Evgenii Kudriashov a242880371
[TableGen][GlobalISel] Reorder atomic predicate to preserve the order (#121806)
Since there are no opcodes for atomic loads and stores comparing to
SelectionDAG, we add `CheckMMOIsNonAtomic` predicate immediately after
the opcode predicate to make a logical combination of them. Otherwise
when `IPM_AtomicOrderingMMO` is inserted after `IPM_GenericPredicate`,
the patterns without predicates get a higher priority as
`IPM_AtomicOrderingMMO` has higher priority than `IPM_GenericPredicate`.

This is important to preserve an order of aligned/unaligned patterns on
X86 because aligned memory operations have an additional alignment
predicate and should be checked first according to their placement in td
file.

Closes #121446
2025-01-16 17:06:21 +01:00
..

LLVM TableGen

The purpose of TableGen is to generate complex output files based on information from source files that are significantly easier to code than the output files would be, and also easier to maintain and modify over time.

The information is coded in a declarative style involving classes and records, which are then processed by TableGen.

class Hello <string _msg> {
  string msg = !strconcat("Hello ", _msg);
}

def HelloWorld: Hello<"world!"> {}
------------- Classes -----------------
class Hello<string Hello:_msg = ?> {
  string msg = !strconcat("Hello ", Hello:_msg);
}
------------- Defs -----------------
def HelloWorld {        // Hello
  string msg = "Hello world!";
}

Try this example on Compiler Explorer.

The internalized records are passed on to various backends, which extract information from a subset of the records and generate one or more output files.

These output files are typically .inc files for C++, but may be any type of file that the backend developer needs.

Resources for learning the language:

Writing TableGen backends:

TableGen in MLIR:

Useful tools: