The compiler fails with assertion during legalization of SETCC for <3 x i8> operands.
The result is extended to <4 x i8> and then truncated <4 x i1>. It does not happen on AVX2, because the final result of SETCC is <4 x i32>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34503
llvm-svn: 306242
Summary:
Make sure we are comparing the unknown instructions in the alias set and the instruction interested in.
I believe this is clearly a bug (missed opportunity). I can also add some test cases if desired.
Reviewers: hfinkel, davide, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34597
llvm-svn: 306241
Summary:
Support vector type G_EXTRACT selection. For now G_EXTRACT marked as legal for any type, so nothing to do in legalizer.
Split from https://reviews.llvm.org/D33665
Reviewers: qcolombet, t.p.northover, zvi, guyblank
Reviewed By: guyblank
Subscribers: guyblank, rovka, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33957
llvm-svn: 306240
The cost of an interleaved access was only implemented for AVX512. For other
X86 targets an overly conservative Base cost was returned, resulting in
avoiding vectorization where it is actually profitable to vectorize.
This patch starts to add costs for AVX2 for most prominent cases of
interleaved accesses (stride 3,4 chars, for now).
Note1: Improvements of up to ~4x were observed in some of EEMBC's rgb
workloads; There is also a known issue of 15-30% degradations on some of these
workloads, associated with an interleaved access followed by type
promotion/widening; the resulting shuffle sequence is currently inefficient and
will be improved by a series of patches that extend the X86InterleavedAccess pass
(such as D34601 and more to follow).
Note 2: The costs in this patch do not reflect port pressure penalties which can
be very dominant in the case of interleaved accesses since most of the shuffle
operations are restricted to a single port. Further tuning, that may incorporate
these considerations, will be done on top of the upcoming improved shuffle
sequences (that is, along with the abovementioned work to extend
X86InterleavedAccess pass).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34023
llvm-svn: 306238
Ananas is a home-brew operating system, mainly for amd64 machines. After
using GCC for quite some time, it has switched to clang and never looked
back - yet, having to manually patch things is annoying, so it'd be much
nicer if this was in the official tree.
More information:
https://github.com/zhmu/ananas/https://rink.nu/projects/ananas.html
Submitted by: Rink Springer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32937
llvm-svn: 306237
If you dump a pdb to yaml, and then round-trip it back to a pdb,
and run cvdump -l <file> on the new pdb, cvdump will generate
output such as this.
*** LINES
** Module: "d:\src\llvm\test\DebugInfo\PDB\Inputs\empty.obj"
Error: Line number corrupted: invalid file id 0
<Unknown> (MD5), 0001:00000010-0000001A, line/addr pairs = 3
5 00000010 6 00000013 7 00000018
Note the error message about the corrupted line number.
It turns out that the problem is that cvdump cannot find the
/names stream (e.g. the global string table), and the reason it
can't find the /names stream is because it doesn't understand
the NameMap that we serialize which tells pdb consumers which
stream has the string table.
Some experimentation shows that if we add items to the hash
table in a specific order before serializing it, cvdump can read
it. This suggests that either we're using the wrong hash function,
or we're serializing something incorrectly, but it will take some
deeper investigation to figure out how / why. For now, this at
least allows cvdump to read our line information (and incidentally,
produces an identical byte sequence to what Microsoft tools
produce when writing the named stream map).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34491
llvm-svn: 306233
Summary:
This patch changes getRange to getRangeRef and returns a reference to the ConstantRange object stored inside the DenseMap caches. We then take advantage of that to add new helper methods that can return min/max value of a signed or unsigned ConstantRange using that reference without first copying the ConstantRange.
getRangeRef calls itself recursively and I believe the reference return is fine for those calls.
I've left getSignedRange and getUnsignedRange returning a ConstantRange object so they will make a copy now. This is to ensure safety since the reference will be invalidated if the DenseMap changes.
I'm sure there are still more places that can take advantage of the reference and I'll submit future patches as I find them.
Reviewers: sanjoy, davide
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: zzheng, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32978
llvm-svn: 306229
When SelectionDAG expands memcpy (or memmove) call into a sequence of load and store instructions, it disregards dereferenceable flag even the source pointer is known to be dereferenceable.
This results in an assertion failure if SelectionDAG commonizes a load instruction generated for memcpy with another load instruction for the source pointer.
This patch makes SelectionDAG to set the dereferenceable flag for the load instructions properly to avoid the assertion failure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34467
llvm-svn: 306209
Summary:
m_CombineOr isn't very efficient. The code using it is also quite verbose.
This patch adds m_Shift and m_BitwiseLogic matchers to make the using code more concise and improve the match efficiency.
Reviewers: spatel, davide
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34593
llvm-svn: 306206
The intention of processFixupValue is not to redefine the semantics of
MCExpr. It is odd enough that a expression lowers to a PCRel MCExpr or
not depending on what it looks like. At least it is a local hack now.
I left a fix for anyone trying to figure out what producers should be
producing a different expression.
llvm-svn: 306200
Summary:
InstCombine replaces large allocas with small globals consts causing buffer overflows
on valid code, see PR33372.
This fix permits this optimization only if the global is dereference for alloca size.
Fixes PR33372
Reviewers: eugenis, majnemer, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34311
llvm-svn: 306194
processFixupValue is called on every relaxation iteration. applyFixup
is only called once at the very end. applyFixup is then the correct
place to do last minute changes and value checks.
While here, do proper range checks again for fixup_arm_thumb_bl. We
used to do it, but dropped because of thumb2. We now do it again, but
use the thumb2 range.
llvm-svn: 306177
Revert "[ORC] Remove redundant semicolons from DEFINE_SIMPLE_CONVERSION_FUNCTIONS uses."
Revert "[ORC] Move ORC IR layer interface from addModuleSet to addModule and fix the module type as std::shared_ptr<Module>."
They broke ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/test-global-ctors.ll on linux.
llvm-svn: 306176
After fixing (r306173) a failing test in the lld test suite (r306173),
reland r306095.
Original commit message:
[mips] Fix register positions in the aui/daui instructions
Swapped the position of the rt and rs register in the aui/daui
instructions for mips32r6 and mips64r6. With this change, the format of
the generated instructions complies with specifications and GCC.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
llvm-svn: 306174
This reverts commit r306157.
It caused some timeouts in clang tests. Perhaps unreachable loops have
far too many phi nodes.
Reverting and investigating.
llvm-svn: 306162
Summary:
Without this patch some types have incorrect size and/or alignment
according to the MSP430 EABI.
Reviewers: asl, awygle
Reviewed By: asl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34561
llvm-svn: 306159
Currently, the implementation of delete dead loops has a special case
when the loop being deleted is never executed. This special case
(updating of exit block's incoming values for phis) can be
run as a prepass for non-executable loops before performing
the actual deletion.
llvm-svn: 306157
This patch dumps the raw bytes of the pdb name map which contains
the mapping of stream name to stream index for the string table
and other reserved streams.
llvm-svn: 306148
This patch contains a pass that transforms CBZ/CBNZ/TBZ/TBNZ instructions into a
conditional branch (Bcc), when the NZCV flags can be set for "free". This is
preferred on targets that have more flexibility when scheduling Bcc
instructions as compared to CBZ/CBNZ/TBZ/TBNZ (assuming all other variables are
equal). This can reduce register pressure and is also the default behavior for
GCC.
A few examples:
add w8, w0, w1 -> cmn w0, w1 ; CMN is an alias of ADDS.
cbz w8, .LBB_2 -> b.eq .LBB0_2 ; single def/use of w8 removed.
add w8, w0, w1 -> adds w8, w0, w1 ; w8 has multiple uses.
cbz w8, .LBB1_2 -> b.eq .LBB1_2
sub w8, w0, w1 -> subs w8, w0, w1 ; w8 has multiple uses.
tbz w8, #31, .LBB6_2 -> b.ge .LBB6_2
In looking at all current sub-target machine descriptions, this transformation
appears to be either positive or neutral.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34220.
llvm-svn: 306144
Commit r306010 adjusted the condition as follows:
- if (Is64Bit) {
+ if (!STI.isTargetWin32()) {
The intent was to preserve the behavior on all Windows platforms
but extend the behavior on 64-bit Windows platforms to every
other one. (Before r306010, emitStackProbeCall only ever executed
when emitting code for Windows triples.)
Unfortunately,
if (Is64Bit && STI.isOSWindows())
is not the same as
if (!STI.isTargetWin32())
because of the way isTargetWin32() is defined:
bool isTargetWin32() const {
return !In64BitMode && (isTargetCygMing() ||
isTargetKnownWindowsMSVC());
}
In practice this broke the JIT tests on 32-bit Windows, which did not
satisfy the new condition:
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/MCJIT/2003-01-15-AlignmentTest.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/MCJIT/2003-08-15-AllocaAssertion.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/MCJIT/2003-08-23-RegisterAllocatePhysReg.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/MCJIT/test-loadstore.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/2003-01-15-AlignmentTest.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/2003-08-15-AllocaAssertion.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/2003-08-23-RegisterAllocatePhysReg.ll
LLVM :: ExecutionEngine/OrcMCJIT/test-loadstore.ll
because %esp was not updated correctly. The failures are only visible
on a MSVC 2017 Debug build, for which we do not have bots.
llvm-svn: 306142
The goal here is to make it possible to display absolute
file offsets when dumping byets from an MSF. The problem is
that when dumping bytes from an MSF, often the bytes will
cross a block boundary and encounter a discontinuity. We
can't use the normal formatBinary() function for this because
this would just treat the sequence as entirely ascending, and
not account out-of-order blocks.
This patch adds a formatMsfData() function to our printer, and
then uses this function to improve the output of the -stream-data
command line option for dumping bytes from a particular stream.
Test coverage is also expanded to make sure to include all possible
scenarios of offsets, sizes, and crossing block boundaries.
llvm-svn: 306141
It causes an extra pass of the machine verifier to be added to the pass
manager, and causes test/CodeGen/Generic/llc-start-stop.ll to fail.
llvm-svn: 306140
This is useful when an upper limit on the cache size needs to be
controlled independently of the amount of the amount of free space.
One use case is a machine with a large number of cache directories
(e.g. a buildbot slave hosting a large number of independent build
jobs). By imposing an upper size limit on each cache directory,
users can more easily estimate the server's capacity.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34547
llvm-svn: 306126
This is essentially just a BinaryStreamRef packaged with an
offset and the logic for reading one is no different than the
logic for reading a BinaryStreamRef, except that we save the
current offset.
llvm-svn: 306122
It was trying to do too many things. The basic lumping together of values for
legalization purposes is now handled by G_MERGE_VALUES. More complex things
involving gaps and odd sizes are handled by G_INSERT sequences.
llvm-svn: 306120
G_SEQUENCE is going away soon so as a first step the MachineIRBuilder needs to
be taught how to emulate it with alternatives. We use G_MERGE_VALUES where
possible, and a sequence of G_INSERTs if not.
llvm-svn: 306119
Summary: visitSwitchInst should not take INT_MAX when Cost is negative. Instead of INT_MAX , we also use a valid upperbound cost when overflow occurs in Cost.
