Summary:
The getFixupKindContainerSizeBytes function returns the size of the
instruction containing a given fixup. Currently fixup_arm_pcrel_9 is
not handled in this function, this causes an assertion failure in
the debug build and incorrect codegen in the release build.
This patch fixes the problem.
Reviewers: ostannard, simon_tatham
Reviewed By: ostannard
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, pbarrio, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63778
llvm-svn: 364404
This patch adds the PseudoCALLReg instruction which allows using an
explicit register operand as the destination for the return address.
GCC can successfully parse this form of the call instruction, which
would be used for calls to functions which do not use ra as the return
address register, such as the __riscv_save libcalls. This patch forms
the first part of an implementation of -msave-restore for RISC-V.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62685
llvm-svn: 364403
truncateVectorWithPACK is often used in conjunction with ComputeNumSignBits which struggles when peeking through bitcasts.
This fix tries to avoid bitcast(shuffle(bitcast())) patterns in the 256-bit 64-bit sublane shuffles so we can still see through at least until lowering when the shuffles will need to be bitcasted to widen the shuffle type.
llvm-svn: 364401
This patch generalizes the UnrollLoop utility to support loops that exit
from the header instead of the latch. Usually, LoopRotate would take care
of must of those cases, but in some cases (e.g. -Oz), LoopRotate does
not kick in.
Codesize impact looks relatively neutral on ARM64 with -Oz + LTO.
Program master patch diff
External/S.../CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII 629060.00 627676.00 -0.2%
External/SPEC/CINT2000/176.gcc/176.gcc 1245916.00 1244932.00 -0.1%
MultiSourc...Prolangs-C/simulator/simulator 86100.00 86156.00 0.1%
MultiSourc...arks/Rodinia/backprop/backprop 66212.00 66252.00 0.1%
MultiSourc...chmarks/Prolangs-C++/life/life 67276.00 67312.00 0.1%
MultiSourc...s/Prolangs-C/compiler/compiler 69824.00 69788.00 -0.1%
MultiSourc...Prolangs-C/assembler/assembler 86672.00 86696.00 0.0%
Reviewers: efriedma, vsk, paquette
Reviewed By: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61962
llvm-svn: 364398
For some reason, the update_llc_checks.py script produces checks for
empty lines which cause failures. Corrected that to check for actual
text produced by llc.
llvm-svn: 364377
An upcoming patch will modify the behaviour with respect to saving the TOC
in functions with indirect calls.
Adding a test case so the patch will show the difference in codegen.
llvm-svn: 364375
This was just an omission in the back end. We have had the instructions for both
single and double precision for a few HW generations, but never got around to
legalizing these.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63634
llvm-svn: 364373
The weak alias should have the characteristics set to
`IMAGE_EXTERN_WEAK_SEARCH_ALIAS` to indicate that the weak external here
is a symbol alias and that the symbol is aliased to a locally defined
symbol. We were previously setting the characteristics to
`IMAGE_EXTERN_WEAK_SEARCH_LIBRARY` which indicates that the symbol
should be looked for in the libraries.
llvm-svn: 364370
r363233 rewrote a bunch of the Intrin Emitter code, however the new
function to update the arg codes did not properly consider a pointer to
an any. This patch adds that logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63507
llvm-svn: 364364
When we calculate MII, we use two loops, one with iterator R++ to
check whether we can reserve the resource, then --R to move back
the iterator to do reservation.
This is risky, as R++, --R may not point to the same element at all.
The can cause wrong MII.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63536
llvm-svn: 364353
Original patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D63659 from
Steven Perron <stevenperron@google.com>
The pass AMDGPUUnifyDivergentExitNodes does not update the phi nodes in
the successors of blocks that is splits. This is fixed by calling
BasicBlock::splitBasicBlock to split the block instead of doing it
manually. This does extra work because a new conditional branch is
created in BB which is immediately replaced, but I think the simplicity
is worth it. It also helps make the code more future proof in case other
things need to be updated.
llvm-svn: 364342
This follows up the transform from rL363956 to use the ctpop intrinsic when checking for power-of-2-or-zero.
This is matching the isPowerOf2() patterns used in PR42314:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314
But there's at least 1 instcombine follow-up needed to match the alternate form:
(v & (v - 1)) == 0;
We should have all of the backend expansions handled with:
rL364319
(x86-specific changes still needed for optimal code based on subtarget)
And the larger patterns to exclude zero as a power-of-2 are joining with this change after:
rL364153 ( D63660 )
rL364246
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63777
llvm-svn: 364341
Peephole opt has a one use limitation which appears to be accidental. The function being used was incorrectly documented as returning whether the def had one *user*, but instead returned true only when there was one *use*. Add a corresponding hasOneNonDbgUser helper, and adjust peephole-opt to use the appropriate one.
All of the actual folding code handles multiple uses within a single instruction. That codepath is well exercised through instruction selection.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63656
llvm-svn: 364336
We currently have some isel patterns for treating vzmovl+load the same as vzload, but that shrinks the load which we shouldn't do if the load is volatile.
Rather than adding isel checks for volatile. This patch removes the patterns and teachs DAG combine to merge them into vzload when its legal to do so.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63665
llvm-svn: 364333
"To" selects an odd-numbered GPR, and "Te" an even one. There are some
8.1-M instructions that have one too few bits in their register fields
and require registers of particular parity, without necessarily using
a consecutive even/odd pair.
Also, the constraint letter "t" should select an MVE q-register, when
MVE is present. This didn't need any source changes, but some extra
tests have been added.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: javed.absar, eraman, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #clang, #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60709
llvm-svn: 364331
This provides the low-level support to start using MVE vector types in
LLVM IR, loading and storing them, passing them to __asm__ statements
containing hand-written MVE vector instructions, and *if* you have the
hard-float ABI turned on, using them as function parameters.
(In the soft-float ABI, vector types are passed in integer registers,
and combining all those 32-bit integers into a q-reg requires support
for selection DAG nodes like insert_vector_elt and build_vector which
aren't implemented yet for MVE. In fact I've also had to add
`arm_aapcs_vfpcc` to a couple of existing tests to avoid that
problem.)
Specifically, this commit adds support for:
* spills, reloads and register moves for MVE vector registers
* ditto for the VPT predication mask that lives in VPR.P0
* make all the MVE vector types legal in ISel, and provide selection
DAG patterns for BITCAST, LOAD and STORE
* make loads and stores of scalar FP types conditional on
`hasFPRegs()` rather than `hasVFP2Base()`. As a result a few
existing tests needed their llc command lines updating to use
`-mattr=-fpregs` as their method of turning off all hardware FP
support.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60708
llvm-svn: 364329
Summary:
In Secure PLT ABI, -fpic is similar to -fPIC. The differences are that:
* -fpic stores the address of _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ in r30, while -fPIC stores .got2+0x8000.
* -fpic uses an addend of 0 for R_PPC_PLTREL24, while -fPIC uses 0x8000.
Reviewers: hfinkel, jhibbits, joerg, nemanjai, spetrovic
Reviewed By: jhibbits
Subscribers: adalava, kbarton, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63563
llvm-svn: 364324
The expensive buildbots highlighted the mir tests were broken, which
I've now updated and added --verify-machineinstrs to them. This also
uncovered a couple of bugs in the backend pass, so these have also
been fixed.
llvm-svn: 364323
This is a pre-commit of the tests introduced by the SuperNode SLP patch D63661.
