| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| // Random ideas for the ARM backend. |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Reimplement 'select' in terms of 'SEL'. |
| |
| * We would really like to support UXTAB16, but we need to prove that the |
| add doesn't need to overflow between the two 16-bit chunks. |
| |
| * Implement pre/post increment support. (e.g. PR935) |
| * Implement smarter constant generation for binops with large immediates. |
| |
| A few ARMv6T2 ops should be pattern matched: BFI, SBFX, and UBFX |
| |
| Interesting optimization for PIC codegen on arm-linux: |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=43129 |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Crazy idea: Consider code that uses lots of 8-bit or 16-bit values. By the |
| time regalloc happens, these values are now in a 32-bit register, usually with |
| the top-bits known to be sign or zero extended. If spilled, we should be able |
| to spill these to a 8-bit or 16-bit stack slot, zero or sign extending as part |
| of the reload. |
| |
| Doing this reduces the size of the stack frame (important for thumb etc), and |
| also increases the likelihood that we will be able to reload multiple values |
| from the stack with a single load. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| The constant island pass is in good shape. Some cleanups might be desirable, |
| but there is unlikely to be much improvement in the generated code. |
| |
| 1. There may be some advantage to trying to be smarter about the initial |
| placement, rather than putting everything at the end. |
| |
| 2. There might be some compile-time efficiency to be had by representing |
| consecutive islands as a single block rather than multiple blocks. |
| |
| 3. Use a priority queue to sort constant pool users in inverse order of |
| position so we always process the one closed to the end of functions |
| first. This may simply CreateNewWater. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Eliminate copysign custom expansion. We are still generating crappy code with |
| default expansion + if-conversion. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Eliminate one instruction from: |
| |
| define i32 @_Z6slow4bii(i32 %x, i32 %y) { |
| %tmp = icmp sgt i32 %x, %y |
| %retval = select i1 %tmp, i32 %x, i32 %y |
| ret i32 %retval |
| } |
| |
| __Z6slow4bii: |
| cmp r0, r1 |
| movgt r1, r0 |
| mov r0, r1 |
| bx lr |
| => |
| |
| __Z6slow4bii: |
| cmp r0, r1 |
| movle r0, r1 |
| bx lr |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Implement long long "X-3" with instructions that fold the immediate in. These |
| were disabled due to badness with the ARM carry flag on subtracts. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| More load / store optimizations: |
| 1) Better representation for block transfer? This is from Olden/power: |
| |
| fldd d0, [r4] |
| fstd d0, [r4, #+32] |
| fldd d0, [r4, #+8] |
| fstd d0, [r4, #+40] |
| fldd d0, [r4, #+16] |
| fstd d0, [r4, #+48] |
| fldd d0, [r4, #+24] |
| fstd d0, [r4, #+56] |
| |
| If we can spare the registers, it would be better to use fldm and fstm here. |
| Need major register allocator enhancement though. |
| |
| 2) Can we recognize the relative position of constantpool entries? i.e. Treat |
| |
| ldr r0, LCPI17_3 |
| ldr r1, LCPI17_4 |
| ldr r2, LCPI17_5 |
| |
| as |
| ldr r0, LCPI17 |
| ldr r1, LCPI17+4 |
| ldr r2, LCPI17+8 |
| |
| Then the ldr's can be combined into a single ldm. See Olden/power. |
| |
| Note for ARM v4 gcc uses ldmia to load a pair of 32-bit values to represent a |
| double 64-bit FP constant: |
| |
| adr r0, L6 |
| ldmia r0, {r0-r1} |
| |
| .align 2 |
| L6: |
| .long -858993459 |
| .long 1074318540 |
| |
| 3) struct copies appear to be done field by field |
| instead of by words, at least sometimes: |
| |
| struct foo { int x; short s; char c1; char c2; }; |
| void cpy(struct foo*a, struct foo*b) { *a = *b; } |
| |
| llvm code (-O2) |
| ldrb r3, [r1, #+6] |
| ldr r2, [r1] |
| ldrb r12, [r1, #+7] |
| ldrh r1, [r1, #+4] |
| str r2, [r0] |
| strh r1, [r0, #+4] |
| strb r3, [r0, #+6] |
| strb r12, [r0, #+7] |
| gcc code (-O2) |
| ldmia r1, {r1-r2} |
| stmia r0, {r1-r2} |
| |
| In this benchmark poor handling of aggregate copies has shown up as |
| having a large effect on size, and possibly speed as well (we don't have |
| a good way to measure on ARM). |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| * Consider this silly example: |
| |
| double bar(double x) { |
| double r = foo(3.1); |
| return x+r; |
| } |
| |
| _bar: |
| stmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r7, lr} |
