Now that most of the methods in Clang and LLVM that were parsing arch/cpu/fpu
strings are using ARMTargetParser, it's time to make it a bit more conforming
with what the ABI says.
This commit adds some clarification on what build attributes are accepted and
which are "non-standard". It also makes clear that the "defaultCPU" and
"defaultArch" methods were really just build attribute getters.
It also diverges from GCC's behaviour to say that armv2/armv3 are really an
ARMv4 in the build attributes, when the ABI has a clear state for that: Pre-v4.
llvm-svn: 238344
Before, getCanonicalArchName was relying on parseArch() to validate the arch
name, which was a problem when other methods, that also needed to call it,
were duplicating the steps.
But to dissociate getCanonicalArchName from parseArch, we needed to make
getCanonicalArchName more robust in detecting valid arch names. It's still
not perfect, but will do for the time being, until we merge Triple with
TargetParser into a TargetDescription mega class.
llvm-svn: 238047
This allows us to match armv6m to default to thumb, but will also be used by
Clang's driver and remove the current incomplete copy in it.
llvm-svn: 238036
Simplifying Triple::parseARMArch, leaving all the parsing to ARMTargetParser.
This commit also adds AArch64 detection to ARMTargetParser canonicalization,
and a two RedHat arch names (v{6,7}hl, meaning hard-float / little-endian).
Adding enough unit tests to cover the basics. Clang checks fine.
llvm-svn: 237902
First ARMTargetParser FIXME, conservatively changing the way we parse CPUs
in the back-end. Still not perfect, with a lot of special cases, but moving
towards a more generic solution.
Moving all logic to the target parser made some unwritten assumptions
about architectures in Clang to break. I've added a lot of architectures
required by Clang, and default to CPUs that Clang believes it should
(and I agree).
I've also added a lot of unit tests, with the correct CPU for each
architecture, and Clang seems to be working correctly, too.
It also became clear that using "unsigned ID" as the argument for the get
methods makes it hard to know what ID, so I also changed the argument names
to match the enum type names.
llvm-svn: 237797
sys/time.h on Solaris (and possibly other systems) defines "SEC" as "1"
using a cpp macro. The result is that this fails to compile.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR23482
llvm-svn: 237112
This new class in a global context contain arch-specific knowledge in order
to provide LLVM libraries, tools and projects with the ability to understand
the architectures. For now, only FPU, ARCH and ARCH extensions on ARM are
supported.
Current behaviour it to parse from free-text to enum values and back, so that
all users can share the same parser and codes. This simplifies a lot both the
ASM/Obj streamers in the back-end (where this came from), and the front-end
parsers for command line arguments (where this is going to be used next).
The previous implementation, using .def/.h includes is deprecated due to its
inflexibility to be built without the backend support and for being too
cumbersome. As more architectures join this scheme, and as more features of
such architectures are added (such as hardware features, type sizes, etc) into
a full blown TargetDescription class, having a set of classes is the most
sane implementation.
The ultimate goal of this refactor both LLVM's and Clang's target description
classes into one unique interface, so that we can de-duplicate and standardise
the descriptions, as well as make it available for other front-ends, tools,
etc.
The FPU parsing for command line options in Clang has been converted to use
this new library and a number of aliases were added for compatibility:
* A bogus neon-vfpv3 alias (neon defaults to vfp3)
* armv5/v6
* {fp4/fp5}-{sp/dp}-d16
Next steps:
* Port Clang's ARCH/EXT parsing to use this library.
* Create a TableGen back-end to generate this information.
* Run this TableGen process regardless of which back-ends are built.
* Expose more information and rename it to TargetDescription.
* Continue re-factoring Clang to use as much of it as possible.
llvm-svn: 236900