1
0
mirror of https://github.com/golang/go synced 2024-10-05 11:31:22 -06:00
go/src/cmd/5g/gsubr.go

1212 lines
25 KiB
Go
Raw Normal View History

// Derived from Inferno utils/5c/txt.c
// http://code.google.com/p/inferno-os/source/browse/utils/5c/txt.c
//
// Copyright © 1994-1999 Lucent Technologies Inc. All rights reserved.
// Portions Copyright © 1995-1997 C H Forsyth (forsyth@terzarima.net)
// Portions Copyright © 1997-1999 Vita Nuova Limited
// Portions Copyright © 2000-2007 Vita Nuova Holdings Limited (www.vitanuova.com)
// Portions Copyright © 2004,2006 Bruce Ellis
// Portions Copyright © 2005-2007 C H Forsyth (forsyth@terzarima.net)
// Revisions Copyright © 2000-2007 Lucent Technologies Inc. and others
// Portions Copyright © 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved.
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
// in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
// to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
// copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
// LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
// OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
// THE SOFTWARE.
package main
import (
"cmd/internal/gc"
"cmd/internal/obj"
"cmd/internal/obj/arm"
"fmt"
)
// TODO(rsc): Can make this bigger if we move
// the text segment up higher in 5l for all GOOS.
// At the same time, can raise StackBig in ../../runtime/stack.h.
var unmappedzero int = 4096
var resvd = []int{
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
arm.REG_R9, // formerly reserved for m; might be okay to reuse now; not sure about NaCl
arm.REG_R10, // reserved for g
}
/*
* return constant i node.
* overwritten by next call, but useful in calls to gins.
*/
var ncon_n gc.Node
func ncon(i uint32) *gc.Node {
if ncon_n.Type == nil {
gc.Nodconst(&ncon_n, gc.Types[gc.TUINT32], 0)
}
gc.Mpmovecfix(ncon_n.Val.U.Xval, int64(i))
return &ncon_n
}
var sclean [10]gc.Node
var nsclean int
/*
* n is a 64-bit value. fill in lo and hi to refer to its 32-bit halves.
*/
func split64(n *gc.Node, lo *gc.Node, hi *gc.Node) {
if !gc.Is64(n.Type) {
gc.Fatal("split64 %v", gc.Tconv(n.Type, 0))
}
if nsclean >= len(sclean) {
gc.Fatal("split64 clean")
}
sclean[nsclean].Op = gc.OEMPTY
nsclean++
switch n.Op {
default:
switch n.Op {
default:
var n1 gc.Node
if !dotaddable(n, &n1) {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Igen(n, &n1, nil)
sclean[nsclean-1] = n1
}
n = &n1
case gc.ONAME:
if n.Class == gc.PPARAMREF {
var n1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Cgen(n.Heapaddr, &n1)
sclean[nsclean-1] = n1
n = &n1
}
// nothing
case gc.OINDREG:
break
}
*lo = *n
*hi = *n
lo.Type = gc.Types[gc.TUINT32]
if n.Type.Etype == gc.TINT64 {
hi.Type = gc.Types[gc.TINT32]
} else {
hi.Type = gc.Types[gc.TUINT32]
}
hi.Xoffset += 4
case gc.OLITERAL:
var n1 gc.Node
gc.Convconst(&n1, n.Type, &n.Val)
i := gc.Mpgetfix(n1.Val.U.Xval)
gc.Nodconst(lo, gc.Types[gc.TUINT32], int64(uint32(i)))
i >>= 32
if n.Type.Etype == gc.TINT64 {
gc.Nodconst(hi, gc.Types[gc.TINT32], int64(int32(i)))
} else {
gc.Nodconst(hi, gc.Types[gc.TUINT32], int64(uint32(i)))
}
}
}
func splitclean() {
if nsclean <= 0 {
gc.Fatal("splitclean")
}
nsclean--
if sclean[nsclean].Op != gc.OEMPTY {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&sclean[nsclean])
}
}
func gmove(f *gc.Node, t *gc.Node) {
if gc.Debug['M'] != 0 {
fmt.Printf("gmove %v -> %v\n", gc.Nconv(f, 0), gc.Nconv(t, 0))
}
ft := gc.Simsimtype(f.Type)
tt := gc.Simsimtype(t.Type)
cvt := t.Type
if gc.Iscomplex[ft] || gc.Iscomplex[tt] {
gc.Complexmove(f, t)
return
}
// cannot have two memory operands;
// except 64-bit, which always copies via registers anyway.
