The support is disabled by default. So far there is instruction
selection, spilling, and frame elimination. It also changes SP
from unswizzled to swizzled as used by flat scratch instructions,
so it cannot be mixed with MUBUF stack access.
At the very least missing:
- GlobalISel;
- Some optimizations in frame elimination in between vector
and scalar ALU;
- It shall finally allow to always materialize frame index
as an SGPR, but that is not implemented and frame elimination
cannot handle it yet;
- Unaligned and/or multidword flat scratch shall work, but it
is legalized now for MUBUF;
- Operand folding cannot optimize FI like with MUBUF yet;
- It will need scaling the value of the SP/FP in the DWARF
expression to recover the unswizzled scratch address;
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89170
Summary:
- HIP uses an unsized extern array `extern __shared__ T s[]` to declare
the dynamic shared memory, which size is not known at the
compile time.
Reviewers: arsenm, yaxunl, kpyzhov, b-sumner
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, hiraditya, kerbowa, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82496
These should probably be inferred from the function on parse, but the
target specific infrastructure currently does not give you a way to do
this. SILowerSGPRSpills early exits without this reporting spills,
which makes it difficult to write a MIR test for.
In case of more than wavesize CSR SGPR spills, lanes of reserved VGPR were getting
overwritten due to wrap around.
Reserve a VGPR (when NumVGPRSpillLanes = 0, WaveSize, 2*WaveSize, ..) and when one
of the two conditions is true:
1. One reserved VGPR being tracked by VGPRReservedForSGPRSpill is not yet reserved.
2. All spill lanes of reserved VGPR(s) are full and another spill lane is required.
Reviewed By: arsenm, kerbowa
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82463
Relying on any MachineFunction state in the MachineFunctionInfo
constructor is hazardous, because the construction time is unclear and
determined by the first use. The function may be only partially
constructed, which is part of why we have many of these hacky string
attributes to track what we need for ABI lowering.
For SelectionDAG, all stack objects are created up-front before
calling convention lowering so stack objects are visible at
construction time. For GlobalISel, none of the IR function has been
visited yet and the allocas haven't been added to the MachineFrameInfo
yet. This should fix failing to set flat_scratch_init in GlobalISel
when needed.
This pass really needs to be turned into some kind of analysis, but I
haven't found a nice way use one here.
When the callee requires a dynamic stack realignment,
it is not possible to correcty access the incoming
stack arguments using the stack pointer. We reserve a
base pointer in such cases to access the function arguments
inside the callee. The base pointer will hold the incoming
stack pointer value before any kind of delta added to it.
Reviewed By: arsenm, scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78811
Since SRSRC has alignment requirements, first find non GIT pointer clobbered
registers for SRSRC and then if those registers clobber preloaded Scratch Wave
Offset register, copy the Scratch Wave Offset register to a free SGPR.
Remove the gap left between the stack pointer (s32) and frame pointer
(s34) now that the scratch wave offset is no longer a part of the
calling convention ABI.
Update llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst to reflect the change.
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75657
Add the scratch wave offset to the scratch buffer descriptor (SRSrc) in
the entry function prologue. This allows us to removes the scratch wave
offset register from the calling convention ABI.
As part of this change, allow the use of an inline constant zero for the
SOffset of MUBUF instructions accessing the stack in entry functions
when a frame pointer is not requested/required. Entry functions with
calls still need to set up the calling convention ABI stack pointer
register, and reference it in order to address arguments of called
functions. The ABI stack pointer register remains unswizzled, but is now
wave-relative instead of queue-relative.
Non-entry functions also use an inline constant zero SOffset for
wave-relative scratch access, but continue to use the stack and frame
pointers as before. When the stack or frame pointer is converted to a
swizzled offset it is now scaled directly, as the scratch wave offset no
longer needs to be subtracted first.
Update llvm/docs/AMDGPUUsage.rst to reflect these changes to the calling
convention.
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75138
Currently we infer whether the flat-scratch-init kernel input should
be enabled based on calls. Move this handling, so we can decide if the
full set of ABI inputs is needed in kernels. Ideally we would have an
analysis of some sort, rather than the function attributes.
