This patch does an inline expansion of memcmp.
It changes the memcmp library call into an inline expansion when the size is
known at compile time and is under a target specified threshold.
This expansion is implemented in CodeGenPrepare and expands into straight line
code. The target specifies a maximum load size and the expansion works by using
this size to load the two sources, compare, and exit early if a difference is
found. It also has a special case when the memcmp result is used in a compare
to zero equality.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28637
llvm-svn: 304313
- new waitcnt pass remains off by default; -enable-si-insert-waitcnts=1 to enable it
- fix handling of PERMUTE ops
- fix insertion of waitcnt instrs at function begin/end ( port of analogous code that was added to old waitcnt pass )
- add new test
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33114
llvm-svn: 304311
Correct references to alignment of store which may be deleted in a
previous iteration of merge. Instead use first store that would be
merged.
Corrects pr33172's use-after-poison caught by ASan.
Reviewers: spatel, hfinkel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: thegameg, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33686
llvm-svn: 304299
There are some VectorShuffle Nodes in SDAG which can be selected to XXPERMDI
Instruction, this patch recognizes them and does the selection to improve
the PPC performance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33404
llvm-svn: 304298
This patch builds upon https://reviews.llvm.org/rL302810 to add
handling for bitwise logical operations in general purpose registers.
The idea is to keep the values in GPRs as long as possible - only
extracting them to a condition register bit when no further operations
are to be done.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31851
llvm-svn: 304282
This is the equivalent of r304048 for ARM:
- Rewrite livein calculation to use the computeLiveIns() helper
function. This is slightly less efficient but easier to reason about
and doesn't unnecessarily add pristine and reserved registers[1]
- Zero the status register at the beginning of the loop to make sure it
has a defined value.
- Remove kill flags of values that need to stay alive throughout the loop.
[1] An upcoming commit of mine will tighten the MachineVerifier to catch
these.
llvm-svn: 304267
Summary:
AntiDepBreaker intends to add all live-outs, including the implicit
CSRs, in StartBlock. r299124 was done without understanding that
intention.
Now with the live-ins propagated correctly (D32464), we can revert this change.
Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33697
llvm-svn: 304251
There is no guarantee that the first use of a constant that is traversed
is actually the first in the related basic block. Thus, if we use that
as the insertion point we may end up with definitions that don't
dominate there use.
llvm-svn: 304244
For multiplications of 64-bit values (giving 64-bit result), detect
cases where the arguments are sign-extended 32-bit values, on a per-
operand basis. This will allow few patterns to match a wider variety
of combinations in which extensions can occur.
llvm-svn: 304223
An encoding does not allow to use SDWA in an instruction with
scalar operands, either literals or SGPRs. That is however possible
to copy these operands into a VGPR first.
Several copies of the value are produced if multiple SDWA conversions
were done. To cleanup MachineLICM (to hoist copies out of loops),
MachineCSE (to remove duplicate copies) and SIFoldOperands (to replace
SGPR to VGPR copy with immediate copy right to the VGPR) runs are added
after the SDWA pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33583
llvm-svn: 304219
xchg with a mem operand has different locking semantics. If we unfold it
into a xchg r,r we will loose the implicit lock. Likewise we never want
to fold a register xchg into a memory one as it would be a lot slower.
This triggers during LLVM selfhost.
llvm-svn: 304163
The extending load possibility was missed in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL304072
We might want to handle this cases as a follow-up, but bailing out for now
to avoid miscompiling.
llvm-svn: 304153
Clang coerces structs into arrays, so it's a good idea to support them.
Most of the support boils down to getting the splitToValueTypes helper
to actually split types. We then use G_INSERT/G_EXTRACT to deal with the
parts.
llvm-svn: 304132
The reverted change introdued assertions ala:
"MachineBasicBlock::succ_iterator
llvm::MachineBasicBlock::removeSuccessor(succ_iterator, bool): Assertion
`I != Successors.end() && "Not a current successor!"'
Mikael, the original committer, wrote me that he is working on a fix, but that
it likely will take some time to get this resolved. As this bug is one of the
last two issues that keep the AOSP buildbot from turning green, I revert the
original commit r302876.
I am looking forward to see this recommitted after the assertion has been
resolved.
llvm-svn: 304128
This was reverted due to buildbot breakages and I was not familiar
with this code to investigate it. But while trying to get a
useful backtrace for the author, it turns out the fix was very
obvious. Resubmitting this patch as is, and will submit the
fix in a followup so that the fix is not hidden in the larger
CL.
llvm-svn: 304122
This reverts commit 28cb1003507f287726f43c771024a1dc102c45fe as well
as all subsequent followups. llvm-tblgen currently segfaults with
this change, and it seems it has been broken on the bots all
day with no fixes in preparation. See, for example:
http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/clang-x86-windows-msvc2015/
llvm-svn: 304121
X86 backend holds huge tables in order to map between the register and memory forms of each instruction.
This TableGen Backend automatically generated all these tables with the appropriate flags for each entry.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32684
llvm-svn: 304088
If we have (extract_subvector(load wide vector)) with no other users,
that can just be (load narrow vector). This is intentionally conservative.
Follow-ups may loosen the one-use constraint to account for the extract cost
or just remove the one-use check.
The memop chain updating is based on code that already exists multiple times
in x86 lowering, so that should be pulled into a helper function as a follow-up.
Background: this is a potential improvement noticed via regressions caused by
making x86's peekThroughBitcasts() not loop on consecutive bitcasts (see
comments in D33137).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33578
llvm-svn: 304072
Rewrite fixupKills() to use the LivePhysRegs class. Simplifies the code
and fixes a bug where the CSR registers in return blocks where missed
leading to invalid kill flags. Also remove the unnecessary rule that we
wouldn't set kill flags on tied operands.
No tests as I have an upcoming commit improving MachineVerifier checks
to catch these cases in multiple existing lit tests.
llvm-svn: 304055
This reverts commit r299287 plus clean-ups.
The localizer pass is a helper pass that could be run at O0 in the GISel
pipeline to work around the deficiency of the fast register allocator.
It basically shortens the live-ranges of the constants so that the
allocator does not spill all over the place.
Long term fix would be to make the greedy allocator fast.
llvm-svn: 304051
- Rewrite livein calculation to use the computeLiveIns() helper
function. This is slightly less efficient but easier to reason about
and doesn't unnecessarily add pristine and reserved registers[1]
- Zero the status register at the beginning of the loop to make sure it
has a defined value.
- Remove kill flags of values that need to stay alive throughout the loop.
[1] An upcoming commit of mine will tighten the MachineVerifier to catch
these.
llvm-svn: 304048
It's a workaround because the test was flakey passing to begin with, but
it looks like (going off commit history) it really did want to test in
the presence of debug info, so keep that behavior (by adding something
to the CU so it's not dropped) & restore the flakey pass in the process.
(added a FIXME in case someone else decides to look at it later)
llvm-svn: 304042
[AMDGPU] add intrinsic for s_getpc
Summary: The s_getpc instruction is exposed as intrinsic llvm.amdgcn.s.getpc.
Patch by Tim Corringham
llvm-svn: 304031
Re-commit r303938 and r303954 with a fix for addLiveIns(): the internal
addPristines() function must be called on an empty set or it may
accidentally reset saved registers.
- addLiveOutsNoPristines() needs to add callee saved registers that are
actually saved and restored somewhere to the set (they are not
pristine).
- Cleanup/rewrite the code for addLiveOuts()/addLiveOutsNoPristines().
This fixes the problem from D32156.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32464
llvm-svn: 304001
In the best case:
extract (binop (concat X1, X2), (concat Y1, Y2)), N --> binop XN, YN
...we kill all of the extract/concat and just have narrow binops remaining.
If only one of the binop operands is amenable, this transform is still
worthwhile because we kill some of the extract/concat.
Optional bitcasting makes the code more complicated, but there doesn't
seem to be a way to avoid that.
The TODO about extending to more than bitwise logic is there because we really
will regress several x86 tests including madd, psad, and even a plain
integer-multiply-by-2 or shift-left-by-1. I don't think there's anything
fundamentally wrong with this patch that would cause those regressions; those
folds are just missing or brittle.
If we extend to more binops, I found that this patch will fire on at least one
non-x86 regression test. There's an ARM NEON test in
test/CodeGen/ARM/coalesce-subregs.ll with a pattern like:
t5: v2f32 = vector_shuffle<0,3> t2, t4
t6: v1i64 = bitcast t5
t8: v1i64 = BUILD_VECTOR Constant:i64<0>
t9: v2i64 = concat_vectors t6, t8
t10: v4f32 = bitcast t9
t12: v4f32 = fmul t11, t10
t13: v2i64 = bitcast t12
t16: v1i64 = extract_subvector t13, Constant:i32<0>
There was no functional change in the codegen from this transform from what I
could see though.
For the x86 test changes:
1. PR32790() is the closest call. We don't reduce the AVX1 instruction count in that case,
but we improve throughput. Also, on a core like Jaguar that double-pumps 256-bit ops,
there's an unseen win because two 128-bit ops have the same cost as the wider 256-bit op.
SSE/AVX2/AXV512 are not affected which is expected because only AVX1 has the extract/concat
ops to match the pattern.
2. do_not_use_256bit_op() is the best case. Everyone wins by avoiding the concat/extract.
Related bug for IR filed as: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33026
3. The SSE diffs in vector-trunc-math.ll are just scheduling/RA, so nothing real AFAICT.
4. The AVX1 diffs in vector-tzcnt-256.ll are all the same pattern: we reduced the instruction
count by one in each case by eliminating two insert/extract while adding one narrower logic op.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32790
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33137
llvm-svn: 303997
Currently getOptimalMemOpType returns i32 for large enough sizes without
checking for alignment, leading to poor code generation when misaligned accesses
aren't permitted as we generate a word store then later split it up into byte
stores. This means we inadvertantly go over the MaxStoresPerMemcpy limit and for
memset we splat the memset value into a word then immediately split it up
again.
Fix this by leaving it up to FindOptimalMemOpLowering to figure out which type
to use, but also fix a bug there where it wasn't correctly checking if
misaligned memory accesses are allowed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33442
llvm-svn: 303990
I forgot to forward the chain, causing some missing instruction
dependencies. The test crashes the compiler without this patch.
Inspired by the test case, D33519 also tries to remove the extra sync.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33573
llvm-svn: 303931
Rename the DEBUG_TYPE to match the names of corresponding passes where
it makes sense. Also establish the pattern of simply referencing
DEBUG_TYPE instead of repeating the passname where possible.
llvm-svn: 303921
Summary:
This is used in the Linux kernel, and effectively just means "print an
address". This brings back r193593.
Reviewed by: Renato Golin
Reviewers: t.p.northover, rengolin, richard.barton.arm, kristof.beyls
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, llvm-commits, eraman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33558
llvm-svn: 303901
AVX512_VPOPCNTDQ is a new feature set that was published by Intel.
The patch represents the LLVM side of the addition of two new intrinsic based instructions (vpopcntd and vpopcntq).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33169
llvm-svn: 303858
There are some VectorShuffle Nodes in SDAG which can be selected to XXSLDWI
instruction, this patch recognizes them and does the selection to improve the
PPC performance.
llvm-svn: 303822
Use ADDframe pseudo instruction instead.
This will fix machine verifier error, and will help to fix PR32146.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33452
llvm-svn: 303758
Summary:
This is a fix for PR32538. MachineCSE first looks at MO.isDead(), but
if it is not marked dead, MachineCSE still wants to do its own check
to see if it is trivially dead. This check for the trivial case
assumed that physical registers cannot be live out of a block.
