; Test floating-point negation. ; ; RUN: llc < %s -mtriple=s390x-linux-gnu -mcpu=z10 | FileCheck %s ; RUN: llc < %s -mtriple=s390x-linux-gnu -mcpu=z13 | FileCheck %s ; Test f32. define float @f1(float %f) { ; CHECK-LABEL: f1: ; CHECK: lcdfr %f0, %f0 ; CHECK: br %r14 %res = fsub float -0.0, %f ret float %res } ; Test f64. define double @f2(double %f) { ; CHECK-LABEL: f2: ; CHECK: lcdfr %f0, %f0 ; CHECK: br %r14 %res = fsub double -0.0, %f ret double %res } ; Test f128. With the loads and stores, a pure negation would probably ; be better implemented using an XI on the upper byte. Do some extra ; processing so that using FPRs is unequivocally better. define void @f3(fp128 *%ptr, fp128 *%ptr2) { ; CHECK-LABEL: f3: ; CHECK: lcxbr ; CHECK: dxbr ; CHECK: br %r14 %orig = load fp128, fp128 *%ptr %negzero = fpext float -0.0 to fp128 %neg = fsub fp128 0xL00000000000000008000000000000000, %orig %op2 = load fp128, fp128 *%ptr2 %res = fdiv fp128 %neg, %op2 store fp128 %res, fp128 *%ptr ret void }