Commit Graph

392 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Craig Topper 2fd180bbb9 [IR] Reduce max supported integer from 2^24-1 to 2^23.
SelectionDAG will promote illegal types up to a power of 2 before
splitting down to a legal type. This will create an IntegerType
with a bit width that must be <= MAX_INT_BITS. This places an
effective upper limit on any type of 2^23 so that we don't try
create a 2^24 type.

I considered putting a fatal error somewhere in the path from
TargetLowering::getTypeConversion down to IntegerType::get, but
limiting the type in IR seemed better.

This breaks backwards compatibility with IR that is using a really
large type. I suspect such IR is going to be very rare due to the
the compile time costs such a type likely incurs.

Prevents the ICE in PR51829.

Reviewed By: efriedma, aaron.ballman

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109721
2021-09-14 07:52:10 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 2413d6063b [docs] Mention that the legacy PM is deprecated and will be removed after 14
Per https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-August/152305.html.

Reviewed By: MaskRay, fhahn

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109080
2021-09-01 23:31:48 -07:00
Wang, Pengfei 6f7f5b54c8 [X86] AVX512FP16 instructions enabling 1/6
1. Enable FP16 type support and basic declarations used by following patches.
2. Enable new instructions VMOVW and VMOVSH.

Ref.: https://software.intel.com/content/www/us/en/develop/download/intel-avx512-fp16-architecture-specification.html

Reviewed By: LuoYuanke

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105263
2021-08-10 12:46:01 +08:00
Tom Stellard 08c766a731 Bump the trunk major version to 14
and clear the release notes.
2021-07-27 21:58:25 -07:00
Lang Hames 3c7fd8df3b [docs] Update release notes with all LLVM-C API changes
Patch by Mats Larsen. Thanks Mats!

Reviewed By: lhames

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106764
2021-07-27 17:33:20 +10:00
Stefan Gränitz e814b28eeb [docs] Update release notes to mention lli JIT engine switch 2021-07-25 23:58:43 +02:00
Fangrui Song cae3b831f4 [llvm-nm] Switch command line parsing from llvm::cl to OptTable
Part of https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-July/151622.html
"Binary utilities: switch command line parsing from llvm::cl to OptTable"

Users should generally observe no difference as long as they only use intended
option forms. Behavior changes:

* `-t=d` is removed. Use `-t d` instead.
* `--demangle=0` cannot be used. Omit the option or use `--no-demangle` instead.
* `--help-list` is removed. This is a `cl::` specific option.

Note:

* `-t` diagnostic gets improved.
* This patch avoids cl::opt collision if we decide to support multiplexing for binary utilities
* One-dash long options are still supported.
* The `-s` collision (`-s segment section` for Mach-O) is unfortunate. `-s` means `--print-armap` in GNU nm.
* This patch removes the last `cl::multi_val` use case from the `llvm/lib/Support/CommandLine.cpp` library

`-M` (`--print-armap`), `-U` (`--defined-only`), and `-W` (`--no-weak`)
are now deprecated. They could conflict with future GNU nm options.
(--print-armap has an existing alias -s, so GNU will unlikely add a new one.
--no-weak (not in GNU nm) is rarely used anyway.)

`--just-symbol-name` is now deprecated in favor of
`--format=just-symbols` and `-j`.

Reviewed By: jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105330
2021-07-07 13:34:33 -07:00
Fangrui Song d4dcb55c70 [llvm-readobj] Make -s and -t match llvm-readelf
llvm-readobj is an internal testing tool for binary formats. Its output and
command line options do not need to be stable. It isn't supposed to be part of a
build process.

llvm-readelf was created as a user-facing utility and its interface intends to
be compatible with GNU readelf (unless there are good reasons not to).

The two tools have mostly compatible options. -s and -t are noticeable
exceptions due to history. I think the cost of keeping the inconsistency
overweighs the little history-compatible benefit and hinders transition from
cl::opt to OptTable, so let's change it.

Reviewed By: jhenderson

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105055
2021-06-29 11:56:26 -07:00
Lucas Prates 5cf27532fa [NFC] Fixing short title underline in release notes file 2021-06-28 13:55:00 +01:00
Lucas Prates 88b1135e72 [Aarch64] Adding support for Armv9-A Realm Management Extension
This adds support for Armv9-A's Realm Management Extension, including
three new system registers - MFAR_EL3, GPCCR_EL3 and GPTBR_EL3 - and
four new TLBI instructions.

The reference for the Realm Management Extension can be found at: https://developer.arm.com/documentation/ddi0615/aa.

Based on patches by Victor Campos.

Reviewed By: dmgreen

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104773
2021-06-28 13:45:22 +01:00
Jeroen Dobbelaere bb8ce25e88 Intrinsic::getName: require a Module argument
Ensure that we provide a `Module` when checking if a rename of an intrinsic is necessary.

This fixes the issue that was detected by https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=32288
(as mentioned by @fhahn), after committing D91250.

Note that the `LLVMIntrinsicCopyOverloadedName` is being deprecated in favor of `LLVMIntrinsicCopyOverloadedName2`.

Reviewed By: nikic

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99173
2021-06-14 14:52:29 +02:00
Arthur Eubanks 47211fa889 Revert "[TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry"
Needs to be discussed more.

This reverts commit 255a5c1baa6020c009934b4fa342f9f6dbbcc46
This reverts commit df2056ff3730316f376f29d9986c9913b95ceb1
This reverts commit faff79b7ca144e505da6bc74aa2b2f7cffbbf23
This reverts commit d2a9020785c6e02afebc876aa2778fa64c5cafd
2021-06-07 16:07:44 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 9255a5c1ba [TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry
Parameter attributes are considered part of the function [1], and like
mismatched calling conventions [2], we can't have the verifier check for
mismatched parameter attributes.

Issues can be diagnosed with D103412.

[1] https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#parameter-attributes
[2] https://llvm.org/docs/FAQ.html#why-does-instcombine-simplifycfg-turn-a-call-to-a-function-with-a-mismatched-calling-convention-into-unreachable-why-not-make-the-verifier-reject-it

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101806
2021-06-03 15:52:01 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 71cca4f728 Revert "[TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry"
This reverts commit 1c7f32334d.

Some code still needs to properly set parameter ABI attributes, see
D101806.
2021-05-29 23:08:15 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks b9d25cc921 [docs] Fix broken docs after 1c7f32334 2021-05-18 14:38:12 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 1c7f32334d [TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry
Parameter attributes are considered part of the function [1], and like
mismatched calling conventions [2], we can't have the verifier check for
mismatched parameter attributes.

This is a reland after fixing MSan issues in D102667.

[1] https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#parameter-attributes
[2] https://llvm.org/docs/FAQ.html#why-does-instcombine-simplifycfg-turn-a-call-to-a-function-with-a-mismatched-calling-convention-into-unreachable-why-not-make-the-verifier-reject-it

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101806
2021-05-18 14:30:22 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 341902672c Revert "[TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry"
This reverts commit 16748bd2fb.

Causes https://crbug.com/1209013
2021-05-16 22:02:10 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 2155dc51d7 [IR] Introduce the opaque pointer type
The opaque pointer type is essentially just a normal pointer type with a
null pointee type.

This also adds support for the opaque pointer type to the bitcode
reader/writer, as well as to textual IR.

To avoid confusion with existing pointer types, we disallow creating a
pointer to an opaque pointer.

Opaque pointer types should not be widely used at this point since many
parts of LLVM still do not support them. The next steps are to add some
very simple use cases of opaque pointers to make sure they work, then
start pretending that all pointers are opaque pointers and see what
breaks.

https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-May/150359.html

Reviewed By: dblaikie, dexonsmith, pcc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101704
2021-05-13 15:22:27 -07:00
Krzysztof Parzyszek 2b20dee59b Fix section title underlining in the release notes 2021-05-13 08:37:06 -05:00
Krzysztof Parzyszek 4dea348731 Add entry about Hexagon V68 support to the release notes 2021-05-13 08:28:55 -05:00
Shoaib Meenai 56f7e5a822 [cmake] Add support for multiple distributions
LLVM's build system contains support for configuring a distribution, but
it can often be useful to be able to configure multiple distributions
(e.g. if you want separate distributions for the tools and the
libraries). Add this support to the build system, along with
documentation and usage examples.

Reviewed By: phosek

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89177
2021-05-12 11:13:18 -07:00
Arthur Eubanks 16748bd2fb [TargetLowering] Only inspect attributes in the arguments for ArgListEntry
Parameter attributes are considered part of the function [1], and like
mismatched calling conventions [2], we can't have the verifier check for
mismatched parameter attributes.

[1] https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#parameter-attributes
[2] https://llvm.org/docs/FAQ.html#why-does-instcombine-simplifycfg-turn-a-call-to-a-function-with-a-mismatched-calling-convention-into-unreachable-why-not-make-the-verifier-reject-it

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101806
2021-05-10 12:35:11 -07:00
Fangrui Song e510860656 [llvm-objdump] Add -M {att,intel} & deprecate --x86-asm-syntax={att,intel}
The internal `cl::opt` option --x86-asm-syntax sets the AsmParser and AsmWriter
dialect. The option is used by llc and llvm-mc tests to set the AsmWriter dialect.

This patch adds -M {att,intel} as GNU objdump compatible aliases (PR43413).

Note: the dialect is initialized when the MCAsmInfo is constructed.
`MCInstPrinter::applyTargetSpecificCLOption` is called too late and its MCAsmInfo
reference is const, so changing the `cl::opt` in
`MCInstPrinter::applyTargetSpecificCLOption` is not an option, at least without
large amount of refactoring.

Reviewed By: hoy, jhenderson, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101695
2021-05-05 00:20:41 -07:00
Nikita Popov 665065821e [FastISel] Remove kill tracking
This is a followup to D98145: As far as I know, tracking of kill
flags in FastISel is just a compile-time optimization. However,
I'm not actually seeing any compile-time regression when removing
the tracking. This probably used to be more important in the past,
before FastRA was switched to allocate instructions in reverse
order, which means that it discovers kills as a matter of course.

As such, the kill tracking doesn't really seem to serve a purpose
anymore, and just adds additional complexity and potential for
errors. This patch removes it entirely. The primary changes are
dropping the hasTrivialKill() method and removing the kill
arguments from the emitFast methods. The rest is mechanical fixup.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98294
2021-04-03 15:50:13 +02:00
Matt Arsenault 9a0c9402fa Reapply "OpaquePtr: Turn inalloca into a type attribute"
This reverts commit 07e46367ba.
2021-03-29 08:55:30 -04:00
Oliver Stannard 07e46367ba Revert "Reapply "OpaquePtr: Turn inalloca into a type attribute""
Reverting because test 'Bindings/Go/go.test' is failing on most
buildbots.