| add r7, sp, #8 |
| mov r4, r0 |
| mov r5, r1 |
| fldd d0, LCPI1_0 |
| fmrrd r0, r1, d0 |
| bl _foo |
| fmdrr d0, r4, r5 |
| fmsr s2, r0 |
| fsitod d1, s2 |
| faddd d0, d1, d0 |
| fmrrd r0, r1, d0 |
| ldmfd sp!, {r4, r5, r7, pc} |
| |
| Ignore the prologue and epilogue stuff for a second. Note |
| mov r4, r0 |
| mov r5, r1 |
| the copys to callee-save registers and the fact they are only being used by the |
| fmdrr instruction. It would have been better had the fmdrr been scheduled |
| before the call and place the result in a callee-save DPR register. The two |
| mov ops would not have been necessary. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Calling convention related stuff: |
| |
| * gcc's parameter passing implementation is terrible and we suffer as a result: |
| |
| e.g. |
| struct s { |
| double d1; |
| int s1; |
| }; |
| |
| void foo(struct s S) { |
| printf("%g, %d\n", S.d1, S.s1); |
| } |
| |
| 'S' is passed via registers r0, r1, r2. But gcc stores them to the stack, and |
| then reload them to r1, r2, and r3 before issuing the call (r0 contains the |
| address of the format string): |
| |
| stmfd sp!, {r7, lr} |
| add r7, sp, #0 |
| sub sp, sp, #12 |
| stmia sp, {r0, r1, r2} |
| ldmia sp, {r1-r2} |
| ldr r0, L5 |
| ldr r3, [sp, #8] |
| L2: |
| add r0, pc, r0 |
| bl L_printf$stub |
| |
| Instead of a stmia, ldmia, and a ldr, wouldn't it be better to do three moves? |
| |
| * Return an aggregate type is even worse: |
| |
| e.g. |
| struct s foo(void) { |
| struct s S = {1.1, 2}; |
| return S; |
| } |
| |
| mov ip, r0 |
| ldr r0, L5 |
| sub sp, sp, #12 |
| L2: |
| add r0, pc, r0 |
| @ lr needed for prologue |
| ldmia r0, {r0, r1, r2} |
| stmia sp, {r0, r1, r2} |
| stmia ip, {r0, r1, r2} |
| mov r0, ip |
| add sp, sp, #12 |
| bx lr |
| |
| r0 (and later ip) is the hidden parameter from caller to store the value in. The |
| first ldmia loads the constants into r0, r1, r2. The last stmia stores r0, r1, |
| r2 into the address passed in. However, there is one additional stmia that |
| stores r0, r1, and r2 to some stack location. The store is dead. |
| |
| The llvm-gcc generated code looks like this: |
| |
| csretcc void %foo(%struct.s* %agg.result) { |
| entry: |
| %S = alloca %struct.s, align 4 ; <%struct.s*> [#uses=1] |
| %memtmp = alloca %struct.s ; <%struct.s*> [#uses=1] |
| cast %struct.s* %S to sbyte* ; <sbyte*>:0 [#uses=2] |
| call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %0, sbyte* cast ({ double, int }* %C.0.904 to sbyte*), uint 12, uint 4 ) |
| cast %struct.s* %agg.result to sbyte* ; <sbyte*>:1 [#uses=2] |
| call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %1, sbyte* %0, uint 12, uint 0 ) |
| cast %struct.s* %memtmp to sbyte* ; <sbyte*>:2 [#uses=1] |
| call void %llvm.memcpy.i32( sbyte* %2, sbyte* %1, uint 12, uint 0 ) |
| ret void |
| } |
| |
| llc ends up issuing two memcpy's (the first memcpy becomes 3 loads from |
| constantpool). Perhaps we should 1) fix llvm-gcc so the memcpy is translated |
| into a number of load and stores, or 2) custom lower memcpy (of small size) to |
| be ldmia / stmia. I think option 2 is better but the current register |
| allocator cannot allocate a chunk of registers at a time. |
| |
| A feasible temporary solution is to use specific physical registers at the |
| lowering time for small (<= 4 words?) transfer size. |
| |
| * ARM CSRet calling convention requires the hidden argument to be returned by |
| the callee. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| We can definitely do a better job on BB placements to eliminate some branches. |
| It's very common to see llvm generated assembly code that looks like this: |
| |
| LBB3: |
| ... |
| LBB4: |
| ... |
| beq LBB3 |
| b LBB2 |
| |
| If BB4 is the only predecessor of BB3, then we can emit BB3 after BB4. We can |
| then eliminate beq and turn the unconditional branch to LBB2 to a bne. |
| |
| See McCat/18-imp/ComputeBoundingBoxes for an example. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Pre-/post- indexed load / stores: |
| |
| 1) We should not make the pre/post- indexed load/store transform if the base ptr |
| is guaranteed to be live beyond the load/store. This can happen if the base |
| ptr is live out of the block we are performing the optimization. e.g. |
| |
| mov r1, r2 |
| ldr r3, [r1], #4 |
| ... |
| |
| vs. |
| |
| ldr r3, [r2] |
| add r1, r2, #4 |
| ... |
| |
| In most cases, this is just a wasted optimization. However, sometimes it can |
| negatively impact the performance because two-address code is more restrictive |
| when it comes to scheduling. |
| |
