Summary:
The MUBUF addr64 bit has been removed on VI, so we must use FLAT
instructions when the pointer is stored in VGPRs.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11067
llvm-svn: 242673
llvm-readobj exists for testing llvm. We can safely stop the program
the first time we know the input in corrupted.
This is in preparation for making it handle a few more broken files.
llvm-svn: 242656
SKX supports conversion for all FP types. Integer types include doublewords and quardwords.
I added "Legal" status for these nodes and a bunch of tests.
I added "NoVLX" for AVX DAG selection to force VLX instructions selection when VLX is supported.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11255
llvm-svn: 242637
Reapply r242500 now that the swift schedmodel includes LDRLIT.
This is mostly done to disable the PostRAScheduler which optimizes for
instruction latencies which isn't a good fit for out-of-order
architectures. This also allows to leave out the itinerary table in
swift in favor of the SchedModel ones.
This change leads to performance improvements/regressions by as much as
10% in some benchmarks, in fact we loose 0.4% performance over the
llvm-testsuite for reasons that appear to be unknown or out of the
compilers control. rdar://20803802 documents the investigation of
these effects.
While it is probably a good idea to perform the same switch for the
other ARM out-of-order CPUs, I limited this change to swift as I cannot
perform the benchmark verification on the other CPUs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10513
llvm-svn: 242588
These pseudo instructions are only lowered after register allocation and
are therefore still present when the machine scheduler runs.
Add a run: line to a testcase that uses the uncommon flags necessary to
actually produce a LDRLIT instruction on swift.
llvm-svn: 242587
The idea of deferred spilling is to delay the insertion of spill code until the
very end of the allocation. A "candidate" to spill variable might not required
to be spilled because of other evictions that happened after this decision was
taken. The spirit is similar to the optimistic coloring strategy implemented in
Preston and Briggs graph coloring algorithm.
For now, this feature is highly experimental. Although correct, it would require
much more modification to properly model the effect of spilling.
Anyway, this early patch helps prototyping this feature.
Note: The test case cannot unfortunately be reduced and is probably fragile.
llvm-svn: 242585
This commit modifies the machine instruction lexer so that it now accepts the
'$' characters in identifier tokens.
This change makes the syntax for unquoted global value tokens consistent with
the syntax for the global idenfitier tokens in the LLVM's assembly language.
llvm-svn: 242584
This -warn-error flag invariably gets into release tarballs
and breaks builds on distributions that run tests as a part
of release process. The OCaml binding tests are especially
critical, since they often expose lingering toolchain bugs,
and so it is replaced with -w +A (equivalent to -Wall).
llvm-svn: 242550
This is mainly for the benefit of GlobalMerge, so that an alias into a
MergedGlobals variable has the same size as the original non-merged
variable.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10837
llvm-svn: 242520
basic changes to the IR such as folding pointers through PHIs, Selects,
integer casts, store/load pairs, or outlining.
This leaves the feature available behind a flag. This flag's default
could be flipped if necessary, but the real-world performance impact of
this particular feature of GMR may not be sufficiently significant for
many folks to want to run the risk.
Currently, the risk here is somewhat mitigated by half-hearted attempts
to update GlobalsModRef when the rest of the optimizer changes
something. However, I am currently trying to remove that update
mechanism as it makes migrating the AA infrastructure to a form that can
be readily shared between new and old pass managers very challenging.
Without this update mechanism, it is possible that this still unlikely
failure mode will start to trip people, and so I wanted to try to
proactively avoid that.
There is a lengthy discussion on the mailing list about why the core
approach here is flawed, and likely would need to look totally different
to be both reasonably effective and resilient to basic IR changes
occuring. This patch is essentially the first of two which will enact
the result of that discussion. The next patch will remove the current
update mechanism.
Thanks to lots of folks that helped look at this from different angles.
Especial thanks to Michael Zolotukhin for doing some very prelimanary
benchmarking of LTO without GlobalsModRef to get a rough idea of the
impact we could be facing here. So far, it looks very small, but there
are some concerns lingering from other benchmarking. The default here
may get flipped if performance results end up pointing at this as a more
significant issue.