Committed on behalf of @vporpo (Vasileios Porpodas)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63664
llvm-svn: 364320
Change the generic ctpop expansion to more efficiently handle a
check for not-a-power-of-two value:
(ctpop x) != 1 --> (x == 0) || ((x & x-1) != 0)
This is the inverted predicate sibling pattern that was added with:
D63004
This should have been done before I changed IR canonicalization to
favor this form with:
rL364246
...so if this requires revert/changing, the earlier commit may also
need to modified.
llvm-svn: 364319
rL364293 committed a couple of lines that just said "// RUN llvm-mc ..."
without the all-important ':' after RUN, so those test lines weren't
actually running anything.
llvm-svn: 364305
Simplify ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG if the extended bits are not required.
Matches what we already do for ZERO_EXTEND.
Reapplies rL363850 but now with legality checks added at rL364290
llvm-svn: 364303
Simplify SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG if the extended bits are not required/known zero.
Matches what we already do for SIGN_EXTEND.
Reapplies rL363802 but now with legality checks added at rL364290
llvm-svn: 364299
A minor iteration on the MVE VPT Block pass to enable more efficient VPT Block
code generation: consecutive VPT predicated statements, predicated on the same
condition, will be placed within the same VPT Block. This essentially is also
an exercise to write some more tests for the next step, which should be more
generic also merging instructions when they are not consecutive.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63711
llvm-svn: 364298
Summary:
The symbols use the processor-specific SHN_AMDGPU_LDS section index
introduced with a previous change. The linker is then expected to resolve
relocations, which are also emitted.
Initially disabled for HSA and PAL environments until they have caught up
in terms of linker and runtime loader.
Some notes:
- The llvm.amdgcn.groupstaticsize intrinsics can no longer be lowered
to a constant at compile times, which means some tests can no longer
be applied.
The current "solution" is a terrible hack, but the intrinsic isn't
used by Mesa, so we can keep it for now.
- We no longer know the full LDS size per kernel at compile time, which
means that we can no longer generate a relevant error message at
compile time. It would be possible to add a check for the size of
individual variables, but ultimately the linker will have to perform
the final check.
Change-Id: If66dbf33fccfbf3609aefefa2558ac0850d42275
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, t-tye, b-sumner, jsjodin
Subscribers: qcolombet, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61494
llvm-svn: 364297
Summary:
The directive defines a symbol as an group/local memory (LDS) symbol.
LDS symbols behave similar to common symbols for the purposes of ELF,
using the processor-specific SHN_AMDGPU_LDS as section index.
It is the linker and/or runtime loader's job to "instantiate" LDS symbols
and resolve relocations that reference them.
It is not possible to initialize LDS memory (not even zero-initialize
as for .bss).
We want to be able to link together objects -- starting with relocatable
objects, but possible expanding to shared objects in the future -- that
access LDS memory in a flexible way.
LDS memory is in an address space that is entirely separate from the
address space that contains the program image (code and normal data),
so having program segments for it doesn't really make sense.
Furthermore, we want to be able to compile multiple kernels in a
compilation unit which have disjoint use of LDS memory. In that case,
we may want to place LDS symbols differently for different kernels
to save memory (LDS memory is very limited and physically private to
each kernel invocation), so we can't simply place LDS symbols in a
.lds section.
Hence this solution where LDS symbols always stay undefined.
Change-Id: I08cbc37a7c0c32f53f7b6123aa0afc91dbc1748f
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, t-tye, b-sumner, jsjodin
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61493
llvm-svn: 364296
If an FP_EXTEND or FP_ROUND isel dag node converts directly between
f16 and f32 when the target CPU has no instruction to do it in one go,
it has to be done in two steps instead, going via f32.
Previously, this was done implicitly, because all such CPUs had the
storage-only implementation of f16 (i.e. the only thing you can do
with one at all is to convert it to/from f32). So isel would legalize
the f16 into an f32 as soon as it saw it, by inserting an fp16_to_fp
node (or vice versa), and then the fp_extend would already be f32->f64
rather than f16->f64.
But that technique can't support a target CPU which has full f16
support but _not_ f64, such as some variants of Arm v8.1-M. So now we
provide custom lowering for FP_EXTEND and FP_ROUND, which checks
support for f16 and f64 and decides on the best thing to do given the
combination of flags it gets back.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60692
llvm-svn: 364294
This adds some extra RUN lines to existing test files, to check that
things that worked in previous architecture versions haven't
accidentally stopped working in 8.1-M. Also we add some new tests: a
test of scalar floating point instructions that could be easily
confused with the similar-looking vector ones at assembly time, a test
of basic load/store/move access to the FP registers (which has to work
even in integer-only MVE); and one final check of the really obvious
case where turning off MVE should make sure MVE instructions really
are rejected.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62682
llvm-svn: 364293
This final batch includes the tail-predicated versions of the
low-overhead loop instructions (LETP); the VPSEL instruction to select
between two vector registers based on the predicate mask without
having to open a VPT block; and VPNOT which complements the predicate
mask in place.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62681
llvm-svn: 364292
This adds the rest of the vector memory access instructions. It
includes contiguous loads/stores, with an ordinary addressing mode
such as [r0,#offset] (plus writeback variants); gather loads and
scatter stores with a scalar base address register and a vector of
offsets from it (written [r0,q1] or similar); and gather/scatters with
a vector of base addresses (written [q0,#offset], again with
writeback). Additionally, some of the loads can widen each loaded
value into a larger vector lane, and the corresponding stores narrow
them again.
To implement these, we also have to add the addressing modes they
need. Also, in AsmParser, the `isMem` query function now has
subqueries `isGPRMem` and `isMVEMem`, according to which kind of base
register is used by a given memory access operand.
I've also had to add an extra check in `checkTargetMatchPredicate` in
the AsmParser, without which our last-minute check of `rGPR` register
operands against SP and PC was failing an assertion because Tablegen
had inserted an immediate 0 in place of one of a pair of tied register
operands. (This matches the way the corresponding check for `MCK_rGPR`
in `validateTargetOperandClass` is guarded.) Apparently the MVE load
instructions were the first to have ever triggered this assertion, but
I think only because they were the first to have a combination of the
usual Arm pre/post writeback system and the `rGPR` class in particular.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62680
llvm-svn: 364291
As part of the fix for rL364264 + rL364272 - limit the *_EXTEND conversion to !TLO.LegalOperations || isOperationLegal cases.
We'll improve X86 legality in future commits.
llvm-svn: 364290
Introduce three pseudo instructions to be used during DAG ISel to
represent v8.1-m low-overhead loops. One maps to set_loop_iterations
while loop_decrement_reg is lowered to two, so that we can separate
the decrement and branching operations. The pseudo instructions are
expanded pre-emission, where we can still decide whether we actually
want to generate a low-overhead loop, in a new pass:
ARMLowOverheadLoops. The pass currently bails, reverting to an sub,
icmp and br, in the cases where a call or stack spill/restore happens
between the decrement and branching instructions, or if the loop is
too large.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63476
llvm-svn: 364288
Summary:
This addresses the regression that is being exposed by D50222 in `test/CodeGen/X86/jump_sign.ll`
The missing fold, at least partially, looks trivial:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/Zsln
i.e. if we are comparing with zero, and comparing the `urem`-by-non-power-of-two,
and the `urem` is of something that may at most have a single bit set (or no bits set at all),
the `urem` is not needed.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper, xbolva00, spatel
Reviewed By: xbolva00, spatel
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63390
llvm-svn: 364286
The patch teaches yaml2obj/obj2yaml to support parsing/dumping
the sections and symbols with the same name.
