More consistent formatting and tidying-up

llvm-svn: 179716
This commit is contained in:
Eli Bendersky 2013-04-17 20:17:08 +00:00
parent 24a36eb331
commit 239a78b835
1 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -4534,7 +4534,7 @@ The '``load``' instruction is used to read from memory.
Arguments:
""""""""""
The argument to the '``load``' instruction specifies the memory address
The argument to the ``load`` instruction specifies the memory address
from which to load. The pointer must point to a :ref:`first
class <t_firstclass>` type. If the ``load`` is marked as ``volatile``,
then the optimizer is not allowed to modify the number or order of
@ -4555,14 +4555,14 @@ any defined semantics for atomic loads.
The optional constant ``align`` argument specifies the alignment of the
operation (that is, the alignment of the memory address). A value of 0
or an omitted ``align`` argument means that the operation has the abi
or an omitted ``align`` argument means that the operation has the ABI
alignment for the target. It is the responsibility of the code emitter
to ensure that the alignment information is correct. Overestimating the
alignment results in undefined behavior. Underestimating the alignment
may produce less efficient code. An alignment of 1 is always safe.
The optional ``!nontemporal`` metadata must reference a single
metatadata name <index> corresponding to a metadata node with one
metatadata name ``<index>`` corresponding to a metadata node with one
``i32`` entry of value 1. The existence of the ``!nontemporal``
metatadata on the instruction tells the optimizer and code generator
that this load is not expected to be reused in the cache. The code
@ -4570,7 +4570,7 @@ generator may select special instructions to save cache bandwidth, such
as the ``MOVNT`` instruction on x86.
The optional ``!invariant.load`` metadata must reference a single
metatadata name <index> corresponding to a metadata node with no
metatadata name ``<index>`` corresponding to a metadata node with no
entries. The existence of the ``!invariant.load`` metatadata on the
instruction tells the optimizer and code generator that this load
address points to memory which does not change value during program