/* Definitions of target machine for GNU compiler, for CRIS. Copyright (C) 2002-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GCC. GCC is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3, or (at your option) any later version. GCC is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with GCC; see the file COPYING3. If not see . */ /* Node: Condition Code */ /* The mode used for condition-codes depends on both the way the condition-codes are generated (the CC-setter, typically the compare instruction), and used (the CC-user, typically a branch). For CRIS, we have ordinary compares and incidental condition-code settings from preceding instructions, setting a subset of N, Z, V and C to usable values, from the perspective of comparing the result against zero (referred to below as "fpcraz"). The two subsets meaningful to gcc are all of N, Z, V, C versus just N, Z; some CC-users care only about N and/or Z and some that care about at least one of those flags together with V and/or C. The plain "CC_MODE (CC)" (which is always present in gcc), is used to reflect the "unoptimized" state, where the CC-setter is a compare against zero and the CC-user is any branch or s instruction, before reload. After reload, a need for C or V is reflected as CC_NZVCmode in both setters and users, and others remain CCmode, until or if optimization of CC-setter and CC-users, when CCmode setters can be changed or replaced by either CC_NZmode or CC_NZVCmode. To wit, all users that require CC_NZVCmode must match only that mode at any time. All other users must match all of CCmode, CC_NZmode, and CC_NZVCmode. All setters that set only CC_NZmode must match setting only that mode. All other setters must match setting all of CCmode, CC_NZmode, and CC_NZVCmode. There's also other modes (i.e. CC_ZnNmode) with a separate set of setters and users not matched by the others. */ /* Z and N flags only. For a condition-code setter: only the Z and N flags are set to usable values, fpcraz. For a condition-code user: the operation using the condition codes only care about the Z and N flags. */ CC_MODE (CC_NZ); /* Z and N *and* V and C flags. For a condition-code setter: all flags are set to usable values, fpcraz. For a condition-code user: at least one of V and C are used and possibly N and Z too. */ CC_MODE (CC_NZVC); /* The result of a btst / btstq instruction for extracting a single bit goes negated into the N flag, or in olde cc0-parlance, CC_Z_IN_NOT_N. */ CC_MODE (CC_ZnN);