WebAssembly's spec has now been updated to specify some guarantees
about lock free atomic accesses. Update clang to match.
This also updates sig_atomic_t to be 64-bit on wasm64. WebAssembly
does not presently have asynchronous interrupts, but this change is
within the spirit of how they will work if they are added.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12862
llvm-svn: 247624
This makes int_fast64_t and int_least64_t the same type as int64_t, and
eliminates a difference between wasm32 and wasm64.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12861
llvm-svn: 247622
Seems it broke the Polly build.
From http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/builds/11687/steps/compile/logs/stdio:
In file included from /home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/lib/TableGen/Record.cpp:14:0:
/home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/include/llvm/TableGen/Record.h:369:3: error: looser throw specifier for 'virtual llvm::TypedInit::~TypedInit()'
/home/grosser/buildslave/perf-x86_64-penryn-O3-polly-fast/llvm.src/include/llvm/TableGen/Record.h:270:11: error: overriding 'virtual llvm::Init::~Init() noexcept (true)'
llvm-svn: 247222
This implements basic support for compiling (though not yet assembling
or linking) for a WebAssembly target. Note that ABI details are not yet
finalized, and may change.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12002
llvm-svn: 246814
The ACLE (ARM C Language Extensions) 2.0 allows the __fp16 type to be
used as a functon argument or return type (ACLE 1.1 did not).
The current public release of the AAPCS (2.09) states that __fp16 values
should be converted to single-precision before being passed or returned,
but AAPCS 2.10 (to be released shortly) changes this, so that they are
passed in the least-significant 16 bits of either a GPR (for base AAPCS)
or a single-precision register (for AAPCS-VFP). This does not change how
arguments are passed if they get passed on the stack.
This patch brings clang up to compliance with the latest versions of
both of these specs.
We can now set the __ARM_FP16_ARGS ACLE predefine, and we have always
been able to set the __ARM_FP16_FORMAT_IEEE predefine (we do not support
the alternative format).
llvm-svn: 246764
Original commit message:
[ARM] Allow passing/returning of __fp16 arguments
The ACLE (ARM C Language Extensions) 2.0 allows the __fp16 type to be
used as a functon argument or return type (ACLE 1.1 did not).
The current public release of the AAPCS (2.09) states that __fp16 values
should be converted to single-precision before being passed or returned,
but AAPCS 2.10 (to be released shortly) changes this, so that they are
passed in the least-significant 16 bits of either a GPR (for base AAPCS)
or a single-precision register (for AAPCS-VFP). This does not change how
arguments are passed if they get passed on the stack.
This patch brings clang up to compliance with the latest versions of
both of these specs.
We can now set the __ARM_FP16_ARGS ACLE predefine, and we have always
been able to set the __ARM_FP16_FORMAT_IEEE predefine (we do not support
the alternative format).
llvm-svn: 246760
The ACLE (ARM C Language Extensions) 2.0 allows the __fp16 type to be
used as a functon argument or return type (ACLE 1.1 did not).
The current public release of the AAPCS (2.09) states that __fp16 values
should be converted to single-precision before being passed or returned,
but AAPCS 2.10 (to be released shortly) changes this, so that they are
passed in the least-significant 16 bits of either a GPR (for base AAPCS)
or a single-precision register (for AAPCS-VFP). This does not change how
arguments are passed if they get passed on the stack.
This patch brings clang up to compliance with the latest versions of
both of these specs.
We can now set the __ARM_FP16_ARGS ACLE predefine, and we have always
been able to set the __ARM_FP16_FORMAT_IEEE predefine (we do not support
the alternative format).
llvm-svn: 246755
const char pointers. In turn, push this through Clang APIs as well,
simplifying a number of bits of code that was handling the oddities of
nullptrs.
llvm-svn: 246375
Without this, 64-byte vector types (__m512), specified to be 64-byte
aligned in the AVX512 draft SysV ABI, will only be 32-byte aligned.
This is analoguous to AVX, for which we accept 32-byte max alignment.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10724
llvm-svn: 246230
There's no point in using a larger alignment if we have no instructions
that would benefit from it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12389
llvm-svn: 246229
The ABI string only exists to communicate with TargetCodeGenInfo.
Concretely, since we only used "avx*" ABI strings on x86_64 (as AVX
doesn't affect the i386 ABIs), this meant that, when initializing
SimdDefaultAlign, we would ignore AVX/AVX512 on i386, for no good
reason.
Instead, directly check the features. A similar change for
MaxVectorAlign will follow.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12390
llvm-svn: 246228
with multiple uses of feature map construction.
Note: We could make this a static function on TargetInfo if we
fix the x86 port needing to check the triple in an isolated case.
llvm-svn: 246128
This involved specializing handleUserFeatures so that we could perform
diagnostics on -only- user supplied features and migrating the rest of
the initialization functions to set features based on enabling and disabling
full feature sets. No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 245936
The ACLE (ARM C Language Extensions) 2.0 defines that the predefined macro
__ARM_FP16_ARGS should be defined if __fp16 can be used as an argument and
result.
The support for __fp16 to be used as an argument and result is already
implemented for AArch64 so this change is just adding the missing macro.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12240
llvm-svn: 245833
"generic" cpu was wrongly handled as exact real CPU name of ARMv8.1A architecture.
This has been fixed, now it is abstract name, suitable for any arch.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11640
llvm-svn: 245445
Summary:
MSDN says that fastcall, stdcall, thiscall, and vectorcall are all
accepted but ignored on ARM and X64.
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/984x0h58.aspx
MSDN also says cdecl is also accepted and typically ignored
This patch brings ARM in line with how we ignore them for X64
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: compnerd, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12034
llvm-svn: 245076
... and add aarch32 to specifically refer to the 32-bit ones.
Previously, 'arm' meant only 32-bit architectures and there was no way
for a module to build with both 32 and 64 bit ARM architectures.
Now a module that is intended to work on both architectures can specify
requires arm
whereas a module only for 32-bit platforms can say
requires aarch32
and just like before, 64-bit only can say
requires aarch64
llvm-svn: 244306
so that we can populate it on a per-target basis with required features.
Future commits will start using this information for warnings.
llvm-svn: 244286