A special suffix is added to a name to make it unique.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63596
llvm-svn: 364282
I've been trying to fix this, but hit some roadblocks. So I'm
committing the test case for now so we'll at least avoid
recreating that failure.
llvm-svn: 364272
This reverts the following patches.
"[TargetLowering] SimplifyDemandedBits SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG -> ANY/ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG"
"[TargetLowering] SimplifyDemandedBits ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG -> ANY_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG"
"[TargetLowering] SimplifyDemandedBits - add ANY_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG support"
We can end up with an any_extend_vector_inreg with a 256 bit result type
and a 128 bit result type. This is allowed by the ISD opcode, but the
generic operation legalizer is only able to expand cases where the
total vector width is the same.
The X86 backend creates these mismatched cases for zext_vec_inreg/sext_vec_inreg.
The SimplifyDemandedBits changes are allowing those nodes to become
aext_vec_inreg. For the zext/sext cases, the X86 backend has Custom
handling and never lets them get to the generic legalizer. We need to do the same
for aext_vec_inreg.
llvm-svn: 364264
This is the Demorgan'd 'not' of the pattern handled in:
D63660 / rL364153
This is another intermediate IR step towards solving PR42314:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314
We can test if a value is not a power-of-2 using ctpop(X) > 1,
so combining that with an is-zero check of the input is the
same as testing if not exactly 1 bit is set:
(X == 0) || (ctpop(X) u> 1) --> ctpop(X) != 1
llvm-svn: 364246
Inference of nowrap flags in CVP has been disabled, because it
triggered a bug in LFTR (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31181).
This issue has been fixed in D60935, so we should be able to reenable
nowrap flag inference now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62776
llvm-svn: 364228
This command prints a description of the referenced function's stack frame.
For each formal parameter and local variable, the tool prints:
- function name
- variable name
- file/line of declaration
- FP-relative variable location (if available)
- size in bytes
- HWASAN tag offset
This information will be used by the HWASAN runtime to identify local
variables in UAR reports.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63468
llvm-svn: 364225
Widen vector result type for ctlz_zero_undef and cttz_zero_undef the same as
ctlz and cttz.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63463
llvm-svn: 364221
There are quite some old testcases with powerpc- triple,
we should add this triple support so that we can update them with script.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63723
llvm-svn: 364213
Scalar extends to s64 can use S_BFE_{I64|U64}, but vector extends need
to extend to the 32-bit half, and then to 64.
I'm not sure what the line should be between what RegBankSelect
handles, and what instruction select does, but for now I'm erring on
the side of RegBankSelect for future post-RBS combines.
llvm-svn: 364212
Summary:
The LLVM disassembler assumes that the unused src0 operand of v_nop is
zero. Other tools can put another value in that field, which is still
valid. This commit fixes the LLVM disassembler to recognize such an
encoding as v_nop, in the same way as we already do for s_getpc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63724
Change-Id: Iaf0363eae26ff92fc4ebc716216476adbff37a6f
llvm-svn: 364208
This patch does a few things to start cleaning up the isFNEG function.
-Remove the Op0/Op1 peekThroughBitcast calls that seem unnecessary. getTargetConstantBitsFromNode has its own peekThroughBitcast inside. And we have a separate peekThroughBitcast on the return value.
-Add a check of the scalar size after the first peekThroughBitcast to ensure we haven't changed the element size and just did something like f32->i32 or f64->i64.
-Remove an unnecessary check that Op1's type is floating point after the peekThroughBitcast. We're just going to look for a bit pattern from a constant. We don't care about its type.
-Add VT checks on several places that consume the return value of isFNEG. Due to the peekThroughBitcasts inside, the type of the return value isn't guaranteed. So its not safe to use it to build other nodes without ensuring the type matches the type being used to build the node. We might be able to replace these checks with bitcasts instead, but I don't have a test case so a bail out check seemed better for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63683
llvm-svn: 364206
Prefer the more exact intrinsic to remove a use of the input value
and possibly make further transforms easier (we will still need
to match patterns with funnel-shift of wider types as pieces of
bswap, especially if we want to canonicalize to funnel-shift with
constant shift amount). Discussed in D46760.
llvm-svn: 364187
This needs different handling if the source is known to be a valid
condition or not. Handle turning it into shifts or a select during
regbankselect.
llvm-svn: 364186
This matters for byval uses outside of the entry block, which appear
as copies.
Previously, the only folding done was during selection, which could
not see the underlying frame index. For any uses outside the entry
block, the frame index was materialized in the entry block relative to
the global scratch wave offset.
This may produce worse code in cases where the offset ends up not
fitting in the MUBUF offset field. A better heuristic would be helpfu
for extreme frames.
llvm-svn: 364185
This can occur under certain circumstances when undefs are created later on in the constant multipliers (e.g. in this case due to SimplifyDemandedVectorElts). Its better to let the shift by zero to occur and perform any cleanup afterward.
Fixes OSS Fuzz #15429
llvm-svn: 364179
Summary:
Handle smul.fix.sat in the scalarizer. This is done by
adding smul.fix.sat to the set of "isTriviallyVectorizable"
intrinsics.
The addition of smul.fix.sat in isTriviallyVectorizable and
hasVectorInstrinsicScalarOpd can also be seen as a preparation
to be able to use hasVectorInstrinsicScalarOpd in ConstantFolding.
Reviewers: rengolin, RKSimon, dblaikie
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63704
llvm-svn: 364177
This adds the family of loads and stores with names like VLD20.8 and
VST42.32, which load and store parts of multiple q-registers in such a
way that executing both VLD20 and VLD21, or all four of VLD40..VLD43,
will distribute 2 or 4 vectors' worth of memory data across the lanes
of the same number of registers but in a transposed order.
In addition to the Tablegen descriptions of the instructions
themselves, this patch also adds encode and decode support for the
QQPR and QQQQPR register classes (representing the range of loaded or
stored vector registers), and tweaks to the parsing system for lists
of vector registers to make it return the right format in this case
(since, unlike NEON, MVE regards q-registers as primitive, and not
just an alias for two d-registers).
llvm-svn: 364172
We do not need the elf-groups.x86_64. In one of the tests, it was
used for no solid reason, and for the second test case we can use
YAML input with SHT_GROUP sections.
The patch performs a cleanup of one of the test cases, removes another
one completely (since during the review was found out it actually
duplicates one of the existent tests) and removes the precompiled binary.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63647
llvm-svn: 364167
Ideally we'd be able to represent this truncate as a any_extend to
v16i32 and a truncate, but SelectionDAG doens't know how to not
fold those together.
