similar to: [LLVMdev] uitofp and sitofp rounding mode

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 20000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] uitofp and sitofp rounding mode"

2013 Jul 24
0
[LLVMdev] uitofp and sitofp rounding mode
On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 4:03 AM, Jay Foad <jay.foad at gmail.com> wrote: > When the uitofp and sitofp instructions convert e.g. from i64 to > float, what rounding mode do they use? Answers in the form a patch to > LangRef.html would be great! The default rounding mode, just like every other floating-point operation. -Eli
2011 Oct 21
2
[LLVMdev] convert integer to double "uitofp" or "sitofp" ?
Hello, As I understand, in LLVM IR it cannot be determined whether a register of type int is signed or unsigned. If one wants to convert an integer to a double, which instruction should be used:  "uitofp" or "sitofp" ? We track the values taken by all load instructions and we process them using a function. If the value is a pointer, we use int64 as the type of the function
2011 Sep 26
3
[LLVMdev] PTX backend do not support sitofp instruction?
Hi all, Does PTX backend support llvm sitofp instruction? I failed to compile my llvm source when use llc -march=ptx32. The reason is that the source has a sitofp instruction. After i changed the instruction into uitofp manually, it passed. Thanks in advance, best, Yabin -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL:
2011 Sep 26
0
[LLVMdev] PTX backend do not support sitofp instruction?
> Does PTX backend support llvm sitofp instruction? Seems it doesn't support sitofp, search "Conversion to f32" in PTXInstrInfo.td. Regards, chenwj -- Wei-Ren Chen (陳韋任) Computer Systems Lab, Institute of Information Science, Academia Sinica, Taiwan (R.O.C.) Tel:886-2-2788-3799 #1667
2008 Apr 01
3
[LLVMdev] Reference Manual Clarifications 2
The fptrunc instruction states "If the value cannot fit within the destination type, ty2, then the results are undefined." This is fine, but what about other floating-point operations that can overflow? For example, does 'mul double 1.0e300, 1.0e300' produce +infinity or is it undefined? I think LLVM should treat floating-point overflows consistently. On a similar note,
2016 May 16
6
Working on FP SCEV Analysis
[+CC Andy] Hi Elena, I don't have any fundamental issues with teaching SCEV about floating point types, but given this will be a major change, I think a high level roadmap should be discussed on llvm-dev before we start reviewing and committing changes. Here are some issues that I think are worth discussing: - Core motivation: why do we even care about optimizing floating point
2008 Apr 01
0
[LLVMdev] Reference Manual Clarifications 2
On Mon, 31 Mar 2008, Jon Sargeant wrote: > The fptrunc instruction states "If the value cannot fit within the > destination type, ty2, then the results are undefined." This is fine, but > what about other floating-point operations that can overflow? For example, > does 'mul double 1.0e300, 1.0e300' produce +infinity or is it undefined? It is defined by IEEE to
2020 Jan 11
2
[RFC][SDAG] Convert build_vector of ops on extractelts into ops on input vectors
Thanks so much for your feedback Simon. I am not sure that what I am proposing here is at odds with what you're referring to (here and in the PR you linked). The key difference AFAICT is that the pattern I am referring to is probably more aptly described as "reducing scalarization" than as "vectorization". The reason I say that is that the inputs are vectors and the output
2008 Jun 22
0
[LLVMdev] Vector cast
On Sat, Jun 21, 2008 at 4:24 PM, Nicolas Capens <nicolas at capens.net> wrote: > I seem to be unable to cast a vector of integers to a vector of floats > (uitofp [4 x i8] to [4 x float], to be exact). It hits an assert in > LegalizeDAG.cpp line 5433: "Unknown int value type". The Assembly Language > Reference Manual's definition of uitofp doesn't indicate that
2020 Jan 11
2
[RFC][SDAG] Convert build_vector of ops on extractelts into ops on input vectors
Absolutely. We do it for scalars, so it would likely be a matter of just extending it. But that is one example. The issue of extracting elements, performing an operation on each element individually and then rebuilding the vector is likely more prevalent than that. At least I think that is the case, but I'll do some analysis to see if it is so or not. On Sat, Jan 11, 2020 at 6:15 PM Craig
2008 Jun 21
3
[LLVMdev] Vector cast
Hi all, I seem to be unable to cast a vector of integers to a vector of floats (uitofp [4 x i8] to [4 x float], to be exact). It hits an assert in LegalizeDAG.cpp line 5433: "Unknown int value type". The Assembly Language Reference Manual's definition of uitofp doesn't indicate that this is unsupported, so it looks like a bug to me. I'm on an x86 system by the way. My
2019 Oct 01
2
PR43374 - when should comparing NaN values raise a floating point exception?