Patch by Mattias Eriksson.
Reviewers: qcolombet, jbhateja
Reviewed By: qcolombet, jbhateja
Subscribers: jbhateja, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33408
llvm-svn: 303731
I suspect this buildbot has slow-incdec set by default, most likely due to
the default CPU having this set. This feature bit can prevent optsize from
having an effect on this IR.
llvm-svn: 303720
This fixes 17 of the 41 -verify-machineinstrs test failures identified in PR33045
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33451
llvm-svn: 303691
Summary:
Promoting Alloca to Vector and Promoting Alloca to LDS are two independent handling of Alloca and should not affect each other.
As a result, we should not give up promoting to vector if there is not enough LDS. This patch factors out the local memory usage
related checking out and replace it after the calling convention checking.
Reviewer:
arsenm
Differential Revision:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D33139
llvm-svn: 303684
Perform DAG combine:
and (srl x, c), mask => shl (bfe x, nb + c, mask >> nb), nb
Where nb is a number of trailing zeroes in mask.
It replaces two instructions with two and BFE is generally a more
expensive one. However this is only done if we are selecting a byte
or word at an aligned boundary which results in a proper SDWA
operand pattern. It is only done if SDWA is supported.
TODO: improve SDWA pass to actually convert this pattern. It is not
done now because we have an immediate in the instruction, which has
be moved into a VGPR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33455
llvm-svn: 303681
Summary:
A temporary workaround for PR32780 - rematerialized instructions accessing the same promoted global through different constant pool entries.
The patch turns off the globals promotion optimization leaving all its code in place, so that it can be easily turned on once PR32780 is fixed.
Since this is a miscompilation issue causing generation of misbehaving code, and the problem is very subtle, the patch might be valuable enough to get into 4.0.1.
Reviewers: efriedma, jmolloy
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, llvm-commits, rengolin, asl, tstellar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33446
llvm-svn: 303679
Summary:
It's rare but a small number of patterns use IntInit's at the root of the match.
On X86, one such rule is enabled by the OptForSize predicate and causes the
compiler to use the smaller:
%0 = MOV32r1
instead of the usual:
%0 = MOV32ri 1
This patch adds support for matching IntInit's at the root and uses this as a
test case for the optsize attribute that was implemented in r301750
Reviewers: qcolombet, ab, t.p.northover, rovka, kristof.beyls, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32791
llvm-svn: 303678
shl (or|add x, c2), c1 => or|add (shl x, c1), (c2 << c1)
This allows to fold a constant into an address in some cases as
well as to eliminate second shift if the expression is used as
an address and second shift is a result of a GEP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33432
llvm-svn: 303641
Summary:
This patch makes instruction fusion more aggressive by
* adding artificial edges between the successors of FirstSU and
SecondSU, similar to BaseMemOpClusterMutation::clusterNeighboringMemOps.
* updating PostGenericScheduler::tryCandidate to keep clusters together,
similar to GenericScheduler::tryCandidate.
This change increases the number of AES instruction pairs generated on
Cortex-A57 and Cortex-A72. This doesn't change code at all in
most benchmarks or general code, but we've seen improvement on kernels
using AESE/AESMC and AESD/AESIMC.
Reviewers: evandro, kristof.beyls, t.p.northover, silviu.baranga, atrick, rengolin, MatzeB
Reviewed By: evandro
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, MatzeB, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33230
llvm-svn: 303618
This commit fixes a bug introduced in r301019 where optimizeLogicalImm
would replace a logical node's immediate operand that was CSE'd and
was also an operand of another node.
This commit fixes the bug by replacing the logical node instead of its
immediate operand.
rdar://problem/32295276
llvm-svn: 303607
Turn expensive 64 bit shift into 32 bit if shift does not overflow int:
shl (ext x) => zext (shl x)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33367
llvm-svn: 303569
This patch adds handling of the `micromips` and `nomicromips` attributes
passed by front-end. The patch depends on D33363.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33364
llvm-svn: 303545
PPC backend eliminates compare instructions by using record-form instructions in PPCInstrInfo::optimizeCompareInstr, which is called from peephole optimization pass.
This patch improves this optimization to eliminate more compare instructions in two types of common case.
- comparison against a constant 1 or -1
The record-form instructions set CR bit based on signed comparison against 0. So, the current implementation does not exploit the record-form instruction for comparison against a non-zero constant.
This patch enables record-form optimization for constant of 1 or -1 if possible; it changes the condition "greater than -1" into "greater than or equal to 0" and "less than 1" into "less than or equal to 0".
With this patch, compare can be eliminated in the following code sequence, as an example.
uint64_t a, b;
if ((a | b) & 0x8000000000000000ull) { ... }
else { ... }
- andi for 32-bit comparison on PPC64
Since record-form instructions execute 64-bit signed comparison and so we have limitation in eliminating 32-bit comparison, i.e. with cmplwi, using the record-form. The original implementation already has such checks but andi. is not recognized as an instruction which executes implicit zero extension and hence safe to convert into record-form if used for equality check.
%1 = and i32 %a, 10
%2 = icmp ne i32 %1, 0
br i1 %2, label %foo, label %bar
In this simple example, LLVM generates andi. + cmplwi + beq on PPC64.
This patch make it possible to eliminate the cmplwi for this case.
I added andi. for optimization targets if it is safe to do so.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30081
llvm-svn: 303500
Summary:
While this makes some case better and some case worse - so it's unclear if it is a worthy combine just by itself - this is a useful canonicalisation.
As per discussion in D32756 .
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32916
llvm-svn: 303441
This patch defines the i1 type as illegal in the X86 backend for AVX512.
For DAG operations on <N x i1> types (build vector, extract vector element, ...) i8 is used, and should be truncated/extended.
This should produce better scalar code for i1 types since GPRs will be used instead of mask registers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32273
llvm-svn: 303421
pruneSubRegValues() needs to remove subregister ranges starting at
instructions that later get removed by eraseInstrs(). It missed to check
one case in which eraseInstrs() would remove an instruction.
Fixes http://llvm.org/PR32688
llvm-svn: 303396
This also reverts follow-ups r303292 and r303298.
It broke some Chromium tests under MSan, and apparently also internal
tests at Google.
llvm-svn: 303369
This provides a new way to access the TargetMachine through
TargetPassConfig, as a dependency.
The patterns replaced here are:
* Passes handling a null TargetMachine call
`getAnalysisIfAvailable<TargetPassConfig>`.
* Passes not handling a null TargetMachine
`addRequired<TargetPassConfig>` and call
`getAnalysis<TargetPassConfig>`.
* MachineFunctionPasses now use MF.getTarget().
* Remove all the TargetMachine constructors.
* Remove INITIALIZE_TM_PASS.
This fixes a crash when running `llc -start-before prologepilog`.
PEI needs StackProtector, which gets constructed without a TargetMachine
by the pass manager. The StackProtector pass doesn't handle the case
where there is no TargetMachine, so it segfaults.
Related to PR30324.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33222
llvm-svn: 303360
Summary:
There should be no intesection between SDWA operands and potential MIs. E.g.:
```
v_and_b32 v0, 0xff, v1 -> src:v1 sel:BYTE_0
v_and_b32 v2, 0xff, v0 -> src:v0 sel:BYTE_0
v_add_u32 v3, v4, v2
```
In that example it is possible that we would fold 2nd instruction into 3rd (v_add_u32_sdwa) and then try to fold 1st instruction into 2nd (that was already destroyed). So if SDWAOperand is also a potential MI then do not apply it.
Reviewers: vpykhtin, arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32804
llvm-svn: 303347
According to Intel's Optimization Reference Manual for SNB+:
" For LEA instructions with three source operands and some specific situations, instruction latency has increased to 3 cycles, and must
dispatch via port 1:
- LEA that has all three source operands: base, index, and offset
- LEA that uses base and index registers where the base is EBP, RBP,or R13
- LEA that uses RIP relative addressing mode
- LEA that uses 16-bit addressing mode "
This patch currently handles the first 2 cases only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32277
llvm-svn: 303333
Partially implement callee-side for arguments and return values.
byval doesn't work properly, and most likely sret or other on-stack
return values most as well.
llvm-svn: 303308
When legalizing vector operations on vNi128, they will be split to v1i128
because that is a legal type on ppc64, but then the compiler will crash in
selection dag because it fails to select for these operations. This patch fixes
shift operations. Logical shift right and left shift can be performed in the
vector unit, but algebraic shift right requires being split.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32774
llvm-svn: 303307
- '-verify-mahcineinstrs' starts to complain allocatable live-in physical
registers on non-entry or non-landing-pad basic blocks.
- Refactor the XBEGIN translation to define EAX on a dedicated fallback code
path due to XABORT. Add a pseudo instruction to define EAX explicitly to
avoid add physical register live-in.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33168
llvm-svn: 303306
Summary: Moving LiveRangeShrink to x86 as this pass is mostly useful for archtectures with great register pressure.
Reviewers: MatzeB, qcolombet
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: jholewinski, jyknight, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33294
llvm-svn: 303292
Avoids instructions to pack a vector when the source is really
a scalar being broadcast.
Also be smarter and look for per-component fneg.
Doesn't yet handle scalar from upper half of register
or other swizzles.
llvm-svn: 303291
The variables MinGPR/MinG8R were not updated properly when resetting the
offsets, which in the included testcase lead to saving the CR register
in the same location as R30.
This fixes another issue reported in PR26519.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33017
llvm-svn: 303257
Summary:
This fixes pr32392.
The lowering pipeline is:
llvm.ppc.cfence in IR -> PPC::CFENCE8 in isel -> Actual instructions in
expandPostRAPseudo.
The reason why expandPostRAPseudo is chosen is because previous passes
are likely eliminating instructions like cmpw 3, 3 (early CSE) and bne-
7, .+4 (some branch pass(s)).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32763
llvm-svn: 303205
Summary:
In SelectionDAG, when a store is immediately chained to another store
to the same address, elide the first store as it has no observable
effects. This is causes small improvements dealing with intrinsics
lowered to stores.
Test notes:
* Many testcases overwrite store addresses multiple times and needed
minor changes, mainly making stores volatile to prevent the
optimization from optimizing the test away.
* Many X86 test cases optimized out instructions associated with
associated with va_start.
* Note that test_splat in CodeGen/AArch64/misched-stp.ll no longer has
dependencies to check and can probably be removed and potentially
replaced with another test.
Reviewers: rnk, john.brawn
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, qcolombet, jyknight, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33206
llvm-svn: 303198
According to Intel's Optimization Reference Manual for SNB+:
" For LEA instructions with three source operands and some specific situations, instruction latency has increased to 3 cycles, and must
dispatch via port 1:
- LEA that has all three source operands: base, index, and offset
- LEA that uses base and index registers where the base is EBP, RBP,or R13
- LEA that uses RIP relative addressing mode
- LEA that uses 16-bit addressing mode "
This patch currently handles the first 2 cases only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32277
llvm-svn: 303183
Shrink-wrapping uses post-dominators to find a restore point that
post-dominates all the uses of CSR / stack.
The way dominator trees are modeled in LLVM today is that unreachable
blocks are not present in a generic dominator tree, so, an unreachable node is
dominated by anything: include/llvm/Support/GenericDomTree.h:467.
