1 ; RUN: llc -mtriple=aarch64-none-linux-gnu < %s -o - | FileCheck %s 2 3 ; The following functions test the use case where an X constraint is used to 4 ; add a dependency between an assembly instruction (vmsr in this case) and 5 ; another instruction. In each function, we use a different type for the 6 ; X constraint argument. 7 ; 8 ; We can something similar from the following C code: 9 ; double f1(double f, int pscr_value) { 10 ; asm volatile("msr fpsr,%1" : "=X" ((f)): "r" (pscr_value)); 11 ; return f+f; 12 ; } 13 14 ; CHECK-LABEL: f1 15 ; CHECK: msr FPSR 16 ; CHECK: fadd d 17 18 define double @f1(double %f, i32 %pscr_value) { 19 entry: 20 %f.addr = alloca double, align 8 21 store double %f, double* %f.addr, align 8 22 call void asm sideeffect "msr fpsr,$1", "=*X,r"(double* nonnull %f.addr, i32 %pscr_value) nounwind 23 %0 = load double, double* %f.addr, align 8 24 %add = fadd double %0, %0 25 ret double %add 26 } 27 28 ; int f2(int f, int pscr_value) { 29 ; asm volatile("msr fpsr,$1" : "=X" ((f)): "r" (pscr_value)); 30 ; return f*f; 31 ; } 32 33 ; CHECK-LABEL: f2 34 ; CHECK: msr FPSR 35 ; CHECK: mul 36 define i32 @f2(i32 %f, i32 %pscr_value) { 37 entry: 38 %f.addr = alloca i32, align 4 39 store i32 %f, i32* %f.addr, align 4 40 call void asm sideeffect "msr fpsr,$1", "=*X,r"(i32* nonnull %f.addr, i32 %pscr_value) nounwind 41 %0 = load i32, i32* %f.addr, align 4 42 %mul = mul i32 %0, %0 43 ret i32 %mul 44 } 45 46 ; typedef signed char int8_t; 47 ; typedef __attribute__((neon_vector_type(8))) int8_t int8x8_t; 48 ; void f3 (void) 49 ; { 50 ; int8x8_t vector_res_int8x8; 51 ; unsigned int fpscr; 52 ; asm volatile ("msr fpsr,$1" : "=X" ((vector_res_int8x8)) : "r" (fpscr)); 53 ; return vector_res_int8x8 * vector_res_int8x8; 54 ; } 55 56 ; CHECK-LABEL: f3 57 ; CHECK: msr FPSR 58 ; CHECK: mul 59 define <8 x i8> @f3() { 60 entry: 61 %vector_res_int8x8 = alloca <8 x i8>, align 8 62 %0 = getelementptr inbounds <8 x i8>, <8 x i8>* %vector_res_int8x8, i32 0, i32 0 63 call void asm sideeffect "msr fpsr,$1", "=*X,r"(<8 x i8>* nonnull %vector_res_int8x8, i32 undef) nounwind 64 %1 = load <8 x i8>, <8 x i8>* %vector_res_int8x8, align 8 65 %mul = mul <8 x i8> %1, %1 66 ret <8 x i8> %mul 67 } 68 69 ; We can emit integer constants. 70 ; We can get this from: 71 ; void f() { 72 ; int x = 2; 73 ; asm volatile ("add x0, x0, %0" : : "X" (x)); 74 ; } 75 ; 76 ; CHECK-LABEL: f4 77 ; CHECK: add x0, x0, #2 78 define void @f4() { 79 entry: 80 tail call void asm sideeffect "add x0, x0, $0", "X"(i32 2) 81 ret void 82 } 83 84 ; We can emit function labels. This is equivalent to the following C code: 85 ; void f(void) { 86 ; void (*x)(void) = &foo; 87 ; asm volatile ("bl %0" : : "X" (x)); 88 ; } 89 ; CHECK-LABEL: f5 90 ; CHECK: bl f4 91 define void @f5() { 92 entry: 93 tail call void asm sideeffect "bl $0", "X"(void ()* nonnull @f4) 94 ret void 95 } 96 97 declare void @foo(...) 98 99 ; This tests the behavior of the X constraint when used on functions pointers, 100 ; or functions with a cast. In the first asm call we figure out that this 101 ; is a function pointer and emit the label. However, in the second asm call 102 ; we can't see through the bitcast and we end up having to lower this constraint 103 ; to something else. This is not ideal, but it is a correct behaviour according 104 ; to the definition of the X constraint. 105 ; 106 ; In this case (and other cases where we could have emitted something else), 107 ; what we're doing with the X constraint is not particularly useful either, 108 ; since the user could have used "r" in this situation for the same effect. 109 110 ; CHECK-LABEL: f6 111 ; CHECK: bl foo 112 ; CHECK: br x 113 114 define void @f6() nounwind { 115 entry: 116 tail call void asm sideeffect "bl $0", "X"(void (...)* @foo) nounwind 117 tail call void asm sideeffect "br $0", "X"(void (...)* bitcast (void ()* @f4 to void (...)*)) nounwind 118 ret void 119 } 120 121 ; The following IR can be generated from C code with a function like: 122 ; void a() { 123 ; void* a = &&A; 124 ; asm volatile ("bl %0" : : "X" (a)); 125 ; A: 126 ; return; 127 ; } 128 ; 129 ; Ideally this would give the block address of bb, but it requires us to see 130 ; through blockaddress, which we can't do at the moment. This might break some 131 ; existing use cases where a user would expect to get a block label and instead 132 ; gets the block address in a register. However, note that according to the 133 ; "no constraints" definition this behaviour is correct (although not very nice). 134 135 ; CHECK-LABEL: f7 136 ; CHECK: bl 137 define void @f7() { 138 call void asm sideeffect "br $0", "X"( i8* blockaddress(@f7, %bb) ) 139 br label %bb 140 bb: 141 ret void 142 } 143 144 ; If we use a constraint "=*X", we should get a store back to *%x (in x0). 145 ; CHECK-LABEL: f8 146 ; CHECK: add [[Dest:x[0-9]+]], x0, x0 147 ; CHECK: str [[Dest]], [x0] 148 define void @f8(i64 *%x) { 149 entry: 150 tail call void asm sideeffect "add $0, x0, x0", "=*X"(i64 *%x) 151 ret void 152 } 153