Reviewers: hans, echristo, dmgreen
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: mcrosier, javed.absar, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34436
llvm-svn: 306118
This reverts the use of TargetLowering::prepareVolatileOrAtomicLoad
introduced by r196905. Nothing in the semantics of the "volatile"
keyword or the definition of the z/Architecture actually requires
that volatile loads are preceded by a serialization operation, and
no other compiler on the platform actually implements this.
Since we've now seen a use case where this additional serialization
causes noticable performance degradation, this patch removes it.
The patch still leaves in the serialization before atomic loads,
which is now implemented directly in lowerATOMIC_LOAD. (This also
seems overkill, but that can be addressed separately.)
llvm-svn: 306117
The isBarrier/isTerminator flags have been removed from the SystemZ trap
instructions, so that tests do not fail with EXPENSIVE_CHECKS. This was just
an issue at -O0 and did not affect code output on benchmarks.
(Like Eli pointed out: "targets are split over whether they consider their
"trap" a terminator; x86, AArch64, and NVPTX don't, but ARM, MIPS, PPC, and
SystemZ do. We should probably try to be consistent here.". This is still the
case, although SystemZ has switched sides).
SystemZ now returns true in isMachineVerifierClean() :-)
These Generic tests have been modified so that they can be run with or without
EXPENSIVE_CHECKS: CodeGen/Generic/llc-start-stop.ll and
CodeGen/Generic/print-machineinstrs.ll
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Simon Pilgrim, Eli Friedman
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33047https://reviews.llvm.org/D34143
llvm-svn: 306106
Summary:
Many languages have a three way comparison idiom where comparing two values
produces not a boolean, but a tri-state value. Typical values (e.g. as used in
the lcmp/fcmp bytecodes from Java) are -1 for less than, 0 for equality, and +1
for greater than.
We actually do a great job already of converting three way comparisons into
binary comparisons when the result produced has one a single use. Unfortunately,
such values can have more than one use, and in that case, our existing
optimizations break down.
The patch adds a peephole which converts a three-way compare + test idiom into a
binary comparison on the original inputs. It focused on replacing the test on
the result of the three way compare and does nothing about removing the three
way compare itself. That's left to other optimizations (which do actually kick
in commonly.)
We currently recognize one idiom on signed integer compare. In the future, we
plan to recognize and simplify other comparison idioms on
other signed/unsigned datatypes such as floats, vectors etc.
This is a resurrection of Philip Reames' original patch:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D19452
Reviewers: majnemer, apilipenko, reames, sanjoy, mkazantsev
Reviewed by: mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34278
llvm-svn: 306100
ELF/mips-plt-r6.s in lld-test is failing. Reverting the change.
Original commit message:
[mips] Fix register positions in the aui/daui instructions
Swapped the position of the rt and rs register in the aut/daui
instructions for mips32r6 and mips64r6. With this change, the format of
the generated instructions complies with specifications and GCC.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
llvm-svn: 306099
Summary:
The function matches the interface of llvm::to_integer, but as we are
calling out to a C library function, I let it take a Twine argument, so
we can avoid a string copy at least in some cases.
I add a test and replace a couple of existing uses of strtod with this
function.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34518
llvm-svn: 306096
Swapped the position of the rt and rs register in the aut/daui instructions
for mips32r6 and mips64r6. With this change, the format of the generated
instructions complies with specifications and GCC.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33988
llvm-svn: 306095
Before this change, it was always the first element of a vector that got splatted since the lower 6 bits of vshf.d $wd were always zero for little endian.
Additionally, masking has been performed for vshf via which splat.d is created.
Vshf has a property where if its first operand's elements have either bit 6 or 7 set, destination element is set to zero.
Initially masked with 63 to avoid this property, which would result in generation of and.v + vshf.d in all cases.
Masking with one results in generating a single splati.d instruction when possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32216
llvm-svn: 306090
Currently JumpThreading can use LazyValueInfo to analyze an 'and' or 'or' of compare if the compare is fed by a livein of a basic block. This can be used to to prove the condition can't be met for some predecessor and the jump from that predecessor can be moved to the false path of the condition.
But if the compare is something that InstCombine turns into an add and a single compare, it can't be analyzed because the livein is now an input to the add and not the compare.
This patch adds a new method to LVI to get a ConstantRange on an edge. Then we teach jump threading to detect the add livein feeding a compare and to get the ConstantRange and propagate it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33262
llvm-svn: 306085
X86_64 COFF only has support for 32 bit pcrel relocations. Produce an
error on all others.
Note that gnu as has extended the relocation values to support
this. It is not clear if we should support the gnu extension.
llvm-svn: 306082
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: LVI can reason about an AND of icmps on the true dest of a branch. I believe we can do similar for the false dest of ORs. This allows us to get the same answer for the demorganed versions of some of the AND test cases as you can see.
Reviewers: anna, reames
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34431
llvm-svn: 306076
Details: There was a use but it was in the assert which was not
exercised during product build.
Reviewers: Andrew Kaylor
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32658
llvm-svn: 306073
This is very similar to the transform in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL306040
...but in this case, we use cmp X, 1 to set the carry bit as needed.
Again, we can show that all of these are logically equivalent (although
InstCombine currently canonicalizes to a form not seen here), and if
we believe IACA, then this is the smallest/fastest code. Eg, with SNB:
| Num Of | Ports pressure in cycles | |
| Uops | 0 - DV | 1 | 2 - D | 3 - D | 4 | 5 | |
---------------------------------------------------------------------
| 1 | 1.0 | | | | | | | cmp edi, 0x1
| 2 | | 1.0 | | | | 1.0 | CP | sbb eax, eax
The larger motivation is to clean up all select-of-constants combining/lowering
because we're missing some common cases.
llvm-svn: 306072
Also document the attribute, since "probe-stack" already is.
Reviewed By: majnemer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34528
llvm-svn: 306069
For whatever reason, when processing
.globl foo
foo:
.data
bar:
.long foo-bar
llvm-mc creates a relocation with the section:
0x0 IMAGE_REL_I386_REL32 .text
This is different than when the relocation is relative from the
beginning. For example, a file with
call foo
produces
0x0 IMAGE_REL_I386_REL32 foo
I would like to refactor the logic for converting "foo - ." into a
relative relocation so that it is shared with ELF. This is the first
step and just changes the coff implementation to match what ELF (and
COFF in the case of calls) does.
llvm-svn: 306063
The feeder instruction will be moved to right before the compare, so
the updating code should not be looking for kills past the compare.
llvm-svn: 306059
move the ObjectCache from the IRCompileLayer to SimpleCompiler.
This is the first in a series of patches aimed at cleaning up and improving the
robustness and performance of the ORC APIs.
llvm-svn: 306058
There's nothing incorrect about emitting such relocations against
symbols defined in other objects. The code in EmitCOFFSec* was missing
the visitUsedExpr part of MCStreamer::EmitValueImpl, so these symbols
were not being registered with the object file assembler.
This will be used to make reduced test cases for LLD.
llvm-svn: 306057
It looks like that when this code was written recordRelocation could
be called with A-B where A and B are in the same section. The
expression evaluation logic these days makes sure those are folded, so
some of this code was dead.
llvm-svn: 306053
Summary:
Currently, we incorrectly update exit blocks of loops when there are multiple
edges from a single exiting block to the exit block. This can happen when we
have switches as the terminator of the exiting blocks.
The fix here is to correctly update the phi nodes in the exit block, and remove
all incoming values *except* for one which is from the preheader.
Note: Currently, this error can manifest only while deleting non-executed loops. However, it
is possible to trigger this error in invariant loops, once we enhance the logic
around the exit conditions for the loop check.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dberlin, sanjoy, efriedma
Reviewed by: efriedma
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34516
llvm-svn: 306048
Summary:
These intrinsics aren't used by clang and haven't been for a while.
There's some really terrible codegen in the 32-bit target for avx512bw due to i64 not being legal. But as I said these intrinsics aren't used by clang even before this patch so this codegen reflects our clang behavior today.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, zvi, igorb
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34389
llvm-svn: 306047
This matches the checks done at the beginning of isKnownNonEqual that this code is partially emulating.
Without this we can get assertion failures due to the bit widths of the KnownBits not matching.
llvm-svn: 306044
All NativeRawSymbols will have a unique symbol ID (retrievable via
getSymIndexId). For now, these are initialized to 0, but soon the
NativeSession will be responsible for creating the raw symbols, and it will
assign unique IDs.
The symbol cache in the NativeSession will also require the ability to clone
raw symbols, so I've provided implementations for that as well.
llvm-svn: 306042
There doesn't seem to be a compelling reason why this method should be const
other than it was possible with the DIA implementation. The native session
is going to act as a symbol factory and cache. This could be acheived with
mutable (and the existing const_cast), but it seems cleaner to accept that
this method affects the state of the session.
This change eliminates an existing const_cast.
llvm-svn: 306041
Our handling of select-of-constants is lumpy in IR (https://reviews.llvm.org/D24480),
lumpy in DAGCombiner, and lumpy in X86ISelLowering. That's why we only had the 'sbb'
codegen in 1 out of the 4 tests. This is a step towards smoothing that out.
First, show that all of these IR forms are equivalent:
http://rise4fun.com/Alive/mx
Second, show that the 'sbb' version is faster/smaller. IACA output for SandyBridge
(later Intel and AMD chips are similar based on Agner's tables):
This is the "obvious" x86 codegen (what gcc appears to produce currently):
| Num Of | Ports pressure in cycles | |
| Uops | 0 - DV | 1 | 2 - D | 3 - D | 4 | 5 | |
---------------------------------------------------------------------
| 1* | | | | | | | | xor eax, eax
| 1 | 1.0 | | | | | | CP | test edi, edi
| 1 | | | | | | 1.0 | CP | setnz al
| 1 | | 1.0 | | | | | CP | neg eax
This is the adc version:
| 1* | | | | | | | | xor eax, eax
| 1 | 1.0 | | | | | | CP | cmp edi, 0x1
| 2 | | 1.0 | | | | 1.0 | CP | adc eax, 0xffffffff
And this is sbb:
| 1 | 1.0 | | | | | | | neg edi
| 2 | | 1.0 | | | | 1.0 | CP | sbb eax, eax
If IACA is trustworthy, then sbb became a single uop in Broadwell, so this will be
clearly better than the alternatives going forward.
llvm-svn: 306040
Without this cast the "char" overload of operator<< is
chosen and the values is output as an ascii rather than
an integer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34486
llvm-svn: 306039
Intrinsic already existed for llvm.SI.tbuffer.store
Needed tbuffer.load and also re-implementing the intrinsic as llvm.amdgcn.tbuffer.*
Added CodeGen tests for the 2 new variants added.
Left the original llvm.SI.tbuffer.store implementation to avoid issues with existing code
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tony-tye, tpr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30687
llvm-svn: 306031
Summary:
InstCombine likes to turn (icmp eq (and X, C1), 0) into (icmp slt (trunc (X)), 0) sometimes. This breaks foldSelectICmpAndOr's ability to recognize (select (icmp eq (and X, C1), 0), Y, (or Y, C2))->(or (shl (and X, C1), C3), y).
