These names have been changed from CamelCase to camelCase, but there were
many places (comments mostly) that still used the old names.
This change is NFC.
Describe:
+ Exact tablegen command and how to get it
+ tablegen command debug option for subtarget generation
+ Use of schedcover.py on the debug output to determine coverage
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35058
llvm-svn: 308476
Lots of blocks had "llvm" or "nasm" syntax types but either weren't following
the syntax, or the syntax has changed (and sphinx hasn't keep up) or the type
doesn't even exist (nasm?).
Other documents had :options: what were invalid. I only removed those that had
warnings, and left the ones that didn't, in order to follow the principle of
least surprise.
This is like this for ages, but the buildbot is now failing on errors. It may
take a while to upgrade the buildbot's sphinx, if that's even possible, but
that shouldn't stop us from getting docs updates (which seem down for quite
a while).
Also, we're not losing any syntax highlight, since when it doesn't parse, it
doesn't colour. Ie. those blocks are not being highlighted anyway.
I'm trying to get all docs in one go, so that it's easy to revert later if we
do fix, or at least easy to know what's to fix.
llvm-svn: 276109
Summary: * docs/WritingAnLLVMBackend.rst: Makefiles are no longer used. The users should use CMakeLists.txt. In order to add the target, the TARGETS_TO_BUILD is replaced with LLVM_ALL_TARGETS.
Reviewers: gribozavr, void, beanz
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Patch By: Visoiu Mistrih Francis (thegameg)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20700
llvm-svn: 270921
"Writing an LLVM Compiler Backend" can be misinterpreted as meaning
"backend" in the sense of "using LLVM as a backend for your compiler for
your new language". This new name is less ambiguous.
As a bonus, this brings the title in line with the file name.
llvm-svn: 185377
This patch modifies TableGen to generate a function in
${TARGET}GenInstrInfo.inc called getNamedOperandIdx(), which can be used
to look up indices for operands based on their names.
In order to activate this feature for an instruction, you must set the
UseNamedOperandTable bit.
For example, if you have an instruction like:
def ADD : TargetInstr <(outs GPR:$dst), (ins GPR:$src0, GPR:$src1)>;
You can look up the operand indices using the new function, like this:
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::dst) => 0
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src0) => 1
Target::getNamedOperandIdx(Target::ADD, Target::OpName::src1) => 2
The operand names are case sensitive, so $dst and $DST are considered
different operands.
This change is useful for R600 which has instructions with a large number
of operands, many of which model single bit instruction configuration
values. These configuration bits are common across most instructions,
but may have a different operand index depending on the instruction type.
It is useful to have a convenient way to look up the operand indices,
so these bits can be generically set on any instruction.
llvm-svn: 184879