We can now enable this for AVX1 targets can now assist with canonicalizeShuffleMaskWithHorizOp cleanup.
There's still a few missed opportunities for merging subvector insert/extracts into shuffles, but they shouldn't cause any regressions now.
Instead of just attempting to fold shuffle(HOP,HOP) for a specific target shuffle, make this part of combineX86ShufflesRecursively so we can perform this on the combined shuffle chain, which is particularly useful for recognising more cases of where we're performing multiple HOPs that can be merged and pre-AVX where we don't have good blend/unary target shuffle support.
Split the isRepeatedTargetShuffleMask into a wrapper variant that takes a MVT describing the mask width, and an internal version that just needs the raw mask element bit size.
This will be necessary for an upcoming change where the horizontal ops element width might not match the shuffle mask element width.
This is beginning to look like a canonicalization stage that could be performed as part of shuffle combining
Another step towards PR41813
Recommit of rG9bd97d036398 with fixed offset adjustments
Pull out element equivalence code from isShuffleEquivalent/isTargetShuffleEquivalent, I've also removed many of the index modulos where possible.
First step toward simply adding some additional equivalence tests.
Changes the Offset arguments to both functions from int64_t to TypeSize
& updates all uses of the functions to create the offset using TypeSize::Fixed()
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85220
When we use mask compare intrinsics under strict FP option, the masked
elements shouldn't raise any exception. So, we cann't replace the
intrinsic with a full compare + "and" operation.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85385
If a shuffle is referring to both the lower and upper half lanes of an unary horizontal op, then canonicalize the mask to only refer to the lower half.
Check that we're shuffling hadd/pack ops first before altering shuffle masks.
First step towards adding extra functionality, plus it avoids costly shuffle mask manipulation if not necessary.
This was blocking isTypeLegal call so that we could do a particular
transform on illegal types before type legalization. But the we
create a target specific node using that type. We shouldn't do
that if the type isn't legal. So I think we should just always
make sure the type is legal.
I suspect that in order to get the condition VT to not be a vector
of i1 we already completed type legalization anyway so this probably
doesn't matter much in practice.
Previously the transform was doing these two canonicalizations
(x > y) ? x : y -> (x >= y) ? x : y
(x < y) ? x : y -> (x <= y) ? x : y
But those don't seem to be useful generally. And they actively
pessimize the cases in PR47049.
This patch limits it to
(x > 0) ? x : 0 -> (x >= 0) ? x : 0
(x < -1) ? x : -1 -> (x <= -1) ? x : -1
These are the cases mentioned in the comments as the motivation
for the canonicalization. These allow the CMOV to use the S
flag from the compare thus improving opportunities to use a TEST
or the flags from an arithmetic instruction.
In D85499, I attempted to fix this same issue by canonicalizing
andnp for i1 vectors, but since there was some opposition to such
a change, this commit just fixes the bug by using two different
forms depending on which kind of vector type is in use. We can
then always decide to switch the canonical forms later.
Description of the original bug:
We have a DAG combine that tries to fold (vselect cond, 0000..., X) -> (andnp cond, x).
However, it does so by attempting to create an i64 vector with the number
of elements obtained by truncating division by 64 from the bitwidth. This is
bad for mask vectors like v8i1, since that division is just zero. Besides,
we don't want i64 vectors anyway. For i1 vectors, switch the pattern
to (andnp (not cond), x), which is the canonical form for `kandn`
on mask registers.
Fixes https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/36955.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85553
We need to have special handling of i128 div/rem on Windows due
to a weird calling convention needed for the libcall. There was
also some code that made it look like we do the same for sdivrem/udiv,
but the code didn't account for multiple return values of those
functions so couldn't possibly work. I think this code never
triggers because we don't have libcall names defined for those
functions by default so DAGCombine never creates DIVREM nodes.
For example a v4f16 argument is scalarized to 4 i32 values. So
the values are spread out instead of being packed tightly like
in the original vector.
Fixes PR47000.
We've had issues in the past where isHorizontalBinOp calls would affect later combines as the LHS/RHS references had been commuted but still failed to match.
Now that rG47cea9e82dda941e lets us aggressively decode multi-use shuffles for the OR(SHUFFLE(),SHUFFLE()) case we don't need the computeKnownBits variant any more.
Permit lane-crossing post shuffles on AVX1 targets as long as every element comes from the same source lane, which for v8f32/v4f64 cases can be efficiently lowered with the LowerShuffleAsLanePermuteAnd* style methods.
[X86][SSE] Shuffle combine blends to OR(X,Y) if the relevant elements are known zero (REAPPLIED)
This allows us to remove the (depth violating) code in getFauxShuffleMask where we were combining the OR(SHUFFLE,SHUFFLE) shuffle inputs as well, and not just the OR().
This is a minor step toward being able to shuffle combine from/to SELECT/BLENDV as a faux shuffle.
Reapplied with fixed signed/unsigned comparisons.
Test function mask_cmp_128 failed during ISEL
LLVM ERROR: Cannot select: t37: v8i1 = X86ISD::KSHIFTL t48, TargetConstant:i8<4>
due to v8i1 only available under AVX512DQ.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84922
This allows us to remove the (depth violating) code in getFauxShuffleMask where we were combining the OR(SHUFFLE,SHUFFLE) shuffle inputs as well, and not just the OR().
This is a minor step toward being able to shuffle combine from/to SELECT/BLENDV as a faux shuffle.
We already do this on AVX (+ for ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG), but this enables it for all SSE targets - we attempted something similar back at rL357057 but hit issues with the ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG handling (PR41249).
I'm still looking at the vector-mul.ll regression - which is due to 32-bit targets performing the load as a f64, resulting in the shuffle combiner thinking it has to create a shuffle in the float domain.
If the upper bits of the __builtin_parity idiom are known to be
0 we were previously emitting an xor with 0 to get the parity flag.
But we can use cmp/test instead which may expose opportunities for
load folding or combining an AND.
Noticed while investigating combining from concatenated shuffle vectors, we weren't checking that PSHUFLW/PSHUFHW was legal - we were depending on lowering splitting to subvectors.
As long as we can extract the lowest 128-bit subvector from the pre-truncated source vector, then we don't care what size it is.
The next stage will be to support non-zero extraction indices, as long as its still coming from the lowest 128-bit subvector.
Instead of never accepting v8f32/v4f64 FHADD/FHSUB if the input shuffle masks cross lanes, perform the matching and determine if the post shuffle mask simplifies to a 'whole lane shuffle' mask - in which case we are guaranteed to cheaply perform this as a VPERM2F128 shuffle.
If the mask input to getV4X86ShuffleImm8 only refers to a single source element (+ undefs) then canonicalize to a full broadcast.
getV4X86ShuffleImm8 defaults to inline values for undefs, which can be useful for shuffle widening/narrowing but does leave SimplifyDemanded* calls thinking the shuffle depends on unnecessary elements.
I'm still investigating what we should do more generally to avoid these undemanded elements, but broadcast cases was a simpler win.
An initial backend patch towards fixing the various poor HADD combines (PR34724, PR41813, PR45747 etc.).
This extends isHorizontalBinOp to check if we have per-element horizontal ops (odd+even element pairs), but not in the expected serial order - in which case we build a "post shuffle mask" that we can apply to the HOP result, assuming we have fast-hops/optsize etc.
The next step will be to extend the SHUFFLE(HOP(X,Y)) combines as suggested on PR41813 - accepting more post-shuffle masks even on slow-hop targets if we can fold it into another shuffle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83789
XBEGIN causes several based blocks to be inserted. If flags are live across it we need to make eflags live in the new basic blocks to avoid machine verifier errors.
Fixes PR46827
Reviewed By: ivanbaev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84479
If we lower a v2i64 shuffle to PSHUFD, we currently clamp undef elements to 0, (elements 0,1 of the v4i32) which can result in the shuffle referencing more elements of the source vector than expected, affecting later shuffle combines and KnownBits/SimplifyDemanded calls.
By ensuring we widen the undef mask element we allow getV4X86ShuffleImm8 to use inline elements as the default, which are more likely to fold.
If we don't care about an entire LHS/RHS of the PACK op, then can just treat it the same as undef (we don't care if it saturates) and is safe to treat as a shuffle.
This can happen if we attempt to decode as a faux shuffle before SimplifyDemandedVectorElts has been called on the PACK which should replace the source with UNDEF entirely.
getTargetShuffleMask is used by the various "SimplifyDemanded" folds so we can't assume that the bypassed extract_subvector can be safely simplified - getFauxShuffleMask performs a more general decode that allows us to more safely catch many of these cases so the impact is minimal.
fma reassoc A, B, C --> fadd (fmul A, B), C (when target has no FMA hardware)
C/C++ code may use explicit fma() calls (which become LLVM fma
intrinsics in IR) but then gets compiled with -ffast-math or similar.
For targets that do not have FMA hardware, we don't want to go out to
the math library for a precise but slow FMA result.
I tried this as a generic DAGCombine, but it caused infinite looping
on more than 1 other target, so there's likely some over-reaching fma
formation happening.
There's also a potential intersection of strict FP with fast-math here.
Deferring to current behavior for that case (assuming that strict-ness
overrides fast-ness).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83981
There was a lot of duplicate code here for checking the VT and
subtarget. Moving it into a helper avoids that.
It also fixes a bug that combineAdd reused Op0/Op1 after a call
to isHorizontalBinOp may have changed it. The new helper function
has its own local version of Op0/Op1 that aren't shared by other
code.
Fixes PR46455.
Reviewed By: spatel, bkramer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83971
Bit 7 of the index controls zeroing, the other bits are ignored when bit 7 is set. Shuffle lowering was using 128 and shuffle combining was using 255. Seems like we should be consistent.
This patch changes shuffle combining to use 128 to match lowering.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83587
peekThroughOneUseBitcasts checks the use count of the operand of the bitcast. Not the bitcast itself. So I think that means we need to do any outside haseOneUse checks before calling the function not after.
I was working on another patch where I misused the function and did a very quick audit to see if I there were other similar mistakes.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83598
Truncations lowered as shuffles of multiple (concatenated) vectors often leave us with lane-crossing shuffles that feed a PACKSS/PACKUS, if both shuffles are fed from the same 2 vector sources, then we can PACK the sources directly and shuffle the result instead.
This is currently limited to whole i128 lanes in a 256-bit vector, but we can extend this if the need arises (but I'm not seeing many examples in real world code).
If we don't immediately lower the vector shift, the splat
constant vector we created may get turned into a constant pool
load before we get around to lowering the shift. This makes it
a lot more difficult to create a shift by constant. Sometimes we
fail to see through the constant pool at all and end up trying
to lower as if it was a variable shift. This requires custom
handling and may create an unsupported vselect on pre-sse-4.1
targets. Since we're after LegalizeVectorOps we are unable to
legalize the unsupported vselect as that code is in LegalizeVectorOps
rather than LegalizeDAG.
So calling LowerShift immediately ensures that we get see the
splat constant.
Fixes PR46527.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83455
Technically a VSELECT expects a vector of all 1s or 0s elements
for its condition. But we aren't guaranteeing that the sign bit
and the non sign bits match in these locations. So we should use
BLENDV which is more relaxed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83447
If we're extracting a subvector from a shuffle that is shuffling entire subvectors we can peek through and extract the subvector from the shuffle source instead.
This helps remove some cases where concat_vectors(extract_subvector(),extract_subvector()) legalizations has resulted in BLEND/VPERM2F128 shuffles of the subvectors.
vselect ((X & Pow2C) == 0), LHS, RHS --> vselect ((shl X, C') < 0), RHS, LHS
Follow-up to D83073 - the non-splat mask cases where we actually see an
improvement are quite limited from what I can tell. AVX1 needs multiply
and blend capabilities and AVX2 needs vector shift and blend capabilities.
The intersection of those 2 constraints is only vectors with 32-bit or
64-bit elements.
XOP is/was better.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83181
We were checking the VBROADCAST_LOAD element size against the extraction destination size instead of the extracted vector element size - PEXTRW/PEXTB have implicit zext'ing so have i32 destination sizes for v8i16/v16i8 vectors, resulting in us extracting from the wrong part of a load.
This patch bails from the fold if the vector element sizes don't match, and we now use the target constant extraction code later on like the pre-AVX2 targets, fixing the test case.
Found by internal fuzzing tests.
In the test based on PR46586:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46586
...we are inserting 16-bits into the high element of the vector, shuffling it
to element 0, and extracting 32-bits. But xmm1 was never initialized, so the
top 16-bits of the extract are undef without this patch.
(It seems like we could do better than this by recognizing that we only demand
a subsection of the build vector, but I want to make sure we fix the
miscompile 1st.)
This path is only used for pre-SSE4.1, and simpler patterns get squashed
somewhere along the way, so the test still includes a 'urem' as it did in the
original test from the bug report.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83319
When an argument has 'byval' attribute and should be
passed on the stack according calling convention,
a stack copy would be emitted twice. This will cause
the real value will be put into stack where the pointer
should be passed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83175
Probably not super important since there are no real CPUs with
avx512vl and not avx512bw. But vpternlog should be better than
vblendvb.
I do wonder if we should use vpternlog even with BWI. We
currently use vblendmb or vpblendmw by putting the mask into a GPR
and moving it to a k-register. But I don't think we hoist the
GPR to k-register copy in machine LICM. Using VPTERNLOG would use
a constant pool load, but has the advantage that we're pretty good
at hoisting and rematerializing those.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83156
VPBLENDVB is multiple uops while VPTERNLOG is a single uop. So
we should use that instead.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83155
Using PACK for truncations leaves us with intermediate shuffles that can be tricky to remove while the truncation tree is being formed.
This fold helps pull out the PERMQ case which is one of the most common, avoiding some costly lane-crossing shuffles.
A future patch will begin adding more general shuffle folding, which we should be able to use for HADD/HSUB as well.
We canonicalize patterns like:
%s = lshr i32 %a0, 1
%t = trunc i32 %s to i1
to:
%a = and i32 %a0, 2
%c = icmp ne i32 %a, 0
...in IR, but the bit-shifting original sequence may be better for x86 vector codegen.
I tried several variants of the transform, and it's tricky to not induce regressions.
In particular, I did not find a way to cleanly handle non-splat constants, so I've left
that as a TODO item here (currently negative tests for those are included). AVX512
resulted in some diffs, but didn't look meaningful, so I left that out too. Some of
the 256-bit AVX1 diffs are questionable, but close enough that they are probably
insignificant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83073.
We consider v32i16/v64i8 to be legal types on avx512f, but we
don't have most operations until avx512bw. But we can use
and/or/xor operations. So try those before splitting.
This is especially helpful since we turn some ands with constant
masks into shuffles in early DAG combines. So we should make sure
we recover those back to AND.
The comments here indicate that we prefer to promote the shifts
instead of allowing rotate to be pattern matched. But we weren't
taking into account whether 512-bit registers are enabled or
whethever we have vpsllvw/vpsrlvw instructions.
splatvar_rotate_v32i8 is a slight regrssion, but the other cases
are neutral or improved.
D82257/rG3521ecf1f8a3 was incorrectly sign-extending a constant vector from the lsb, this is fine if all the constant elements are 'allsignbits' in the active bits, but if only some of the elements are, then we are corrupting the constant values for those elements.
This fix ensures we sign extend from the msb of the active/demanded bits instead.
If we're masking the result of an OR-reduction before comparing against zero, we can fold this into the PTEST() / MOVMSK(CMPEQ()) codegen by pre-masking the source value.
This works particularly well on PTEST which performs the AND as part of its operation, but the MOVMSK variant also benefits for non-V2I64 cases.
Fixes PR44781
If the shuffle is a blend and one input is a 0 vector, we should prefer AND over PSHUFB since its available on more execution ports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82798
This was producing reg = xor undef reg, undef reg. This looks similar
to a use of a value to define itself, and I want to disallow undef
uses for SSA virtual registers. If this were to use implicit_def,
there's no guarantee the two operands end up using the same register
(I think no guarantee exists even if the two operands start out as the
same register, but this was violated when I switched this to use an
explicit implicit_def). The MOV32r0 pseudo evidently exists to handle
this case, so use it instead. This was more work than I expected for
the 64-bit case, but I didn't see any helper for materializing a
64-bit 0.
If a constant is only allsignbits in the demanded/active bits, then sign extend it to an allsignbits bool pattern for OR/XOR ops.
This also requires SimplifyDemandedBits XOR handling to be modified to call ShrinkDemandedConstant on any (non-NOT) XOR pattern to account for non-splat cases.
Next step towards fixing PR45808 - with this patch we now get a <-1,-1,0,0> v4i64 constant instead of <1,1,0,0>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82257
Pre-commit for D82257, this adds a DemandedElts arg to ShrinkDemandedConstant/targetShrinkDemandedConstant which will allow future patches to (optionally) add vector support.
We already fold (v2i64 scalar_to_vector(aext)) -> (v2i64 bitcast(v4i32 scalar_to_vector(x))), this adds support for similar aextload cases and also handles v2f64 cases that wrap the i64 extension behind bitcasts.
Fixes the remaining issue with PR39016
Generalize the vector operand extraction code for shuffle/pack ops - we can assume that the vector operands are the same width as the result, and any non-vector values can be reused directly in the smaller width op.
Summary:
A while ago I implemented the functionality to lower Microsoft __ptr32
and __ptr64 pointers, which are stored as 32-bit and 64-bit pointer
and are extended/truncated to the appropriate pointer size when
dereferenced.
This patch adds an addrspacecast to cast from the __ptr32/__ptr64
pointer to a default address space when dereferencing.
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42359
Reviewers: hans, arsenm, RKSimon
Subscribers: wdng, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81517
This caused a Chromium test to miscompile. See discussion on the Phabricator
review.
> This patch extends MatchVectorAllZeroTest to handle OR vector reduction patterns where the result is compared against zero.
>
> Fixes PR45378
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81547
This reverts 057c9c7ee0
We have many cases where we call SimplifyMultipleUseDemandedBits and demand specific vector elements, but all the bits from them - this adds a helper wrapper to handle this.
If a collection of interconnected phi nodes is only ever loaded, stored
or bitcast then we can convert the whole set to the bitcast type,
potentially helping to reduce the number of register moves needed as the
phi's are passed across basic block boundaries. This has to be done in
CodegenPrepare as it naturally straddles basic blocks.
The alorithm just looks from phi nodes, looking at uses and operands for
a collection of nodes that all together are bitcast between float and
integer types. We record visited phi nodes to not have to process them
more than once. The whole subgraph is then replaced with a new type.
Loads and Stores are bitcast to the correct type, which should then be
folded into the load/store, changing it's type.
This comes up in the biquad testcase due to the way MVE needs to keep
values in integer registers. I have also seen it come up from aarch64
partner example code, where a complicated set of sroa/inlining produced
integer phis, where float would have been a better choice.
I also added undef and extract element handling which increased the
potency in some cases.
This adds it with an option that defaults to off, and disabled for 32bit
X86 due to potential issues around canonicalizing NaNs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81827
Pulled out from the ongoing work on D66004, currently we don't do a good job of simplifying variable shuffle masks that have already lowered to constant pool entries.
This patch adds SimplifyDemandedVectorEltsForTargetShuffle (a custom x86 helper) to first try SimplifyDemandedVectorElts (which we already do) and then constant pool simplification to help mark undefined elements.
To prevent lowering/combines infinite loops, we only handle basic constant pool loads instead of creating new BUILD_VECTOR nodes for lowering - e.g. we don't try to convert them to broadcast/vzext_load - there might be some benefit to this but if so I'd rather we come up with some way to reuse existing code than reimplement a lot of BUILD_VECTOR code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81791
Without SSE41 we don't have the PCMPEQQ instruction, making cmp-with-zero reductions more complicated than necessary. We can compare as vXi32 (PCMPEQD) and tweak the MOVMSK comparison to test upper/lower DWORD comparisons.
This pre-fixes something that occurs with null tests for vectors of (64-bit) pointers such as in PR35129.
This patch extends MatchVectorAllZeroTest to handle OR vector reduction patterns where the result is compared against zero.
Fixes PR45378
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81547
Pull the lowering code out of LowerVectorAllZeroTest (and rename it MatchVectorAllZeroTest).
We should be able to reuse this in combineVectorSizedSetCCEquality as well.
Another cleanup to simplify D81547.
Reduce by splitting the vector until we reach the target size for PTEST/MOVMSK_PCMPEQ. There might be some cases where AVX512 can perform this with 512-bit vectors but so far I haven't encountered any such pattern that reaches LowerVectorAllZeroTest.
Prep work for D81547
matchScalarReduction should return all its source vectors with the same type, so we can safely perform the OR reduction with the original type.
So we just need to bitcast for PTEST/PCMPEQB with the final reduced vector.
When checking for an enum function attribute, use hasFnAttribute()
rather than hasAttribute() at FunctionIndex, because it is
significantly faster (and more concise to boot).
Reduce XMM->GPR traffic by performing bitops on the vectors, and using a single MOVMSK call.
This requires us to use vectors of the same size and element width, but we can mix fp/int type equivalents with suitable bitcasting.
If the input to the bitcast is a sign bit test, it makes sense to
directly use vpmovmskb or vmovmskps/pd. This removes the need to
copy the sign bits to a k-register and then to a GPR.
Fixes PR46200.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81327
Noticed while trying to cleanup D66004 - if a shuffle operand came from a scalar, we're better off using INSERTPS vs UNPCKLPS as this is more likely to load fold later on. It also matches our existing BUILD_VECTOR lowering.
We can extend this to other PINSRB/D/Q/W cases in the future as the need arises.
Convert shift+or bool vector patterns into CONCAT_VECTORS if we know this will be lowered to KUNPCK (which requires 16+ vector elements).
Fixes PR32547
AVX512 mask types are often bitcasted to scalar integers for various ops before being bitcast back to be used as a predicate. In many cases we can avoid these KMASK<->GPR transfers and perform equivalent operations on the mask unit.
If the destination mask type is legal, and we can confirm that the scalar op originally came from a mask/vector/float/double type then we should try to avoid the scalar entirely.
This avoids some codegen issues noticed while working on PTEST/MOVMSK improvements.
Partially fixes PR32547 - we don't create a KUNPCK yet, but OR(X,KSHIFTL(Y)) can be handled in a separate patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81548
If we probe *after* each static stack allocation, we need to probe *before* each
dynamic stack allocation. Provide a scheme to describe the possible scenario.
Thanks a lot to @jonpa for motivating this fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81067
LowerSELECT sees the CMP with 0 and wants to use a trick with SUB
and SBB. But we can use the flags from the BSF/TZCNT.
Fixes PR46203.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81312
This combine tries shrink a vzmovl if its input is an
insert_subvector. This patch improves it to turn
(vzmovl (bitcast (insert_subvector))) into
(insert_subvector (vzmovl (bitcast))) potentially allowing the
bitcast to be folded with a load.
We can pad the v2f32 with 0s up to v8f32 and use a v8f32->v8i64
operation. This is what we end up with on non-strict nodes except
we don't pad with 0s since we don't care about exceptions.
In the sign splat case, we can fold PMOVMSKB(PACKSSBW(LO(X), HI(X))) -> PMOVMSKB(BITCAST_v32i8(X)) without introducing a signmask + comparison (which unlike for any_of won't fold into a single TEST).
Handle MOVMSK 'allof' comparisons (X86ISD::SUB X, AllBitsMask) as well as 'anyof' patterns.
This allows us to handle these patterns in the MOVMSK(BITCAST(X)) pattern to fix PR37087.
As shown on PR37087, if we have a MOVMSK(BICAST(X)) from a wider vector, then by using MOVMSK from the wider type (32/64-bit elements) we can improve the chances of further combines with SimplifyDemandedBits/Elts and on some targets (skylake) can be more efficient.
Shifts are supposed to always shift in zeros or sign bits regardless of their inputs. It's possible the input value may have been replaced with undef by SimplifyDemandedBits, but the shift in zeros are still demanded.
This issue was reported to me by ispc from 10.0. Unfortunately their failing test does not fail on trunk. Seems to be because the shl is optimized out earlier now and doesn't become VSHLI.
ispc bug https://github.com/ispc/ispc/issues/1771
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81212
An initial patch adding combineSetCCMOVMSK to simplify MOVMSK and its vector input based on the comparison of the MOVMSK result.
This first stage just adds support for some simple MOVMSK(PACKSSBW()) cases where we remove the PACKSS if we're comparing ne/eq zero (any_of patterns), allowing us to directly compare against the v8i16 source vector(s) bitcasted to v16i8, with suitable masking to take into account of which signbits are valid.
Future combines could peek through further PACKSS, target shuffles, handle all_of patterns (ne/eq -1), optimize to a PTEST op, etc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81171
If we're only demanding the (shifted) sign bits of the shift source value, then we can use the value directly.
This handles SimplifyDemandedBits/SimplifyMultipleUseDemandedBits for both ISD::SHL and X86ISD::VSHLI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80869
We looked through a truncate to get to the load. So we should be
deleting the truncate first.
There is a check that the node is really unused before deleting
so this didn't cause a functional issue.
This matches what we do for the full sized vector ops at the start of combineX86ShufflesRecursively, and helps getFauxShuffleMask extract more INSERT_SUBVECTOR patterns.
Try to prevent future node creation issues (as detailed in PR45974) by making the SelectionDAG reference const, so it can still be used for analysis, but not node creation.
As detailed on PR45974 and D79987, getFauxShuffleMask is creating nodes on the fly to create shuffles with inputs the same size as the result, causing problems for hasOneUse() checks in later simplification stages.
Currently only combineX86ShufflesRecursively benefits from these widened inputs so I've begun moving the functionality there, and out of getFauxShuffleMask. This allows us to remove the widening from VBROADCAST and *EXTEND* faux shuffle cases.
This just leaves the INSERT_SUBVECTOR case in getFauxShuffleMask still creating nodes, which will require more extensive refactoring.
We already had a DAG combine for (mmx (bitconvert (i64 (extractelement v2i64))))
to MOVDQ2Q.
Remove patterns for MMX_MOVQ2DQrr/MMX_MOVDQ2Qrr that use
scalar_to_vector/extractelement involving i64 scalar type with
v2i64 and x86mmx.
Let the codegen recognized the nomerge attribute and disable branch folding when the attribute is given
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79537
Only 64-bit bits will be loaded, not the whole 128 bits. We can
just combine it to plain mmx load. This has the side effect of
enabling isel load folding for it.
This part of my desire to get rid of isel patterns that shrink loads.
If we are using PTEST to check 'allsign bits' vector elements we can use MOVMSK to extract the signbits directly and perform the comparison on the scalar value.
For vXi16 cases, as we don't have a MOVMSK for this type, we must mask each signbit out of a PMOVMSKB v2Xi8 result, which folds into the TEST comparison.
If this allows us to remove a vector op (via the SimplifyMultipleUseDemandedBits call) this is consistently faster than a PTEST (https://godbolt.org/z/ziJUst).
I'm investigating whether we ever get regressions without the SimplifyMultipleUseDemandedBits call, even if this means we don't remove a vector op, but that has exposed some other poor codegen issues that I'm still investigating and would have to wait for a later patch.
Suggested on PR42035 to avoid unnecessary ashr(x,bw-1)/pcmpgt(0,x) sign splat patterns feeding into ptest.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80563
There's more code for calling CombineTo and replacing the nodes
that I'd like to share, but its complicated by the getNode call
in the middle that needs to be specific to each opcode.
While there are also make sure we recursively delete the load
we're replacing. It eventually gets removed by a RemoveDeadNodes
call at the end of DAG combine, but we should be more eager about
it. We were inconsistently doing this in some places but not all.
Fix combineSubToSubus to handle the new DAG to avoid a regression.
There are still regressions in test14/test15/test16. Where it
looks like were trying to set up cases we could match to
umin+trunc+subus but the handling was never finished. The
regression here isn't unique to sub. Its a lost opportunity for
taking an AND with two truncated inputs and producing a larger
AND with a single truncate. The same thing could happen with
any other node we handle in combineTruncatedArithmetic since we
are moving the truncate up the DAG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80483
- test both 32 and 64 bit version
- probe the tail in dynamic-alloca
- generate more concise code
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79482
This replaces the build_vector lowering code that was just added in
D80013
and matches the pattern later from the x86-specific "vzext_movl".
That seems to result in the same or better improvements and gets rid
of the 'TODO' items from that patch.
AFAICT, we always shrink wider constant vectors to 128-bit on these
patterns, so we still get the implicit zero-extension to ymm/zmm
without wasting space on larger vector constants. There's a trade-off
there because that means we miss potential load-folding.
Similarly, we could load scalar constants here with implicit
zero-extension even to 128-bit. That saves constant space, but it
means we forego load-folding, and so it increases register pressure.
This seems like a good middle-ground between those 2 options.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80131
If we're extracting an upper subvector from a broadcast we're better off extracting the lowest subvector instead as it avoids an actual extract instruction and might help SimplifyDemandedVectorElts further simplify the code.
This initial version only peeks through cases where we just demand the sign bit of an ashr shift, but we could generalize this further depending on how many sign bits we already have.
