Adds loop expansions for known-size and unknown-sized memcpy calls, allowing the
target to provide the operand types through TTI callbacks. The default values
for the TTI callbacks use int8 operand types and matches the existing behaviour
if they aren't overridden by the target.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32536
llvm-svn: 307346
Summary:
`Instruction::Switch`: only first operand can be set to a non-constant value.
`Instruction::InsertValue` both the first and the second operand can be set to a non-constant value.
`Instruction::Alloca` return true for non-static allocation.
Reviewers: efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: srhines, pirama, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34905
llvm-svn: 307294
Going through the Constant methods requires redetermining that the Constant is a ConstantInt and then calling isZero/isOne/isMinusOne.
llvm-svn: 307292
Currently, we do not support multiple exiting blocks to the
latch exit block. However, this bailout wasn't triggered when we had a
unique exit block (which is the latch exit), with multiple exiting
blocks to that unique exit.
Moved the bailout so that it's triggered in both cases and added
testcase.
llvm-svn: 307291
Summary: In this code we got to Dom by following the predecessor link of BB. So it stands to reason that BB should also show up as a successor of Dom's terminator right? There isn't a way to have the CFG connect in only one direction is there?
Reviewers: jmolloy, davide, mcrosier
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35025
llvm-svn: 307276
It seems that the patch was reverted by mistake. Clang testing showed failure of the
MathExtras.SaturatingMultiply test, however I was unable to reproduce the issue on the
fresh code base and was able to confirm that the transformation introduced by the change
does not happen in the said test. This gives a strong confidence that the actual reason of
the failure of the initial patch was somewhere else, and that problem now seems to be
fixed. Re-submitting the change to confirm that.
llvm-svn: 307244
This adds exact flags to AShr/LShr flags where we can statically
prove it is valid using the range of induction variables. This
allows further optimisations to remove extra loads.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34207
llvm-svn: 307157
This patch seems to cause failures of test MathExtras.SaturatingMultiply on
multiple buildbots. Reverting until the reason of that is clarified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/rL307126
llvm-svn: 307135
-If there is a IndVar which is known to be non-negative, and there is a value which is also non-negative,
then signed and unsigned comparisons between them produce the same result. Both of those can be
seen in the same loop. To allow other optimizations to simplify them, we turn all instructions like
%c = icmp slt i32 %iv, %b
to
%c = icmp ult i32 %iv, %b
if both %iv and %b are known to be non-negative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34979
llvm-svn: 307126
This commit pretty much rolls back the logic added in r306495
as in the testcase provided we simplify an `icmp` looking through
a PHI that hasn't been mapped yet.
I think instsimplify shouldn't do threading over select/phis or
just looking through phis in general, but this is what we have
now. Also, add a test to prevent this from happening in case somebody
wants to modify this code again.
Briefly discussed with Kyle Butt (thanks Kyle!).
llvm-svn: 306938
With fix for use-after-free errors. We can't add the new branch and
remove the old one until we are done with the Builder constructed for
the block.
llvm-svn: 306937
Check if a single cast is preventing handling a first-order-recurrence Phi,
because the scheduling constraints it imposes on the first-order-recurrence
shuffle are infeasible; but they can be made feasible by moving the cast
downwards. Record such casts and move them when vectorizing the loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33058
llvm-svn: 306884
This patch appends the name of the function to the switch generated lookup
table. This will ease the visual debugging in identifying the function the table
is generated from.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34817
llvm-svn: 306867
Summary:
Runtime unrolling is done for loops with a single exit block and a
single exiting block (and this exiting block should be the latch block).
This patch adds logic to support unrolling in the presence of multiple exit
blocks (which also means multiple exiting blocks).
Currently this is under an off-by-default option and is supported when
epilog code is generated. Support in presence of prolog code will be in
a future patch (we just need to add more tests, and update comments).
This patch is essentially an implementation patch. I have not added any
heuristic (in terms of branches added or code size) to decide when
this should be enabled.
Reviewers: mkuper, sanjoy, reames, evstupac
Reviewed by: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33001
llvm-svn: 306846
In rL300494 there was an attempt to deal with excessive compile time on
invocations of getSign/ZeroExtExpr using local caching. This approach only
helps if we request the same SCEV multiple times throughout recursion. But
in the bug PR33431 we see a case where we request different values all the time,
so caching does not help and the size of the cache grows enormously.
