similar to: [LLVMdev] best way to implement complex addressing modes

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] best way to implement complex addressing modes"

2006 Sep 07
0
[LLVMdev] best way to implement complex addressing modes
On Wed, 6 Sep 2006, [UTF-8] Rafael Esp?ndola wrote: > The ARM has some very powerful and complex addressing modes. For > example, the data processing instructions (and, orr, add, ..) have an > addressing mode that has 11 options (imm, reg, and 9 reg + some > shift). > > I am considering 3 ways to implement this: > > 1) define one instruction that has an ARM specific
2017 Dec 06
2
[LLD] Slow callstacks in gdb
Rui Ueyama <ruiu at google.com> writes: > On Tue, Dec 5, 2017 at 1:22 PM, Rafael Avila de Espindola < > rafael.espindola at gmail.com> wrote: > >> Martin Richtarsky <s at martinien.de> writes: >> >> > Output looks as follows [1] Seems sh_offset is missing? >> >> That is what readelf prints as Off >> >> > [17] .rela.text
2006 Sep 07
1
[LLVMdev] best way to implement complex addressing modes
Hi Chris, > On Wed, 6 Sep 2006, [UTF-8] Rafael Esp?ndola wrote: > > The ARM has some very powerful and complex addressing modes. For > > example, the data processing instructions (and, orr, add, ..) have > > an addressing mode that has 11 options (imm, reg, and 9 reg + some > > shift). > > I'm not sure exactly what the constraints you have are For those
2017 Dec 05
2
[LLD] Slow callstacks in gdb
Martin Richtarsky <s at martinien.de> writes: > Output looks as follows [1] Seems sh_offset is missing? That is what readelf prints as Off > [17] .rela.text RELA 0000000000000000 071423 001728 18 > 1 4 8 The offset of rela text should have been aligned, but it is not. Can you report a bug on icc? As a work around using the gnu assembler if possible
2012 Jan 24
0
[LLVMdev] Use of 'ldrd' instructions with unaligned addresses on armv7 (Major bug in LLVM optimizer?)
On Tue, Jan 24, 2012 at 08:36:17AM -0800, Esperanza de Escobar wrote: > No one is arguing that there aren't ABI specs or LLVM design > guidelines that say that unaligned accesses "should not", "could not" > or "aren't guaranteed to" work, because it's besides the point. No, it is the core of the issue. Standard C gives the compiler certain
2016 Jun 02
2
BPF backend with vector operations - error "Could not infer all types in, pattern!"
Hello. I come back to this older thread. Again, because of i64immSExt32 I receive TableGen error "Could not infer all types in, pattern!" (exact details written below). So far I'm not able to generate selection code with TableGen for the ADD_r* instructions, etc: def i64immSExt32 : PatLeaf<(imm), [{return
2012 Jan 24
4
[LLVMdev] Use of 'ldrd' instructions with unaligned addresses on armv7 (Major bug in LLVM optimizer?)
No one is arguing that there aren't ABI specs or LLVM design guidelines that say that unaligned accesses "should not", "could not" or "aren't guaranteed to" work, because it's besides the point. The point is that unaligned 32-bit loads and stores *work in practice* on every single ARM device Apple has ever manufactured. I'm not a hardware person, but
2012 Aug 02
0
[LLVMdev] TableGen related question for the Hexagon backend
On Aug 1, 2012, at 1:53 PM, Jyotsna Verma <jverma at codeaurora.org> wrote: > > Currently, we rely on switch tables to transform between formats. However, > we would like to have a different mechanism to represent these relationships > instead of switch tables. I am thinking of modeling these relations in > HexagonInstrInfo.td file and use TableGen to generate a table with
2012 Aug 16
2
[LLVMdev] TableGen related question for the Hexagon backend
Hi Everyone, After some more thoughts to the Jacob's suggestion of using multiclasses for Opcode mapping, this is what I have come up with. Please take a look at the design below and let me know if you have any suggestions/questions. I have tried to keep the design target independent so that other targets could benefit from it. 1) The idea is to add 3 new classes into
2012 Aug 01
3
[LLVMdev] TableGen related question for the Hexagon backend
Hi, I'm looking for some suggestions on a problem related to the Hexagon backend. Hexagon architecture allows instructions in various formats. For example, we have 3 variations of the add instruction as defined below: ADDrr : r1 = add(r2, r3) --> add 2 32-bit registers ADDrr_p : if(p0) r1 = add(r2, r3) --> predicated version of ADDrr instruction, executed when p0 is true ADDrr_np :
2013 Jan 23
2
[LLVMdev] introducing sign extending halfword loads into the LLVM IR
Hi Bjorn, could you file a bug on llvm.org/bugs and cc me on it. Thanks, Arnold > So it appears that also the ARM backend has a big problems with sign-extending loads. > > I've compiled the following loop > > short in[]; > int out[]; > int value; > > for (i = 0; i < nr; i++) { > value = in[i]; > if (value>2047) >
2007 Jul 27
1
get() with complex objects?
