The assert that caused this to be reverted should be fixed now.
Original commit message:
This patch changes our defualt legalization behavior for 16, 32, and
64 bit vectors with i8/i16/i32/i64 scalar types from promotion to
widening. For example, v8i8 will now be widened to v16i8 instead of
promoted to v8i16. This keeps the elements widths the same and pads
with undef elements. We believe this is a better legalization strategy.
But it carries some issues due to the fragmented vector ISA. For
example, i8 shifts and multiplies get widened and then later have
to be promoted/split into vXi16 vectors.
This has the potential to cause regressions so we wanted to get
it in early in the 10.0 cycle so we have plenty of time to
address them.
Next steps will be to merge tests that explicitly test the command
line option. And then we can remove the option and its associated
code.
llvm-svn: 368183
This patch changes our defualt legalization behavior for 16, 32, and
64 bit vectors with i8/i16/i32/i64 scalar types from promotion to
widening. For example, v8i8 will now be widened to v16i8 instead of
promoted to v8i16. This keeps the elements widths the same and pads
with undef elements. We believe this is a better legalization strategy.
But it carries some issues due to the fragmented vector ISA. For
example, i8 shifts and multiplies get widened and then later have
to be promoted/split into vXi16 vectors.
This has the potential to cause regressions so we wanted to get
it in early in the 10.0 cycle so we have plenty of time to
address them.
Next steps will be to merge tests that explicitly test the command
line option. And then we can remove the option and its associated
code.
llvm-svn: 367901
When considering a loop containing nontemporal stores or loads for
vectorization, suppress the vectorization if the corresponding
vectorized store or load with the aligment of the original scaler
memory op is not supported with the nontemporal hint on the target.
This adds two new functions:
bool isLegalNTStore(Type *DataType, unsigned Alignment) const;
bool isLegalNTLoad(Type *DataType, unsigned Alignment) const;
to TTI, leaving the target independent default implementation as
returning true, but with overriding implementations for X86 that
check the legality based on available Subtarget features.
This fixes https://llvm.org/PR40759
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61764
llvm-svn: 363581
The original costs stopped at SSE42, I've added conservative estimates for everything down to SSE1/SSE2 and moved some of the SSE42 costs to SSE41 (really only the addition of PCMPGT makes any difference).
I've also added missing vXi8 costs (we use PHMINPOSUW for i8/i16 for scarily quick results) and 256-bit vector costs for AVX1.
llvm-svn: 360528
On pre-AVX512 targets we can use MOVMSK to extract reduced boolean results. This is properly optimized, annoyingly AVX512 isn't and produces code that is almost as bad as the (unchanged) costs suggest......
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60403
llvm-svn: 358574
Summary:
This adds a BranchFusion feature to replace the usage of the MacroFusion
for AMD CPUs.
See D59688 for context.
Reviewers: andreadb, lebedev.ri
Subscribers: hiraditya, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59872
llvm-svn: 357171
This adds support for scalarizing these intrinsics as well the X86TargetTransformInfo support to avoid scalarizing them in the cases X86 can handle.
I've omitted handling special cases for constant masks for this first pass. Though CodeGenPrepare can constant fold the branch conditions and remove some of the control flow anyway.
Fixes PR40994 and is covers most of PR3666. Might want to implement constant masks to close that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59180
llvm-svn: 356687
We were just checking pointer size and type primitive size. But this caused unintended things like vectors of half being accepted by masked load/store.
For FP we now explicitly check for only double and float.
For pointers we now let any pointer through. Trusting that only 32 and 64 would be used to generate assembly.
We only check bitwidth after checking that the type is an integer.
llvm-svn: 355667
As this has broken the lto bootstrap build for 3 days and is
showing a significant regression on the Dither_benchmark results (from
the LLVM benchmark suite) -- specifically, on the
BENCHMARK_FLOYD_DITHER_128, BENCHMARK_FLOYD_DITHER_256, and
BENCHMARK_FLOYD_DITHER_512; the others are unchanged. These have
regressed by about 28% on Skylake, 34% on Haswell, and over 40% on
Sandybridge.
This reverts commit r353923.
llvm-svn: 354434
The use of the -mprefer-vector-width=256 command line option mixed with functions
using vector intrinsics can create situations where one function thinks 512 vectors
are legal, but another fucntion does not.
