bl instruction.
llvm-svn: 200842
This patch fixes the ldr-pseudo implementation to work when used in
inline assembly. The fix is to move arm assembler constant pools
from the ARMAsmParser class to the ARMTargetStreamer class.
Previously we kept the assembler generated constant pools in the
ARMAsmParser object. This does not work for inline assembly because
a new parser object is created for each blob of inline assembly.
This patch moves the constant pools to the ARMTargetStreamer class
so that the constant pool will remain alive for the entire code
generation process.
An ARMTargetStreamer class is now required for the arm backend.
There was no existing implementation for MachO, only Asm and ELF.
Instead of creating an empty MachO subclass, we decided to make the
ARMTargetStreamer a non-abstract class and provide default
(llvm_unreachable) implementations for the non constant-pool related
methods.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2638
llvm-svn: 200777
The .object_arch directive indicates an alternative architecture to be specified
in the object file. The directive does *not* effect the enabled feature bits
for the object file generation. This is particularly useful when the code
performs runtime detection and would like to indicate a lower architecture as
the requirements than the actual instructions used.
llvm-svn: 200451
.movsp is an ARM unwinding directive that indicates to the unwinder that a
register contains an offset from the current stack pointer. If the offset is
unspecified, it defaults to zero.
llvm-svn: 200449
This enhances the ARMAsmParser to handle .tlsdescseq directives. This is a
slightly special relocation. We must be able to generate them, but not consume
them in assembly. The relocation is meant to assist the linker in generating a
TLS descriptor sequence. The ELF target streamer is enhanced to append
additional fixups into the current segment and that is used to emit the new
R_ARM_TLS_DESCSEQ relocations.
llvm-svn: 200448
Add support for tlsdesc relocations which are part of the ABI, marked as
experimental. These relocations permit the linker to perform TLS reference
optimizations.
llvm-svn: 200447
This adds support for TLS CALL relocations. TLS CALL relocations are used to
indicate to the linker to generate appropriate entries to resolve TLS references
via an appropriate function invocation (e.g. __tls_get_addr(PLT)).
In order to accomodate the linker relaxation of the TLS access model for the
references (GD/LD -> IE, IE -> LE), the relocation addend must be incomplete.
This requires that the partial inplace value is also incomplete (i.e. 0). We
simply avoid the offset value calculation at the time of the fixup adjustment in
the ARM assembler backend.
llvm-svn: 200446
After all hard work to implement the EHABI and with the test-suite
passing, it's time to turn it on by default and allow users to
disable it as a work-around while we fix the eventual bugs that show
up.
This commit also remove the -arm-enable-ehabi-descriptors, since we
want the tables to be printed every time the EHABI is turned on
for non-Darwin ARM targets.
Although MCJIT EHABI is not working yet (needs linking with the right
libraries), this commit also fixes some relocations on MCJIT regarding
the EH tables/lib calls, and update some tests to avoid using EH tables
when none are needed.
The EH tests in the test-suite that were previously disabled on ARM
now pass with these changes, so a follow-up commit on the test-suite
will re-enable them.
llvm-svn: 200388
The subtarget info is explicitly passed to the EncodeInstruction
method and we should use that subtarget info to influence any
encoding decisions.
llvm-svn: 200350
This brings MC into line with GNU 'as' on ARM, and it brings the ARM
target into line with most other LLVM targets, which declare the
initial CFI state with addInitialFrameState().
Without this, functions generated with .cfi_startproc/endproc on ARM
will tend to cause GDB to abort with:
gdb/dwarf2-frame.c:1132: internal-error: Unknown CFA rule.
I've also tested this by comparing the output of "readelf -w" on the
object files produced by llvm-mc and gas when given the .s file added
here.
This change is part of addressing PR18636.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2597
llvm-svn: 200255
This has a few advantages:
* Only targets that use a MCTargetStreamer have to worry about it.
* There is never a MCTargetStreamer without a MCStreamer, so we can use a
reference.
* A MCTargetStreamer can talk to the MCStreamer in its constructor.
llvm-svn: 200129
There is no inline asm in a .s file. Therefore, there should be no logic to
handle it in the streamer. Inline asm only exists in bitcode files, so the
logic can live in the (long misnamed) AsmPrinter class.
llvm-svn: 200011
This patch restores the ARM mode if the user's inline assembly
does not. In the object streamer, it ensures that instructions
following the inline assembly are encoded correctly and that
correct mapping symbols are emitted. For the asm streamer, it
emits a .arm or .thumb directive.
This patch does not ensure that the inline assembly contains
the ADR instruction to switch modes at runtime.
The problem we need to solve is code like this:
int foo(int a, int b) {
int r = a + b;
asm volatile(
".align 2 \n"
".arm \n"
"add r0,r0,r0 \n"
: : "r"(r));
return r+1;
}
If we compile this function in thumb mode then the inline assembly
will switch to arm mode. We need to make sure that we switch back to
thumb mode after emitting the inline assembly or we will incorrectly
encode the instructions that follow (i.e. the assembly instructions
for return r+1).