This reverts commit fc9df30991.
2021-03-29 11:32:22 +01:00
Matt Arsenault fc9df30991 Reapply "OpaquePtr: Turn inalloca into a type attribute"
This reverts commit 20d5c42e0e.
2021-03-28 13:35:21 -04:00
Nico Weber 20d5c42e0e Revert "OpaquePtr: Turn inalloca into a type attribute"
This reverts commit 4fefed6563.
Broke check-clang everywhere.
2021-03-28 13:02:52 -04:00
Matt Arsenault 4fefed6563 OpaquePtr: Turn inalloca into a type attribute
I think byval/sret and the others are close to being able to rip out
the code to support the missing type case. A lot of this code is
shared with inalloca, so catch this up to the others so that can
happen.
2021-03-28 11:12:23 -04:00
Andrew Savonichev d791695cb5 [MCA] Add support for in-order CPUs
This patch adds a pipeline to support in-order CPUs such as ARM
Cortex-A55.

In-order pipeline implements a simplified version of Dispatch,
Scheduler and Execute stages as a single stage. Entry and Retire
stages are common for both in-order and out-of-order pipelines.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94928
2021-03-04 14:08:19 +03:00
Wang, Pengfei e7e67c930a Add Windows ehcont section support (/guard:ehcont).
Add option /guard:ehcont

Reviewed By: rnk

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96709
2021-03-04 11:47:29 +08:00
Fangrui Song c465429f28 [llvm-objcopy] Delete --build-id-link-{dir,input,output}
The few options are niche. They solved a problem which was traditionally solved
with more shell commands (`llvm-readelf -n` fetches the Build ID. Then
`ln` is used to hard link the file to a directory derived from the Build ID.)

Due to limitation, they are no longer used by Fuchsia and they don't appear to
be used elsewhere (checked with Google Search and Debian Code Search). So delete
them without a transition period.

Announcement: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-February/148446.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96310
2021-02-15 11:17:32 -08:00
Tom Stellard 5369517d20 Bump the trunk major version to 13
and clear the release notes.
2021-01-26 19:37:55 -08:00
Wolfgang Pieb d38be2ba0e [llvm-mca] Initial implementation of serialization using JSON. The views
implemented at this time are Summary, Timeline, ResourcePressure and InstructionInfo.
Use --json on the command line to obtain JSON output.
2021-01-21 15:15:54 -08:00
Fangrui Song 7afdc89c20 [sanitizer] Define SANITIZER_GLIBC to refine SANITIZER_LINUX feature detection and support musl
Several `#if SANITIZER_LINUX && !SANITIZER_ANDROID` guards are replaced
with the more appropriate `#if SANITIZER_GLIBC` (the headers are glibc
extensions, not specific to Linux (i.e. if we ever support GNU/kFreeBSD
or Hurd, the guards may automatically work)).

Several `#if SANITIZER_LINUX && !SANITIZER_ANDROID` guards are refined
with `#if SANITIZER_GLIBC` (the definitions are available on Linux glibc,
but may not be available on other libc (e.g. musl) implementations).

This patch makes `ninja asan cfi lsan msan stats tsan ubsan xray` build on a musl based Linux distribution (apk install musl-libintl)
Notes about disabled interceptors for musl:

* `SANITIZER_INTERCEPT_GLOB`: musl does not implement `GLOB_ALTDIRFUNC` (GNU extension)
* Some ioctl structs and functions operating on them.
* `SANITIZER_INTERCEPT___PRINTF_CHK`: `_FORTIFY_SOURCE` functions are GNU extension
* `SANITIZER_INTERCEPT___STRNDUP`: `dlsym(RTLD_NEXT, "__strndup")` errors so a diagnostic is formed. The diagnostic uses `write` which hasn't been intercepted => SIGSEGV
* `SANITIZER_INTERCEPT_*64`: the `_LARGEFILE64_SOURCE` functions are glibc specific. musl does something like `#define pread64 pread`
* Disabled `msg_iovlen msg_controllen cmsg_len` checks: musl is conforming while many implementations (Linux/FreeBSD/NetBSD/Solaris) are non-conforming. Since we pick the glibc definition, exclude the checks for musl (incompatible sizes but compatible offsets)

Pass through LIBCXX_HAS_MUSL_LIBC to make check-msan/check-tsan able to build libc++ (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=48618).

Many sanitizer features are available now.

```
% ninja check-asan
(known issues:
* ASAN_OPTIONS=fast_unwind_on_malloc=0 odr-violations hangs
)
...
Testing Time: 53.69s
  Unsupported      : 185
  Passed           : 512
  Expectedly Failed:   1
  Failed           :  12

% ninja check-ubsan check-ubsan-minimal check-memprof # all passed

% ninja check-cfi
( all cross-dso/)
...
Testing Time: 8.68s
  Unsupported      : 264
  Passed           :  80
  Expectedly Failed:   8
  Failed           :  32

% ninja check-lsan
(With GetTls (D93972), 10 failures)
Testing Time: 4.09s
  Unsupported:  7
  Passed     : 65
  Failed     : 22

% ninja check-msan
(Many are due to functions not marked unsupported.)
Testing Time: 23.09s
  Unsupported      :   6
  Passed           : 764
  Expectedly Failed:   2
  Failed           :  58

% ninja check-tsan
Testing Time: 23.21s
  Unsupported      :  86
  Passed           : 295
  Expectedly Failed:   1
  Failed           :  25
```

Used `ASAN_OPTIONS=verbosity=2` to verify there is no unneeded interceptor.

Partly based on Jari Ronkainen's https://reviews.llvm.org/D63785#1921014

Note: we need to place `_FILE_OFFSET_BITS` above `#include "sanitizer_platform.h"` to avoid `#define __USE_FILE_OFFSET64 1` in 32-bit ARM `features.h`

Reviewed By: vitalybuka

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93848
2021-01-06 10:55:40 -08:00
Chih-Ping Chen 975b64b293 [docs] Release notes for IsDecl in DIModule.
Please see https://reviews.llvm.org/D93462 for the actual code change.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93558
2021-01-04 07:03:34 -05:00
Hans Wennborg 3d8b7465c3 Test commit 2020-12-07 17:27:03 +01:00
serge-sans-paille 95537f4508 llvmbuildectomy - compatibility with ocaml bindings
Use exact component name in add_ocaml_library.
Make expand_topologically compatible with new architecture.
Fix quoting in is_llvm_target_library.
Fix LLVMipo component name.
Write release note.
2020-11-13 14:35:52 +01:00
Caroline Concatto 71038788ce Revert "[AArch64][AsmParser] Remove 'x31' alias for 'sp/xzr' register."
This reverts commit 8b281bfaf3.
2020-11-02 08:15:50 +00:00
Caroline Concatto 8b281bfaf3 [AArch64][AsmParser] Remove 'x31' alias for 'sp/xzr' register.
Only the aliases 'xzr' and 'sp' exist for the physical register x31.
The reason for wanting to remove the alias 'x31' is because it allows users
to write invalid asm that is not accepted by the GNU assembler.

Is there any objection to removing this alias? Or do we want to keep
this for compatibility with existing code that uses w31/x31?

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90153
2020-11-02 07:57:05 +00:00
Liu, Chen3 756f597841 [X86] Support Intel avxvnni
This patch mainly made the following changes:

1. Support AVX-VNNI instructions;
2. Introduce ExplicitVEXPrefix flag so that vpdpbusd/vpdpbusds/vpdpbusds/vpdpbusds instructions only use vex-encoding when user explicity add {vex} prefix.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89105
2020-10-31 12:39:51 +08:00
Benjamin Kramer 39a0d6889d [X86] Add a stub for Intel's alderlake.
No scheduling, no autodetection.
2020-10-24 19:01:22 +02:00
Tianqing Wang be39a6fe6f [X86] Add User Interrupts(UINTR) instructions
For more details about these instructions, please refer to the latest
ISE document:
https://software.intel.com/en-us/download/intel-architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.

Reviewed By: craig.topper

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89301
2020-10-22 17:33:07 +08:00
Wang, Pengfei e32036b973 [X86] Add clang release notes for HRESET and minor change for llvm release notes. (NFC) 2020-10-21 15:59:42 +08:00
Matt Arsenault 0a7cd99a70 Reapply "OpaquePtr: Add type to sret attribute"
This reverts commit eb9f7c28e5.

Previously this was incorrectly handling linking of the contained
type, so this merges the fixes from D88973.
2020-10-16 11:05:02 -04:00
Wang, Pengfei 412cdcf2ed [X86] Add HRESET instruction.
For more details about these instructions, please refer to the latest ISE document: https://software.intel.com/en-us/download/intel-architecture-instruction-set-extensions-programming-reference.

Reviewed By: craig.topper

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89102
2020-10-13 08:47:26 +08:00
Fangrui Song 012dd42e02 [X86] Support -march=x86-64-v[234]
PR47686. These micro-architecture levels are defined in the x86-64 psABI:

https://gitlab.com/x86-psABIs/x86-64-ABI/-/commit/77566eb03bc6a326811cb7e9

GCC 11 will support these levels.

Note, -mtune=x86-64-v[234] are invalid and __builtin_cpu_is cannot be
used on them.

Reviewed By: craig.topper, RKSimon

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89197
2020-10-12 10:29:46 -07:00
Amara Emerson 322d0afd87 [llvm][mlir] Promote the experimental reduction intrinsics to be first class intrinsics.
This change renames the intrinsics to not have "experimental" in the name.

The autoupgrader will handle legacy intrinsics.

Relevant ML thread: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/140729.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88787
2020-10-07 10:36:44 -07:00
Tres Popp eb9f7c28e5 Revert "OpaquePtr: Add type to sret attribute"
This reverts commit 55c4ff91bd.

Issues were introduced as discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D88241
where this change made previous bugs in the linker and BitCodeWriter
visible.
2020-09-29 10:31:04 +02:00
Matt Arsenault 55c4ff91bd OpaquePtr: Add type to sret attribute
Make the corresponding change that was made for byval in
b7141207a4. Like byval, this requires a
bulk update of the test IR tests to include the type before this can
be mandatory.
2020-09-25 14:07:30 -04:00
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos 66310aafa0 fix typos; improve a couple of descriptions;
add release note
2020-09-08 15:48:18 -04:00
Arthur Eubanks 96f0b57568 [Bindings] Add LLVMAddInstructionSimplifyPass
Reviewed By: sroland

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86764
2020-09-01 12:38:49 -07:00
Hans Wennborg 40fed00486 First commit on the release/11.x branch. 2020-09-01 11:44:02 -07:00
JF Bastien 82d29b397b Add an unsigned shift base sanitizer
It's not undefined behavior for an unsigned left shift to overflow (i.e. to
shift bits out), but it has been the source of bugs and exploits in certain
codebases in the past. As we do in other parts of UBSan, this patch adds a
dynamic checker which acts beyond UBSan and checks other sources of errors. The
option is enabled as part of -fsanitize=integer.

The flag is named: -fsanitize=unsigned-shift-base
This matches shift-base and shift-exponent flags.

