machineinstr whether the aliased register is dead, rather than the original
register is dead. This allows it to get the correct answer when examining
an instruction like this:
CALLpcrel32 <ga:foo>, %AL<imp-def>, %EAX<imp-def,dead>
where EAX is dead but a subregister of it is still live. This fixes PR5294.
llvm-svn: 85135
bootstrapping. It's not safe to leave identity subreg_to_reg and insert_subreg
around.
- Relax register scavenging to allow use of partially "not-live" registers. It's
common for targets to operate on registers where the top bits are undef. e.g.
s0 =
d0 = insert_subreg d0<undef>, s0, 1
...
= d0
When the insert_subreg is eliminated by the coalescer, the scavenger used to
complain. The previous fix was to keep to insert_subreg around. But that's
brittle and it's overly conservative when we want to use the scavenger to
allocate registers. It's actually legal and desirable for other instructions
to use the "undef" part of d0. e.g.
s0 =
d0 = insert_subreg d0<undef>, s0, 1
...
s1 =
= s1
= d0
We probably need add a "partial-undef" marker on machine operand so the
machine verifier would not complain.
llvm-svn: 85091
used elsewhere - an exit block is a block outside the loop branched to
from within the loop. An exiting block is a block inside the loop that
branches out.
llvm-svn: 85019
to break up CFG diamonds by banishing one of the blocks to the end of
the function, which is bad for code density and branch size.
This does pessimize MultiSource/Benchmarks/Ptrdist/yacr2, the
benchmark cited as the reason for the change, however I've examined
the code and it looks more like a case of gaming a particular
branch than of being generally applicable.
llvm-svn: 84803
tracked. Instead of trying to manually keep track of these locations
while doing complex modifications, just recompute them when they're needed.
This fixes a bug in which the TopMBB and BotMBB were not correctly updated,
leading to invalid transformations.
llvm-svn: 84598
appropriate restore location for the spill as well as perform the actual
save and restore.
The Thumb1 target uses this to make sure R12 is not clobbered while a spilled
scavenger register is live there.
llvm-svn: 84554
stack slots and giving them different PseudoSourceValue's did not fix the
problem of post-alloc scheduling miscompiling llvm itself.
- Apply Dan's conservative workaround by assuming any non fixed stack slots can
alias other memory locations. This means a load from spill slot #1 cannot
move above a store of spill slot #2.
- Enable post-alloc scheduling for x86 at optimization leverl Default and above.
llvm-svn: 84424