We have isel patterns to use a vpmovzxwd+vpdmovdb for the truncate,
but we aren't able to simultaneously fold the load and the store
from the isel pattern. By pulling the truncate into the store we
can successfully hide it from the DAG combiner. Then we can isel
pattern match the truncstore and load+any_extend separately.
llvm-svn: 364163
In rL364135, I taught IndVars to fold exiting branches in loops with a zero backedge taken count (i.e. loops that only run one iteration). This extends that to eliminate the dead comparison left around.
llvm-svn: 364155
This is another intermediate IR step towards solving PR42314:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314
We can test if a value is power-of-2-or-0 using ctpop(X) < 2,
so combining that with a non-zero check of the input is the
same as testing if exactly 1 bit is set:
(X != 0) && (ctpop(X) u< 2) --> ctpop(X) == 1
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63660
llvm-svn: 364153
This turned out to be surprisingly effective. I was originally doing this just for completeness sake, but it seems like there are a lot of cases where SCEV's exit count reasoning is stronger than it's isKnownPredicate reasoning.
Once this is in, I'm thinking about trying to build on the same infrastructure to eliminate provably untaken checks. There may be something generally interesting here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63618
llvm-svn: 364135
This is useful for allowing code to efficiently take an address
that can be later mapped onto debug info. Currently the hwasan
pass achieves this by taking the address of the current function:
http://llvm-cs.pcc.me.uk/lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/HWAddressSanitizer.cpp#921
but this costs two instructions (plus a GOT entry in PIC code) per function
with stack variables. This will allow the cost to be reduced to a single
instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63471
llvm-svn: 364126
-d code.
Summary:
Move it into `main` function so the checking is effective for all actions
user may do with llvm-objdump; notably, -r and -s in addition to existing -d.
Match GNU behavior.
Reviewers: jhenderson, grimar, MaskRay, rupprecht
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63631
llvm-svn: 364118
To help produce better diagnostics for stack use-after-return, we'd like
to be able to determine the addresses of each HWASANified function's local
variables given a small amount of information recorded on entry to the
function. Currently we require all HWASANified functions to use frame pointers
and record (PC, FP) on function entry. This works better than recording SP
because FP cannot change during the function, unlike SP which can change
e.g. due to dynamic alloca.
However, most variables currently end up using SP-relative locations in their
debug info. This prevents us from recomputing the address of most variables
because the distance between SP and FP isn't recorded in the debug info. To
address this, make the AArch64 backend prefer FP-relative debug locations
when producing debug info for HWASANified functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63300
llvm-svn: 364117
On Windows ARM64, intrinsic __debugbreak is compiled into brk #0xF000 which is
mapped to llvm.debugtrap in Clang. Instruction brk #F000 is the defined break
point instruction on ARM64 which is recognized by Windows debugger and
exception handling code, so llvm.debugtrap should map to it instead of
redirecting to llvm.trap (brk #1) as the default implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63635
llvm-svn: 364115
The VM layout on iOS is not stable between releases. On 64-bit iOS and
its derivatives we use a dynamic shadow offset that enables ASan to
search for a valid location for the shadow heap on process launch rather
than hardcode it.
This commit extends that approach for 32-bit iOS plus derivatives and
their simulators.
rdar://50645192
rdar://51200372
rdar://51767702
Reviewed By: delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63586
llvm-svn: 364105
128/256 bit scalar_to_vectors are canonicalized to (insert_subvector undef, (scalar_to_vector), 0). We have isel patterns that try to match this pattern being used by a vzmovl to use a 128-bit instruction and a subreg_to_reg.
This patch detects the insert_subvector undef portion of this and pulls it through the vzmovl, creating a narrower vzmovl and an insert_subvector allzeroes. We can then match the insertsubvector into a subreg_to_reg operation by itself. Then we can fall back on existing (vzmovl (scalar_to_vector)) patterns.
Note, while the scalar_to_vector case is the motivating case I didn't restrict to just that case. I'm also wondering about shrinking any 256/512 vzmovl to an extract_subvector+vzmovl+insert_subvector(allzeros) but I fear that would have bad implications to shuffle combining.
I also think there is more canonicalization we can do with vzmovl with loads or scalar_to_vector with loads to create vzload.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63512
llvm-svn: 364095
With this we can now fully code generate jump tables, which is important for code size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63223
llvm-svn: 364086
This change makes use of the newly refactored SwitchLoweringUtils code from
SelectionDAG to in order to generate jump tables and range checks where appropriate.
Much of this code is ported from SDAG with some modifications. We generate
G_JUMP_TABLE and G_BRJT instructions when JT opportunities are found. This means
that targets which previously relied on the naive one MBB per case stmt
translation will now start falling back until they add support for the new opcodes.
For range checks, we don't generate any previously unused operations. This
just recognizes contiguous ranges of case values and generates a single block per
range. Single case value blocks are just a special case of ranges so we get that
support almost for free.
There are still some optimizations missing that I haven't ported over, and
bit-tests are also unimplemented. This patch series is already complex enough.
Actual arm64 support for selection of jump tables is coming in a later patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63169
llvm-svn: 364085
This patch introduces a new heuristic for guiding operand reordering. The new "look-ahead" heuristic can look beyond the immediate predecessors. This helps break ties when the immediate predecessors have identical opcodes (see lit test for an example).
Committed on behalf of @vporpo (Vasileios Porpodas)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60897
llvm-svn: 364084
We already use vmovq for v2i64/v2f64 vzmovl. But we were using a
blendpd+xorpd for v4i64/v4f64/v8i64/v8f64 under opt speed. Or
movsd+xorpd under optsize.
I think the blend with 0 or movss/d is only needed for
vXi32 where we don't have an instruction that can move 32
bits from one xmm to another while zeroing upper bits.
movq is no worse than blendpd on any known CPUs.
llvm-svn: 364079
We sometimes get poor code size because constants of types < 32b are legalized
as 32 bit G_CONSTANTs with a truncate to fit. This works but means that the
localizer can no longer sink them (although it's possible to extend it to do so).
On AArch64 however s8 and s16 constants can be selected in the same way as s32
constants, with a mov pseudo into a W register. If we make s8 and s16 constants
legal then we can avoid unnecessary truncates, they can be CSE'd, and the
localizer can sink them as normal.
There is a caveat: if the user of a smaller constant has to widen the sources,
we end up with an anyext of the smaller typed G_CONSTANT. This can cause
regressions because of the additional extend and missed pattern matching. To
remedy this, there's a new artifact combiner to generate the wider G_CONSTANT
if it's legal for the target.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63587
llvm-svn: 364075
We do not have to spread using the precompiled binaries in the tests,
when we can use YAML. This patch removes the dynrel.elf binary and adds
a few comments to the test cases.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63641
llvm-svn: 364052
Summary:
The motivation for this was to propagate fast-math flags like nnan and
ninf on vector floating point operations to the corresponding scalar
operations to take advantage of follow-on optimizations. But I think
the same argument applies to all of our IR flags: if they apply to the
vector operation then they also apply to all the individual scalar
operations, and they might enable follow-on optimizations.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63593
llvm-svn: 364051
There are some test that are splitted into main part + input yaml for no visible reason.
This patch inines the yaml part for the 3 test cases I found.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63644
llvm-svn: 364049
Summary:
LLVM Allows Targets to provide information that guides optimisations
made to LLVM IR. This is done with callbacks on a TargetTransformInfo object.