In this patch we remove the local cache for this methods and add the recursion
depth limit instead, as we do for arithmetics. This gives us a guarantee that the
invocation sequence is limited and reasonably short.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34273
llvm-svn: 306785
Summary:
I was testing using this expansion logic in other cases besides
NVPTX, and found some runtime failures due to the lack of a check
for a zero length memcpy/memset before the loop. There is already
such a check in the memmove expansion code though.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: jholewinski, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34707
llvm-svn: 306541
When simplifying an instruction that has been re-mapped, it should never
simplify to an instruction in the original function. In the edge case
where we are inlining a function into itself, the existing code led to
incorrect behavior. Replace the incorrect code with an assert verifying
that we never expect simplification to produce an instruction in the old
function, unless the functions are the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33850
llvm-svn: 306495
BlockAddress are only valid within their function context, which does not
interact well with CodeExtractor. Detect this case and prevent it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33839
llvm-svn: 306448
Instead of getBackEdgeTakenCount, use getExitCount on the latch exiting block
(which is proven to be the only exiting block in the loop to be unrolled).
llvm-svn: 306410
metadata out of InstCombine and into helpers.
NFC, this just exposes the logic used by InstCombine when propagating
metadata from one load instruction to another. The plan is to use this
in SROA to address PR32902.
If anyone has better ideas about how to factor this or name variables,
I'm all ears, but this seemed like a pretty good start and lets us make
progress on the PR.
This is based on a patch by Ariel Ben-Yehuda (D34285).
llvm-svn: 306267
This was reverted in r306252, but I already had the bug fixed and was
just trying to form a test case.
The original commit factored the logic for forming dedicated exits
inside of LoopSimplify into a helper that could be used elsewhere and
with an approach that required fewer intermediate data structures. See
that commit for full details including the change to the statistic, etc.
The code looked fine to me and my reviewers, but in fact didn't handle
indirectbr correctly -- it left the 'InLoopPredecessors' vector dirty.
If you have code that looks *just* right, you can end up leaking these
predecessors into a subsequent rewrite, and crash deep down when trying
to update PHI nodes for predecessors that don't exist.
I've added an assert that makes the bug much more obvious, and then
changed the code to reliably clear the vector so we don't get this bug
again in some other form as the code changes.
I've also added a test case that *does* manage to catch this while also
giving some nice positive coverage in the face of indirectbr.
The real code that found this came out of what I think is CPython's
interpreter loop, but any code with really "creative" interpreter loops
mixing indirectbr and other exit paths could manage to tickle the bug.
I was hard to reduce the original test case because in addition to
having a particular pattern of IR, the whole thing depends on the order
of the predecessors which is in turn depends on use list order. The test
case added here was designed so that in multiple different predecessor
orderings it should always end up going down the same path and tripping
the same bug. I hope. At least, it tripped it for me without
manipulating the use list order which is better than anything bugpoint
could do...
llvm-svn: 306257
I want to use the same logic as LoopSimplify to form dedicated exits in
another pass (SimpleLoopUnswitch) so I wanted to factor it out here.
I also noticed that there is a pretty significantly more efficient way
to implement this than the way the code in LoopSimplify worked. We don't
need to actually retain the set of unique exit blocks, we can just
rewrite them as we find them and use only a set to deduplicate.
This did require changing one part of LoopSimplify to not re-use the
unique set of exits, but it only used it to check that there was
a single unique exit. That part of the code is about to walk the exiting
blocks anyways, so it seemed better to rewrite it to use those exiting
blocks to compute this property on-demand.
I also had to ditch a statistic, but it doesn't seem terribly valuable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34049
llvm-svn: 306081
Summary:
This allows strlen to be moved out of the loop in case its argument is
not modified in the loop in LICM.
Reviewers: hfinkel, davide, sanjoy, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34323
llvm-svn: 305641
This is a fix for PR33292 that shows a case of extremely long compilation
of a single .c file with clang, with most time spent within SCEV.
We have a mechanism of limiting recursion depth for getAddExpr to avoid
long analysis in SCEV. However, there are calls from getAddExpr to getMulExpr
and back that do not propagate the info about depth. As result of this, a chain
getAddExpr -> ... .> getAddExpr -> getMulExpr -> getAddExpr -> ... -> getAddExpr
can be extremely long, with every segment of getAddExpr's being up to max depth long.
This leads either to long compilation or crash by stack overflow. We face this situation while
analyzing big SCEVs in the test of PR33292.
This patch applies the same limit on max expression depth for getAddExpr and getMulExpr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33984
llvm-svn: 305463
I did this a long time ago with a janky python script, but now
clang-format has built-in support for this. I fed clang-format every
line with a #include and let it re-sort things according to the precise
LLVM rules for include ordering baked into clang-format these days.
I've reverted a number of files where the results of sorting includes
isn't healthy. Either places where we have legacy code relying on
particular include ordering (where possible, I'll fix these separately)
or where we have particular formatting around #include lines that
I didn't want to disturb in this patch.
This patch is *entirely* mechanical. If you get merge conflicts or
anything, just ignore the changes in this patch and run clang-format
over your #include lines in the files.
