The directive name is not useful because the next line replicates the error line
which includes the directive. The prevailing style uses "expected newline".
glibc sysdeps/aarch64/tst-vpcs-mod.S has something like:
```
.variant_pcs vpcs_call
.global vpcs_call
```
This is supported by GNU as but leads to an error in MC. Use getOrCreateSymbol
to support a not-yet-registered symbol: call `registerSymbol` to ensure the
symbol exists even if there is no binding directive/label, to match GNU as.
While here, improve tests to check (1) a local symbol can get
STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS (2) undefined .variant_pcs (3) an alias does not
inherit STO_AARCH64_VARIANT_PCS.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D122507
When assembling for example an SVE instruction with the `.arch +sve2` directive,
+sve should be implied by setting +sve2, similar to what would happen if
one would pass the mattr=+sve2 flag on the command-line.
The AsmParser doesn't set the implied features, meaning that the SVE
instruction does not assemble. This patch fixes that.
Note that the same does not hold when disabling a feature. For example,
+nosve2 does not imply +nosve.
Reviewed By: c-rhodes
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120259
The cleanup was manual, but assisted by "include-what-you-use". It consists in
1. Removing unused forward declaration. No impact expected.
2. Removing unused headers in .cpp files. No impact expected.
3. Removing unused headers in .h files. This removes implicit dependencies and
is generally considered a good thing, but this may break downstream builds.
I've updated llvm, clang, lld, lldb and mlir deps, and included a list of the
modification in the second part of the commit.
4. Replacing header inclusion by forward declaration. This has the same impact
as 3.
Notable changes:
- llvm/Support/TargetParser.h no longer includes llvm/Support/AArch64TargetParser.h nor llvm/Support/ARMTargetParser.h
- llvm/Support/TypeSize.h no longer includes llvm/Support/WithColor.h
- llvm/Support/YAMLTraits.h no longer includes llvm/Support/Regex.h
- llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h no longer includes llvm/Support/MemAlloc.h nor llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h
You may need to add some of these headers in your compilation units, if needs be.
As an hint to the impact of the cleanup, running
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 8000919 lines
after: 7917500 lines
Reduced dependencies also helps incremental rebuilds and is more ccache
friendly, something not shown by the above metric :-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
This family of instructions includes CPYF (copy forward), CPYB (copy
backward), SET (memset) and SETG (memset + initialise MTE tags), with
some sub-variants to indicate whether address translation is done in a
privileged or unprivileged way. For the copy instructions, you can
separately specify the read and write translations (so that kernels
can safely use these instructions in syscall handlers, to memcpy
between the calling process's user-space memory map and the kernel's
own privileged one).
The unusual thing about these instructions is that they write back to
multiple registers, because they perform an implementation-defined
amount of copying each time they run, and write back to _all_ the
address and size registers to indicate how much remains to be done
(and the code is expected to loop on them until the size register
becomes zero). But this is no problem in LLVM - you just define each
instruction to have multiple outputs, multiple inputs, and a set of
constraints tying their register numbers together appropriately.
This commit introduces a special subtarget feature called MOPS (after
the name the spec gives to the CPU id field), which is a dependency of
the top-level 8.8-A feature, and uses that to enable most of the new
instructions. The SETMG instructions also depend on MTE (and the test
checks that).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116157
This reverts commit fd4808887e.
This patch causes gcc to issue a lot of warnings like:
warning: base class ‘class llvm::MCParsedAsmOperand’ should be
explicitly initialized in the copy constructor [-Wextra]
This patch introduces support for targetting the Armv9.3-A architecture,
which should map to the existing Armv8.8-A extensions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116158
This is the first commit in a series that implements support for
"armv8.8-a" architecture. This should contain all the necessary
boilerplate to make the 8.8-A architecture exist from LLVM and Clang's
point of view: it adds the new arch as a subtarget feature, a definition
in TargetParser, a name on the command line, an appropriate set of
predefined macros, and adds appropriate tests. The new architecture name
is supported in both AArch32 and AArch64.
However, in this commit, no actual _functionality_ is added as part of
the new architecture. If you specify -march=armv8.8a, the compiler
will accept it and set the right predefines, but generate no code any
differently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115694
This change introduces subtarget features to predicate certain
instructions and system registers that are available only on
'A' profile targets. Those features are not present when
targeting a generic CPU, which is the default processor.
In other words the generic CPU now means the intersection of
'A' and 'R' profiles. To maintain backwards compatibility we
enable the features that correspond to -march=armv8-a when the
architecture is not explicitly specified on the command line.