Since for post-dominators, a no-return block is considered
"unreachable", calling findNearestCommonDominator on an unreachable node
A and a non-unreachable node B, will return B, which can be false. If we
find such node, we bail out since there is no good restore point
available.
rdar://problem/30186931
llvm-svn: 303130
We don't use section-relative relocations on AArch64, so all symbols must be at
least visible to the linker (i.e. properly global or l_whatever, but not
L_whatever).
llvm-svn: 303118
This caused PR33053.
Original commit message:
> The new experimental reduction intrinsics can now be used, so I'm enabling this
> for AArch64. We will need this for SVE anyway, so it makes sense to do this for
> NEON reductions as well.
>
> The existing code to match shufflevector patterns are replaced with a direct
> lowering of the reductions to AArch64-specific nodes. Tests updated with the
> new, simpler, representation.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32247
llvm-svn: 303115
At O3 we are more willing to increase size if we believe it will improve
performance. The current threshold for tail-duplication of 2 instructions is
conservative, and can be relaxed at O3.
Benchmark results:
llvm test-suite:
6% improvement in aha, due to duplication of loop latch
3% improvement in hexxagon
2% slowdown in lpbench. Seems related, but couldn't completely diagnose.
Internal google benchmark:
Produces 4% improvement on internal google protocol buffer serialization
benchmarks.
Differential-Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32324
llvm-svn: 303084
Follow up to D33147
NVPTXTargetLowering::LowerCall was trusting the default argument values.
Fixes another 17 of the NVPTX '-verify-machineinstrs with EXPENSIVE_CHECKS' errors in PR32146.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33189
llvm-svn: 303082
This patch enables fusing dependent AESE/AESMC and AESD/AESIMC
instruction pairs on Cortex-A72, as recommended in the Software
Optimization Guide, section 4.10.
llvm-svn: 303073
Doing this means that if an LEApcrel is used in two places we will rematerialize
instead of generating two MOVs. This is particularly useful for printfs using
the same format string, where we want to generate an address into a register
that's going to get corrupted by the call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32858
llvm-svn: 303054
Doing this lets us hoist it out of loops, and I've also marked it as
rematerializable the same as the thumb1 and thumb2 counterparts.
It looks like it being marked as such was just a mistake, as the commit that
made that change only mentions LEApcrelJT and in thumb1 and thumb2 only the
LEApcrelJT instructions were marked as having side-effects, so it looks like
the intent was to only mark LEApcrelJT as having side-effects but LEApcrel was
accidentally marked as such also.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32857
llvm-svn: 303053
Currently, when masked load, store, gather or scatter intrinsics are used, we check in CodeGenPrepare pass if the subtarget support these intrinsics, if not we replace them with scalar code - this is a functional transformation not an optimization (not optional).
CodeGenPrepare pass does not run when the optimization level is set to CodeGenOpt::None (-O0).
Functional transformation should run with all optimization levels, so here I created a new pass which runs on all optimization levels and does no more than this transformation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32487
llvm-svn: 303050
I noticed the 512-bit lzcnts don't use the X86 specific lookup table code and instead use the EXPAND case in LegalizeDAG. I was toying around with fixing this and noticed it would require compare instructions that generate i1 masks and then converting from mask to vector. Then I noticed that we don't test which compares are used with avx512vl and no avx512cd.
llvm-svn: 303020
Remove an unneeded prefix from the 32-bit command line. Make all the 64-bit triples match. Replace ALL with X64 and remove it from the 32-bit test.
llvm-svn: 303019
Summary:
We should not change volatile loads/stores in promoting alloca to vector.
Reviewers:
arsenm
Differential Revision:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D33107
llvm-svn: 302943
This fixes 47 of the 75 NVPTX '-verify-machineinstrs with EXPENSIVE_CHECKS' errors in PR32146.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33147
llvm-svn: 302942
Summary: LiveRangeShrink pass moves instruction right after the definition with the same BB if the instruction and its operands all have more than one use. This pass is inexpensive and guarantees optimal live-range within BB.
Reviewers: davidxl, wmi, hfinkel, MatzeB, andreadb
Reviewed By: MatzeB, andreadb
Subscribers: hiraditya, jyknight, sanjoy, skatkov, gberry, jholewinski, qcolombet, javed.absar, krytarowski, atrick, spatel, RKSimon, andreadb, MatzeB, mehdi_amini, mgorny, efriedma, davide, dberlin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32563
llvm-svn: 302938
Llvm-stress discovered that a COPY may end up in ExpandPostRA::LowerCopy()
with an undef source operand. It is not possible for the target to handle
this, as this flag is not passed to TII->copyPhysReg().
This patch solves this by treating such a COPY as an identity COPY.
Review: Matthias Braun
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32892
llvm-svn: 302877
Summary:
Instead of using RemoveExtraEdges (which uses analyzeBranch, which cannot
always be trusted) at the end to fixup the CFG we keep the CFG updated as
we go along and remove or add branches and merge blocks.
This way we won't have any problems if the involved MBBs contain
unanalyzable instructions.
This fixes PR32721.
In that case we had a triangle
EBB
| \
| |
| TBB
| /
FBB
where FBB didn't have any successors at all since it ended with an
unconditional return. Then TBB and FBB were be merged into EBB, but EBB
would still keep its successors, and the use of analyzeBranch and
CorrectExtraCFGEdges wouldn't help to remove them since the return
instruction is not analyzable (at least not on ARM).
Reviewers: kparzysz, iteratee, MatzeB
Reviewed By: iteratee
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33037
llvm-svn: 302876
According to Power ISA V3.0 document, the first source operand of mtvsrdd is constant 0 if r0 is specified. So the corresponding register constraint should be g8rc_nox0.
This bug caused wrong output generated by 401.bzip2 when -mcpu=power9 and fdo are specified.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32880
llvm-svn: 302834
Updates the MSP430 target to generate EABI-compatible libcall names.
As a byproduct, adjusts the hardware multiplier options available in
the MSP430 target, adds support for promotion of the ISD::MUL operation
for 8-bit integers, and correctly marks R11 as used by call instructions.
Patch by Andrew Wygle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32676
llvm-svn: 302820
We don't use it and it was removed in gfx9, and the encoding
bit repurposed.
Additionally actually using it requires changing the output register
class, which wasn't done anyway.
llvm-svn: 302814
This patch is the first in a series of patches to provide code gen for
doing compares in GPRs when the compare result is required in a GPR.
It adds the infrastructure to select GPR sequences for i1->i32 and i1->i64
extensions. This first patch handles equality comparison on i32 operands with
the result sign or zero extended.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31847
llvm-svn: 302810
manages to form a VSELECT with a non-i1 element type condition. Those
are technically allowed in SDAG (at least, the generic type legalization
logic will form them and I wouldn't want to try to audit everything te
preclude forming them) so we need to be able to lower them.
This isn't too hard to implement. We mark VSELECT as custom so we get
a chance in C++, add a fast path for i1 conditions to get directly
handled by the patterns, and a fallback when we need to manually force
the condition to be an i1 that uses the vptestm instruction to turn
a non-mask into a mask.
This, unsurprisingly, generates awful code. But it at least doesn't
crash. This was actually impacting open source packages built with LLVM
for AVX-512 in the wild, so quickly landing a patch that at least stops
the immediate bleeding.
I think I've found where to fix the codegen quality issue, but less
confident of that change so separating it out from the thing that
doesn't change the result of any existing test case but causes mine to
not crash.
llvm-svn: 302785
This is the same as r292827 for AArch64: we widen 8- and 16-bit ADD, SUB
and MUL to 32 bits since we only have TableGen patterns for 32 bits.
See the commit message for r292827 for more details.
At this point we could just remove some of the tests for regbankselect
and instruction-select, since we're not going to see any narrow
operations at those levels anymore. Instead I decided to update them
with G_ANYEXT/G_TRUNC operations, so we can validate the full sequences
generated by the legalizer.
llvm-svn: 302782
G_ANYEXT can be introduced by the legalizer when widening scalars. Add
support for it in the register bank info (same mapping as everything
else) and in the instruction selector.
When selecting it, we treat it as a COPY, just like G_TRUNC. On this
occasion we get rid of some assertions in selectCopy so we can reuse it.
This shouldn't be a problem at the moment since we're not supporting any
complicated cases (e.g. FPR, different register banks). We might want to
separate the paths when we do.
llvm-svn: 302778
This reverts r302712.
The change fails with ASAN enabled:
ERROR: AddressSanitizer: use-after-poison on address ... at ...
READ of size 2 at ... thread T0
#0 ... in llvm::SDNode::getNumValues() const <snip>/include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:855:42
#1 ... in llvm::SDNode::hasAnyUseOfValue(unsigned int) const <snip>/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/SelectionDAG.cpp:7270:3
#2 ... in llvm::SDValue::use_empty() const <snip> include/llvm/CodeGen/SelectionDAGNodes.h:1042:17
#3 ... in (anonymous namespace)::DAGCombiner::MergeConsecutiveStores(llvm::StoreSDNode*) <snip>/lib/CodeGen/SelectionDAG/DAGCombiner.cpp:12944:7
Reviewers: niravd
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33081
llvm-svn: 302746
Summary:
Allow consecutive stores whose values come from consecutive loads to
merged in the presense of other uses of the loads. Previously this was
disallowed as in general the merged load cannot be shared with the
other uses. Merging N stores into 1 may cause as many as N redundant
loads. However in the context of caching this should have neglible
affect on memory pressure and reduce instruction count making it
almost always a win.
Fixes PR32086.
Reviewers: spatel, jyknight, andreadb, hfinkel, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30471
llvm-svn: 302712
For stores, check if the stored value is defined by a floating point
instruction and if yes, we return a default mapping with FPR instead
of GPR.
llvm-svn: 302679
The new experimental reduction intrinsics can now be used, so I'm enabling this
for AArch64. We will need this for SVE anyway, so it makes sense to do this for
NEON reductions as well.
The existing code to match shufflevector patterns are replaced with a direct
lowering of the reductions to AArch64-specific nodes. Tests updated with the
new, simpler, representation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32247
llvm-svn: 302678
Summary:
When trying to figure out if MBB could fallthrough to ToMBB (possibly by
falling through a bunch of other MBBs) we didn't actually check if there
was fallthrough between the last two blocks in the chain.
Reviewers: kparzysz, iteratee, MatzeB
Reviewed By: kparzysz, iteratee
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32996
llvm-svn: 302650
This method must return a valid register class, or the list-ilp isel
scheduler will crash. For MVT::Untyped nullptr was previously returned, but
now ADDR128BitRegClass is returned instead. This is needed just as long as
list-ilp (and probably also list-hybrid) is still there.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, A Trick
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32802
llvm-svn: 302649
This pass uses a new target hook to decide whether or not to expand a particular
intrinsic to the shuffevector sequence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32245
llvm-svn: 302631
This is a follow-up to r302611, which moved an -O0 computation of DT
from SDAGISel to TwoAddress.
Don't use it here either, and avoid computing it completely. The only
use was forwarding the analysis as an optional argument to utility
functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32766
llvm-svn: 302612
Before r247167, the pass manager builder controlled which AA
implementations were used, exporting them all in the AliasAnalysis
analysis group.
Now, AAResultsWrapperPass always uses BasicAA, but still uses other AA
implementations if made available in the pass pipeline.
But regardless, SDAGISel is required at O0, and really doesn't need to
be doing fancy optimizations based on useful AA results.
Don't require AA at CodeGenOpt::None, and only use it otherwise.
This does have a functional impact (and one testcase is pessimized
because we can't reuse a load). But I think that's desirable no matter
what.