var a int
var r1 gc.Node
if !gc.Is64(f.Type) && !gc.Is64(t.Type) && gc.Ismem(f) && gc.Ismem(t) {
goto hard
}
// convert constant to desired type
if f.Op == gc.OLITERAL {
var con gc.Node
switch tt {
default:
gc.Convconst(&con, t.Type, &f.Val)
case gc.TINT16,
gc.TINT8:
var con gc.Node
gc.Convconst(&con, gc.Types[gc.TINT32], &f.Val)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, con.Type, t)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &con, &r1)
gmove(&r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
case gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT8:
var con gc.Node
gc.Convconst(&con, gc.Types[gc.TUINT32], &f.Val)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, con.Type, t)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &con, &r1)
gmove(&r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
}
f = &con
ft = gc.Simsimtype(con.Type)
// constants can't move directly to memory
if gc.Ismem(t) && !gc.Is64(t.Type) {
goto hard
}
}
// value -> value copy, only one memory operand.
// figure out the instruction to use.
// break out of switch for one-instruction gins.
// goto rdst for "destination must be register".
// goto hard for "convert to cvt type first".
// otherwise handle and return.
switch uint32(ft)<<16 | uint32(tt) {
default:
// should not happen
gc.Fatal("gmove %v -> %v", gc.Nconv(f, 0), gc.Nconv(t, 0))
return
/*
* integer copy and truncate
*/
case gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TINT8: // same size
if !gc.Ismem(f) {
a = arm.AMOVB
break
}
fallthrough
case gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TINT8, // truncate
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBS
case gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT8:
if !gc.Ismem(f) {
a = arm.AMOVB
break
}
fallthrough
case gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBU
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TINT8, // truncate low word
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBS
goto trunc64
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBU
goto trunc64
case gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TINT16: // same size
if !gc.Ismem(f) {
a = arm.AMOVH
break
}
fallthrough
case gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TINT16, // truncate
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHS
case gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT16:
if !gc.Ismem(f) {
a = arm.AMOVH
break
}
fallthrough
case gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHU
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TINT16, // truncate low word
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHS
goto trunc64
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHU
goto trunc64
case gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TINT32, // same size
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
a = arm.AMOVW
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TINT32, // truncate
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
var flo gc.Node
var fhi gc.Node
split64(f, &flo, &fhi)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, t.Type, nil)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &flo, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
splitclean()
return
case gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TINT64, // same size
gc.TINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT64,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
var fhi gc.Node
var flo gc.Node
split64(f, &flo, &fhi)
var tlo gc.Node
var thi gc.Node
split64(t, &tlo, &thi)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, flo.Type, nil)
var r2 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r2, fhi.Type, nil)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &flo, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &fhi, &r2)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &tlo)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r2, &thi)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
gc.Regfree(&r2)
splitclean()
splitclean()
return
/*
* integer up-conversions
*/
case gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TINT16, // sign extend int8
gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
a = arm.AMOVBS
goto rdst
case gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TINT64, // convert via int32
gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
cvt = gc.Types[gc.TINT32]
goto hard
case gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TINT16, // zero extend uint8
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
a = arm.AMOVBU
goto rdst
case gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TINT64, // convert via uint32
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
cvt = gc.Types[gc.TUINT32]
goto hard
case gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TINT32, // sign extend int16
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
a = arm.AMOVHS