Start moving towards treating this as a property of the calling
convention, and not the subtarget. The default denormal mode should
not be part of the subtarget, and be moved into a separate function
attribute.
This patch is still NFC. The denormal mode remains as a subtarget
feature for now, but make the necessary changes to switch to using an
attribute.
SGPR_128 only includes the real allocatable SGPRs, and SReg_128 adds
the additional non-allocatable TTMP registers. There's no point in
allocating SReg_128 vregs. This shrinks the size of the classes
regalloc needs to consider, which is usually good.
llvm-svn: 374284
We had couple places which still return 10 as a maximum
occupancy. Fixed.
Also print comment about occupancy as compiler see it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65423
llvm-svn: 367381
Make the FP register callee saved.
This is tricky because now the FP needs to be spilled in the prolog
relative to the incoming SP register, rather than the frame register
used throughout the rest of the function. I don't like how this
bypassess the standard mechanism for CSR spills just to get the
correct insert point. I may look for a better solution, since all CSR
VGPRs may also need to have all lanes activated. Another option might
be to make getFrameIndexReference change the base register if the
frame index is a CSR, and then try to figure out the right insertion
point in emitProlog.
If there is a free VGPR lane available for SGPR spilling, try to use
it for the FP. If that would require intrtoducing a new VGPR spill,
try to use a free call clobbered SGPR. Only fallback to introducing a
new VGPR spill as a last resort.
This also doesn't attempt to handle SGPR spilling with scalar stores.
llvm-svn: 365372
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
There are various places in LLVM where the definition of StackID is not
properly honoured, for example in PEI where objects with a StackID > 0 are
allocated on the default stack (StackID0). This patch enforces that PEI
only considers allocating objects to StackID 0.
Reviewers: arsenm, thegameg, MatzeB
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60062
llvm-svn: 357460
Since this can be set with s_setreg*, it should not be a subtarget
property. Set a default based on the calling convention, and Introduce
a new amdgpu-dx10-clamp attribute to override this if desired.
Also introduce a new amdgpu-ieee attribute to match.
The values need to match to allow inlining. I think it is OK for the
caller's dx10-clamp attribute to override the callee, but there
doesn't appear to be the infrastructure to do this currently without
definining the attribute in the generic Attributes.td.
Eventually the calling convention lowering will need to insert a mode
switch somewhere for these.
llvm-svn: 357302
This fixes a couple of unflushed raw_string_ostream bugs in recent
commits that only show up on a bot building on windows with expensive
checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59396
Change-Id: I9c6208325503b3ee0786b4b688e13fc24a15babf
llvm-svn: 356394
This has been a very painful missing feature that has made producing
reduced testcases difficult. In particular the various registers
determined for stack access during function lowering were necessary to
avoid undefined register errors in a large percentage of
cases. Implement a subset of the important fields that need to be
preserved for AMDGPU.
Most of the changes are to support targets parsing register fields and
properly reporting errors. The biggest sort-of bug remaining is for
fields that can be initialized from the IR section will be overwritten
by a default initialized machineFunctionInfo section. Another
remaining bug is the machineFunctionInfo section is still printed even
if empty.
llvm-svn: 356215
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
This feature is only relevant to shaders, and is no longer used. When disabled,
lowering of reserved registers for shaders causes a compiler crash.
Remove the feature and add a test for compilation of shaders at OptNone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53829
llvm-svn: 345763
The isAmdCodeObjectV2 is a misleading name which actually checks whether the os
is amdhsa or mesa.
Also add a test to make sure we do not generate old kernel header for code
object v3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52897
llvm-svn: 343813
This reverts commit r337021.
