This commit adds support for generating stackmaps at safepoints to the
new backend framework and to the AArch64 backend in particular. It has
been tested to work with SpiderMonkey.
- put the division in the synthetic instruction as well,
- put the branch table check in the inst's emission code,
- replace OneWayCondJmp by TrapIf vcode instruction,
- add comments describing code generated by the synthetic instructions
Removes unneeded data structure that was holding instructions for
xmm based move instructions. These instructions can should be categorized
as rm not just r. This change is intended to simplify organization and
cases when lowering.
This patch implements the required but not already available
x64 instructions for copysign as well as the actual lowering sequence
and tests for the newly implemented x64 instructions.
Those instructions include:
andps,
andnps,
movaps,
movd,
orps,
The lowering sequence is based on the lowering for f32.copysign
in the current cranelift backend. movd does not have a test yet
due to some logic needed express a 32-bit register as a source
for xmm_rm_r instructions. This code also begins some
rethinking/refactoring of how the sse move instuctions
are written and so also includes new emit cases that will replace
current ones that match a different enum used to describe sse moves.
Adds support for addss and subss. This is the first lowering for
sse floating point alu and some move operations. The changes here do
some renaming of data structures and adds a couple of new ones
to support sse specific operations. The work done here will likely
evolve as needed to support an efficient, inituative, and consistent
framework.
compilation.
This saves ~0.14% instruction count, ~0.18% allocated bytes, and ~1.5%
allocated blocks on a `clif-util wasm` compilation of `bz2.wasm` for
aarch64.
This PR changes the aarch64 ABI implementation to use positive offsets
from SP, rather than negative offsets from FP, to refer to spill slots
and stack-local storage. This allows for better addressing-mode options,
and hence slightly better code: e.g., the unsigned scaled 12-bit offset
mode can be used to reach anywhere in a 32KB frame without extra
address-construction instructions, whereas negative offsets are limited
to a signed 9-bit unscaled mode (-256 bytes).
To enable this, the PR introduces a notion of "nominal SP offsets" as a
virtual addressing mode, lowered during the emission pass. The offsets
are relative to "SP after adjusting downward to allocate stack/spill
slots", but before pushing clobbers. This allows the addressing-mode
expressions to be generated before register allocation (or during it,
for spill/reload sequences).
To convert these offsets into *true* offsets from SP, we need to track
how much further SP is moved downward, and compensate for this. We do so
with "virtual SP offset adjustment" pseudo-instructions: these are seen
by the emission pass, and result in no instruction (0 byte output), but
update state that is now threaded through each instruction emission in
turn. In this way, we can push e.g. stack args for a call and adjust
the virtual SP offset, allowing reloads from nominal-SP-relative
spillslots while we do the argument setup with "real SP offsets" at the
same time.