I'm looking at an issue where we want a particular pseudo-instruction to choose from a set of registers that is not included in the existing set of RegisterClass definitions. More concretely, there is a RegisterClass in ARMRegisterInfo.td defined as def rGPR : RegisterClass<"ARM", [i32], 32, (sub GPR, SP, PC)> { let AltOrders = [(add LR, rGPR), (trunc rGPR, 8)]; let AltOrderSelect = [{ return 1 + MF.getTarget().getSubtarget<ARMSubtarget>().isThumb1Only(); }]; } However, I'd like the instruction NOT to use the LR. I don't see an existing RegisterClass defined with R0_R12; something like: def newGPR : RegisterClass<"ARM", [i32], 32, (add (sequence "R%u", 0, 12))>; I can add this new RegisterClass myself and then modify the pseudo-instruction definition to simply use my new RegisterClass. However, TableGen creates a set of dynamically created classes for GPRPairs that hold all the various incarnations of GPRPair sets that correspond to various RegisterClass definitions (like GPR pairs just for R0-R7, another for rGPR that doesn't contain the SP, .). If I add a new RegisterClass however, the dynamically created GPRPair class corresponding to this new RegisterClass overlaps with the dynamically created class for rGPR. In Thumb2InstrInfo.cpp, the dynamically created TargetRegisterClass GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_rGPRRegClass is explicitly called out. If I add my new class, the class GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_rGPRRegClass is never created, instead the class GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_newGPRRegClass is created. Compilation therefore fails. I could simply rename the RegisterClass so that it is alphabetically sorted after rGPR, but that seems to simply be avoiding the real issue. So, since I'm fairly new to LLVM, my question is, am I approaching this correctly? Is adding a new RegisterClass something that is highly discouraged? Is it better to force certain instructions to avoid certain registers in the register allocation process? Should explicit references to dynamically generated classes be done? Thanks, Daniel -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20130625/3cbb43de/attachment.html>
Hi Daniel,> So, since I’m fairly new to LLVM, my question is, am I approaching this > correctly? Is adding a new RegisterClass something that is highly > discouraged?I'd say it's OK. There are often good reasons to add a register class and that's far better than hacking regalloc for particular instructions. We don't want to do it frivolously, but that applies to anything really.> Should explicit references to dynamically generated classes be done?I'm neutral on that, personally. I'd say that if the dynamically generated name makes sense it's OK. But perhaps the best solution to this particular problem *would* be adding an rGPRPair RegisterClass and using that instead. It would probably make the code clearer and the class exists anyway. Cheers. Tim.
On Jun 25, 2013, at 7:10 AM, Daniel Stewart <stewartd at codeaurora.org> wrote:> If I add a new RegisterClass however, the dynamically created GPRPair class corresponding to this new RegisterClass overlaps with the dynamically created class for rGPR. In Thumb2InstrInfo.cpp, the dynamically created TargetRegisterClass GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_rGPRRegClass is explicitly called out. If I add my new class, the class GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_rGPRRegClass is never created, instead the class GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_newGPRRegClass is created. Compilation therefore fails. I could simply rename the RegisterClass so that it is alphabetically sorted after rGPR, but that seems to simply be avoiding the real issue. > > Should explicit references to dynamically generated classes be done?In my opinion, no. If source code needs to refer to a register class by name, that class should be defined explicitly in the .td files. The present case is easy, though: if (ARM::GPRPairRegClass.hasSubClassEq(RC)) { // Thumb2 STRD expects its dest-registers to be in rGPR. Not a problem for // gsub_0, but needs an extra constraint for gsub_1 (which could be sp // otherwise). MachineRegisterInfo *MRI = &MF.getRegInfo(); MRI->constrainRegClass(SrcReg, &ARM::GPRPair_with_gsub_1_in_rGPRRegClass); The function TRI->getMatchingSuperRegClass(RC, ARM::rGPR, ARM::gsub1) provides the right register class whether it is named or synthetic. Alternatively, we could add API: MRI->constrainRegClassForSubReg(SrcReg, ARM::rGPR, ARM::gsub1). But defining an rGPRPair register class as Tim suggested would also work. /jakob
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