differences, which means that identical instructions (after stripping off
the first literal string) do not run any different code at all. On the X86,
this turns this code:
switch (MI->getOpcode()) {
case X86::ADC32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::ADC32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::ADC32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::ADD32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::ADD32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::ADD32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::AND32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::AND32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::AND32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::CMP32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::CMP32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::MOV32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::MOV32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::OR32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::OR32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::OR32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::ROL32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::ROR32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SAR32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SBB32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::SBB32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SBB32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::SHL32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SHLD32mrCL: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::SHR32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SHRD32mrCL: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::SUB32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::SUB32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::SUB32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::TEST32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::TEST32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::TEST8mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::XCHG32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::XOR32mi: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::XOR32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
case X86::XOR32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
}
into this:
switch (MI->getOpcode()) {
case X86::ADC32mi:
case X86::ADC32mr:
case X86::ADD32mi:
case X86::ADD32mr:
case X86::AND32mi:
case X86::AND32mr:
case X86::CMP32mi:
case X86::CMP32mr:
case X86::MOV32mi:
case X86::MOV32mr:
case X86::OR32mi:
case X86::OR32mr:
case X86::SBB32mi:
case X86::SBB32mr:
case X86::SHLD32mrCL:
case X86::SHRD32mrCL:
case X86::SUB32mi:
case X86::SUB32mr:
case X86::TEST32mi:
case X86::TEST32mr:
case X86::XCHG32mr:
case X86::XOR32mi:
case X86::XOR32mr: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i32); break;
case X86::ADC32mi8:
case X86::ADD32mi8:
case X86::AND32mi8:
case X86::OR32mi8:
case X86::ROL32mi:
case X86::ROR32mi:
case X86::SAR32mi:
case X86::SBB32mi8:
case X86::SHL32mi:
case X86::SHR32mi:
case X86::SUB32mi8:
case X86::TEST8mi:
case X86::XOR32mi8: printOperand(MI, 4, MVT::i8); break;
}
After this, the generated asmwriters look pretty much as though they were
generated by hand. This shrinks the X86 asmwriter.inc files from 55101->39669
and 55429->39551 bytes each, and PPC from 16766->12859 bytes.
llvm-svn: 19760