References: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0600/latest
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110065
armv9-a, armv9.1-a and armv9.2-a can be targeted using the -march option
both in ARM and AArch64.
- Armv9-A maps to Armv8.5-A.
- Armv9.1-A maps to Armv8.6-A.
- Armv9.2-A maps to Armv8.7-A.
- The SVE2 extension is enabled by default on these architectures.
- The cryptographic extensions are disabled by default on these
architectures.
The Armv9-A architecture is described in the Arm® Architecture Reference
Manual Supplement Armv9, for Armv9-A architecture profile
(https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0608/latest).
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109517
This moves the registry higher in the LLVM library dependency stack.
Every client of the target registry needs to link against MC anyway to
actually use the target, so we might as well move this out of Support.
This allows us to ensure that Support doesn't have includes from MC/*.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111454
Changes in architecture revision 00eac1:
* Tile slice index offset no longer prefixed with '#'.
* The syntax for 128-bit (.Q) ZA tile slice accesses must now include
an explicit zero index.
The reference can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0602/2021-09
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111212
A small subset of the NEON instruction set is legal in streaming mode.
This patch adds support for the following vector to integer move
instructions:
0x00 1110 0000 0001 0010 11xx xxxx xxxx # SMOV W|Xd,Vn.B[0]
0x00 1110 0000 0010 0010 11xx xxxx xxxx # SMOV W|Xd,Vn.H[0]
0100 1110 0000 0100 0010 11xx xxxx xxxx # SMOV Xd,Vn.S[0]
0000 1110 0000 0001 0011 11xx xxxx xxxx # UMOV Wd,Vn.B[0]
0000 1110 0000 0010 0011 11xx xxxx xxxx # UMOV Wd,Vn.H[0]
0000 1110 0000 0100 0011 11xx xxxx xxxx # UMOV Wd,Vn.S[0]
0100 1110 0000 1000 0011 11xx xxxx xxxx # UMOV Xd,Vn.D[0]
Only the zero index variants are legal, all others indexes are illegal.
To support this, new instructions are defined specifically for zero
index which is hardcoded, along an implicit 'VectorIndex0' operand.
Since the index operand is implicit and takes no bits in the encoding,
custom decoding is required to add the operand.
I'm not sure if this is the best approach but the predicate constraint
on a subset of an operand is unusual. Would be interested to hear some
alternatives.
The instructions are predicated on 'HasNEONorStreamingSVE', i.e. they're
enabled by either +neon or +streaming-sve. This follows on from the work
in D106272 to support the subset of SVE(2) instructions that are legal
in streaming mode.
Depends on D107902.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107903
This patch adds the zero instruction for zeroing a list of 64-bit
element ZA tiles. The instruction takes a list of up to eight tiles
ZA0.D-ZA7.D, which must be in order, e.g.
zero {za0.d,za1.d,za2.d,za3.d,za4.d,za5.d,za6.d,za7.d}
zero {za1.d,za3.d,za5.d,za7.d}
The assembler also accepts 32-bit, 16-bit and 8-bit element tiles which
are mapped to corresponding 64-bit element tiles in accordance with the
architecturally defined mapping between different element size tiles,
e.g.
* Zeroing ZA0.B, or the entire array name ZA, is equivalent to zeroing
all eight 64-bit element tiles ZA0.D to ZA7.D.
* Zeroing ZA0.S is equivalent to zeroing ZA0.D and ZA4.D.
The preferred disassembly of this instruction uses the shortest list of
tile names that represent the encoded immediate mask, e.g.
* An immediate which encodes 64-bit element tiles ZA0.D, ZA1.D, ZA4.D and
ZA5.D is disassembled as {ZA0.S, ZA1.S}.
* An immediate which encodes 64-bit element tiles ZA0.D, ZA2.D, ZA4.D and
ZA6.D is disassembled as {ZA0.H}.
* An all-ones immediate is disassembled as {ZA}.
* An all-zeros immediate is disassembled as an empty list {}.
This patch adds the MatrixTileList asm operand and related parsing to support
this.
Depends on D105570.
The reference can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0602/2021-06
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105575
This patch adds the new system registers introduced in SME:
- ID_AA64SMFR0_EL1 (ro) SME feature identifier.
- SMCR_ELx (r/w) streaming mode control register for configuring
effective SVE Streaming SVE Vector length when the PE is in
Streaming SVE mode.
- SVCR (r/w) streaming vector control register, visible at all
exception levels. Provides access to PSTATE.SM and PSTATE.ZA
using MSR and MRS instructions.
- SMPRI_EL1 (r/w) streaming mode execution priority register.
- SMPRIMAP_EL2 (r/w) streaming mode priority mapping register.
