Saleem Abdulrasool
2014-Sep-08 02:25 UTC
[LLVMdev] [Compiler-RT] [ARM] Where __aeabi_[il]div0 builtins should be implemented?
On Sat, Sep 6, 2014 at 3:40 PM, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org> wrote:> On 6 September 2014 22:46, Saleem Abdulrasool <compnerd at compnerd.org> > wrote: > > I did dig into this further and it seems that they are, in fact, > considered > > part of the RT-ABI :-(. Ive committed a simple conforming > implementation in > > SVN r217322. > > Hi Saleem, > > This implementation will differ from the current sdiv's expected > (return 0) if called from a place that doesn't mov r0, #0 just before > calling div0. >Why not adjust this instead?> ARM and GCC both throw an exception, and on non-EABI ARM, we're > returning zero, so it would be good to have at least one consistent > behaviour. >I think its better to avoid pulling in a dependency on the target libc, particularly if you want to permit the use of compiler-rt in a bare-metal environment. This implementation conforms to the specification and can be overridden if the libc wishes to catch the div-by-zero. We could use __rt_raise(2, 2), which would need to call signal as well, so you end up growing a dependency on the target environment's libc implementation. I think that expanding the responsibility of compiler-rt from supporting the code generation from the compiler to integrating into the target environment's libc can be problematic.> I think we should return zero on both idiv0 and ldiv0 and move the > "mov r0, #0" inside the #else for now. >Why 0 and not infinity? Or some other value?> cheers, > --renato-- Saleem Abdulrasool compnerd (at) compnerd (dot) org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140907/b1effd40/attachment.html>
Renato Golin
2014-Sep-08 08:19 UTC
[LLVMdev] [Compiler-RT] [ARM] Where __aeabi_[il]div0 builtins should be implemented?
> Why not adjust this instead?I was just being conservative. I don't know what else depends on this library and I don't want to change things outside of my scope. Since returning zero is consistent with the EABI, I don't think we should deviate from that norm, not without a lot of thought, at least.> We could use __rt_raise(2, 2), which would need to call signal as well, so > you end up growing a dependency on the target environment's libc > implementation. I think that expanding the responsibility of compiler-rt > from supporting the code generation from the compiler to integrating into > the target environment's libc can be problematic.I wasn't proposing we signal, but that we return zero, instead of the argument. Today we return either zero (in divmod/div/mod) or the argument (when calling div0 directly), and that's just wrong.> Why 0 and not infinity? Or some other value?Because 0 is what it was before. cheers, --renato
Saleem Abdulrasool
2014-Sep-09 01:18 UTC
[LLVMdev] [Compiler-RT] [ARM] Where __aeabi_[il]div0 builtins should be implemented?
On Mon, Sep 8, 2014 at 1:19 AM, Renato Golin <renato.golin at linaro.org> wrote:> > Why not adjust this instead? > > I was just being conservative. I don't know what else depends on this > library and I don't want to change things outside of my scope. >The current implementations actually return 0. Can you point out where that doesn't hold please? If you look at the generated code, in reality, the function is to spec as `bx lr'. The intent is that it provides a hook where you can break (without changing any state) OR replace it with the implementation that you prefer.> Since returning zero is consistent with the EABI, I don't think we > should deviate from that norm, not without a lot of thought, at least.Yes, although the current implementation also is consistent with EABI.> > We could use __rt_raise(2, 2), which would need to call signal as well, > so > > you end up growing a dependency on the target environment's libc > > implementation. I think that expanding the responsibility of compiler-rt > > from supporting the code generation from the compiler to integrating into > > the target environment's libc can be problematic. > > I wasn't proposing we signal, but that we return zero, instead of the > argument. >Fair enough. However, the point is that emulating GCC's behavior of the exception is what I was referring to.> Today we return either zero (in divmod/div/mod) or the argument (when > calling div0 directly), and that's just wrong.Quoting the RTABI: 1. int __aeabi_idiv0(int return_value); long long __aeabi_ldiv0(long long return_value); The *div0 functions: Return the value passed to them as a parameter. Is my copy out of date?> > Why 0 and not infinity? Or some other value? > > Because 0 is what it was before. > > cheers, > --renato >-- Saleem Abdulrasool compnerd (at) compnerd (dot) org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140908/c55283f0/attachment.html>
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