The pr18014.ll case is a minor annoyance - we've failed to to move the psrad/paddd after the blendvps which would have avoided the extra move, but we have still increased the ILP.
On X86 (AVX1/AVX2), non-boolean masked loads only demand the sign bit of the mask, we already do the equivalent for masked stores.
Annoyingly I can't easily handle this inside TargetLowering::SimplifyDemandedBits as this is an x86 specific case for a generic node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80478
This is a preliminary patch before I deal with the xor+and issue raised in D77301.
We get much better code for i8/i16 funnel shifts by concatenating the operands together and performing the shift as a double width type, it avoids repeated use of the shift amount and partial registers.
fshl(x,y,z) -> (((zext(x) << bw) | zext(y)) << (z & (bw-1))) >> bw.
fshr(x,y,z) -> (((zext(x) << bw) | zext(y)) >> (z & (bw-1))) >> bw.
Alive2: http://volta.cs.utah.edu:8080/z/CZx7Cn
This doesn't do as well for i32 cases on x86_64 (the xor+and followup patch is much better) so I haven't bothered with that.
Cases with constant amounts are more dubious as well so I haven't currently bothered with those - its these kind of 'edge' cases that put me off trying to put this in TargetLowering::expandFunnelShift.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80466
If the caller needs to reponsible for making sure the MaybeAlign
has a value, then we should just make the caller convert it to an Align
with operator*.
I explicitly deleted the relational comparison operators that
were being inherited from Optional. It's unclear what the meaning
of two MaybeAligns were one is defined and the other isn't
should be. So make the caller reponsible for defining the behavior.
I left the ==/!= operators from Optional. But now that exposed a
weird quirk that ==/!= between Align and MaybeAlign required the
MaybeAlign to be defined. But now we use the operator== from
Optional that takes an Optional and the Value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80455
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D74651 for the preallocated IR constructs
and LangRef changes.
In X86TargetLowering::LowerCall(), if a call is preallocated, record
each argument's offset from the stack pointer and the total stack
adjustment. Associate the call Value with an integer index. Store the
info in X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index as the key.
This adds two new target independent ISDOpcodes and two new target
dependent Opcodes corresponding to @llvm.call.preallocated.{setup,arg}.
The setup ISelDAG node takes in a chain and outputs a chain and a
SrcValue of the preallocated call Value. It is lowered to a target
dependent node with the SrcValue replaced with the integer index key by
looking in X86MachineFunctionInfo. In
X86TargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter() this is lowered to an
%esp adjustment, the exact amount determined by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index key.
The arg ISelDAG node takes in a chain, a SrcValue of the preallocated
call Value, and the arg index int constant. It produces a chain and the
pointer fo the arg. It is lowered to a target dependent node with the
SrcValue replaced with the integer index key by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo. In
X86TargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter() this is lowered to a
lea of the stack pointer plus an offset determined by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index key.
Force any function containing a preallocated call to use the frame
pointer.
Does not yet handle a setup without a call, or a conditional call.
Does not yet handle musttail. That requires a LangRef change first.
Tried to look at all references to inalloca and see if they apply to
preallocated. I've made preallocated versions of tests testing inalloca
whenever possible and when they make sense (e.g. not alloca related,
inalloca edge cases).
Aside from the tests added here, I checked that this codegen produces
correct code for something like
```
struct A {
A();
A(A&&);
~A();
};
void bar() {
foo(foo(foo(foo(foo(A(), 4), 5), 6), 7), 8);
}
```
by replacing the inalloca version of the .ll file with the appropriate
preallocated code. Running the executable produces the same results as
using the current inalloca implementation.
Reverted due to unexpectedly passing tests, added REQUIRES: asserts for reland.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77689
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D74651 for the preallocated IR constructs
and LangRef changes.
In X86TargetLowering::LowerCall(), if a call is preallocated, record
each argument's offset from the stack pointer and the total stack
adjustment. Associate the call Value with an integer index. Store the
info in X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index as the key.
This adds two new target independent ISDOpcodes and two new target
dependent Opcodes corresponding to @llvm.call.preallocated.{setup,arg}.
The setup ISelDAG node takes in a chain and outputs a chain and a
SrcValue of the preallocated call Value. It is lowered to a target
dependent node with the SrcValue replaced with the integer index key by
looking in X86MachineFunctionInfo. In
X86TargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter() this is lowered to an
%esp adjustment, the exact amount determined by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index key.
The arg ISelDAG node takes in a chain, a SrcValue of the preallocated
call Value, and the arg index int constant. It produces a chain and the
pointer fo the arg. It is lowered to a target dependent node with the
SrcValue replaced with the integer index key by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo. In
X86TargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter() this is lowered to a
lea of the stack pointer plus an offset determined by looking in
X86MachineFunctionInfo with the integer index key.
Force any function containing a preallocated call to use the frame
pointer.
Does not yet handle a setup without a call, or a conditional call.
Does not yet handle musttail. That requires a LangRef change first.
Tried to look at all references to inalloca and see if they apply to
preallocated. I've made preallocated versions of tests testing inalloca
whenever possible and when they make sense (e.g. not alloca related,
inalloca edge cases).
Aside from the tests added here, I checked that this codegen produces
correct code for something like
```
struct A {
A();
A(A&&);
~A();
};
void bar() {
foo(foo(foo(foo(foo(A(), 4), 5), 6), 7), 8);
}
```
by replacing the inalloca version of the .ll file with the appropriate
preallocated code. Running the executable produces the same results as
using the current inalloca implementation.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77689
We have the getNegatibleCost/getNegatedExpression to evaluate the cost and negate the expression.
However, during negating the expression, the cost might change as we are changing the DAG,
and then, hit the assertion if we negated the wrong expression as the cost is not trustful anymore.
This patch is target to remove the getNegatibleCost to avoid the out of sync with getNegatedExpression,
and check the cost during negating the expression. It also reduce the duplicated code between
getNegatibleCost and getNegatedExpression. And fix the crash for the test in D76638
Reviewed By: RKSimon, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77319
This build vector lowering pattern came up in D79886.
I've tried to limit the improvement to cases where it looks
clearly better to load, but we could remove the 'TODO'
predicates already if we are willing to overlook some
corner cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80013
Summary:
The BFloat IR type is introduced to provide support for, initially, the BFloat16
datatype introduced with the Armv8.6 architecture (optional from Armv8.2
onwards). It has an 8-bit exponent and a 7-bit mantissa and behaves like an IEEE
754 floating point IR type.
This is part of a patch series upstreaming Armv8.6 features. Subsequent patches
will upstream intrinsics support and C-lang support for BFloat.
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, rjmccall, rsmith, liutianle, RKSimon, craig.topper, jfb, LukeGeeson, sdesmalen, deadalnix, ctetreau
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, danielkiss, arphaman, kristof.beyls, dexonsmith
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78190
We already form PMULH when the shift is truncated. But we can
also do it from just a shift by extending the result.
Unfortunately, I get regressions if I try to replace the truncate
combine with this as we turn the truncate into a more complicated
sequence first. Then we are unable to combine that sequence with
the extend produced at the end of this combine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79682
Expands on the enablement of the shouldSinkOperands() TLI hook in:
D79718
The last codegen/IR test diff shows what I suspected could happen - we were
sinking all splat shift operands into a loop. But that's not what we want in
general; we only want to sink the *shift amount* operand if it is a splat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79827
SDAG suffers when it can't see that a funnel operand is a splat value
(due to single-basic-block visibility), so invert the normal loop
hoisting rules to move a splat op closer to its use.
This would be part 1 of an enhancement similar to D63233.
This is needed to re-fix PR37426:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37426
...because we got better at canonicalizing IR to funnel shift intrinsics.
The existing CGP code for shift opcodes is likely overstepping what it was
intended to do, so that will be fixed in a follow-up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79718
Summary:
This patch refactors handling of VarArgs in
X86TargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments.
That refactoring was requested while reviewing
D69372. Code related to varargs handling is removed
from X86TargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments and
is divided into smaller routines.
Reviewed By: aeubanks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74794
We have a couple main strategies for legalizing MULH.
-If the vXi16 type is legal, extend to do the full i16 multiply
and then shift and truncate the results.
-Use unpcks to split each 128 bit lane into high and low halves.a
For signed we have an extra case to split a v32i8 to v16i8 and then
use the extending to v16i16 strategy.
This patch proposes to use the unpck strategy instead. Which is
what we already do for unsigned.
This seems to be 1 instruction shorter when the RHS is constant
like the idiv case. It's 1 instruction longer for the smulo case.
But we're trading cross lane shuffles for inlane shuffles and a
shift.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79652
We have the getNegatibleCost/getNegatedExpression to evaluate the cost and negate the expression.
However, during negating the expression, the cost might change as we are changing the DAG,
and then, hit the assertion if we negated the wrong expression as the cost is not trustful anymore.
This patch is target to remove the getNegatibleCost to avoid the out of sync with getNegatedExpression,
and check the cost during negating the expression. It also reduce the duplicated code between
getNegatibleCost and getNegatedExpression. And fix the crash for the test in D76638
Reviewed By: RKSimon, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77319
XOP targets have fast per-element vector shifts and we're better off splitting to 128-bit shifts where necessary (which is what we already do in LowerShift).
For the sint_to_fp(and(X,C)) -> and(X,sint_to_fp(C)) fold, allow combineVectorCompareAndMaskUnaryOp to match any X that ComputeNumSignBits says is all-bits, not just SETCC.
Noticed while investigating mask promotion issues in PR45808
This patch stores the alignment for ConstantPoolSDNode as an
Align and updates the getConstantPool interface to take a MaybeAlign.
Removing getAlignment() will be done as a follow up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79436
We rely on the combine
(sext_in_reg (v4i64 a/sext (v4i32 x)), v4i1) -> (v4i64 sext (v4i32 sext_in_reg (v4i32 x, ExtraVT)))
to avoid complex v4i64 ashr codegen, but doing so prevents v4i64 comparison mask promotion, so ensure we attempt to promote before canonicalizing the (hopefully now redundant sext_in_reg).
