This is an alternate version of D115914 that handles/tests all binary opcodes.
I suspect that we don't see these patterns too often because -simplifycfg
would convert the minimal cases into selects rather than leave them in phi form
(note: instcombine has logic holes for combining the select patterns too though,
so that's another potential patch).
We only create a new binop in a predecessor that unconditionally branches to
the final block.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/C57M2Fhttps://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/WHwAoU (not safe to speculate an sdiv for example)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/rdVUvW (but it is ok on this path)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117110
We already have the related folds for zext-of-bool, so it
should make things more consistent to have this transform
to select for sext-of-bool too:
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/YikdfAFixes#53319
We avoid this fold in the more general cases where we use FoldOpIntoSelect.
That's because -- unlike most binary opcodes -- 'div' can't usually be
speculated with a variable divisor since it can have immediate UB. But in
the case where both arms of the select are constants, we can safely evaluate
both sides and eliminate 'div' completely.
This is a follow-up to the equivalent fold for 'rem' opcodes:
D115173 / f65be726ab
We avoid this fold in the more general cases where we use `FoldOpIntoSelect`.
That's because -- unlike most binary opcodes -- 'rem' can't usually be
speculated with a variable divisor since it can have immediate UB. But in
the case where both arms of the select are constants, we can safely evaluate
both sides and eliminate 'rem' completely.
This should fix:
https://llvm.org/PR52102
The same optimization for 'div' is planned as a follow-up patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115173
This may not be obvious, but Alive2 agrees:
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/Ld9qNT
If the mul has "nsw", then -1 * INT_MIN is poison, so the
negate can also have "nsw" because 0 - INT_MIN is poison.
If the mul has "nuw", then that means the "OtherOp" can only
be 0 or 1 (anything else multiplied by 0xfff... would wrap).
So the replacement negate must be "nsw" because it is either
"0-0" or "0-1".
This is another regression noticed with a planned follow-up
to D111410.
Stop using APInt constructors and methods that were soft-deprecated in
D109483. This fixes all the uses I found in llvm, except for the APInt
unit tests which should still test the deprecated methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110807
InstCombine's worklist can be re-used by other passes like
VectorCombine. Move it to llvm/Transform/Utils and rename it to
InstructionWorklist.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110181
We already have pow(x, y) * pow(x, z) -> pow(x, y + z) transformation, but we are missing same transformation for powi (power is integer).
Requires reassoc.
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109954
InstCombine didn't perform (sext bool X) * (sext bool X) --> zext (and X, X) which can result in just (zext X). The patch adds regression tests to check this transformation and adds a check for equality of mul's operands for that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104193
InstCombine didn't perform (sext bool X) * (sext bool X) --> zext (and X, X) which can result in just (zext X). The patch adds regression tests to check this transformation and adds a check for equality of mul's operands for that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104193
This can be seen as a follow up to commit 0ee439b705,
that changed the second argument of __powidf2, __powisf2 and
__powitf2 in compiler-rt from si_int to int. That was to align with
how those runtimes are defined in libgcc.
One thing that seem to have been missing in that patch was to make
sure that the rest of LLVM also handle that the argument now depends
on the size of int (not using the si_int machine mode for 32-bit).
When using __builtin_powi for a target with 16-bit int clang crashed.
And when emitting libcalls to those rtlib functions, typically when
lowering @llvm.powi), the backend would always prepare the exponent
argument as an i32 which caused miscompiles when the rtlib was
compiled with 16-bit int.
The solution used here is to use an overloaded type for the second
argument in @llvm.powi. This way clang can use the "correct" type
when lowering __builtin_powi, and then later when emitting the libcall
it is assumed that the type used in @llvm.powi matches the rtlib
function.
One thing that needed some extra attention was that when vectorizing
calls several passes did not support that several arguments could
be overloaded in the intrinsics. This patch allows overload of a
scalar operand by adding hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd, with
an entry for powi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439
InstCombine didn't perform the transformations when fmul's operands were
the same instruction because it required to have one use for each of them
which is false in the case. This patch fixes this + adds tests for them
and introduces a new function isOnlyUserOfAnyOperand to check these cases
in a single place.