Based on patch by David Peixotto
Change-Id: Ib57f6d2d78a22afad5de8693fba6230ff56ba48b
llvm-svn: 199818
This implements the unwind_raw directive for the ARM IAS. The unwind_raw
directive takes the form of a stack offset value followed by one or more bytes
representing the opcodes to be emitted. The opcode emitted will interpreted as
if it were assembled by the opcode assembler via the standard unwinding
directives.
Thanks to Logan Chien for an extra test!
llvm-svn: 199707
The .personalityindex directive is equivalent to the .personality directive with
the ARM EABI personality with the specific index (0, 1, 2). Both of these
directives indicate personality routines, so enhance the personality directive
handling to take into account personalityindex.
Bonus fix: flush the UnwindContext at the beginning of a new function.
Thanks to Logan Chien for additional tests!
llvm-svn: 199706
Ensure that the tag types are reflected on a replacement. This is particularly
important for the compatibility tag which has multiple representations where the
last definition wins.
llvm-svn: 199577
This moves the ARM build attributes definitions and support routines into the
Support library. The support routines simply permit the conversion of the value
to and from a string representation.
The movement is prompted in order to permit access to the constants and string
representations from readobj in order to facilitate decoding of the attributes
section.
llvm-svn: 199575
This will allow it to be called from target independent parts of the main
streamer that don't know if there is a registered target streamer or not. This
in turn will allow targets to perform extra actions at specified points in the
interface: add extra flags for some labels, extra work during finalization, etc.
llvm-svn: 199174
A 32-bit immediate value can be formed from a constant expression and loaded
into a register. Add support to emit this into an object file. Because this
value is a constant, a relocation must *not* be produced for it.
llvm-svn: 199023
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
Parse tag names as well as expressions. The former is part of the
specification, the latter is for improved compatibility with the GNU assembler.
Fix attribute value handling to be comformant to the specification.
llvm-svn: 198662
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
Move the ARM EHABI unwind opcode definitions from the ARM MCTargetDesc into LLVM
Support. This enables sharing of the definitions across the ARM target code as
well as llvm-readobj. This will allow implementation of the unwind decoding in
llvm-readobj.
llvm-svn: 198576
This adds support for the .inst directive. This is an ARM specific directive to
indicate an instruction encoded as a constant expression. The major difference
between .word, .short, or .byte and .inst is that the latter will be
disassembled as an instruction since it does not get flagged as data.
llvm-svn: 197657
According to "Addenda to ABI for ARM architecture", Tag_FP_arch is the
new name for the equivalent Tag_VFP_arch. This commit renames
Tag_VFP_arch to Tag_FP_arch.
llvm-svn: 197587
were falling into the cases for 24-bit branch kinds which are not 24-bit
branches. The routine is to return false for fixups are expected to always
be resolvable at assembly time. Which these three fixups are as they have
limited displacement and are for local references within a function.
rdar://15586725
llvm-svn: 197282
Most users would be surprised if "isCOFF" and "isMachO" were simultaneously
true, unless they'd put the compiler in a box with a gun attached to a photon
detector.
This makes sure precisely one of the three formats is true for any triple and
simplifies some target logic based on that.
llvm-svn: 196934
ARM symbol variants are written with parens instead of @ like this:
.word __GLOBAL_I_a(target1)
This commit adds support for parsing these symbol variants in
expressions. We introduce a new flag to MCAsmInfo that indicates the
parser should use parens to parse the symbol variant. The expression
parser is modified to look for symbol variants using parens instead
of @ when the corresponding MCAsmInfo flag is true.
The MCAsmInfo parens flag is enabled only for ARM on ELF.
By adding this flag to MCAsmInfo, we are able to get rid of
redundant ARM-specific symbol variants and use the generic variants
instead (e.g. VK_GOT instead of VK_ARM_GOT). We use the new
UseParensForSymbolVariant attribute in MCAsmInfo to correctly print
the symbol variants for arm.
To achive this we need to keep a handle to the MCAsmInfo in the
MCSymbolRefExpr class that we can check when printing the symbol
variant.
Updated Tests:
Changed case of symbol variant to match the generic kind.
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls-models.ll
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls1.ll
test/CodeGen/ARM/tls2.ll
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/tls1.ll
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/tls2.ll
PR18080
llvm-svn: 196424
add_public_tablegen_target adds *CommonTableGen to LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS.
LLVM_COMMON_DEPENDS affects add_llvm_library (and other add_target stuff) within its scope.
llvm-svn: 195927
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
Adds a subtarget feature for the CRC instructions (optional in v8-A) to the ARM (32-bit) backend.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2036
llvm-svn: 193599
an MCExpr, in order to avoid writing an encoded zero value in the immediate
field.
When getUnconditionalBranchTargetOpValue is called with an MCExpr target, we
don't know what the final immediate field value should be. We shouldn't
explicitly set the immediate field to an encoded zero value as zero is encoded
with a non-zero bit pattern. This leads to bits being set that pollute the
final immediate value. The nature of the encoding is such that the polluted
bits only affect very large immediate values, explaining why this hasn't
caused problems earlier.
Fixes <rdar://problem/15155975>.
llvm-svn: 193535
This commit allows the ARM integrated assembler to parse
and assemble the code with .eabi_attribute, .cpu, and
.fpu directives.
To implement the feature, this commit moves the code from
AttrEmitter to ARMTargetStreamers, and several new test
cases related to cortex-m4, cortex-r5, and cortex-a15 are
added.
Besides, this commit also change the Subtarget->isFPOnlySP()
to Subtarget->hasD16() to match the usage of .fpu directive.
This commit changes the test cases:
* Several .eabi_attribute directives in
2010-09-29-mc-asm-header-test.ll are removed because the .fpu
directive already cover the functionality.
* In the Cortex-A15 test case, the value for
Tag_Advanced_SIMD_arch has be changed from 1 to 2,
which is more precise.
llvm-svn: 193524
This patch fixes an old FIXME by creating a MCTargetStreamer interface
and moving the target specific functions for ARM, Mips and PPC to it.
The ARM streamer is still declared in a common place because it is
used from lib/CodeGen/ARMException.cpp, but the Mips and PPC are
completely hidden in the corresponding Target directories.
I will send an email to llvmdev with instructions on how to use this.
llvm-svn: 192181
When MC was first added, targets could use hasRawTextSupport to keep features
working before they were added to the MC interface.
The design goal of MC is to provide an uniform api for printing assembly and
object files. Short of relaxations and other corner cases, a object file is
just another representation of the assembly.
It was never the intention that targets would keep doing things like
if (hasRawTextSupport())
Set flags in one way.
else
Set flags in another way.
When they do that they create two code paths and the object file is no longer
just another representation of the assembly. This also then requires testing
with llc -filetype=obj, which is extremelly brittle.
This patch removes some of these hacks by replacing them with smaller ones.
The ARM flag setting is trivial, so I just moved it to the constructor. For
Mips, the patch adds two temporary hack directives that allow the assembly
to represent the same things as the object file was already able to.
The hope is that the mips developers will replace the hack directives with
the same ones that gas uses and drop the -print-hack-directives flag.
I will also try to implement a target streamer interface, so that we can
move this out of the common code.
In summary, for any new work, two rules of the thumb are
* Don't use "llc -filetype=obj" in tests.
* Don't add calls to hasRawTextSupport.
llvm-svn: 192035
The 'Deprecated' class allows you to specify a SubtargetFeature that the
instruction is deprecated on.
The 'ComplexDeprecationPredicate' class allows you to define a custom
predicate that is called to check for deprecation.
For example:
ComplexDeprecationPredicate<"MCR">
would mean you would have to define the following function:
bool getMCRDeprecationInfo(MCInst &MI, MCSubtargetInfo &STI,
std::string &Info)
Which returns 'false' for not deprecated, and 'true' for deprecated
and store the warning message in 'Info'.
The MCTargetAsmParser constructor was chaned to take an extra argument of
the MCInstrInfo class, so out-of-tree targets will need to be changed.
llvm-svn: 190598
We used to generate the compact unwind encoding from the machine
instructions. However, this had the problem that if the user used `-save-temps'
or compiled their hand-written `.s' file (with CFI directives), we wouldn't
generate the compact unwind encoding.
Move the algorithm that generates the compact unwind encoding into the
MCAsmBackend. This way we can generate the encoding whether the code is from a
`.ll' or `.s' file.
<rdar://problem/13623355>
llvm-svn: 190290
Thumb2 literal loads use an offset encoding which allows for
negative zero. This fixes parsing and encoding so that #-0
is correctly processed. The parser represents #-0 as INT32_MIN.
llvm-svn: 188549
The long encoding for Thumb2 unconditional branches is broken.
Additionally, there is no range checking for target operands; as such
for instructions originating in assembly code, only short Thumb encodings
are generated, regardless of the bitsize needed for the offset.
Adding range checking is non trivial due to the representation of Thumb
branch instructions. There is no true difference between conditional and
unconditional branches in terms of operands and syntax - even unconditional
branches have a predicate which is expected to match that of the IT block
they are in. Yet, the encodings and the permitted size of the offset differ.
Due to this, for any mnemonic there are really 4 encodings to choose for.
The problem cannot be handled in the parser alone or by manipulating td files.
Because the parser builds first a set of match candidates and then checks them
one by one, whatever tablegen-only solution might be found will ultimately be
dependent of the parser's evaluation order. What's worse is that due to the fact
that all branches have the same syntax and the same kinds of operands, that
order is governed by the lexicographical ordering of the names of operand
classes...