| Unfortunately, liveout information is currently unavailable during DAG combine |
| time. |
| |
| 2) Consider spliting a indexed load / store into a pair of add/sub + load/store |
| to solve #1 (in TwoAddressInstructionPass.cpp). |
| |
| 3) Enhance LSR to generate more opportunities for indexed ops. |
| |
| 4) Once we added support for multiple result patterns, write indexed loads |
| patterns instead of C++ instruction selection code. |
| |
| 5) Use VLDM / VSTM to emulate indexed FP load / store. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Implement support for some more tricky ways to materialize immediates. For |
| example, to get 0xffff8000, we can use: |
| |
| mov r9, #&3f8000 |
| sub r9, r9, #&400000 |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| We sometimes generate multiple add / sub instructions to update sp in prologue |
| and epilogue if the inc / dec value is too large to fit in a single immediate |
| operand. In some cases, perhaps it might be better to load the value from a |
| constantpool instead. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| GCC generates significantly better code for this function. |
| |
| int foo(int StackPtr, unsigned char *Line, unsigned char *Stack, int LineLen) { |
| int i = 0; |
| |
| if (StackPtr != 0) { |
| while (StackPtr != 0 && i < (((LineLen) < (32768))? (LineLen) : (32768))) |
| Line[i++] = Stack[--StackPtr]; |
| if (LineLen > 32768) |
| { |
| while (StackPtr != 0 && i < LineLen) |
| { |
| i++; |
| --StackPtr; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| return StackPtr; |
| } |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| This should compile to the mlas instruction: |
| int mlas(int x, int y, int z) { return ((x * y + z) < 0) ? 7 : 13; } |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| At some point, we should triage these to see if they still apply to us: |
| |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=19598 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18560 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27016 |
| |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11831 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11826 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11825 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11824 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11823 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11820 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10982 |
| |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=10242 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9831 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9760 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9759 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9703 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9702 |
| http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9663 |
| |
| http://www.inf.u-szeged.hu/gcc-arm/ |
| http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/debus04linktime.html |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| gcc generates smaller code for this function at -O2 or -Os: |
| |
| void foo(signed char* p) { |
| if (*p == 3) |
| bar(); |
| else if (*p == 4) |
| baz(); |
| else if (*p == 5) |
| quux(); |
| } |
| |
| llvm decides it's a good idea to turn the repeated if...else into a |
| binary tree, as if it were a switch; the resulting code requires -1 |
| compare-and-branches when *p<=2 or *p==5, the same number if *p==4 |
| or *p>6, and +1 if *p==3. So it should be a speed win |
| (on balance). However, the revised code is larger, with 4 conditional |
| branches instead of 3. |
| |
| More seriously, there is a byte->word extend before |
| each comparison, where there should be only one, and the condition codes |
| are not remembered when the same two values are compared twice. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| More LSR enhancements possible: |
| |
| 1. Teach LSR about pre- and post- indexed ops to allow iv increment be merged |
| in a load / store. |
| 2. Allow iv reuse even when a type conversion is required. For example, i8 |
| and i32 load / store addressing modes are identical. |
| |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| This: |
| |
| int foo(int a, int b, int c, int d) { |
| long long acc = (long long)a * (long long)b; |
| acc += (long long)c * (long long)d; |
| return (int)(acc >> 32); |
| } |
| |
| Should compile to use SMLAL (Signed Multiply Accumulate Long) which multiplies |
| two signed 32-bit values to produce a 64-bit value, and accumulates this with |
| a 64-bit value. |
| |
| We currently get this with both v4 and v6: |
| |
