For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281323
For the common pattern (CMPZ (AND x, #bitmask), #0), we can do some more efficient instruction selection if the bitmask is one consecutive sequence of set bits (32 - clz(bm) - ctz(bm) == popcount(bm)).
1) If the bitmask touches the LSB, then we can remove all the upper bits and set the flags by doing one LSLS.
2) If the bitmask touches the MSB, then we can remove all the lower bits and set the flags with one LSRS.
3) If the bitmask has popcount == 1 (only one set bit), we can shift that bit into the sign bit with one LSLS and change the condition query from NE/EQ to MI/PL (we could also implement this by shifting into the carry bit and branching on BCC/BCS).
4) Otherwise, we can emit a sequence of LSLS+LSRS to remove the upper and lower zero bits of the mask.
1-3 require only one 16-bit instruction and can elide the CMP. 4 requires two 16-bit instructions but can elide the CMP and doesn't require materializing a complex immediate, so is also a win.
llvm-svn: 281215
The CMPZ #0 disappears during peepholing, leaving just a tADDi3, tADDi8 or t2ADDri. This avoids having to materialize the expensive negative constant in Thumb-1, and allows a shrinking from a 32-bit CMN to a 16-bit ADDS in Thumb-2.
llvm-svn: 281040
This is a mechanical change of comments in switches like fallthrough,
fall-through, or fall-thru to use the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro instead.
llvm-svn: 278902
Summary: Thumb2 supports encoding immediates with specific patterns into mov.w by splatting the low 8 bits into other bytes.
I'm resubmitting this patch. The test case in the original commit
r277610 does not specify triple, so builds with differnt default triple
will have different output.
This patch fixed trile as thumb-darwin-apple.
Reviewers: john.brawn, jmolloy, bruno
Subscribers: jmolloy, aemerson, rengolin, samparker, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23090
llvm-svn: 277865
Summary: Thumb2 supports encoding immediates with specific patterns into mov.w by splatting the low 8 bits into other bytes.
Reviewers: john.brawn, jmolloy
Subscribers: jmolloy, aemerson, rengolin, samparker, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23090
llvm-svn: 277610
In this particular example we wouldn't want the smmls anyway (the value is
actually unused), but in general smmls does not provide the required flags
register so if that SUBE result is used we can't replace it.
llvm-svn: 277541
Retry r275776 (no changes, we suspect the issue was with another commit).
The current logic for handling inline asm operands in DAGToDAGISel interprets
the operands by looking for constants, which should represent the flags
describing the kind of operand we're dealing with (immediate, memory, register
def etc). The operands representing actual data are skipped only if they are
non-const, with the exception of immediate operands which are skipped explicitly
when a flag describing an immediate is found.
The oversight is that memory operands may be const too (e.g. for device drivers
reading a fixed address), so we should explicitly skip the operand following a
flag describing a memory operand. If we don't, we risk interpreting that
constant as a flag, which is definitely not intended.
Fixes PR26038
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22103
llvm-svn: 276101
The current logic for handling inline asm operands in DAGToDAGISel interprets
the operands by looking for constants, which should represent the flags
describing the kind of operand we're dealing with (immediate, memory, register
def etc). The operands representing actual data are skipped only if they are
non-const, with the exception of immediate operands which are skipped explicitly
when a flag describing an immediate is found.
The oversight is that memory operands may be const too (e.g. for device drivers
reading a fixed address), so we should explicitly skip the operand following a
flag describing a memory operand. If we don't, we risk interpreting that
constant as a flag, which is definitely not intended.
Fixes PR26038
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22103
llvm-svn: 275776
Thumb-1 doesn't have post-inc or pre-inc load or store instructions. However the LDM/STM instructions with writeback can function as post-inc load/store:
ldm r0!, {r1} @ load from r0 into r1 and increment r0 by 4
Obviously, this only works if the post increment is 4.
llvm-svn: 275540
This is a follow-up for r273544.
The end goal is to get rid of the isSwift / isCortexXY / isWhatever methods.
This commit also removes a command line flag that isn't used in any of the tests:
check-vmlx-hazards. It can be replaced easily with the mattr mechanism, since
this is now a subtarget feature.
