kewuzhang
2014-Jun-16 20:51 UTC
[LLVMdev] codeGen, instruction write one value to the input register.
Hi Guys, In LLVM codegen, a typical binary operation instruction is defined something like below: " def _rr: NVPTXInst<(outs Int1Regs:$dst), (ins Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b), "xor.pred \t$dst, $a, $b;", [(set Int1Regs:$dst, (OpNode Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b))]>; “ which takes two inputs and write the result to the $dst register. Then how to define a binary instruction which returns two results, one is written to the $dst register, and the other one is written to one of the inputs? I mean, to implement something like: ” Type sincos( Type input, Type * cosVal) “ the instruction will compute sin and cos value of input, return the sin result and write the cos result to cosVal. Is there anything special constraints or something I should put onto the cos register? Best Kevin -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140616/4fb5519f/attachment.html>
Cameron McInally
2014-Jun-16 21:08 UTC
[LLVMdev] codeGen, instruction write one value to the input register.
On Mon, Jun 16, 2014 at 4:51 PM, kewuzhang <kewu.zhang at amd.com> wrote:> Hi Guys, > > In LLVM codegen, > a typical binary operation instruction is defined something like below: > > " def _rr: NVPTXInst<(outs Int1Regs:$dst), (ins Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b), > "xor.pred \t$dst, $a, $b;", > [(set Int1Regs:$dst, (OpNode Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b))]>; > “ > > which takes two inputs and write the result to the $dst register. > > Then how to define a binary instruction which returns two results, one is > written to the $dst register, and the other one is written to one of the > inputs? I mean, to implement something like: > ” > Type sincos( Type input, Type * cosVal) > “ > > the instruction will compute sin and cos value of input, return the sin > result and write the cos result to cosVal. > Is there anything special constraints or something I should put onto the cos > register? >Hey Kevin, You might get a good start looking at the AVX2 VGATHER patterns in llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86InstrSSE.td. Those patterns return two results. They also make use of the @earlyclobber constraint. Hope that helps, Cameron
kewuzhang
2014-Jul-07 18:22 UTC
[LLVMdev] codeGen, instruction write one value to the input register.
Tks Cameron, I did some study on it. Now I am having the same problem as mentioned in this thread;"http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2013-January/057654.html” ,> Looking at the X86 back-end code, it looks like there do exist > multi-output instructions, but they all use physical (implicit) registers > for the second destination, not arbitrary register types. And if I change > the second destination to be a certain physical register, this problem goes > away in my code. Is this just not a supported case currently? Or am I > doing something wrong?Wondering if there is any update about it? best kevin On Jun 16, 2014, at 5:08 PM, Cameron McInally <cameron.mcinally at nyu.edu> wrote:> On Mon, Jun 16, 2014 at 4:51 PM, kewuzhang <kewu.zhang at amd.com> wrote: >> Hi Guys, >> >> In LLVM codegen, >> a typical binary operation instruction is defined something like below: >> >> " def _rr: NVPTXInst<(outs Int1Regs:$dst), (ins Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b), >> "xor.pred \t$dst, $a, $b;", >> [(set Int1Regs:$dst, (OpNode Int1Regs:$a, Int1Regs:$b))]>; >> “ >> >> which takes two inputs and write the result to the $dst register. >> >> Then how to define a binary instruction which returns two results, one is >> written to the $dst register, and the other one is written to one of the >> inputs? I mean, to implement something like: >> ” >> Type sincos( Type input, Type * cosVal) >> “ >> >> the instruction will compute sin and cos value of input, return the sin >> result and write the cos result to cosVal. >> Is there anything special constraints or something I should put onto the cos >> register? >> > > Hey Kevin, > > You might get a good start looking at the AVX2 VGATHER patterns in > llvm/lib/Target/X86/X86InstrSSE.td. Those patterns return two results. > They also make use of the @earlyclobber constraint. > > Hope that helps, > Cameron-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140707/1d786003/attachment.html>