Note that this alone doesn't result in less DT computations: TwoAddress
was previously able to reuse the DT we computed for SDAG. That will be
fixed separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32766
llvm-svn: 302611
We currently require SCEV, which requires DT/LI. Those are expensive to
compute, but the pass only runs for functions that have the safestack
attribute.
Compute DT/LI to build SCEV lazily, only when the pass is actually going
to transform the function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31302
llvm-svn: 302610
This should hopefully makes changes to the O0 pipeline obvious; it's
easy to require expensive passes, and this helps make informed
decisions.
Case in point: in the few weeks separating the time when I initially
wrote this patch to the time when I committed, the test regressed as
r302103 added another use of DT!
llvm-svn: 302608
Summary: computeKnownBitsForTargetNode was not defined for Lanai which resulted in additional AND's with 0x1 for the output of SETCC instructions.
Reviewers: eliben, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29605
llvm-svn: 302568
This patch adds more patterns that a reasonable person might write that can be compiled to BZHI.
This adds support for
(~0U >> (32 - b)) & a;
and
a << (32 - b) >> (32 - b);
This was inspired by the code in APInt::clearUnusedBits.
This can pass an index of 32 to the bzhi instruction which a quick test of Haswell hardware shows will not mask any bits. Though the description text in the Intel manual says the "index is saturated to OperandSize-1". The pseudocode in the same manual indicates no bits will be zeroed for this case.
I think this is still missing cases where the subtract portion is an 8-bit operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32616
llvm-svn: 302549
for scalar masked instructions only the lower bit of the mask is relevant. so for constant masks we should either do an unmasked operation or no operation, depending on the value of the lower bit.
This patch handles cases where the lower bit is '1'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32805
llvm-svn: 302546
The modified tests should test the masked intrinsics.
Currently the mask is constant, which with a future patch (https://reviews.llvm.org/D32805) will cause the intrinsics to be replaced with an unmasked version.
This patch changes the constant mask to be a variable one.
llvm-svn: 302529
Using arguments with attribute inalloca creates problems for verification
of machine representation. This attribute instructs the backend that the
argument is prepared in stack prior to CALLSEQ_START..CALLSEQ_END
sequence (see http://llvm.org/docs/InAlloca.htm for details). Frame size
stored in CALLSEQ_START in this case does not count the size of this
argument. However CALLSEQ_END still keeps total frame size, as caller can
be responsible for cleanup of entire frame. So CALLSEQ_START and
CALLSEQ_END keep different frame size and the difference is treated by
MachineVerifier as stack error. Currently there is no way to distinguish
this case from actual errors.
This patch adds additional argument to CALLSEQ_START and its
target-specific counterparts to keep size of stack that is set up prior to
the call frame sequence. This argument allows MachineVerifier to calculate
actual frame size associated with frame setup instruction and correctly
process the case of inalloca arguments.
The changes made by the patch are:
- Frame setup instructions get the second mandatory argument. It
affects all targets that use frame pseudo instructions and touched many
files although the changes are uniform.
- Access to frame properties are implemented using special instructions
rather than calls getOperand(N).getImm(). For X86 and ARM such
replacement was made previously.
- Changes that reflect appearance of additional argument of frame setup
instruction. These involve proper instruction initialization and
methods that access instruction arguments.
- MachineVerifier retrieves frame size using method, which reports sum of
frame parts initialized inside frame instruction pair and outside it.
The patch implements approach proposed by Quentin Colombet in
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27481#c1.
It fixes 9 tests failed with machine verifier enabled and listed
in PR27481.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32394
llvm-svn: 302527
Similar to what we do for vXi8 ASHR(X, 7), use SSE42's PCMPGTQ to splat the sign instead of using the PSRAD+PSHUFD.
Avoiding bitcasts this improves combines that utilize computeNumSignBits, permits memory folding and reduces pipe pressure. Although it does require a second register, given that this is a (cheap) zero register the impact is minimal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32973
llvm-svn: 302525
This reverts commit r302461.
It appears to be causing failures compiling gtest with debug info on the
Linux sanitizer bot. I was unable to reproduce the failure locally,
however.
llvm-svn: 302504
Summary:
For inalloca functions, this is a very common code pattern:
%argpack = type <{ i32, i32, i32 }>
define void @f(%argpack* inalloca %args) {
entry:
%a = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 0
%b = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 1
%c = getelementptr inbounds %argpack, %argpack* %args, i32 0, i32 2
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %a, ... "a")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %c, ... "b")
tail call void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata i32* %b, ... "c")
Even though these GEPs can be simplified to a constant offset from EBP
or RSP, we don't do that at -O0, and each GEP is computed into a
register. Registers used to compute argument addresses are typically
spilled and clobbered very quickly after the initial computation, so
live debug variable tracking loses information very quickly if we use
DBG_VALUE instructions.
This change moves processing of dbg.declare between argument lowering
and basic block isel, so that we can ask if an argument has a frame
index or not. If the argument lives in a register as is the case for
byval arguments on some targets, then we don't put it in the side table
and during ISel we emit DBG_VALUE instructions.
Reviewers: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32980
llvm-svn: 302483
Summary:
An llvm.dbg.declare of a static alloca is always added to the
MachineFunction dbg variable map, so these values are entirely
redundant. They survive all the way through codegen to be ignored by
DWARF emission.
Effectively revert r113967
Two bugpoint-reduced test cases from 2012 broke as a result of this
change. Despite my best efforts, I haven't been able to rewrite the test
case using dbg.value. I'm not too concerned about the lost coverage
because these were reduced from the test-suite, which we still run.
Reviewers: aprantl, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32920
llvm-svn: 302461
This fixes PR32550, in a way that does not imply running the greedy
mode at O0.
The fix consists in checking if a load is used by any floating point
instruction and if yes, we return a default mapping with FPR instead
of GPR.
llvm-svn: 302453
Currently combineLogicBlendIntoPBLENDV can only match ASHR to detect sign splatting of a bit mask, this patch generalises this to use computeNumSignBits instead.
This is a first step in several things we can do to improve PBLENDV support:
* Better matching of X86ISD::ANDNP patterns.
* Handle floating point cases.
* Better vector and bitcast support in computeNumSignBits.
* Recognise that PBLENDV only uses the sign bit of the mask, we should be able strip away sign splats (ASHR, PCMPGT isNeg tests etc.).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32953
llvm-svn: 302424
This patch introduces an LLVM intrinsic and a target opcode for custom event
logging in XRay. Initially, its use case will be to allow users of XRay to log
some type of string ("poor man's printf"). The target opcode compiles to a noop
sled large enough to enable calling through to a runtime-determined relative
function call. At runtime, when X-Ray is enabled, the sled is replaced by
compiler-rt with a trampoline to the logic for creating the custom log entries.
Future patches will implement the compiler-rt parts and clang-side support for
emitting the IR corresponding to this intrinsic.
Reviewers: timshen, dberris
Subscribers: igorb, pelikan, rSerge, timshen, echristo, dberris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27503
llvm-svn: 302405
rL294581 broke unnecessary register dependencies on partial v16i8/v8i16 BUILD_VECTORs, but on SSE41 we (currently) use insertion for full BUILD_VECTORs as well. By allowing full insertion to occur on SSE41 targets we can break register dependencies here as well.
llvm-svn: 302355
Remove an extra canonicalization step if ISD::ABS is going to be used anyway.
Updated x86 abs combine to check that we are lowering from both canonicalizations.
llvm-svn: 302337
This exposes a method in MachineFrameInfo that calculates
MaxCallFrameSize and calls it after instruction selection in the ARM
target.
This avoids
ARMBaseRegisterInfo::canRealignStack()/ARMFrameLowering::hasReservedCallFrame()
giving different answers in early/late phases of codegen.
The testcase shows a particular nasty example result of that where we
would fail to properly align an alloca.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32622
llvm-svn: 302303
- MIParser: If the successor list is not specified successors will be
added based on basic block operands in the block and possible
fallthrough.
- MIRPrinter: Adds a new `simplify-mir` option, with that option set:
Skip printing of block successor lists in cases where the
parser is guaranteed to reconstruct it. This means we still print the
list if some successor cannot be determined (happens for example for
jump tables), if the successor order changes or branch probabilities
being unequal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31262
llvm-svn: 302289
o Add bpfeb support in BPF dwarfdump unit test case
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 302265
Hoisting common code can cause registers that live-in in the successor
blocks to no longer be live-in. The live-in information needs to be
updated to reflect this, or otherwise incorrect code can be generated
later on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32661
llvm-svn: 302228
This happened on the PPC32/SVR4 path and was discovered when building
FreeBSD on PPC32. It was a typo-class error in the frame lowering code.
This fixes PR26519.
llvm-svn: 302183
This avoids problems on code like this:
char buf[16];
__asm {
movups xmm0, [buf]
mov [buf], eax
}
The frontend size in this case (1) is wrong, and the register makes the
instruction matching unambiguous. There are also enough bytes available
that we shouldn't complain to the user that they are potentially using
an incorrectly sized instruction to access the variable.
Supersedes D32636 and D26586 and fixes PR28266
llvm-svn: 302179
When a 128 bit COPY is lowered into two instructions, an impl-use operand of
the super-reg should be added to each new instruction in case one of the
sub-regs is undefined.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 302146
Added the integer data processing intrinsics from ACLE v2.1 Chapter 9
but I have missed out the saturation_occurred intrinsics for now. For
the instructions that read and write the GE bits, a chain is included
and the only instruction that reads these flags (sel) is only
selectable via the implemented intrinsic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32281
llvm-svn: 302126
According to psABI, PLT stub clobbers XMM8-XMM15.
In Regcall calling convention those registers are used for passing parameters.
Thus we need to prevent lazy binding in Regcall.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32430
llvm-svn: 302124
Summary:
This change adds a new section to the xray-instrumented binary that
stores an index into ranges of the instrumentation map, where sleds
associated with the same function can be accessed as an array. At
runtime, we can get access to this index by function ID offset allowing
for selective patching and unpatching by function ID.
Each entry in this new section (xray_fn_idx) will include two pointers
indicating the start and one past the end of the sleds associated with
the same function. These entries will be 16 bytes long on x86 and
aarch64. On arm, we align to 16 bytes anyway so the runtime has to take
that into consideration.
__{start,stop}_xray_fn_idx will be the symbols that the runtime will
look for when we implement the selective patching/unpatching by function
id APIs. Because XRay synthesizes the function id's in a monotonically
increasing manner at runtime now, implementations (and users) can use
this table to look up the sleds associated with a specific function.
This is useful in implementations that want to do things like:
- Implement coverage mode for functions by patching everything
pre-main, then as functions are encountered, the installed handler
can unpatch the function that's been encountered after recording
that it's been called.
- Do "learning mode", so that the implementation can figure out some
statistical information about function calls by function id for a
time being, and then determine which functions are worth
uninstrumenting at runtime.
- Do "selective instrumentation" where an implementation can
specifically instrument only certain function id's at runtime
(either based on some external data, or through some other
heuristics) instead of patching all the instrumented functions at
runtime.
Reviewers: dblaikie, echristo, chandlerc, javed.absar
Subscribers: pelikan, aemerson, kpw, llvm-commits, rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32693
llvm-svn: 302109
Summary:
This is an implementation of the loop detection logic that XRay needs to
determine whether a function might take time at runtime. Without this
heuristic, XRay will tend to not instrument short functions that have
loops that might have runtime dependent on inputs or external values.
