Eli Friedman
2012-Nov-22 21:01 UTC
[LLVMdev] Extended Inline asm with double data type crashes clang
On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 4:14 AM, rajesh viswabramana <viswabramana.rajesh at gmail.com> wrote:> Hi all, > > I tried same code on gcc for arm(hard float), > > double f2 () > { > double x = 10.0; > > asm ("" : "=r" (x) : "0" (x)); > return x; > } > >> arm-linux-gnueabi-gcc -S -mhard-float pr39058.c -O2 > > Generates proper code, > mov r3, #0 > mov r2, #0 > movt r3, 16420 > fmdrr d0, r2, r3 > bx lr > > But llvm crashes, If data type is "double", register type is "int". > Any comments why does llvm currently handle this case ?"r" is supposed to be a single register, not a register pair; the fact that gcc accepts this is probably an accident. clang should reject this code (without crashing, of course). -Eli
Tim Northover
2012-Nov-22 21:19 UTC
[LLVMdev] Extended Inline asm with double data type crashes clang
> "r" is supposed to be a single register, not a register pair; the fact > that gcc accepts this is probably an accident. clang should reject > this code (without crashing, of course).I'm not quite convinced by this. On AArch64, GCC supports the %H, %Q and %R operand modifiers which very explicitly deal with a pair of 64-bit registers. These are intended to be used with the 'r' constraint (I asked, specifically because there wasn't a corresponding "register-pair" constraint). It could just be the new port and no-one's noticed the rules have been broken yet, of course. So we could take the high road, but it's a little unclear who we should go whinging to that GCC is breaking the rules of the GCC-specific inline assembly syntax. Tim.
Eli Friedman
2012-Nov-22 23:07 UTC
[LLVMdev] Extended Inline asm with double data type crashes clang
On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 1:19 PM, Tim Northover <t.p.northover at gmail.com> wrote:>> "r" is supposed to be a single register, not a register pair; the fact >> that gcc accepts this is probably an accident. clang should reject >> this code (without crashing, of course). > > I'm not quite convinced by this. On AArch64, GCC supports the %H, %Q > and %R operand modifiers which very explicitly deal with a pair of > 64-bit registers. These are intended to be used with the 'r' > constraint (I asked, specifically because there wasn't a corresponding > "register-pair" constraint). > > It could just be the new port and no-one's noticed the rules have been > broken yet, of course. So we could take the high road, but it's a > little unclear who we should go whinging to that GCC is breaking the > rules of the GCC-specific inline assembly syntax.Hmm... it isn't completely without precedent to have a constraint which refers to multiple registers (like the x86 "A" constraint), but it doesn't seem like something which can be done generically: what "pairs" would we allow for "r" on e.g. x86? Of course, while writing this, I just realized this is a variant of a bug which has been discussed on llvm-commits: PR13622. And gcc actually does implement pairs on x86; I think the choice of registers is based on some internal register allocator sequence. And gcc also knows how to allocate register triplets on x86 (though I have no clue how you would use them). :) Ugh, I wish gcc's inline asm extension didn't expose so much of the insanity of gcc internals. -Eli
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