- SMIDR_EL1 (ro) streaming mode identification register.
- TPIDR2_EL0 (r/w) for use by SME software to manage per-thread
SME context.
- MPAMSM_EL1 (r/w) MPAM (v8.4) streaming mode register, for
labelling memory accesses performed in streaming mode.
Also added in this patch are the SME mode change instructions.
Three MSR immediate instructions are implemented to set or clear
PSTATE.SM, PSTATE.ZA, or both respectively:
- MSR SVCRSM, #<imm1>
- MSR SVCRZA, #<imm1>
- MSR SVCRSMZA, #<imm1>
The following smstart/smstop aliases are also implemented for
convenience:
smstart -> MSR SVCRSMZA, #1
smstart sm -> MSR SVCRSM, #1
smstart za -> MSR SVCRZA, #1
smstop -> MSR SVCRSMZA, #0
smstop sm -> MSR SVCRSM, #0
smstop za -> MSR SVCRZA, #0
The reference can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0602/2021-06
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105576
This patch adds support for following contiguous load and store
instructions:
* LD1B, LD1H, LD1W, LD1D, LD1Q
* ST1B, ST1H, ST1W, ST1D, ST1Q
A new register class and operand is added for the 32-bit vector select
register W12-W15. The differences in the following tests which have been
re-generated are caused by the introduction of this register class:
* llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/irtranslator-inline-asm.ll
* llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/regbank-inlineasm.mir
* llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/stp-opt-with-renaming-reserved-regs.mir
* llvm/test/CodeGen/AArch64/stp-opt-with-renaming.mir
D88663 attempts to resolve the issue with the store pair test
differences in the AArch64 load/store optimizer.
The GlobalISel differences are caused by changes in the enum values of
register classes, tests have been updated with the new values.
The reference can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0602/2021-06
Reviewed By: CarolineConcatto
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105572
SME introduces the ZA array, a new piece of architectural register state
consisting of a matrix of [SVLb x SVLb] bytes, where SVL is the
implementation defined Streaming SVE vector length and SVLb is the
number of 8-bit elements in a vector of SVL bits.
SME instructions consist of three types of matrix operands:
* Tiles: a ZA tile is a square, two-dimensional sub-array of elements
within the ZA array. These tiles make up the larger accumulator array
and the granularity varies based on the element size, i.e.
- ZAQ0..ZAQ15 (smallest tile granule)
- ZAD0..ZAD7
- ZAS0..ZAS3
- ZAH0..ZAH1
or ZAB0 (largest tile granule, single tile)
* Tile vectors: similar to regular tiles, but have an extra 'h' or 'v'
to tell how the vector at [reg+offset] is layed out in the tile,
horizontally or vertically. E.g. za1h.h or za15v.q, which corresponds
to vectors in registers ZAH1 and ZAQ15, respectively.
* Accumulator matrix: this is the entire accumulator array ZA.
This patch adds the register classes and related operands and parsing
for SME instructions operating on the accumulator array.
The ADDHA and ADDVA instructions which operate on tiles are also added
in this patch to make some use of the code added, later patches will
make use of the other operands introduced here.
The reference can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0602/2021-06
Co-authored by: Sander de Smalen (@sdesmalen)
Reviewed By: david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105570
This adds support for Armv9-A's Realm Management Extension, including
three new system registers - MFAR_EL3, GPCCR_EL3 and GPTBR_EL3 - and
four new TLBI instructions.
The reference for the Realm Management Extension can be found at: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0615/aa.
Based on patches by Victor Campos.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104773
This is a mechanical change. This actually also renames the
similarly named methods in the SmallString class, however these
methods don't seem to be used outside of the llvm subproject, so
this doesn't break building of the rest of the monorepo.
The prevailing style does not add the message. The directive name is not useful
because the next line replicates the error line which includes the directive.
The Arm Architecture Reference Manual says that the SystemHintOp_BTI
opcode is prefered when CRm:op2 matches 0100:xx0, but llvm-mc
currently accepts 0100:xxx, which isn't right.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102415
This untangles the MCContext and the MCObjectFileInfo. There is a circular
dependency between MCContext and MCObjectFileInfo. Currently this dependency
also exists during construction: You can't contruct a MOFI without a MCContext
without constructing the MCContext with a dummy version of that MOFI first.
This removes this dependency during construction. In a perfect world,
MCObjectFileInfo wouldn't depend on MCContext at all, but only be stored in the
MCContext, like other MC information. This is future work.
This also shifts/adds more information to the MCContext making it more
available to the different targets. Namely:
- TargetTriple
- ObjectFileType
- SubtargetInfo
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101462