This patch adds a TargetTransformInfo class for RISC-V. This will allow us to
implement RISC-V specific callbacks as they become necessary.
This commit also adds the getIntImmCost callbacks, and tests them with a simple
constant hoisting test. Our immediate costs are on the conservative side, for
the moment, but we prevent hoisting in most circumstances anyway.
Previous review was on D63007
Reviewers: asb, luismarques
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: ributzka, MaskRay, llvm-commits, Jim, benna, psnobl, jocewei, PkmX, rkruppe, the_o, brucehoult, MartinMosbeck, rogfer01, edward-jones, zzheng, jrtc27, shiva0217, kito-cheng, niosHD, sabuasal, apazos, simoncook, johnrusso, rbar, hiraditya, mgorny
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63433
llvm-svn: 364046
This patch teaches the bottleneck analysis how to identify and print the most
expensive sequence of instructions according to the simulation. Fixes PR37494.
The goal is to help users identify the sequence of instruction which is most
critical for performance.
A dependency graph is internally used by the bottleneck analysis to describe
data dependencies and processor resource interferences between instructions.
There is one node in the graph for every instruction in the input assembly
sequence. The number of nodes in the graph is independent from the number of
iterations simulated by the tool. It means that a single node of the graph
represents all the possible instances of a same instruction contributed by the
simulated iterations.
Edges are dynamically "discovered" by the bottleneck analysis by observing
instruction state transitions and "backend pressure increase" events generated
by the Execute stage. Information from the events is used to identify critical
dependencies, and materialize edges in the graph. A dependency edge is uniquely
identified by a pair of node identifiers plus an instance of struct
DependencyEdge::Dependency (which provides more details about the actual
dependency kind).
The bottleneck analysis internally ranks dependency edges based on their impact
on the runtime (see field DependencyEdge::Dependency::Cost). To this end, each
edge of the graph has an associated cost. By default, the cost of an edge is a
function of its latency (in cycles). In practice, the cost of an edge is also a
function of the number of cycles where the dependency has been seen as
'contributing to backend pressure increases'. The idea is that the higher the
cost of an edge, the higher is the impact of the dependency on performance. To
put it in another way, the cost of an edge is a measure of criticality for
performance.
Note how a same edge may be found in multiple iteration of the simulated loop.
The logic that adds new edges to the graph checks if an equivalent dependency
already exists (duplicate edges are not allowed). If an equivalent dependency
edge is found, field DependencyEdge::Frequency of that edge is incremented by
one, and the new cost is cumulatively added to the existing edge cost.
At the end of simulation, costs are propagated to nodes through the edges of the
graph. The goal is to identify a critical sequence from a node of the root-set
(composed by node of the graph with no predecessors) to a 'sink node' with no
successors. Note that the graph is intentionally kept acyclic to minimize the
complexity of the critical sequence computation algorithm (complexity is
currently linear in the number of nodes in the graph).
The critical path is finally computed as a sequence of dependency edges. For
edges describing processor resource interferences, the view also prints a
so-called "interference probability" value (by dividing field
DependencyEdge::Frequency by the total number of iterations).
Examples of critical sequence computations can be found in tests added/modified
by this patch.
On output streams that support colored output, instructions from the critical
sequence are rendered with a different color.
Strictly speaking the analysis conducted by the bottleneck analysis view is not
a critical path analysis. The cost of an edge doesn't only depend on the
dependency latency. More importantly, the cost of a same edge may be computed
differently by different iterations.
The number of dependencies is discovered dynamically based on the events
generated by the simulator. However, their number is not fixed. This is
especially true for edges that model processor resource interferences; an
interference may not occur in every iteration. For that reason, it makes sense
to also print out a "probability of interference".
By construction, the accuracy of this analysis (as always) is strongly dependent
on the simulation (and therefore the quality of the information available in the
scheduling model).
That being said, the critical sequence effectively identifies a performance
criticality. Instructions from that sequence are expected to have a very big
impact on performance. So, users can take advantage of this information to focus
their attention on specific interactions between instructions.
In my experience, it works quite well in practice, and produces useful
output (in a reasonable amount time).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63543
llvm-svn: 364045
These instructions let you load half a vector register at once from
two general-purpose registers, or vice versa.
The assembly syntax for these instructions mentions the vector
register name twice. For the move _into_ a vector register, the MC
operand list also has to mention the register name twice (once as the
output, and once as an input to represent where the unchanged half of
the output register comes from). So we can conveniently assign one of
the two asm operands to be the output $Qd, and the other $QdSrc, which
avoids confusing the auto-generated AsmMatcher too much. For the move
_from_ a vector register, there's no way to get round the fact that
both instances of that register name have to be inputs, so we need a
custom AsmMatchConverter to avoid generating two separate output MC
operands. (And even that wouldn't have worked if it hadn't been for
D60695.)
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62679
llvm-svn: 364041
This adds the `MVE_qDest_rSrc` superclass and all its instances, plus
a few other instructions that also take a scalar input register or two.
I've also belatedly added custom diagnostic messages to the operand
classes for odd- and even-numbered GPRs, which required matching
changes in two of the existing MVE assembly test files.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62678
llvm-svn: 364040
llvm-mc or clang with -g normally produces debug info describing the
assembler source itself; however, if that source already contains some
.file/.loc directives, we should instead emit the debug info described
by those directives. For certain assembler sources seen in the wild
(particularly in the Chrome build) this was causing a crash due to
incorrect assumptions about legal sequences of assembler source text.
Fixes PR38994.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63573
llvm-svn: 364039
The sat add/sub tests still have unnecessary extract_subvector((vandnps ymm, ymm), 0) uses that should be split to (vandnps (extract_subvector(ymm, 0), extract_subvector(ymm, 0)), but its getting better.
llvm-svn: 364038
Summary:
This adds the `MVE_qDest_qSrc` superclass and all instructions that
inherit from it. It's not the complete class of _everything_ with a
q-register as both destination and source; it's a subset of them that
all have similar encodings (but it would have been hopelessly unwieldy
to call it anything like MVE_111x11100).
This category includes add/sub with carry; long multiplies; halving
multiplies; multiply and accumulate, and some more complex
instructions.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62677
llvm-svn: 364037
Many LLVM-based tools already support response files (i.e. files
containing a list of options, specified with '@'). This change simply
updates the documentation and help text for some of these tools to
include it. I haven't attempted to fix all tools, just a selection that
I am interested in.
I've taken the opportunity to add some tests for --help behaviour, where
they were missing. We could expand these tests, but I don't think that's
within scope of this patch.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42233 and
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42236.
Reviewed by: grimar, MaskRay, jkorous
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63597
llvm-svn: 364036
--help and -h are automatically supported by the command-line parser,
unless overridden by the tool. The behaviour of the PrintHelpMessage
being used for -h prior to this patch is subtly different to that
provided by --help automatically (it omits certain elements of help text
and options, such as --help-list), so overriding the default is not
desirable, without good reason. This patch removes the explicit
specification of -h and its behaviour, so that the default behaviour is
used.