To circumvent all this, any necessary disambiguation is added to the instruction
validation pass.
llvm-svn: 188067
instructions. With this patch:
1. ldr.n is recognized as mnemonic for the short encoding
2. ldr.w is recognized as menmonic for the long encoding
3. ldr will map to either short or long encodings depending on the size of the offset
llvm-svn: 186831
This is dead code since PIC16 was removed in 2010. The result was an odd mix,
where some parts would carefully pass it along and others would assert it was
zero (most of the object streamer for example).
llvm-svn: 185436
According to ARM EHABI section 9.2, if the
__aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr1() or __aeabi_unwind_cpp_pr2() is
used, then the handler data must be emitted after the unwind
opcodes. The handler data consists of several words, and
should be terminated by zero.
In case that the .handlerdata directive is not specified by
the programmer, we should emit zero to terminate the handler
data.
llvm-svn: 185422
When using a positive offset, literal loads where encoded
as if it was negative, because:
- The sign bit was not assigned to an operand
- The addrmode_imm12 operand was not encoding the sign bit correctly
This patch also makes the assembler look at the .w/.n specifier for
loads.
llvm-svn: 184182
- Don't use assert(0), or tests may pass or fail according to assertions.
- For now, The tests are marked as XFAIL for win32 hosts.
FIXME: Could we avoid XFAIL to specify triple in the RUN lines?
llvm-svn: 183728
Some ARM CPUs only support ARM mode (ancient v4 ones, for example) and some
only support Thumb mode (M-class ones currently). This makes sure such CPUs
default to the correct mode and makes the AsmParser diagnose an attempt to
switch modes incorrectly.
rdar://14024354
llvm-svn: 183710
Changes to ARM unwind opcode assembler:
* Fix multiple .save or .vsave directives. Besides, the
order is preserved now.
* For the directives which will generate multiple opcodes,
such as ".save {r0-r11}", the order of the unwind opcode
is fixed now, i.e. the registers with less encoding value
are popped first.
* Fix the $sp offset calculation. Now, we can use the
.setfp, .pad, .save, and .vsave directives at any order.
Changes to test cases:
* Add test cases to check the order of multiple opcodes
for the .save directive.
* Fix the incorrect $sp offset in the test case. The
stack pointer offset specified in the test case was
incorrect. (Changed test cases: ehabi-mc-section.ll and
ehabi-mc.ll)
* The opcode to restore $sp are slightly reordered. The
behavior are not changed, and the new output is same
as the output of GNU as. (Changed test cases:
eh-directive-pad.s and eh-directive-setfp.s)
llvm-svn: 183627
This patch builds on some existing code to do CFG reconstruction from
a disassembled binary:
- MCModule represents the binary, and has a list of MCAtoms.
- MCAtom represents either disassembled instructions (MCTextAtom), or
contiguous data (MCDataAtom), and covers a specific range of addresses.
- MCBasicBlock and MCFunction form the reconstructed CFG. An MCBB is
backed by an MCTextAtom, and has the usual successors/predecessors.
- MCObjectDisassembler creates a module from an ObjectFile using a
disassembler. It first builds an atom for each section. It can also
construct the CFG, and this splits the text atoms into basic blocks.
MCModule and MCAtom were only sketched out; MCFunction and MCBB were
implemented under the experimental "-cfg" llvm-objdump -macho option.
This cleans them up for further use; llvm-objdump -d -cfg now generates
graphviz files for each function found in the binary.
In the future, MCObjectDisassembler may be the right place to do
"intelligent" disassembly: for example, handling constant islands is just
a matter of splitting the atom, using information that may be available
in the ObjectFile. Also, better initial atom formation than just using
sections is possible using symbols (and things like Mach-O's
function_starts load command).
This brings two minor regressions in llvm-objdump -macho -cfg:
- The printing of a relocation's referenced symbol.
- An annotation on loop BBs, i.e., which are their own successor.
Relocation printing is replaced by the MCSymbolizer; the basic CFG
annotation will be superseded by more related functionality.
llvm-svn: 182628
This is a basic first step towards symbolization of disassembled
instructions. This used to be done using externally provided (C API)
callbacks. This patch introduces:
- the MCSymbolizer class, that mimics the same functions that were used
in the X86 and ARM disassemblers to symbolize immediate operands and
to annotate loads based off PC (for things like c string literals).
- the MCExternalSymbolizer class, which implements the old C API.
- the MCRelocationInfo class, which provides a way for targets to
translate relocations (either object::RelocationRef, or disassembler
C API VariantKinds) to MCExprs.
- the MCObjectSymbolizer class, which does symbolization using what it
finds in an object::ObjectFile. This makes simple symbolization (with
no fancy relocation stuff) work for all object formats!
- x86-64 Mach-O and ELF MCRelocationInfos.
- A basic ARM Mach-O MCRelocationInfo, that provides just enough to
support the C API VariantKinds.
Most of what works in otool (the only user of the old symbolization API
that I know of) for x86-64 symbolic disassembly (-tvV) works, namely:
- symbol references: call _foo; jmp 15 <_foo+50>
- relocations: call _foo-_bar; call _foo-4
- __cf?string: leaq 193(%rip), %rax ## literal pool for "hello"
Stub support is the main missing part (because libObject doesn't know,
among other things, about mach-o indirect symbols).