<rdar://problem/46129047>

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86000
2020-08-27 19:50:10 -07:00
Craig Topper 2d13693bfc [X86] Update release notes for -mtune support. 2020-08-26 16:16:56 -07:00
Craig Topper 09288bcbf5 [X86] Add assembler support for .d32 and .d8 mnemonic suffixes to control displacement size.
This is an older syntax than the {disp32} and {disp8} pseudo
prefixes that were added a few weeks ago. We can reuse most of
the support for that to support .d32 and .d8 as well.
2020-08-26 10:45:50 -07:00
Craig Topper 01eb1233db [X86] Mention -march=sapphirerapids in the release notes.
This was just added in e02d081f2b.
2020-08-25 11:57:34 -07:00
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos 196e6f9f18 Replace TableGen range piece punctuator with '...'
The TableGen range piece punctuator is currently '-' (e.g., {0-9}),
which interacts oddly with the fact that an integer literal's sign
is part of the literal. This patch replaces the '-' with the new
punctuator '...'. The '-' punctuator is deprecated.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85585

Change-Id: I3d53d14e23f878b142d8f84590dd465a0fb6c09c
2020-08-21 23:33:57 +02:00
Craig Topper 68382d5852 [X86][docs] Add mention of removal of 'mpx' backend feature to the release notes.
I removed the feature from X86.td in ebe5f17f9c
2020-07-23 08:25:34 -07:00
Matt Arsenault 5e999cbe8d IR: Define byref parameter attribute
This allows tracking the in-memory type of a pointer argument to a
function for ABI purposes. This is essentially a stripped down version
of byval to remove some of the stack-copy implications in its
definition.

This includes the base IR changes, and some tests for places where it
should be treated similarly to byval. Codegen support will be in a
future patch.

My original attempt at solving some of these problems was to repurpose
byval with a different address space from the stack. However, it is
technically permitted for the callee to introduce a write to the
argument, although nothing does this in reality. There is also talk of
removing and replacing the byval attribute, so a new attribute would
need to take its place anyway.

This is intended avoid some optimization issues with the current
handling of aggregate arguments, as well as fixes inflexibilty in how
frontends can specify the kernel ABI. The most honest representation
of the amdgpu_kernel convention is to expose all kernel arguments as
loads from constant memory. Today, these are raw, SSA Argument values
and codegen is responsible for turning these into loads.

Background:

There currently isn't a satisfactory way to represent how arguments
for the amdgpu_kernel calling convention are passed. In reality,
arguments are passed in a single, flat, constant memory buffer
implicitly passed to the function. It is also illegal to call this
function in the IR, and this is only ever invoked by a driver of some
kind.

It does not make sense to have a stack passed parameter in this
context as is implied by byval. It is never valid to write to the
kernel arguments, as this would corrupt the inputs seen by other
dispatches of the kernel. These argumets are also not in the same
address space as the stack, so a copy is needed to an alloca. From a
source C-like language, the kernel parameters are invisible.
Semantically, a copy is always required from the constant argument
memory to a mutable variable.

The current clang calling convention lowering emits raw values,
including aggregates into the function argument list, since using
byval would not make sense. This has some unfortunate consequences for
the optimizer. In the aggregate case, we end up with an aggregate
store to alloca, which both SROA and instcombine turn into a store of
each aggregate field. The optimizer never pieces this back together to
see that this is really just a copy from constant memory, so we end up
stuck with expensive stack usage.

This also means the backend dictates the alignment of arguments, and
arbitrarily picks the LLVM IR ABI type alignment. By allowing an
explicit alignment, frontends can make better decisions. For example,
there's real no advantage to an aligment higher than 4, so a frontend
could choose to compact the argument layout. Similarly, there is a
high penalty to using an alignment lower than 4, so a frontend could
opt into more padding for small arguments.

Another design consideration is when it is appropriate to expose the
fact that these arguments are all really passed in adjacent
memory. Currently we have a late IR optimization pass in codegen to
rewrite the kernel argument values into explicit loads to enable
vectorization. In most programs, unrelated argument loads can be
merged together. However, exposing this property directly from the
frontend has some disadvantages. We still need a way to track the
original argument sizes and alignments to report to the driver. I find
using some side-channel, metadata mechanism to track this
unappealing. If the kernel arguments were exposed as a single buffer
to begin with, alias analysis would be unaware that the padding bits
betewen arguments are meaningless. Another family of problems is there
are still some gaps in replacing all of the available parameter
attributes with metadata equivalents once lowered to loads.

The immediate plan is to start using this new attribute to handle all
aggregate argumets for kernels. Long term, it makes sense to migrate
all kernel arguments, including scalars, to be passed indirectly in
the same manner.

Additional context is in D79744.
2020-07-20 10:23:09 -04:00
Elvina Yakubova df952cb914 [llvm-readobj] Print error when executed with no input files
This patch changes llvm-readelf (and llvm-readobj for consistency)
behavior to print an error when executed with no input files.

Reading from stdin can be achieved via a '-' for the input
object.

Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46400

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83704

Reviewed by: jhenderson, MaskRay, sbc, jyknight
2020-07-20 10:39:05 +01:00
Jinsong Ji 971dd3f150 [docs][lldb] Fix lldb item in releasenotes
Reviewed By: JDevlieghere

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83962
2020-07-16 17:07:53 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 7ab7b979d2 Bump the trunk major version to 12
and clear the release notes.
2020-07-15 12:05:05 +02:00
Peter Collingbourne bd7defeb94 llvm-nm: Implement --special-syms.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82251
2020-06-22 13:05:47 -07:00
Dan Gohman 6604295959 [WebAssembly] WebAssembly doesn't support "protected" visibility
Implement the `hasProtectedVisibility()` hook to indicate that, like
Darwin, WebAssembly doesn't support "protected" visibility.

On ELF, "protected" visibility is intended to be an optimization, however
in practice it often [isn't], and ELF documentation generally ranges from
[not mentioning it at all] to [strongly discouraging its use].

[isn't]: https://www.airs.com/blog/archives/307
[not mentioning it at all]: https://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility
[strongly discouraging its use]: https://www.akkadia.org/drepper/dsohowto.pdf

While here, also mention the new Reactor support in the release notes.
2020-06-12 19:52:35 -07:00
Nick Desaulniers 8eda71616f [Clang][A32/T32][Linux] -O1 implies -fomit-frame-pointer
Summary:
An upgrade of LLVM for CrOS [0] containing [1] triggered a bunch of
errors related to writing to reserved registers for a Linux kernel's
arm64 compat vdso (which is a aarch32 image).

After a discussion on LKML [2], it was determined that
-f{no-}omit-frame-pointer was not being specified. Comparing GCC and
Clang [3], it becomes apparent that GCC defaults to omitting the frame
pointer implicitly when optimizations are enabled, and Clang does not.
ie. setting -O1 (or above) implies -fomit-frame-pointer. Clang was
defaulting to -fno-omit-frame-pointer implicitly unless -fomit-frame-pointer
was set explicitly.

Why this becomes a problem is that the Linux kernel's arm64 compat vdso
contains code that uses r7. r7 is used sometimes for the frame pointer
(for example, when targeting thumb (-mthumb)). See useR7AsFramePointer()
in llvm/llvm-project/llvm/lib/Target/ARM/ARMSubtarget.h. This is mostly
for legacy/compatibility reasons, and the 2019 Q4 revision of the ARM
AAPCS looks to standardize r11 as the frame pointer for aarch32, though
this is not yet implemented in LLVM.

Users that are reliant on the implicit value if unspecified when
optimizations are enabled should explicitly choose -fomit-frame-pointer
(new behavior) or -fno-omit-frame-pointer (old behavior).

[0] https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1084372
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/D76848
[2] https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/20200526173117.155339-1-ndesaulniers@google.com/
[3] https://godbolt.org/z/0oY39t

Reviewers: kristof.beyls, psmith, danalbert, srhines, MaskRay, ostannard, efriedma

Reviewed By: psmith, danalbert, srhines, MaskRay, efriedma

Subscribers: efriedma, olista01, MaskRay, vhscampos, cfe-commits, llvm-commits, manojgupta, llozano, glider, hctim, eugenis, pcc, peter.smith, srhines

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80828
2020-06-02 15:54:14 -07:00
Sourabh Singh Tomar c1d5b831b1 [docs] Release notes for DIModule metadata
Updated the release notes for the changes in the DIModule metadata.

Reviewed By: aprantl

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80614
2020-05-28 10:17:40 +05:30
Michal Paszkowski 335de55fa3 Revert "Added a new IRCanonicalizer pass."
This reverts commit 14d358537f.
2020-05-23 13:51:43 +02:00
Michal Paszkowski 14d358537f Added a new IRCanonicalizer pass.
Summary:
Added a new IRCanonicalizer pass which aims to transform LLVM modules into
a canonical form by reordering and renaming instructions while preserving the
same semantics. The canonicalizer makes it easier to spot semantic differences
when diffing two modules which have undergone different passes.

Presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c9WMijSOEUg

Reviewed by: plotfi

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66029
2020-05-23 12:45:53 +02:00
Eli Friedman f26bdb539e Make Value::getPointerAlignment() return an Align, not a MaybeAlign.
If we don't know anything about the alignment of a pointer, Align(1) is
still correct: all pointers are at least 1-byte aligned.

Included in this patch is a bugfix for an issue discovered during this
cleanup: pointers with "dereferenceable" attributes/metadata were
assumed to be aligned according to the type of the pointer.  This
wasn't intentional, as far as I can tell, so Loads.cpp was fixed to
stop making this assumption. Frontends may need to be updated.  I
updated clang's handling of C++ references, and added a release note for
this.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80072
2020-05-20 16:37:20 -07:00
Mikhail Maltsev 089fbe6919 [Docs] Fixed formatting in release notes, NFC 2020-04-22 18:25:22 +01:00
Mikhail Maltsev d7ab9e7c9b [ARM] Release notes for the Custom Datapath Extension (CDE)
Summary:
This change mentions CDE assembly in the LLVM release notes and CDE
intrinsics in both Clang and LLVM release notes.

Reviewers: kristof.beyls, simon_tatham

Reviewed By: kristof.beyls

Subscribers: danielkiss, cfe-commits

Tags: #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78481
2020-04-22 16:34:19 +01:00
Craig Topper 8dfb9627b7 [X86] Make v32i16/v64i8 legal types without avx512bw. Use custom splitting instead.
This moves v32i16/v64i8 to a model consistent with how we
treat integer types with avx1.

This does change the ABI for types vXi16/vXi8 vectors larger than
512 bits to pass in multiple zmms instead of multiple ymms. We'd
already hacked some code to make v64i8/v32i16 pass in zmm.

Cost model is still a bit of a mess. In some place I tried to
match existing behavior. But really we need to account for
splitting and concating costs. Cost model for shuffles is
especially pessimistic.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76212
2020-04-15 12:17:18 -07:00
Djordje Todorovic 3505226702 [docs][llvm-dwarfdump] Add the release notes about --show-section-sizes
Note that the llvm-dwarfdump has the new option.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77495
2020-04-10 10:35:18 +02:00
Djordje Todorovic 3a4d9f8335 [docs] Add the release notes about Debug Entry Values
Note that x86, arm and aarch64 targets support the Debug Entry Values
feature by default.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77494
2020-04-07 12:08:22 +02:00
Matt Arsenault 75cf30918f AMDGPU: Assume f32 denormals are enabled by default
This will likely introduce catastrophic performance regressions on
older subtargets, but should be correct. A follow up change will
remove the old fp32-denormals subtarget features, and switch to using
the new denormal-fp-math/denormal-fp-math-f32 attributes. Frontends
should be making sure to add the denormal-fp-math-f32 attribute when
appropriate to avoid performance regressions.
2020-04-02 17:17:12 -04:00
Simon Tatham f282b6ab23 [ReleaseNotes,ARM] MVE intrinsics are all implemented!
Summary:
The next release of LLVM will support the full ACLE spec for MVE intrinsics,
so it's worth saying so in the release notes.

