
In most cases, the type information attached to load and store instructions is meaningless and inconsistently applied. We can usually use ".b" loads and avoid the complexity of trying to assign the correct type. The one expectation is sign-extending load, which will continue to use ".s" to ensure the sign extension into a larger register is done correctly.
15 lines
518 B
LLVM
15 lines
518 B
LLVM
; RUN: llc < %s -mtriple=nvptx64 -mcpu=sm_35 | FileCheck %s
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; RUN: %if ptxas %{ llc < %s -mtriple=nvptx64 -mcpu=sm_35 | %ptxas-verify %}
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define void @foo(ptr nocapture readonly %x_value, ptr nocapture %output) #0 {
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%1 = load <4 x float>, ptr %x_value, align 16
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%2 = fpext <4 x float> %1 to <4 x double>
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; CHECK-NOT: ld.v2.b32 {%fd{{[0-9]+}}, %fd{{[0-9]+}}}, [%rd{{[0-9]+}}];
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; CHECK: cvt.f64.f32
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; CHECK: cvt.f64.f32
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; CHECK: cvt.f64.f32
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; CHECK: cvt.f64.f32
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store <4 x double> %2, ptr %output
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ret void
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}
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