If a 512 bit vector is passed between them via a pointer, its possible ArgumentPromotion
might try to pass by value instead. This will result in type legalization for the two
functions handling the 512 bit vector differently leading to runtime failures.
Had the 512 bit vector been passed by value from clang codegen, both functions would
have been tagged with a min-legal-vector-width=512 function attribute. That would
make them be legalized the same way.
I observed this issue in 32-bit mode where a union containing a 512 bit vector was
being passed by a function that used intrinsics to one that did not. The caller
ended up passing in zmm0 and the callee tried to read it from ymm0 and ymm1.
The fix implemented here is just to consider it a mismatch if two functions
would handle 512 bit differently without looking at the types that are being
considered. This is the easist and safest fix, but it can be improved in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58390
llvm-svn: 354376
Tuning flags don't have any effect on the available instructions so aren't a good reason to prevent inlining.
There are also some ISA flags that don't have any intrinsics our ABI requirements that we can exclude. I've put only the most basic ones like cmpxchg16b and lahfsahf. These are interesting because they aren't present in all 64-bit CPUs, but we have codegen workarounds when they aren't present.
Loosening these checks can help with scenarios where a caller has a more specific CPU than a callee. The default tuning flags on our generic 'x86-64' CPU can currently make it inline compatible with other CPUs. I've also added an example test for 'nocona' and 'prescott' where 'nocona' is just a 64-bit capable version of 'prescott' but in 32-bit mode they should be completely compatible.
I've based the implementation here of the similar code in AMDGPU.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58371
llvm-svn: 354355
Try to use 64-bit SLP vectorization. In addition to horizontal instrs
this change triggers optimizations for partial vector operations (for instance,
using low halfs of 128-bit registers xmm0 and xmm1 to multiply <2 x float> by
<2 x float>).
Fixes llvm.org/PR32433
llvm-svn: 353923
Followup to D56636, this time handling the UADDSAT case by expanding
uadd.sat(a, b) to umin(a, ~b) + b.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56869
llvm-svn: 352409
First step towards PR40376, this patch adds support for getCmpSelInstrCost to use the (optional) Instruction CmpInst predicate to indicate the type of integer comparison we're performing and alter the costs accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57013
llvm-svn: 351810
Prior to SSE41 (and sometimes on AVX1), vector select has to be performed as a ((X & C)|(Y & ~C)) bit select.
Exposes a couple of issues with the min/max reduction costs (which only go down to SSE42 for some reason).
The increase pre-SSE41 selection costs also prevent a couple of tests from firing any longer, so I've either tweaked the target or added AVX tests as well to the existing SSE2 tests.
llvm-svn: 351685
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
There are no test changes here in the existing cost model
regression tests because integer add/sub have a default
legal cost of 1 already. This would break, however, if
we custom lower those ops because the default cost model
assumes that custom-lowered ops are more expensive.
This is similar to the change in rL350403. See discussion
in D56011 for more details. When we enhance that patch to
handle integer ops, we need this cost model change to avoid
unintended diffs here from the custom lowering.
llvm-svn: 350496
Noticed in D56011 - handle the case that scalar fp ops are quicker on P3 than P4
Add the other costs so that we're not relying on the default "is legal/custom" cost logic.
llvm-svn: 350403
Summary:
This allows expanding {7,11,13,14,15,21,22,23,25,26,27,28,29,30,31}-byte memcmp
in just two loads on X86. These were previously calling memcmp.
Reviewers: spatel, gchatelet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55263
llvm-svn: 349731
This is an initial patch to add a minimum level of support for funnel shifts to the SelectionDAG and to begin wiring it up to the X86 SHLD/SHRD instructions.
Some partial legalization code has been added to handle the case for 'SlowSHLD' where we want to expand instead and I've added a few DAG combines so we don't get regressions from the existing DAG builder expansion code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54698
llvm-svn: 348353
Unlike most cost model functions this code makes a lot of table lookups without using the results from getTypeLegalizationCost. This means 512-bit vectors can be looked up even when the type isn't legal.
