* aarch64: Translate float and splat lowering to ISLE
I was looking into `constant_f128` and its fallback lowering into memory
and to get familiar with the code I figured it'd be good to port some
Rust logic to ISLE. This commit ports the `constant_{f128,f64,f32}`
helpers into ISLE from Rust as well as the `splat_const` helper which
ended up being closely related.
Tests reflect a number of regalloc changes that happened but also namely
one major difference is that in the lowering of `f32` a 32-bit immediate
is created now instead of a 64-bit immediate (in a GP register before
it's moved into a FP register). This semantically has no change but the
generated code is slightly different in a few minor cases.
* aarch64: Load f64/v128 constants from a pool
This commit removes the `LoadFpuConst64` and `LoadFpuConst128`
pseudo-instructions from the AArch64 backend which internally loaded a
nearby constant and then jumped over it. Constants now go through the
`VCodeConstant` infrastructure which gets placed at the end of the
function similar to how x64 works. Some minor support was added in as
well to add a new addressing mode for a `MachLabel`-relative load.
filetests
Filetests is a crate that contains multiple test suites for testing
various parts of cranelift. Each folder under cranelift/filetests/filetests is a different
test suite that tests different parts.
Adding a runtest
One of the available testsuites is the "runtest" testsuite. Its goal is to compile some piece of clif code, run it and ensure that what comes out is what we expect.
To build a run test you can add the following to a file:
test interpret
test run
target x86_64
target aarch64
target s390x
function %band_f32(f32, f32) -> f32 {
block0(v0: f32, v1: f32):
v2 = band v0, v1
return v2
}
; run: %band_f32(0x0.5, 0x1.0) == 0x1.5
Since this is a run test for band we can put it in: runtests/band.clif.
Once we have the file in the test suite we can run it by invoking: cargo run -- test filetests/filetests/runtests/band.clif from the cranelift directory.
The first lines tell clif-util what kind of tests we want to run on this file.
test interpret invokes the interpreter and checks if the conditions in the ; run comments pass. test run does the same, but compiles the file and runs it as a native binary.
For more information about testing see testing.md.