As for the MCSymbolizer API, instead of relying on the disassemblers
to call the tryAdding* methods, maybe this could be done automagically
using InstrInfo? For instance, even though PC-relative LEAs are used
to get the address of string literals in a typical Mach-O file, a MOV
would be used in an ELF file. And right now, the explicit symbolization
only recognizes PC-relative LEAs. InstrInfo should have already have
most of what is needed to know what to symbolize, so this can
definitely be improved.
I'd also like to remove object::RelocationRef::getValueString (it seems
only used by relocation printing in objdump), as simply printing the
created MCExpr is definitely enough (and cleaner than string concats).
llvm-svn: 182625
It was just a less powerful and more confusing version of
MCCFIInstruction. A side effect is that, since MCCFIInstruction uses
dwarf register numbers, calls to getDwarfRegNum are pushed out, which
should allow further simplifications.
I left the MachineModuleInfo::addFrameMove interface unchanged since
this patch was already fairly big.
llvm-svn: 181680
This commit implements the AsmParser for fnstart, fnend,
cantunwind, personality, handlerdata, pad, setfp, save, and
vsave directives.
This commit fixes some minor issue in the ARMELFStreamer:
* The switch back to corresponding section after the .fnend
directive.
* Emit the unwind opcode while processing .fnend directive
if there is no .handlerdata directive.
* Emit the unwind opcode to .ARM.extab while processing
.handlerdata even if .personality directive does not exist.
llvm-svn: 181603
This fixes an issue where trying to assemlbe valid ADR instructions would cause
LLVM to hit a failed assertion.
Patch by Keith Walker.
llvm-svn: 176189
isa<> and dyn_cast<>. In several places, code is already hacking around
the absence of this, and there seem to be several interfaces that might
be lifted and/or devirtualized using this.
This change was based on a discussion with Jim Grosbach about how best
to handle testing for specific MCStreamer subclasses. He said that this
was the correct end state, and everything else was too hacky so
I decided to just make it so.
No functionality should be changed here, this is just threading the kind
through all the constructors and setting up the classof overloads.
llvm-svn: 174113
This patch adds support for AArch64 (ARM's 64-bit architecture) to
LLVM in the "experimental" category. Currently, it won't be built
unless requested explicitly.
This initial commit should have support for:
+ Assembly of all scalar (i.e. non-NEON, non-Crypto) instructions
(except the late addition CRC instructions).
+ CodeGen features required for C++03 and C99.
+ Compilation for the "small" memory model: code+static data <
4GB.
+ Absolute and position-independent code.
+ GNU-style (i.e. "__thread") TLS.
+ Debugging information.
The principal omission, currently, is performance tuning.
This patch excludes the NEON support also reviewed due to an outbreak of
batshit insanity in our legal department. That will be committed soon bringing
the changes to precisely what has been approved.
Further reviews would be gratefully received.
llvm-svn: 174054
and update ELF header e_flags.
Currently gathering information such as symbol,
section and data is done by collecting it in an
MCAssembler object. From MCAssembler and MCAsmLayout
objects ELFObjectWriter::WriteObject() forms and
streams out the ELF object file.
This patch just adds a few members to the MCAssember
class to store and access the e_flag settings. It
allows for runtime additions to the e_flag by
assembler directives. The standalone assembler can
get to MCAssembler from getParser().getStreamer().getAssembler().
This patch is the generic infrastructure and will be
followed by patches for ARM and Mips for their target
specific use.
Contributer: Jack Carter
llvm-svn: 173882
utils/sort_includes.py script.
Most of these are updating the new R600 target and fixing up a few
regressions that have creeped in since the last time I sorted the
includes.
llvm-svn: 171362
MC disassembler clients (LLDB) are interested in querying if an
instruction may affect control flow other than by virtue of being
an explicit branch instruction. For example, instructions which
write directly to the PC on some architectures.
llvm-svn: 170610
Add R_ARM_NONE and R_ARM_PREL31 relocation types
to MCExpr. Both of them will be used while
generating .ARM.extab and .ARM.exidx sections.
llvm-svn: 169965
Before this patch, when you objdump an LLVM-compiled file, objdump tried to
decode data-in-code sections as if they were code. This patch adds the missing
Mapping Symbols, as defined by "ELF for the ARM Architecture" (ARM IHI 0044D).
Patch based on work by Greg Fitzgerald.
llvm-svn: 169609
The encoding of NOP in ARMAsmBackend.cpp is missing a trailing zero, which
causes the emission of a coprocessor instruction rather than "mov r0, r0"
as indicated in the comment. The test also checks for the wrong encoding.
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20121203/157919.html
llvm-svn: 169420
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.
Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]
llvm-svn: 169131
The target backend can support data-in-code load commands even when
the assembler doesn't, or vice-versa. Allow targets to opt-in for
direct-to-object.
PR13973.
llvm-svn: 164974
When a BL/BLX references a symbol in the same translation unit that is
out of range, use an external relocation. The linker will use this to
generate a branch island rather than a direct reference, allowing the
relocation to resolve correctly.
rdar://12359919
llvm-svn: 164615
This patch fixes load/store instructions to handle less common cases
like "asr #32", "rrx" properly throughout the MC layer.