Reviewers: kristof.beyls

Reviewed By: kristof.beyls

Subscribers: cfe-commits, hans, dmgreen, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm, #clang

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76513
2020-03-24 11:42:25 +00:00
Dylan McKay 56aed6144a [AVR] Add a release note about the AVR backend becoming an official backend
AVR has been enabled by default since
c480c584a0, the tests have been stable for
a couple days now, revert extremely unlikely.
2020-03-16 20:07:59 +13:00
Francesco Petrogalli 3d65dd1e66 [ReleaseNotes] Mention the `vector-function-abi-variant` attribute.
Subscribers: llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74969
2020-02-24 17:39:31 +00:00
serge_sans_paille e67cbac812 Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.

Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].

This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.

Only implemented for x86.

[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html

This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-09 10:42:45 +01:00
serge-sans-paille 4546211600 Revert "Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86"
This reverts commit 0fd51a4554.

Failures:

http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-win-x-armv7l/builds/4354
2020-02-09 10:06:31 +01:00
serge_sans_paille 0fd51a4554 Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.

Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].

This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.

Only implemented for x86.

[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html

This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with proper LiveIn
declaration, better option handling and more portable testing.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-09 09:35:42 +01:00
serge-sans-paille 658495e6ec Revert "Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86"
This reverts commit e229017732.

Failures:

http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-debian/builds/2604
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/llvm-clang-win-x-aarch64/builds/4308
2020-02-08 14:26:22 +01:00
serge_sans_paille e229017732 Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.

Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].

This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.

Only implemented for x86.

[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html

This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with better option
handling and more portable testing

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-08 13:31:52 +01:00
Nico Weber b03c3d8c62 Revert "Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86"
This reverts commit 4a1a0690ad.
Breaks tests on mac and win, see https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-07 14:49:38 -05:00
serge_sans_paille 4a1a0690ad Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.

Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].

This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.

Only implemented for x86.

[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html

This a recommit of 39f50da2a3 with correct option
flags set.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-07 19:54:39 +01:00
serge-sans-paille f6d98429fc Revert "Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86"
This reverts commit 39f50da2a3.

The -fstack-clash-protection is being passed to the linker too, which
is not intended.

Reverting and fixing that in a later commit.
2020-02-07 11:36:53 +01:00
serge_sans_paille 39f50da2a3 Support -fstack-clash-protection for x86
Implement protection against the stack clash attack [0] through inline stack
probing.

Probe stack allocation every PAGE_SIZE during frame lowering or dynamic
allocation to make sure the page guard, if any, is touched when touching the
stack, in a similar manner to GCC[1].

This extends the existing `probe-stack' mechanism with a special value `inline-asm'.
Technically the former uses function call before stack allocation while this
patch provides inlined stack probes and chunk allocation.

Only implemented for x86.

[0] https://www.qualys.com/2017/06/19/stack-clash/stack-clash.txt
[1] https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2017-07/msg00556.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68720
2020-02-07 10:56:15 +01:00
Hans Wennborg 5852475e2c Bump the trunk major version to 11
and clear the release notes.
2020-01-15 13:38:01 +01:00
Fangrui Song 03b9f0a5e1 Ignore "no-frame-pointer-elim" and "no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf" in favor of "frame-pointer"
D56351 (included in LLVM 8.0.0) introduced "frame-pointer".  All tests
which use "no-frame-pointer-elim" or "no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf"
have been migrated to use "frame-pointer".

Implement UpgradeFramePointerAttributes to upgrade the two obsoleted
function attributes for bitcode. Their semantics are ignored.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71863
2019-12-30 09:46:19 -08:00
Florian Hahn 5762648c46 [Docs] Fix sphinx build errors. 2019-12-23 21:53:30 +01:00
Don Hinton 6555995a6d [CommandLine] Add callbacks to Options
Summary:
Add a new cl::callback attribute to Option.

This attribute specifies a callback function that is called when
an option is seen, and can be used to set other options, as in
option A implies option B.  If the option is a `cl::list`, and
`cl::CommaSeparated` is also specified, the callback will fire
once for each value.  This could be used to validate combinations
or selectively set other options.

Reviewers: beanz, thomasfinch, MaskRay, thopre, serge-sans-paille

Reviewed By: beanz

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70620
2019-12-06 15:16:45 -08:00
Sourabh Singh Tomar f1e3988aa6 Recommit "[DWARF5]Addition of alignment atrribute in typedef DIE."
This revision is revised to update Go-bindings and Release Notes.

The original commit message follows.

This patch, adds support for DW_AT_alignment[DWARF5] attribute, to be emitted with typdef DIE.
When explicit alignment is specified.

Patch by Awanish Pandey <Awanish.Pandey@amd.com>

Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie, jini.susan.george, SouraVX, alok,
deadalinx

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70111
2019-12-03 09:51:43 +05:30
Tom Stellard 3ffbf9720f [cmake] Remove LLVM_{BUILD,LINK}_LLVM_DYLIB options on Windows
Summary: The options aren't supported so they can be removed.

Reviewers: beanz, smeenai, compnerd

Reviewed By: compnerd

Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69877
2019-11-08 10:37:16 -08:00
Craig Topper b2b6a54f84 [X86] Add support for -mvzeroupper and -mno-vzeroupper to match gcc
-mvzeroupper will force the vzeroupper insertion pass to run on
CPUs that normally wouldn't. -mno-vzeroupper disables it on CPUs
where it normally runs.

To support this with the default feature handling in clang, we
need a vzeroupper feature flag in X86.td. Since this flag has
the opposite polarity of the fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write we
used to use to disable the pass, we now need to add this new
flag to every CPU except KNL/KNM and BTVER2 to keep identical
behavior.

Remove -fast-partial-ymm-or-zmm-write which is no longer used.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69786
2019-11-04 11:03:54 -08:00
Roman Lebedev c4b757be02
Revert BCmp Loop Idiom recognition transform (PR43870)
As discussed in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43870,
this transform is missing a crucial legality check:
the old (non-countable) loop would early-return upon first mismatch,
but there is no such guarantee for bcmp/memcmp.

We'd need to ensure that [PtrA, PtrA+NBytes) and [PtrB, PtrB+NBytes)
are fully dereferenceable memory regions. But that would limit
the transform to constant loop trip counts and would further
cripple it because dereferenceability analysis is *very* partial.

Furthermore, even if all that is done, every single test
would need to be rewritten from scratch.

So let's just give up.
2019-11-02 12:48:03 +03:00
Alina Sbirlea bbb43df011 [ReleaseNotes] Add item on deleting the BasicBlockPass(Manager). 2019-10-30 14:26:46 -07:00
Andrew Paverd d157a9bc8b Add Windows Control Flow Guard checks (/guard:cf).
Summary:
A new function pass (Transforms/CFGuard/CFGuard.cpp) inserts CFGuard checks on
indirect function calls, using either the check mechanism (X86, ARM, AArch64) or
or the dispatch mechanism (X86-64). The check mechanism requires a new calling
convention for the supported targets. The dispatch mechanism adds the target as
an operand bundle, which is processed by SelectionDAG. Another pass
(CodeGen/CFGuardLongjmp.cpp) identifies and emits valid longjmp targets, as
required by /guard:cf. This feature is enabled using the `cfguard` CC1 option.

Reviewers: thakis, rnk, theraven, pcc

Subscribers: ychen, hans, metalcanine, dmajor, tomrittervg, alex, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, steven_wu, dexonsmith, cfe-commits, llvm-commits

Tags: #clang, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65761
2019-10-28 15:19:39 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea c0e6a92e34 Update ReleaseNotes: expand the section on enabling MemorySSA
llvm-svn: 375045
2019-10-16 21:52:09 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 76cdcf25b8 [LoopIdiomRecognize] Recommit: BCmp loop idiom recognition
Summary:
This is a recommit, this originally landed in rL370454 but was
subsequently reverted in  rL370788 due to
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43206
The reduced testcase was added to bcmp-negative-tests.ll
as @pr43206_different_loops - we must ensure that the SCEV's
we got are both for the same loop we are currently investigating.

Original commit message:

@mclow.lists brought up this issue up in IRC.
It is a reasonably common problem to compare some two values for equality.
Those may be just some integers, strings or arrays of integers.

In C, there is `memcmp()`, `bcmp()` functions.
In C++, there exists `std::equal()` algorithm.
One can also write that function manually.

libstdc++'s `std::equal()` is specialized to directly call `memcmp()` for
various types, but not `std::byte` from C++2a. https://godbolt.org/z/mx2ejJ

libc++ does not do anything like that, it simply relies on simple C++'s
`operator==()`. https://godbolt.org/z/er0Zwf (GOOD!)

