Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Necessary for floating-point negation, because
`%result = sub 0, %operand` doesn't give the correct sign for 0/-0.
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The negate trick is unnecessary and broken when the first arg is the
result.
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Reported by Alessandro Mantovani.
Unlikely to be hit in practice
because we don't add addresses to
addresses.
type :biggie = { l, l, l }
function $repro(:biggie %p) {
@start
%x =l add %p, $a
storew 42, %x
ret
}
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The same functionality can be implemented
naturally in the cfg simplification pass.
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Previously, each ret would lead to an
epilog. This caused bloat for large
functions with multiple return points.
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This prevents an FE_INVALID exception when comparing with NaN.
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We now emit correct code when the user
refers to a specific constant address.
I also made some comments clearer in
the instruction selection pass and got
rid of some apparently useless code.
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There is no flavor of mov which can set 8 bytes
of memory to a constant not representable as an
int32. The solution is simply to emit two movs
of 4 bytes each.
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The arm64 might have the same problem but it
is currently unable to handle them even in
instruction selection.
Thanks to Jean Dao for reporting the bug.
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The stashing of constants in gas.c was also
changed to support 16-bytes constants.
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It never worked until today.
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Symbols in the source file are still limited in
length because the rest of the code assumes that
strings always fit in NString bytes.
Regardless, there is already a benefit because
comparing/copying symbol names does not require
using strcmp()/strcpy() anymore.
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This big diff does multiple changes to allow
the addition of new targets to qbe. The
changes are listed below in decreasing order
of impact.
1. Add a new Target structure.
To add support for a given target, one has to
implement all the members of the Target
structure. All the source files where changed
to use this interface where needed.
2. Single out amd64-specific code.
In this commit, the amd64 target T_amd64_sysv
is the only target available, it is implemented
in the amd64/ directory. All the non-static
items in this directory are prefixed with either
amd64_ or amd64_sysv (for items that are
specific to the System V ABI).
3. Centralize Ops information.
There is now a file 'ops.h' that must be used to
store all the available operations together with
their metadata. The various targets will only
select what they need; but it is beneficial that
there is only *one* place to change to add a new
instruction.
One good side effect of this change is that any
operation 'xyz' in the IL now as a corresponding
'Oxyz' in the code.
4. Misc fixes.
One notable change is that instruction selection
now generates generic comparison operations and
the lowering to the target's comparisons is done
in the emitter.
GAS directives for data are the same for many
targets, so data emission was extracted in a
file 'gas.c'.
5. Modularize the Makefile.
The Makefile now has a list of C files that
are target-independent (SRC), and one list
of C files per target. Each target can also
use its own 'all.h' header (for example to
define registers).
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