Hello R-listers, I'm having trouble accessing "sub" objects ("attributes"?), e.g., "x$silinfo$avg.width" using the /get() /command; I'm using/ get()/ in a loop as illustrated in the following code: #FIRST MAKE CLUSTERS of VARYING k /for (i in 1:300){ assign(paste("x.",i,sep=""),pam(x,i)) #WORKS FINE }/ #NEXT, TAKE LOOK AT AVE.
2020 Jun 22
3
Hardware ASan Generating Unknown Instruction
Hi, I am trying to execute a simple hello world program compiled like so: path/to/compiled/clang -o test --target=aarch64-linux-gnu -march=armv8.5-a -fsanitize=hwaddress --sysroot=/usr/aarch64-linux-gnu/ -L/usr/lib/gcc/aarch64-linux-gnu/10.1.0/ -g test.c However, when I look at the disassembly, there is an unknown instruction listed at 0x2d51c: 000000000002d4c0 main: 2d4c0: ff c3 00 d1
2012 Jan 09
39
[PATCH v4 00/25] xen: ARMv7 with virtualization extensions
Hello everyone, this is the fourth version of the patch series that introduces ARMv7 with virtualization extensions support in Xen. The series allows Xen and Dom0 to boot on a Cortex-A15 based Versatile Express simulator. See the following announce email for more informations about what we are trying to achieve, as well as the original git history: See
2011 Dec 06
57
[PATCH RFC 00/25] xen: ARMv7 with virtualization extensions
Hello everyone, this is the very first version of the patch series that introduces ARMv7 with virtualization extensions support in Xen. The series allows Xen and Dom0 to boot on a Cortex-A15 based Versatile Express simulator. See the following announce email for more informations about what we are trying to achieve, as well as the original git history: See
2012 Jun 13
0
[LLVMdev] Assert in live update from MI scheduler.
Ok, after a long detour I am back to where I have started. I think there is a problem at dep DAG construction. Let me try to convince you. Here is the C code we are dealing with: push () { struct xx_stack *stack, *top; for (stack = xx_stack; stack; stack = stack->next) top = stack; yy_instr = top->first; } If the loop never iterates, "top" will have
2012 Jun 13
2
[LLVMdev] Assert in live update from MI scheduler.
On Jun 13, 2012, at 1:15 PM, Sergei Larin <slarin at codeaurora.org> wrote: > Andy, > > You are probably right here – look at this – before phi elimination this code looks much more sane: > > # *** IR Dump After Live Variable Analysis ***: > # Machine code for function push: SSA > Function Live Outs: %R0 > > BB#0: derived from LLVM BB %entry >
2012 Jun 14
1
[LLVMdev] Assert in live update from MI scheduler.
Sergei, Absolutely right, the copy/ldriw should not be reordered. I was attempting to explain that I consider it a phi-elimination bug, not a DAG builder bug. Liveness will also have problems with this code in the long run. To avoid confusion, I filed PR13112: Phi elimination generates uninitialized vreg uses, and disabled the SSA check until its fixes in r158461. However, your C code is also
2012 Jul 06
0
[LLVMdev] MachineOperand: Subreg defines and the Undef flag
Hi Jakob, > New_MI_1:: Vreg1 = 0 ; Vreg1 and Vreg2 > are 32 bit virt. regs. > New_MI_2:: Vreg2 = COPY C:lo_sub_reg. > New_MI_3:: B= REG_SEQUENCE<Vreg1, hi_sub_reg, Vreg2, lo_sub_reg> ; B > is a > 64 bit virt reg. I used this approach and it worked find until I hit, what I believe is, a bug in the register coalescer. When the register
2012 Jun 13
0
[LLVMdev] Assert in live update from MI scheduler.
Andy, You are probably right here - look at this - before phi elimination this code looks much more sane: # *** IR Dump After Live Variable Analysis ***: # Machine code for function push: SSA Function Live Outs: %R0 BB#0: derived from LLVM BB %entry %vreg5<def> = IMPLICIT_DEF; IntRegs:%vreg5 %vreg4<def> = TFRI_V4 <ga:@xx_stack>; IntRegs:%vreg4