This reverts a part of 365e40b. While it is not legal to clobber
the output register, it is legal and necessary to do this for inputs,
since we do not preserve them, and LLVM could have decided to
reuse them.
Thanks to @Amanieu for discovering this.
This is not actually legal (although the restriction is not
documented anywhere), and is not caught by LLVM unless the codegen
option -verify-machineinstrs is specified. This option is now used
on Travis.
While not legal, this does not seem to result in invalid output
(although it creates an unnecessary spill); however, under extremely
specific circumstances (e.g. when a register scavenger is run under
severe pressure), this will result in a codegen crash, which is
how I found it.