A priory, an EBB argument value only gets an affinity if it is used
directly by a non-ghost instruction. A use by a branch passing arguments
to an EBB doesn't count.
When an EBB argument value does have an affinity, the values passed by
all the predecessors must also have affinities. This can cause EBB
argument values to get affinities recursively.
- Add a second pass to the liveness computation for propagating EBB
argument affinities, possibly recursively.
- Verify EBB argument affinities correctly: A value passed to a branch
must have an affinity only if the corresponding EBB argument value in
the destination has an affinity.
When an EBB argument value is used only as a return value, it still
needs to be given a register affinity. Otherwise it would appear as a
ghost value with no affinity.
Do the same to call arguments.
* Function names should start with %
* Create FunctionName from string
* Implement displaying of FunctionName as %nnnn with fallback to #xxxx
* Run rustfmt and fix FunctionName::with_string in parser
* Implement FunctionName::new as a generic function
* Binary function names should start with #
* Implement NameRepr for function name
* Fix examples in docs to reflect that function names start with %
* Rebase and fix filecheck tests
The live value tracker expects them to be there.
We may eventually delete dead arguments from internal EBBs, but at least
the entry block needs to be able to handle dead function arguments.
The arguments to the entry block arrive in registers determined by the
ABI. This information is stored in the signature.
Use a separate function for coloring entry block arguments using the
signature information. We can't handle stack arguments yet.