This patch is a result of discussion in D102574.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102698
This extends b40fde062c for the especially non-standard
powi pattern. We want to avoid being completely wrong
on the negation-of-int-min corner case, so I'm adding
an extra FMF check for 'ninf' assuming that gives us
the flexibility to handle that possibility.
https://llvm.org/PR49147
Follow-up to:
D96648 / b40fde062
...for the special-case base calls.
From the earlier commit:
This is unusual in the general (non-reciprocal) case because we need
an extra instruction, but that should be better for general FP
reassociation and codegen. We conservatively check for "arcp" FMF
here as we do with existing fdiv folds, but it is not strictly
necessary to have that.
This is unusual in the general (non-reciprocal) case because we need
an extra instruction, but that should be better for general FP
reassociation and codegen. We conservatively check for "arcp" FMF
here as we do with existing fdiv folds, but it is not strictly
necessary to have that.
This is part of solving:
https://llvm.org/PR49147
(The powi variant potentially has a different constraint.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96648
This exposes the helper for other power-of-2 instcombine folds that I'm intending to add vector support to.
The helper only operated on power-of-2 constants so getExactLogBase2 is a more accurate name.
These transforms will now be performed irrespective of the number of uses for the expression "1.0/sqrt(X)":
1.0/sqrt(X) * X => X/sqrt(X)
X * 1.0/sqrt(X) => X/sqrt(X)
We already handle more general cases, and we are intentionally not creating extra (and likely expensive)
fdiv ops in IR. This pattern is the exception to the rule because we always expect the Backend to reduce
X/sqrt(X) to sqrt(X), if it has the necessary (reassoc) fast-math-flags.
Ref: DagCombiner optimizes the X/sqrt(X) to sqrt(X).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86726
These are not correctness issues.
In visitUDivOperand(), if the (potential) divisor is undef, then udiv is
already UB, so it is not incorrect to keep undef as shift amount.
But, that is suboptimal.
We could instead simply drop that select, picking the other operand.
Afterwards, getLogBase2() could assert that there is no undef in divisor.
While x*undef is undef, shift-by-undef is poison,
which we must avoid introducing.
Also log2(iN undef) is *NOT* iN undef, because log2(iN undef) u< N.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47133
Negator knows how to do this, but the one-use reasoning is getting
a bit muddy here, we don't really want to increase instruction count,
so we need to both lie that "IsNegation" and have an one-use check
on the outermost LHS value.
Multiplication is commutative, and either of operands can be negative,
so if the RHS is a negated power-of-two, we should try to make it
true power-of-two (which will allow us to turn it into a left-shift),
by trying to sink the negation down into LHS op.
But, we shouldn't re-invent the logic for sinking negation,
let's just use Negator for that.
Tests and original patch by: Simon Pilgrim @RKSimon!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85446
For a long time, the InstCombine pass handled target specific
intrinsics. Having target specific code in general passes was noted as
an area for improvement for a long time.
D81728 moves most target specific code out of the InstCombine pass.
Applying the target specific combinations in an extra pass would
probably result in inferior optimizations compared to the current
fixed-point iteration, therefore the InstCombine pass resorts to newly
introduced functions in the TargetTransformInfo when it encounters
unknown intrinsics.
The patch should not have any effect on generated code (under the
assumption that code never uses intrinsics from a foreign target).
This introduces three new functions:
TargetTransformInfo::instCombineIntrinsic
TargetTransformInfo::simplifyDemandedUseBitsIntrinsic
TargetTransformInfo::simplifyDemandedVectorEltsIntrinsic
A few target specific parts are left in the InstCombine folder, where
it makes sense to share code. The largest left-over part in
InstCombineCalls.cpp is the code shared between arm and aarch64.
This allows to move about 3000 lines out from InstCombine to the targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81728
This is the one i'm seeing as missed optimization,
although there are likely other possibilities, as usual.