Ulrich offered to do it instead since I expect he can get it done much faster than me. Instead I'm doing SIToFP and UIToFP. Ulrich said he wasn't going to be able to get to it for a couple of weeks, but that was a week or two ago. Ulrich? -----Original Message----- From: Cameron McInally <cameron.mcinally at nyu.edu> Sent: Tuesday, October 01, 2019 10:21 AM To: Kristof Beyls
2017 Jun 06
2
Change undef to poison in a few operations
Hi, Lately we have come to realize how undef makes our life complicated.. Therefore in this email we propose to change the behavior of a few instruction to yield poison instead of undef in error cases. This follows the suggestion of Eli in https://reviews.llvm.org/D33654. Why is undef so bad? - I believe it's not possible to make newgvn correct with undef. See for example the discussion
2008 Mar 31
7
[LLVMdev] Reference Manual Clarifications
Here is a patch containing all but one of the changes. I realized that the remainder/modulo discussion does indeed belongs to the srem instruction. The semantics of urem are obvious and need no further clarification. Best Regards, Jon 1572,1573c1572,1575 < notation (see below). Floating point constants must have a <a < href="#t_floating">floating point</a>
2015 Jul 06
5
[LLVMdev] Why can't comparisons with negative zero be simplified?
In InstCombineCompares.cpp, routine InstCombiner::FoldFCmp_IntToFP_Cst, there are these lines: // Comparisons with zero are a special case where we know we won't lose // information. bool IsCmpZero = RHS.isPosZero(); // If the conversion would lose info, don't hack on this. if ((int)InputSize > MantissaWidth && !IsCmpZero) return nullptr; Why check for positive
2008 Apr 01
1
[LLVMdev] Reference Manual Clarifications
Chris Lattner wrote: > On Mar 31, 2008, at 5:07 PM, Jon Sargeant wrote: > >> Gordon Henriksen wrote: >>> Hi Jon, >>> Please you'll want to submit patches as unified diffs and as >>> attachments. >>> I notice you're using Thunderbird, so I refer you to this tip: >>>
2017 Mar 20
2
Is it a valid fp transformation?
I agree. There’s implementation-defined behavior on the conversion of (arg*58) to int, but that shouldn’t be at issue here. The transform of (float)x + 1 => (float)(x + 1) is bogus. > On Mar 20, 2017, at 10:41 AM, Sanjay Patel via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Looks broken to me; I don't think there's UB in the original program. > > The fold in
2016 May 18
2
Working on FP SCEV Analysis
>What situations are they common in? ICC Vectorizer made a paradigm shift a while ago. If there aren’t a clear reason why something can’t be vectorized, we should try our best to vectorize. The rest is a performance modeling (and priority to implement) question, not a capability question. We believe this is a good paradigm to follow in a vectorizer development. It was a big departure from
2008 Oct 26
0
[LLVMdev] Turning on LegalizeTypes by default
On Oct 26, 2008, at 1:03 AM, Duncan Sands wrote: > Hi all, I plan to turn on the new type legalization infrastructure > "LegalizeTypes" by default tomorrow. This is a redesign/ > reimplementation > of the logic currently in LegalizeDAG that turns (for example) 64 bit > arithmetic on a 32 bit machine into a series of 32 bit operations. > As well > as being a
2017 Feb 13
2
RFC: Representing unions in TBAA
Hello all, I'm new to the llvm community. I'm learning how things work. I noticed that there has been some interest in improving how unions are handled. Bug 21725 is one example. I figured it might be a interesting place to start. I discussed this with a couple people, and below is a suggestion on how to represent unions. I would like some comments on how this fits in with how