Helps with the poor codegen in PR45808.
Neither gcc or icc support this. Split out from D79472. I want
to remove more, but it looks like icc does support some things
gcc doesn't and I need to double check our internal test suites.
Y is the start of several 2 letter constraints, but we also had
partial support to recognize it by itself. But it doesn't look
like it can get through clang as a single letter so the backend
support for this was effectively dead.
This helped fix some i686 vXi64 broadcast folds that were becoming v2Xi32 broadcasts because we didn't match the broadcast until after SimplifyDemandedBits worked out we only used the bottom 32-bits in PMUL(U)DQ and type legalization had split the original i64 load.
A couple of regressions occurred which required some fixups - adding concat_vectors(broadcast_load,broadcast_load) splat support and recognising (unnecessary) unary shuffles of already broadcasted vectors.
This came about as part of the work investigating vector load combining from shuffles for PR42550.
This patch replaces the VZEXT_MOVL removal from combineShuffle with a more general version based in SimplifyDemandedVectorEltsForTargetNode.
By using computeKnownBits we can always remove the VZEXT_MOVL if the upper elements of the source operand are known to be zero.
This requires us to add the conversion ops to computeKnownBitsForTargetNode as well.
Reviewed By: @craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79335
gcc supports selecting ymm0/zmm0 for the Yz constraint when used with 256 or 512 bit vector types.
Fixes PR45806
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79448
Unless we're truncating an 'all-bits' result, using PACKSS for vXi64->vXi32 truncation causes problems with later combines as ComputeNumSignBits struggles to see through BITCASTs to smaller types. If we don't use PACKSS in these cases then we fallback to shuffles which are usually just as good.
We haven't promoted AND/OR/XOR to vXi64 types for a while. So
there's no reason to use isOperationLegalOrPromote. So we can
just use isOperationLegal by merging with ADD handling.
Default legalization will create two v8i64 truncs to v8i32, concat
them to v16i32, and then truncate the rest of the way to v16i8.
Instead we can truncate directly from v8i64 to v8i8 in the lower
half of an xmm. Then concat the two halves to use vpunpcklqdq.
This is the same number of uops, but the dependency chain through
the uops is better since the halves are merged at the end.
I had to had SimplifyDemandedBits support for VTRUNC to prevent
a regression on vector-trunc-math.ll. combineTruncatedArithmetic
no longer gets a chance to shrink vXi64 mul so we were producing
the v8i64 multiply sequence using multiple PMULUDQs. With the
demanded bits fix we are able to prune out the extra ops leaving
just two PMULUDQs, one for each v8i64 half. This is twice the
width of the 2 v8i32 PMULLDs we had before, but PMULUDQ is 1
uop and PMULLD is 2. We also save some truncates. It's probably
worth using PMULUDQ even when PMULLQ is available since the latter
is 3 uops, but that will require a different change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79231
The splitVector helper uses extractSubVector which splits build vectors like we do here, so avoid reimplementing it.
splitVector could easily be extended to peek through bitcasts as well but I'd prefer to keep this commit NFC.
Handle concat_vectors(extract_subvector(broadcast(x)), extract_subvector(broadcast(x))) -> broadcast(x)
To expose this we also need collectConcatOps to recognise the insert_subvector(x, extract_subvector(x, lo), hi) subvector splat pattern
Also fix some cost tables for vXi1 types to match the costs entries for the types they will be promoted to.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79045
This pushes the NOT pattern up the DAG to help expose it for further combines (AND->ANDN in particular).
The PSHUFD/MOVDDUP 'splat' cases are the only ones I've seen in the wild so far, we can further generalize if/when we need to.
X86 matches several 'shift+xor' funnel shift patterns:
fold (or (srl (srl x1, 1), (xor y, 31)), (shl x0, y)) -> (fshl x0, x1, y)
fold (or (shl (shl x0, 1), (xor y, 31)), (srl x1, y)) -> (fshr x0, x1, y)
fold (or (shl (add x0, x0), (xor y, 31)), (srl x1, y)) -> (fshr x0, x1, y)
These patterns are also what we end up with the proposed expansion changes in D77301.
This patch moves these to DAGCombine's generic MatchFunnelPosNeg.
All existing X86 test cases still pass, and we just have a small codegen change in pr32282.ll.
Reviewed By: @spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78935
This section is the remnant of how this code was structured before
we made v32i16/v64i8 legal types with avx512f when not restricting
to 256 bit vectors. Now that there are just a few items left,
merge them near similar things in the other section.
I've modified isTruncateFree to get an accurate cost for types that need to be split. I'm planning to look into fixing it for all vectors, but need more cost cleanups first.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78973
This method has been commented as deprecated for a while. Remove
it and replace all uses with the equivalent getCalledOperand().
I also made a few cleanups in here. For example, to removes use
of getElementType on a pointer when we could just use getFunctionType
from the call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78882
The insert(truncate/extend(extract(vec0,c0)),vec1,c1) case in rGacbc5ede99 wasn't combining the 'mineltsize' with the src vector elt size which may be smaller due to implicit extension during extraction.
Reduced from test case provided by @mstorsjo
This is a NFC patch for D77319. The idea is to hide the getNegatibleCost inside the getNegatedExpression()
to have it return null if the cost is expensive, and add some helper function for easy to use. And
rename the old getNegatedExpression to negateExpression to avoid the semantic conflict.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78291
Followup to the PR45604 fix at rGe71dd7c011a3 where we disabled most of these cases.
By creating the shuffle at the byte level we can handle any extension/truncation as long as we track how small the scalar got and assume that the upper bytes will need to be zero.
This is another enhancement to D77895/D78362
to avoid a round-trip from XMM->GPR->XMM.
This time we handle the case of starting/ending with different FP types
but always with signed i32 as the intermediate value.
I think this covers all of the faux vector optimization possibilities
for pre-AVX512.
There is at least 1 other transform mentioned in PR36617:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36617#c19
...where we fold an 'fpext' into a preceding 'sitofp'. I think we will
want to handle that earlier (DAGCombiner or instcombine) because that's
a target-independent optimization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78758
Summary:
These helpers are exercised by follow-up commits in this patch series,
which is all about removing CodeGen differences with vs. without debug
info in the AArch64 backend.
Reviewers: fhahn, aprantl, jpaquette, paquette
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78260
gcc may warn here because X86ISD::NodeType is specified as "unsigned",
but ISD::NodeType is a naked C enum (although passed as an "unsigned"
throughout SDAG).
getFauxShuffle attempts to combine INSERT_VECTOR_ELT(TRUNCATE/EXTEND(EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT(x))) patterns into a target shuffle chain.
PR45604 identified an issue where the scalar was truncated to a size smaller than the destination vector element and then zero extended back, which requires the upper bits to be zero'd which we don't currently do.
To avoid the bug I've added an early out in these truncation cases, a future commit should allow us to handle this by inserting the necessary SM_SentinelZero padding.
This is an enhancement to D77895 to avoid another
round-trip from XMM->GPR->XMM. This time we handle
the case of starting/ending with an f64 and casting
to signed i32 as the intermediate value.
It's a bit more involved than I initially assumed
because we need to use target-specific opcodes to
represent the non-standard cast ops.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78362
This moves v32i16/v64i8 to a model consistent with how we
treat integer types with avx1.
This does change the ABI for types vXi16/vXi8 vectors larger than
512 bits to pass in multiple zmms instead of multiple ymms. We'd
already hacked some code to make v64i8/v32i16 pass in zmm.
Cost model is still a bit of a mess. In some place I tried to
match existing behavior. But really we need to account for
splitting and concating costs. Cost model for shuffles is
especially pessimistic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76212
-Consistently name the functions as split*
-Add a helper for doing the two extractSubvector calls and determining the size of the split
-Use getSplitDestVTs to get the result type for the split node.
-Move the binary and unary helper to one place in the file near the extractSubvector functions. Left the VSETCC one near LowerVSETCC since that's its only caller.
-Remove the 256/512 wrappers that just had asserts. I don't think they provided a lot of value and now with the routines called split* the call sites are more obvious what they do.
-Make the unary routine support different source and dest types to support D76212.
-Add some weaker asserts into the helpers to make up for losing the very specific asserts from the 256/512 wrappers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78176
It can be used to avoid passing the begin and end of a range.
This makes the code shorter and it is consistent with another
wrappers we already have.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78016
The shuffle decoding is used by X86ISelLowering and
MCTargetDesc/X86InstComments. The latter used to be in a
separate InstPrinter library. The Utils library existed to allow
InstPrinter and CodeGen to share the shuffle decoding. Since
X86InstComments now lives in the MCTargetDesc, which CodeGen
already depends on, we can sink the shuffle decoding there as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77980
Summary:
Fold (shift (shift X, C2), C1) -> (shift X, (C1 + C2)) for logical as
well as arithmetic shifts. This is needed to prevent regressions from
an upcoming funnel shift expansion change.
While we're here, fold (VSRAI -1, C) -> -1 too.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77300
Improve the chances of folding the writemask into the combined shuffle by scaling a wider shuffle mask to match the root's original type.
This creates a few minor issues with variable shuffles, preventing combines of shuffles because of the more limited support binary shuffle types. In most cases we're probably better off combining the shuffles and losing the writemask fold, but this isn't always going to be true.
As discussed in PR36617:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36617#c13
...we can avoid the likely slow round-trip from XMM to GPR to XMM
by using the vector versions of the convert instructions.
Based on experimental results from recent Intel/AMD chips, we don't
need to worry about triggering denorm stalls while operating on
garbage data in the high lanes with convert instructions, so this is
expected to always be as good or better perf than the scalar
instruction equivalent. FP exceptions are also not a concern because
strict code should not be using the regular SDAG opcodes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77895
A lot of vectorized code doesn't use masks so we shouldn't penalize them by not doing shuffle combining on avx512 targets.