WARNING: MemorySanitizer: use-of-uninitialized-value
#0 0x1415cd65 in void write_signed<long>(llvm::raw_ostream&, long, unsigned long, llvm::IntegerStyle) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/NativeFormatting.cpp:95:7
#1 0x1415c900 in llvm::write_integer(llvm::raw_ostream&, long, unsigned long, llvm::IntegerStyle) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/NativeFormatting.cpp:121:3
#2 0x1472357f in llvm::raw_ostream::operator<<(long) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Support/raw_ostream.cpp:117:3
#3 0x13bb9d4 in llvm::raw_ostream::operator<<(int) /code/llvm-project/llvm/include/llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h:210:18
#4 0x3c2bc18 in void printField<unsigned int, &(amd_kernel_code_s::amd_kernel_code_version_major)>(llvm::StringRef, amd_kernel_code_s const&, llvm::raw_ostream&) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/Utils/AMDKernelCodeTUtils.cpp:78:23
#5 0x3c250ba in llvm::printAmdKernelCodeField(amd_kernel_code_s const&, int, llvm::raw_ostream&) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/Utils/AMDKernelCodeTUtils.cpp:104:5
#6 0x3c27ca3 in llvm::dumpAmdKernelCode(amd_kernel_code_s const*, llvm::raw_ostream&, char const*) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/Utils/AMDKernelCodeTUtils.cpp:113:5
#7 0x3a46e6c in llvm::AMDGPUTargetAsmStreamer::EmitAMDKernelCodeT(amd_kernel_code_s const&) /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/MCTargetDesc/AMDGPUTargetStreamer.cpp:161:3
#8 0xd371e4 in llvm::AMDGPUAsmPrinter::EmitFunctionBodyStart() /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/AMDGPUAsmPrinter.cpp:204:26
[...]
Uninitialized value was created by an allocation of 'KernelCode' in the stack frame of function '_ZN4llvm16AMDGPUAsmPrinter21EmitFunctionBodyStartEv'
#0 0xd36650 in llvm::AMDGPUAsmPrinter::EmitFunctionBodyStart() /code/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/AMDGPU/AMDGPUAsmPrinter.cpp:192
llvm-svn: 337079
This was completely broken if there was ever a struct argument, as
this information is thrown away during the argument analysis.
The offsets as passed in to LowerFormalArguments are not useful,
as they partially depend on the legalized result register type,
and they don't consider the alignment in the first place.
Ignore the Ins array, and instead figure out from the raw IR type
what we need to do. This seems to fix the padding computation
if the DAG lowering is forced (and stops breaking arguments
following padded arguments if the arguments were only partially
lowered in the IR)
llvm-svn: 337021
Summary:
This is a follow-up to r335942.
- Merge SISubtarget into AMDGPUSubtarget and rename to GCNSubtarget
- Rename AMDGPUCommonSubtarget to AMDGPUSubtarget
- Merge R600Subtarget::Generation and GCNSubtarget::Generation into
AMDGPUSubtarget::Generation.
Reviewers: arsenm, jvesely
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49037
llvm-svn: 336851
and everything that comes with it from implementation
and v3 header files.
Leave definition in v2 header files for backwards
compatibility.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48191
llvm-svn: 335267
Keep track of achieved occupancy in SIMachineFunctionInfo.
At the moment we have a lot of duplicated or even missed code to
query and maintain occupancy info. Record it in the MFI and
query in a single call. Interfaces:
- getOccupancy() - returns current recorded achieved occupancy.
- getMinAllowedOccupancy() - returns lesser of the achieved occupancy
and the lowest occupancy we are ready to tolerate. For example if
a kernel is memory bound we are ready to tolerate 4 waves.
- limitOccupancy() - record occupancy level if we have to lower it.
- increaseOccupancy() - record occupancy if scheduler managed to
increase the occupancy.
MFI takes care of integrating different checks affecting occupancy,
including LDS use and waves-per-eu attribute. Note that scheduler
starts with not yet known register pressure, so has to record either
limit or increase in occupancy after it is done. Later passes can
just query a resulting value.
New interface is used in the active scheduler and NFC wrt its work.
Changes are also made to experimental schedulers to use it and record
an occupancy after they are done. Before the change waves-per-eu was
ignored by experimental schedulers and tolerance window for memory
bound kernels was not used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47509
llvm-svn: 333629
AFAIK the driver's allocation will actually have to round this
up anyway. It is useful to track the rounded up size, so that
the end of the kernel segment is known to be dereferencable so
a wider s_load_dword can be used for a short argument at the end
of the segment.
llvm-svn: 333456
Summary:
MCTargetDesc/AMDGPUMCTargetDesc.h contains enums for all the instuction
and register defintions, which are huge so we only want to include
them where needed.
