Chris Lattner-2 wrote:>
>
> On Feb 11, 2009, at 4:07 AM, Alex wrote:
>
>> In my hardware there are two special registers cannot be copied but
>> can only be assigned and referenced (read) in the other instruction.
>> They are allocatable also.
>>
>> br i1 %if_cond, label %then, label %else
>> then:
>> %x1 = fptosi float %y1 to i32
>> br label %endif
>> else:
>> %x2 = fptosi float %y2 to i32
>> br label %endif
>> endif:
>> %x3 = phi i32 [%x1, %then], [%x2, %else]
>>
>> PNE::LowerAtomiPHINode() fails because
>> TargetInstrInfo::copyRegToReg() doesn't support the copy of this
>> type of register.
>>
>> Most registers of this hardware are f32. These two special register
>> of type i32 are provided to relative index the other f32 registers.
>> The value of these i32 registers can only be written by a FP-to-INT
>> conversion instruction. But these two i32 registers are not designed
>> to be copied from one to the other.
>>
>
> This is a very interesting problem. If you have registers like this,
> they should be non-allocatable (just like 'flags') which means that
> you don't have to define copy operations for them.
>
They "should" be non-allocatable if the hardware implements the same
number
of these i32 registers as the "specification". The input language
(which is
converted to LLVM IR) may use up to 4 registers but the hardware only has 2.
So they must be allocatable, right?
For example, the input uses up to 3 <i32> registers INT0, INT1, INT2 (Rx
are
FP registers):
fp2int INT0, R0
fp2int INT1, R1
fp2int INT2, R2
add R0, R0, R[INT1+1]
mul R0, R[INT2+2], R[INT0+1]
Since the hardware doesn't has INT2, the final machine should be like:
fp2int INT0, R0
fp2int INT1, R1
add R0, R0, R[INT1+1]
fp2int INT1, R2 <==== rename INT2 to INT1
mul R0, R[INT1+2], R[INT0+1]
I use the method suggested in "Kaleidoscope: Extending the Language:
Mutable
Variables" (http://llvm.org/docs/tutorial/LangImpl7.html) and rely on
mem2reg to promote these loads to registers.
By the way, all registers are non-spillable.
--
View this message in context:
http://www.nabble.com/Eliminate-PHI-for-non-copyable-registers-tp21953583p21972748.html
Sent from the LLVM - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.