Patch by Chris Lidbury.
llvm-svn: 164455
- Darwin lied about not supporting .lcomm and turned it into zerofill in the
asm parser. Push the zerofill-conversion down into macho-specific code.
- This makes the tri-state LCOMMType enum superfluous, there are no targets
without .lcomm.
- Do proper error reporting when trying to use .lcomm with alignment on a target
that doesn't support it.
- .comm and .lcomm alignment was parsed in bytes on COFF, should be power of 2.
- Fixes PR13755 (.lcomm crashes on ELF).
llvm-svn: 163395
the register info for getEncodingValue. This builds on the
small patch of yesterday to set HWEncoding in the register
file.
One (deprecated) use was turned into a hard number to avoid
needing register info in the old JIT.
llvm-svn: 161628
where the other_half of the movt and movw relocation entries needs to get set
and only with the 16 bits of the other half.
rdar://10038370
llvm-svn: 160978
Use a dedicated MachO load command to annotate data-in-code regions.
This is the same format the linker produces for final executable images,
allowing consistency of representation and use of introspection tools
for both object and executable files.
Data-in-code regions are annotated via ".data_region"/".end_data_region"
directive pairs, with an optional region type.
data_region_directive := ".data_region" { region_type }
region_type := "jt8" | "jt16" | "jt32" | "jta32"
end_data_region_directive := ".end_data_region"
The previous handling of ARM-style "$d.*" labels was broken and has
been removed. Specifically, it didn't handle ARM vs. Thumb mode when
marking the end of the section.
rdar://11459456
llvm-svn: 157062
for the assembler and disassembler. Which were not being set/read correctly
for offsets greater than 22 bits in some cases.
Changes to lib/Target/ARM/ARMAsmBackend.cpp from Gideon Myles!
llvm-svn: 156118
Expressions for movw/movt don't always have an :upper16: or :lower16:
on them and that's ok. When they don't, it's just a plain [0-65536]
immediate result, effectively the same as a :lower16: variant kind.
rdar://10550147
llvm-svn: 155941
Replace some assert() calls w/ actual diagnostics. In a perfect world,
there'd be range checks on these values long before things ever reached
this code. For now, though, issuing a better-late-than-never diagnostic
is still a big improvement over assert().
rdar://11347287
llvm-svn: 155851
The base address for the PC-relative load is Align(PC,4), so it's the
address of the word containing the 16-bit instruction, not the address
of the instruction itself. Ugh.
rdar://11314619
llvm-svn: 155659
the feature set of v7a. This comes about if the user specifies something like
-arch armv7 -mcpu=cortex-m3. We shouldn't be generating instructions such as
uxtab in this case.
rdar://11318438
llvm-svn: 155601
The ARM code generator makes aggressive assumptions about the encodings
being selected for branches which MCRelaxAll invalidates.
rdar://11006355
llvm-svn: 152268
With the new composite physical registers to represent arbitrary pairs
of DPR registers, we don't need the pseudo-registers anymore. Get rid of
a bunch of them that use DPR register pairs and just use the real
instructions directly instead.
llvm-svn: 152045
We on the linker to resolve calls to the appropriate BL/BLX instruction
to make interworking function correctly. It uses the symbol in the
relocation to do that, so we need to be careful about being too clever.
To enable this for ARM mode, split the BL/BLX fixup kind off from the
unconditional-branch fixups.
rdar://10927209
llvm-svn: 151571
Now that the clang driver passes the CPU and feature information to
the backend when processing assembly files (150273), this isn't necessary.
llvm-svn: 150274
Adjust an example MachObjectWriter diagnostic to use the information
to issue a better message.
Before:
LLVM ERROR: unknown ARM fixup kind!
After:
x.s:6:5: error: unsupported relocation on symbol
beq bar
^
rdar://9800182
llvm-svn: 149093
This enables the linker to match concrete relocation types (absolute or relative) with whatever library or C++ support code is being linked against.
llvm-svn: 149057
violation -- MC cannot depend on CodeGen.
Specifically, the MCTargetDesc component of each target is actually
a subcomponent of the MC library. As such, it cannot depend on the
target-independent code generator, because MC itself cannot depend on
the target-independent code generator. This change moved a flag from the
ARM MCTargetDesc file ARMMCAsmInfo.cpp to the CodeGen layer in
ARMException.cpp, leaving behind an 'extern' to refer back to it. That
layering order isn't viable givin the constraints outlined above.
Commandline flags are designed to be static specifically to avoid these
types of bugs.
Fixing this is likely going to require some non-trivial refactoring.
llvm-svn: 148759
This change adds an new value to the --arm-enable-ehabi option that
disables emitting unwinding descriptors. This mode gives a working
backtrace() without the (currently broken) exception support.
llvm-svn: 148686
Load/store instructions w/ a fixup to be relative a function marked as thumb
don't use the low bit to specify thumb vs. non-thumb like interworking
branches do, so don't set it when dealing with those fixups.
rdar://10348687.
llvm-svn: 148366
When the file isn't being built with subsections-via-symbols, symbol
differences involving non-local symbols can be resolved more aggressively.