So likely, there exists a certain performance opportunities.
Let's compare performance of naive `std::equal()` (no `memcmp()`) with one that
is using `memcmp()` (in this case, compiled with modified compiler). {F8768213}

```
#include <algorithm>
#include <cmath>
#include <cstdint>
#include <iterator>
#include <limits>
#include <random>
#include <type_traits>
#include <utility>
#include <vector>

#include "benchmark/benchmark.h"

template <class T>
bool equal(T* a, T* a_end, T* b) noexcept {
  for (; a != a_end; ++a, ++b) {
    if (*a != *b) return false;
  }
  return true;
}

template <typename T>
std::vector<T> getVectorOfRandomNumbers(size_t count) {
  std::random_device rd;
  std::mt19937 gen(rd());
  std::uniform_int_distribution<T> dis(std::numeric_limits<T>::min(),
                                       std::numeric_limits<T>::max());
  std::vector<T> v;
  v.reserve(count);
  std::generate_n(std::back_inserter(v), count,
                  [&dis, &gen]() { return dis(gen); });
  assert(v.size() == count);
  return v;
}

struct Identical {
  template <typename T>
  static std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Gen(size_t count) {
    auto Tmp = getVectorOfRandomNumbers<T>(count);
    return std::make_pair(Tmp, std::move(Tmp));
  }
};

struct InequalHalfway {
  template <typename T>
  static std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Gen(size_t count) {
    auto V0 = getVectorOfRandomNumbers<T>(count);
    auto V1 = V0;
    V1[V1.size() / size_t(2)]++;  // just change the value.
    return std::make_pair(std::move(V0), std::move(V1));
  }
};

template <class T, class Gen>
void BM_bcmp(benchmark::State& state) {
  const size_t Length = state.range(0);

  const std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Data =
      Gen::template Gen<T>(Length);
  const std::vector<T>& a = Data.first;
  const std::vector<T>& b = Data.second;
  assert(a.size() == Length && b.size() == a.size());

  benchmark::ClobberMemory();
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(a);
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(a.data());
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(b);
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(b.data());

  for (auto _ : state) {
    const bool is_equal = equal(a.data(), a.data() + a.size(), b.data());
    benchmark::DoNotOptimize(is_equal);
  }
  state.SetComplexityN(Length);
  state.counters["eltcnt"] =
      benchmark::Counter(Length, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariant);
  state.counters["eltcnt/sec"] =
      benchmark::Counter(Length, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariantRate);
  const size_t BytesRead = 2 * sizeof(T) * Length;
  state.counters["bytes_read/iteration"] =
      benchmark::Counter(BytesRead, benchmark::Counter::kDefaults,
                         benchmark::Counter::OneK::kIs1024);
  state.counters["bytes_read/sec"] = benchmark::Counter(
      BytesRead, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariantRate,
      benchmark::Counter::OneK::kIs1024);
}

template <typename T>
static void CustomArguments(benchmark::internal::Benchmark* b) {
  const size_t L2SizeBytes = []() {
    for (const benchmark::CPUInfo::CacheInfo& I :
         benchmark::CPUInfo::Get().caches) {
      if (I.level == 2) return I.size;
    }
    return 0;
  }();
  // What is the largest range we can check to always fit within given L2 cache?
  const size_t MaxLen = L2SizeBytes / /*total bufs*/ 2 /
                        /*maximal elt size*/ sizeof(T) / /*safety margin*/ 2;
  b->RangeMultiplier(2)->Range(1, MaxLen)->Complexity(benchmark::oN);
}

BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint8_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint8_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint16_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint16_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint32_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint32_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint64_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint64_t>);

BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint8_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint8_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint16_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint16_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint32_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint32_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint64_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint64_t>);
```
{F8768210}
```
$ ~/src/googlebenchmark/tools/compare.py --no-utest benchmarks build-{old,new}/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
RUNNING: build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench --benchmark_out=/tmp/tmpb6PEUx
2019-04-25 21:17:11
Running build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Run on (8 X 4000 MHz CPU s)
CPU Caches:
  L1 Data 16K (x8)
  L1 Instruction 64K (x4)
  L2 Unified 2048K (x4)
  L3 Unified 8192K (x1)
Load Average: 0.65, 3.90, 4.14
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark                                         Time             CPU   Iterations UserCounters...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000           432131 ns       432101 ns         1613 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=2.20706G/s eltcnt=825.856M eltcnt/sec=1.18491G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_BigO               0.86 N          0.86 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_RMS                   8 %             8 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000          161408 ns       161409 ns         4027 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=5.90843G/s eltcnt=1030.91M eltcnt/sec=1.58603G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_BigO              0.67 N          0.67 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_RMS                 25 %            25 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000           81497 ns        81488 ns         8415 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=11.7032G/s eltcnt=1077.12M eltcnt/sec=1.57078G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_BigO              0.71 N          0.71 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_RMS                 42 %            42 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000            50138 ns        50138 ns        10909 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=19.0209G/s eltcnt=698.176M eltcnt/sec=1.27647G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_BigO              0.84 N          0.84 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_RMS                 27 %            27 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000      192405 ns       192392 ns         3638 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=4.95694G/s eltcnt=1.86266G eltcnt/sec=2.66124G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO          0.38 N          0.38 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS              3 %             3 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000     127858 ns       127860 ns         5477 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=7.45873G/s eltcnt=1.40211G eltcnt/sec=2.00219G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.50 N          0.50 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             0 %             0 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000      49140 ns        49140 ns        14281 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=19.4072G/s eltcnt=1.82797G eltcnt/sec=2.60478G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.40 N          0.40 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            18 %            18 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000       32101 ns        32099 ns        21786 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=29.7101G/s eltcnt=1.3943G eltcnt/sec=1.99381G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.50 N          0.50 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             1 %             1 %
RUNNING: build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench --benchmark_out=/tmp/tmpQ46PP0
2019-04-25 21:19:29
Running build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Run on (8 X 4000 MHz CPU s)
CPU Caches:
  L1 Data 16K (x8)
  L1 Instruction 64K (x4)
  L2 Unified 2048K (x4)
  L3 Unified 8192K (x1)
Load Average: 1.01, 2.85, 3.71
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark                                         Time             CPU   Iterations UserCounters...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000            18593 ns        18590 ns        37565 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=51.2991G/s eltcnt=19.2333G eltcnt/sec=27.541G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_BigO               0.04 N          0.04 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_RMS                  37 %            37 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000           18950 ns        18948 ns        37223 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=50.3324G/s eltcnt=9.52909G eltcnt/sec=13.511G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_BigO              0.08 N          0.08 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_RMS                 34 %            34 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000           18627 ns        18627 ns        37895 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=51.198G/s eltcnt=4.85056G eltcnt/sec=6.87168G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_BigO              0.16 N          0.16 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_RMS                 35 %            35 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000            18855 ns        18855 ns        37458 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=50.5791G/s eltcnt=2.39731G eltcnt/sec=3.3943G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_BigO              0.32 N          0.32 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_RMS                 33 %            33 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000        9570 ns         9569 ns        73500 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=99.6601G/s eltcnt=37.632G eltcnt/sec=53.5046G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO          0.02 N          0.02 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             29 %            29 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000       9547 ns         9547 ns        74343 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=99.8971G/s eltcnt=19.0318G eltcnt/sec=26.8159G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.04 N          0.04 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            29 %            29 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000       9396 ns         9394 ns        73521 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=101.518G/s eltcnt=9.41069G eltcnt/sec=13.6255G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.08 N          0.08 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            30 %            30 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000        9499 ns         9498 ns        73802 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=100.405G/s eltcnt=4.72333G eltcnt/sec=6.73808G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.16 N          0.16 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            28 %            28 %
Comparing build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench to build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Benchmark                                                  Time             CPU      Time Old      Time New       CPU Old       CPU New
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000                      -0.9570         -0.9570        432131         18593        432101         18590
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000                     -0.8826         -0.8826        161408         18950        161409         18948
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000                     -0.7714         -0.7714         81497         18627         81488         18627
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000                      -0.6239         -0.6239         50138         18855         50138         18855
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000                 -0.9503         -0.9503        192405          9570        192392          9569
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000                -0.9253         -0.9253        127858          9547        127860          9547
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000                -0.8088         -0.8088         49140          9396         49140          9394
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000                 -0.7041         -0.7041         32101          9499         32099          9498
```

What can we tell from the benchmark?
* Performance of naive equality check somewhat improves with element size,
  maxing out at eltcnt/sec=1.58603G/s for uint16_t, or bytes_read/sec=19.0209G/s
  for uint64_t. I think, that instability implies performance problems.
* Performance of `memcmp()`-aware benchmark always maxes out at around
  bytes_read/sec=51.2991G/s for every type. That is 2.6x the throughput of the
  naive variant!
* eltcnt/sec metric for the `memcmp()`-aware benchmark maxes out at
  eltcnt/sec=27.541G/s for uint8_t (was: eltcnt/sec=1.18491G/s, so 24x) and
  linearly decreases with element size.
  For uint64_t, it's ~4x+ the elements/second.
* The call obvious is more pricey than the loop, with small element count.
  As it can be seen from the full output {F8768210}, the `memcmp()` is almost
  universally worse, independent of the element size (and thus buffer size) when
  element count is less than 8.

So all in all, bcmp idiom does indeed pose untapped performance headroom.
This diff does implement said idiom recognition. I think a reasonable test
coverage is present, but do tell if there is anything obvious missing.

Now, quality. This does succeed to build and pass the test-suite, at least
without any non-bundled elements. {F8768216} {F8768217}
This transform fires 91 times:
```
$ /build/test-suite/utils/compare.py -m loop-idiom.NumBCmp result-new.json
Tests: 1149
Metric: loop-idiom.NumBCmp

Program                                         result-new

MultiSourc...Benchmarks/7zip/7zip-benchmark    79.00
MultiSource/Applications/d/make_dparser         3.00
SingleSource/UnitTests/vla                      2.00
MultiSource/Applications/Burg/burg              1.00
MultiSourc.../Applications/JM/lencod/lencod     1.00
MultiSource/Applications/lemon/lemon            1.00
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet            1.00
MultiSourc...e/Benchmarks/MallocBench/gs/gs     1.00
MultiSourc...gs-C/TimberWolfMC/timberwolfmc     1.00
MultiSourc...Prolangs-C/simulator/simulator     1.00
```
The size changes are:
I'm not sure what's going on with SingleSource/UnitTests/vla.test yet, did not look.
```
$ /build/test-suite/utils/compare.py -m size..text result-{old,new}.json --filter-hash
Tests: 1149
Same hash: 907 (filtered out)
Remaining: 242
Metric: size..text

Program                                        result-old result-new diff
test-suite...ingleSource/UnitTests/vla.test   753.00     833.00     10.6%
test-suite...marks/7zip/7zip-benchmark.test   1001697.00 966657.00  -3.5%
test-suite...ngs-C/simulator/simulator.test   32369.00   32321.00   -0.1%
test-suite...plications/d/make_dparser.test   89585.00   89505.00   -0.1%
test-suite...ce/Applications/Burg/burg.test   40817.00   40785.00   -0.1%
test-suite.../Applications/lemon/lemon.test   47281.00   47249.00   -0.1%
test-suite...TimberWolfMC/timberwolfmc.test   250065.00  250113.00   0.0%
test-suite...chmarks/MallocBench/gs/gs.test   149889.00  149873.00  -0.0%
test-suite...ications/JM/lencod/lencod.test   769585.00  769569.00  -0.0%
test-suite.../Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet.test   770049.00  770049.00   0.0%
test-suite...HMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/128    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...HMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/256    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...CHMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/64    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...CHMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/32    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...ENCHMARK_BILATERAL_FILTER/64/4    NaN        NaN        nan%
Geomean difference                                                   nan%
         result-old    result-new       diff
count  1.000000e+01  10.00000      10.000000
mean   3.152090e+05  311695.40000  0.006749
std    3.790398e+05  372091.42232  0.036605
min    7.530000e+02  833.00000    -0.034981
25%    4.243300e+04  42401.00000  -0.000866
50%    1.197370e+05  119689.00000 -0.000392
75%    6.397050e+05  639705.00000 -0.000005
max    1.001697e+06  966657.00000  0.106242
```

I don't have timings though.

And now to the code. The basic idea is to completely replace the whole loop.
If we can't fully kill it, don't transform.
I have left one or two comments in the code, so hopefully it can be understood.

Also, there is a few TODO's that i have left for follow-ups:
* widening of `memcmp()`/`bcmp()`
* step smaller than the comparison size
* Metadata propagation
* more than two blocks as long as there is still a single backedge?
* ???

