Similar to 806761a7629df268c8aed49657aeccffa6bca449.
For IR files without a target triple, -mtriple= specifies the full
target triple while -march= merely sets the architecture part of the
default target triple, leaving a target triple which may not make sense,
e.g. amdgpu-apple-darwin.
Therefore, -march= is error-prone and not recommended for tests without
a target triple. The issue has been benign as we recognize
$unknown-apple-darwin as ELF instead of rejecting it outrightly.
This patch changes AMDGPU tests to not rely on the default
OS/environment components. Tests that need fixes are not changed:
```
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/fabs.f64.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/fabs.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/floor.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/fneg-fabs.f64.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/fneg-fabs.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/r600-infinite-loop-bug-while-reorganizing-vector.ll
LLVM :: CodeGen/AMDGPU/schedule-if-2.ll
```
The condition in canEvictInterferenceBasedOnCost is slightly different
from the assertion in evictInteference.
canEvictInterferenceBasedOnCost uses a <= check for the cascade number
for legality, but the assert was checking for <. For equal cascade
numbers for an urgent eviction, canEvictInterferenceBasedOnCost could
return success. The actual eviction would then hit this assert. Avoid
ever returning true for equivalent cascade numbers.
The resulting failed allocation seems a bit off to me. e.g. in
illegal-eviction-assert.mir, I wuold assume %0 gets allocated starting
at $vgpr0. That was its initial allocation choice, but was later
evicted. In this example no evictions can help improve anything.