Sorry for any noise here, but it is important to keep these things
stable. I was seeing an increasing number of patches with irrelevant
re-ordering of #include lines because clang-format was used. This patch
at least isolates that churn, makes it easy to skip when resolving
conflicts, and gets us to a clean baseline (again).
llvm-svn: 304787
Summary:
This problem stems from the fact that instructions are allocated using new
in LLVM, i.e. there is no relationship that can be derived by just looking
at the pointer value.
This interface dispatches to appropriate dominance check given 2 instructions,
i.e. in case the instructions are in the same basic block, ordered basicblock
(with instruction numbering and caching) are used. Otherwise, dominator tree
is used.
This is a preparation patch for https://reviews.llvm.org/D32720
Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel, davide
Subscribers: davide, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33380
llvm-svn: 304764
This was rL304226, reverted in 304228 due to a clang assertion failure
on the build bots. That problem should have been addressed by clang
commit rL304470.
llvm-svn: 304488
Summary:
Sort OpsToRename before iterating to make iteration order deterministic.
Thanks to Daniel Berlin for the sorting logic.
Reviewers: dberlin, RKSimon, efriedma, davide
Reviewed By: dberlin, davide
Subscribers: sanjoy, davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33265
llvm-svn: 304447
This patch does an inline expansion of memcmp.
It changes the memcmp library call into an inline expansion when the size is
known at compile time and is under a target specified threshold.
This expansion is implemented in CodeGenPrepare and expands into straight line
code. The target specifies a maximum load size and the expansion works by using
this size to load the two sources, compare, and exit early if a difference is
found. It also has a special case when the memcmp result is used in a compare
to zero equality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28637
llvm-svn: 304313
Summary:
In rL302576, DISubprograms gained the constraint that a !dbg attachments to functions must
have a 1:1 mapping to DISubprograms. As part of that change, the function cloning support
was adjusted to attempt to enforce this invariant during cloning. However, there
were several problems with the implementation. Part of these were fixed in rL304079.
However, there was a more fundamental problem with these changes, namely that it
bypasses the matadata value map, causing the cloned metadata to be a mix of metadata
pointing to the new suprogram (where manual code was added to fix those up) and the
old suprogram (where this was not the case). This mismatch could cause a number of
different assertion failures in the DWARF emitter. Some of these are given at
https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/22069, but some others have been observed
as well. Attempt to rectify this by partially reverting the manual DI metadata fixup,
and instead using the standard value map approach. To retain the desired semantics
of not duplicating the compilation unit and inlined subprograms, explicitly freeze
these in the value map.
Reviewers: dblaikie, aprantl, GorNishanov, echristo
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33655
llvm-svn: 304226
Summary:
I believe https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302576 introduced two bugs:
1) it produces duplicate distinct variables for every: dbg.value describing the same variable.
To fix the problme I switched form getDistinct() to get() in DebugLoc.cpp: auto reparentVar = [&](DILocalVariable *Var) {
return DILocalVariable::getDistinct(
2) It passes NewFunction plain name as a linkagename parameter to Subprogram constructor. Breaks assert in:
|| DeclLinkageName.empty()) || LinkageName == DeclLinkageName) && "decl has a linkage name and it is different"' failed.
#9 0x00007f5010261b75 llvm::DwarfUnit::applySubprogramDefinitionAttributes(llvm::DISubprogram const*, llvm::DIE&) /home/gor/llvm/lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfUnit.cpp:1173:3
#
(Edit: reproducer added)
Here how https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302576 broke coroutine debug info.
Coroutine body of the original function is split into several parts by cloning and removing unneeded code.
All parts describe the original function and variables present in the original function.
For a simple case, prior to Split, original function has these two blocks:
```
PostSpill: ; preds = %AllocaSpillBB
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %x, i64 0, metadata !14, metadata !15), !dbg !13
store i32 %x, i32* %x.addr, align 4
...
and
sw.epilog: ; preds = %sw.bb
%x.addr.reload.addr = getelementptr inbounds %f.Frame, %f.Frame* %FramePtr, i32 0, i32 4, !dbg !20
%4 = load i32, i32* %x.addr.reload.addr, align 4, !dbg !20
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %4, i64 0, metadata !14, metadata !15), !dbg !13!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !6, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
Note that in two blocks different expression represent the same original user variable X.
Before rL302576, for every cloned function there was exactly one cloned DILocalVariable(name: "x" as in:
```
define i8* @f(i32 %x) #0 !dbg !6 {
...
!6 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
...
!14 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !6, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
define internal fastcc void @f.resume(%f.Frame* %FramePtr) #0 !dbg !25 {
...