While this implementation doesn't do any further analysis than just
figuring out whether there is a loop in the MachineFunction being
code-gen'ed, we're paving the way for being able to perform more
sophisticated analysis of the function in the future (for example to
determine whether the trip count for the loop might be constant, and
make a decision on that instead). This enables us to cover more
functions with the default heuristics, and potentially identify ones
that have variable runtime latency just by looking for the presence of
loops.
Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, pelikan
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32274
llvm-svn: 302103
Summary:
The existing implementation creates a symbolic SCEV expression every
time we analyze a phi node and then has to remove it, when the analysis
is finished. This is very expensive, and in most of the cases it's also
unnecessary. According to the data I collected, ~60-70% of analyzed phi
nodes (measured on SPEC) have the following form:
PN = phi(Start, OP(Self, Constant))
Handling such cases separately significantly speeds this up.
Reviewers: sanjoy, pete
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32663
llvm-svn: 302096
. there should be no runtime relocation inside the bpf function.
. relocation supported here mostly for debugging.
. a test case is added.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 302055
I was worried we might replace a mul with a mul+shift even if there were later
uses. Turns out to be unfounded but I'd just as well add an actual test for it.
llvm-svn: 302051
Summary: Do the transform when the carry isn't used. It's a pattern exposed when legalizing large integers.
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32755
llvm-svn: 302047
This patch adds support for the the LightWeight Profiling (LWP) instructions which are available on all AMD Bulldozer class CPUs (bdver1 to bdver4).
Reapplied - this time without changing line endings of existing files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32769
llvm-svn: 302041
Allocframe and the following stores on the stack have a latency of 2 cycles
when not in the same packet. This happens because R29 is needed early by the
store instruction. Since one of such stores can be packetized along with
allocframe and use old value of R29, we can assign it 0 cycle latency
while leaving latency of other stores to the default value of 2 cycles.
Patch by Jyotsna Verma.
llvm-svn: 302034
This patch adds support for the the LightWeight Profiling (LWP) instructions which are available on all AMD Bulldozer class CPUs (bdver1 to bdver4).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32769
llvm-svn: 302028
Fixes PR31789 - When loop-vectorize tries to use these intrinsics for a
non-default address space pointer we fail with a "Calling a function with a
bad singature!" assertion. This patch solves this by adding the 'vector of
pointers' argument as an overloaded type which will determine the address
space.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31490
llvm-svn: 302018
The "macosx" OS type is still the canonical type. In the future "macos" will
become the canonical OS type (but we will still support "macosx").
rdar://27043820
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32748
llvm-svn: 302011
Summary:
This is the corresponding llvm change to D28037 to ensure no performance
regression.
Reviewers: bogner, kbarton, hfinkel, iteratee, echristo
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28329
llvm-svn: 301990
When we replaced the multiplicand the destination node might already exist.
When that happens the original gets CSEd and deleted. However, it's actually
used as the offset so nonsense is produced.
Should fix PR32726.
llvm-svn: 301983
Remove "_NC" suffix and semantics from TLSDESC_LD{64,32}_LO12 and
TLSDESC_ADD_LO12 relocations
Rearrange ordering in AArch64.def to follow relocation encoding
Fix name:
R_AARCH64_P32_LD64_GOT_LO12_NC => R_AARCH64_P32_LD32_GOT_LO12_NC
Add support for several "TLS", "TLSGD", and "TLSLD" relocations for
ILP32
Fix return values from isNonILP32reloc
Add implementations for
R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21_NC, R_AARCH64_P32_LD32_GOT_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSIE_LD32_GOTTPREL_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_LD32_LO12, R_AARCH64_LD64_GOT_LO12_NC,
*TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12, *TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12_NC,
*TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12, *TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12_NC
Modify error messages to give name of equivalent relocation in the
ABI not being used, along with better checking for non-existent
requested relocations.
Added assembler support for "pg_hi21_nc"
Relocation definitions added without implementations:
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_ADR_PREL21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADR_PREL21,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADD_LO12_NC, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADR_PREL21,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_LD_PREL19, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_LD_PREL19,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADR_PAGE21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_DTPREL,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_DTPMOD, R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_TPREL,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC
Fix encoding:
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_ADR_PAGE21
Reviewers: Peter Smith
Patch by: Joel Jones (jjones@cavium.com)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32072
llvm-svn: 301980
I doubt anyone actually uses it, and I'm not even entirely convinced it exists
myself; but it is our default for "clang -arch armv6". Functionally, if it does
exist it's identical to the arm1176jz-f from LLVM's point of view (the
difference is apparently in the "Security Extensions").
llvm-svn: 301962
The compiler was generating code that ends up ignoring a multiple
latency dependence between two instructions by scheduling the
intructions in back-to-back packets.
The packetizer needs to end a packet if the latency of the current
current insruction and the source in the previous packet is
greater than 1 cycle. This case occurs when there is still room in
the current packet, but scheduling the instruction causes a stall.
Instead, the packetizer should start a new packet. Also, if the
current packet already contains a stall, then it is okay to add
another instruction to the packet that also causes a stall. This
occurs when there are no instructions that can be scheduled in
between the producer and consumer instructions.
This patch changes the latency for loads to 2 cycles from 3 cycles.
This change refects that a load only needs to be separated by
one extra packet to eliminate the stall.
Patch by Ikhlas Ajbar.
llvm-svn: 301954
TLSDESC_ADD_LO12 relocations
Rearrange ordering in AArch64.def to follow relocation encoding
Fix name:
R_AARCH64_P32_LD64_GOT_LO12_NC => R_AARCH64_P32_LD32_GOT_LO12_NC
Add support for several "TLS", "TLSGD", and "TLSLD" relocations for
ILP32
Fix return values from isNonILP32reloc
Add implementations for
R_AARCH64_ADR_PREL_PG_HI21_NC, R_AARCH64_P32_LD32_GOT_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSIE_LD32_GOTTPREL_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_LD32_LO12, R_AARCH64_LD64_GOT_LO12_NC,
*TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12, *TLSLD_LDST128_DTPREL_LO12_NC,
*TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12, *TLSLE_LDST128_TPREL_LO12_NC
Modify error messages to give name of equivalent relocation in the
ABI not being used, along with better checking for non-existent
requested relocations.
Added assembler support for "pg_hi21_nc"
Relocation definitions added without implementations:
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_ADR_PREL21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADR_PREL21,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADD_LO12_NC, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADR_PREL21,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADR_PAGE21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_ADD_LO12_NC,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSLD_LD_PREL19, R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_LD_PREL19,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSGD_ADR_PAGE21, R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_DTPREL,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_DTPMOD, R_AARCH64_P32_TLS_TPREL,
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC
Fix encoding:
R_AARCH64_P32_TLSDESC_ADR_PAGE21
Reviewers: Peter Smith
Patch by: Joel Jones (jjones@cavium.com)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32072
llvm-svn: 301939
Summary: This is a common pattern that arise when legalizing large integers operations. Only do it when Y + 1 cannot overflow as this would change the carry behavior of uaddo .
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32687
llvm-svn: 301922
Summary: Common pattern when legalizing large integers operations. Similar to D32687, when the carry isn't used.
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32738
llvm-svn: 301919
PR31088 demonstrated that we were assuming that only integers require promotion from <1 x iX> types, when in fact float types may require it as well - in this case half floats.
This patch adds support for extension/truncation for both integer and float types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32391
llvm-svn: 301910
The existing code only looks at half of the tree when matching bswap + rol patterns ending in an OR tree (as opposed to a cascade).
Patch originally introduced by Jim Lewis.
Submitted on the behalf of Dinar Temirbulatov.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32039
llvm-svn: 301907
Fixes PR30730.
This is a re-commit of a pulled commit. The commit was pulled because some
software projects contained uses of Altivec vectors that violated alignment
requirements. Known issues have now been fixed.
Committing on behalf of Lei Huang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26861
llvm-svn: 301892
This tracks whether MaxCallFrameSize is computed yet. Ideally we would
assert and fail when the value is queried before it is computed, however
this fails various targets that need to be fixed first.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32570
llvm-svn: 301851
This is the SelectionDAG version of D32521. If know where at least one 1 is located in the input to these intrinsics we can place an upper bound on the number of bits needed to represent the count and thus increase the number of known zeros in the output.
I think we can also refine this further for CTTZ_UNDEF/CTLZ_UNDEF by assuming that the answer will never be BitWidth. I've left this out for now because it caused other test failures across multiple targets. Usually because of turning ADD into OR based on this new information.
I'll fix CTPOP in a future patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32692
llvm-svn: 301806
We discussed shrinking/widening of selects in IR in D26556, and I'll try to get back to that
patch eventually. But I'm hoping that this transform is less iffy in the DAG where we can check
legality of the select that we want to produce.
A few things to note:
1. We can't wait until after legalization and do this generically because (at least in the x86
tests from PR14657), we'll have PACKSS and bitcasts in the pattern.
2. This might benefit more of the SSE codegen if we lifted the legal-or-custom requirement, but
that requires a closer look to make sure we don't end up worse.
3. There's a 'vblendv' opportunity that we're missing that results in andn/and/or in some cases.
That should be fixed next.
4. I'm assuming that AVX1 offers the worst of all worlds wrt uneven ISA support with multiple
legal vector sizes, but if there are other targets like that, we should add more tests.
5. There's a codegen miracle in the multi-BB tests from PR14657 (the gcc auto-vectorization tests):
despite IR that is terrible for the target, this patch allows us to generate the optimal loop
code because something post-ISEL is hoisting the splat extends above the vector loops.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32620
llvm-svn: 301781
Summary: As per discution on how to get better codegen an large int legalization, it became clear that using a glue for the carry was preventing several desirable optimizations. Passing the carry down as a value allow for more flexibility.
Reviewers: jyknight, nemanjai, mkuper, spatel, RKSimon, zvi, bkramer
Subscribers: igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29872
llvm-svn: 301775
Summary:
Predicate<> now has a field to indicate how often it must be recomputed.
Currently, there are two frequencies, per-module (RecomputePerFunction==0)
and per-function (RecomputePerFunction==1). Per-function predicates are
currently recomputed more frequently than necessary since the only predicate
in this category is cheap to test. Per-module predicates are now computed in
getSubtargetImpl() while per-function predicates are computed in selectImpl().
Tablegen now manages the PredicateBitset internally. It should only be
necessary to add the required includes.
Also fixed a problem revealed by the test case where
constrainSelectedInstRegOperands() would attempt to tie operands that
BuildMI had already tied.
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32491
llvm-svn: 301750
Fixes the issue highlighted in
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-June/037500.html.
The DW_AT_decl_file and DW_AT_decl_line attributes on namespaces can
prevent LLVM from uniquing types that are in the same namespace. They
also don't carry any meaningful information.
rdar://problem/17484998
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32648
llvm-svn: 301706
When a PHI operand has a subregister, create a COPY instead of simply
replacing the PHI output with the input it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32650
llvm-svn: 301699
. swap 4-bit register encoding, 16-bit offset and 32-bit imm to support big endian archs
. add a test
Reported-by: David S. Miller <davem@davemloft.net>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 301653
Reapplied r299221 after fix for nondeterminism in ThinLTO builder (rL301599), with extra check for implicit truncation of inserted element.
llvm-svn: 301644
This is a follow up to the fix in r298360 to improve the handling of debug
values when redundant LEAs are removed. The fix in r298360 effectively
discarded the debug values. This patch now attempts to preserve the debug
values by using the DWARF DW_OP_stack_value operation via prependDIExpr.
