On 64-bit X86, 0x66 operand-size override prefix will change the size of
the instruction operand, e.g. from 32 bits to 16 bits, but it will not
modify the size of the displacement operand used for memory addressing,
which will always be 32 bits.
Reviewed By: skan, rafauler
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126726
MCSymbolizer::tryAddingSymbolicOperand() overloaded the Size parameter
to specify either the instruction size or the operand size depending on
the architecture. However, for proper symbolic disassembly on X86, we
need to know both sizes, as an instruction can have two operands, and
the instruction size cannot be reliably calculated based on the operand
offset and its size. Hence, split Size into OpSize and InstSize.
For X86, the new interface allows to fix a couple of issues:
* Correctly adjust the value of PC-relative operands.
* Set operand size to zero when the operand is specified implicitly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D126101
Fix a number of issues with MCSymbolizer::tryAddingSymbolicOperand()
in X86Disassembler:
* Pass instruction size instead of immediate size.
* Correctly adjust the value of PC-relative operands.
* Set operand offset to zero when the operand is specified
implicitly.
Reviewed By: Amir, skan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D121065