I've added support for VALIGNQ/VALIGND and 512-bit SHUF128 to prevent some regressions. I also prevented recombining 256-bit SHUF128 to PERM2X128. We may not need to add 256-bit SHUF128 support, but I don't think I found any cases requiring that in my testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77928
As proposed in D77881, we'll have the related widening operation,
so this name becomes too vague.
While here, change the function signature to take an 'int' rather
than 'size_t' for the scaling factor, add an assert for overflow of
32-bits, and improve the documentation comments.
Summary:
There are at least three clients for KnownBits calculations:
ValueTracking, SelectionDAG and GlobalISel. To reduce duplication the
common logic should be moved out of these clients and into KnownBits
itself.
This patch does this for AND, OR and XOR calculations by implementing
and using appropriate operator overloads KnownBits::operator& etc.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74060
This removes a call to getScalarType from a bunch of call sites.
It also makes the behavior consistent with SIGN_EXTEND_INREG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77631
Shuffle combining can insert zero byte sized elements into the shuffle mask, which combineX86ShufflesConstants will attempt to fold without taking into account whether the byte-sized type is legal (e.g. AVX512F only targets).
If we have a full-zeroable vector then we should just return a zero version of the root type, otherwise if the type isn't valid we should bail.
Fixes PR45443
truncateVectorWithPACK has its own vector length controls, so we can rely on those directly. This helps some existing truncation to subvector tests, which were being combined later during shuffle lowering at which point the sign/zero bit detection had become obscured preventing lowerShuffleWithPACK working as well as it could.
We had previously limited the shuffle(HORIZOP,HORIZOP) combine to binary shuffles, but we can often merge unary shuffles just as well, folding in UNDEF/ZERO values into the 64-bit half lanes.
For the (P)HADD/HSUB cases this is limited to fast-horizontal cases but PACKSS/PACKUS combines under all cases.
Our existing combine allows to merge the shuffle of 2 similar 64-bit wide 'horizontal ops' (HADD/PACK/etc.) if the shuffle was a UNPCK/MOVSD.
This patch generalizes this to decode any target shuffle mask that can be widened to a 128-bit repeating v2*64 mask, which helps us catch PBLENDW/PBLENDD cases.
If we're packing from 128-bits to 64-bits then we don't need the RHS argument. This helps with register allocation, especially as we avoid repeating a use of the input value.
Similar to the lowerV16I8Shuffle implementation, for binary compaction v8i16 shuffles we can avoid the PUNPCKLDQ(PSHUFB,PSHUFB) pattern on SSE41+ targets by using PACKUSDW and PBLENDW. Before SSE41 we would need to use PACKSSDW but that requires sign extension that seems to destroy any gains, even on targets without PSHUFB.
This is a bigger gain on AMD than Intel targets but should never be a regression, and avoiding the shuffle mask load(s) is always useful.
Noticed in codegen while dealing with PR31443.
Extend lowerShuffleWithPACK/matchShuffleWithPACK/createPackShuffleMask to handle compaction style shuffle masks that can be lowered to chains of PACKSS/PACKUS if their inputs are suitably sign/zero extended.
This helps avoid PSHUFB (and its mask load) for short shuffle chains, shuffle combining will still replace with a PSHUFB if we have enough shuffles as getFauxShuffleMask should recognise the PACKSS/PACKUS chains.
This pass replaces each indirect call/jump with a direct call to a thunk that looks like:
lfence
jmpq *%r11
This ensures that if the value in register %r11 was loaded from memory, then
the value in %r11 is (architecturally) correct prior to the jump.
Also adds a new target feature to X86: +lvi-cfi
("cfi" meaning control-flow integrity)
The feature can be added via clang CLI using -mlvi-cfi.
This is an alternate implementation to https://reviews.llvm.org/D75934 That merges the thunk insertion functionality with the existing X86 retpoline code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76812
First step toward making use of canLowerByDroppingEvenElements to match chains of PACKSS/PACKUS for compaction shuffles.
At the moment we still only match a single stage but the MatchPACK is now more general.
PTEST/TESTP sets EFLAGS as:
TESTZ: ZF = (Op0 & Op1) == 0
TESTC: CF = (~Op0 & Op1) == 0
TESTNZC: ZF == 0 && CF == 0
If we are inverting the 0'th operand of a PTEST/TESTP instruction we can adjust the comparisons to correct handle the inversion implicitly.
Additionally, for "TESTZ" (ZF) cases, the allones case, PTEST(X,-1) can be simplified to PTEST(X,X).
We can expand this for the TESTZ(X,~Y) pattern and also handle KTEST/KORTEST in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76984
Summary:
Make sure we do not assert on value types not being
simple in getFauxShuffleMask when analysing operations
such as "v8i16 = truncate v8i24".
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77136
Summary: These were templated due to SelectionDAG using int masks for shuffles and IR using unsigned masks for shuffles. But now that D72467 has landed we have an int mask version of IRBuilder::CreateShuffleVector. So just use int instead of a template
Reviewers: spatel, efriedma, RKSimon
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77183
Also add lowerShuffleWithPACK call to lowerV32I16Shuffle - shuffle combining was catching it but we avoid a lot of temporary shuffle creations if we catch it at lowering first.
If canLowerByDroppingEvenElements indicates that the shuffle is a N:1 compaction pattern and the inputs are suitably sign/zero extended then we can use a chain of PACKSS/PACKUS to compact.
This helps avoid PSHUFB (and its mask load) for short shuffle chains, shuffle combining will still replace with a PSHUFB if we have enough shuffles as getFauxShuffleMask can recognise PACKSS/PACKUS chains.
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: jyknight, sdardis, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, jfb, PkmX, jocewei, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77059
If we are lowering to X86ISD::SHUF128 we are going to lose track of individual 128-bit lanes that are UNDEF, so if we can widen these to guarantee that they are sequential with their neighbour we should. This helps with later shuffle combines.
As explained on PR40720, EXTRACTF128 is always as good/better than VPERM2F128, and we can use the implicit zeroing of the upper half.
I've added some extra tests to vector-shuffle-combining-avx2.ll to make sure we don't lose coverage.
This was an inner helper function for the real matchShuffleAsByteRotate function, but it is more generic and is used directly for VALIGN lowering which doesn't work at the byte level.
These transforms rely on a vector reduction flag on the SDNode
set by SelectionDAGBuilder. This flag exists because SelectionDAG
can't see across basic blocks so SelectionDAGBuilder is looking
across and saving the info. X86 is the only target that uses this
flag currently. By removing the X86 code we can remove the flag
and the SelectionDAGBuilder code.
This pass adds a dedicated IR pass for X86 that looks across the
blocks and transforms the IR into a form that the X86 SelectionDAG
can finish.
An advantage of this new approach is that we can enhance it to
shrink the phi nodes and final reduction tree based on the zeroes
that we need to concatenate to bring the partially reduced
reduction back up to the original width.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76649
We can improve computeKnownBits results by avoiding excess bitcasts.
For this pattern we were doing:
(v16i8 PACKUS(v8i16 BITCAST(v16i8 AND(V1, MASK)), v8i16 BITCAST(v16i8 AND(V2, MASK))))
By performing the MASK/AND with a v8i16 type and bitcasting V1/V2 directly we can help computeKnownBits see that the mask is clearing the upper bits and allows shuffle combining to peek through later on.
This will be necessary to extend rG9d1721ce3926 to AVX2+ targets in a future patch.
As discussed on PR31443, we should be trying to use PACKUS for binary truncation patterns to reduce the number of shuffles.
The plan is to support AVX2+ targets once we've worked around PR45315 - we fail to peek through a VBROADCAST_LOAD mask to recognise zero upper bits in a PACKUS pattern.
We should also be able to add support for v8i16 and possibly 256/512-bit vectors as well.
As long we extract from a source vector with smaller elements and we zero-extend the element in the final shuffle mask then we can safely peek through truncations and any/zero-extensions to find the source extraction.
Add support for combining shuffles to AVX512 truncate instructions - another step toward fixing D56387/D66004. It also fixes SKX code on PR31443.
We could probably extend this further to handle non-VLX truncation cases.
This reverts commit 4e0fe038f4. Re-lands
65b21282c7.
After landing 5ff5ddd0ad to add int3 into
trailing unreachable blocks, we can now remove these extra stack
adjustments without confusing the Win64 unwinder. See
https://llvm.org/45064#c4 or X86AvoidTrailingCall.cpp for a full
explanation.
Fixes PR45064.
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, sameer.abuasal, apazos, luismarques, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76551
createPSADBW uses SplitsOpsAndApply so should be able to handle
any size.
Restrict the extract result type to i32 or i64 since that's what
we have coverage for today and probably matches what the
isSimple() check gave us before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76560
SplitsOpsAndApply will take care of any needed splitting correctly.
All that we need to check is that the vector element count is a
power of 2.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76558
We often widen xmm/ymm vectors to ymm/zmm by insertion into an undef base vector. By letting getTargetShuffleAndZeroables track the undef elts we can help avoid a lot of unnecessary cross-lane shuffles.
Fixes PR44694
Now that rG18c19441d105 has improved VPERM2X128 handling, we can perform this to improve x64->x32 truncation without poor cross-lane issues.
Someday combineX86ShufflesRecursively will handle this, but we're still really bad at dealing with different vector widths.
The combine tries to put the broadcast in either the integer or
fp domain to match the bitcast domain. But we can only do this
if the broadcast size is 32 or larger.
Under certain circumstances we'll end up in the position where the negated shift amount will get truncated to the type specified getScalarShiftAmountTy(), so we need to test for a truncated version of the shift amount as well.
This allows us to remove half of the remaining patterns tested for by X86ISelLowering's combineOrShiftToFunnelShift.