goto rdst
case gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TINT64, // convert via int32
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
cvt = gc.Types[gc.TINT32]
goto hard
case gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TINT32, // zero extend uint16
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
a = arm.AMOVHU
goto rdst
case gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TINT64, // convert via uint32
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
cvt = gc.Types[gc.TUINT32]
goto hard
case gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TINT64, // sign extend int32
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
var tlo gc.Node
var thi gc.Node
split64(t, &tlo, &thi)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, tlo.Type, nil)
var r2 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r2, thi.Type, nil)
gmove(f, &r1)
p1 := gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &r2)
p1.From.Type = obj.TYPE_SHIFT
p1.From.Offset = 2<<5 | 31<<7 | int64(r1.Val.U.Reg)&15 // r1->31
p1.From.Reg = 0
//print("gmove: %P\n", p1);
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &tlo)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r2, &thi)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
gc.Regfree(&r2)
splitclean()
return
case gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TINT64, // zero extend uint32
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
var thi gc.Node
var tlo gc.Node
split64(t, &tlo, &thi)
gmove(f, &tlo)
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, thi.Type, nil)
gins(arm.AMOVW, ncon(0), &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &thi)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
splitclean()
return
// case CASE(TFLOAT64, TUINT64):
/*
* float to integer
*/
case gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
// case CASE(TFLOAT32, TUINT64):
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TUINT32:
fa := arm.AMOVF
a := arm.AMOVFW
if ft == gc.TFLOAT64 {
fa = arm.AMOVD
a = arm.AMOVDW
}
ta := arm.AMOVW
switch tt {
case gc.TINT8:
ta = arm.AMOVBS
case gc.TUINT8:
ta = arm.AMOVBU
case gc.TINT16:
ta = arm.AMOVHS
case gc.TUINT16:
ta = arm.AMOVHU
}
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, gc.Types[ft], f)
var r2 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r2, gc.Types[tt], t)
gins(fa, f, &r1) // load to fpu
p1 := gins(a, &r1, &r1) // convert to w
switch tt {
case gc.TUINT8,
gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT32:
p1.Scond |= arm.C_UBIT
}
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &r2) // copy to cpu
gins(ta, &r2, t) // store
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
gc.Regfree(&r2)
return
/*
* integer to float
*/
case gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TINT8<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64,
gc.TUINT8<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64,
gc.TINT16<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64,
gc.TUINT16<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64,
gc.TINT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64,
gc.TUINT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
fa := arm.AMOVW
switch ft {
case gc.TINT8:
fa = arm.AMOVBS
case gc.TUINT8:
fa = arm.AMOVBU
case gc.TINT16:
fa = arm.AMOVHS
case gc.TUINT16:
fa = arm.AMOVHU
}
a := arm.AMOVWF
ta := arm.AMOVF
if tt == gc.TFLOAT64 {
a = arm.AMOVWD
ta = arm.AMOVD
}
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, gc.Types[ft], f)
var r2 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r2, gc.Types[tt], t)
gins(fa, f, &r1) // load to cpu
gins(arm.AMOVW, &r1, &r2) // copy to fpu
p1 := gins(a, &r2, &r2) // convert
switch ft {
case gc.TUINT8,
gc.TUINT16,
gc.TUINT32:
p1.Scond |= arm.C_UBIT
}
gins(ta, &r2, t) // store
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
gc.Regfree(&r2)
return
case gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.TUINT64<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
gc.Fatal("gmove UINT64, TFLOAT not implemented")
return
/*
* float to float
*/
case gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.AMOVF
case gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.AMOVD
case gc.TFLOAT32<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, gc.Types[gc.TFLOAT64], t)
gins(arm.AMOVF, f, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVFD, &r1, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVD, &r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
case gc.TFLOAT64<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
var r1 gc.Node
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, gc.Types[gc.TFLOAT64], t)
gins(arm.AMOVD, f, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVDF, &r1, &r1)
gins(arm.AMOVF, &r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
}
gins(a, f, t)
return
// TODO(kaib): we almost always require a register dest anyway, this can probably be
// removed.