Reviewers: reames, fhahn, mkazantsev, chandlerc, craig.topper, courbet

Reviewed By: courbet

Subscribers: miyuki, hiraditya, xbolva00, nikic, jfb, gchatelet, courbet, llvm-commits, mclow.lists

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61144

llvm-svn: 374662
2019-10-12 15:35:32 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 536b0ee40a [UBSan][clang][compiler-rt] Applying non-zero offset to nullptr is undefined behaviour
Summary:
Quote from http://eel.is/c++draft/expr.add#4:
```
4     When an expression J that has integral type is added to or subtracted
      from an expression P of pointer type, the result has the type of P.
(4.1) If P evaluates to a null pointer value and J evaluates to 0,
      the result is a null pointer value.
(4.2) Otherwise, if P points to an array element i of an array object x with n
      elements ([dcl.array]), the expressions P + J and J + P
      (where J has the value j) point to the (possibly-hypothetical) array
      element i+j of x if 0≤i+j≤n and the expression P - J points to the
      (possibly-hypothetical) array element i−j of x if 0≤i−j≤n.
(4.3) Otherwise, the behavior is undefined.
```

Therefore, as per the standard, applying non-zero offset to `nullptr`
(or making non-`nullptr` a `nullptr`, by subtracting pointer's integral value
from the pointer itself) is undefined behavior. (*if* `nullptr` is not defined,
i.e. e.g. `-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks` was *not* specified.)

To make things more fun, in C (6.5.6p8), applying *any* offset to null pointer
is undefined, although Clang front-end pessimizes the code by not lowering
that info, so this UB is "harmless".

Since rL369789 (D66608 `[InstCombine] icmp eq/ne (gep inbounds P, Idx..), null -> icmp eq/ne P, null`)
LLVM middle-end uses those guarantees for transformations.
If the source contains such UB's, said code may now be miscompiled.
Such miscompilations were already observed:
* https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20190826/687838.html
* https://github.com/google/filament/pull/1566

Surprisingly, UBSan does not catch those issues
... until now. This diff teaches UBSan about these UB's.

`getelementpointer inbounds` is a pretty frequent instruction,
so this does have a measurable impact on performance;
I've addressed most of the obvious missing folds (and thus decreased the performance impact by ~5%),
and then re-performed some performance measurements using my [[ https://github.com/darktable-org/rawspeed | RawSpeed ]] benchmark:
(all measurements done with LLVM ToT, the sanitizer never fired.)
* no sanitization vs. existing check: average `+21.62%` slowdown
* existing check vs. check after this patch: average `22.04%` slowdown
* no sanitization vs. this patch: average `48.42%` slowdown

Reviewers: vsk, filcab, rsmith, aaron.ballman, vitalybuka, rjmccall, #sanitizers

Reviewed By: rsmith

Subscribers: kristof.beyls, nickdesaulniers, nikic, ychen, dtzWill, xbolva00, dberris, arphaman, rupprecht, reames, regehr, llvm-commits, cfe-commits

Tags: #clang, #sanitizers, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67122

llvm-svn: 374293
2019-10-10 09:25:02 +00:00
Craig Topper 635d383fad [X86] Enable -mprefer-vector-width=256 by default for Skylake-avx512 and later Intel CPUs.
AVX512 instructions can cause a frequency drop on these CPUs. This
can negate the performance gains from using wider vectors. Enabling
prefer-vector-width=256 will prevent generation of zmm registers
unless explicit 512 bit operations are used in the original source
code.

I believe gcc and icc both do something similar to this by default.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67259

llvm-svn: 371694
2019-09-11 23:54:36 +00:00
Alina Sbirlea a6e0bef312 Update ReleaseNotes: add enabling of MemorySSA.
llvm-svn: 371569
2019-09-10 23:22:37 +00:00
Craig Topper 5ebd0a6e88 [SelectionDAG] Remove ISD::FP_ROUND_INREG
I don't think anything in tree creates this node. So all of this
code appears to be dead.

Code coverage agrees
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/coverage/coverage-reports/llvm/coverage/Users/buildslave/jenkins/workspace/clang-stage2-coverage-R/llvm/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/DAGCombiner.cpp.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67312

llvm-svn: 371431
2019-09-09 17:54:44 +00:00
Roman Lebedev bdd65351d3 Revert r370454 "[LoopIdiomRecognize] BCmp loop idiom recognition"
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43206 was filed,
claiming that there is a miscompilation.
Reverting until i investigate.

This reverts commit r370454

llvm-svn: 370788
2019-09-03 17:14:56 +00:00
Craig Topper 18e8d02e8c [X86] Pass v32i16/v64i8 in zmm registers on KNL target.
gcc and icc pass these types in zmm registers in zmm registers.

This patch implements a quick hack to override the register
type before calling convention handling to one that is legal.
Longer term we might want to do something similar to 256-bit
integer registers on AVX1 where we just split all the operations.

Fixes PR42957

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66708

llvm-svn: 370495
2019-08-30 17:35:08 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 5c9f3cfec7 [LoopIdiomRecognize] BCmp loop idiom recognition
Summary:
@mclow.lists brought up this issue up in IRC.
It is a reasonably common problem to compare some two values for equality.
Those may be just some integers, strings or arrays of integers.

In C, there is `memcmp()`, `bcmp()` functions.
In C++, there exists `std::equal()` algorithm.
One can also write that function manually.

libstdc++'s `std::equal()` is specialized to directly call `memcmp()` for
various types, but not `std::byte` from C++2a. https://godbolt.org/z/mx2ejJ

libc++ does not do anything like that, it simply relies on simple C++'s
`operator==()`. https://godbolt.org/z/er0Zwf (GOOD!)

So likely, there exists a certain performance opportunities.
Let's compare performance of naive `std::equal()` (no `memcmp()`) with one that
is using `memcmp()` (in this case, compiled with modified compiler). {F8768213}

```
#include <algorithm>
#include <cmath>
#include <cstdint>
#include <iterator>
#include <limits>
#include <random>
#include <type_traits>
#include <utility>
#include <vector>

#include "benchmark/benchmark.h"

template <class T>
bool equal(T* a, T* a_end, T* b) noexcept {
  for (; a != a_end; ++a, ++b) {
    if (*a != *b) return false;
  }
  return true;
}

template <typename T>
std::vector<T> getVectorOfRandomNumbers(size_t count) {
  std::random_device rd;
  std::mt19937 gen(rd());
  std::uniform_int_distribution<T> dis(std::numeric_limits<T>::min(),
                                       std::numeric_limits<T>::max());
  std::vector<T> v;
  v.reserve(count);
  std::generate_n(std::back_inserter(v), count,
                  [&dis, &gen]() { return dis(gen); });
  assert(v.size() == count);
  return v;
}

struct Identical {
  template <typename T>
  static std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Gen(size_t count) {
    auto Tmp = getVectorOfRandomNumbers<T>(count);
    return std::make_pair(Tmp, std::move(Tmp));
  }
};

struct InequalHalfway {
  template <typename T>
  static std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Gen(size_t count) {
    auto V0 = getVectorOfRandomNumbers<T>(count);
    auto V1 = V0;
    V1[V1.size() / size_t(2)]++;  // just change the value.
    return std::make_pair(std::move(V0), std::move(V1));
  }
};

template <class T, class Gen>
void BM_bcmp(benchmark::State& state) {
  const size_t Length = state.range(0);

  const std::pair<std::vector<T>, std::vector<T>> Data =
      Gen::template Gen<T>(Length);
  const std::vector<T>& a = Data.first;
  const std::vector<T>& b = Data.second;
  assert(a.size() == Length && b.size() == a.size());

  benchmark::ClobberMemory();
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(a);
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(a.data());
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(b);
  benchmark::DoNotOptimize(b.data());

  for (auto _ : state) {
    const bool is_equal = equal(a.data(), a.data() + a.size(), b.data());
    benchmark::DoNotOptimize(is_equal);
  }
  state.SetComplexityN(Length);
  state.counters["eltcnt"] =
      benchmark::Counter(Length, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariant);
  state.counters["eltcnt/sec"] =
      benchmark::Counter(Length, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariantRate);
  const size_t BytesRead = 2 * sizeof(T) * Length;
  state.counters["bytes_read/iteration"] =
      benchmark::Counter(BytesRead, benchmark::Counter::kDefaults,
                         benchmark::Counter::OneK::kIs1024);
  state.counters["bytes_read/sec"] = benchmark::Counter(
      BytesRead, benchmark::Counter::kIsIterationInvariantRate,
      benchmark::Counter::OneK::kIs1024);
}

template <typename T>
static void CustomArguments(benchmark::internal::Benchmark* b) {
  const size_t L2SizeBytes = []() {
    for (const benchmark::CPUInfo::CacheInfo& I :
         benchmark::CPUInfo::Get().caches) {
      if (I.level == 2) return I.size;
    }
    return 0;
  }();
  // What is the largest range we can check to always fit within given L2 cache?
  const size_t MaxLen = L2SizeBytes / /*total bufs*/ 2 /
                        /*maximal elt size*/ sizeof(T) / /*safety margin*/ 2;
  b->RangeMultiplier(2)->Range(1, MaxLen)->Complexity(benchmark::oN);
}

BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint8_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint8_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint16_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint16_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint32_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint32_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint64_t, Identical)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint64_t>);

BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint8_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint8_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint16_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint16_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint32_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint32_t>);
BENCHMARK_TEMPLATE(BM_bcmp, uint64_t, InequalHalfway)
    ->Apply(CustomArguments<uint64_t>);
```
{F8768210}
```
$ ~/src/googlebenchmark/tools/compare.py --no-utest benchmarks build-{old,new}/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
RUNNING: build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench --benchmark_out=/tmp/tmpb6PEUx
2019-04-25 21:17:11
Running build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Run on (8 X 4000 MHz CPU s)
CPU Caches:
  L1 Data 16K (x8)
  L1 Instruction 64K (x4)
  L2 Unified 2048K (x4)
  L3 Unified 8192K (x1)
Load Average: 0.65, 3.90, 4.14
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark                                         Time             CPU   Iterations UserCounters...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000           432131 ns       432101 ns         1613 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=2.20706G/s eltcnt=825.856M eltcnt/sec=1.18491G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_BigO               0.86 N          0.86 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_RMS                   8 %             8 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000          161408 ns       161409 ns         4027 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=5.90843G/s eltcnt=1030.91M eltcnt/sec=1.58603G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_BigO              0.67 N          0.67 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_RMS                 25 %            25 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000           81497 ns        81488 ns         8415 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=11.7032G/s eltcnt=1077.12M eltcnt/sec=1.57078G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_BigO              0.71 N          0.71 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_RMS                 42 %            42 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000            50138 ns        50138 ns        10909 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=19.0209G/s eltcnt=698.176M eltcnt/sec=1.27647G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_BigO              0.84 N          0.84 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_RMS                 27 %            27 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000      192405 ns       192392 ns         3638 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=4.95694G/s eltcnt=1.86266G eltcnt/sec=2.66124G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO          0.38 N          0.38 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS              3 %             3 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000     127858 ns       127860 ns         5477 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=7.45873G/s eltcnt=1.40211G eltcnt/sec=2.00219G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.50 N          0.50 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             0 %             0 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000      49140 ns        49140 ns        14281 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=19.4072G/s eltcnt=1.82797G eltcnt/sec=2.60478G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.40 N          0.40 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            18 %            18 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000       32101 ns        32099 ns        21786 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=29.7101G/s eltcnt=1.3943G eltcnt/sec=1.99381G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.50 N          0.50 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             1 %             1 %
RUNNING: build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench --benchmark_out=/tmp/tmpQ46PP0
2019-04-25 21:19:29
Running build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Run on (8 X 4000 MHz CPU s)
CPU Caches:
  L1 Data 16K (x8)
  L1 Instruction 64K (x4)
  L2 Unified 2048K (x4)
  L3 Unified 8192K (x1)
Load Average: 1.01, 2.85, 3.71
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Benchmark                                         Time             CPU   Iterations UserCounters...
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000            18593 ns        18590 ns        37565 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=51.2991G/s eltcnt=19.2333G eltcnt/sec=27.541G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_BigO               0.04 N          0.04 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>_RMS                  37 %            37 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000           18950 ns        18948 ns        37223 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=50.3324G/s eltcnt=9.52909G eltcnt/sec=13.511G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_BigO              0.08 N          0.08 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>_RMS                 34 %            34 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000           18627 ns        18627 ns        37895 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=51.198G/s eltcnt=4.85056G eltcnt/sec=6.87168G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_BigO              0.16 N          0.16 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>_RMS                 35 %            35 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000            18855 ns        18855 ns        37458 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=50.5791G/s eltcnt=2.39731G eltcnt/sec=3.3943G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_BigO              0.32 N          0.32 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>_RMS                 33 %            33 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000        9570 ns         9569 ns        73500 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=99.6601G/s eltcnt=37.632G eltcnt/sec=53.5046G/s
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO          0.02 N          0.02 N
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS             29 %            29 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000       9547 ns         9547 ns        74343 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=99.8971G/s eltcnt=19.0318G eltcnt/sec=26.8159G/s
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.04 N          0.04 N
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            29 %            29 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000       9396 ns         9394 ns        73521 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=101.518G/s eltcnt=9.41069G eltcnt/sec=13.6255G/s
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.08 N          0.08 N
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            30 %            30 %
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000        9499 ns         9498 ns        73802 bytes_read/iteration=1000k bytes_read/sec=100.405G/s eltcnt=4.72333G eltcnt/sec=6.73808G/s
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_BigO         0.16 N          0.16 N
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>_RMS            28 %            28 %
Comparing build-old/test/llvm-bcmp-bench to build-new/test/llvm-bcmp-bench
Benchmark                                                  Time             CPU      Time Old      Time New       CPU Old       CPU New
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, Identical>/512000                      -0.9570         -0.9570        432131         18593        432101         18590
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, Identical>/256000                     -0.8826         -0.8826        161408         18950        161409         18948
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, Identical>/128000                     -0.7714         -0.7714         81497         18627         81488         18627
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, Identical>/64000                      -0.6239         -0.6239         50138         18855         50138         18855
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint8_t, InequalHalfway>/512000                 -0.9503         -0.9503        192405          9570        192392          9569
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint16_t, InequalHalfway>/256000                -0.9253         -0.9253        127858          9547        127860          9547
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint32_t, InequalHalfway>/128000                -0.8088         -0.8088         49140          9396         49140          9394
<...>
BM_bcmp<uint64_t, InequalHalfway>/64000                 -0.7041         -0.7041         32101          9499         32099          9498
```