This patch tries to recover this. I had to flip around some of the early out checks so that I could create a new And instruction during the compare processing without it possibly never getting used.
Reviewers: spatel, majnemer, davide
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34184
llvm-svn: 306029
If the components of the and/or had multiple uses, this transform created an additional instruction.
This patch makes sure we remove one of the components.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34498
llvm-svn: 306027
There are 2 parts to this patch made simultaneously to avoid a regression.
We're reversing the canonicalization that moves bitwise vector ops before bitcasts.
We're moving bitwise vector ops *after* bitcasts instead. That's the 1st and 3rd hunks
of the patch. The motivation is that there's only one fold that currently depends on
the existing canonicalization (see next), but there are many folds that would
automatically benefit from the new canonicalization.
PR33138 ( https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33138 ) shows why/how we have these
patterns in IR.
There's an or(and,andn) pattern that requires an adjustment in order to continue matching
to 'select' because the bitcast changes position. This match is unfortunately complicated
because it requires 4 logic ops with optional bitcast and sext ops.
Test diffs:
1. The bitcast.ll and bitcast-bigendian.ll changes show the most basic difference -
bitcast comes before logic.
2. There are also tests with no diffs in bitcast.ll that verify that we're still doing
folds that were enabled by the previous canonicalization.
3. icmp-xor-signbit.ll shows the payoff. We don't need to adjust existing icmp patterns
to look through bitcasts.
4. logical-select.ll contains several tests for the or(and,andn) --> select fold to
verify that we are still handling those cases. The lone diff shows the movement of
the bitcast from the new canonicalization rule.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33517
llvm-svn: 306011
Summary:
The ARM ELF ABI requires the linker to do interworking for wide
conditional branches from Thumb code to ARM code.
That was pointed out by @peter.smith in the comments for D33436.
Reviewers: rafael, peter.smith, echristo
Reviewed By: peter.smith
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, peter.smith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34447
llvm-svn: 306009
This patch allows $AT to be used as a register name in assembly files.
Currently only $at is recognized as a valid register name.
Patch by Stanislav Ocovaj.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34348
llvm-svn: 306007
The fix in r306003 uncovered a pretty fundamental problem that libc++
implementation of std::result_of does not handle the prototype of
open(2) correctly (presumably because it contains ...). This makes the
whole function unusable in its current form, so I am also reverting the
original commit (r305892), which introduced the function, at least until
I figure out a way to solve the libc++ issue.
llvm-svn: 306005
Summary:
Despite that this instructions are listed in VOP2, they are treated as VOP3 in specs. They should not support SDWA.
There are no real instructions for them, but there are pseudo instructions.
Reviewers: arsenm, vpykhtin, cfang
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34403
llvm-svn: 305999
This has been deprecated since ARMARM v7-AR, release C.b, published back
in 2012.
This also removes test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ifcvt-neon.ll that originally was
introduced to check that conditionalization of Neon instructions did
happen when generating Thumb2. However, the test had evolved and was no
longer testing that. Rather than trying to adapt that test, this commit
introduces test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ifcvt-neon-deprecated.mir, since we can
now use the MIR framework to write nicer/more maintainable tests.
llvm-svn: 305998
After the N64 static relocation model support was added to llvm it is required to add its support in RuntimeDyld also because lldb uses ExecutionEngine for evaluating expressions.
Reviewed by sdardis
Differential: D31649
llvm-svn: 305997
Rather than creating a separate ".rdata" section distinct from the
customary ".rodata" in ELF, ".rdata" switches to the ".rodata" section.
This patch relands r305949 and r305950 with the correct commit message
and addresses nit raised during review.
Patch By: John Baldwin!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34452
llvm-svn: 305995
This patch makes a couple of changes to how we decide whether to use the narrow
or wide encoding of thumb2 instructions:
* Common out the detection of the .w qualifier
* Check for the CPSR operand in a consistent way
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34460
llvm-svn: 305992
Summary:
This patch adds a macro fusion using CodeGen/MacroFusion.cpp to pair AES
instructions back to back and adds FeatureFuseAES to enable the feature.
Reviewers: evandro, javed.absar, rengolin, t.p.northover
Reviewed By: javed.absar
Subscribers: aemerson, mgorny, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34142
llvm-svn: 305988
Masked gather for vector length 2 is lowered incorrectly for element type i32.
The type <2 x i32> was automatically extended to <2 x i64> and we generated VPGATHERQQ instead of VPGATHERQD.
The type <2 x float> is extended to <4 x float>, so there is no bug for this type, but the sequence may be more optimal.
In this patch I'm fixing <2 x i32>bug and optimizing <2 x float> sequence for GATHERs only. The same fix should be done for Scatters as well.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34343
llvm-svn: 305987
Summary:
Added support based on merged SDWA pseudo instructions. Now peephole allow one scalar operand, omod and clamp modifiers.
Added several subtarget features for GFX9 SDWA.
This diff also contains changes from D34026.
Depends D34026
Reviewers: vpykhtin, rampitec, arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34241
llvm-svn: 305986
This includes the safe SEH tables and the control flow guard function
table. LLD will emit the guard table soon, and I need a tool that dumps
them for testing.
llvm-svn: 305979
- Use auto where appropriate
- Use early return to reduce nesting
- Remove stray comment line
- Use C++ foreach over explicit iterator
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34477
llvm-svn: 305971
Summary:
This fixes a bug where we always treat APSInts in Codeview as
signed when writing them to YAML. One symptom of this problem is that
llvm-pdbdump raw would show Enumerator Values that differ between the
original PDB and a PDB that has been round-tripped through YAML.
Reviewers: zturner
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34013
llvm-svn: 305965
If one of the arguments of adde/sube is zero we can fold another
add/sub into it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34374
llvm-svn: 305964
This simplification allows to avoid generating v_cndmask_b32
to serialize condition code between compare and use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34300
llvm-svn: 305962
Summary:
vectorizer-maximize-bandwidth is generally useful in terms of performance. I've tested the impact of changing this to default on speccpu benchmarks on sandybridge machines. The result shows non-negative impact:
spec/2006/fp/C++/444.namd 26.84 -0.31%
spec/2006/fp/C++/447.dealII 46.19 +0.89%
spec/2006/fp/C++/450.soplex 42.92 -0.44%
spec/2006/fp/C++/453.povray 38.57 -2.25%
spec/2006/fp/C/433.milc 24.54 -0.76%
spec/2006/fp/C/470.lbm 41.08 +0.26%
spec/2006/fp/C/482.sphinx3 47.58 -0.99%
spec/2006/int/C++/471.omnetpp 22.06 +1.87%
spec/2006/int/C++/473.astar 22.65 -0.12%
spec/2006/int/C++/483.xalancbmk 33.69 +4.97%
spec/2006/int/C/400.perlbench 33.43 +1.70%
spec/2006/int/C/401.bzip2 23.02 -0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/403.gcc 32.57 -0.43%
spec/2006/int/C/429.mcf 40.35 +0.27%
spec/2006/int/C/445.gobmk 26.96 +0.06%
spec/2006/int/C/456.hmmer 24.4 +0.19%
spec/2006/int/C/458.sjeng 27.91 -0.08%
spec/2006/int/C/462.libquantum 57.47 -0.20%
spec/2006/int/C/464.h264ref 46.52 +1.35%
geometric mean +0.29%
The regression on 453.povray seems real, but is due to secondary effects as all hot functions are bit-identical with and without the flag.
I started this patch to consult upstream opinions on this. It will be greatly appreciated if the community can help test the performance impact of this change on other architectures so that we can decided if this should be target-dependent.
Reviewers: hfinkel, mkuper, davidxl, chandlerc
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Subscribers: rengolin, sanjoy, javed.absar, bjope, dorit, magabari, RKSimon, llvm-commits, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33341
llvm-svn: 305960
This attribute is used to ensure the guard page is triggered on stack
overflow. Stack frames larger than the guard page size will generate
a call to __probestack to touch each page so the guard page won't
be skipped.
Reviewed By: majnemer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34386
llvm-svn: 305939
Using various methods, BasicAA tries to determine whether two
GetElementPtr memory locations alias when its base pointers are known
to be equal. When none of its heuristics are applicable, it falls back
to PartialAlias to, according to a comment, protect TBAA making a wrong
decision in case of unions and malloc. PartialAlias is not correct,
because a PartialAlias result implies that some, but not all, bytes
overlap which is not necessarily the case here.
AAResults returns the first analysis result that is not MayAlias.
BasicAA is always the first alias analysis. When it returns
PartialAlias, no other analysis is queried to give a more exact result
(which was the intention of returning PartialAlias instead of MayAlias).
For instance, ScopedAA could return a more accurate result.
The PartialAlias hack was introduced in r131781 (and re-applied in
r132632 after some reverts) to fix llvm.org/PR9971 where TBAA returns a
wrong NoAlias result due to a union. A test case for the malloc case
mentioned in the comment was not provided and I don't think it is
affected since it returns an omnipotent char anyway.
Since r303851 (https://reviews.llvm.org/D33328) clang does emit specific
TBAA for unions anymore (but "omnipotent char" instead). Hence, the
PartialAlias workaround is not required anymore.
This patch passes the test-suite and check-llvm/check-clang of a
self-hoisted build on x64.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34318
llvm-svn: 305938
This will be needed in order to share the irsymtab string table with
the bitcode string table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33971
llvm-svn: 305937
Summary: r305009 disables recursive inlining for indirect calls in sample loader pass. The same logic applies to direct recursive calls.
Reviewers: iteratee, davidxl
Reviewed By: iteratee
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34456
llvm-svn: 305934
Summary:
The main complexity in adding symbol records is that we need to
"relocate" all the type indices. Type indices do not have anything like
relocations, an opaque data structure describing where to find existing
type indices for fixups. The linker just has to "know" where the type
references are in the symbol records. I added an overload of
`discoverTypeIndices` that works on symbol records, and it seems to be
able to link the standard library.
Reviewers: zturner, ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34432
llvm-svn: 305933
Define target hook isReallyTriviallyReMaterializable() to explicitly specify
PowerPC instructions that are trivially rematerializable. This will allow
the MachineLICM pass to accurately identify PPC instructions that should always
be hoisted.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34255
llvm-svn: 305932
Summary:
I noticed that passing known bits across these intrinsics isn't great at capturing the information we really know. Turning known bits of the input into known bits of a count output isn't able to convey a lot of what we really know.
This patch adds range metadata to these intrinsics based on the known bits.
Currently the patch punts if we already have range metadata present.
Reviewers: spatel, RKSimon, davide, majnemer
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: sanjoy, hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32582
llvm-svn: 305927
Summary:
Previously this folding had no checks to see if it was going to result in less instructions. This was pointed out during the review of D34184
This patch adds code to count how many instructions its going to create vs how many its going to remove so we can make a proper decision.