There is still some work left regarding FeatureExpandMLx. In the past MLx
expansion was enabled for subtargets with hasVFP2(), until r129775 [1] switched
from that to isCortexA9, without too much justification.
In spite of that, the code performing MLx expansion still contains calls to
isSwift/isLikeA9, although the results of those are pretty clear given that
we're only enabling it for the A9.
We should try to enable it for all targets that have FeatureHasVMLxHazards, as
it seems to be closely related to that behaviour, and if that is possible try to
clean up the MLx expansion pass from all calls to isWhatever. This will require
some performance testing, so it will be done in another patch.
[1] http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20110418/119725.html
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21798
llvm-svn: 274742
The important thing I was missing was ensuring newly added constants were kept in topological order. Repositioning the node is correct if the constant is newly added (so it has no topological ordering) but wrong if it already existed - positioning it next in the worklist would break the topological ordering.
Original commit message:
[Thumb] Select a BIC instead of AND if the immediate can be encoded more optimally negated
If an immediate is only used in an AND node, it is possible that the immediate can be more optimally materialized when negated. If this is the case, we can negate the immediate and use a BIC instead;
int i(int a) {
return a & 0xfffffeec;
}
Used to produce:
ldr r1, [CONSTPOOL]
ands r0, r1
CONSTPOOL: 0xfffffeec
And now produces:
movs r1, #255
adds r1, #20 ; Less costly immediate generation
bics r0, r1
llvm-svn: 274543
We were using DAG->getConstant instead of DAG->getTargetConstant. This meant that we could inadvertently increase the use count of a constant if stars aligned, which it did in this testcase. Increasing the use count of the constant could cause ISel to fall over (because DAGToDAG lowering assumed the constant had only one use!)
Original commit message:
[Thumb] Select a BIC instead of AND if the immediate can be encoded more optimally negated
If an immediate is only used in an AND node, it is possible that the immediate can be more optimally materialized when negated. If this is the case, we can negate the immediate and use a BIC instead;
int i(int a) {
return a & 0xfffffeec;
}
Used to produce:
ldr r1, [CONSTPOOL]
ands r0, r1
CONSTPOOL: 0xfffffeec
And now produces:
movs r1, #255
adds r1, #20 ; Less costly immediate generation
bics r0, r1
llvm-svn: 274510
TargetLowering and DAGToDAG are used to combine ADDC, ADDE and UMLAL
dags into UMAAL. Selection is split into the two phases because it
is easier to match the two patterns at those different times.
Differential Revision: http://http://reviews.llvm.org/D21461
llvm-svn: 273165
Reapplying patch as it was reverted when it was first
committed because of an assertion failure when the
mrrc2 intrinsic was called in ARM mode. The failure
was happening because the instruction was being built
in ARMISelDAGToDAG.cpp and the tablegen description for
mrrc2 instruction doesn't allow you to use a predicate.
The ARM architecture manuals do say that mrrc2 in ARM
mode can be predicated with AL in assembly but this has
no effect on the encoding of the instruction as the top
4 bits will always be 1111 not 1110 which is the encoding
for the condition AL.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21408
llvm-svn: 272982
We can only generate immediates up to #510 with a MOV+ADD, not #511, because there's no such instruction as add #256.
Found by Oliver Stannard and csmith!
llvm-svn: 272665
MRRC/MRRC2 instruction writes to two registers. The
intrinsic definition returns a single uint64_t to
represent the write, this is a compact way of
representing a write to two 32 bit registers,
the alternative might have been two return a
struct of 2 uint32_t's but this isn't as nice.
Differential Revision:
llvm-svn: 272544
This used to be free, copying and moving DebugLocs became expensive
after the metadata rewrite. Passing by reference eliminates a ton of
track/untrack operations. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 272512
If an immediate is only used in an AND node, it is possible that the immediate can be more optimally materialized when negated. If this is the case, we can negate the immediate and use a BIC instead;
int i(int a) {
return a & 0xfffffeec;
}
Used to produce:
ldr r1, [CONSTPOOL]
ands r0, r1
CONSTPOOL: 0xfffffeec
And now produces:
movs r1, #255
adds r1, #20 ; Less costly immediate generation
bics r0, r1
llvm-svn: 272251
This adds an additional matcher to select UBFX(..) from SRL(AND(..)) in
ARMISelDAGToDAG to help with code size.