// requires register destination
rdst:
{
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, t.Type, t)
gins(a, f, &r1)
gmove(&r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
}
// requires register intermediate
hard:
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, cvt, t)
gmove(f, &r1)
gmove(&r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
return
// truncate 64 bit integer
trunc64:
var fhi gc.Node
var flo gc.Node
split64(f, &flo, &fhi)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(&r1, t.Type, nil)
gins(a, &flo, &r1)
gins(a, &r1, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&r1)
splitclean()
return
}
func samaddr(f *gc.Node, t *gc.Node) bool {
if f.Op != t.Op {
return false
}
switch f.Op {
case gc.OREGISTER:
if f.Val.U.Reg != t.Val.U.Reg {
break
}
return true
}
return false
}
/*
* generate one instruction:
* as f, t
*/
func gins(as int, f *gc.Node, t *gc.Node) *obj.Prog {
// Node nod;
// int32 v;
if f != nil && f.Op == gc.OINDEX {
gc.Fatal("gins OINDEX not implemented")
}
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Regalloc(&nod, &regnode, Z);
// v = constnode.vconst;
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Cgen(f->right, &nod);
// constnode.vconst = v;
// idx.reg = nod.reg;
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Regfree(&nod);
if t != nil && t.Op == gc.OINDEX {
gc.Fatal("gins OINDEX not implemented")
}
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Regalloc(&nod, &regnode, Z);
// v = constnode.vconst;
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Cgen(t->right, &nod);
// constnode.vconst = v;
// idx.reg = nod.reg;
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
// gc.Regfree(&nod);
p := gc.Prog(as)
gc.Naddr(&p.From, f)
gc.Naddr(&p.To, t)
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
switch as {
case arm.ABL:
if p.To.Type == obj.TYPE_REG {
p.To.Type = obj.TYPE_MEM
}
case arm.ACMP, arm.ACMPF, arm.ACMPD:
if t != nil {
if f.Op != gc.OREGISTER {
/* generate a comparison
TODO(kaib): one of the args can actually be a small constant. relax the constraint and fix call sites.
*/
gc.Fatal("bad operands to gcmp")
}
p.From = p.To
p.To = obj.Addr{}
raddr(f, p)
}
case arm.AMULU:
if f != nil && f.Op != gc.OREGISTER {
gc.Fatal("bad operands to mul")
}
case arm.AMOVW:
if (p.From.Type == obj.TYPE_MEM || p.From.Type == obj.TYPE_ADDR || p.From.Type == obj.TYPE_CONST) && (p.To.Type == obj.TYPE_MEM || p.To.Type == obj.TYPE_ADDR) {
gc.Fatal("gins double memory")
}
case arm.AADD:
if p.To.Type == obj.TYPE_MEM {
gc.Fatal("gins arith to mem")
}
case arm.ARSB:
if p.From.Type == obj.TYPE_NONE {
gc.Fatal("rsb with no from")
}
}
if gc.Debug['g'] != 0 {
fmt.Printf("%v\n", p)
}
return p
}
/*
* insert n into reg slot of p
*/
func raddr(n *gc.Node, p *obj.Prog) {
var a obj.Addr
gc.Naddr(&a, n)
if a.Type != obj.TYPE_REG {
if n != nil {
gc.Fatal("bad in raddr: %v", gc.Oconv(int(n.Op), 0))
} else {
gc.Fatal("bad in raddr: <null>")
}
p.Reg = 0
} else {
p.Reg = a.Reg
}
}
/* generate a constant shift
* arm encodes a shift by 32 as 0, thus asking for 0 shift is illegal.
*/
func gshift(as int, lhs *gc.Node, stype int32, sval int32, rhs *gc.Node) *obj.Prog {
if sval <= 0 || sval > 32 {
gc.Fatal("bad shift value: %d", sval)
}
sval = sval & 0x1f
p := gins(as, nil, rhs)
p.From.Type = obj.TYPE_SHIFT
p.From.Offset = int64(stype) | int64(sval)<<7 | int64(lhs.Val.U.Reg)&15
return p
}
/* generate a register shift
*/
func gregshift(as int, lhs *gc.Node, stype int32, reg *gc.Node, rhs *gc.Node) *obj.Prog {
p := gins(as, nil, rhs)
p.From.Type = obj.TYPE_SHIFT
p.From.Offset = int64(stype) | (int64(reg.Val.U.Reg)&15)<<8 | 1<<4 | int64(lhs.Val.U.Reg)&15
return p
}
/*
* return Axxx for Oxxx on type t.