Reviewers: spatel, majnemer
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34437
llvm-svn: 305926
Move GlobalAddress Offset decomposition from initial match into
comparision check and removing the possibility of constructing a new
offseted global address when examining addresses.
llvm-svn: 305917
Implemented support to AArch64 codegen for ARMv8.1 Large System
Extensions atomic instructions. Where supported, these instructions can
provide atomic operations with higher performance.
Currently supported operations include: fetch_add, fetch_or, fetch_xor,
fetch_smin, fetch_min/max (signed and unsigned), swap, and
compare_exchange.
This implementation implies sequential-consistency ordering, more
relaxed ordering is under development.
Subtarget->hasLSE is currently supported for Cavium ThunderX2T99.
Patch by Ananth Jasty.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33586
Change-Id: I82f6d3d64255622791ceb0715b7ab9f4dc4d4b2c
llvm-svn: 305893
Summary:
This function retries an operation if it was interrupted by a signal
(failed with EINTR). It's inspired by the TEMP_FAILURE_RETRY macro in
glibc, but I've turned that into a template function. I've also added a
fail-value argument, to enable the function to be used with e.g.
fopen(3), which is documented to fail for any reason that open(2) can
fail (which includes EINTR).
The main user of this function will be lldb, but there were also a
couple of uses within llvm that I could simplify using this function.
Reviewers: zturner, silvas, joerg
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33895
llvm-svn: 305892
There should be at most a single kill flag for the
promoted operand between the store/load pair.
Discussed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D34402.
llvm-svn: 305889
This patch adds one more condition in selection DINS/INS
instruction, which fixes MultiSource/Applications/JM/ldecod/
for mips32r2 (and mips64r2 n32 abi).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33725
llvm-svn: 305888
Converts to range-loop usage in machine scheduler.
This makes the code neater and easier to read,
and also keeps pace of the machine scheduler
implementation with C++11 features.
Reviewed by: Matthias Braun
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34320
llvm-svn: 305887
Summary: Previously there were two separate pseudo instruction for SDWA on VI and on GFX9. Created one pseudo instruction that is union of both of them. Added verifier to check that operands conform either VI or GFX9.
Reviewers: dp, arsenm, vpykhtin
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, artem.tamazov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34026
llvm-svn: 305886
Summary:
This patch updates promoteLoadFromStore to use the store MachineOperand as the
source operand of the of the new instruction instead of creating a new
register MachineOperand. This way, the existing register flags are
preserved.
This fixes PR33468 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33468).
Reviewers: MatzeB, t.p.northover, junbuml
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34402
llvm-svn: 305885
Add support for combining a build vector to a shuffle.
When the build vector is of extracted elements from 2 vectors (vec1, vec2) where vec2 is 2 times smaller than vec1.
llvm-svn: 305883
MulOpsInlineThreshold option of SCEV is defaulted to 1000, which is inadequately high.
When constructing SCEVs of expressions like:
x1 = a * a
x2 = x1 * x1
x3 = x2 * x2
...
We actually have huge SCEVs with max allowed amount of operands inlined.
Such expressions are easy to get from unrolling of loops looking like
x = a
for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
x = x * x
Or more tricky cases where big powers are involved. If some non-linear analysis
tries to work with a SCEV that has 1000 operands, it may lead to excessively long
compilation. The attached test does not pass within 1 minute with default threshold.
This patch decreases its default value to 32, which looks much more reasonable if we
use analyzes with complexity O(N^2) or O(N^3) working with SCEV.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34397
llvm-svn: 305882
Summary:
When we're building with XRay instrumentation, we use a trick that
preserves references from the function to a function sled index. This
index table lives in a separate section, and without this trick the
linker is free to garbage-collect this section and all the segments it
refers to. Until we're able to tell the linkers to preserve these
sections, we use this reference trick to keep around both the index and
the entries in the instrumentation map.
Before this change we emitted both a synthetic reference to the label in
the instrumentation map, and to the entry in the function map index.
This change removes the first synthetic reference and only emits one
synthetic reference to the index -- the index entry has the references
to the labels in the instrumentation map, so the linker will still
preserve those if the function itself is preserved.
This reduces the amount of synthetic references we emit from 16 bytes to
just 8 bytes in x86_64, and similarly to other platforms.
Reviewers: dblaikie
Subscribers: javed.absar, kpw, pelikan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34340
llvm-svn: 305880
Right now areMemoryOpsAliased has an assertion justified as:
MMO1 should have a value due it comes from operation we'd like to use
as implicit null check.
assert(MMO1->getValue() && "MMO1 should have a Value!");
However, it is possible for that invariant to not be upheld in the
following situation (conceptually):
Null check %RAX
NotNullSucc:
%RAX = LEA %RSP, 16 // I0
%RDX = MOV64rm %RAX // I1
With the current code, we will have an early exit from
ImplicitNullChecks::isSuitableMemoryOp on I0 with SR_Unsuitable.
However, I1 will look plausible (since it loads from %RAX) and
will go ahead and call areMemoryOpsAliased(I1, I0). This will cause
us to fail the assert mentioned above since I1 does not load from an
IR level value and thus is allowed to have a non-Value base address.
The fix is to bail out earlier whenever we see an unsuitable
instruction overwrite PointerReg. This would guarantee that when we
call areMemoryOpsAliased, we're guaranteed to be looking at an
instruction that loads from or stores to an IR level value.
Original Patch Author: sanjoy
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34385
llvm-svn: 305879
We weren't actually checking for duplicated stores, as the condition
was always actually false. This was found by Coverity, and I have
no clue how to trigger this in real-world code (although I
tried for a bit).
llvm-svn: 305867
We forgot to serialize these because llvm-readobj didn't dump them. They
are typically all zeros in an object file. The linker fills them in with
relocations before adding them to the PDB. Now we can properly round
trip these symbols through pdb2yaml -> yaml2pdb.
I made these fields optional with a zero default so that we can elide
them from our test cases.
llvm-svn: 305857
The instruction it falls over on is an IMPLICT_DEF that also happens
to be the only instruction in its lexical scope. That LexicalScope has
never been created because its range is empty. This patch skips over
all meta-instructions instead of just DBG_VALUEs.
Thanks to David Blaikie for providing a testcase!
llvm-svn: 305853
This is a workaround for large file writes. It has been witnessed that
write(2) failing with EINVAL (22) due to a large value (>2G). Thanks to
James Knight for the help with coming up with a sane test case.
llvm-svn: 305846
In the object file, the section index and relative offset are typically
zero, so make these YAML fields optional with a default.
It looks like there may be more partially initialized symbol records,
but this should fix the msan bot.
llvm-svn: 305842
If there is an immediate operand we shall not shrink V_SUBB_U32
and V_ADDC_U32, it does not fit e32 encoding.
Differential Revison: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34291
llvm-svn: 305840
Before it was possible to partially fold use instructions
before the defs. After the xor is folded into a copy, the same
mov can end up in the fold list twice, so on the second attempt
it will fail expecting to see a register to fold.
llvm-svn: 305821
There were certain fields that we didn't know how to write, as
well as various padding bytes that we would ignore. This leads
to garbage data in the PDB. While not strictly necessary, we
should initialize these bytes to something meaningful, as it
makes for easier binary comparison between PDBs.
llvm-svn: 305819
This does some improvements/cleanup to the recently introduced
scavengeRegisterBackwards() functionality:
- Rewrite findSurvivorBackwards algorithm to use the existing
LiveRegUnit::accumulateBackward() code. This also avoids the Available
and Candidates bitset and just need 1 LiveRegUnit instance
(= 1 bitset).
- Pick registers in allocation order instead of register number order.
llvm-svn: 305817
This is patch for GSoC project, bash-completion for clang.
To use this on bash, please run `source clang/utils/bash-autocomplete.sh`.
bash-autocomplete.sh is code for bash-completion.
In this patch, Options.td was mainly changed in order to add value class
in Options.inc.
llvm-svn: 305805
There are a couple of potential improvements as seen in the IR and asm:
1. We're unnecessarily extending to a larger type to compare values.
2. The codegen for (select cond, 1, -1) could avoid a cmov.
(or we could change the order of the compares, so we have a select with 0 operand)
llvm-svn: 305802
We were incorrectly sign extending into the high word (as you would for
SMULO) when legalizing UMULO in terms of a wider full multiplication.
Patch by James Duley.
llvm-svn: 305800
We have a large portfolio of folds for and-of-icmps and or-of-icmps in InstSimplify and InstCombine,
but hardly anything for xor-of-icmps. Rather than trying to rethink and translate all of those folds,
we can use the truth table definition of xor:
X ^ Y --> (X | Y) & !(X & Y)
...to see if we can convert the xor to and/or and then use the existing folds.
http://rise4fun.com/Alive/J9v
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33342
llvm-svn: 305792
Summary:
As part of this
* Emitted instructions now have named MachineInstr variables associated
with them. This isn't particularly important yet but it's a small step
towards multiple-insn emission.
* constrainSelectedInstRegOperands() is no longer hardcoded. It's now added
as the ConstrainOperandsToDefinitionAction() action. COPY_TO_REGCLASS uses
an alternate constraint mechanism ConstrainOperandToRegClassAction() which
supports arbitrary constraints such as that defined by COPY_TO_REGCLASS.
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, kristof.beyls, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33590
llvm-svn: 305791
Target shuffle combining now supports the matching of INSERT_VECTOR_ELT/PINSRW/PINSRB for merging multiple insertions into shuffles/bitmasks.
llvm-svn: 305788
Summary:
In some cases legalization ends up with not symmetric merge/unmerge nodes.
Transform it to merge/unmerge nodes.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, qcolombet, zvi
Reviewed By: t.p.northover
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, guyblank, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33626
llvm-svn: 305783
The description of this option was copy-pasted from another one and does not
correspond to reality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34390
llvm-svn: 305782
Resubmission of r305387, which was reverted at r305390. The Address
Sanitizer caught a stack-use-after-scope of a Twine variable. This
is now fixed by passing the Twine directly as a function parameter.
The ARM backend asserts against constant pool lowering when it generates
execute-only code in order to prevent the generation of constant pools in
the text section. It appears that target independent optimizations might
generate DAG nodes that represent constant pools. By lowering such nodes
as global addresses we don't violate the semantics of execute-only code
and also it is guaranteed that execute-only behaves correct with the
position-independent addressing modes that support execute-only code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33773
llvm-svn: 305776
The recursive implementation of CalcNodeSethiUllmanNumber may
overflow stack on extremely long pred chains. This patch replaces it
with an equivalent iterative implementation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33769
llvm-svn: 305775
The lld-x86_64-darwin13 is failing with:
error: unused function 'operator<<'
Wrap the declation in ifndef NDEBUG, which matches
what is done in MipsELFObjectWriter.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34384
llvm-svn: 305771
This fixes two build failures that only occur in certain
configurations:
- error: unused function 'operator<<'
- error: control reaches end of non-void function
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34382
llvm-svn: 305770
With PR33517, it became apparent that symbol table creation can fail
when presented with malformed inputs. This patch makes that sort of
error detectable, so llvm-cov etc. can fail more gracefully.
Specifically, we now check that function records loaded from corrupted coverage
mapping data are rejected, e.g when the recorded function name is garbage.
