Soon, InstructionData won't have sufficient information to compute this.
Give TargetIsa::encode() an explicit ctrl_typevar argument. This
function does not require the instruction to be inserted in the DFG
tables.
- Add a dfg.is_inst_valid() method for the verifier.
- Use the inst_args_mut() method when rewriting values in the parser.
- Add a new branch_destination_mut() to use when rewriting EBBs.
This also gets rid of one of the large instruction format switches in
the parser.
Compute exact EBB header offsets and check that branches are in range.
Not implemented yet: Relax branches that are not in range.
Invoke the relax_branches() pass from the 'test binemit' file tests so
they can verify the proper encoding of branch instructions too.
This instruction behaves like icmp fused with brnz, and it can be used
to represent fused compare+branch instruction on Intel when optimizing
for macro-op fusion.
RISC-V provides compare-and-branch instructions directly, and it is
needed there too.
Compare a scalar integer to an immediate constant. Both Intel and RISC-V
ISAs have this operation.
This requires the addition of a new IntCompareImm instruction format.
* Verify that a recomputed dominator tree is identical to the existing one.
* The verifier now typechecks instruction results and arguments.
* The verifier now typechecks instruction results and arguments.
* The verifier now typechecks instruction results and arguments.
* Added `inst_{fixed,variable}_args` accessor functions.
* Improved error messages in verifier.
* Type check return statements against the function signature.
As discussed in #3.
Once we know the controlling type variable of a polymorphic instruction,
the types of input operands are either bound to known types, or they can
vary freely.
The call arguments on call_indirect should not include the fixed callee
argument.
Add legalizer assertions to verify that signatures are actually valid
after legalization. If not, we would get infinite legalizer loops.
Now that some instruction formats put all of their value arguments in a
value list, we need to know how many value are fixed and how many are
variable_args.
CC @angusholder who may need this information in the verifier.
Allow some flexibility in the signature matching for instruction
formats. In particular, look for a value list format as a second chance
option.
The Return, ReturnReg, and TernaryOverflow formats all fit the single
MultiAry catch-all format for instructions without immediate operands.
No instruction sets actually have single instructions for materializing
vector constants. You always need to use a constant pool.
Cretonne doesn't have constant pools yet, but it will in the future, and
that is how vector constants should be represented.
Instruction formats are now identified by a signature that doesn't
include the ordering of value operands relative to immediate operands.
This means that the BinaryRev instruction format becomes redundant, so
delete it. The isub_imm instruction was the only one using that format.
Rename it to irsub_imm to make it clear what it does now that it is
printed as 'irsub_imm v2, 45'.
Now that variable arguments are always stored in a value list with the
fixed arguments, we no longer need the arcane [&[Value]; 2] return type.
Arguments are always stored contiguously, so just return a &[Value]
slice.
Also remove the each_arg() methods which were just trying to make it
easier to work with the old slice pair.
With the Return and ReturnReg formats converted to using value lists for
storing their arguments, thee are no remaining instruction formats with
variable argument lists in boxed storage.
The Return and ReturnReg formats are also going to be merged since
they are identical now.
The Branch format also stores its fixed argument in the value list. This
requires the value pool to be passed to a few more functions.
Note that this actually makes the Branch and Jump variants of
InstructionData identical. The instruction format hashing does not yet
understand that all value operands are stored in the value list. We'll
fix that in a later patch.
Also convert IndirectCall, noting that Call and IndirectCall remain
separate instruction formats because they have different immediate
fields.
Add a new kind of instruction format that keeps all of its value
arguments in a value list. These value lists are all allocated out of
the dfg.value_lists memory pool.
Instruction formats with the value_list property set store *all* of
their value arguments in a single value list. There is no distinction
between fixed arguments and variable arguments.
Change the Call instruction format to use the value list representation
for its arguments.
This change is only the beginning. The intent is to eliminate the
boxed_storage instruction formats completely. Value lists use less
memory, and when the transition is complete, InstructionData will have a
trivial Drop implementation.
Add support for two new type variable functions: half_vector() and
double_vector().
Use these two instructions to break down unsupported SIMD types and
build them up again.
Some polymorphic instructions don't return the controlling type
variable, so it has to be computed from the designated operand instead.
- Add a requires_typevar_operand() method to the operand constraints
which indicates that.
- Add a ctrl_typevar(dfg) method to InstructionData which computes the
controlling type variable correctly, and returns VOID for monomorphic
instructions.
- Use ctrl_typevar(dfg) to drive the level-1 encoding table lookups.
- Remove NO_VALUE and ExpandedValue::None.
- Remove the Default implelmentation for Value.
- InstructionData::second_result() returns an Option<Value>.
- InstructionData::second_result() returns a reference to the packed
option.
for InstructionData. Use generated `is_terminator()` for `Opcode`
instead. `is_terminator`, `can_trap` and `is_branch` functions are now
public.
fix syntax error
Provide a generic way of accessing the value arguments on an
instruction. This is provided as two slice references. One for the fixed
arguments and one for any VariableArgs.
The arguments() methods return an array of two slices which is a bit
awkward. Also provide an each_arg() method which passes each argument
value to a closure.
The make_inst_results() method now understands direct and indirect
calls, and can allocate result values matching the return types of the
function call.
Give these crates each a more standard directory layout with sources in
a 'src' sub-sirectory and Cargo.toml in the top lib/foo directory.
Add license and description fields to each.
The build script for the cretonne crate now lives in
'lib/cretonne/build.rs' separating it from the normal library sources
under 'lib/cretonne/src'.