| _foo: |
| smull r1, r0, r1, r0 |
| smull r3, r2, r3, r2 |
| adds r3, r3, r1 |
| adc r0, r2, r0 |
| bx lr |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| This: |
| #include <algorithm> |
| std::pair<unsigned, bool> full_add(unsigned a, unsigned b) |
| { return std::make_pair(a + b, a + b < a); } |
| bool no_overflow(unsigned a, unsigned b) |
| { return !full_add(a, b).second; } |
| |
| Should compile to: |
| |
| _Z8full_addjj: |
| adds r2, r1, r2 |
| movcc r1, #0 |
| movcs r1, #1 |
| str r2, [r0, #0] |
| strb r1, [r0, #4] |
| mov pc, lr |
| |
| _Z11no_overflowjj: |
| cmn r0, r1 |
| movcs r0, #0 |
| movcc r0, #1 |
| mov pc, lr |
| |
| not: |
| |
| __Z8full_addjj: |
| add r3, r2, r1 |
| str r3, [r0] |
| mov r2, #1 |
| mov r12, #0 |
| cmp r3, r1 |
| movlo r12, r2 |
| str r12, [r0, #+4] |
| bx lr |
| __Z11no_overflowjj: |
| add r3, r1, r0 |
| mov r2, #1 |
| mov r1, #0 |
| cmp r3, r0 |
| movhs r1, r2 |
| mov r0, r1 |
| bx lr |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Some of the NEON intrinsics may be appropriate for more general use, either |
| as target-independent intrinsics or perhaps elsewhere in the ARM backend. |
| Some of them may also be lowered to target-independent SDNodes, and perhaps |
| some new SDNodes could be added. |
| |
| For example, maximum, minimum, and absolute value operations are well-defined |
| and standard operations, both for vector and scalar types. |
| |
| The current NEON-specific intrinsics for count leading zeros and count one |
| bits could perhaps be replaced by the target-independent ctlz and ctpop |
| intrinsics. It may also make sense to add a target-independent "ctls" |
| intrinsic for "count leading sign bits". Likewise, the backend could use |
| the target-independent SDNodes for these operations. |
| |
| ARMv6 has scalar saturating and halving adds and subtracts. The same |
| intrinsics could possibly be used for both NEON's vector implementations of |
| those operations and the ARMv6 scalar versions. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Split out LDR (literal) from normal ARM LDR instruction. Also consider spliting |
| LDR into imm12 and so_reg forms. This allows us to clean up some code. e.g. |
| ARMLoadStoreOptimizer does not need to look at LDR (literal) and LDR (so_reg) |
| while ARMConstantIslandPass only need to worry about LDR (literal). |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Constant island pass should make use of full range SoImm values for LEApcrel. |
| Be careful though as the last attempt caused infinite looping on lencod. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Predication issue. This function: |
| |
| extern unsigned array[ 128 ]; |
| int foo( int x ) { |
| int y; |
| y = array[ x & 127 ]; |
| if ( x & 128 ) |
| y = 123456789 & ( y >> 2 ); |
| else |
| y = 123456789 & y; |
| return y; |
| } |
| |
| compiles to: |
| |
| _foo: |
| and r1, r0, #127 |
| ldr r2, LCPI1_0 |
| ldr r2, [r2] |
| ldr r1, [r2, +r1, lsl #2] |
| mov r2, r1, lsr #2 |
| tst r0, #128 |
| moveq r2, r1 |
| ldr r0, LCPI1_1 |
| and r0, r2, r0 |
| bx lr |
| |
| It would be better to do something like this, to fold the shift into the |
| conditional move: |
| |
| and r1, r0, #127 |
| ldr r2, LCPI1_0 |
| ldr r2, [r2] |
| ldr r1, [r2, +r1, lsl #2] |
| tst r0, #128 |
| movne r1, r1, lsr #2 |
| ldr r0, LCPI1_1 |
| and r0, r1, r0 |
| bx lr |
| |
| it saves an instruction and a register. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| It might be profitable to cse MOVi16 if there are lots of 32-bit immediates |
| with the same bottom half. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Robert Muth started working on an alternate jump table implementation that |
| does not put the tables in-line in the text. This is more like the llvm |
| default jump table implementation. This might be useful sometime. Several |
| revisions of patches are on the mailing list, beginning at: |
| http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2009-June/022763.html |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Make use of the "rbit" instruction. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Take a look at test/CodeGen/Thumb2/machine-licm.ll. ARM should be taught how |
| to licm and cse the unnecessary load from cp#1. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| The CMN instruction sets the flags like an ADD instruction, while CMP sets |
| them like a subtract. Therefore to be able to use CMN for comparisons other |
| than the Z bit, we'll need additional logic to reverse the conditionals |
| associated with the comparison. Perhaps a pseudo-instruction for the comparison, |
