The hasMemory argument is irrelevant to how the argument
for an "i" constraint should get lowered; PR 6309.  While
this argument was passed around a lot, this is the only
place it was used, so it goes away from a lot of other
places.



git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@106893 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
diff --git a/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelLowering.cpp b/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelLowering.cpp
index 63802fa..aeae04a 100644
--- a/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelLowering.cpp
+++ b/lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCISelLowering.cpp
@@ -5380,11 +5380,8 @@
 
 
 /// LowerAsmOperandForConstraint - Lower the specified operand into the Ops
-/// vector.  If it is invalid, don't add anything to Ops. If hasMemory is true
-/// it means one of the asm constraint of the inline asm instruction being
-/// processed is 'm'.
+/// vector.  If it is invalid, don't add anything to Ops.
 void PPCTargetLowering::LowerAsmOperandForConstraint(SDValue Op, char Letter,
-                                                     bool hasMemory,
                                                      std::vector<SDValue>&Ops,
                                                      SelectionDAG &DAG) const {
   SDValue Result(0,0);
@@ -5443,7 +5440,7 @@
   }
 
   // Handle standard constraint letters.
-  TargetLowering::LowerAsmOperandForConstraint(Op, Letter, hasMemory, Ops, DAG);
+  TargetLowering::LowerAsmOperandForConstraint(Op, Letter, Ops, DAG);
 }
 
 // isLegalAddressingMode - Return true if the addressing mode represented