Moved functions appendOffset and prependDIExpr from Local.cpp to
DebugInfoMetadata.cpp and made them available as static member functions of
DIExpression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31604
llvm-svn: 301630
Summary:
In some cases LLVM (especially the SLP vectorizer) will create vectors
that are 256 bytes (or larger). Given that this is intentional[0] is
likely to get more common, this patch updates the StackMap binary
format to deal with the spill locations for said vectors.
This change also bumps the stack map version from 2 to 3.
[0]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32533#738350
Reviewers: reames, kavon, skatkov, javed.absar
Subscribers: mcrosier, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32629
llvm-svn: 301615
Summary:
The type of the target frame index is intptr, not the type of the value we're
going to store into it. Without this change we crash in the attached test case
when trying to type-legalize a TargetFrameIndex.
Patchpoint lowering types the target frame index as intptr as well.
Reviewers: reames, bogner, arsenm
Subscribers: arsenm, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32256
llvm-svn: 301566
Author: milena.vujosevic.janicic
Reviewers: sdardis
The code implements size reduction pass for MicroMIPS.
Load and store instructions are examined and transformed, if possible.
lw32 instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction lwsp
sw32 instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction swsp
Arithmetic instrcutions are examined and transformed, if possible.
addu32 instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction addu16
subu32 instruction is transformed into 16-bit instruction subu16
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D15144
llvm-svn: 301540
Fix a crash when trying to extend a value passed as a sign- or
zero-extended stack parameter. The cause of the crash was that we were
setting the size of the loaded value to 32 bits, and then tyring to
extend again to 32 bits.
This patch addresses the issue by also introducing a G_TRUNC after the
load. This will leave the unused bits to their original values set by
the caller, while being consistent about the types. For values that are
not extended, we just use a smaller load.
llvm-svn: 301531
Besides better codegen, the motivation is to be able to canonicalize this pattern
in IR (currently we don't) knowing that the backend is prepared for that.
This may also allow removing code for special constant cases in
DAGCombiner::foldSelectOfConstants() that was added in D30180.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31944
llvm-svn: 301457
Build vectors have magical truncation powers, so we have things like this:
v4i1 = BUILD_VECTOR Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>
v4i16 = BUILD_VECTOR Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>, Constant:i32<1>
If we don't truncate the splat node returned by getConstantSplatNode(), then we won't find
truth when ZeroOrNegativeOneBooleanContent is the rule.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32505
llvm-svn: 301408
For targets that don't have ISD::MULHS or ISD::SMUL_LOHI for the type
and the double width type is illegal, then the two operands are
sign extended to twice their size then multiplied to check for overflow.
The extended upper halves were mismatched causing an incorrect result.
This fixes the mismatch.
A test was added for ARM V6-M where the bug was detected.
Patch by James Duley.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31807
llvm-svn: 301404
Removed micro mips register classes for gp initialization because gp initialization uses pure mips64 instruction. Even when compiling for micro mips, gp initialization can be done with pure mips64 instructions.
Reviewed by Simon Dardis
Differential: D32286
llvm-svn: 301394
If Select pseudo instruction doesn't have use SR, then
CMP instructions are being marked as dead and later can be
removed by MachineCSE pass. This leads to incorrect code
generation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32473
llvm-svn: 301372
This patch reapplies r301309 with the fix to the MIR test to fix the assertion
triggered by r301309. Had trimmed a little bit too much from the MIR!
llvm-svn: 301317
This patch fixes a bug with the updating of DBG_VALUE's in
BreakAntiDependencies. Previously, it would only attempt to update the first
DBG_VALUE following the instruction whose register is being changed,
potentially leaving DBG_VALUE's referring to the wrong register. Now the code
will update all DBG_VALUE's that immediately follow the instruction.
This issue was detected as a result of an optimized codegen difference with
"-g" where an X86 byte/word fixup was not performed due to a DBG_VALUE
referencing the wrong register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31755
llvm-svn: 301309
I'm proposing a fold for increment-of-sexted-bool in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D31944
...so we need to know what happens in more cases like these.
llvm-svn: 301269
This reverts commit r300732. This breaks a few tests.
I think the problem is related to adding more uses of
the condition that don't yet exist at this point.
llvm-svn: 301242
In call sequence setups, there may not be a frame index base
and the pointer is a constant offset from the frame
pointer / scratch wave offset register.
llvm-svn: 301230
Merges equivalent initializations of M0 and hoists them into a common
dominator block. Technically the same code can be used with any
register, physical or virtual.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32279
llvm-svn: 301228
When functions are terminated by unreachable instructions, the last
instruction might trigger a CFI instruction to be generated. However,
emitting it would be be illegal since the function (and thus the FDE
the CFI is in) has already ended with the previous instruction.
Darwin's dwarfdump --verify --eh-frame complains about this and the
specification supports this.
Relevant bits from the DWARF 5 standard (6.4 Call Frame Information):
"[The] address_range [field in an FDE]: The number of bytes of
program instructions described by this entry."
"Row creation instructions: [...]
The new location value is always greater than the current one."
The first quotation implies that a CFI cannot describe a target
address outside of the enclosing FDE's range.
rdar://problem/26244988
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32246
llvm-svn: 301219
Currently the operand type for ATOMIC_FENCE assumes value type of a pointer in address space 0.
This is fine for most targets. However for amdgcn target, the size of pointer in address space 0
depends on triple environment. For amdgiz environment, it is 64 bit but for other environment it is
32 bit. On the other hand, amdgcn target expects 32 bit fence operands independent of the target
triple environment. Therefore a hook is need in target lowering for getting the fence operand type.
This patch has no effect on targets other than amdgcn.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32186
llvm-svn: 301215
Fixes traps in any block besides the entry block,
and fixes depending on a live-in physical register
by using a virtual register copy.
Also happens to stop emitting a nop in the case
debug trap is not supported.
llvm-svn: 301206
Summary:
Fix a compiler bug when the lane select happens to end up in a VGPR.
Clarify the semantic of the corresponding intrinsic to be that of
the corresponding GLSL: the lane select must be uniform across a
wave front, otherwise results are undefined.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32343
llvm-svn: 301197
While we use BaseIndexOffset in FindBetterNeighborChains to
appropriately realize they're almost the same address and should be
improved concurrently we do not use it in isAlias using the non-index
understanding FindBaseOffset instead. Adding a BaseIndexOffset check
in isAlias like should allow indexed stores to be merged.
FindBaseOffset to be excised in subsequent patch.
Reviewers: jyknight, aditya_nandakumar, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31987
llvm-svn: 301187
We have to widen the operands to 32 bits and then we can either use
hardware division if it is available or lower to a libcall otherwise.
At the moment it is not enough to set the Legalizer action to
WidenScalar, since for libcalls it won't know what to do (it won't be
able to find what size to widen to, because it will find Libcall and not
Legal for 32 bits). To hack around this limitation, we request Custom
lowering, and as part of that we widen first and then we run another
legalizeInstrStep on the widened DIV.
llvm-svn: 301166
Add support for both targets with hardware division and without. For
hardware division we have to add support throughout the pipeline
(legalizer, reg bank select, instruction select). For targets without
hardware division, we only need to mark it as a libcall.
llvm-svn: 301164
When selecting a G_CONSTANT to a MOVi, we need the value to be an Imm
operand. We used to just leave the G_CONSTANT operand unchanged, which
works in some cases (such as the GEP offsets that we create when
referring to stack slots). However, in many other places the G_CONSTANTs
are created with CImm operands. This patch makes sure to handle those as
well, and to error out gracefully if in the end we don't end up with an
Imm operand.
Thanks to Oliver Stannard for reporting this issue.
llvm-svn: 301162
Summary:
D30400 has enabled tADC and tSBC instructions to be unglued, thereby allowing CPSR to remain live between Thumb1 scheduling units.
Most Thumb1 instructions have an OptionalDef for CPSR; but the scheduler ignored the OptionalDefs, and could unwittingly insert a flag-setting instruction in between an ADDS and the corresponding ADC.
Reviewers: javed.absar, atrick, MatzeB, t.p.northover, jmolloy, rengolin
Reviewed By: javed.absar
Subscribers: rogfer01, efriedma, aemerson, rengolin, llvm-commits, MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31081
llvm-svn: 301106
canMutate() was returning true when the operands were all in the same order as
the matched instruction. However, it wasn't checking the operands were actually
on that instruction. This worked when we could only match a single instruction
but the addition of nested instruction matching led to cases where the operands
could be split across multiple instructions. canMutate() now returns false if
operands belong to instructions other than the root of the match.
llvm-svn: 301077
Since Split DWARF needs to name the actual .dwo file that is generated,
it can't be known at the time the llvm::Module is produced as it may be
merged with other Modules before the object is generated and that object
may be generated with any name.
By passing the Split DWARF file name when LLVM is producing object code
the .dwo file name in the object file can match correctly.
The support for Split DWARF for implicit modules remains the same -
using metadata to store the dwo name and dwo id so that potentially
multiple skeleton CUs referring to different dwo files can be generated
from one llvm::Module.
llvm-svn: 301062
The code assumed that when saving an additional CSR register
(ExtraCSSpill==true) we would have a free register throughout the
function. This was not true if this CSR register is also used to pass
values as in the swiftself case.
rdar://31451816
llvm-svn: 301057
In addition to the original commit, tighten the condition for when to
pad empty functions to COFF Windows. This avoids running into problems
when targeting e.g. Win32 AMDGPU, which caused test failures when this
was committed initially.
llvm-svn: 301047
Empty functions can lead to duplicate entries in the Guard CF Function
Table of a binary due to multiple functions sharing the same RVA,
causing the kernel to refuse to load that binary.
We had a terrific bug due to this in Chromium.
It turns out we were already doing this for Mach-O in certain
situations. This patch expands the code for that in
AsmPrinter::EmitFunctionBody() and renames
TargetInstrInfo::getNoopForMachoTarget() to simply getNoop() since it
seems it was used for not just Mach-O anyway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32330
llvm-svn: 301040
Otherwise there's some mismatch, and we'll either form an illegal type or an
illegal node.
Thanks to Eli Friedman for pointing out the problem with my original solution.
llvm-svn: 301036
SI_MASKED_UNREACHABLE does not have machine instruction encoding.
It needs special handling in AMDGPUAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction like some
other pseudo instructions.
This patch fixes compilation failure of RadeonRays.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32364
llvm-svn: 301025
immediate operands.
This commit adds an AArch64 dag-combine that optimizes code generation
for logical instructions taking immediate operands. The optimization
uses demanded bits to change a logical instruction's immediate operand
so that the immediate can be folded into the immediate field of the
instruction.
This recommits r300932 and r300930, which was causing dag-combine to
loop forever. The problem was that optimizeLogicalImm was returning
true even when there was no change to the immediate node (which happened
when the immediate was all zeros or ones), which caused dag-combine to
push and pop the same node to the work list over and over again without
making any progress.
This commit fixes the bug by returning false early in optimizeLogicalImm
if the immediate is all zeros or ones. Also, it changes the code to
compare the immediate with 0 or Mask rather than calling
countPopulation.
rdar://problem/18231627
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D5591
llvm-svn: 301019
DAG combine was mistakenly assuming that the step-up it was looking at was
always a doubling, but it can sometimes be a larger extension in which case
we'd crash.
llvm-svn: 301002
places based on it.
Existing constant hoisting pass will merge a group of contants in a small range
and hoist the const materialization code to the common dominator of their uses.
However, if the uses are all in cold pathes, existing implementation may hoist
the materialization code from cold pathes to a hot place. This may hurt performance.
The patch introduces BFI to the pass and selects the best insertion places based
on it.
