Uses are split into three categories:
- Arbitrary (except for size savings) - constants like RSCRATCH are
used.
- ABI (i.e. RAX as return value) - ABI_RETURN is used.
- Fixed by architecture (RCX shifts, RDX/RAX for some instructions) -
explicit register is kept.
In theory this allows the assignments to be modified easily. I verified
that I was able to run Melee with all the registers changed, although
there may be issues if RSCRATCH[2] and ABI_PARAM{1,2} conflict.
(1) Rename ABI_ALL_CALLEE_SAVED to ABI_ALL_CALLER_SAVED, because that's
what it was actually defined as (and used as). Derp.
(2) RegistersInUse is always used for the purpose of saving registers
before calling a C++ function in the middle of a JIT block (without
flushing). There is no need to save callee-saved registers in this
case. Change the name to CallerSavedRegistersInUse and mask with
ABI_ALL_CALLER_SAVED.
Nothing obvious broke when starting up a Melee game. (I added a test
for anything actually being masked out; it happens, but in this
particular case seemed to occur at most a few dozen times per second, so
the actual performance benefit is probably negligible.)
Our defines were never clear between what meant 64bit or x86_64
This makes a clear cut between bitness and architecture.
This commit also has the side effect of bringing up aarch64 compiling support.