Needed for gas compatibility.
llvm-svn: 146054
Whether a fixup needs relaxation for the associated instruction is a
target-specific function, as the FIXME indicated. Create a hook for that
and use it.
llvm-svn: 145881
Not right yet, as the rules for when to relax in the MCAssembler aren't
(yet) correct for ARM. This is a step in the proper direction, though.
llvm-svn: 145871
We don't (yet) have the granularity in the fixups to be specific about which
bitranges are affected. That's a future cleanup, but we're not there yet.
llvm-svn: 144852
and code model. This eliminates the need to pass OptLevel flag all over the
place and makes it possible for any codegen pass to use this information.
llvm-svn: 144788
Remove an assert that was expecting only the relevant 16bit portion for
the fixup being handled. Also kill some dead code in the T2 portion.
rdar://9653509
llvm-svn: 140861
Encode the immediate into its 8-bit form as part of isel rather than later,
which simplifies things for mapping the encoding bits, allows the removal
of the custom disassembler decoding hook, makes the operand printer trivial,
and prepares things more cleanly for handling these in the asm parser.
rdar://10211428
llvm-svn: 140834
Build on previous patches to successfully distinguish between an M-series and A/R-series MSR and MRS instruction. These take different mask names and have a *slightly* different opcode format.
Add decoder and disassembler tests.
Improvement on the previous patch - successfully distinguish between valid v6m and v7m masks (one is a subset of the other). The patch had to be edited slightly to apply to ToT.
llvm-svn: 140696
instructions are more aligned than the CPU requires, and adds some additional
directives, to follow in future patches. Patch by David Meyer!
llvm-svn: 139125
- On COFF the .lcomm directive has an alignment argument.
- On ELF we fall back to .local + .comm
Based on a patch by NAKAMURA Takumi.
Fixes PR9337, PR9483 and PR10128.
llvm-svn: 138976
These fixups are handled poorly in general, and should have a single
contiguous range of bits per fixup type, but that's not how they're
currently organized, so for now in complex ones like for blx, we just tell the
emitter it's OK for the fixup to munge any bit it wants.
llvm-svn: 137947
Represent the operand value as it will be encoded in the instruction. This
allows removing the specialized encoder and decoder methods entirely. Add
an assembler match class while we're at it to lay groundwork for parsing the
thumb shift instructions.
llvm-svn: 137879
Thumb one requires that many arithmetic instruction forms have an 'S'
suffix. For Thumb2, the whether the suffix is required or precluded depends
on whether the instruction is in an IT block. Use target parser predicates
to check for these sorts of context-sensitive constraints.
llvm-svn: 137746
Memory operand parsing is a bit haphazzard at the moment, in no small part
due to the even more haphazzard representations of memory operands in the .td
files. Start cleaning that all up, at least a bit.
The addressing modes in the .td files will be being simplified to not be
so monolithic, especially with regards to immediate vs. register offsets
and post-indexed addressing. addrmode3 is on its way with this patch, for
example.
This patch is foundational to enable going back to smaller incremental patches
for the individual memory referencing instructions themselves. It does just
enough to get the basics in place and handle the "make check" regression tests
we already have.
Follow-up work will be fleshing out the details and adding more robust test
cases for the individual instructions, starting with ARM mode and moving from
there into Thumb and Thumb2.
llvm-svn: 136845
specified in the same file that the library itself is created. This is
more idiomatic for CMake builds, and also allows us to correctly specify
dependencies that are missed due to bugs in the GenLibDeps perl script,
or change from compiler to compiler. On Linux, this returns CMake to
a place where it can relably rebuild several targets of LLVM.
I have tried not to change the dependencies from the ones in the current
auto-generated file. The only places I've really diverged are in places
where I was seeing link failures, and added a dependency. The goal of
this patch is not to start changing the dependencies, merely to move
them into the correct location, and an explicit form that we can control
and change when necessary.
This also removes a serialization point in the build because we don't
have to scan all the libraries before we begin building various tools.
We no longer have a step of the build that regenerates a file inside the
source tree. A few other associated cleanups fall out of this.
This isn't really finished yet though. After talking to dgregor he urged
switching to a single CMake macro to construct libraries with both
sources and dependencies in the arguments. Migrating from the two macros
to that style will be a follow-up patch.
Also, llvm-config is still generated with GenLibDeps.pl, which means it
still has slightly buggy dependencies. The internal CMake
'llvm-config-like' macro uses the correct explicitly specified
dependencies however. A future patch will switch llvm-config generation
(when using CMake) to be based on these deps as well.
This may well break Windows. I'm getting a machine set up now to dig
into any failures there. If anyone can chime in with problems they see
or ideas of how to solve them for Windows, much appreciated.
llvm-svn: 136433
LLVM*AsmPrinter.