The change is controlled by an option consthoist-with-block-frequency which is
off by default for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28962
llvm-svn: 300989
Select them as copies. We only select if both the source and the
destination are on the same register bank, so this shouldn't cause any
trouble.
llvm-svn: 300971
The condition in isSupportedType didn't handle struct/array arguments
properly. Fix the check and add a test to make sure we use the fallback
path in this kind of situation. The test deals with some common cases
where the call lowering should error out. There are still some issues
here that need to be addressed (tail calls come to mind), but they can
be addressed in other patches.
llvm-svn: 300967
when the subtarget has fast strings.
This has two advantages:
- Speed is improved. For example, on Haswell thoughput improvements increase
linearly with size from 256 to 512 bytes, after which they plateau:
(e.g. 1% for 260 bytes, 25% for 400 bytes, 40% for 508 bytes).
- Code is much smaller (no need to handle boundaries).
llvm-svn: 300957
It seems that r300930 was creating an infinite loop in dag-combine when
compling the following file:
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/consumer-typeset/z21.c
llvm-svn: 300940
immediate operands.
This commit adds an AArch64 dag-combine that optimizes code generation
for logical instructions taking immediate operands. The optimization
uses demanded bits to change a logical instruction's immediate operand
so that the immediate can be folded into the immediate field of the
instruction.
This recommits r300913, which broke bots because I didn't fix a call to
ShrinkDemandedConstant in SIISelLowering.cpp after changing the APIs of
TargetLoweringOpt and TargetLowering.
rdar://problem/18231627
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D5591
llvm-svn: 300930
immediate operands.
This commit adds an AArch64 dag-combine that optimizes code generation
for logical instructions taking immediate operands. The optimization
uses demanded bits to change a logical instruction's immediate operand
so that the immediate can be folded into the immediate field of the
instruction.
rdar://problem/18231627
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D5591
llvm-svn: 300913
Single-threaded fences aren't required to provide any synchronization with
other processing elements so there's no need for a DMB. They should still be a
barrier for compiler optimizations though.
llvm-svn: 300904
Before, we assumed that any ConstantInt offset was precisely the access width,
so we could use the "[rN]!" form. ISelLowering only ever created that kind, but
further simplification during combining could lead to unexpected constants and
incorrect codegen.
Should fix PR32658.
llvm-svn: 300878
Recently alloca address space has been added to data layout. Due to this
change, pointer returned by alloca may have different size as pointer in
address space 0.
However, currently the value type of frame index is assumed to be of the
same size as pointer in address space 0.
This patch fixes that.
Most targets assume alloca returning pointer in address space 0, which
is the default alloca address space. Therefore it is NFC for them.
AMDGCN target with amdgiz environment requires this change since it
assumes alloca returning pointer to addr space 5 and its size is 32,
which is different from the size of pointer in addr space 0 which is 64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32021
llvm-svn: 300864
Masked vectors which hold shift amounts when creating the following nodes:
ISD::SHL, ISD::SRL or ISD::SRA.
Instructions that use said nodes, which have had their arguments altered are
sll, srl, sra, bneg, bclr and bset.
For said instructions, the shift amount or the bit position that is
specified in the corresponding vector elements will be interpreted as the
shift amount/bit position modulo the size of the element in bits.
The problem lies in compiling with -O2 enabled, where the instructions for
formats .w and .d are not generated, but are instead optimized away.
In this case, having shift amounts that are either negative or greater than
the element bit size results in generation of incorrect results when
constant folding.
We remedy this by masking the operands for the nodes mentioned above before
actually creating them, so that the final result is correct before placed
into the constant pool.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31331
llvm-svn: 300839
Debug information is calculated with getFrameIndexReference() which was
missing some logic for the fixed object cases (= parameters on the stack).
rdar://24557797
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32204
llvm-svn: 300781
I've changed one of the tests to not fold away, but we didn't and still don't do the transform
that the comment claims we do (and I don't know why we'd want to do that).
Follow-up to:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL300725https://reviews.llvm.org/rL300763
llvm-svn: 300772
This allows forming more 'not' ops, so we get improvements for ISAs that have and-not.
Follow-up to:
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL300725
llvm-svn: 300763
Re-commit after revert in r300668. Changed getMaxFPOffset() to a
more conservative heuristic instead of trying to be clever and missing
for some exotic calling conventions.
We need to reserve an emergency spill slot in cases with large argument
types that could overflow immediate offsets for FP relative address
calculations.
rdar://31317893
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31643
llvm-svn: 300761
This is inserted directly in the text section. The relocation
for the function ends up resolving to the beginning of the
amd_kernel_code_t header rather than the actual function
entry point.
Also skip some of the comments for initialization
that only makes sense for kernels.
llvm-svn: 300736
The most common case for a branch condition is
a single use compare. Directly invert the branch
predicate rather than adding a lot of xor i1 true
which the DAG will have to fold later.
This produces nicer to read structurizer output.
This produces some random changes in codegen
due to the DAG swapping branch conditions itself,
and then does a poor job of dealing with those
inverts.
llvm-svn: 300732
The patch itself is simple: stop discriminating against vectors in visitAnd() and again in
SimplifyDemandedBits().
Some notes for reference:
1. We're not consistent about calls to SimplifyDemandedBits in the various visitXXX functions.
Sometimes, we check if the RHS is a constant first. Other times (like here), we just dive in.
2. I'd like to break the vector shackles in steps for the sake of risk minimization, but we could
make similar simultaneous changes in other places if we think that would be better.
3. I don't know what the intent of the changed tests in this patch was supposed to be, but since
they wiggled in a positive way, I'm just going with that. :)
4. In the rotate tests, note that we can see through non-splat constants. This is a result of D24253.
5. My motivation for being here now is to make D31944 look better, so this is step 1 of N towards
improving the vector codegen in that patch without writing any actual new code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32230
llvm-svn: 300725
Also, make a few changes to allow using the pass in .mir testcases.
Among other things, change the abbreviation from opt-amode to amode-opt,
because otherwise lit would expand the "opt" part to the full path to
the opt binary.
llvm-svn: 300707
A bunch of tests failed because memory operations have been reordered.
I am unsure which commit changed this behaviour as the AVR build was
failing at that point with an unrelated error.
This commit just reoders some of the CHECK lines in some tests to suit
current llc output.
llvm-svn: 300682
Support G_MUL, very similar to G_ADD and G_SUB. The only difference is
in the instruction selector, where we have to select either MUL or MULv5
depending on the target.
llvm-svn: 300665
This fixes PR32471.
As comment 10 on that bug report highlights
(https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32471#c10), there are quite a
few different defendable design tradeoffs that could be made, including
not representing pointers at all in LLT.
I decided to go for representing vector-of-pointer as a concept in LLT,
while keeping the size of the LLT type 64 bits (this is an increase from
48 bits before). My rationale for keeping pointers explicit is that on
some targets probably it's very handy to have the distinction between
pointer and non-pointer (e.g. 68K has a different register bank for
pointers IIRC). If we keep a scalar pointer, it probably is easiest to
also have a vector-of-pointers to keep LLT relatively conceptually clean
and orthogonal, while we don't have a very strong reason to break that
orthogonality. Once we gain more experience on the use of LLT, we can
of course reconsider this direction.
Rejecting vector-of-pointer types in the IRTranslator is also an option
to avoid the crash reported in PR32471, but that is only a very
short-term solution; also needs quite a bit of code tweaks in places,
and is probably fragile. Therefore I didn't consider this the best
option.
llvm-svn: 300664
We need to reserve an emergency spill slot in cases with large argument
types that could overflow immediate offsets for FP relative address
calculations.
rdar://31317893
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31643
llvm-svn: 300639
Android x86_64 target uses f128 type and stores f128 values in %xmm* registers.
SoftenFloatRes_EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT should not convert result value
from f128 to i128.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D32102
llvm-svn: 300583
Remove non-consecutive stores from store merge candidate search as
they cannot be merged and will prevent us from finding subsequent
mergeable store cases.
Reviewers: jyknight, bogner, javed.absar, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32086
llvm-svn: 300561
In the assembler, we should emit build attributes based on the target
selected with command-line options. This matches the GNU assembler's
behaviour. We only do this for build attributes which describe the
hardware that is expected to be available, not the ones that describe
ABI compatibility.
This is done by moving some of the attribute emission code to
ARMTargetStreamer, so that it can be shared between the assembly and
code-generation code paths. Since the assembler only creates a
MCSubtargetInfo, not an ARMSubtarget, the code had to be changed to
check raw features, and not use the convenience functions in
ARMSubtarget.
If different attributes are later specified using the .eabi_attribute
directive, then they will take precedence, as happens when the same
.eabi_attribute is specified twice.
This must be enabled by an option, because we don't want to do this when
parsing inline assembly. The attributes would match the ones emitted at
the start of the file, so wouldn't actually change the emitted object
file, but the extra directives would be added to every inline assembly
block when emitting assembly, which we'd like to avoid.
The majority of the changes in the build-attributes.ll test are just
re-ordering the directives, because the hardware attributes are now
emitted before the ABI ones. However, I did fix one bug which I spotted:
Tag_CPU_arch_profile was not being emitted for v6M.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31812
llvm-svn: 300547
This reverts r300535 and r300537.
The newly added tests in test/CodeGen/AArch64/GlobalISel/arm64-fallback.ll
produces slightly different code between LLVM versions being built with different compilers.
E.g., dependent on the compiler LLVM is built with, either one of the following
can be produced:
remark: <unknown>:0:0: unable to legalize instruction: %vreg0<def>(p0) = G_EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT %vreg1, %vreg2; (in function: vector_of_pointers_extractelement)
remark: <unknown>:0:0: unable to legalize instruction: %vreg2<def>(p0) = G_EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT %vreg1, %vreg0; (in function: vector_of_pointers_extractelement)
Non-determinism like this is clearly a bad thing, so reverting this until
I can find and fix the root cause of the non-determinism.
llvm-svn: 300538
For subtargets that use the custom lowering for divmod, e.g. gnueabi,
we used to check if the subtarget has hardware divide and then lower to
a div-mul-sub sequence if true, or to a libcall if false.
However, judging by the usage of hasDivide vs hasDivideInARMMode, it
seems that hasDivide only refers to Thumb. For instance, in the
ARMTargetLowering constructor, the code that specifies whether to use
libcalls for (S|U)DIV looks like this:
bool hasDivide = Subtarget->isThumb() ? Subtarget->hasDivide()
: Subtarget->hasDivideInARMMode();
In the case of divmod for arm-gnueabi, using only hasDivide() to
determine what to do means that instead of lowering to __aeabi_idivmod
to get the remainder, we lower to div-mul-sub and then further lower the
div to __aeabi_idiv. Even worse, if we have hardware divide in ARM but
not in Thumb, we generate a libcall instead of using it (this is not an
issue in practice since AFAICT none of the cores that we support have
hardware divide in ARM but not Thumb).
This patch fixes the code dealing with custom lowering to take into
account the mode (Thumb or ARM) when deciding whether or not hardware
division is available.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32005
llvm-svn: 300536
This fixes PR32471.
As comment 10 on that bug report highlights
(https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32471#c10), there are quite a
few different defendable design tradeoffs that could be made, including
not representing pointers at all in LLT.
I decided to go for representing vector-of-pointer as a concept in LLT,
while keeping the size of the LLT type 64 bits (this is an increase from
48 bits before). My rationale for keeping pointers explicit is that on
some targets probably it's very handy to have the distinction between
pointer and non-pointer (e.g. 68K has a different register bank for
pointers IIRC). If we keep a scalar pointer, it probably is easiest to
also have a vector-of-pointers to keep LLT relatively conceptually clean
and orthogonal, while we don't have a very strong reason to break that
orthogonality. Once we gain more experience on the use of LLT, we can
of course reconsider this direction.