Reviewed by: hintonda
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63565
llvm-svn: 364029
Summary:
These take a pair of vector register to compare, and a comparison type
(written in the form of an Arm condition suffix); they output a vector
of booleans in the VPR register, where predication can conveniently
use them.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62676
llvm-svn: 364027
G_INTTOPTR can prevent the localizer from moving G_CONSTANTs, but since it's
essentially a side effect free cast instruction we can remat both instructions.
This patch changes the localizer to enable localization of the chains by
iterating over the entry block instructions in reverse order. That way, uses will
localized first, and then the defs are free to be localized as well.
This also changes the previous SmallPtrSet of localized instructions to use a
SetVector instead. We're dealing with pointers and need deterministic iteration
order.
Overall, this change improves ARM64 -O0 CTMark code size by around 0.7% geomean.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63630
llvm-svn: 364001
Also, add a FIXME for the unsafe transform on a unary FNeg. A unary FNeg can only be transformed to a FMul by -1.0 when the nnan flag is present. The unary FNeg project is a WIP, so the unsafe transformation is acceptable until that work is complete.
The bogus assert with introduced in D63445.
llvm-svn: 363998
As discussed in PR42314:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314
Improving the canonicalization for these patterns:
rL363956
...means we should adjust/enhance the related simplification.
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/w1cp
Name: isPow2 or zero
%x = and i32 %xx, 2048
%a = add i32 %x, -1
%r = and i32 %a, %x
=>
%r = i32 0
llvm-svn: 363997
Every called function could possibly need this to calculate the
absolute address of stack objectst, and this avoids inserting a copy
around every call site in the kernel. It's also somewhat cleaner to
keep this in a callee saved SGPR.
llvm-svn: 363990
Currently, many profiling tests on Solaris FAIL like
Command Output (stderr):
--
Undefined first referenced
symbol in file
__llvm_profile_register_names_function /tmp/lit_tmp_Nqu4eh/infinite_loop-9dc638.o
__llvm_profile_register_function /tmp/lit_tmp_Nqu4eh/infinite_loop-9dc638.o
Solaris 11.4 ld supports the non-standard GNU ld extension of adding
__start_SECNAME and __stop_SECNAME labels to sections whose names are valid
as C identifiers. Given that we already use Solaris 11.4-only features
like ld -z gnu-version-script-compat and fully working .preinit_array
support in compiler-rt, we don't need to worry about older versions of
Solaris ld.
The patch documents that support (although the comment in
lib/Transforms/Instrumentation/InstrProfiling.cpp
(needsRuntimeRegistrationOfSectionRange) is quite cryptic what it's
actually about), and adapts the affected testcase not to expect the
alternativeq __llvm_profile_register_functions and __llvm_profile_init.
It fixes all affected tests.
Tested on amd64-pc-solaris2.11.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41111
llvm-svn: 363984
Summary:
The getClobberingMemoryAccess API checks for clobbering accesses in a loop by walking the backedge. This may check if a memory access is being
clobbered by the loop in a previous iteration, depending how smart AA got over the course of the updates in MemorySSA (it does not occur when built from scratch).
If no clobbering access is found inside the loop, it will optimize to an access outside the loop. This however does not mean that access is safe to sink.
Given:
```
for i
load a[i]
store a[i]
```
The access corresponding to the load can be optimized to outside the loop, and the load can be hoisted. But it is incorrect to sink it.
In order to sink the load, we'd need to check no Def clobbers the Use in the same iteration. With this patch we currently restrict sinking to either
Defs not existing in the loop, or Defs preceding the load in the same block. An easy extension is to ensure the load (Use) post-dominates all Defs.
Caught by PR42294.
This issue also shed light on the converse problem: hoisting stores in this same scenario would be illegal. With this patch we restrict
hoisting of stores to the case when their corresponding Defs are dominating all Uses in the loop.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63582
llvm-svn: 363982
I added a canonicalization to create this general pattern in:
rL363956
But as noted in PR42314:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314#c11
...we have a (potentially expensive) simplification for the version
of the code that we just canonicalized away from, so we should
add/adjust that code to match.
llvm-svn: 363981
This fixes CodeGen/available-externally-suppress.c when the new pass manager is
turned on by default. available_externally was not emitted during -O2 -flto
runs when it should still be retained for link time inlining purposes. This can
be fixed by checking that we aren't LTOPrelinking when adding the
EliminateAvailableExternallyPass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63580
llvm-svn: 363971
Summary:
BLSI sets the C flag is the input is not zero. So if its followed
by a TEST of the input where only the Z flag is consumed, we can
replace it with the opposite check of the C flag.
We should be able to do the same for BLSMSK and BLSR, but the
naive test case for those is being optimized to a subo by
CodeGenPrepare.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63589
llvm-svn: 363957
The form that compares against 0 is better because:
1. It removes a use of the input value.
2. It's the more standard form for this pattern: https://graphics.stanford.edu/~seander/bithacks.html#DetermineIfPowerOf2
3. It results in equal or better codegen (tested with x86, AArch64, ARM, PowerPC, MIPS).
This is a root cause for PR42314, but probably doesn't completely answer the codegen request:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42314
Alive proof:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/9kG
Name: is power-of-2
%neg = sub i32 0, %x
%a = and i32 %neg, %x
%r = icmp eq i32 %a, %x
=>
%dec = add i32 %x, -1
%a2 = and i32 %dec, %x
%r = icmp eq i32 %a2, 0
Name: is not power-of-2
%neg = sub i32 0, %x
%a = and i32 %neg, %x
%r = icmp ne i32 %a, %x
=>
%dec = add i32 %x, -1
%a2 = and i32 %dec, %x
%r = icmp ne i32 %a2, 0
llvm-svn: 363956
Thought of this case while working on something else. We appear to get it right in all of the variations I tried, but that's by accident. So, add a test which would catch the potential bug.
llvm-svn: 363953
The attribute can specify elimination for leaf or non-leaf, so it
should always be considered. I copied this bug from AArch64, which
probably should also be fixed.
llvm-svn: 363949
This includes integer arithmetic of various kinds (add/sub/multiply,
saturating and not), and the immediate forms of VMOV and VMVN that
load an immediate into all lanes of a vector.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62674
llvm-svn: 363936
Introducing VCC defs during SIFixSGPRCopies is generally
problematic. Avoid it by starting with the VOP3 form with the general
condition register. This is the easiest to fix instance, but doesn't
solve any specific problems I'm looking at.
llvm-svn: 363904
The ARMDisassembler changes allow changing between ARM and Thumb mode
based on the MCSubtargetInfo, rather than the Target, which simplifies
the other changes a bit.
I'm not really happy with adding more target-specific logic to
tools/llvm-objdump/, but there isn't any easy way around it: the logic
in question specifically applies to disassembling an object file, and
that code simply isn't located in lib/Target, at least at the moment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60927
llvm-svn: 363903
Summary:
Stop referring to "numeric expression", using simply the term
"expression" instead. Likewise for numeric operation since operations
are only used in numeric expressions.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63500
llvm-svn: 363901
Summary:
Make use of Error and Expected to bubble up diagnostics and force
checking of errors in the callers.
Reviewers: jhenderson, jdenny, probinson, arichardson
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63125
llvm-svn: 363900
Teach IndVarSimply's LinearFunctionTestReplace transform to handle multiple exit loops. LFTR does two key things 1) it rewrites (all) exit tests in terms of a common IV potentially eliminating one in the process and 2) it moves any offset/indexing/f(i) style logic out of the loop.
