On 10/14/22 15:21, Koning, Paul wrote:

On Oct 14, 2022, at 5:15 PM, Jeff Law via Gcc-patches <gcc-patches@gcc.gnu.org> 
wrote:


On 10/14/22 11:36, Koning, Paul wrote:
On Oct 14, 2022, at 1:10 PM, Jeff Law <jeffreya...@gmail.com> wrote:

On 10/14/22 10:37, Koning, Paul wrote:
...
But that approach falls down with reload/lra doing substitutions without 
validating the result.  I guess it might be possible to cobble together 
something with secondary reloads, but it's way way way down on my todo list.
Aren't the constraints enforced?  My experience is that I was getting these bad 
addressing modes in some test programs, and that the constraints I created to 
make the requirement explicit cured that.  Maybe I'm expecting too much from 
constraints, but my (admittedly inexperienced) understanding of them is that 
they inform reload what sort of things it can construct, and what it cannot.
It's not really a constraint issue -- the pattern's condition would cause this 
not to recognize, but LRA doesn't re-recognize the insn.  We might be able to 
hack something in the constraints to force a reload of the source operand in 
this case.   Ugly, but a possibility.
I find it hard to cope with constraints that don't constrain.  Minimally it 
should be clearly documented exactly what cases fail to obey the constraints 
and what a target writer can do to deal with those failures.
Constraints have a purpose, but as I've noted, they really don't come into play here.   
Had LRA tried to see if what it created as a valid move insn, the backend would have said 
"nope, that's not valid".  That's a stronger test than checking the 
constraints.  If the insn is not valid according to its condition, then the constraints 
simply don't matter.

I'm not aware of a case where constraints are failing to be obeyed and 
constraints simply aren't a viable solution here other than to paper over the 
problem and hope it doesn't show up elsewhere.

Right now operand 0's constraint is "<" meaning pre-inc operand, operand 1 is 
"r".  How would you define a new constraint for operand 1 that disallows overlap with 
operand 0 given that the H8 allows autoinc on any register operand?   You can't look at operand 0 
while processing the constraint for operand 1. Similarly if you try to define a new constraint for 
operand0 without looking at operand1.
Easy but cumbersome: define constraints for "register N" (for each N) and another set for "autoinc on 
any register other than N".  In pdp11, I called these Z0, Z1... and Za, Zb... respectively.  Then the insn gets 
constraints that look like "Z0,Z1,Z2..." and "Za, Zb, Zc..." for the two operands.  As I said, see 
pdp11.md, the mov insn.

Yea, you're right.  It's definitely possible.  Painful, but possible.

jeff

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