When we have dynamic allocas we have a frame pointer, and
when we're lowering frame indexes we should make sure we use it.
Patch by Jacob Gravelle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24889
llvm-svn: 282442
Summary: This patch adds asm.js-style setjmp/longjmp handling support for WebAssembly. It also uses JavaScript's try and catch mechanism.
Reviewers: jpp, dschuff
Subscribers: jfb, dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24121
llvm-svn: 280415
Summary: This patch adds asm.js-style setjmp/longjmp handling support for WebAssembly. It also uses JavaScript's try and catch mechanism.
Reviewers: jpp, dschuff
Subscribers: jfb, dschuff
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23928
llvm-svn: 280302
Summary:
If the register has a negative value then unsigned overflow will occur;
this case is sometimes even created intentionally by LSR. For now
disable GA+reg folding. Fixes PR29127
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24053
llvm-svn: 280285
The WebAssemly spec removing the return value from store instructions, so
remove the associated optimization from LLVM.
This patch leaves the store instruction operands in place for now, so stores
now always write to "$drop"; these will be removed in a seperate patch.
llvm-svn: 279100
This patch changes the code structure of
WebAssemblyLowerEmscriptenException pass to support both exception
handling and setjmp/longjmp. It also changes the name of the pass and
the source file.
1. Change the file/pass name to WebAssemblyLowerEmscriptenExceptions ->
WebAssemblyLowerEmscriptenEHSjLj to make it clear that it supports both
EH and SjLj
2. List function / global variable names at the top so they
can be changed easily
3. Some cosmetic changes
Patch by Heejin Ahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23588
llvm-svn: 279075
Summary:
This test was resulting in asan/valgrind failures due to undefined
DWARF register mappings for WebAssembly, and was disabled in r278495.
These have been resolved.
Reviewers: sunfish, dschuff
Subscribers: bkramer, llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23459
llvm-svn: 278576
Summary: Some backends, like WebAssembly, use virtual registers instead of physical registers. This crashes the DbgValueHistoryCalculator pass, which assumes that all registers are physical. Instead, skip virtual registers when iterating aliases, and assume that they are clobbered.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, dschuff, aprantl
Subscribers: yurydelendik, llvm-commits, jfb, sunfish
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22590
llvm-svn: 278371
This patch adds -emscripten-cxx-exceptions-whitelist option to
WebAssemblyLowerEmscriptenExceptions pass. This options is the list of
function names in which Emscripten-style exception handling is enabled.
This is to support emscripten's EXCEPTION_CATCHING_WHITELIST which
exists because of the performance impact of emscripten's non-zero-cost
EH method.
Patch by Heejin Ahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23292
llvm-svn: 278171
* Delete extra '_' prefixes from JS library function names. fixImports()
function in JS glue code deals with this for wasm.
* Change command-line option names in order to be consistent with
asm.js.
* Add missing lowering code for llvm.eh.typeid.for intrinsics
* Delete commas in mangled function names
* Fix a function argument attributes bug. Because we add the pointer to
the original callee as the first argument of invoke wrapper, all
argument attribute indices have to be incremented by one.
Patch by Heejin Ahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23258
llvm-svn: 278081
Previously, FastISel for WebAssembly wasn't checking the return value of
`getRegForValue` in certain cases, which would generate instructions
referencing NoReg. This patch fixes this behavior.
Patch by Dominic Chen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23100
llvm-svn: 277742
Summary: This patch implements CFI for WebAssembly. It modifies the
LowerTypeTest pass to pre-assign table indexes to functions that are
called indirectly, and lowers type checks to test against the
appropriate table indexes. It also modifies the WebAssembly backend to
support a special ".indidx" assembly directive that propagates the table
index assignments out to the linker.
Patch by Dominic Chen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D21768
llvm-svn: 277398
Summary: This patch includes asm.js-style exception handling support for
WebAssembly. The WebAssembly MVP does not have any support for
unwinding or non-local control flow. In order to support C++ exceptions,
emscripten currently uses JavaScript exceptions along with some support
code (written in JavaScript) that is bundled by emscripten with the
generated code.
This scheme lowers exception-related instructions for wasm such that
wasm modules can be compatible with emscripten's existing scheme and
share the support code.
Patch by Heejin Ahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22958
llvm-svn: 277391
Under emscripten, C code can take the address of a function implemented
in Javascript (which is exposed via an import in wasm). Because imports
do not have linear memory address in wasm, we need to generate a thunk
to be the target of the indirect call; it call the import directly.
To make this possible, LLVM needs to emit the type signatures for these
functions, because they may not be called directly or referred to other
than where the address is taken.
This uses s new .s directive (.functype) which specifies the signature.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20891
Re-apply r271599 but instead of bailing with an error when a declared
function has multiple returns, replace it with a pointer argument. Also
add the test case I forgot to 'git add' last time around.
llvm-svn: 271703
This reverts r271599, it broke the integration tests.