What can we tell from the benchmark?
* Performance of naive equality check somewhat improves with element size,
  maxing out at eltcnt/sec=1.58603G/s for uint16_t, or bytes_read/sec=19.0209G/s
  for uint64_t. I think, that instability implies performance problems.
* Performance of `memcmp()`-aware benchmark always maxes out at around
  bytes_read/sec=51.2991G/s for every type. That is 2.6x the throughput of the
  naive variant!
* eltcnt/sec metric for the `memcmp()`-aware benchmark maxes out at
  eltcnt/sec=27.541G/s for uint8_t (was: eltcnt/sec=1.18491G/s, so 24x) and
  linearly decreases with element size.
  For uint64_t, it's ~4x+ the elements/second.
* The call obvious is more pricey than the loop, with small element count.
  As it can be seen from the full output {F8768210}, the `memcmp()` is almost
  universally worse, independent of the element size (and thus buffer size) when
  element count is less than 8.

So all in all, bcmp idiom does indeed pose untapped performance headroom.
This diff does implement said idiom recognition. I think a reasonable test
coverage is present, but do tell if there is anything obvious missing.

Now, quality. This does succeed to build and pass the test-suite, at least
without any non-bundled elements. {F8768216} {F8768217}
This transform fires 91 times:
```
$ /build/test-suite/utils/compare.py -m loop-idiom.NumBCmp result-new.json
Tests: 1149
Metric: loop-idiom.NumBCmp

Program                                         result-new

MultiSourc...Benchmarks/7zip/7zip-benchmark    79.00
MultiSource/Applications/d/make_dparser         3.00
SingleSource/UnitTests/vla                      2.00
MultiSource/Applications/Burg/burg              1.00
MultiSourc.../Applications/JM/lencod/lencod     1.00
MultiSource/Applications/lemon/lemon            1.00
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet            1.00
MultiSourc...e/Benchmarks/MallocBench/gs/gs     1.00
MultiSourc...gs-C/TimberWolfMC/timberwolfmc     1.00
MultiSourc...Prolangs-C/simulator/simulator     1.00
```
The size changes are:
I'm not sure what's going on with SingleSource/UnitTests/vla.test yet, did not look.
```
$ /build/test-suite/utils/compare.py -m size..text result-{old,new}.json --filter-hash
Tests: 1149
Same hash: 907 (filtered out)
Remaining: 242
Metric: size..text

Program                                        result-old result-new diff
test-suite...ingleSource/UnitTests/vla.test   753.00     833.00     10.6%
test-suite...marks/7zip/7zip-benchmark.test   1001697.00 966657.00  -3.5%
test-suite...ngs-C/simulator/simulator.test   32369.00   32321.00   -0.1%
test-suite...plications/d/make_dparser.test   89585.00   89505.00   -0.1%
test-suite...ce/Applications/Burg/burg.test   40817.00   40785.00   -0.1%
test-suite.../Applications/lemon/lemon.test   47281.00   47249.00   -0.1%
test-suite...TimberWolfMC/timberwolfmc.test   250065.00  250113.00   0.0%
test-suite...chmarks/MallocBench/gs/gs.test   149889.00  149873.00  -0.0%
test-suite...ications/JM/lencod/lencod.test   769585.00  769569.00  -0.0%
test-suite.../Benchmarks/Bullet/bullet.test   770049.00  770049.00   0.0%
test-suite...HMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/128    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...HMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/256    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...CHMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/64    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...CHMARK_ANISTROPIC_DIFFUSION/32    NaN        NaN        nan%
test-suite...ENCHMARK_BILATERAL_FILTER/64/4    NaN        NaN        nan%
Geomean difference                                                   nan%
         result-old    result-new       diff
count  1.000000e+01  10.00000      10.000000
mean   3.152090e+05  311695.40000  0.006749
std    3.790398e+05  372091.42232  0.036605
min    7.530000e+02  833.00000    -0.034981
25%    4.243300e+04  42401.00000  -0.000866
50%    1.197370e+05  119689.00000 -0.000392
75%    6.397050e+05  639705.00000 -0.000005
max    1.001697e+06  966657.00000  0.106242
```

I don't have timings though.

And now to the code. The basic idea is to completely replace the whole loop.
If we can't fully kill it, don't transform.
I have left one or two comments in the code, so hopefully it can be understood.

Also, there is a few TODO's that i have left for follow-ups:
* widening of `memcmp()`/`bcmp()`
* step smaller than the comparison size
* Metadata propagation
* more than two blocks as long as there is still a single backedge?
* ???

Reviewers: reames, fhahn, mkazantsev, chandlerc, craig.topper, courbet

Reviewed By: courbet

Subscribers: hiraditya, xbolva00, nikic, jfb, gchatelet, courbet, llvm-commits, mclow.lists

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61144

llvm-svn: 370454
2019-08-30 09:51:23 +00:00
Craig Topper 5a43fdd313 [X86] Remove what little support we had for MPX
-Deprecate -mmpx and -mno-mpx command line options
-Remove CPUID detection of mpx for -march=native
-Remove MPX from all CPUs
-Remove MPX preprocessor define

I've left the "mpx" string in the backend so we don't fail on old IR, but its not connected to anything.

gcc has also deprecated these command line options. https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=GCC-Patch-To-Drop-MPX

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66669

llvm-svn: 370393
2019-08-29 18:09:02 +00:00
Craig Topper a47db7110d [X86][ReleaseNotes] Add a note about the switch to widening legalization for narrow vectors.
llvm-svn: 370233
2019-08-28 17:18:56 +00:00
Hans Wennborg dba4dd1e8d Revert r367941 "Add a note to the release not about a potentially breaking optimization"
The note was moved to the release_90 branch in r367997.

llvm-svn: 367998
2019-08-06 08:32:33 +00:00
Philip Reames e39e79358f Add a note to the release not about a potentially breaking optimization
This has come up twice already (once in pr42763 and once in the commit thread), so give warning of a new way in which UB can result in unexpected program behavior.

llvm-svn: 367941
2019-08-05 22:34:59 +00:00
Tim Northover a009a60a91 IR: print value numbers for unnamed function arguments
For consistency with normal instructions and clarity when reading IR,
it's best to print the %0, %1, ... names of function arguments in
definitions.

Also modifies the parser to accept IR in that form for obvious reasons.

llvm-svn: 367755
2019-08-03 14:28:34 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 8f5b44aead Bump the trunk version to 10.0.0svn
and clear the release notes.

llvm-svn: 366427
2019-07-18 11:51:05 +00:00
Matt Arsenault 269e4e1b60 Add some release notes for 9.0 release
llvm-svn: 366093
2019-07-15 17:50:28 +00:00
Pavel Labath 9eb4b96be0 Add lldb type unit support to the release notes
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, teemperor

Subscribers: llvm-commits, lldb-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64366

llvm-svn: 365568
2019-07-09 22:36:43 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim 456fc4fa6d Retire VS2015 Support
As proposed here: https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-June/133147.html

This patch raises the minimum supported version to build LLVM/Clang to Visual Studio 2017.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64326

llvm-svn: 365452
2019-07-09 10:10:48 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere 7626e1e504 Add lldb-mi deprecation to the release notes
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64254

llvm-svn: 365231
2019-07-05 18:23:52 +00:00
Jonas Devlieghere bb65a38b56 Add LLDB section to the release notes
llvm-svn: 365228
2019-07-05 17:58:30 +00:00
Serge Guelton 85fc597f26 Document legacy pass manager extension points
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64093

llvm-svn: 365142
2019-07-04 14:03:11 +00:00
Tim Northover b7141207a4 Reapply: IR: add optional type to 'byval' function parameters
When we switch to opaque pointer types we will need some way to describe
how many bytes a 'byval' parameter should occupy on the stack. This adds
a (for now) optional extra type parameter.

If present, the type must match the pointee type of the argument.

The original commit did not remap byval types when linking modules, which broke
LTO. This version fixes that.

