This gives a DiagnosticType to all AsmOperands in sight. This replaces all
"invalid operand" diagnostics with something more specific. The messages given
should still be sufficiently vague that they're not usually actively misleading
when LLVM guesses your instruction incorrectly.
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Handle chains in which the same offset is used for both loads and
stores to the same array.
Fixes rdar://11410078.
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same so we put in the comment field an indicator when we think we are
emitting the 16 bit version. For the direct object emitter, the difference is
important as well as for other passes which need an accurate count of
program size. There will be other similar putbacks to this for various
instructions.
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Previously, even when a pre-increment load or store was generated,
we often needed to keep a copy of the original base register for use
with other offsets. If all of these offsets are constants (including
the offset which was combined into the addressing mode), then this is
clearly unnecessary. This change adjusts these other offsets to use the
new incremented address.
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Aside from the question of whether we report a warning or an error when we
can't satisfy a requested stack object alignment, the current implementation
of this is not good. We're not providing any source location in the diagnostics
and the current warning is not connected to any warning group so you can't
control it. We could improve the source location somewhat, but we can do a
much better job if this check is implemented in the front-end, so let's do that
instead. <rdar://problem/13127907>
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Thanks to help from Nadav and Hal, I have a more reasonable (and even
correct!) approach. This specifically penalizes the insertelement
and extractelement operations for the performance hit that will occur
on PowerPC processors.
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isn't using the default calling convention. However, if the transformation is
from a call to inline IR, then the calling convention doesn't matter.
rdar://13157990
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Adds a function to target transform info to query for the cost of address
computation. The cost model analysis pass now also queries this interface.
The code in LoopVectorize adds the cost of address computation as part of the
memory instruction cost calculation. Only there, we know whether the instruction
will be scalarized or not.
Increase the penality for inserting in to D registers on swift. This becomes
necessary because we now always assume that address computation has a cost and
three is a closer value to the architecture.
radar://13097204
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allowed size for the instruction. This code uses RegScavenger to fix this.
We sometimes need 2 registers for Mips16 so we must handle things
differently than how register scavenger is normally used.
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These instructions compare two floating point values and return an
integer true (-1) or false (0) value.
When compiling code generated by the Mesa GLSL frontend, the SET*_DX10
instructions save us four instructions for most branch decisions that
use floating-point comparisons.
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The test is a binary placed in test/DebugInfo/Inputs, with a source C
file used for reference/reproducing. The source's first line is a clang
build command for reproducing the binary.
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account. Atoms use LEA for updating SP in prologs/epilogs, and the
exact LEA opcode depends on the data model.
Also reapplying the test case which was added and then reverted
(because of Atom failures), this time specifying explicitly the CPU in
addition to the triple. The test case now checks all variations (data
mode, cpu Atom vs. Core).
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Weakly defined symbols should evaluate to 0 if they're undefined at
link-time. This is impossible to do with the usual address generation
patterns, so we should use a literal pool entry to materlialise the
address.
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These instructions are a late addition to the architecture, and may
yet end up behind an optional attribute, but for now they're available
at all times.
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This adds hints to the various "prfm" instructions so that they can
affect the instruction cache as well as the data cache.
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Failure: undefined symbol 'Lline_table_start0'.
Root-cause: we use a symbol subtraction to calculate at_stmt_list, but
the line table entries are not dumped in the assembly.
Fix: use zero instead of a symbol subtraction for Compile Unit 0.
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We generate one line table for each compilation unit in the object file.
Reviewed by Eric and Kevin.
rdar://problem/13067005
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