* Add 'jump_table_entry' and 'indirect_jump' instructions.
* Update CodeSink to keep track of code size. Pretty up clif-util's disassembly output.
* Only disassemble the machine portion of output. Pretty print the read-only data after it.
* Update switch frontend code to use new br_table instruction w/ default.
The majority of the test modules were already named "tests", and that's
what the example in the Rust book uses, so switch to that for all test
modules, for consistency.
* Reorganize the global value kinds.
This:
- renames "deref" global values to "load" and gives it a offset that works
like the "load" instructions' does
- adds an explicit "iadd_imm" global value kind, which replaces the
builtin iadd in "vmctx" and "deref" global values.
- also renames "globalsym" to "symbol"
This makes several changes:
- It adds an index_type to heap declarations, allowing heaps to specify the
type for indexing. This also anticipates 64-bit heap support.
- It adds a memory_type to deref global values, allowing deref globals to
have types other than pointers. This is used to allow the bound variable
in dynamic heaps to have type i32, to match the index type in heaps
with i32 index type.
- And, it fixes heap legalization to do the bounds check in the heap's
index type.
* Remove reserved_reg functionality.
This wasn't implemented, and if we need it in the future, it seems like
it would be better to extend the concept of global values to cover this.
* Use GlobalValue::reserved_value() for sentinal values.
- don't generate "&& true" when generating instruction eq() fn;
- use more Self;
- use subsec_millis instead of subsec_nanos and divide;
- coalesce two ifs;
In the text format, allow aliases to be defined multiple times, as long
as they're always aliasing the same value.
write.rs is already emitting redundant aliases, because it emits them at
their uses, so this change allows the parser to be able to parse such
code.
* Update to rustfmt-preview.
* Run "cargo fmt --all" with rustfmt 0.4.1.
rustfmt 0.4.1 is the latest release of rustfmt-preview available on the
stable channel.
* Fix a long line that rustfmt 0.4.1 can't handle.
* Remove unneeded commas left behind by rustfmt.
* initial set of work for windows fastcall (x64) call convention
- call conventions: rename `fastcall` to `windows_fastcall`
- add initial set of filetests
- ensure arguments are written after the shadow space/store (offset-wise)
The shadow space available before the arguments (range 0..32)
is not used as spill space yet.
* address review feedback
Add a calling-convention setting to the `Flags` used as part of the
`TargetIsa`. This allows Cretonne code that generates calls to use the
correct convention, such as when emitting libcalls during legalization
or when the wasm frontend is decoding functions. This setting can be
overridden per-function.
This also adds "fast", "cold", and "fastcall" conventions, with "fast"
as the new default. Note that "fast" and "cold" are not intended to be
ABI-compatible across Cretonne versions.
This will also ensure Windows users will get an `unimplemented!` rather
than silent calling-convention mismatches, which reflects the fact that
Windows calling conventions are not yet implemented.
This also renames SpiderWASM, which isn't camel-case, to Baldrdash,
which is, and which is also a more relevant name.
* Initial skeleton.
* Add basic faerie support.
This adds enough functionality to enable simple .o file writing through
faerie. This included adding the functionality to Module to support
RelocSink implementations.
* Add basic SimpleJIT support.
This adds enough functionality to enable a simple program to be jitted
and executed.
* Make declare_func_in_func take a Function instead of a Context.
It only needs the Function, and sometimes it's useful to call it from
places that don't have a full Context.
* Temporarily disable local and exported global variables in the Faerie backend.
Faerie assumes these variables use pc-relative offset instructions, and
Cretonne is not yet emitting those instructions.
* FaerieBackend depends on PIC.
Faerie itself only supports PIC objects for now, so add an assert to
Cretonne to check that it's using a PIC target flag.
* SimpleJIT support for data objects.
* Preliminary faerie support for data objects.
* Support for data objects in faerie using the new colocated flag.
* Unit tests for DataContext and friends.
* Add a Module::consume() function.
This consumes the Module and returns the contained Backend, so that
users can call Backend-specific functions with it. For example, the
Faerie backend has functions to write an object file.
* Update the new crates to version 0.4.4.
* Make FaerieBackend own its TargetIsa.
This simplifies its interface, as it eliminates a lifetime parameter.
While we may eventually want to look into allowing multiple clients to
share a TargetIsa, it isn't worth the complexity for FaerieBackend
right now.
* Don't try to protect faerie from multiple declarations.
Let faerie decide for itself whether it wants to consider two
declarations to be compatible.
* Use debug_assert_eq rather than debug_assert with ==.
* Fix FaerieRelocSink's reloc_external to handle data object names.
* Relax the asserts in get_function_definition and get_data_definition.
These functions don't require definable symbols, but they do require
that definable symbols be defined. This is needed for the simplejit
backend.
* Add a function to the faerie backend to retrieve the artifact name.
* Sync up with cretonne changes.