WebAssembly's `memory.fill` and `memory.copy` instructions trap if the
pointers are out of bounds, even if the length is zero. This is
different from LLVM, which expects that it can call `memcpy` on
arbitrary invalid pointers if the length is zero. To avoid spurious
traps, branch around `memory.fill` and `memory.copy` when the length is
zero.
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Co-authored-by: Heejin Ahn <aheejin@gmail.com>
This function was added for ARM targets, but aligning global/stack pointer
arguments passed to memcpy/memmove/memset can improve code size and
performance for all targets that don't have fast unaligned accesses.
This adds a generic implementation that adjusts the alignment to pointer
size if unaligned accesses are slow.
Review D134168 suggests that this significantly improves performance on
synthetic benchmarks such as Dhrystone on RV32 as it avoids memcpy() calls.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D134282
The data layout strings do not have any effect on llc tests and will become
misleadingly out of date as we continue to update the canonical data layout, so
remove them from the tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105842
This covers both the existing memory functions as well as the new bulk memory proposal.
Added new test files since changes where also required in the inputs.
Also removes unused init/drop intrinsics rather than trying to make them work for 64-bit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82821