Add optional support for opt-in partial reduction cases by providing an optional partial mask to indicate which elements have been extracted for the scalar reduction.
We currently only ever use this for lowering constant uniform values (shift/rotate by immediate) so we can safely enable it by default (it treats the undef bits as zero when extracting constants).
This is necessary for an upcoming patch that will use SimplifyDemandedBits more aggressively on funnel shift amounts and causes regressions in vXi64 constant without it.
Merge the INSERT_VECTOR_ELT/SCALAR_TO_VECTOR and PINSRW/PINSRB shuffle mask paths - they both do the same thing (find source vector + handle implicit zero extension). The PINSRW/PINSRB path also handled in the insertion of zero case which needed to be added to the general case as well.
This is a little more complicated than I'd like it to be. We have
to manually match a trunc+srl+load pattern that generic DAG
combine won't do for us due to isTypeDesirableForOp.
If we're extracting the 0'th index of a v16i8 vector we're better off using MOVD than PEXTRB, unless we're storing the value or we require the implicit zero extension of PEXTRB.
The biggest perf diff is on SLM targets where MOVD (uops=1, lat=3 tp=1) is notably faster than PEXTRB (uops=2, lat=5, tp=4).
This matches what we already do for PEXTRW.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76138
For i32 and i64 cases, X86ISD::SHLD/SHRD are close enough to ISD::FSHL/FSHR that we can use them directly, we just need to account for the operand commutation for SHRD.
The i16 SHLD/SHRD case is annoying as the shift amount is modulo-32 (vs funnel shift modulo-16), so I've added X86ISD::FSHL/FSHR equivalents, which matches the generic implementation in all other terms.
Something I'm slightly concerned with is that ISD::FSHL/FSHR legality is controlled by the Subtarget.isSHLDSlow() feature flag - we don't normally use non-ISA features for this but it allows the DAG combines to continue to operate after legalization in a lot more cases.
The X86 *bits.ll changes are all affected by the same issue - we now have a "FSHR(-1,-1,amt) -> ROTR(-1,amt) -> (-1)" simplification that reduces the dependencies enough for the branch fall through code to mess up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75748
For pre-AVX512 targets, combine binary shuffles to X86ISD::VPERM2X128 if possible. This mainly helps optimize the blend(extract_subvector(x,1),y) pattern.
At some point soon we're going to have make a decision about when to combine AVX512 shuffles more aggressively - we bail out if there is any change in element size (to protect predicate mask merging) which means we miss out on a lot of optimizations.
isTypeDesirableForOp prevents loads from being shrunk to i16 by DAG
combine. Because of this we can't just match the broadcast and a
scalar load. So look for broadcast+truncate+load and form a
vbroadcast_load during DAG combine. This replaces what was
previously done as an isel pattern and I think fixes it so we
won't change the size of a volatile load. But my main motivation
is just to clean up our isel patterns.
If we don't need the upper subvector elements of the BLENDI node then use a smaller vector size.
This causes a couple of minor regressions in insertelement-ones.ll which are more examples of PR26018; given how cheap allones generation is I don't consider that a showstopper, just an annoyance (and there's plenty of other poor codegen cases in that file).
If we're inserting a scalar that is smaller than the element
size of the final VT, the value of the extra bits doesn't matter.
Previously we any_extended in the scalar domain before inserting.
This patch changes this to use a broadcast of the original
scalar type and then a bitcast to the final type. This might
enable the use of a broadcast load.
This recovers regressions from 07d68c24aa
and 9fcd212e2f without relying on
alignment of the load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75835
In 172eee9c, we tried to avoid these by modelling the callee as
internally resetting the stack pointer.
However, for the majority of functions with reserved stack frames, this
would lead LLVM to emit extra SP adjustments to undo the callee's
internal adjustment. This lead us to fix the problem further on down the
pipeline in eliminateCallFramePseudoInstr. In 5b79e603d3, I added
use a heuristic to try to detect when the adjustment would be
unreachable.
This heuristic is imperfect, and when exception handling is involved, it
fails to fire. The new test is an example of this. Simply throwing an
exception with an active cleanup emits dead SP adjustments after the
throw. Not only are they dead, but if they were executed, they would be
incorrect, so they are confusing.
This change essentially reverts 172eee9c and makes the 5b79e603d3
heuristic responsible for preventing unreachable stack adjustments. This
means we may emit unreachable stack adjustments for functions using EH
with unreserved call frames, but that is not very many these days. Back
in 2016 when this change was added, we were focused on 32-bit, which we
observed to have fewer reserved frames.
Fixes PR45064
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75712
The original code could create a bitcast from f64 to i64 and back
on 32-bit targets. This was only working because getBitcast was
able to fold the casts away to avoid leaving the illegal i64 type.
Now we handle the scalar case directly by broadcasting using the
scalar type as the element type. Then bitcasting to the final VT.
This works since we ensure the scalar type is the same size as
the final VT element type. No more casts to i64.
For the vector case, we cast to VT or subvector of VT. And then
do the broadcast.
I think this all matches what we generated before, just in a more
readable way.
Previously we tried to promote these to xmm/ymm/zmm by promoting
in the X86CallingConv.td file. But this breaks when we run out
of xmm/ymm/zmm registers and need to fall back to memory. We end
up trying to create a non-sensical scalar to vector. This lead
to an assertion. The new tests in avx512-calling-conv.ll all
trigger this assertion.
Since we really want to treat these types like we do on avx2,
it seems better to promote them before the calling convention
code gets involved. Except when the calling convention is one
that passes the vXi1 type in a k register.
The changes in avx512-regcall-Mask.ll are because we indicated
that xmm/ymm/zmm types should be passed indirectly for the
Win64 ABI before we go to the common lines that promoted the
vXi1 types. This caused the promoted types to be picked up by
the default calling convention code. Now we promote them earlier
so they get passed indirectly as though they were xmm/ymm/zmm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75154
If we would emit a VBROADCAST node, we can instead directly emit
a VBROADCAST_LOAD. This allows us to get rid of the special case
to use an f64 load on 32-bit targets for vXi64.
I believe there is more cleanup we can do later in this function,
but I'll do that in follow ups.
If we go with D75412, we no longer depend on the scalar type directly. So we don't need to avoid using i64. We already have AVX1 fallback patterns with i32 and i64 scalar types so we don't need to avoid using integer types on AVX1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75413
Also add a DAG combine to combine different sized broadcasts from
constant pool to avoid a regression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75412
The build_vector needs to be the only user of the data, but the
chain will likely have another use. So we can't make sure the
build_vector is the only user of the node.
These AddToWorklist calls were added in 84cd968f75.
It's possible the SimplifyDemandedBits/SimplifyDemandedVectorElts
triggered CSE that deleted N. Detect that and avoid adding N
to the worklist.
Fixes PR45067.
Previously this code was called into two ways, either a FrameIndexSDNode
was passed in StackSlot. Or a load node was passed in the argument
called StackSlot. This was determined by a dyn_cast to FrameIndexSDNode.
In the case of a load, we had to go find the real pointer from
operand 0 and cast the node to MemSDNode to find the pointer info.
For the stack slot case, the code assumed that the stack slot
was perfectly aligned despite not being the creator of the slot.
This commit modifies the interface to make the caller responsible
for passing all of the required information to avoid all the
guess work and reverse engineering.
I'm not aware of any issues with the original code after an
earlier commit to fix the alignment of one of the stack objects.
This is just clean up to make the code less surprising.
This node reads the rounding control which means it needs to be ordered properly with operations that change the rounding control. So it needs to be chained to maintain order.
This patch adds a chain input and output to the node and connects it to the chain in SelectionDAGBuilder. I've update all in-tree targets to connect their chain through their lowering code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75132
Instead add it when we make the machine nodes during instruction
selections.
This makes this ISD node closer to ISD::MGATHER. Trying to see
if we remove the X86 specific ones.
I'm hoping to begin improving shuffle combining across different vector sizes, but before that we must ensure that all existing getTargetShuffleInputs calls must bail if the inputs aren't the same size.
The gather intrinsics use a floating point mask when the result
type is FP. But we call DemandedBits on the mask assuming its an
integer type. We also use integer types when we create it from
generic IR. So add a bitcast to the intrinsic path to guarantee
the integer type.
Leave the gather/scatter subclasses, but make them inherit from
MemIntrinsicSDNode and delete their constructor and destructor.
This way we can still have the getIndex, getMask, etc. convenience
functions.
If a simplication occurs the operand will be added to the worklist.
But since the demanded mask was based on N, we need to make sure
we revisit N in case there are more simplifications to be done.
Returning SDValue(N, 0) as we do, only tells DAG combine that
something changed, but that won't make it add anything to the
worklist.
Found while playing around with using VEXTRACT_STORE in more cases.
But I guess this doesn't affect any of our existing tests.
We can use MOVLPS which will load 64 bits, but we need a v4f32
result type. We already have isel patterns for this.
The code here is a little hacky. We can probably improve it with
more isel patterns.
This is similar to using movd which we do for sse2 targets.
I've added a DAG combine for VEXTRACT_STORE to use SimplifyDemandedVectorElts
to clean up some artifacts from type legalization.
Similar to what do for other operations that use a subset of bits.
Allows us to remove a pattern that shrinks a load. Which was
incorrect if the load was volatile.
At this point in the code we know that Op1 or Op2 is
all ones. Y points to the other operand. In the case that
Op2 is zero, Op1 must be all ones and Y is Op2. The OR
ORs Y into Res. But if Y is 0 the OR will be folded away by
getNode so we don't need to check for it.
The combineSelect code was casting to i64 without any check that
i64 was legal. This can break after type legalization.
It also required splitting the mmx register on 32-bit targets.
It's not clear that this makes sense. Instead switch to using
a cmov pseudo like we do for XMM/YMM/ZMM.