!25 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped, isOptimized: false, unit: !0, variables: !2)
!28 = !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !25, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
After rL302576, for every cloned function there were as many DILocalVariable(name: "x" as there were "call void @llvm.dbg.value" for that variable.
This was causing asserts in VerifyDebugInfo and AssemblyPrinter.
Example:
```
!27 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", linkageName: "f.resume", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55,
!29 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
!39 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
!41 = distinct !DILocalVariable(name: "x", arg: 1, scope: !27, file: !7, line: 55, type: !11)
```
Second problem:
Prior to rL302576, all clones were described by DISubprogram referring to original function.
```
define i8* @f(i32 %x) #0 !dbg !6 {
...
!6 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
define internal fastcc void @f.resume(%f.Frame* %FramePtr) #0 !dbg !25 {
...
!25 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55, flags: DIFlagPrototyped,
```
After rL302576, DISubprogram for clones is of two minds, plain name refers to the original name, linkageName refers to plain name of the clone.
```
!27 = distinct !DISubprogram(name: "f", linkageName: "f.resume", scope: !7, file: !7, line: 55, type: !8, isLocal: false, isDefinition: true, scopeLine: 55,
```
I think the assumption in AsmPrinter is that both name and linkageName should refer to the same entity. It asserts here when they are not:
```
|| DeclLinkageName.empty()) || LinkageName == DeclLinkageName) && "decl has a linkage name and it is different"' failed.
#9 0x00007f5010261b75 llvm::DwarfUnit::applySubprogramDefinitionAttributes(llvm::DISubprogram const*, llvm::DIE&) /home/gor/llvm/lib/CodeGen/AsmPrinter/DwarfUnit.cpp:1173:3
```
After this fix, behavior (with respect to coroutines) reverts to exactly as it was before and therefore making them debuggable again, or even more importantly, compilable, with "-g"
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33614
llvm-svn: 304079
This patch provides an initial prototype for a pass that sinks instructions based on GVN information, similar to GVNHoist. It is not yet ready for commiting but I've uploaded it to gather some initial thoughts.
This pass attempts to sink instructions into successors, reducing static
instruction count and enabling if-conversion.
We use a variant of global value numbering to decide what can be sunk.
Consider:
[ %a1 = add i32 %b, 1 ] [ %c1 = add i32 %d, 1 ]
[ %a2 = xor i32 %a1, 1 ] [ %c2 = xor i32 %c1, 1 ]
\ /
[ %e = phi i32 %a2, %c2 ]
[ add i32 %e, 4 ]
GVN would number %a1 and %c1 differently because they compute different
results - the VN of an instruction is a function of its opcode and the
transitive closure of its operands. This is the key property for hoisting
and CSE.
What we want when sinking however is for a numbering that is a function of
the *uses* of an instruction, which allows us to answer the question "if I
replace %a1 with %c1, will it contribute in an equivalent way to all
successive instructions?". The (new) PostValueTable class in GVN provides this
mapping.
This pass has some shown really impressive improvements especially for codesize already on internal benchmarks, so I have high hopes it can replace all the sinking logic in SimplifyCFG.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24805
llvm-svn: 303850
This continues the changes started when computeSignBit was replaced with this new version of computeKnowBits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33431
llvm-svn: 303773
Summary:
Before this change, AttributeLists stored a pair of index and
AttributeSet. This is memory efficient if most arguments do not have
attributes. However, it requires doing a search over the pairs to test
an argument or function attribute. Profiling shows that this loop was
0.76% of the time in 'opt -O2' of sqlite3.c, because LLVM constantly
tests values for nullability.
This was worth about 2.5% of mid-level optimization cycles on the
sqlite3 amalgamation. Here are the full perf results:
https://reviews.llvm.org/P7995
Here are just the before and after cycle counts:
```
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_before -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
13,274,181,184 cycles # 3.047 GHz ( +- 0.28% )
$ perf stat -r 5 ./opt_after -O2 sqlite3.bc -o /dev/null
12,906,927,263 cycles # 3.043 GHz ( +- 0.51% )
```
This patch *does not* change the indices used to query attributes, as
requested by reviewers. Tracking whether an index is usable for array
indexing is a huge pain that affects many of the internal APIs, so it
would be good to come back later and do a cleanup to remove this
internal adjustment.
Reviewers: pete, chandlerc
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32819
llvm-svn: 303654
This patch builds over https://reviews.llvm.org/rL303349 and replaces
the use of the condition only if it is safe to do so.
We should not blindly RAUW the condition if experimental.guard or assume
is a use of that
condition. This is because LVI may have used the guard/assume to
identify the
value of the condition, and RUAWing will fold the guard/assume and uses
before the guards/assumes.
Reviewers: sanjoy, reames, trentxintong, mkazantsev
Reviewed by: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33257
llvm-svn: 303633