Testing: check-{llvm,clang,profile}, some unit test updates.
llvm-svn: 305767
With PR33517, it became apparent that symbol table creation can fail
when presented with malformed inputs. This patch makes that sort of
error detectable, so llvm-cov etc. can fail more gracefully.
Specifically, we now check that function names within the symbol table
aren't empty.
Testing: check-{llvm,clang,profile}, some unit test updates.
llvm-svn: 305765
The offset may not be an inline immediate, so this needs
to be materialized into a register. The post-RA run of
SIShrinkInstructions is able to fold it later if it can.
llvm-svn: 305761
It adds it for the target after inlining but before SROA where
we can get most out of it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34366
llvm-svn: 305759
This is the last step needed to avoid regressions for x86 before we flip the switch to allow
expansion of the smallest set of memcpy() via CGP. The DAG version checks for constant strings,
so we need to do that here too.
FWIW, the 2 constant test is not handled by LibCallSimplifier::optimizeMemCmp() because that
code is limited to 8-bit constant arrays. LibCallSimplifier will also fail to optimize some 1
constant tests because its alignment requirements are too strict (shouldn't require alignment
for a constant operand).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34071
llvm-svn: 305734
Summary:
Existing heuristic uses the ratio between the function entry
frequency and the loop invocation frequency to find cold loops. However,
even if the loop executes frequently, if it has a small trip count per
each invocation, vectorization is not beneficial. On the other hand,
even if the loop invocation frequency is much smaller than the function
invocation frequency, if the trip count is high it is still beneficial
to vectorize the loop.
This patch uses estimated trip count computed from the profile metadata
as a primary metric to determine coldness of the loop. If the estimated
trip count cannot be computed, it falls back to the original heuristics.
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, mkuper, danielcdh, wmi, tejohnson
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: tejohnson, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32451
llvm-svn: 305729
Summary:
Some optimizations in AddReachableCodeToWorklist did not update
the MadeIRChange state. This could happen both when removing
trivially dead instructions (DCE) and at constant folds.
It is essential that changes to the IR is reported correctly,
since for example InstCombinePass::run() will indicate that all
analyses are preserved otherwise.
And the CGPassManager determines if the CallGraph is up-to-date
based on status from InstructionCombiningPass::runOnFunction().
The new test case early_dce_clobbers_callgraph.ll is a reproducer
for some asserts that started to trigger after changes in the
inliner in r305245. With this patch the test case passes again.
Reviewers: sanjoy, craig.topper, dblaikie
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34346
llvm-svn: 305725
This seems to be interacting badly with ASan somehow, causing false reports of
heap-buffer overflows: PR33514.
> Summary:
> The patch makes instruction count the highest priority for
> LSR solution for X86 (previously registers had highest priority).
>
> Reviewers: qcolombet
>
> Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D30562
>
> From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 305720
Summary:
This is a first step towards getting line info to show up in VS and
windbg. So far, only llvm-pdbutil can parse the PDBs that we produce.
cvdump doesn't like something about our file checksum tables. I'll have
to dig into that next.
This patch adds a new DebugSubsectionRecordBuilder which takes bytes
directly from some other producer, such as a linker, and sticks it into
the PDB. Line tables only need to be relocated. No data needs to be
rewritten.
File checksums and string tables, on the other hand, need to be re-done.
Reviewers: zturner, ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34257
llvm-svn: 305713
Summary:
These 4 patterns have the same one use check repeated twice for each. Once without a cast and one with. But the cast has no effect on what method is called.
For the OR case I believe it is always profitable regardless of the number of uses since we'll never increase the instruction count.
For the AND case I believe it is profitable if the pair of xors has one use such that we'll get rid of it completely. Or if the C value is something freely invertible, in which case the not doesn't cost anything.
Reviewers: spatel, majnemer
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34308
llvm-svn: 305705
Summary:
Currently we don't try to do anything with vector xors.
This patch adds support for removing duplicate pairs from a chain of vector xors as its pretty easy to support. We still dont' try to combine the xors with and/ors, but I might try that in a future patch.
Reviewers: mcrosier, davide, resistor
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34338
llvm-svn: 305704
As all store merges checks are based on the memory operation
performed, allow use of truncated stores and extended loads as valid
input candidates for merging.
Relanding after fixing selection between truncated and normal store.
llvm-svn: 305701
Summary:
After a single predecessor is merged into a basic block, we need to invalidate
the LVI information for the new merged block, when LVI is not provably true for
all of instructions in the new block.
The test cases added show the correct LVI information using the LVI printer
pass.
Reviewers: reames, dberlin, davide, sanjoy
Reviewed by: dberlin, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34108
llvm-svn: 305699
Summary: use AA to tell whether a load can be moved before a call that writes to memory.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, sanjoy, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34115
llvm-svn: 305698
Summary: Implement some of the simplest addressing modes.It should help to test ABI.
Reviewers: zvi, guyblank
Reviewed By: guyblank
Subscribers: rovka, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33888
llvm-svn: 305691
Use llvm::make_unique to avoid ambiguity with MSVC.
This patch adds a generic MacroFusion pass, that is used on X86 and
AArch64, which both define target-specific shouldScheduleAdjacent
functions. This generic pass should make it easier for other targets to
implement macro fusion and I intend to add macro fusion for ARM shortly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34144
llvm-svn: 305690
Summary:
This patch adds a generic MacroFusion pass, that is used on X86 and
AArch64, which both define target-specific shouldScheduleAdjacent
functions. This generic pass should make it easier for other targets to
implement macro fusion and I intend to add macro fusion for ARM shortly.
Reviewers: craig.topper, evandro, t.p.northover, atrick, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Subscribers: atrick, aemerson, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34144
llvm-svn: 305677
Add support throughout the pipeline:
- mark as legal for s32 and pointers
- map to GPRs
- lower to a sequence of instructions, which moves 0 or 1 into the
result register based on the flags set by a CMPrr
We have copied from FastISel a helper function which maps CmpInst
predicates into ARMCC codes. Ideally, we should be able to move it
somewhere that both FastISel and GlobalISel can use.
llvm-svn: 305672
Current implementation of SCEVExpander demonstrates a very naive behavior when
it deals with power calculation. For example, a SCEV for x^8 looks like
(x * x * x * x * x * x * x * x)
If we try to expand it, it generates a very straightforward sequence of muls, like:
x2 = mul x, x
x3 = mul x2, x
x4 = mul x3, x
...
x8 = mul x7, x
This is a non-efficient way of doing that. A better way is to generate a sequence of
binary power calculation. In this case the expanded calculation will look like:
x2 = mul x, x
x4 = mul x2, x2
x8 = mul x4, x4
In some cases the code size reduction for such SCEVs is dramatic. If we had a loop:
x = a;
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
x = x * x;
And this loop have been fully unrolled, we have something like:
x = a;
x2 = x * x;
x4 = x2 * x2;
x8 = x4 * x4;
The SCEV for x8 is the same as in example above, and if we for some reason
want to expand it, we will generate naively 7 multiplications instead of 3.
The BinPow expansion algorithm here allows to keep code size reasonable.
This patch teaches SCEV Expander to generate a sequence of BinPow multiplications
if we have repeating arguments in SCEVMulExpressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34025
llvm-svn: 305663
Merge the functionality into the random access type collection.
This class was only being used in 2 places, so getting rid of it
simplifies the code.
llvm-svn: 305653
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
No behavior is changed if LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV is blank or undefined.
If LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV is "TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE" and $TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE is not blank,
llvm::sys::getDefaultTargetTriple() returns $TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE.
Lit resets config.target_triple and config.environment[LLVM_TARGET_TRIPLE_ENV] to change the default target.
Without changing LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE nor rebuilding, lit can be run;
TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE=i686-pc-win32 bin/llvm-lit -sv path/to/test/
TEST_TARGET_TRIPLE=i686-pc-win32 ninja check-clang-tools
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33662
llvm-svn: 305632
Re-apply r276044/r279124/r305516. Fixed a problem where we would refuse
to place spills as the very first instruciton of a basic block and thus
artifically increase pressure (test in
test/CodeGen/PowerPC/scavenging.mir:spill_at_begin)
This is a variant of scavengeRegister() that works for
enterBasicBlockEnd()/backward(). The benefit of the backward mode is
that it is not affected by incomplete kill flags.
This patch also changes
PrologEpilogInserter::doScavengeFrameVirtualRegs() to use the register
scavenger in backwards mode.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21885
llvm-svn: 305625
Summary:
This is my misunderstanding on isBarrier. It's not for memory barriers,
but for other control flow purposes. lwsync doesn't have it either.
This fixes a simple crash with -verify-machineinstrs like below:
define void @Foo() {
entry:
%tmp = load atomic i64, i64* undef acquire, align 8
unreachable
}
I deliberately don't want to check in the test, since there is little
chance to regress on such a mistake. Such a test adds noise to the code
base.
I plan to check in first, since it fixes a crash, and the fix is obvious.
Reviewers: kbarton, echristo
Subscribers: sanjoy, nemanjai, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34314
llvm-svn: 305624
This ensures that symbolic relocations are generated for stack
pointer manipulations.
These relocations are of type R_WEBASSEMBLY_GLOBAL_INDEX_LEB.
This change also adds support for reading relocations of this
type in WasmObjectFile.cpp.
Since its a globally imported symbol this does mean that
the get_global/set_global instruction won't be valid until
the objects are linked that global used in no longer an
imported global.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34172
llvm-svn: 305616
Suppose we had a type index offsets array with a boundary at type index
N. Then you request the name of the type with index N+1, and that name
requires the name of index N-1 (think a parameter list, for example). We
didn't handle this, and we would print something like (<unknown UDT>,
<unknown UDT>).
The fix for this is not entirely trivial, and speaks to a larger
problem. I think we need to kill TypeDatabase, or at the very least kill
TypeDatabaseVisitor. We need a thing that doesn't do any caching
whatsoever, just given a type index it can compute the type name "the
slow way". The reason for the bug is that we don't have anything like
that. Everything goes through the type database, and if we've visited a
record, then we're "done". It doesn't know how to do the expensive thing
of re-visiting dependent records if they've not yet been visited.
What I've done here is more or less copied the code (albeit greatly
simplified) from TypeDatabaseVisitor, but wrapped it in an interface
that just returns a std::string. The logic of caching the name is now in
LazyRandomTypeCollection. Eventually I'd like to move the record
database here as well and the visited record bitfield here as well, at
which point we can actually just delete TypeDatabase. I don't see any
reason for it if a "sequential" collection is just a special case of a
random access collection with an empty partial offsets array.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34297
llvm-svn: 305612
Davide Italiano reported the following issue if llvm
is compiled with gcc -Wstrict-aliasing -Werror:
.....
lib/Target/BPF/CMakeFiles/LLVMBPFCodeGen.dir/BPFISelDAGToDAG.cpp.o
../lib/Target/BPF/BPFISelDAGToDAG.cpp: In member function ‘virtual
void {anonymous}::BPFDAGToDAGISel::PreprocessISelDAG()’:
../lib/Target/BPF/BPFISelDAGToDAG.cpp:264:26: warning: dereferencing
type-punned pointer will break strict-aliasing rules
[-Wstrict-aliasing]
val = *(uint16_t *)new_val;
.....
