; RUN: llc -march=hexagon -enable-aa-sched-mi < %s | FileCheck %s ; The two memory addresses in the load and the memop below are trivially ; non-aliasing. However, there are some cases where the scheduler cannot ; determine this - in this case, it is because of the use of memops, that on the ; surface. do not have only one mem operand. However, the backend knows MIs and ; can step in and help some cases. In our case, if the base registers are the ; same and the offsets different and the memory access size is such that ; the two accesses won't overlap, we can tell the scheduler that there is no ; dependence due to aliasing between the two instructions. ; In the example below, this allows the load to be packetized with the memop. ; CHECK: { ; CHECK: r{{[0-9]*}} = memw(r{{[0-9]*}}+#4) ; CHECK-NEXT: memw(r{{[0-9]*}}+#0) += #3 ; CHECK: } @g0 = common global [10 x i32] zeroinitializer, align 8 ; Function Attrs: nounwind define void @f0(i32* nocapture %a0) #0 { b0: %v0 = load i32, i32* %a0, align 4, !tbaa !0 %v1 = add nsw i32 %v0, 3 store i32 %v1, i32* %a0, align 4, !tbaa !0 %v2 = getelementptr inbounds i32, i32* %a0, i32 1 %v3 = load i32, i32* %v2, align 4, !tbaa !0 store i32 %v3, i32* getelementptr inbounds ([10 x i32], [10 x i32]* @g0, i32 0, i32 0), align 8, !tbaa !0 ret void } attributes #0 = { nounwind "target-cpu"="hexagonv60" } !0 = !{!1, !1, i64 0} !1 = !{!"int", !2} !2 = !{!"omnipotent char", !3} !3 = !{!"Simple C/C++ TBAA"}