There are 4 variants of a general sdiv->udiv fold:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/VS6
Name: v0
Pre: C0 >= 0 && C1 >= 0
%r = sdiv i8 C0, C1
=>
%r = udiv i8 C0, C1
Name: v1
Pre: C0 <= 0 && C1 >= 0
%r = sdiv i8 C0, C1
=>
%t0 = udiv i8 -C0, C1
%r = sub i8 0, %t0
Name: v2
Pre: C0 >= 0 && C1 <= 0
%r = sdiv i8 C0, C1
=>
%t0 = udiv i8 C0, -C1
%r = sub i8 0, %t0
Name: v3
Pre: C0 <= 0 && C1 <= 0
%r = sdiv i8 C0, C1
=>
%r = udiv i8 -C0, -C1
If we really don't like sdiv (more than udiv that is),
and are okay with increasing instruction count (2 new negations),
and we ensure that we don't undo the fold,
then we could just implement these..
Similar to rG40fcc42:
The base case only worked because we were relying on a
poison-unsafe select transform; if that is fixed, we
would regress on patterns like this.
The extra use tests show that the select transform can't
be applied consistently. So it may be a regression to have
an extra instruction on 1 test, but that result was not
created safely and does not happen reliably.
The base case only works because we are relying on a
poison-unsafe select transform; if that is fixed, we
would regress on patterns like this.
The extra use tests show that the select transform can't
be applied consistently. So it may be a regression to have
an extra instruction on 1 test, but that result was not
created safely and does not happen reliably.
fabs(X) * fabs(Y) --> fabs(X * Y)
fabs(X) / fabs(Y) --> fabs(X / Y)
If both operands of fmul/fdiv are positive, then the result must be positive.
There's a NAN corner-case that prevents removing the more specific fold just
above this one:
fabs(X) * fabs(X) -> X * X
That fold works even with NAN because the sign-bit result of the multiply is
not specified if X is NAN.
We can't remove that and use the more general fold that is proposed here
because once we convert to this:
fabs (X * X)
...it is not legal to simplify the 'fabs' out of that expression when X is NAN.
That's because fabs() guarantees that the sign-bit is always cleared - even
for NAN values.
So this patch has the potential to lose information, but it seems unlikely if
we do the more specific fold ahead of this one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82277
Summary:
getLogBase2 tries to iterate over the number of vector elements. Since
the number of elements of a scalable vector is unknown at compile time,
we must return null if the input type is scalable.
Identified by test LLVM.Transforms/InstCombine::nsw.ll
Reviewers: efriedma, fpetrogalli, kmclaughlin, spatel
Reviewed By: efriedma, fpetrogalli
Subscribers: tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79197
Summary:
Remove usages of asserting vector getters in Type in preparation for the
VectorType refactor. The existence of these functions complicates the
refactor while adding little value.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, rriddle, efriedma
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77263
Use UnaryOperator::CreateFNeg instead.
Summary:
With the introduction of the native fneg instruction, the
fsub -0.0, %x idiom is obsolete. This patch makes LLVM
emit fneg instead of the idiom in all places.
Reviewed By: cameron.mcinally
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75130
Rather than mixing creation of new instructions and in-place
modification here, create a new log2 intrinsic. This should be
NFC apart from worklist order changes.
Adds a replaceOperand() helper, which is like Instruction.setOperand()
but adds the old operand to the worklist. This reduces the amount of
missing or incorrect worklist management.
This only applies the helper to a relatively small subset of
setOperand() calls in InstCombine, namely those of the pattern
`I.setOperand(); return &I;`, where it is most obviously applicable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73803
This renames Worklist.AddDeferred() to Worklist.add() and
Worklist.Add() to Worklist.push(). The intention here is that
Worklist.add() should be the go-to method for explicit worklist
management, while the raw Worklist.push() is mostly for
InstCombine internals. I will then migrate uses of Worklist.push()
to Worklist.add() in followup changes.
As suggested by spatel on D73411 I'm also changing the remaining
method names to lowercase first character, in line with current
coding standards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73745
This is a special case of Z / (X / Y) => (Y * Z) / X, with X = 1.0.
The m_OneUse check is avoided because even in the case of the
multiple uses for 1.0/Y, the number of instructions remain the same
and a division is replaced by a multiplication.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72319
As described here:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44186
The match() code safely allows undef values, but we can't safely
propagate a vector constant that contains an undef to the new
compare instruction.
Reverse the canonicalization of fneg relative to fmul/fdiv. That makes it
easier to implement the transforms (and possibly other fneg transforms) in
1 place because we can always start the pattern match from fneg (either the
legacy binop or the new unop).