Rejecting vector-of-pointer types in the IRTranslator is also an option
to avoid the crash reported in PR32471, but that is only a very
short-term solution; also needs quite a bit of code tweaks in places,
and is probably fragile. Therefore I didn't consider this the best
option.
llvm-svn: 300535
Summary:
Refactoring changed paramHasAttr(1 + i) to paramHasAttr(0), fix that to
paramHasAttr(i).
Add more tests to WebAssemblyOptimizeReturned that catch that
regression.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: jfb, sbc100, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32136
llvm-svn: 300502
Avoid looping through program to determine register counts.
This avoids needing to look at regmask operands.
Also fixes some counting errors with flat_scr when there
are no stack objects.
llvm-svn: 300482
It's basically a terrible idea anyway but objc_msgSend gets emitted like that.
We can decide on a better way to deal with it in the unlikely event that anyone
actually uses it.
llvm-svn: 300474
It's almost certainly not a good idea to actually use it in most cases (there's
a pretty large code size overhead on AArch64), but we can't do those
experiments until it's supported.
llvm-svn: 300462
Our 16 bit support is assembler-only + the terrible hack that is
.code16gcc. Simply using 32 bit registers does the right thing for the
latter.
Fixes PR32681.
llvm-svn: 300429
Summary:
In PR32594, inline assembly using the 'A' constraint on x86_64 causes
llvm to crash with a "Cannot select" stack trace. This is because
`X86TargetLowering::getRegForInlineAsmConstraint` hardcodes that 'A'
means the EAX and EDX registers.
However, on x86_64 it means the RAX and RDX registers, and on 16-bit x86
(ia16?) it means the old AX and DX registers.
Add new register classes in `X86RegisterInfo.td` to support these cases,
and amend the logic in `getRegForInlineAsmConstraint` to cope with
different subtargets. Also add a test case, derived from PR32594.
Reviewers: craig.topper, qcolombet, RKSimon, ab
Reviewed By: ab
Subscribers: ab, emaste, royger, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31902
llvm-svn: 300404
If a kernel's pointer argument is known to be readonly
set access qualifier accordingly. This allows RT not to
flush caches before dispatches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32091
llvm-svn: 300362
MOVNTDQA non-temporal aligned vector loads can be correctly represented using generic builtin loads, allowing us to remove the existing x86 intrinsics.
Clang companion patch: D31766.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31767
llvm-svn: 300325
This further improves Ahmed's change in rL299482. See the new comment for the
rationale.
The patch recovers most of the regression for bzip2 after D31965. We're down
to +2.68% from +6.97%.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32028
llvm-svn: 300276
If the offset cannot fit into the instruction, an addition to the
pointer is emitted before the actual access. However, BPF offsets are
16-bit but LLVM considers them to be, for the matter of this check,
to be 32-bit long.
This causes the following program:
int bpf_prog1(void *ign)
{
volatile unsigned long t = 0x8983984739ull;
return *(unsigned long *)((0xffffffff8fff0002ull) + t);
}
To generate the following (wrong) code:
0: 18 01 00 00 39 47 98 83 00 00 00 00 89 00 00 00
r1 = 590618314553ll
2: 7b 1a f8 ff 00 00 00 00 *(u64 *)(r10 - 8) = r1
3: 79 a1 f8 ff 00 00 00 00 r1 = *(u64 *)(r10 - 8)
4: 79 10 02 00 00 00 00 00 r0 = *(u64 *)(r1 + 2)
5: 95 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 exit
Fix it by changing the offset check to 16-bit.
Patch by Nadav Amit <nadav.amit@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32055
llvm-svn: 300269
In many cases ds operations can be combined even if offsets do not
fit into 8 bit encoding. What it takes is to adjust base address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31993
llvm-svn: 300227
If workgroup size is known inform llvm about range returned by local
id and local size queries.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31804
llvm-svn: 300102
Check if the scale operand is identical (doesn't have to be 1) and
do not check the chaain operand.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31833
llvm-svn: 299986
If you run llc -stop-after=codegenprepare and feed the resulting MIR
to llc -start-after=codegenprepare, you'll have an empty machine
function since we haven't run any isel yet. Of course, this only works
if the MIRParser believes you that this is okay.
This is essentially a revert of r241862 with a fix for the problem it
was papering over.
llvm-svn: 299975
Use the same handling in the generic legalizer code as for the other
libcalls (G_FREM, G_FPOW).
Enable it on ARM for float and double so we can test it.
llvm-svn: 299931
Summary: Legalize only if the type is marked as Legal or Custom. If not, return Unsupported as LegalizerHelper is not able to handle non-power-of-2 types right now.
Reviewers: qcolombet, aditya_nandakumar, dsanders, t.p.northover, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, ab
Reviewed By: kristof.beyls, ab
Subscribers: dberris, rovka, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31711
llvm-svn: 299929
A fix for the bug reported in PR30911.
The issue arises when multiple CALLSEQ_BEGIN nodes are unscheduled as
the last node to be unscheduled will gain access to the CallResource
register. But when a node is being picked, only CALLSEQ_END nodes are
checked against the CallResource and have their chains evaluated.
This then means that other CALLSEQ_BEGIN nodes can be scheduled
before the existing call sequence has been finalised. This patch adds
a check against the FrameSetup nodes in DelayForLiveRegs to prevent
this from happening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31536
llvm-svn: 299926
Check the legality of ISD::[US]MULO to see whether
Intrinsic::[us]mul_with_overflow will legalize into a function call (and, thus,
will use the CTR register). Fixes PR32485.
Patch by Tim Neumann!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31790
llvm-svn: 299910
The math works out where it can actually be counter-productive. The probability
calculations correctly handle the case where the alternative is 0 probability,
rely on those calculations.
Includes a test case that demonstrates the problem.
llvm-svn: 299892
Qin may be large, and Succ may be more frequent than BB. Take these both into
account when deciding if tail-duplication is profitable.
llvm-svn: 299891
Merging identical blocks when it doesn't reduce fallthrough. It is common for
the blocks created from critical edge splitting to be identical. We would like
to merge these blocks whenever doing so would not reduce fallthrough.
llvm-svn: 299890
BIC is generally faster, and it can put the output in a different
register from the input.
We already do this in Thumb2 mode; not sure why the equivalent fix
never got applied to ARM mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31797
llvm-svn: 299803
The original instruction might get legalized and erased and expanded
into intermediate instructions and the intermediate instructions might
fail legalization. This end up in reporting GISelFailure on the erased
instruction.
Instead report GISelFailure on the intermediate instruction which failed
legalization.
Reviewed by: ab
llvm-svn: 299802
When using -ffixed-x18, the x18 (or w18) register can safely be used
with the "global register variable" GCC extension, but the backend
fails to recognize it.
Patch by Roland McGrath.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31793
llvm-svn: 299799
This reverts commit r299766. This change appears to have broken the MIPS
buildbots. Reverting while I investigate.
Revert "[mips] Remove usage of debug only variable (NFC)"
This reverts commit r299769. Follow up commit.
llvm-svn: 299788
Increase threshold to unroll a loop which contains an "if" statement
whose condition defined by a PHI belonging to the loop. This may help
to eliminate if region and potentially even PHI itself, saving on
both divergence and registers used for the PHI.
Add a small bonus for each of such "if" statements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31693
llvm-svn: 299779
We have two cases here, the first one being the following instruction
selection from the builtin function:
bm(n)zi builtin -> vselect node -> bins[lr]i machine instruction
In case of bm(n)zi having an immediate which has either its high or low bits
set, a bins[lr] instruction can be selected through the selectVSplatMask[LR]
function. The function counts the number of bits set, and that value is
being passed to the bins[lr]i instruction as its immediate, which in turn
copies immediate modulo the size of the element in bits plus 1 as per specs,
where we get the off-by-one-error.
The other case is:
bins[lr]i -> vselect node -> bsel.v
In this case, a bsel.v instruction gets selected with a mask having one bit
less set than required.
Patch by Stefan Maksimovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30579
llvm-svn: 299768
By target hookifying getRegisterType, getNumRegisters, getVectorBreakdown,
backends can request that LLVM to scalarize vector types for calls
and returns.
The MIPS vector ABI requires that vector arguments and returns are passed in
integer registers. With SelectionDAG's new hooks, the MIPS backend can now
handle LLVM-IR with vector types in calls and returns. E.g.
'call @foo(<4 x i32> %4)'.
Previously these cases would be scalarized for the MIPS O32/N32/N64 ABI for
calls and returns if vector types were not legal. If vector types were legal,
a single 128bit vector argument would be assigned to a single 32 bit / 64 bit
integer register.
By teaching the MIPS backend to inspect the original types, it can now
implement the MIPS vector ABI which requires a particular method of
scalarizing vectors.
Previously, the MIPS backend relied on clang to scalarize types such as "call
@foo(<4 x float> %a) into "call @foo(i32 inreg %1, i32 inreg %2, i32 inreg %3,
i32 inreg %4)".
This patch enables the MIPS backend to take either form for vector types.
Reviewers: zoran.jovanovic, jaydeep, vkalintiris, slthakur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27845
llvm-svn: 299766
A test case was found with llvm-stress that caused DAGCombiner to crash
when compiling for an older subtarget without vector support.
SystemZTargetLowering::combineTruncateExtract() should do nothing for older
subtargets.
This check was placed in canTreatAsByteVector(), which also helps in a few
other places.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 299763
It turns out -float-abi=hard doesn't set the hard float calling
convention for libcalls. We need to use a hard float triple instead
(e.g. gnueabihf).
llvm-svn: 299761
Summary:
Difference beetween PreRegAlloc() and MachineSSAOptimization() are that the former is run despite of -O0 optimization level. In my undestanding SiShrinkInstructions and SDWAPeephole shouldn't run when optimizations are disabled.
With this change order of passes will not change.
Reviewers: arsenm, vpykhtin, rampitec
Subscribers: qcolombet, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31705
llvm-svn: 299757
Legalize to a libcall.
On this occasion, also start allowing soft float subtargets. For the
moment G_FREM is the only legal floating point operation for them.
llvm-svn: 299753
The new codepath has been in the tree for years, and there isn't any
reason to use two codepaths here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D30596
llvm-svn: 299723
This is possible in ways that are not compiler bugs,
so stop asserting on them.
This emits an extra error when emitting objects when it
can't encode the new pseudo, but I'm not sure that matters.
llvm-svn: 299712
In LowerMUL, the chain information is not preserved for the new
created Load SDNode.
For example, if a Store alias with one of the operand of Mul.
The Load for that operand need to be scheduled before the Store.
The dependence is recorded in the chain of Store, in TokenFactor.
However, when lowering MUL, the SDNodes for the new Loads for
VMULL are not updated in the TokenFactor for the Store. Thus the
chain is not preserved for the lowered VMULL.
llvm-svn: 299701
Summary:
Host CPU detection now supports Kryo, so we need to recognize it in ARM
target.
Reviewers: mcrosier, t.p.northover, rengolin, echristo, srhines
Reviewed By: t.p.northover, echristo
Subscribers: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31775
llvm-svn: 299674
If a workgroup size is known to be not greater than wavefront size
the s_barrier instruction is not needed since all threads are guarantied
to come to the same point at the same time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31731
llvm-svn: 299659