ref: ba11607161c9dd6724b9bc1ea22728c4dd606111
dir: /build/make/thumb.pm/
#!/usr/bin/env perl ## ## Copyright (c) 2013 The WebM project authors. All Rights Reserved. ## ## Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license ## that can be found in the LICENSE file in the root of the source ## tree. An additional intellectual property rights grant can be found ## in the file PATENTS. All contributing project authors may ## be found in the AUTHORS file in the root of the source tree. ## package thumb; sub FixThumbInstructions($$) { my $short_branches = $_[1]; my $branch_shift_offset = $short_branches ? 1 : 0; # Write additions with shifts, such as "add r10, r11, lsl #8", # in three operand form, "add r10, r10, r11, lsl #8". s/(add\s+)(r\d+),\s*(r\d+),\s*(lsl #\d+)/$1$2, $2, $3, $4/g; # Convert additions with a non-constant shift into a sequence # with left shift, addition and a right shift (to restore the # register to the original value). Currently the right shift # isn't necessary in the code base since the values in these # registers aren't used, but doing the shift for consistency. # This converts instructions such as "add r12, r12, r5, lsl r4" # into the sequence "lsl r5, r4", "add r12, r12, r5", "lsr r5, r4". s/^(\s*)(add)(\s+)(r\d+),\s*(r\d+),\s*(r\d+),\s*lsl (r\d+)/$1lsl$3$6, $7\n$1$2$3$4, $5, $6\n$1lsr$3$6, $7/g; # Convert loads with right shifts in the indexing into a # sequence of an add, load and sub. This converts # "ldrb r4, [r9, lr, asr #1]" into "add r9, r9, lr, asr #1", # "ldrb r9, [r9]", "sub r9, r9, lr, asr #1". s/^(\s*)(ldrb)(\s+)(r\d+),\s*\[(\w+),\s*(\w+),\s*(asr #\d+)\]/$1add $3$5, $5, $6, $7\n$1$2$3$4, [$5]\n$1sub $3$5, $5, $6, $7/g; # Convert register indexing with writeback into a separate add # instruction. This converts "ldrb r12, [r1, r2]!" into # "ldrb r12, [r1, r2]", "add r1, r1, r2". s/^(\s*)(ldrb)(\s+)(r\d+),\s*\[(\w+),\s*(\w+)\]!/$1$2$3$4, [$5, $6]\n$1add $3$5, $6/g; # Convert negative register indexing into separate sub/add instructions. # This converts "ldrne r4, [src, -pstep, lsl #1]" into # "subne src, src, pstep, lsl #1", "ldrne r4, [src]", # "addne src, src, pstep, lsl #1". In a couple of cases where # this is used, it's used for two subsequent load instructions, # where a hand-written version of it could merge two subsequent # add and sub instructions. s/^(\s*)((ldr|str|pld)(ne)?)(\s+)(r\d+,\s*)?\[(\w+), -([^\]]+)\]/$1sub$4$5$7, $7, $8\n$1$2$5$6\[$7\]\n$1add$4$5$7, $7, $8/g; # Convert register post indexing to a separate add instruction. # This converts "ldrneb r9, [r0], r2" into "ldrneb r9, [r0]", # "addne r0, r0, r2". s/^(\s*)((ldr|str)(ne)?[bhd]?)(\s+)(\w+),(\s*\w+,)?\s*\[(\w+)\],\s*(\w+)/$1$2$5$6,$7 [$8]\n$1add$4$5$8, $8, $9/g; # Convert "mov pc, lr" into "bx lr", since the former only works # for switching from arm to thumb (and only in armv7), but not # from thumb to arm. s/mov(\s*)pc\s*,\s*lr/bx$1lr/g; } 1;