There's a secondary practical benefit seen in PR21914 and PR42681:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=21914https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42681
...hoisting fneg rather than sinking seems to play nicer with LICM in IR
(although this change may expose analysis holes in the other direction).
1. The instcombine test changes show the expected neutral IR diffs from
reversing the order.
2. The reassociation tests show that we were missing an optimization
opportunity to fold away fneg-of-fneg. My reading of IEEE-754 says
that all of these transforms are allowed (regardless of binop/unop
fneg version) because:
"For all other operations [besides copy/abs/negate/copysign], this
standard does not specify the sign bit of a NaN result."
In all of these transforms, we always have some other binop
(fadd/fsub/fmul/fdiv), so we are free to flip the sign bit of a
potential intermediate NaN operand.
(If that interpretation is wrong, then we must already have a bug in
the existing transforms?)
3. The clang tests shouldn't exist as-is, but that's effectively a
revert of rL367149 (the test broke with an extension of the
pre-existing fneg canonicalization in rL367146).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65399
llvm-svn: 367447
Summary:
I have stumbled into this by accident while preparing to extend backend `x s% C ==/!= 0` handling.
While we did happen to handle this fold in most of the cases,
the folding is indirect - we fold `x u% y` to `x & (y-1)` (iff `y` is power-of-two),
or first turn `x s% -y` to `x u% y`; that does handle most of the cases.
But we can't turn `x s% INT_MIN` to `x u% -INT_MIN`,
and thus we end up being stuck with `(x s% INT_MIN) == 0`.
There is no such restriction for the more general fold:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/IIeS
To be noted, the fold does not enforce that `y` is a constant,
so it may indeed increase instruction count.
This is consistent with what `x u% y`->`x & (y-1)` already does.
I think it makes sense, it's at most one (simple) extra instruction,
while `rem`ainder is really much more un-simple (and likely **very** costly).
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, nikic, xbolva00, craig.topper
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65046
llvm-svn: 367322
This reverts commit 1383a91689.
sdiv-canonicalize.ll fails after this revision. The fold needs to be
moved outside the branch handling constant operands. However when this
is done there are further test changes, so I'm reverting this in the
meantime.
llvm-svn: 358026
Similar to:
rL358005
Forego folding arbitrary vector constants to fix a possible miscompile bug.
We can enhance the transform if we do want to handle the more complicated
vector case.
llvm-svn: 358013
A more general canonicalization between fdiv and fmul would not
handle this case because that would have to be limited by uses
to prevent 2 values from becoming 3 values:
(x/y) * (x/y) --> (x*x) / (y*y)
(But we probably should still have that limited -- but more general --
canonicalization independently of this change.)
llvm-svn: 357943
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
Summary:
In several places in the code we use the following pattern:
if (hasUnaryFloatFn(&TLI, Ty, LibFunc_tan, LibFunc_tanf, LibFunc_tanl)) {
[...]
Value *Res = emitUnaryFloatFnCall(X, TLI.getName(LibFunc_tan), B, Attrs);
[...]
}
In short, we check if there is a lib-function for a certain type, and then
we _always_ fetch the name of the "double" version of the lib function and
construct a call to the appropriate function, that we just checked exists,
using that "double" name as a basis.
This is of course a problem in cases where the target doesn't support the
"double" version, but e.g. only the "float" version.
In that case TLI.getName(LibFunc_tan) returns "", and
emitUnaryFloatFnCall happily appends an "f" to "", and we erroneously end
up with a call to a function called "f".
To solve this, the above pattern is changed to
if (hasUnaryFloatFn(&TLI, Ty, LibFunc_tan, LibFunc_tanf, LibFunc_tanl)) {
[...]
Value *Res = emitUnaryFloatFnCall(X, &TLI, LibFunc_tan, LibFunc_tanf,
LibFunc_tanl, B, Attrs);
[...]
}
I.e instead of first fetching the name of the "double" version and then
letting emitUnaryFloatFnCall() add the final "f" or "l", we let
emitUnaryFloatFnCall() fetch the right name from TLI.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, bjope, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53370
llvm-svn: 344725
The IRBuilder CreateIntrinsic method wouldn't allow you to specify the
types that you wanted the intrinsic to be mangled with. To fix this
I've:
- Added an ArrayRef<Type *> member to both CreateIntrinsic overloads.
