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* Generate a nop instruction after some ais annotations (#137)Bernhard Schommer2018-09-121-5/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Generate a nop instruction after ais annotations. In order to prevent the merging of ais annotations with following Labels a nop instruction is inserted, but only if the annotation is followed immediately by a label. The insertion of nop instructions is performed during the expansion of builtin and pseudo assembler instructions and is processor independent, by inserting a __builtin_nop built-in. * Add Pnop instruction to ARM, RISC-V, and x86 ARM as well as RISC-V don't have nop instructions that can be easily encoded by for example add with zero instructions. For x86 we used to use `mov X0, X0` for nop but this may not be as efficient as the true nop instruction. * Implement __builtin_nop on all supported target architectures. This builtin is not yet made available on the C side for all architectures. Bug 24067
* Fix expansion of ctzl/clzl builtin for 64bit targets (#127)Michael Schmidt2018-07-121-2/+15
| | | | bug 24105, issue #243: expand correct version of ctzl/clzl builtin when long type is 64bit wide
* New support for inserting ais-annotations.Bernhard Schommer2017-10-191-4/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | The ais annotations can be inserted via the new ais variants of the builtin annotation. They mainly differe in that they have an address format specifier '%addr' which will be replaced by the adress in the binary. The implementation simply prints a label for the builtin call alongside a the text of the annotation as comment and inserts the annotation together as acii string in a separate section 'ais_annotations' and replaces the usages of the address format specifiers by the address of the label of the builtin call.
* Extend builtin arguments with a pointer addition operatorXavier Leroy2017-07-061-0/+2
| | | | | | This extension enables more addressing modes to be encoded as builtin arguments and used in conjunction with volatile memory accesses. Current status: x86 port only, the only new addressing mode handled is reg + offset.
* Hybrid 64bit/32bit PowerPC portBernhard Schommer2017-05-031-5/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | This commit adds code generation for 64bit PowerPC architectures which execute 32bit applications. The main difference to the normal 32bit PowerPC port is that it uses the available 64bit instructions instead of using the runtime library functions. However pointers are still 32bit and the 32bit calling convention is used. In order to use this port the target architecture must be either in Server execution mode or if in Embedded execution mode the high order 32 bits of GPRs must be implemented in 32-bit mode. Furthermore the operating system must preserve the high order 32 bits of GPRs.
* Do not use hardcoded register number for sp.Bernhard Schommer2016-11-251-1/+1
| | | | | | Since the dwarf register names for x86_32 and x86_64 differ it is wrong to hardcode the dwarf register number for rsp to 4. Bug 20461
* Make Archi.ptr64 always computable, and reorganize files accordingly: ia32 ↵Xavier Leroy2016-10-271-0/+638
-> x86/x86_32/x86_64 Having Archi.ptr64 as an opaque Parameter that is determined at run-time depending on compcert.ini is problematic for applications such as VST where functions such as Ctypes.sizeof must compute within Coq. This commit introduces two versions of the Archi.v file, one for x86 32 bits (with ptr64 := false), one for x86 64 bits (with ptr64 := true). Unlike previous approaches, no other file is duplicated between these two variants of x86. While we are at it, I renamed "ia32" into "x86" everywhere. "ia32" is Intel speak for the 32-bit architecture. It is not a good name to describe both the 32 and 64 bit architectures. Finally, .depend is no longer under version control and is regenerated when the target architecture changes. That's because the location of Archi.v differs between the ports that have 32/64 bit variants (x86 so far) and the ports that have only one bitsize (ARM and PowerPC so far).