More places than I expected had nontrival return types in imports, or
else the check was wrong.
llvm-svn: 271606
Under emscripten, C code can take the address of a function implemented
in Javascript (which is exposed via an import in wasm). Because imports
do not have linear memory address in wasm, we need to generate a thunk
to be the target of the indirect call; it call the import directly.
To make this possible, LLVM needs to emit the type signatures for these
functions, because they may not be called directly or referred to other
than where the address is taken.
This uses s new .s directive (.functype) which specifies the signature.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20891
llvm-svn: 271599
Instead of this:
i32.const $push10=, __stack_pointer
i32.load $push11=, 0($pop10)
Emit this:
i32.const $push10=, 0
i32.load $push11=, __stack_pointer($pop10)
It's not currently clear which is better, though there's a chance the second
form may be better at overall compression. We can revisit this when we have
more data; for now it makes sense to make PEI consistent with isel.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20411
llvm-svn: 270635
This saves a small amount of code size, and is a first small step toward
passing values on the stack across block boundaries.
Differential Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20450
llvm-svn: 270294
Don't expand divisions by constants if it would require multiple instructions.
The current assumption is that engines will perform the desired optimizations.
llvm-svn: 269930
We currently don't represent get_local and set_local explicitly; they
are just implied by virtual register use and def. This avoids a lot of
clutter, but it does complicate stackifying: get_locals read their
operands at their position in the stack evaluation order, rather than
at their parent instruction. This patch adds code to walk the stack to
determine the precise ordering, when needed.
llvm-svn: 269854
MachineInstr::isSafeToMove is more conservative than is needed here;
use a more explicit check, and incorporate knowledge of some
WebAssembly-specific opcodes.
llvm-svn: 269736
compiler-rt/libgcc shift routines expect the shift count to be an i32, so
use i32 as the shift count for shifts that are legalized to libcalls. This
also reverts r268991, now that the signatures are correct.
llvm-svn: 269531
Move the register stackification and coloring passes to run very late, after
PEI, tail duplication, and most other passes. This means that all code emitted
and expanded by those passes is now exposed to these passes. This also
eliminates the need for prologue/epilogue code to be manually stackified,
which significantly simplifies the code.
This does require running LiveIntervals a second time. It's useful to think
of these late passes not as late optimization passes, but as a domain-specific
compression algorithm based on knowledge of liveness information. It's used to
compress the code after all conventional optimizations are complete, which is
why it uses LiveIntervals at a phase when actual optimization passes don't
typically need it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20075
llvm-svn: 269012
Summary:
MRI::eliminateFrameIndex can emit several instructions to do address
calculations; these can usually be stackified. Because instructions with
FI operands can have subsequent operands which may be expression trees,
find the top of the leftmost tree and insert the code before it, to keep
the LIFO property.
Also use stackified registers when writing back the SP value to memory
in the epilog; it's unnecessary because SP will not be used after the
epilog, and it results in better code.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18234
llvm-svn: 263725
This implements a very simple conservative transformation that doesn't
require more than linear code size growth. There's room for much more
optimization in this space.
llvm-svn: 262982
Implements a mostly-conventional redzone for the userspace
stack. Because we have unsigned load/store offsets we continue to use a
local SP subtracted from the incoming SP but do not write it back to
memory.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17525
llvm-svn: 261662
Previously the stack pointer was only written back to memory in the
prolog. But this is wrong for dynamic allocas, for which
target-independent codegen handles SP updates after the prolog (and
possibly even in another BB). Instead update the SP global in
ADJCALLSTACKDOWN which is generated after the SP update sequence.
This will have further refinements when we add red zone support.
llvm-svn: 261579
LLVM converts adds into ors when it can prove that the operands don't share
any non-zero bits. Teach address folding to recognize or instructions with
constant operands with this property that can be folded into addresses as
if they were adds.
llvm-svn: 261562
The stack pointer is bumped when there is a frame pointer or when there
are static-size objects, but was only getting written back when there
were static-size objects.
llvm-svn: 261453
While we still do want reducible control flow, the RequiresStructuredCFG
flag imposes more strict structure constraints than WebAssembly wants.
Unsetting this flag enables critical edge splitting and tail merging.
Also, disable TailDuplication explicitly, as it doesn't support virtual
registers, and was previously only disabled by the RequiresStructuredCFG
flag.
llvm-svn: 261190
This fixes very slow compilation on
test/CodeGen/Generic/2010-11-04-BigByval.ll . Note that MaxStoresPerMemcpy
and friends are not yet carefully tuned so the cutoff point is currently
somewhat arbitrary. However, it's important that there be a cutoff point
so that we don't emit unbounded quantities of loads and stores.
llvm-svn: 261050
The register stackifier currently checks for intervening stores (and
loads that may alias them) but doesn't account for the fact that the
instruction being moved may affect intervening loads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17298
llvm-svn: 261014
CopyToReg nodes don't support FrameIndex operands. Other targets select
the FI to some LEA-like instruction, but since we don't have that, we
need to insert some kind of instruction that can take an FI operand and
produces a value usable by CopyToReg (i.e. in a vreg). So insert a dummy
copy_local between Op and its FI operand. This results in a redundant
copy which we should optimize away later (maybe in the post-FI-lowering
peephole pass).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17213
llvm-svn: 260987
WebAssembly doesn't require full RPO; topological sorting is sufficient and
can preserve more of the MachineBlockPlacement ordering. Unfortunately, this
still depends a lot on heuristics, because while we use the
MachineBlockPlacement ordering as a guide, we can't use it in places where
it isn't topologically ordered. This area will require further attention.