*/
func optoas(op int, t *gc.Type) int {
if t == nil {
gc.Fatal("optoas: t is nil")
}
a := obj.AXXX
switch uint32(op)<<16 | uint32(gc.Simtype[t.Etype]) {
default:
gc.Fatal("optoas: no entry %v-%v etype %v simtype %v", gc.Oconv(int(op), 0), gc.Tconv(t, 0), gc.Tconv(gc.Types[t.Etype], 0), gc.Tconv(gc.Types[gc.Simtype[t.Etype]], 0))
/* case CASE(OADDR, TPTR32):
a = ALEAL;
break;
case CASE(OADDR, TPTR64):
a = ALEAQ;
break;
*/
// TODO(kaib): make sure the conditional branches work on all edge cases
case gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TBOOL,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TUINT64,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TPTR32,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TPTR64,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OEQ<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABEQ
case gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TBOOL,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TUINT64,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TPTR32,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TPTR64,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.ONE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABNE
case gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABLT
case gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OLT<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
a = arm.ABLO
case gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABLE
case gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OLE<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
a = arm.ABLS
case gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABGT
case gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OGT<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
a = arm.ABHI
case gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TINT64,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABGE
case gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OGE<<16 | gc.TUINT64:
a = arm.ABHS
case gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TBOOL,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ACMP
case gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.ACMPF
case gc.OCMP<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ACMPD
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
case gc.OPS<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32,
gc.OPS<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ABVS
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TBOOL:
a = arm.AMOVB
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBS
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TUINT8:
a = arm.AMOVBU
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHS
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TUINT16:
a = arm.AMOVHU
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AMOVW
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.AMOVF
case gc.OAS<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.AMOVD
case gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AADD
case gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.AADDF
case gc.OADD<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.AADDD
case gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ASUB
case gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.ASUBF
case gc.OSUB<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ASUBD
case gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OMINUS<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ARSB
case gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OAND<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AAND
case gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OOR<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AORR
case gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OXOR<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AEOR
case gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TINT32,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OLSH<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ASLL
case gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ASRL
case gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.ORSH<<16 | gc.TINT32:
a = arm.ASRA
case gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AMULU
case gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TINT32:
a = arm.AMUL
case gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.AMULF
case gc.OMUL<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.AMULD
case gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.ADIVU
case gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TINT32:
a = arm.ADIV
case gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TUINT8,
gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TUINT16,
gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TUINT32,
gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TPTR32:
a = arm.AMODU
case gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TINT8,
gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TINT16,
gc.OMOD<<16 | gc.TINT32:
a = arm.AMOD
// case CASE(OEXTEND, TINT16):
// a = ACWD;
// break;
// case CASE(OEXTEND, TINT32):
// a = ACDQ;
// break;
// case CASE(OEXTEND, TINT64):
// a = ACQO;
// break;
case gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TFLOAT32:
a = arm.ADIVF
case gc.ODIV<<16 | gc.TFLOAT64:
a = arm.ADIVD
}
return a
}
const (
ODynam = 1 << 0
OPtrto = 1 << 1
)
var clean [20]gc.Node
var cleani int = 0
func sudoclean() {
if clean[cleani-1].Op != gc.OEMPTY {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&clean[cleani-1])
}
if clean[cleani-2].Op != gc.OEMPTY {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regfree(&clean[cleani-2])
}
cleani -= 2
}
func dotaddable(n *gc.Node, n1 *gc.Node) bool {
if n.Op != gc.ODOT {
return false
}
var oary [10]int64
var nn *gc.Node
o := gc.Dotoffset(n, oary[:], &nn)
if nn != nil && nn.Addable != 0 && o == 1 && oary[0] >= 0 {
*n1 = *nn
n1.Type = n.Type
n1.Xoffset += oary[0]
return true
}
return false
}
/*
* generate code to compute address of n,
* a reference to a (perhaps nested) field inside
* an array or struct.