The motivating case is seen in "splat4_v8f32_load_store" and based on code in PR42024:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42024
(I haven't stepped through the v8i32 sibling test yet to see why that diverged.)
There are other potential improvements visible like allowing scalarization or vector
narrowing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74909
There's a lot of old leftover code in LowerBRCOND. Especially
the detecting or AND or OR of X86ISD::SETCC nodes. Those were
needed before LegalizeDAG was changed to visit nodes before
their operands.
It also relied on reversing the output of LowerSETCC to find the
flags producing node to use for the X86ISD::BRCOND node.
Rather than using LowerSETCC this patch uses emitFlagsForSetcc to
handle the integer ISD::SETCC case. This gives the flag producer
and the comparison code to use directly. I've removed the addTest
flag and just produce a X86ISD::BRCOND and return immediately.
Floating point ISD::SETCC case is just an X86ISD::FCMP with special
care for OEQ and UNE derived from the previous code. I've left
f128 out so it will emit a test. And LowerSETCC will be called
later to produce a libcall and X86ISD::SETCC. We have combines
that can merge the test and X86ISD::SETCC.
We need to handle two cases for overflow ops. Either they are used
directly or they have a seteq 0 or setne 1 to invert the overflow.
The old code did not handle the setne 1 case, but I think some
other combines were making up for it.
If we fail to find a condition, we'll wrap an AND with 1 on the
original condition and tell emitFlagsForSetcc to emit a compare
with 0. This will pickup the LowerAndToBT and or the EmitTest case.
I kept the isTruncWithZeroHighBitsInput call, but we might be able
to fold that in to emitFlagsForSetcc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74750
Only handle power of 2 element count for simplicity. Not sure what to do with vXf64->vXf16 fp_round to avoid double rounding
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74886
We only need to split after type legalization. If we're before
we can just use a wide store and type legalization will split it.
Add a v128i1 test to exercise it post type legalization.
On some targets, like SPARC, forming overflow ops is only profitable if
the math result is used: https://godbolt.org/z/DxSmdB
This patch adds a new MathUsed parameter to allow the targets
to make the decision and defaults to only allowing it
if the math result is used. That is the conservative choice.
This patch also updates AArch64ISelLowering, X86ISelLowering,
ARMISelLowering.h, SystemZISelLowering.h to allow forming overflow
ops if the math result is not used. On those targets using the
overflow intrinsic for the overflow check only generates better code.
Reviewers: nikic, RKSimon, lebedev.ri, spatel
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74722
LoweSELECT will detect the constant inputs and convert to scalar
selects, but we can do it directly here.
I might remove some of the code from LowerSELECT and move it to
DAG combine so doing this explicitly will make us less dependent
on it happening in lowering.
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
This helps this transform occur earlier so we can fold the not
with setcc. If we delay it until after type legalization we might
have introduced instructions to widen the mask if the vselect was
widened. This can prevent the not from making it to the setcc.
We could of course add more DAG combines to handle that, but
moving this earlier is easier.
D73835 will make IRBuilder no longer trivially copyable. This patch
deletes the copy constructor in advance, to separate out the breakage.
Currently, the IRBuilder copy constructor is usually used by accident,
not by intention. In rG7c362b25d7a9 I've fixed a number of cases where
functions accepted IRBuilder rather than IRBuilder &, thus performing
an unnecessary copy. In rG5f7b92b1b4d6 I've fixed cases where an
IRBuilder was copied, while an InsertPointGuard should have been used
instead.
The only non-trivial use of the copy constructor is the
getIRBForDbgInsertion() helper, for which I separated construction and
setting of the insertion point in this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74693
Both of those functions only have a single caller starting
at LowerSETCC. Just handle floating point directly in LowerSETCC.
This removes the need to pass Chain and IsSignaling all the way
down.
The unseen logic diff occurs because MayFoldLoad() is defined like this:
static bool MayFoldLoad(SDValue Op) {
return Op.hasOneUse() && ISD::isNormalLoad(Op.getNode());
}
The test diffs here all seem ok to me on screen/paper, but it's hard to know
if that will lead to universally better perf for all targets. For example,
if a target implements broadcast from mem as multiple uops, we would have to
weigh the potential reduction of instructions and register pressure vs.
possible increase in number of uops. I don't know if we can make a truly
informed decision on this at compile-time.
The motivating case that I'm looking at in PR42024:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42024
...resembles the diff in extract-concat.ll, but we're not going to change the
larger example there without at least 1 other fix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74088
Without PSHUFB we are better using ROTL (expanding to OR(SHL,SRL)) than using the generic v16i8 shuffle lowering - but if we can widen to v8i16 or more then the existing shuffles are still the better option.
REAPPLIED: Original commit rG11c16e71598d was reverted at rGde1d90299b16 as it wasn't accounting for later lowering. This version emits ROTLI or the OR(VSHLI/VSRLI) directly to avoid the issue.
If we widen the compare we might trigger a spurious exception from
the garbage data.
We have two choices here. Explicitly force the upper bits to zero.
Or use a legacy VEX vcmpps/pd instruction and convert the XMM/YMM
result to mask register.
I've chosen to go with the second option. I'm not sure which is
really best. In some cases we could get rid of the zeroing since
the producing instruction probably already zeroed it. But we lose
the ability to fold a load. So which is best is dependent on
surrounding code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74522
Summary:
This was a very odd API, where you had to pass a flag into a zext
function to say whether the extended bits really were zero or not. All
callers passed in a literal true or false.
I think it's much clearer to make the function name reflect the
operation being performed on the value we're tracking (rather than on
the KnownBits Zero and One fields), so zext means the value is being
zero extended and new function anyext means the value is being extended
with unknown bits.
NFC.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74482
This has a really interesting side effect in that it improves some UMAX/UMIN reduction code which had redundant XOR(SHUFFLE(XOR(X,SIGNMASK)),SIGNMASK) patterns - the getNegatibleCost recognises it as FNEG(SHUFFLE(FNEG(X))).... We have a lot of FNEG patterns bitcasted to the integer domain for XOR signbit twiddling which is similar to what we do to allow UMAX/UMIN to be lowered using SMAX/SMIN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74231
The isNegatibleForFree/getNegatedExpression methods currently rely on a raw char value to indicate whether a negation is beneficial or not.
This patch replaces the char return value with an NegatibleCost enum to more clearly demonstrate what is implied.
It also renames isNegatibleForFree to getNegatibleCost to more accurately reflect whats going on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74221
This patch enables the debug entry values feature.
- Remove the (CC1) experimental -femit-debug-entry-values option
- Enable it for x86, arm and aarch64 targets
- Resolve the test failures
- Leave the llc experimental option for targets that do not
support the CallSiteInfo yet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73534
This adds a strict version of FP16_TO_FP and FP_TO_FP16 and uses
them to implement soft promotion for the half type. This is
enough to provide basic support for __fp16 with strictfp.
Add the necessary X86 support to use VCVTPS2PH/VCVTPH2PS when F16C
is enabled.
We aren't doing a good job of optimizing AVX512 outside of this code. So remove the bail out for AVX512 and replace with a FIXME. This at least gets us the AVX2 codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74431
Without PSHUFB we are better using ROTL (expanding to OR(SHL,SRL)) than using the generic v16i8 shuffle lowering - but if we can widen to v8i16 or more then the existing shuffles are still the better option.
We need to use vector instructions for these operations. Previously
we handled this with isel patterns that used extra instructions
and copies to handle the the conversions.
Now we use custom lowering to emit the conversions. This allows
them to be pattern matched and optimized on their own. For
example we can now emit vpextrw to store the result if its going
directly to memory.
I've forced the upper elements to VCVTPHS2PS to zero to keep some
code similar. Zeroes will be needed for strictfp. I've added a
DAG combine for (fp16_to_fp (fp_to_fp16 X)) to avoid extra
instructions in between to be closer to the previous codegen.
This is a step towards strictfp support for f16 conversions.
Non-AVX512BW targets failed to concatenate 256-bit shifts back to 512-bits (split during 512-bit shuffle lowering as they don't have v32i16/v64i8 types).
As noted on PR44379, we didn't attempt to lower vector shuffles using bit rotations on XOP/AVX512F targets.
This patch lowers to uniform ISD:ROTL nodes - ROTR isn't supported by XOP and they are interchangeable for constant values anyway.
There might be cases where targets without ISD:ROTL support would benefit from this (expanding to SRL+SHL+OR), which I'll investigate in a future patch.
REAPPLIED rGe82e17d4d4ca after reversion at rG39eade73a567 - fixed offset matching in matchShuffleAsBitRotate.
As noted on PR44379, we didn't attempt to lower vector shuffles using bit rotations on XOP/AVX512F targets.
This patch lowers to uniform ISD:ROTL nodes - ROTR isn't supported by XOP and they are interchangeable for constant values anyway.
There might be cases where targets without ISD:ROTL support would benefit from this (expanding to SRL+SHL+OR), which I'll investigate in a future patch.
Also, non-AVX512BW targets fail to concatenate 256-bit rotations back to 512-bits (split during shuffle lowering as they don't have v32i16/v64i8 types).
---
Internal shuffle tests indicate theres a bug somewhere that I haven't been able to track down yet.
Fix issue mentioned on rGe82e17d4d4ca - non-AVX512BW targets failed to concatenate 256-bit rotations back to 512-bits (split during shuffle lowering as they don't have v32i16/v64i8 types).
As noted on PR44379, we didn't attempt to lower vector shuffles using bit rotations on XOP/AVX512F targets.
This patch lowers to uniform ISD:ROTL nodes - ROTR isn't supported by XOP and they are interchangeable for constant values anyway.
There might be cases where targets without ISD:ROTL support would benefit from this (expanding to SRL+SHL+OR), which I'll investigate in a future patch.
Also, non-AVX512BW targets fail to concatenate 256-bit rotations back to 512-bits (split during shuffle lowering as they don't have v32i16/v64i8 types).