# RUN: not --crash llc -mtriple=aarch64-- -run-pass=legalizer %s -o - 2>&1 | FileCheck %s # This is to demonstrate what kind of bugs we're missing w/o some kind # of validation for LegalizerInfo: G_INTTOPTR could only be legal / # could be legalized if its destination operand has a pointer type and # its source - a scalar type of an appropriate size. This test meets # the requirements for type index 0 (the pointer) and LLT-size # requirements for type index 1 (64 bits for AArch64), but has a # non-scalar (vector) type for type index 1. The Legalizer is expected # to fail on it with an appropriate error message. Prior to # LegalizerInfo::verify AArch64 legalizer had a subtle bug in its # definition that caused it to accept the following MIR as legal. # Namely, it checked that type index 0 is either s64 or p0 and # implicitly declared any type for type index 1 as legal (as soon as # its size is 64 bits). As LegalizerInfo::verify asserts on such a # definition due to type index 1 not being covered by a specific # action (not just `unsupportedIf`) it forces to review the definition # and fix the mistake: check that type index 0 is p0 and type index 1 # is s64. # CHECK: Bad machine code: operand types must be all-vector or all-scalar # CHECK: LLVM ERROR: Found 1 machine code errors. --- name: broken alignment: 4 tracksRegLiveness: true registers: - { id: 0, class: _ } - { id: 1, class: _ } body: | bb.1: liveins: $d0 %0:_(<4 x s16>) = COPY $d0 %1:_(p0) = G_INTTOPTR %0(<4 x s16>) $x0 = COPY %1(p0) RET_ReallyLR implicit $x0 ...