The error is caused by my previous commit (revision 305560).
This patch fixed the issue by introducing an union to avoid
type casting.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 305608
Summary: As far as I can tell we should be able to implement these almost the same way we do unsigned, but using signed comparisons and checks for min signed value instead of min unsigned value.
Reviewers: pete, davide, sanjoy
Reviewed By: davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33815
llvm-svn: 305607
For the following motivating example
bool c();
void f();
bool start() {
bool result = c();
if (!c()) {
result = false;
goto exit;
}
f();
result = true;
exit:
return result;
}
we would previously generate a single DW_AT_const_value(1) because
only the DBG_VALUE in the second-to-last basic block survived
codegen. This patch improves the heuristic used to determine when a
DBG_VALUE is available at the beginning of its variable's enclosing
lexical scope:
- Stop giving singular constants blanket permission to take over the
entire scope. There is still a special case for constants in the
function prologue that we also miight want to retire later.
- Use the lexical scope information to determine available-at-entry
instead of proximity to the function prologue.
After this patch we generate a location list with a more accurate
narrower availability for the constant true value. As a pleasant side
effect, we also generate inline locations instead of location lists
where a loacation covers the entire range of the enclosing lexical
scope.
Measured on compiling llc with four targets this doesn't have an
effect on compile time and reduces the size of the debug info for llc
by ~600K.
rdar://problem/30286912
llvm-svn: 305599
The verifier should not output any message in such a case.
Added test case with no .apple_name section in the file to verify new functionality.
Made existing test case more specific.
llvm-svn: 305597
In this patch, I flip the switch in DriverUtils from using the external
cvtres.exe tool to using the Windows Resource library in llvm.
I also fixed a bug where .rsrc sections were marked as discardable
memory and therefore were placed in the wrong order in the final PE.
Furthermore, I modified WindowsResource to write the coff directly to a
memory buffer instead of to file, also had it use the machine types
already declared in COFF.h instead creating my own enum.
Finally, I flipped the switch to allow all unit tests that had
previously run only on windows due to a winres dependency to run
cross-platform.
Reviewers: zturner, ruiu
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34265
llvm-svn: 305592
Summary:
When we fold vector constants that are operands of phi's that feed into select,
we need to set the correct insertion point for the *new* selects that get generated.
The correct insertion point is the incoming block for the phi.
Such cases can occur with patch r298845, which fixed folding of
vector constants, but the new selects could be inserted incorrectly (as the added
test case shows).
Reviewers: majnemer, spatel, sanjoy
Reviewed by: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34162
llvm-svn: 305591
The recommit fixes two bugs: The first one is to use CurrentBlock instead of
PREInstr's Parent as param of performScalarPREInsertion because the Parent
of a clone instruction may be uninitialized. The second one is stop PRE when
CurrentBlock to its predecessor is a backedge and an operand of CurInst is
defined inside of CurrentBlock. The same value defined inside of loop in last
iteration can not be regarded as available.
Right now scalarpre doesn't have phi-translate support, so it will miss some
simple pre opportunities. Like the following testcase, current scalarpre cannot
recognize the last "a * b" is fully redundent because a and b used by the last
"a * b" expr are both defined by phis.
long a[100], b[100], g1, g2, g3;
__attribute__((pure)) long goo();
void foo(long a, long b, long c, long d) {
g1 = a * b;
if (__builtin_expect(g2 > 3, 0)) {
a = c;
b = d;
g2 = a * b;
}
g3 = a * b; // fully redundant.
}
The patch adds phi-translate support in scalarpre. This is only a temporary
solution before the newpre based on newgvn is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32252
llvm-svn: 305578
Revert because of reports of some PPC input starting to spill when it
was predicted that it wouldn't and no spillslot was reserved.
This reverts commit r305516.
llvm-svn: 305566
If users tried to have a structure decl/init code like below
struct test_t t = { .memeber1 = 45 };
It is very likely that compiler will generate a readonly section
to hold up the init values for variable t. Later load of t members,
e.g., t.member1 will result in a read from readonly section.
BPF program cannot handle relocation. This will force users to
write:
struct test_t t = {};
t.member1 = 45;
This is just inconvenient and unintuitive.
This patch addresses this issue by implementing BPF PreprocessISelDAG.
For any load from a global constant structure or an global array of
constant struct, it attempts to
translate it into a constant directly. The traversal of the
constant struct and other constant data structures are similar
to where the assembler emits read-only sections.
Four different unit test cases are also added to cover
different scenarios.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 305560
o This is discovered during my study of 32-bit subregister
support.
o This is no impact on current functionality since we
only support 64-bit registers.
o Searching the web, looks like the issue has been discovered
before, so fix it now.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 305559
Summary:
Background: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-May/112779.html
This change is to alter the prototype for the atomic memcpy intrinsic. The prototype itself is being changed to more closely resemble the semantics and parameters of the llvm.memcpy intrinsic -- to ease later combination of the llvm.memcpy and atomic memcpy intrinsics. Furthermore, the name of the atomic memcpy intrinsic is being changed to make it clear that it is not a generic atomic memcpy, but specifically a memcpy is unordered atomic.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy, efriedma
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, anna, llvm-commits, skatkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33240
llvm-svn: 305558
This reverts commit r305455. This commit was reported as breaking one of
the sanitizer buildbots. Reverting until lab.llvm.org comes back online.
llvm-svn: 305557
The second part of r305300: when placing the mux at the later location,
make sure that it won't use any register that was killed between the
two original instructions. Remove any such kills and transfer them to
the mux.
llvm-svn: 305553
- Topologocal is abbreviated as "topo" in comments, but "top" is used in only one comment. Modify it for consistency.
- Capitalize "succ" and "pred" for consistency in one figure.
- Other trivial fixes.
llvm-svn: 305552
Summary: This is the demorganed version of the case we already handle for the OR of iszero.
Reviewers: spatel
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34244
llvm-svn: 305548
This patch should fix sanitizer-x86_64-linux-fast bot.
The problem was that the contents of this stream are aligned to 4 byte,
and the paddings were created just by incrementing `Offset`, so paddings
had undefined values. When the entire stream is written to an output,
it triggered msan.
llvm-svn: 305541
This resubmits commit c0c249e9f2ef83e1d1e5f166b50673d92f3579d7.
It was broken due to some weird template issues, which have
since been fixed.
llvm-svn: 305517
Re-apply r276044/r279124. Trying to reproduce or disprove the ppc64
problems reported in the stage2 build last time, which I cannot
reproduce right now.
This is a variant of scavengeRegister() that works for
enterBasicBlockEnd()/backward(). The benefit of the backward mode is
that it is not affected by incomplete kill flags.
This patch also changes
PrologEpilogInserter::doScavengeFrameVirtualRegs() to use the register
scavenger in backwards mode.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21885
llvm-svn: 305516
This reverts commit 83ea17ebf2106859a51fbc2a86031b44d33696ad.
This is failing due to some strange template problems, so reverting
until it can be straightened out.
llvm-svn: 305505
Summary:
Split the PGOMemOPSizeOpt pass out from IndirectCallPromotion.cpp into
its own file.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34248
llvm-svn: 305501
After some internal discussions, we agreed that the raw output style had
outlived its usefulness. It was originally created before we had even
thought of dumping to YAML, and it was intended to give us some insight
into the internals of a PDB file. Now we have YAML mode which does
almost exactly this but is more powerful in that it can round-trip back
to a PDB, which the raw mode could not do. So the raw mode had become
purely a maintenance burden.
One option was to just delete it. However, its original goal was to be
as readable as possible while staying close to the "metal" - i.e.
presenting the output in a way that maps directly to the underlying file
format. We don't actually need that last requirement anymore since it's
covered by the yaml mode, so we could repurpose "raw" mode to actually
just be as readable as possible.
This patch implements about 80% of the functionality previously in raw
mode, but in a completely different style that is more akin to what
cvdump outputs. Records are very compressed, often times appearing on
just one line. One nice thing about this is that it makes full record
matching easier, because you can grep for indices, names, and leaf types
on a single line often.
See the tests for some examples of what the new output looks like.
Note that this patch actually regresses the functionality of raw mode in
a few areas, but only because the patch was already unreasonably large
and going 100% would have been even worse. Specifically, this patch is
missing:
The ability to dump module debug subsections (checksums, lines, etc)
The ability to dump section headers
Aside from that everything is here. While goign through the tests fixing
them all up, I found many duplicate tests. They've been deleted. In
subsequent patches I will go through and re-add the missing
functionality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34191
llvm-svn: 305495
Add condition for MachineLICM to safely hoist instructions that utilize
non constant registers that are reserved.
On PPC, global variable access is done through the table of contents (TOC)
which is always in register X2. The ABI reserves this register in any
functions that have calls or access global variables.
A call through a function pointer involves saving, changing and restoring
this register around the call and thus MachineLICM does not consider it to
be invariant. We can however guarantee the register is preserved across the
call and thus is invariant.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33562
llvm-svn: 305490
Currently we expect A to be on the same side in both Ands but nothing guarantees that.
While there also switch to using matchers for some of the code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34230
llvm-svn: 305487
The code assumed that we process instructions in basic block order. FastISel
processes instructions in reverse basic block order. We need to pre-assign
virtual registers before selecting otherwise we get def-use relationships wrong.
This only affects code with swifterror registers.
rdar://32659327
llvm-svn: 305484
If a regular LTO module has a summary index, then instead of linking
it into the combined regular LTO module right away, add it to the
combined summary index and associate it with a special module that
represents the combined regular LTO module.
Any such modules are linked during LTO::run(), at which time we use
the results of summary-based dead stripping to control whether to
link prevailing symbols.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33922
llvm-svn: 305482
This is a fix for the test case in PR32314.
Basic Alias Analysis can ask if two nodes are known non-equal after looking through a phi node to find a GEP. isAddOfNonZero saw an add of a constant from the same phi and said that its output couldn't be equal. But Basic Alias Analysis was really asking about the value from the previous loop iteration.
This patch at least makes that case not happen anymore, I'm not sure if there were still other ways this can fail. As was discussed in the bug, it looks like fixing BasicAA would be difficult so this patch seemed like a possible workaround
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33136
llvm-svn: 305481
This patch fixes a potential verification error (64-bit register operands for cmpw) with -verify-machineinstrs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34208
llvm-svn: 305479
In preparation for doing storemerge post-legalization, reorder
visitSTORE passes to move pre/post-index combining after store
merge. Reordered passes other than store merge are unaffected.
llvm-svn: 305473
As all store merges checks are based on the memory operation
performed, allow use of truncated stores and extended loads as valid
input candidates for merging.
llvm-svn: 305468
AVX512 compare instructions return v*i1 types.
In cases where the number of elements in the returned value are less than 8, clang adds zeroes to get a mask of v8i1 type.
Later on it's replaced with CONCAT_VECTORS, which then is lowered to many DAG nodes including insert/extract element and shift right/left nodes.
