Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adam Langley
05a8434484 Support AVX-512 instructions with a writemask in delocate.
AVX-512 adds a new text instruction syntax to x86-64 assembly to specify
the writemask registers and the merge-masking vs zeroing-masking signal.

This change causes these tokens to be passed through.

Patch by Jeff McDonald.

Change-Id: Ib15b15ac684183cc5fba329a176b63b477bc24a3
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/24945
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
2018-01-22 18:00:18 +00:00
Adam Langley
a09a65ffdb Be slightly more relaxed about how ppc64le global-entry TOC references look.
Clang 4.0 on ppc64le generated symbols called “.LCE0” and so on.

Change-Id: I6bacf24365aa547d0ca9e5f338e4bb966df31708
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/17005
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
Reviewed-by: David Benjamin <davidben@google.com>
2017-06-08 21:33:29 +00:00
David Benjamin
055375ef26 Support more complex offset / symbol section interleavings.
LLVM likes to emit offsets of the form foo@toc@ha+16, which we didn't
support. Generalize parseMemRef to handle this case and avoid some of
the repeated offset special-cases. Offsets are now always folded into
the SymbolRef.

This still does not quite implement a fully general GAS-compatible
parser as GAS's parser is insane. GAS in x86_64 will happily accept
things like:

  1@GOTPCREL+foo
  blah1@GOTPCREL-blah2+blah3-blah4+blah5 # GOTPCREL modifies blah5, rest
                                         # of expression is an offset.

GAS actually textually pulls @GOTPCREL out of the input partway through
parsing the expression and parses the modified input! Then its normal
parser goes and maintains a running expression of a specific type and,
at each term, attempts to merge it into what it currently has. So adding
and subtracting symbols is not commutative (signs must alternate or so)
and the last symbol wins.

However its PPC64 parser is not as general and just terminates each
expression after @toc@ha and friends, except that it special-cases
foo@toc@ha+16: if it can parse one more expression after @toc@ha AND it
is a constant expression, then it is added into the running offset.
Otherwise it leaves that data unconsumed.

This is all ridiculous, so just generalize our parser slightly to cover
foo@toc@ha+16 and see how far we get from there.

Change-Id: I65970791fc10fb2638fd7be8cc841900eb997c9c
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/16944
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
2017-06-06 22:48:26 +00:00
Adam Langley
f64a6eeaf0 Switch to new delocate tool.
Most importantly, this version of delocate works for ppc64le. It should
also work for x86-64, but will need significant testing to make sure
that it covers all the cases that the previous delocate.go covered.

It's less stringtastic than the old code, however the parser isn't as
nice as I would have liked. I thought that the reason we put up with
AT&T syntax with Intel is so that assembly syntax could be somewhat
consistent across platforms. At least for ppc64le, that does not appear
to be the case.

Change-Id: Ic7e3c6acc3803d19f2c3ff5620c5e39703d74212
Reviewed-on: https://boringssl-review.googlesource.com/16464
Reviewed-by: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Adam Langley <agl@google.com>
CQ-Verified: CQ bot account: commit-bot@chromium.org <commit-bot@chromium.org>
2017-05-30 18:00:16 +00:00