This turns out to actually be pretty easy to implement. SCEV already has all the information we need to know what the backedge taken count is for each individual exit. (We use that when computing the BE taken count for the loop as a whole.) We basically just need to iterate through the exiting blocks and apply the existing logic with the exit specific BE taken count. (The previously landed NFC makes this super obvious.)
I chose to go ahead and apply this to all loop exits instead of only latch exits as originally proposed. After reviewing other passes, the only case I could find where LFTR form was harmful was LoopPredication. I've fixed the latch case, and guards aren't LFTRed anyways. We'll have some more work to do on the way towards widenable_conditions, but that's easily deferred.
I do want to note that I added one bit after the review. When running tests, I saw a new failure (no idea why didn't see previously) which pointed out LFTR can rewrite a constant condition back to a loop varying one. This was theoretically possible with a single exit, but the zero case covered it in practice. With multiple exits, we saw this happening in practice for the eliminate-comparison.ll test case because we'd compute a ExitCount for one of the exits which was guaranteed to never actually be reached. Since LFTR ran after simplifyAndExtend, we'd immediately turn around and undo the simplication work we'd just done. The solution seemed obvious, so I didn't bother with another round of review.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62625
llvm-svn: 363883
Summary:
This is unfortunately needed for correctness, if we are to extend the tolerance of the update API to the way simple loop unswitch is doing cloning.
In simple loop unswitch (as opposed to loop unswitch), not all blocks are cloned. This can create unreachable cloned blocks (no predecessor), which are later cleaned up.
In MemorySSA, the APIs for supporting these kind of updates (clone + update exit blocks), make certain assumption on the integrity of the CFG. When cloning, if something was not cloned, it's values in MemorySSA default to LiveOnEntry. When updating exit blocks, it is safe to assume that we can first insert phis in the blocks merging two clones, then add additional phis in the IDF of the blocks that received phis. This no longer holds true if one of the clones being merged comes from an unreachable block. We'd conservatively need to add all phis before filling in their incoming definitions. In practice this restriction can be relaxed if we clean up trivial phis after the first round of insertion.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63354
llvm-svn: 363880
The def instruction for the vreg may not match, because it may be
folding through a reg_sequence. The assert was overly conservative and
not necessary. It's not actually important if DefMI really defined the
register, because the fold that will be done cares about the def of
the value that will be folded.
For some reason copies aren't making it through the reg_sequence,
although they should.
llvm-svn: 363876
Turns out that we can save an instruction by folding the right shift into
the compare.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63568
llvm-svn: 363874
This reapplies r363678, using the correct chain for the CopyToReg for
v0. glueCopyToM0 counterintuitively changes the operands of the
original node.
llvm-svn: 363870
This is an exception to the rule that we should prefer xmm ops to ymm ops.
As shown in PR42305:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42305
...the store folding opportunity with vextractf128 may result in better
perf by reducing the instruction count.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63517
llvm-svn: 363853
We already do this for ZERO_EXTEND/ZERO_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG - this just extends the pattern matcher to recognize cases where we don't need the zeros in the extension.
llvm-svn: 363841
This includes all the obvious bitwise operations (AND, OR, BIC, ORN,
MVN) in register-to-register forms, and the immediate forms of
AND/OR/BIC/ORN; byte-order reverse instructions; and the VMOVs that
access a single lane of a vector.
Some of those VMOVs (specifically, the ones that access a 32-bit lane)
share an encoding with existing instructions that were disassembled as
accessing half of a d-register (e.g. `vmov.32 r0, d1[0]`), but in
8.1-M they're now written as accessing a quarter of a q-register (e.g.
`vmov.32 r0, q0[2]`). The older syntax is still accepted by the
assembler.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62673
llvm-svn: 363838
The original line was there from when this test was added, but it is
checking for a switch that doesn't exist, so really has no purpose, at
least any more.
llvm-svn: 363833
The check against the output of `od` in the affected tests expect a
specific input offset format. They also expect a specific offset value,
not consistent with the EXAMPLE section for `od` in POSIX.1-2017
Chapter 4, while using the `-j` option. In particular, the example shows
that the input offset begins at 0 following the bytes skipped.
This patch adjusts the matching of the input offset to be more generic.
In order to avoid false matches, it restricts the number of bytes to be
formatted.
llvm-svn: 363829
greater-than-sign is not a BRE special character.
POSIX.1-2017 XBD Section 9.3.2 indicates that the interpretation of `\>`
is undefined. This patch replaces the pattern.
llvm-svn: 363828
Summary:
This patch teaches ConstantFolding to constant fold
both scalar and vector variants of llvm.smul.fix and
llvm.smul.fix.sat.
As described in the LangRef rounding is unspecified for
these instrinsics. If the result cannot be represented
exactly the default behavior in ConstantFolding is to
round down towards negative infinity. If a target has a
preferred rounding that is different some kind of target
hook would be needed (same strategy as used by the
SelectionDAG legalizer).
Reviewers: nikic, leonardchan, RKSimon
Reviewed By: leonardchan
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63385
llvm-svn: 363811
Vector load/store instructions support an optional alignment field
that the compiler can use to provide known alignment info to the
hardware. If the field is used (and the information is correct),
the hardware may be able (on some models) to perform faster memory
accesses than otherwise.
This patch adds support for alignment hints in the assembler and
disassembler, and fills in known alignment during codegen.
llvm-svn: 363806
The test only checks the existence of the `Types CU list` line.
Unfortunately I can't make a better test because
{gcc,clang} -fuse-ld={lld,gold} --gdb-index do not give me a non-empty types CU list.
Reviewed By: ikudrin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63537
llvm-svn: 363800
Use matchBinaryPredicate instead of isConstOrConstSplat to let us handle non-uniform shift cases.
This requires us to tweak matchBinaryPredicate to allow it to (optionally) handle constants with different type widths.
llvm-svn: 363792
Summary:
Bug: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39024
The bug reports that a vectorized loop is stepped through 4 times and each step through the loop seemed to show a different path. I found two problems here:
A) An incorrect line number on a preheader block (for.body.preheader) instruction causes a step into the loop before it begins.
B) Instructions in the middle block have different line numbers which give the impression of another iteration.
In this patch I give all of the middle block instructions the line number of the scalar loop latch terminator branch. This seems to provide the smoothest debugging experience because the vectorized loops will always end on this line before dropping into the scalar loop. To solve problem A I have altered llvm::SplitBlockPredecessors to accommodate loop header blocks.
I have set up a separate review D61933 for a fix which is required for this patch.
Reviewers: samsonov, vsk, aprantl, probinson, anemet, hfinkel, jmorse
Reviewed By: hfinkel, jmorse
Subscribers: jmorse, javed.absar, eraman, kcc, bjope, jmellorcrummey, hfinkel, gbedwell, hiraditya, zzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm, #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60831
> llvm-svn: 363046
llvm-svn: 363786
Summary:
The test case does an (out of bounds) load from a global constant with
type <3 x float>. InstSimplify tried to turn this into an integer load
of the whole alloc size of the vector, which is 128 bits due to
alignment padding, and then bitcast this to <3 x vector> which failed
an assertion due to the type size mismatch.