llvm-svn: 260978
This avoids some complications updating LiveIntervals to be aware of the new
register lifetimes, because we can just compute new intervals from scratch
rather than describe how the old ones have been changed.
llvm-svn: 260971
Instead of passing varargs directly on the user stack, allocate a buffer in
the caller's stack frame and pass a pointer to it. This simplifies the C
ABI (e.g. non-C callers of C functions do not need to use C's user stack if
they have their own mechanism) and allows further optimizations in the future
(e.g. fewer functions may need to use the stack).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17048
llvm-svn: 260421
Previously the code assumed all uses of FI on loads and stores were as
addresses. This checks whether the use is the address or a value and
handles the latter case as it does for non-memory instructions.
llvm-svn: 259306
The previous code was incorrect (can't getReg a frameindex). We could instead optimize it to reduce tree height, but I'm not sure that's worthwhile yet because we then try to eliminate the frameindex.
This patch also fixes frame index elimination for operations which may load or store: it used to assume the base was operand 2 and immediate offset operand 1. That's not true for stores, where they're 4 and 3.
llvm-svn: 259305
Refine the test for whether an instruction is in an expression tree so that
it detects when one tree ends and another begins, so we can place a block
at that point, rather than continuing to find the first instruction not in
a tree at all.
llvm-svn: 259294
Add support for frame pointer use in prolog/epilog.
Supports dynamic allocas but not yet over-aligned locals.
Target-independend CG generates SP updates, but we still need to write
back the SP value to memory when necessary.
llvm-svn: 259220
This patch revamps the RegStackifier pass with a new tree traversal mechanism,
enabling three major new features:
- Stackification of values with multiple uses, using the result value of set_local
- More aggressive stackification of instructions with side effects
- Reordering operands in commutative instructions to enable more stackification.
llvm-svn: 259009
Summary:
Just does the simple allocation of a stack object and passes
a pointer to the callee.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16610
llvm-svn: 258989
r258781 optimized memcpy/memmove/memcpy so the intrinsic call can return its first argument, but missed the frame index case. Teach it to ignore that case so C code doesn't assert out in these cases.
llvm-svn: 258851
These calls return their first argument, but because LLVM uses an intrinsic
with a void return type, they can't use the returned attribute. Generalize
the store results pass to optimize these calls too.
llvm-svn: 258781
For historic reasons, the behavior of .align differs between targets.
Fortunately, there are alternatives, .p2align and .balign, which make the
interpretation of the parameter explicit, and which behave consistently across
targets.
This patch teaches MC to use .p2align instead of .align, so that people reading
code for multiple architectures don't have to remember which way each platform
does its .align directive.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16549
llvm-svn: 258750
Instructions can be DCE'd after the RegStackify pass. If the instruction which
would be the pop for what would be a push is removed, don't use a push.
llvm-svn: 258694
When generating calls to memcpy, memmove, and memset, use void* as the return
type rather than void, to match the standard signatures for these functions.
This has no practical effect for most targets, since the return values of
these calls aren't being used anyway, and most calling conventions tolerate
this kind of mismatch. However, this change will help support future
optimizations to utilize the return value to avoid holding the argument
value live across a call.
llvm-svn: 258691
This reapplies r258296 and r258366, and also fixes an existing bug in
SelectionDAG.cpp's isMemSrcFromString, neglecting to account for the
offset in a GlobalAddressSDNode, which is uncovered by those patches.
llvm-svn: 258482
This reverts r258296 and the follow up r258366. With this change, we
miscompiled the following program on Windows:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
static const char kData[] = "asdf jkl;";
int main() {
std::string s(kData + 3, sizeof(kData) - 3);
std::cout << s << '\n';
}
llvm-svn: 258465
SelectionDAG previously missed opportunities to fold constants into
GlobalAddresses in several areas. For example, given `(add (add GA, c1), y)`, it
would often reassociate to `(add (add GA, y), c1)`, missing the opportunity to
create `(add GA+c, y)`. This isn't often visible on targets such as X86 which
effectively reassociate adds in their complex address-mode folding logic,
however it is currently visible on WebAssembly since it currently has very
simple address mode folding code that doesn't reassociate anything.
This patch fixes this by making SelectionDAG fold offsets into GlobalAddresses
at the same times that it folds constants together, so that it doesn't miss any
opportunities to perform such folding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16090
llvm-svn: 258296
Teach the register stackifier to rematerialize constants that have multiple
uses instead of leaving them in registers. In the WebAssembly encoding, it's
the same code size to materialize most constants as it is to read a value
from a register.
llvm-svn: 258142