This will also make it easier if we want to split the R600 and GCN
definitions into separate tablegenerated files.
I was unable to remove AMDGPUMCTargetDesc.h from SIMachineFunctionInfo.h
because it uses some enums from the header to initialize default values
for the SIMachineFunction class, so I ended up having to remove includes of
SIMachineFunctionInfo.h from headers too.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: MatzeB, kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46272
llvm-svn: 332930
Before this was not done if the function had no calls in it. This
is still a possible issue with any callable function, regardless
of calls present.
llvm-svn: 328659
Note: This is a candidate for LLVM 6.0, because it was planned to be
in that release but was delayed due to a long review period.
Merge conflict in release_60 - resolution:
Add "-p6:32:32" into the second (non-amdgiz) string.
Only scalar loads support 32-bit pointers. An address in a VGPR will
fail to compile. That's OK because the results of loads will only be used
in places where VGPRs are forbidden.
Updated AMDGPUAliasAnalysis and used SReg_64_XEXEC.
The tests cover all uses cases we need for Mesa.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41651
llvm-svn: 324487
Currently all images are lowered to have a single
image PseudoSourceValue. Image stores happen to have
overly strict mayLoad/mayStore/hasSideEffects flags
set on them, so this happens to work. When these
are fixed to be correct, the scheduler breaks
this because the identical PSVs are assumed to
be the same address. These need to be unique
to the image resource value.
llvm-svn: 321555
Summary:
Added support for scratch (including spilling) for OS type amdpal:
generates code to set up the scratch descriptor if it is needed.
With amdpal, the scratch resource descriptor is loaded from offset 0 of
the global information table. The low 32 bits of the address of the
global information table is passed in s0.
Added amdgpu-git-ptr-high function attribute to hard-wire the high 32
bits of the address of the global information table. If the function
attribute is not specified, or is 0xffffffff, then the backend generates
code to use the high 32 bits of pc.
The documentation for the AMDPAL ABI will be added in a later commit.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37483
llvm-svn: 314501
We need to pass something to functions for this to work.
It isn't derivable just from the kernarg segment pointer
because the implicit arguments are placed after the
kernel arguments.
Also fixes missing test for the intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 309398
As an approximation of the existing handling to avoid
regressions. Fixes using too many registers with calls
on subtargets with the SGPR allocation bug.
llvm-svn: 308326
Introduce pseudo-registers for registers needed for stack
access, which are replaced during finalizeLowering.
Note these pseudo-registers are currently only used for the
used register location, and not for determining their
input argument register.
This is better because it avoids the need to try to predict
whether a call will be emitted from the IR, and also
detects stack objects introduced by legalization.
Test changes are from the HasStackObjects check being more
accurate since stack objects introduced during legalization
are now known.
llvm-svn: 308325
This wasn't necessary before since they are always enabled
for kernels, but this is necessary if they need to be
forwarded to a callable function.
llvm-svn: 308226
This should not be treated as a different version of
private_segment_buffer. These are distinct things with
different uses and register classes, and requires the
function argument info to have more context about the
function's type and environment.
Also add missing test coverage for the intrinsic, and
emit an error for HSA. This also encovers that the intrinsic
is broken unless there happen to be stack objects.
llvm-svn: 306264
Partially implement callee-side for arguments and return values.
byval doesn't work properly, and most likely sret or other on-stack
return values most as well.
llvm-svn: 303308
Before frame offsets are calculated, try to eliminate the
frame indexes used by SGPR spills. Then we can delete them
after.
I think for now we can be sure that no other instruction
will be re-using the same frame indexes. It should be easy
to notice if this assumption ever breaks since everything
asserts if it tries to use a dead frame index later.
The unused emergency stack slot seems to still be left behind,
so an additional 4 bytes is still wasted.
llvm-svn: 295753
Summary:
This lets you select which sort of spilling you want, either s[0:1] or 64-bit loads from s[0:1].