* return 0 on failure, 1 on success.
* on success, leaves usable address in a.
*
* caller is responsible for calling sudoclean
* after successful sudoaddable,
* to release the register used for a.
*/
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
func sudoaddable(as int, n *gc.Node, a *obj.Addr) bool {
if n.Type == nil {
return false
}
*a = obj.Addr{}
switch n.Op {
case gc.OLITERAL:
if !gc.Isconst(n, gc.CTINT) {
break
}
v := gc.Mpgetfix(n.Val.U.Xval)
if v >= 32000 || v <= -32000 {
break
}
switch as {
default:
return false
case arm.AADD,
arm.ASUB,
arm.AAND,
arm.AORR,
arm.AEOR,
arm.AMOVB,
arm.AMOVBS,
arm.AMOVBU,
arm.AMOVH,
arm.AMOVHS,
arm.AMOVHU,
arm.AMOVW:
break
}
cleani += 2
reg := &clean[cleani-1]
reg1 := &clean[cleani-2]
reg.Op = gc.OEMPTY
reg1.Op = gc.OEMPTY
gc.Naddr(a, n)
return true
case gc.ODOT,
gc.ODOTPTR:
cleani += 2
reg := &clean[cleani-1]
reg1 := &clean[cleani-2]
reg.Op = gc.OEMPTY
reg1.Op = gc.OEMPTY
var nn *gc.Node
var oary [10]int64
o := gc.Dotoffset(n, oary[:], &nn)
if nn == nil {
sudoclean()
return false
}
if nn.Addable != 0 && o == 1 && oary[0] >= 0 {
// directly addressable set of DOTs
n1 := *nn
n1.Type = n.Type
n1.Xoffset += oary[0]
gc.Naddr(a, &n1)
return true
}
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Regalloc(reg, gc.Types[gc.Tptr], nil)
n1 := *reg
n1.Op = gc.OINDREG
if oary[0] >= 0 {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Agen(nn, reg)
n1.Xoffset = oary[0]
} else {
cmd/internal/gc: move cgen, regalloc, et al to portable code This CL moves the bulk of the code that has been copy-and-pasted since the initial 386 port back into a shared place, cutting 5 copies to 1. The motivation here is not cleanup per se but instead to reduce the cost of introducing changes in shared concepts like regalloc or general expression evaluation. For example, a change after this one will implement x.(*T) without a call into the runtime. This CL makes that followup work 5x easier. The single copy still has more special cases for architecture details than I'd like, but having them called out explicitly like this at least opens the door to generalizing the conditions and smoothing out the distinctions in the future. This is a LARGE CL. I started by trying to pull in one function at a time in a sequence of CLs and it became clear that everything was so interrelated that it had to be moved as a whole. Apologies for the size. It is not clear how many more releases this code will matter for; eventually it will be replaced by Keith's SSA work. But as noted above, the deduplication was necessary to reduce the cost of working on the current code while we have it. Passes tests on amd64, 386, arm, and ppc64le. Can build arm64 binaries but not tested there. Being able to build binaries means it is probably very close. Change-Id: I735977f04c0614f80215fb12966dfe9bbd1f5861 Reviewed-on: https://go-review.googlesource.com/7853 Reviewed-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@golang.org>
2015-03-18 15:26:36 -06:00
gc.Cgen(nn, reg)
gc.Cgen_checknil(reg)
n1.Xoffset = -(oary[0] + 1)
}
for i := 1; i < o; i++ {
if oary[i] >= 0 {
gc.Fatal("can't happen")
}
gins(arm.AMOVW, &n1, reg)
gc.Cgen_checknil(reg)
n1.Xoffset = -(oary[i] + 1)
}
a.Type = obj.TYPE_NONE
a.Name = obj.NAME_NONE
n1.Type = n.Type
gc.Naddr(a, &n1)
return true
case gc.OINDEX:
return false
}
return false
}