Vector types, quadword integers and f128 currently cannot be handled in
FastISel. We did not skip f128 type in lowering arguments, which causes
a crash. This patch will fix it.
Reviewed By: steven.zhang
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90206
tryLatency compares two sched candidates. For the top zone it prefers
the one with lesser depth, but only if that depth is greater than the
total latency of the instructions we've already scheduled -- otherwise
its latency would be hidden and there would be no stall.
Unfortunately it only tests the depth of one of the candidates. This can
lead to situations where the TopDepthReduce heuristic does not kick in,
but a lower priority heuristic chooses the other candidate, whose depth
*is* greater than the already scheduled latency, which causes a stall.
The fix is to apply the heuristic if the depth of *either* candidate is
greater than the already scheduled latency.
All this also applies to the BotHeightReduce heuristic in the bottom
zone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72392
When we call checkResourceLimit in bumpCycle or bumpNode, and we
know the resource count has just reached the limit (the equations
are equal). We should return true to mark that we are resource
limited for next schedule, or else we might continue to schedule
in favor of latency for 1 more schedule and create a schedule that
actually overbook the resource.
When we call checkResourceLimit to estimate the resource limite before
scheduling, we don't need to return true even if the equations are
equal, as it shouldn't limit the schedule for it .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62345
llvm-svn: 362805
When switched to the MI scheduler for P9, the hardware is modeled as out of order.
However, inside the MI Scheduler algorithm, we still use the in-order scheduling model
as the MicroOpBufferSize isn't set. The MI scheduler take it as the hw cannot buffer
the op. So, only when all the available instructions issued, the pending instruction
could be scheduled. That is not true for our P9 hw in fact.
This patch is trying to enable the Out-of-Order scheduling model. The buffer size 44 is
picked from the P9 hw spec, and the perf test indicate that, its value won't hurt the cpu2017.
With this patch, there are 3 specs improved over 3% and 1 spec deg over 3%. The detail is as follows:
x264_r: +6.95%
cactuBSSN_r: +6.94%
lbm_r: +4.11%
xz_r: -3.85%
And the GEOMEAN for all the C/C++ spec in spec2017 is about 0.18% improved.
Reviewer: Nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55810
llvm-svn: 350285
This patch will address using the xscpsgndp instruction to copy floating point
scalar registers instead of the xxlor (specifically XXLORf) instruction that is
currently used. Additionally, this patch of utilizing xscpsgndp will apply to
P9, while pre-P9 will still use xxlor.
Patch by amyk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50004
llvm-svn: 340643
Optimize code sequences for integer conversion to fp128 when the integer is a result of:
* float->int
* float->long
* double->int
* double->long
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48429
llvm-svn: 336316
This patch enable parameter passing and return by value for float128 types.
Passing aggregate/union which contain float128 members will be submitted in
subsequent patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47552
llvm-svn: 336306