GenLibDeps.pl fails to detect vtable references. As this is the only
referenced symbol from LLVM*Desc to LLVM*AsmPrinter on optimized
builds, the algorithm that creates the list of libraries to be linked
into tools doesn't know about the dependency and sometimes places the
libraries on the wrong order, yielding error messages like this:
../../lib/libLLVMARMDesc.a(ARMMCTargetDesc.cpp.o): In function
`llvm::ARMInstPrinter::ARMInstPrinter(llvm::MCAsmInfo const&)':
ARMMCTargetDesc.cpp:(.text._ZN4llvm14ARMInstPrinterC1ERKNS_9MCAsmInfoE
[llvm::ARMInstPrinter::ARMInstPrinter(llvm::MCAsmInfo
const&)]+0x2a): undefined reference to `vtable for
llvm::ARMInstPrinter'
llvm-svn: 136328
This can happen in cases where TableGen generated asm matcher cannot check
whether a register operand is in the right register class. e.g. mem operands.
rdar://8204588
llvm-svn: 136292
Encode the width operand as it encodes in the instruction, which simplifies
the disassembler and the encoder, by using the imm1_32 operand def. Add a
diagnostic for the context-sensitive constraint that the width must be in
the range [1,32-lsb].
llvm-svn: 136264
Start of cleaning this up a bit. First step is to remove the encoder hook by
storing the operand as the bits it'll actually encode to so it can just be
directly used. Map it to the assembly source values 8/16/24 when we print it.
llvm-svn: 136152
The first problem to fix is to stop creating synthetic *Table_gen
targets next to all of the LLVM libraries. These had no real effect as
CMake specifies that add_custom_command(OUTPUT ...) directives (what the
'tablegen(...)' stuff expands to) are implicitly added as dependencies
to all the rules in that CMakeLists.txt.
These synthetic rules started to cause problems as we started more and
more heavily using tablegen files from *subdirectories* of the one where
they were generated. Within those directories, the set of tablegen
outputs was still available and so these synthetic rules added them as
dependencies of those subdirectories. However, they were no longer
properly associated with the custom command to generate them. Most of
the time this "just worked" because something would get to the parent
directory first, and run tablegen there. Once run, the files existed and
the build proceeded happily. However, as more and more subdirectories
have started using this, the probability of this failing to happen has
increased. Recently with the MC refactorings, it became quite common for
me when touching a large enough number of targets.
To add insult to injury, several of the backends *tried* to fix this by
adding explicit dependencies back to the parent directory's tablegen
rules, but those dependencies didn't work as expected -- they weren't
forming a linear chain, they were adding another thread in the race.
This patch removes these synthetic rules completely, and adds a much
simpler function to declare explicitly that a collection of tablegen'ed
files are referenced by other libraries. From that, we can add explicit
dependencies from the smaller libraries (such as every architectures
Desc library) on this and correctly form a linear sequence. All of the
backends are updated to use it, sometimes replacing the existing attempt
at adding a dependency, sometimes adding a previously missing dependency
edge.
Please let me know if this causes any problems, but it fixes a rather
persistent and problematic source of build flakiness on our end.
llvm-svn: 136023
- Introduce JITDefault code model. This tells targets to set different default
code model for JIT. This eliminates the ugly hack in TargetMachine where
code model is changed after construction.
llvm-svn: 135580
(including compilation, assembly). Move relocation model Reloc::Model from
TargetMachine to MCCodeGenInfo so it's accessible even without TargetMachine.
llvm-svn: 135468
to MCRegisterInfo. Also initialize the mapping at construction time.
This patch eliminate TargetRegisterInfo from TargetAsmInfo. It's another step
towards fixing the layering violation.
llvm-svn: 135424
backend. Moved some MCAsmInfo files down into the MCTargetDesc
sublibraries, removed some (i suspect long) dead files from other parts
of the CMake build, etc. Also copied the include directory hack from the
Makefile.
Finally, updated the lib deps. I spot checked this, and think its
correct, but review appreciated there.
llvm-svn: 135234
and MCSubtargetInfo.
- Added methods to update subtarget features (used when targets automatically
detect subtarget features or switch modes).
- Teach X86Subtarget to update MCSubtargetInfo features bits since the
MCSubtargetInfo layer can be shared with other modules.
- These fixes .code 16 / .code 32 support since mode switch is updated in
MCSubtargetInfo so MC code emitter can do the right thing.
llvm-svn: 134884
CPU, and feature string. Parsing some asm directives can change
subtarget state (e.g. .code 16) and it must be reflected in other
modules (e.g. MCCodeEmitter). That is, the MCSubtargetInfo instance
must be shared.
llvm-svn: 134795
- Each target asm parser now creates its own MCSubtatgetInfo (if needed).
- Changed AssemblerPredicate to take subtarget features which tablegen uses
to generate asm matcher subtarget feature queries. e.g.
"ModeThumb,FeatureThumb2" is translated to
"(Bits & ModeThumb) != 0 && (Bits & FeatureThumb2) != 0".
llvm-svn: 134678