| with a post-codegen pass to clean up and handle the condition codes? |
| See PR5694 for testcase. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Given the following on armv5: |
| int test1(int A, int B) { |
| return (A&-8388481)|(B&8388480); |
| } |
| |
| We currently generate: |
| ldr r2, .LCPI0_0 |
| and r0, r0, r2 |
| ldr r2, .LCPI0_1 |
| and r1, r1, r2 |
| orr r0, r1, r0 |
| bx lr |
| |
| We should be able to replace the second ldr+and with a bic (i.e. reuse the |
| constant which was already loaded). Not sure what's necessary to do that. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| The code generated for bswap on armv4/5 (CPUs without rev) is less than ideal: |
| |
| int a(int x) { return __builtin_bswap32(x); } |
| |
| a: |
| mov r1, #255, 24 |
| mov r2, #255, 16 |
| and r1, r1, r0, lsr #8 |
| and r2, r2, r0, lsl #8 |
| orr r1, r1, r0, lsr #24 |
| orr r0, r2, r0, lsl #24 |
| orr r0, r0, r1 |
| bx lr |
| |
| Something like the following would be better (fewer instructions/registers): |
| eor r1, r0, r0, ror #16 |
| bic r1, r1, #0xff0000 |
| mov r1, r1, lsr #8 |
| eor r0, r1, r0, ror #8 |
| bx lr |
| |
| A custom Thumb version would also be a slight improvement over the generic |
| version. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Consider the following simple C code: |
| |
| void foo(unsigned char *a, unsigned char *b, int *c) { |
| if ((*a | *b) == 0) *c = 0; |
| } |
| |
| currently llvm-gcc generates something like this (nice branchless code I'd say): |
| |
| ldrb r0, [r0] |
| ldrb r1, [r1] |
| orr r0, r1, r0 |
| tst r0, #255 |
| moveq r0, #0 |
| streq r0, [r2] |
| bx lr |
| |
| Note that both "tst" and "moveq" are redundant. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| When loading immediate constants with movt/movw, if there are multiple |
| constants needed with the same low 16 bits, and those values are not live at |
| the same time, it would be possible to use a single movw instruction, followed |
| by multiple movt instructions to rewrite the high bits to different values. |
| For example: |
| |
| volatile store i32 -1, i32* inttoptr (i32 1342210076 to i32*), align 4, |
| !tbaa |
| !0 |
| volatile store i32 -1, i32* inttoptr (i32 1342341148 to i32*), align 4, |
| !tbaa |
| !0 |
| |
| is compiled and optimized to: |
| |
| movw r0, #32796 |
| mov.w r1, #-1 |
| movt r0, #20480 |
| str r1, [r0] |
| movw r0, #32796 @ <= this MOVW is not needed, value is there already |
| movt r0, #20482 |
| str r1, [r0] |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Improve codegen for select's: |
| if (x != 0) x = 1 |
| if (x == 1) x = 1 |
| |
| ARM codegen used to look like this: |
| mov r1, r0 |
| cmp r1, #1 |
| mov r0, #0 |
| moveq r0, #1 |
| |
| The naive lowering select between two different values. It should recognize the |
| test is equality test so it's more a conditional move rather than a select: |
| cmp r0, #1 |
| movne r0, #0 |
| |
| Currently this is a ARM specific dag combine. We probably should make it into a |
| target-neutral one. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Optimize unnecessary checks for zero with __builtin_clz/ctz. Those builtins |
| are specified to be undefined at zero, so portable code must check for zero |
| and handle it as a special case. That is unnecessary on ARM where those |
| operations are implemented in a way that is well-defined for zero. For |
| example: |
| |
| int f(int x) { return x ? __builtin_clz(x) : sizeof(int)*8; } |
| |
| should just be implemented with a CLZ instruction. Since there are other |
| targets, e.g., PPC, that share this behavior, it would be best to implement |
| this in a target-independent way: we should probably fold that (when using |
| "undefined at zero" semantics) to set the "defined at zero" bit and have |
| the code generator expand out the right code. |
| |
| //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// |
| |
| Clean up the test/MC/ARM files to have more robust register choices. |
| |
| R0 should not be used as a register operand in the assembler tests as it's then |
| not possible to distinguish between a correct encoding and a missing operand |
| encoding, as zero is the default value for the binary encoder. |
| e.g., |
| add r0, r0 // bad |
| add r3, r5 // good |
| |
| Register operands should be distinct. That is, when the encoding does not |
| require two syntactical operands to refer to the same register, two different |
| registers should be used in the test so as to catch errors where the |
| operands are swapped in the encoding. |
| e.g., |
| subs.w r1, r1, r1 // bad |
| subs.w r1, r2, r3 // good |
| |