Patch By: Dave Airlie
Reviewers: nhaehnle, arsenm, tstellarAMD
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: mareko, llvm-commits, kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25428
llvm-svn: 293000
Summary:
Without a MachineMemOperand, the scheduler was assuming MIMG instructions
were ordered memory references, so no loads or stores could be reordered
across them.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27536
llvm-svn: 290179
Summary:
mesa3d will use the same kernel calling convention as amdhsa, but it will
handle everything else like the default 'unknown' OS type.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, llvm-commits, kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22783
llvm-svn: 281779
- Implemented amdgpu-flat-work-group-size attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-active-waves-per-eu attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-sgpr attribute
- Implemented amdgpu-num-vgpr attribute
- Dynamic LDS constraints are in a separate patch
Patch by Tom Stellard and Konstantin Zhuravlyov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21562
llvm-svn: 280747
Summary:
We were using reserved VGPRs for SGPR spilling and this was causing
some programs with a workgroup size of 1024 to use more than 64
registers, which is illegal.
Reviewers: arsenm, mareko, nhaehnle
Subscribers: nhaehnle, arsenm, llvm-commits, kzhuravl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22032
llvm-svn: 276980
ABIArgOffset is a problem because properly fsetting the
KernArgSize requires that the reserved area before the
real kernel arguments be correctly aligned, which requires
fixing clover.
llvm-svn: 276766
Summary:
v2: don't count SGPRs spilled to scratch twice
I think this is sufficient. It doesn't count private memory usage, which
happens often and uses scratch but isn't technically a spill. The private
memory usage can be computed by:
[scratch_per_thread - vgpr_spills - a random multiple of SGPR spills].
The fact SGPR spills add very high numbers to the scratch size make that
computation a guessing game, but I don't have a solution to that.
Reviewers: tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22197
llvm-svn: 275288
Debugger prologue is emitted if -mattr=+amdgpu-debugger-emit-prologue.
Debugger prologue writes work group IDs and work item IDs to scratch memory at fixed location in the following format:
- offset 0: work group ID x
- offset 4: work group ID y
- offset 8: work group ID z
- offset 16: work item ID x
- offset 20: work item ID y
- offset 24: work item ID z
Set
- amd_kernel_code_t::debug_wavefront_private_segment_offset_sgpr to scratch wave offset reg
- amd_kernel_code_t::debug_private_segment_buffer_sgpr to scratch rsrc reg
- amd_kernel_code_t::is_debug_supported to true if all debugger features are enabled
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20335
llvm-svn: 273769
Split AMDGPUSubtarget into amdgcn/r600 specific subclasses.
This removes most of the static_casting of the basic codegen
classes everywhere, and tries to restrict the features
visible on the wrong target.
llvm-svn: 273652
Summary:
For GL_ARB_compute_shader we need to support workgroup sizes of at least 1024. However, if we want to allow large workgroup sizes, we may need to use less registers, as we have to run more waves per SIMD.
This patch adds an attribute to specify the maximum work group size the compiled program needs to support. It defaults, to 256, as that has no wave restrictions.
Reducing the number of registers available is done similarly to how the registers were reserved for chips with the sgpr init bug.
Reviewers: mareko, arsenm, tstellarAMD, nhaehnle
Subscribers: FireBurn, kerberizer, llvm-commits, arsenm
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18340
Patch By: Bas Nieuwenhuizen
llvm-svn: 266337
Summary:
The code previously always used s1 as it was using the user + system SGPR
information for compute kernels. This is incorrect for Mesa shaders though,
The register should be the next SGPR after all user and system SGPR's.
We use that Mesa adds arguments for all input and system SGPR's and
take the next available SGPR for the scratch wave offset register.
Signed-off-by: Bas Nieuwenhuizen <bas@basnieuwenhuizen.nl>
Reviewers: mareko, arsenm, nhaehnle, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: qcolombet, arsenm, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18941
Patch By: Bas Nieuwenhuizen
llvm-svn: 266336
This makes it possible to distinguish between mesa shaders
and other kernels even in the presence of compute shaders.
Patch By: Bas Nieuwenhuizen <bas@basnieuwenhuizen.nl>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18559
llvm-svn: 265589