- Used that array to pass into the Intrinsic::getDeclaration call.
- Added a CreateUnaryIntrinsic to replace the most common use of
CreateIntrinsic where the type was auto-deduced from operand 0.
- Added a bunch more unit tests to test Create*Intrinsic calls that
weren't being tested (including the FMF flag that wasn't checked).
This was suggested as part of the AMDGPU specific atomic optimizer
review (https://reviews.llvm.org/D51969).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52087
llvm-svn: 343962
Similar to rL342278:
The test diffs are all cosmetic due to the change in
value naming, but I'm including that to show that the
new code does perform these folds rather than something
else in instcombine.
D52075 should be able to use this code too rather than
duplicating all of the logic.
llvm-svn: 342292
For vectors, getPrimitiveSizeInBits returns the full vector width. This code should using the element size for vectors. This could be fixed by calling getScalarSizeInBits, but its even easier to just get it from the APInt we're checking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51938
llvm-svn: 341971
The actual code seems to be correct, but the comments were misleading.
Patch by Aaron Puchert!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49276
llvm-svn: 337131
This bug was created by rL335258 because we used to always call instsimplify
after trying the associative folds. After that change it became possible
for subsequent folds to encounter unsimplified code (and potentially assert
because of it).
Instead of carrying changed state through instcombine, we can just return
immediately. This allows instsimplify to run, so we can continue assuming
that easy folds have already occurred.
llvm-svn: 336965
Similar to other patches in this series:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL335512https://reviews.llvm.org/rL335527https://reviews.llvm.org/rL335597https://reviews.llvm.org/rL335616
...this is filling a gap in analysis that is exposed by an unrelated select-of-constants transform.
I didn't see a way to unify the sext cases because each div/rem opcode results in a different fold.
Note that in this case, the backend might want to convert the select into math:
Name: sext urem
%e = sext i1 %x to i32
%r = urem i32 %y, %e
=>
%c = icmp eq i32 %y, -1
%z = zext i1 %c to i32
%r = add i32 %z, %y
llvm-svn: 335622
Note: I didn't add a hasOneUse() check because the existing,
related fold doesn't have that check. I suspect that the
improved analysis and codegen make these some of the rare
canonicalization cases where we allow an increase in
instructions.
llvm-svn: 335597
This removes a "UDivFoldAction" in favor of a simple constant
matcher. In theory, the existing code could do more matching,
but I don't see any evidence or need for it. I've left a TODO
about using ValueTracking in case we see any regressions.
llvm-svn: 335545
This is outwardly NFC from what I can tell, but it should be more efficient
to simplify first (despite the name, SimplifyAssociativeOrCommutative does
not actually simplify as InstSimplify does - it creates/morphs instructions).
This should make it easier to refactor duplicated code that runs for all binops.
llvm-svn: 335258
When we optimize select basing on fact that div by 0 is undef
we should not traverse the instruction which are not guaranteed to
transfer execution to next instruction. Guard intrinsic is an example.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47576
llvm-svn: 333864
As noted in the review thread for rL333782, we could have
made a bug harder to hit if we were simplifying instructions
before trying other folds.
The shuffle transform in question isn't ever a simplification;
it's just a canonicalization. So I've renamed that to make that
clearer.
This is NFCI at this point, but I've regenerated the test file
to show the cosmetic value naming difference of using
instcombine's RAUW vs. the builder.
Possible follow-ups:
1. Move reassociation folds after simplifies too.
2. Refactor common code; we shouldn't have so much repetition.
llvm-svn: 333820
This is a follow-up to r331272.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331275
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
The tests marked with 'FIXME' require loosening the check
in SimplifyAssociativeOrCommutative() to optimize completely;
that's still checking isFast() in Instruction::isAssociative().
llvm-svn: 329121
This replaces a large chunk of code that was looking for compound
patterns that include these sub-patterns. Existing tests ensure that
all of the previous examples are still folded as expected.
We still need to loosen the FMF check.
llvm-svn: 328502