Patch by David Green.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20667
llvm-svn: 271384
This is a large change, but it's pretty mechanical:
- Where we were returning a node before, call ReplaceNode instead.
- Where we would return null to fall back to another selector, rename
the method to try* and return a bool for success.
- Where we were calling SelectNodeTo, just return afterwards.
Part of llvm.org/pr26808.
llvm-svn: 269258
This is a step towards removing the rampant undefined behaviour in
SelectionDAG, which is a part of llvm.org/PR26808.
We rename SelectionDAGISel::Select to SelectImpl and update targets to
match, and then change Select to return void and consolidate the
sketchy behaviour we're trying to get away from there.
Next, we'll update backends to implement `void Select(...)` instead of
SelectImpl and eventually drop the base Select implementation.
llvm-svn: 268693
The code here is recursively Select-ing a new Node to avoid issues
where N is CSE'd during replaceDAGValue and stops being valid. We can
accomplish the same goal in a more principled way by using a
HandleSDNode.
This is essentially a less dodgy fix for PR25733 than the original
attempt back in r255120.
llvm-svn: 268590
The fast register-allocator cannot cope with inter-block dependencies without
spilling. This is fine for ldrex/strex loops coming from atomicrmw instructions
where any value produced within a block is dead by the end, but not for
cmpxchg. So we lower a cmpxchg at -O0 via a pseudo-inst that gets expanded
after regalloc.
Fortunately this is at -O0 so we don't have to care about performance. This
simplifies the various axes of expansion considerably: we assume a strong
seq_cst operation and ensure ordering via the always-present DMB instructions
rather than v8 acquire/release instructions.
Should fix the 32-bit part of PR25526.
llvm-svn: 266679
Removed some unused headers, replaced some headers with forward class declarations.
Found using simple scripts like this one:
clear && ack --cpp -l '#include "llvm/ADT/IndexedMap.h"' | xargs grep -L 'IndexedMap[<]' | xargs grep -n --color=auto 'IndexedMap'
Patch by Eugene Kosov <claprix@yandex.ru>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19219
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266595
Added ISelDAGToDAG functions to enable selection of the smlawb, smlawt,
smulwb and smulwt instructions for the ARM backend. Also updated the smul
CodeGen test and removed the smulw one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18892
llvm-svn: 265793
Add support for TLS access for Windows on ARM. This generates a similar access
to MSVC for ARM.
The changes to the tablegen data is needed to support loading an external symbol
global that is not for a call. The adjustments to the DAG to DAG transforms are
needed to preserve the 32-bit move.
llvm-svn: 259676
The basic optimisation was to convert (mul $LHS, $complex_constant) into
roughly "(shl (mul $LHS, $simple_constant), $simple_amt)" when it was expected
to be cheaper. The original logic checks that the mul only has one use (since
we're mangling $complex_constant), but when used in even more complex
addressing modes there may be an outer addition that can pick up the wrong
value too.
I *think* the ARM addressing-mode problem is actually unreachable at the
moment, but that depends on complex assessments of the profitability of
pre-increment addressing modes so I've put a real check in there instead of an
assertion.
llvm-svn: 259228
This patch was originally committed as r257884, but was reverted due to windows
failures. The cause of these failures has been fixed under r258677, hence
re-committing the original patch.
llvm-svn: 258682
# The first commit's message is:
Revert "[ARM] Add DSP build attribute and extension targeting"
This reverts commit b11cc50c0b4a7c8cdb628abc50b7dc226ff583dc.
# This is the 2nd commit message:
Revert "[ARM] Add new system registers to ARMv8-M Baseline/Mainline"
This reverts commit 837d08454e3e5beb8581951ac26b22fa07df3cd5.
llvm-svn: 257916
Darwin TLS accesses most closely resemble ELF's general-dynamic situation,
since they have to be able to handle all possible situations. The descriptors
and so on are obviously slightly different though.
llvm-svn: 257039
We mutated the DAG, which invalidated the node we were trying to use
as a base register. Sometimes we got away with it, but other times the
node really did get deleted before it was finished with.
Should fix PR25733
llvm-svn: 255120