The fix is to do an integer load of the normal size of the vector, with
no alignment padding.
Reviewers: tpr, arsenm, majnemer, dstuttard
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: hfinkel, wdng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63375
llvm-svn: 363784
This patch allows immediates (and CSR alias immediates) which start with
a tilde token or an exclaim (!) token to be parsed as intended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57320
llvm-svn: 363783
Since the parser attempts to parse an operand as a register with
parentheses before parsing it as an immediate, immediates in
parentheses should not be parsed by parseRegister. However in the case
where the immediate does not start with an identifier, the LParen is not
unlexed and so the RParen causes an unexpected token error.
This patch adds the missing UnLex, and modifies the existing UnLex to
not use a buffered token, as it should always be unlexing an LParen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57319
llvm-svn: 363782
Summary:
llvm.x86.sse.stmxcsr only writes to memory.
llvm.x86.sse.ldmxcsr only reads from memory, and might generate an FPE.
Reviewers: craig.topper, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62896
llvm-svn: 363773
This patch adds lowering for global TLS addresses for the TLS models of
InitialExec, GlobalDynamic, LocalExec and LocalDynamic.
LocalExec support required using a 4-operand add instruction, which uses
the fourth operand to express a relocation on the symbol. The necessary
fixup is emitted when the instruction is emitted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55305
llvm-svn: 363771
r363757 renamed ExpandISelPseudo to FinalizeISel, so the RUN line in
select-optimize-multiple.mir needed updating to refer to finalize-isel.
llvm-svn: 363762
This allows targets to make more decisions about reserved registers
after isel. For example, now it should be certain there are calls or
stack objects in the frame or not, which could have been introduced by
legalization.
Patch by Matthias Braun
llvm-svn: 363757
Summary:
Converting the result *.{all,any}_true to a bool at the source level
generates LLVM IR that compares the result to 0. This check is
redundant since these instructions already return either 0 or 1 and
therefore conform to the BooleanContents setting for WebAssembly. This
CL adds patterns to detect and remove such redundant operations on the
result of Boolean reductions.
Reviewers: dschuff, aheejin
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, sunfish, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63529
llvm-svn: 363756
Summary:
Historically llvm-objdump prints the path to a dylib as well as the
dylib's compatibility version and current version number. This change
extends this information by adding the kind of dylib load: weak,
reexport, etc.
rdar://51383512
Reviewers: pete, lhames
Reviewed By: pete
Subscribers: rupprecht, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62866
llvm-svn: 363746
[SROA] Enhance SROA to handle `addrspacecast`ed allocas
- Fix typo in original change
- Add additional handling to ensure all return pointers are properly
casted.
Summary:
- After `addrspacecast` is allowed to be eliminated in SROA, the
adjusting of storage pointer (from `alloca) needs to handle the
potential different address spaces between the storage pointer (from
alloca) and the pointer being used.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63501
llvm-svn: 363743
Summary:
When identifing instructions that can be folded into a MOVCC instruction,
checking for a predicate operand is not enough, also need to check for
thumb2 function, with restrict-IT, is the machine instruction eligible for
ARMv8 IT or not.
Notes in ARMv8-A Architecture Reference Manual, section "Partial deprecation of IT"
https://usermanual.wiki/Pdf/ARM20Architecture20Reference20ManualARMv8.1667877052.pdf
"ARMv8-A deprecates some uses of the T32 IT instruction. All uses of IT that apply to
instructions other than a single subsequent 16-bit instruction from a restricted set
are deprecated, as are explicit references to the PC within that single 16-bit
instruction. This permits the non-deprecated forms of IT and subsequent instructions
to be treated as a single 32-bit conditional instruction."
Reviewers: efriedma, lebedev.ri, t.p.northover, jmolloy, aemerson, compnerd, stoklund, ostannard
Reviewed By: ostannard
Subscribers: ostannard, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63474
llvm-svn: 363739
Summary:
DAGCombine will normally turn a `(shl (add x, c1), c2)` into `(add (shl x, c2), c1 << c2)`, where `c1` and `c2` are constants. This can be prevented by a callback in TargetLowering.
On RISC-V, materialising the constant `c1 << c2` can be more expensive than materialising `c1`, because materialising the former may take more instructions, and may use a register, where materialising the latter would not.
This patch implements the hook in RISCVTargetLowering to prevent this transform, in the cases where:
- `c1` fits into the immediate field in an `addi` instruction.
- `c1` takes fewer instructions to materialise than `c1 << c2`.
In future, DAGCombine could do the check to see whether `c1` fits into an add immediate, which might simplify more targets hooks than just RISC-V.
Reviewers: asb, luismarques, efriedma
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: xbolva00, lebedev.ri, craig.topper, lewis-revill, Jim, hiraditya, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, psnobl, benna, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62857
llvm-svn: 363736
This patch teaches the Verifier how to detect broken !llvm.loop
attachments as discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60831. This
allows LLVM to warn and strip out the broken debug info before
attempting an LTO compilation with input generated by LLVM predating
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL361149.
rdar://problem/51631158
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63499
[Re-applies r363725 without changes after fixing a broken testcase.]
llvm-svn: 363731
This patch teaches the Verifier how to detect broken !llvm.loop
attachments as discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D60831. This
allows LLVM to warn and strip out the broken debug info before
attempting an LTO compilation with input generated by LLVM predating
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL361149.
rdar://problem/51631158
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63499
llvm-svn: 363725
Summary:
- After `addrspacecast` is allowed to be eliminated in SROA, the
adjusting of storage pointer (from `alloca) needs to handle the
potential different address spaces between the storage pointer (from
alloca) and the pointer being used.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63501
llvm-svn: 363711
This includes saturating and non-saturating shifts, both with
immediate shift count and with the shift counts given by another
vector register; VSHLC (in which the bits shifted out of each active
vector lane are shifted in to the next active lane); and also VMOVL,
which is enough like an immediate shift that it didn't fit too badly
in this category.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62672
llvm-svn: 363696
Summary:
These form a small family of their own, to go with the floating-point
VMINNM/VMAXNM instructions added in a previous commit.
They introduce the first of many special cases in the mnemonic
recognition code, because VMIN with the E suffix used by the VPT
predication system needs to avoid being interpreted as the nonexistent
instruction 'VMI' with an ordinary 'NE' condition suffix.
Reviewers: dmgreen, samparker, SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62671
llvm-svn: 363695
Part of fixing the X86 regression noted in D63281 - I've split this into X86 and generic parts - the generic commit will be coming shortly and will fix the vector-reduce-mul-widen.ll regression introduced here.
llvm-svn: 363693
Summary:
Their names began with a mishmash of `MVE_`, `t2` and no prefix at
all. Now they all start with `MVE_`, which seems like a reasonable
choice on the grounds that (a) NEON is the thing they're most at risk
of being confused with, and (b) MVE implies Thumb-2, so a prefix
indicating MVE is strictly more specific than one indicating Thumb-2.
Reviewers: ostannard, SjoerdMeijer, dmgreen
Subscribers: javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63492
llvm-svn: 363690
This patch adds support for generating calls through the procedure
linkage table where required for a given ExternalSymbol or GlobalAddress
callee.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55304
llvm-svn: 363686