Note to front-end maintainers: if this causes test failures, it's probably
because the "byval" attribute is printed after attributes without any parameter
after this change.

llvm-svn: 362128
2019-05-30 18:48:23 +00:00
Fangrui Song f4dfd63c74 [IR] Disallow llvm.global_ctors and llvm.global_dtors of the 2-field form in textual format
The 3-field form was introduced by D3499 in 2014 and the legacy 2-field
form was planned to be removed in LLVM 4.0

For the textual format, this patch migrates the existing 2-field form to
use the 3-field form and deletes the compatibility code.
test/Verifier/global-ctors-2.ll checks we have a friendly error message.

For bitcode, lib/IR/AutoUpgrade UpgradeGlobalVariables will upgrade the
2-field form (add i8* null as the third field).

Reviewed By: rnk, dexonsmith

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D61547

llvm-svn: 360742
2019-05-15 02:35:32 +00:00
Roman Lebedev a6be919c92 [Docs] ReleaseNotes: fixup markup in memcmp()->bcmp() entry
llvm-svn: 358986
2019-04-23 13:46:18 +00:00
Matt Arsenault caf1316f71 IR: Add immarg attribute
This indicates an intrinsic parameter is required to be a constant,
and should not be replaced with a non-constant value.

Add the attribute to all AMDGPU and generic intrinsics that comments
indicate it should apply to. I scanned other target intrinsics, but I
don't see any obvious comments indicating which arguments are intended
to be only immediates.

This breaks one questionable testcase for the autoupgrade. I'm unclear
on whether the autoupgrade is supposed to really handle declarations
which were never valid. The verifier fails because the attributes now
refer to a parameter past the end of the argument list.

llvm-svn: 355981
2019-03-12 21:02:54 +00:00
Clement Courbet 8e16d73346 [SelectionDAG] Allow the user to specify a memeq function.
Summary:
Right now, when we encounter a string equality check,
e.g. `if (memcmp(a, b, s) == 0)`, we try to expand to a comparison if `s` is a
small compile-time constant, and fall back on calling `memcmp()` else.

This is sub-optimal because memcmp has to compute much more than
equality.

This patch replaces `memcmp(a, b, s) == 0` by `bcmp(a, b, s) == 0` on platforms
that support `bcmp`.

`bcmp` can be made much more efficient than `memcmp` because equality
compare is trivially parallel while lexicographic ordering has a chain
dependency.

Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jyknight, ckennelly, gchatelet, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56593

llvm-svn: 355672
2019-03-08 09:07:45 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 1fe469ae6c Bump the trunk version to 9.0.0svn
llvm-svn: 351320
2019-01-16 10:57:02 +00:00
Derek Schuff 5e54bc18e2 [WebAssembly] Update release notes
Summary:
Explicitly note that multithreading support is not included in the stable
ABI.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56681

llvm-svn: 351213
2019-01-15 17:54:42 +00:00
Dan Gohman 220dcdb997 [WebAssembly] Add a release notes blurb
Bid farewell to LLVM_EXPERIMENTAL_TARGETS_TO_BUILD!

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56648

llvm-svn: 351083
2019-01-14 18:20:30 +00:00
Roman Lebedev 629d9804e3 ReleaseNotes: X86 Target: bdver2 sched model was added (D52779)
llvm-svn: 350053
2018-12-24 12:12:26 +00:00
Tom Stellard ed713c55b2 ReleaseNotes: Document removal of add_llvm_loadable_module CMake macro
This was removed in r349839.

llvm-svn: 349921
2018-12-21 16:20:37 +00:00
Max Moroz b2091c930b [llvm-cov] Add lcov tracefile export format.
Summary:
lcov tracefiles are used by various coverage reporting tools and build
systems (e.g., Bazel). It is a simple text-based format to parse and
more convenient to use than the JSON export format, which needs
additional processing to map regions/segments back to line numbers.

It's a little unfortunate that "text" format is now overloaded to refer
specifically to JSON for export, but I wanted to avoid making any
breaking changes to the UI of the llvm-cov tool at this time.

Patch by Tony Allevato (@allevato).

Reviewers: Dor1s, vsk

Reviewed By: Dor1s, vsk

Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54266

llvm-svn: 346506
2018-11-09 16:10:44 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 7c890242cb ReleaseNotes: update links to use https
llvm-svn: 341785
2018-09-10 08:50:31 +00:00
Hans Wennborg 67500081a2 Clear release notes and update version
llvm-svn: 338556
2018-08-01 13:58:00 +00:00
Duncan P. N. Exon Smith 0f81faed05 ADT: Document advantages of SmallVector<T,0> over std::vector
In light of the recent changes to SmallVector in r335421, r337514, and
r337820, document its advantages over std::vector (see r175906 and
r266909).

Also add a release note.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D49748

llvm-svn: 338071
2018-07-26 21:29:54 +00:00
David Carlier 6887aa8adc [docs] add various sanitisers support for FreeBSD/OpenBSD
since couple of months, supports had been enabled for FreeBSD and OpenBSD.

Reviewers: thakis, spatel, dim

Reviewed By: dim

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47322

llvm-svn: 334207
2018-06-07 16:33:48 +00:00
Amaury Sechet 93a7d2aa3c Get rid of SETCCE
Summary: It has been deprecated in favor of SETCCCARRY for a year now and isn't used by any in tree backend.

Reviewers: efriedma, craig.topper, dblaikie, bkramer

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47685

llvm-svn: 333939
2018-06-04 18:36:22 +00:00
Nicola Zaghen 771e3beea6 [ReleaseNotes] Formatting fixes.
llvm-svn: 333902
2018-06-04 14:40:34 +00:00
Nicola Zaghen 9438b15946 [ReleaseNotes] Add release note for the new LLVM_DEBUG macro.
This is to provide a way to migrate from the old DEBUG macro to the new one.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47528

llvm-svn: 333898
2018-06-04 13:55:09 +00:00
Amaury Sechet 8467411dad Set ADDE/ADDC/SUBE/SUBC to expand by default
Summary:
They've been deprecated in favor of UADDO/ADDCARRY or USUBO/SUBCARRY for a while.

Target that uses these opcodes are changed in order to ensure their behavior doesn't change.

Reviewers: efriedma, craig.topper, dblaikie, bkramer

Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, jyknight, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, atanasyan, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47422

llvm-svn: 333748
2018-06-01 13:21:33 +00:00
Fangrui Song afa95ee03d [LLVM-C] [OCaml] Remove LLVMAddBBVectorizePass
Summary: It was fully replaced back in 2014, and the implementation was removed 11 months ago by r306797.

Reviewers: hfinkel, chandlerc, whitequark, deadalnix

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47436

llvm-svn: 333378
2018-05-28 16:58:10 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski ce358262eb Dissallow non-empty metadata for invariant.group
Summary:
This feature is not needed, but it might be usefull in the future
to use metadata to mark what which function should support it
(and strip it when not).

Reviewers: rsmith, sanjoy, amharc, kuhar

Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45419

llvm-svn: 332787
2018-05-18 23:53:46 +00:00
Piotr Padlewski 5dde809404 Rename invariant.group.barrier to launder.invariant.group
Summary:
This is one of the initial commit of "RFC: Devirtualization v2" proposal:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/16GVtCpzK8sIHNc2qZz6RN8amICNBtvjWUod2SujZVEo/edit?usp=sharing

Reviewers: rsmith, amharc, kuhar, sanjoy

Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle, javed.absar, hiraditya, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45111

llvm-svn: 331448
2018-05-03 11:03:01 +00:00
Nico Weber dd3c75a067 Stop setting LLVM_ON_WIN32 in config.h and llvm-config.h.
See thread "Replacing LLVM_ON_WIN32 with just _WIN32" on llvm-dev and cfe-dev.

I replaced all uses of LLVM_ON_WIN32 with _WIN32 in r331127 (llvm),
r331069 (clang), r329697 (lldb), r329696 (lld), r329696 (clang-tools-extra).

If your out-of-tree program used LLVM_ON_WIN32, just use _WIN32 instead, which
is set at exactly the same time to exactly the same value.

https://reviews.llvm.org/D46264

llvm-svn: 331224
2018-04-30 20:19:48 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 1babf5ff32 [DAGCombiner] rename function attribute for disabling ftrunc transform
This is the matching name change for the Clang patch at:
D46236
rL331209

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46237 

llvm-svn: 331210
2018-04-30 18:20:33 +00:00
Sanjay Patel f6d595bd44 [docs] add fp-cast-overflow-workaround options to release notes
llvm-svn: 331059
2018-04-27 16:33:35 +00:00
Sanjay Patel c5ded68077 [docs] provide the specific sanitizer option to detect junk-in-the-ftrunc
llvm-svn: 330958
2018-04-26 17:04:07 +00:00
Sanjay Patel 3d453ad711 [DAGCombine] (float)((int) f) --> ftrunc (PR36617)
This was originally committed at rL328921 and reverted at rL329920 to
investigate failures in Chrome. This time I've added to the ReleaseNotes
to warn users of the potential of exposing UB and let me repeat that
here for more exposure:

  Optimization of floating-point casts is improved. This may cause surprising
  results for code that is relying on undefined behavior. Code sanitizers can
  be used to detect affected patterns such as this:

    int main() {
      float x = 4294967296.0f;
      x = (float)((int)x);
      printf("junk in the ftrunc: %f\n", x);
      return 0;
    }

    $ clang -O1 ftrunc.c -fsanitize=undefined ; ./a.out
    ftrunc.c:5:15: runtime error: 4.29497e+09 is outside the range of 
                   representable values of type 'int'
    junk in the ftrunc: 0.000000


Original commit message:

fptosi / fptoui round towards zero, and that's the same behavior as ISD::FTRUNC,
so replace a pair of casts with the equivalent node. We don't have to account for
special cases (NaN, INF) because out-of-range casts are undefined.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44909

llvm-svn: 330437
2018-04-20 15:07:55 +00:00
Manoj Gupta 431d8c39ba [Release Notes] Add release note for "-fmerge-all-constants"
Summary:
Add note that "-fmerge-all-constants" is not applied as default
anymore.

Reviewers: rjmccall, rsmith, chandlerc

Subscribers: llvm-commits, thakis

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45388

llvm-svn: 329457
2018-04-06 21:11:09 +00:00
Clement Courbet ac74acdefe Re-land r329156 "Add llvm-exegesis tool."
Fixed to depend on and initialize the native target instead of X86.

llvm-svn: 329169
2018-04-04 11:37:06 +00:00
Clement Courbet 7949b3b1dc Revert r329156 "Add llvm-exegesis tool."
Breaks a bunch of bots.

llvm-svn: 329157
2018-04-04 08:22:54 +00:00
Clement Courbet 7287b2c1ec Add llvm-exegesis tool.
Summary:
[llvm-exegesis][RFC] Automatic Measurement of Instruction Latency/Uops

This is the code corresponding to the RFC "llvm-exegesis Automatic Measurement of Instruction Latency/Uops".

The RFC is available on the LLVM mailing lists as well as the following document
for easier reading:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1QidaJMJUyQdRrFKD66vE1_N55whe0coQ3h1GpFzz27M/edit?usp=sharing

Subscribers: mgorny, gchatelet, orwant, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44519

llvm-svn: 329156
2018-04-04 08:13:32 +00:00