The fact that AVX512 compare instructions put the result in a k register and zeroes all its upper bits allows us to remove the extra nodes simply by copying the result to the required register class.
When lowering, identify these cases and transform them into an INSERT_SUBVECTOR node (marked legal), then catch this pattern in instructions selection phase and transform it into one avx512 cmp instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33188
llvm-svn: 305465
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
Add support for modulo for targets that have hardware division and for
those that don't. When hardware division is not available, we have to
choose the correct libcall to use. This is generally straightforward,
except for AEABI.
The AEABI variant is trickier than the other libcalls because it
returns { quotient, remainder }, instead of just one value like the
other libcalls that we've seen so far. Therefore, we need to use custom
lowering for it. However, we don't want to have too much special code,
so we refactor the target-independent code in the legalizer by adding a
helper for replacing an instruction with a libcall. This helper is used
by the legalizer itself when dealing with simple calls, and also by the
custom ARM legalization for the more complicated AEABI divmod calls.
llvm-svn: 305459
Lowering mixed struct args, params and returns used G_INSERT, which is a
bit more convoluted to support through the entire pipeline. Since they
don't occur that often in practice, it's probably wiser to leave them
out until later.
Meanwhile, we can lower homogeneous structs using G_MERGE_VALUES, which
has good support in the legalizer. These occur e.g. as the return of
__aeabi_idivmod, so it's nice to be able to support them.
llvm-svn: 305458
Summary:
Scheduling AESE/AESMC and AESD/AESIMC instruction pairs back-to-back
gives a double digit speedup on benchmarks using those instructions on
Cortex-A processors. In GCC, this optimization is part of the generic
processor model as well.
This change should not have a major performance impact on processors
that do not optimize AES instruction pairs, although I only had access
to Cortex-A processors for benchmarking.
Reviewers: rengolin, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, evandro, silviu.baranga, MatzeB, mcrosier, joelkevinjones, joel_k_jones, bmakam, t.p.northover
Reviewed By: evandro
Subscribers: sbaranga, aemerson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33836
llvm-svn: 305457
Author: milena.vujosevic.janicic
Reviewers: sdardis
The patch extends size reduction pass for MicroMIPS.
The following instructions are examined and transformed, if possible:
ADDIU instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction ADDIUSP
ADDIU instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction ADDIUR1SP
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33887
llvm-svn: 305455
The current name (addModulePath) and return value
(ModulePathStringTableTy::iterator) is a little confusing. This
API adds a module, not just a path. And the iterator is basically
just an implementation detail of the summary index. Address
both of those issues by renaming to addModule and introducing a
ModuleSummaryIndex::ModuleInfo type that the function returns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34124
llvm-svn: 305422
Summary:
At present, `-profile-guided-section-prefix` is a `cl::Optional` option, which means it demands to be passed exactly zero or one times. Our build system makes it pretty tricky to guarantee this. We often accidentally pass the flag more than once (but always with the same "false" value) which results in an error, after which compilation fails:
```
clang (LLVM option parsing): for the -profile-guided-section-prefix option: may only occur zero or one times!
```
While we work on improving our build system, it also seems reasonable just to allow `-profile-guided-section-prefix` to be passed more than once, by to `cl::ZeroOrMore`. Quoting [[ http://llvm.org/docs/CommandLine.html#controlling-the-number-of-occurrences-required-and-allowed | the documentation ]]:
> The cl::ZeroOrMore modifier ... indicates that your program will allow the option to be specified zero or more times.
> ...
> If an option is specified multiple times for an option of the cl::opt class, only the last value will be retained.
Reviewers: danielcdh
Reviewed By: danielcdh
Subscribers: twoh, david2050, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34219
llvm-svn: 305413
This way we end up not looking at PHI args already removed.
MemSSA now goes through the updater so we can prune
it to avoid having redundant MemoryPHI arguments, but that
doesn't quite work for the general case.
Discussed with Daniel Berlin, fixes PR33406.
llvm-svn: 305409
There's an early out that's trying to detect when we don't know any bits that make up the legal range of a shift. The code subtracts one from BitWidth which creates a mask in the lower bits for power of 2 bit widths. This is then ANDed with the known bits to see if any of those bits are known. If the bit width isn't a power of 2 this creates a non-sensical mask.
This patch corrects this by rounding up to a power of 2 before doing the subtract and mask.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34165
llvm-svn: 305400
We know that shuffle masks are power-of-2 sizes, but there's no way (?) for LLVM to know that,
so hack combineX86ShufflesRecursively() to be much faster by replacing div/rem with shift/mask.
This makes the motivating compile-time bug in PR32037 ( https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32037 )
about 9% faster overall.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34174
llvm-svn: 305398
Many times unit tests for different libraries would like to use
the same helper functions for checking common types of errors.
This patch adds a common library with helpers for testing things
in Support, and introduces helpers in here for integrating the
llvm::Error and llvm::Expected<T> classes with gtest and gmock.
Normally, we would just be able to write:
EXPECT_THAT(someFunction(), succeeded());
but due to some quirks in llvm::Error's move semantics, gmock
doesn't make this easy, so two macros EXPECT_THAT_ERROR() and
EXPECT_THAT_EXPECTED() are introduced to gloss over the difficulties.
Consider this an exception, and possibly only temporary as we
look for ways to improve this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33059
llvm-svn: 305395
This was originally reverted because of some non-deterministic
failures on certain buildbots. Luckily ASAN eventually caught
this as a stack-use-after-scope, so the fix is included in
this patch.
llvm-svn: 305393
This reverts commit 3a204faa093c681a1e96c5e0622f50649b761ee0.
I've upset a buildbot which runs the address sanitizer:
ERROR: AddressSanitizer: stack-use-after-scope
lib/Target/ARM/ARMISelLowering.cpp:2690
That Twine variable is used illegally.
llvm-svn: 305390
For multiprecision arithmetic on MIPS, rather than using ISD::ADDE / ISD::ADDC,
get SelectionDAG to break down the operation into ISD::ADDs and ISD::SETCCs.
For MIPS, only the DSP ASE has a carry flag, so in the general case it is not
useful to directly support ISD::{ADDE, ADDC, SUBE, SUBC} nodes.
Also improve the generation code in such cases for targets with
TargetLoweringBase::ZeroOrOneBooleanContent by directly using the result of the
comparison node rather than using it in selects. Similarly for ISD::SUBE /
ISD::SUBC.
Address optimization breakage by moving the generation of MIPS specific integer
multiply-accumulate nodes to before legalization.
This revolves PR32713 and PR33424.
Thanks to Simonas Kazlauskas and Pirama Arumuga Nainar for reporting the issue!
Reviewers: slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33494
llvm-svn: 305389
The ARM backend asserts against constant pool lowering when it generates
execute-only code in order to prevent the generation of constant pools in
the text section. It appears that target independent optimizations might
generate DAG nodes that represent constant pools. By lowering such nodes
as global addresses we don't violate the semantics of execute-only code
and also it is guaranteed that execute-only behaves correct with the
position-independent addressing modes that support execute-only code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33773
llvm-svn: 305387
Summary:
This patch is part of 3 patches that together form a single patch, but must be introduced in stages in order not to break things.
The way that LLVM interprets DW_OP_plus in DIExpression nodes is basically that of the DW_OP_plus_uconst operator since LLVM expects an unsigned constant operand. This unnecessarily restricts the DW_OP_plus operator, preventing it from being used to describe the evaluation of runtime values on the expression stack. These patches try to align the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus with that of the DWARF definition, which pops two elements off the expression stack, performs the operation and pushes the result back on the stack.
This is done in three stages:
• The first patch (LLVM) adds support for DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The second patch (Clang) contains changes all its uses from DW_OP_plus to DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The third patch (LLVM) changes the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus to be in line with its DWARF meaning. This patch includes the bitcode upgrade from legacy DIExpressions.
Patch by Sander de Smalen.
Reviewers: echristo, pcc, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, javed.absar, aprantl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33894
llvm-svn: 305386
This patch fixes two systemic machine verifier errors in the long
branch pass. The first is the incorrect basic block successors
and the second was the incorrect construction of several jump
instructions.
This partially resolves PR27458 and the associated PR32146.
Reviewers: slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33378
llvm-svn: 305382
This is causing failures on linux bots with an invalid stream
read. It doesn't repro in any configuration on Windows, so
reverting until I have a chance to investigate on Linux.
llvm-svn: 305371
This allows us to use yaml2obj and obj2yaml to round-trip CodeView
symbol and type information without having to manually specify the bytes
of the section. This makes for much easier to maintain tests. See the
tests under lld/COFF in this patch for example. Before they just said
SectionData: <blob> whereas now we can use meaningful record
descriptions. Note that it still supports the SectionData yaml field,
which could be useful for initializing a section to invalid bytes for
testing, for example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34127
llvm-svn: 305366
This patch adds code which verifies that each bucket in the .apple_names
accelerator table is either empty or has a valid hash index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34177
llvm-svn: 305344
Summary:
When legalizing G_LOAD/G_STORE using NarrowScalar, we should avoid emitting
%0 = G_CONSTANT ty 0
%1 = G_GEP %x, %0
since it's cheaper to not emit the redundant instructions than it is to fold them
away later.
Reviewers: qcolombet, t.p.northover, ab, rovka, aditya_nandakumar, kristof.beyls
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32746
llvm-svn: 305340
Doing so breaks compilation of the following C program
(under -fprofile-instr-generate):
__attribute__((always_inline)) inline int foo() { return 0; }
int main() { return foo(); }
At link time, we fail because taking the address of an
available_externally function creates an undefined external reference,
which the TU cannot provide.
Emitting the function definition into the object file at all appears to
be a violation of the langref: "Globals with 'available_externally'
linkage are never emitted into the object file corresponding to the LLVM
module."
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34134
llvm-svn: 305327
Summary:
We were writing the length of the string based on system-endianness, and
not universally little-endian. This fixes that.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34159
llvm-svn: 305322
Summary:
Leave an updated VP metadata on the fallback memcpy intrinsic after
specialization. This can be used for later possible expansion based on
the average of the remaining values.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34164
llvm-svn: 305321
Summary: Apparently we need to write using a void* pointer on some architectures, or else alignment error is caused.
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34166
llvm-svn: 305320
Summary: Added output to stderr so that we can actually see what is happening when the test fails on big endian.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34155
llvm-svn: 305314
Store-immediate instructions have a non-extendable offset. Since the
actual offset for a stack object is not known until much later, only
generate these stores when the stack size (at the time of instruction
selection) is small.
llvm-svn: 305305
Summary:
This patch is part of 3 patches that together form a single patch, but must be introduced in stages in order not to break things.
The way that LLVM interprets DW_OP_plus in DIExpression nodes is basically that of the DW_OP_plus_uconst operator since LLVM expects an unsigned constant operand. This unnecessarily restricts the DW_OP_plus operator, preventing it from being used to describe the evaluation of runtime values on the expression stack. These patches try to align the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus with that of the DWARF definition, which pops two elements off the expression stack, performs the operation and pushes the result back on the stack.
This is done in three stages:
• The first patch (LLVM) adds support for DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The second patch (Clang) contains changes all its uses from DW_OP_plus to DW_OP_plus_uconst.