This patch adds a check around the two tables that contain 512-bit types to make sure that neither of the types would be split by type legalization. Meaning 512 bit types are illegal. I wanted to write this in a somewhat generic way that uses type legalization query hooks. But if prefered, I can switch to just using is512BitVector and the subtarget feature.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54984
llvm-svn: 347786
This fixes some of scalarization costs reported for sext/zext using avx512bw. This does not fix all scalarization costs being reported. Just the worst.
I've restricted this only to combinations of types that are legal with avx512bw like v32i1/v64i1/v32i16/v64i8 and conversions between vXi1 and vXi8/vXi16 with legal vXi8/vXi16 result types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54979
llvm-svn: 347785
We're seeing some issues internally where we sent some intrinsics into the cost model that the getTypeLegalizationCost call fails on, but X86 specific tables don't care about. Our base class implementation takes care of them. We'd just like X86 backend to ignore them.
This patch makes sure the switch returned something X86 cares about and skips the table lookups and type legalization call if not. Probably more efficient too since we don't go scanning the tables for every intrinsic we could possibly see.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54711
llvm-svn: 347248
Add support for the expansion of funnelshift/rotates to getIntrinsicInstrCost.
This also required us to move the X86 fshl/fshr costs to the same place as the rotates to avoid expansion and get correct scalarization vs vectorization costs.
llvm-svn: 346854
When we repeat the 2 shifting operands then this is a bit rotation - annoyingly this has to be done in the other getIntrinsicInstrCost than most intrinsics as we need to check the operands are the same.
llvm-svn: 346688
optsize using masked wide loads
Under Opt for Size, the vectorizer does not vectorize interleave-groups that
have gaps at the end of the group (such as a loop that reads only the even
elements: a[2*i]) because that implies that we'll require a scalar epilogue
(which is not allowed under Opt for Size). This patch extends the support for
masked-interleave-groups (introduced by D53011 for conditional accesses) to
also cover the case of gaps in a group of loads; Targets that enable the
masked-interleave-group feature don't have to invalidate interleave-groups of
loads with gaps; they could now use masked wide-loads and shuffles (if that's
what the cost model selects).
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53668
llvm-svn: 345705
Non-uniform division/remainder handling was added back at D49248/D50765 - so share the 'mul+sub' costs that already exist for uniform cases.
llvm-svn: 345164
interleave-group
The vectorizer currently does not attempt to create interleave-groups that
contain predicated loads/stores; predicated strided accesses can currently be
vectorized only using masked gather/scatter or scalarization. This patch makes
predicated loads/stores candidates for forming interleave-groups during the
Loop-Vectorizer's analysis, and adds the proper support for masked-interleave-
groups to the Loop-Vectorizer's planning and transformation stages. The patch
also extends the TTI API to allow querying the cost of masked interleave groups
(which each target can control); Targets that support masked vector loads/
stores may choose to enable this feature and allow vectorizing predicated
strided loads/stores using masked wide loads/stores and shuffles.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53011
llvm-svn: 344472
DIV/REM by constants should always be expanded into mul/shift/etc.
patterns. Unfortunately the ConstantHoisting pass runs too early at a
point where the pattern isn't expanded yet. However after
ConstantHoisting hoisted some immediate the result may not expand
anymore. Also the hoisting typically doesn't make sense because it
operates on immediates that will change completely during the expansion.
Report DIV/REM as TCC_Free so ConstantHoisting will not touch them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53174
llvm-svn: 344315
Summary: This was inheriting the cost from the AVX table, but should be legal under AVX512.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51267
llvm-svn: 340708
X86 normally requires immediates to be a signed 32-bit value which would exclude i64 0x80000000. But for add/sub we can negate the constant and use the opposite instruction.
llvm-svn: 338204
We penalize general SDIV/UDIV costs but don't do the same for SREM/UREM.
This patch makes general vector SREM/UREM x20 as costly as scalar, the same approach as we do for SDIV/UDIV. The patch also extends the existing SDIV/UDIV constant costs for SREM/UREM - at the moment this means the additional cost of a MUL+SUB (see D48975).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48980
llvm-svn: 336486
These were being over cautious for costs for one/two op general shuffles - VSHUFPD doesn't have to replicate the same shuffle in both lanes like VSHUFPS does.
llvm-svn: 335216
As discussed on PR33744, this patch relaxes ShuffleKind::SK_Alternate which requires shuffle masks to only match an alternating pattern from its 2 sources:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7> or <4,1,6,3>
This seems far too restrictive as most SIMD hardware which will implement it using a general blend/bit-select instruction, so replaces it with SK_Select, permitting elements from either source as long as they are inline:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7>, <4,1,6,3>, <0,1,6,7>, <4,1,2,3> etc.
