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* Introduce and use the type fp_comparison for floating-point comparisonsXavier Leroy2019-03-261-3/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | With FP arithmetic, the negation of "x < y" is not "x >= y". For this reason, the back-end intermediate languages of CompCert used to have both "Ccompf c" and "Cnotcompf c" comparison operators, where "c" is of type Integers.comparison and "Cnotcompf c" denotes the negation of FP comparison c. There are some problems with this approach: - Beyond Cnotcompf we also need Cnotcompfs (for single precision FP) and, in case of ARM, special forms for not-comparison against 0.0. This duplication of comparison constructors inevitably causes some code and proof duplication. - Cnotcompf Ceq is really Ccompf Cne, and likewise Cnotcompf Cne is really Ccompf Ceq, hence the representation of FP comparisons is not canonical, adding to the code and proof duplication mentioned above. - Cnotcompf is introduced in CminorSel, but in Cminor we don't have it, making it impossible to express some transformations over comparisons at the machine-independent Cminor level. This commit develops an alternate approach, whereas FP comparisons have their own type, defined as Floats.fp_comparison, and which includes constructors for "not <", "not <=", "not >" and "not >=". Hence this type is closed under boolean negation, so to speak, and there is no longer a need for "Cnotcompf", given that "Ccompf" takes a fp_comparison and can therefore express all FP comparisons of interest.
* Extend builtin arguments with a pointer addition operatorXavier Leroy2017-07-061-4/+13
| | | | | | 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 Schommer2017-05-031-4/+4
| | | | | | | | | | | | | 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.
* RISC-V port and assorted changesXavier Leroy2017-04-281-0/+3
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This commits adds code generation for the RISC-V architecture, both in 32- and 64-bit modes. The generated code was lightly tested using the simulator and cross-binutils from https://riscv.org/software-tools/ This port required the following additional changes: - Integers: More properties about shrx - SelectOp: now provides smart constructors for mulhs and mulhu - SelectDiv, 32-bit integer division and modulus: implement constant propagation, use the new smart constructors mulhs and mulhu. - Runtime library: if no asm implementation is provided, run the reference C implementation through CompCert. Since CompCert rejects the definitions of names of special functions such as __i64_shl, the reference implementation now uses "i64_" names, e.g. "i64_shl", and a renaming "i64_ -> __i64_" is performed over the generated assembly file, before assembling and building the runtime library. - test/: add SIMU make variable to run tests through a simulator - test/regression/alignas.c: make sure _Alignas and _Alignof are not #define'd by C headers commit da14495c01cf4f66a928c2feff5c53f09bde837f Author: Xavier Leroy <xavier.leroy@inria.fr> Date: Thu Apr 13 17:36:10 2017 +0200 RISC-V port, continued Now working on Asmgen. commit 36f36eb3a5abfbb8805960443d087b6a83e86005 Author: Xavier Leroy <xavier.leroy@inria.fr> Date: Wed Apr 12 17:26:39 2017 +0200 RISC-V port, first steps This port is based on Prashanth Mundkur's experimental RV32 port and brings it up to date with CompCert, and adds 64-bit support (RV64). Work in progress.
* Use "Local" as prefixXavier Leroy2017-02-131-1/+1
| | | | | Open Local becomes Local Open. This silences Coq 8.6's warning. Also: remove one useless Require-inside-a-module that caused another warning.
* Make Archi.ptr64 always computable, and reorganize files accordingly: ia32 ↵Xavier Leroy2016-10-271-0/+530
-> 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).