• The third patch (LLVM) changes the semantics of DW_OP_plus and DW_OP_minus to be in line with its DWARF meaning. This patch includes the bitcode upgrade from legacy DIExpressions.
Patch by Sander de Smalen.
Reviewers: pcc, echristo, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: fhahn, aprantl, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33892
llvm-svn: 305304
Summary: Fixes an issue using RegisterStandardPasses from a statically linked object before PassManagerBuilder::addGlobalExtension is called from a dynamic library.
Reviewers: efriedma, theraven
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33515
llvm-svn: 305303
When a mux instruction is created from a pair of complementary conditional
transfers, it can be placed at the location of either the earlier or the
later of the transfers. Since it will use the operands of the original
transfers, putting it in the earlier location may hoist a kill of a source
register that was originally further down. Make sure the kill flag is
removed if the register is still used afterwards.
llvm-svn: 305300
Summary:
Expose the module descriptor index and fill it in for section
contributions.
Reviewers: zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits, ruiu, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34126
llvm-svn: 305296
While simplifying branches in the MachineInstr representation, the
routine BuildCondBr must preserve flags on register MachineOperands. In
particular, it must preserve the <undef> flag.
This fixes a bug that is unlikely to occur in any real scenario, but
which bugpoint is likely to introduce.
Patch By Nick Johnson!
Reviewers: ahatanak, sdardis
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34041
llvm-svn: 305290
The VFNM[AS] instructions did not have scheduling information attached, which
was causing assertion failures with the Cortex-A57 scheduling model and
-fp-contract=fast, because the Cortex-A57 sched model claims to be complete.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34139
llvm-svn: 305288
Much of PR32037's compile time regression is due to getTargetConstantBitsFromNode always creating large (>64bit) APInts during the bitcasting from the source data to the destination bitwidth.
This commit avoids this bitcast stage if the data is already the correct bitwidth.
llvm-svn: 305284
This restores the order of evaluation (& conditionalized evaluation) of
isTriviallyDeadInstruction, InlineHistoryIncludes, and shouldInline
(with the addition of a shouldInline call after
isTriviallyDeadInstruction) from before r305245.
llvm-svn: 305267
These symbols were previously not being marked as functions
so were appearing as globals instead, and with the incorrect
relocation type.
Without this fix, objects that take address of external
functions include them as global imports rather than function
imports which then fails at link time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34068
llvm-svn: 305263
This revert was done so that my other patch to add test framework could
land separately. Now the revert can be reverted and this patch can
reland.
This reverts commit 18b3c75b2b0d32601fb60a06b9672c33d6f0dff9.
llvm-svn: 305259
Summary: Added test cases for multiple machine types, file merging, multiple languages, and more resource types. Also fixed new bugs these tests exposed.
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34047
llvm-svn: 305258
I accidentally combined this patch with one for adding more tests, they
should be separated.
This reverts commit 3da218a523be78df32e637d3446ecf97c9ea0465.
llvm-svn: 305257
Previously we were writing the value function index space
value but for these types of relocations we want to be
writing the table element index space value.
Add a test case for these relocation types that fails
without this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33962
llvm-svn: 305253
User has 3 signatures for operator new today. They take a single size, a size and a number of users, and a size, number of users, and descriptor size.
Historically there used to only be one signature that took size and a number of uses. Long ago derived classes implemented their own versions that took just a size and would call the size and use count version. Then they left an unimplemented signature for the size and use count signature from User. As we moved to C++11 this unimplemented signature because = delete.
Since then operator new has picked up two new signatures for operator new. But when the 3 argument version was added it was never added to the delete list in all of the derived classes where the 2 argument version is deleted. This makes things inconsistent.
I believe once one version of operator new is created in a derived class name hiding will take care of making all of the base class signatures unavailable. So I don't think the deleted lines are needed at all.
This patch removes all of the deletes in cases where there is an override or there is already a delete of another signature (that should trigger name hiding too).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34120
llvm-svn: 305251
When we get an unknown symbol type, we might as well at least
dump it. Same goes for round-tripping through YAML, we can
dump the record contents as raw bytes even if we don't know
how to interpret it semantically.
llvm-svn: 305248
This fixes PR33157.
https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=33157
We might also think about disallowing duplicate dbg.declare intrinsics
entirely, but this may complicate some passes needlessly.
llvm-svn: 305244
It doesn't seem relevant to set an address space limit - this isn't
important in any sense that I'm aware & it gets in the way of things
that use a lot of address space, like llvm-symbolizer.
This came up when I realized that bugpoint regression tests were much
slower with -gsplit-dwarf than plain -g. Turned out that bugpoint
subprocesses (opt, etc) were crashing and doing symbolization - but
bugpoint runs those subprocesses with a 400MB memory limit. So with
plain -g, mmaping the opt binary would exceed the memory limit, fail,
and thus be really fast - no symbolization occurred. Whereas with
-gsplit-dwarf, comically, having less to map in, it would succeed and
then spend lots of time symbolizing.
I've fixed at least the critical part of bugpoint's perf problem there
by adding an option to allow bugpoint to disable symbolization. Thus
improving the perfromance for -gsplit-dwarf and making the -g-esque
speed available without this quirk/accidental benefit.
llvm-svn: 305242
The last fix required the user to manually add the required
feature. This caused an LLD test to fail because I failed to
update LLD. In practice we can hide this logic so it can just
be transparently added when we write the PDB.
llvm-svn: 305236
Older PDBs don't have this. Its presence is detected by using
the various "feature" flags that come at the end of the PDB
Stream. Detect this, and don't try to dump the ID stream if the
features tells us it's not present.
llvm-svn: 305235
Summary:
After RS4GC, we should drop metadata that is no longer valid. These metadata
is used by optimizations scheduled after RS4GC, and can cause a miscompile.
One such metadata is invariant.load which is used by LICM sinking transform.
After rewriting statepoints, the address of a load maybe relocated. With
invariant.load metadata on a load instruction, LICM sinking assumes the
loaded value (from a dererenceable address) to be invariant, and
rematerializes the load operand and the load at the exit block.
This transforms the IR to have an unrelocated use of the
address after a statepoint, which is incorrect.
Other metadata we conservatively remove are related to
dereferenceability and noalias metadata.
This patch drops such metadata on store and load instructions after
rewriting statepoints.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy, apilipenko
Reviewed by: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33756
llvm-svn: 305234
This is a precursor to another change (coming soon) that aims to make
FoldingSet's API more type-safe. Without this, the type-safety change
would just duplicate 4 more public methods between the already very
similar classes.
This renames FoldingSetImpl to FoldingSetBase so it's consistent with
the FooBase -> FooImpl<T> -> Foo<T> convention we seem to have with
other containers.
llvm-svn: 305231
The "Add/sub (shifted reg)" instructions use the 31 encoding for xzr and wzr
rather than the SP, so we need to use different variants.
Situations where this actually comes up are rare enough (see test-case) that I
think falling back to DAG is fine.
llvm-svn: 305230
Static data members were causing a problem because I mistakenly
assumed all members would affect a class's layout and so the
Layout member would be non-null.
llvm-svn: 305229
Fix thinko/typo in subreg aware liverange splitting logic. I'm not sure
how to write a proper testcase for this. The original problem only
happens on an out-of-tree target. Forcing subreg enabled targets to
spill and split in a predictable way is near impossible.
llvm-svn: 305228
Summary:
Use the filepath used to open the archive member as the archive member
name instead of the file basename. This path might be absolute or
relative. This is important because the archive member name will show
up in the PDB, and we want our PDBs to look as much like MSVC's as
possible.
This also helps avoid an issue in our PDB module descriptor writing
code, which assumes that all module names are unique. Relative paths
still aren't guaranteed to be unique, but they're much better than
basenames, which definitely aren't unique.
Reviewers: ruiu, zturner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33575
llvm-svn: 305223
Power9 has instructions that will reverse the bytes within an element for all
sizes (half-word, word, double-word and quad-word). These can be used for the
vec_revb builtins in altivec.h. However, we implement these to match vector
shuffle nodes as that will cover both the builtins and vector shuffles that
occur in the SDAG through other means.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33690
llvm-svn: 305214
Note that if we need the result of both the divide and the modulo then we
compute the modulo based on the result of the divide and not using the new
hardware instruction.
Commit on behalf of STEFAN PINTILIE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33940
llvm-svn: 305210
Summary:
This change enables the sin(x) cos(x) -> sincos(x) optimization on GNU
target triples. This optimization was being inhibited when -ffast-math
wasn't set because sincos in GLibC does not set errno, while sin and cos
do. However, this optimization will only run if the attributes on the
sin/cos calls include readnone, which is how clang represents the fact
that it doesn't care about the errno values set by these functions (via
the -fno-math-errno flag).
Reviewers: hfinkel, bogner
Subscribers: mcrosier, javed.absar, llvm-commits, paul.redmond
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32921
llvm-svn: 305204
Summary:
The old check for slot overlap treated 2 slots `S` and `T` as
overlapping if there existed a CFG node in which both of the slots could
possibly be active. That is overly conservative and caused stack blowups
in Rust programs. Instead, check whether there is a single CFG node in
which both of the slots are possibly active *together*.
Fixes PR32488.
Patch by Ariel Ben-Yehuda <ariel.byd@gmail.com>
Reviewers: thanm, nagisa, llvm-commits, efriedma, rnk
Reviewed By: thanm
Subscribers: dotdash
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31583
llvm-svn: 305193
This step is just intended to reduce code duplication rather than change any functionality.
A follow-up would be to replace PPCTargetLowering::spliceIntoChain() usage with this new helper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33649
llvm-svn: 305192
Summary: The method TargetTransformInfo::getRegisterBitWidth() is declared const, but the type erasing implementation classes (TargetTransformInfo::Concept & TargetTransformInfo::Model) that were introduced by Chandler in https://reviews.llvm.org/D7293 do not have the method declared const. This is an NFC to tidy up the const consistency between TTI and its implementation.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, reames
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: reames, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33903
llvm-svn: 305189
First possible step towards merging SSE/AVX memory folding pattern fragments.
Also allows us to remove the duplicate non-temporal load logic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33902
llvm-svn: 305184
I was looking closer at the x86 test diffs in D33866, and the first change seems like it
shouldn't happen in the first place. So this patch will resolve that.
Using Agner's tables and AMD docs, vperm2f128 and vinsertf128 have identical timing for
any given CPU model, so we should be able to interchange those without affecting perf.
But as we can see in some of the diffs here, using vperm2f128 allows load folding, so
we should take that opportunity to reduce code size and register pressure.
A secondary advantage is making AVX1 and AVX2 codegen more similar. Given that vperm2f128
was introduced with AVX1, we should be selecting it in all of the same situations that we
would with AVX2. If there's some reason that an AVX1 CPU would not want to use this
instruction, that should be fixed up in a later pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33938
llvm-svn: 305171
Summary: UADDO has 2 result, and one must check the result no before doing any kind of combine. Without it, the transform is invalid.
Reviewers: joerg
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34088
llvm-svn: 305162