This initial patch just updates the name and cost model shuffle mask analysis, later patch reviews will update SLP to better utilise this - it still limits itself to SK_Alternate style patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47985
llvm-svn: 334513
This enables us to detect more fast path sdiv cases under cost analysis.
This patch also enables us to handle non-uniform-constant pow2 cases for X86 SDIV costs.
Found while working on D46276
Future patches can then extend the vectorizers to more fully support non-uniform pow2 cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46637
llvm-svn: 332969
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
Algorithmically compute the 'x20' SDIV/UDIV vector costs - this is necessary for PR36550 when DIV costs will be driven from the scheduler models.
llvm-svn: 330870
Add fdiv costs for Goldmont using table 16-17 of the Intel Optimization Manual. Also add overrides for FSQRT for Goldmont and Silvermont.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44644
llvm-svn: 328451
Agner's tables indicate that for SSE42+ targets (Core2 and later) we can reduce the FADD/FSUB/FMUL costs down to 1, which should fix the Himeno benchmark.
Note: the AVX512 FDIV costs look rather dodgy, but this isn't part of this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43733
llvm-svn: 326133
In the motivating case from PR35681 and represented by the macro-fuse-cmp test:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35681
...there's a 37 -> 31 byte size win for the loop because we eliminate the big base
address offsets.
SPEC2017 on Ryzen shows no significant perf difference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42607
llvm-svn: 324289
This will cause the vectorizers to do some limiting of the vector widths they create. This is not a strict limit. There are reasons I know of that the loop vectorizer will generate larger vectors for.
I've written this in such a way that the interface will only return a properly supported width(0/128/256/512) even if the attribute says something funny like 384 or 10.
This has been split from D41895 with the remainder in a follow up commit.
llvm-svn: 323015
Summary:
If the vector type is transformed to non-vector single type, the compile
may crash trying to get vector information about non-vector type.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, mkuper, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41862
llvm-svn: 322106
Previously the lambda for AVX512 passed out a flag that indicated whether AVX512BW was required and that was checked against the AVX512BW subtarget flag outside.
This patch changes the interface to pass the AVX512BW subtarget bit in and return its value if we detect 16 or 8 bit types.
llvm-svn: 319919
Summary:
This adds a new fast gather feature bit to cover all CPUs that support fast gather that we can use independent of whether the AVX512 feature is enabled. I'm only using this new bit to qualify AVX2 codegen. AVX512 is still implicitly assuming fast gather to keep tests working and to match the scatter behavior.
Test command lines have been added for these two cases.
Reviewers: magabari, delena, RKSimon, zvi
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40282
llvm-svn: 318983
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).
llvm-svn: 318490
This patch contains more accurate cost of interelaved load\store of stride 2 for the types int64\double on AVX2.
Reviewers: delena, RKSimon, craig.topper, dorit
Reviewed By: dorit
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40008
llvm-svn: 318385
The type legalizer will try to scalarize these operations if it sees them, but there is no handling for scalarizing them. This leads to a fatal error. With this change they will now be scalarized by the mem intrinsic scalarizing pass before SelectionDAG.
llvm-svn: 318380
Summary:
The cost calculation for default case on X86 target does not always
follow correct wayt because of missing 4-th argument in
`BaseT::getCastInstrCost()` call. Added this missing parameter.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39687
llvm-svn: 317576
Recommit:
This patch contains update of the costs of interleaved loads of v8f32 of stride 3 and 8.
fixed the location of the lit test it works with make check-all.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39403
llvm-svn: 317471
reverted my changes will be committed later after fixing the failure
This patch contains update of the costs of interleaved loads of v8f32 of stride 3 and 8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39403
llvm-svn: 317433
This patch contains update of the costs of interleaved loads of v8f32 of stride 3 and 8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39403
llvm-svn: 317432
- Targets that want to support memcmp expansions now return the list of
supported load sizes.
