The frame pointer and the argument pointer aren't real registers. MQ
was a register on old POWER. All three are still used as arguments to
rs6000_dbx_register_number during initialisation. If we handle them
explicitly we can do a gcc_unreachable to catch other unexpected
registers.
* config/rs6000/rs6000.c (rs6000_dbx_register_number): Handle
FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM, ARG_POINTER_REGNUM, and 64 (which was MQ).
From-SVN: r270925
+2019-05-06 Segher Boessenkool <segher@kernel.crashing.org>
+
+ * config/rs6000/rs6000.c (rs6000_dbx_register_number): Handle
+ FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM, ARG_POINTER_REGNUM, and 64 (which was MQ).
+
2019-05-06 Jakub Jelinek <jakub@redhat.com>
PR tree-optimization/88709
if (regno == TEXASR_REGNO)
return 230;
- return regno;
+ /* These do not make much sense. */
+ if (regno == FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM)
+ return 111;
+ if (regno == ARG_POINTER_REGNUM)
+ return 67;
+ if (regno == 64)
+ return 100;
+
+ gcc_unreachable ();
#endif
}
if (regno == TEXASR_REGNO)
return 116;
- return regno;
+ if (regno == FRAME_POINTER_REGNUM)
+ return 111;
+ if (regno == ARG_POINTER_REGNUM)
+ return 67;
+ if (regno == 64)
+ return 64;
+
+ gcc_unreachable ();
}
/* target hook eh_return_filter_mode */