- Expansion codegen does not assume that all power-of-two load sizes
smaller than the max load size are valid. For examples, this is not the
case for x86(32bit)+sse2.
Fixes PR34887.
llvm-svn: 316905
This patch adds accurate instructions cost.
The formula presents two cases(stride 3 and stride 4) and calculates the cost according to the VF and stride.
Reviewers:
1. delena
2. Farhana
3. zvi
4. dorit
5. Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38762
Change-Id: If4cfbd4ac0e63694e8144cb78c7fa34850647ff7
llvm-svn: 316072
Summary:
Right now there are two functions with the same name, one does the work
and the other one returns true if expansion is needed. Rename
TargetTransformInfo::expandMemCmp to make it more consistent with other
members of TargetTransformInfo.
Remove the unused Instruction* parameter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38165
llvm-svn: 314096
This is intended to be a superset of the functionality from D31037 (EarlyCSE) but implemented
as an independent pass, so there's no stretching of scope and feature creep for an existing pass.
I also proposed a weaker version of this for SimplifyCFG in D30910. And I initially had almost
this same functionality as an addition to CGP in the motivating example of PR31028:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31028
The advantage of positioning this ahead of SimplifyCFG in the pass pipeline is that it can allow
more flattening. But it needs to be after passes (InstCombine) that could sink a div/rem and
undo the hoisting that is done here.
Decomposing remainder may allow removing some code from the backend (PPC and possibly others).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37121
llvm-svn: 312862
SLP vectorizer supports horizontal reductions for Add/FAdd binary
operations. Patch adds support for horizontal min/max reductions.
Function getReductionCost() is split to getArithmeticReductionCost() for
binary operation reductions and getMinMaxReductionCost() for min/max
reductions.
Patch fixes PR26956.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27846
llvm-svn: 312791
Summary:
Add patterns for
fptoui <16 x float> to <16 x i8>
fptoui <16 x float> to <16 x i16>
Reviewers: igorb, delena, craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37505
llvm-svn: 312704
Summary:
We add the precise cache sizes and associativity for the following Intel
architectures:
- Penry
- Nehalem
- Westmere
- Sandy Bridge
- Ivy Bridge
- Haswell
- Broadwell
- Skylake
- Kabylake
Polly uses since several months a performance model for BLAS computations that
derives optimal cache and register tile sizes from cache and latency
information (based on ideas from "Analytical Modeling Is Enough for High-Performance BLIS", by Tze Meng Low published at TOMS 2016).
While bootstrapping this model, these target values have been kept in Polly.
However, as our implementation is now rather mature, it seems time to teach
LLVM itself about cache sizes.
Interestingly, L1 and L2 cache sizes are pretty constant across
micro-architectures, hence a set of architecture specific default values
seems like a good start. They can be expanded to more target specific values,
in case certain newer architectures require different values. For now a set
of Intel architectures are provided.
Just as a little teaser, for a simple gemm kernel this model allows us to
improve performance from 1.2s to 0.27s. For gemm kernels with less optimal
memory layouts even larger speedups can be reported.
Reviewers: Meinersbur, bollu, singam-sanjay, hfinkel, gareevroman, fhahn, sebpop, efriedma, asb
Reviewed By: fhahn, asb
Subscribers: lsaba, asb, pollydev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37051
llvm-svn: 311647
Store operation takes 2 UOps on X86 processors. The exact cost calculation affects several optimization passes including loop unroling.
This change compensates performance degradation caused by https://reviews.llvm.org/D34458 and shows improvements on some benchmarks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35888
llvm-svn: 311285
Add missing SK_PermuteSingleSrc costs for AVX2 targets and earlier, also added some of the simpler SK_PermuteTwoSrc costs to support splitting of SK_PermuteSingleSrc shuffles
llvm-svn: 310632
The root cause of reverting was fixed - PR33514.
Summary:
The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).
Reviewers: qcolombet
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
<evgeny.v.stupachenko@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 310289
this patch updates the cost of addq\subq (add\subtract of vectors of 64bits)
based on the performance numbers of SLM arch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33983
llvm-svn: 306974
The cost of an interleaved access was only implemented for AVX512. For other
X86 targets an overly conservative Base cost was returned, resulting in
avoiding vectorization where it is actually profitable to vectorize.
This patch starts to add costs for AVX2 for most prominent cases of
interleaved accesses (stride 3,4 chars, for now).
Note1: Improvements of up to ~4x were observed in some of EEMBC's rgb
workloads; There is also a known issue of 15-30% degradations on some of these
workloads, associated with an interleaved access followed by type
promotion/widening; the resulting shuffle sequence is currently inefficient and
will be improved by a series of patches that extend the X86InterleavedAccess pass
(such as D34601 and more to follow).
Note 2: The costs in this patch do not reflect port pressure penalties which can
be very dominant in the case of interleaved accesses since most of the shuffle
operations are restricted to a single port. Further tuning, that may incorporate
these considerations, will be done on top of the upcoming improved shuffle
sequences (that is, along with the abovementioned work to extend
X86InterleavedAccess pass).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34023
llvm-svn: 306238
There are a couple of potential improvements as seen in the IR and asm:
1. We're unnecessarily extending to a larger type to compare values.
2. The codegen for (select cond, 1, -1) could avoid a cmov.
(or we could change the order of the compares, so we have a select with 0 operand)
llvm-svn: 305802
This seems to be interacting badly with ASan somehow, causing false reports of
heap-buffer overflows: PR33514.
> Summary:
> The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
> LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).
>
> Reviewers: qcolombet
>
> Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562
>
> From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 305720
Summary:
The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).
Reviewers: qcolombet
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 304824
Summary:
Expanding the loop idiom test for memcpy to also recognize
unordered atomic memcpy. The only difference for recognizing
an unordered atomic memcpy and instead of a normal memcpy is
that the loads and/or stores involved are unordered atomic operations.
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
Patch by Daniel Neilson!
Reviewers: reames, anna, skatkov
Reviewed By: reames, anna
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33243
llvm-svn: 304806
Account for subvector extraction/insertion, helps prevent the vectorizers from selecting 256-bit vectors that will have to be split anyhow on AVX1 targets.
llvm-svn: 302378
getArithmeticInstrCost(), getShuffleCost(), getCastInstrCost(),
getCmpSelInstrCost(), getVectorInstrCost(), getMemoryOpCost(),
getInterleavedMemoryOpCost() implemented.
Interleaved access vectorization enabled.
BasicTTIImpl::getCastInstrCost() improved to check for legal extending loads,
in which case the cost of the z/sext instruction becomes 0.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Renato Golin.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29631
llvm-svn: 300052
Summary:
LSV wants to know the maximum size that can be loaded to a vector register.
On X86, this always matches the maximum register width. Implement this
accordingly and add a test to make sure that LSV can vectorize up to the
maximum permissible width on X86.
Reviewers: delena, arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31504
llvm-svn: 299589
getIntrinsicInstrCost() used to only compute scalarization cost based on types.
This patch improves this so that the actual arguments are checked when they are
available, in order to handle only unique non-constant operands.
Tests updates:
Analysis/CostModel/X86/arith-fp.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/AArch64/interleaved_cost.ll
Transforms/LoopVectorize/ARM/interleaved_cost.ll
The improvement in getOperandsScalarizationOverhead() to differentiate on
constants made it necessary to update the interleaved_cost.ll tests even
though they do not relate to intrinsics.
Review: Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29540
llvm-svn: 297705
Refactoring to remove duplications of this method.
New method getOperandsScalarizationOverhead() that looks at the present unique
operands and add extract costs for them. Old behaviour was to just add extract
costs for one operand of the type always, which still happens in
getArithmeticInstrCost() if no operands are provided by the caller.
This is a good start of improving on this, but there are more places
that can be improved by using getOperandsScalarizationOverhead().
Review: Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29017
llvm-svn: 293155
updated instructions:
pmulld, pmullw, pmulhw, mulsd, mulps, mulpd, divss, divps, divsd, divpd, addpd and subpd.
special optimization case which replaces pmulld with pmullw\pmulhw\pshuf seq.
In case if the real operands bitwidth <= 16.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28104
llvm-svn: 291657
The 'fast' costs should only work for shifts by uniform constants (uniform non-constant are lowered using the slow default implementation).
Logical shifts were not taking into account that we must mask the psrlw result, so the costs needed to be doubled.
Added missing AVX2/AVX512BW costs as well.
llvm-svn: 291391