Also thanks to Pete and Gerolf for reviewing!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11213
llvm-svn: 242512
Since r230724 ("Skip promotable allocas to improve performance at -O0"), there is a regression in the generated debug info for those non-instrumented variables. When inspecting such a variable's value in LLDB, you often get garbage instead of the actual value. ASan instrumentation is inserted before the creation of the non-instrumented alloca. The only allocas that are considered standard stack variables are the ones declared in the first basic-block, but the initial instrumentation setup in the function breaks that invariant.
This patch makes sure uninstrumented allocas stay in the first BB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11179
llvm-svn: 242510
This is mostly done to disable the PostRAScheduler which optimizes for
instruction latencies which isn't a good fit for out-of-order
architectures. This also allows to leave out the itinerary table in
swift in favor of the SchedModel ones.
This change leads to performance improvements/regressions by as much as
10% in some benchmarks, in fact we loose 0.4% performance over the
llvm-testsuite for reasons that appear to be unknown or out of the
compilers control. rdar://20803802 documents the investigation of
these effects.
While it is probably a good idea to perform the same switch for the
other ARM out-of-order CPUs, I limited this change to swift as I cannot
perform the benchmark verification on the other CPUs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10513
llvm-svn: 242500
Constructing a name based on the function name didn't give us a unique
symbol if we had more than one setjmp in a function. Using
MCContext::createTempSymbol() always gives us a unique name.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9314
llvm-svn: 242482
llvm.eh.sjlj.setjmp was used as part of the SjLj exception handling
style but is also used in clang to implement __builtin_setjmp. The ARM
backend needs to output additional dispatch tables for the SjLj
exception handling style, these tables however can't be emitted if
llvm.eh.sjlj.setjmp is simply used for __builtin_setjmp and no actual
landing pad blocks exist.
To solve this issue a new llvm.eh.sjlj.setup_dispatch intrinsic is
introduced which is used instead of llvm.eh.sjlj.setjmp in the SjLj
exception handling lowering, so we can differentiate between the case
where we actually need to setup a dispatch table and the case where we
just need the __builtin_setjmp semantic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9313
llvm-svn: 242481
C11 leaves the choice on whether round-to-integer operations set the inexact
flag implementation-defined. Darwin does expect it to be set, but this seems to
be against the intent of the IEEE document and slower to implement anyway. So
it should be opt-in.
llvm-svn: 242446
I was looking at some vector code generation and kept seeing
unnecessary vector copies into the Altivec half of the VSX registers.
I discovered that we overlooked v4i32 when adding the register classes
for VSX; we only added v4f32 and v2f64. This means that anything that
canonicalizes into v4i32 (which is a LOT of stuff) ends up being
forced into VRRC on its way to VSRC.
The fix is one line. The rest of the patch is fixing up some test
cases whose code generation has changed as a result.
This seems like it would be a good candidate for backport to 3.7.
llvm-svn: 242442
Summary:
SpeculativeExecution enables a series straight line optimizations (such
as SLSR and NaryReassociate) on conditional code. For example,
if (...)
... b * s ...
if (...)
... (b + 1) * s ...
speculative execution can hoist b * s and (b + 1) * s from then-blocks,
so that we have
... b * s ...
if (...)
...
... (b + 1) * s ...
if (...)
...
Then, SLSR can rewrite (b + 1) * s to (b * s + s) because after
speculative execution b * s dominates (b + 1) * s.
The performance impact of this change is significant. It speeds up the
benchmarks running EigenFloatContractionKernelInternal16x16
(ba68f42fa6/unsupported/Eigen/CXX11/src/Tensor/TensorContractionCuda.h?at=default#cl-526)
by roughly 2%. Some internal benchmarks that have the above code pattern
are improved by up to 40%. No significant slowdowns are observed on
Eigen CUDA microbenchmarks.
Reviewers: jholewinski, broune, eliben
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11201
llvm-svn: 242437
This is a new iteration of the reverted r238793 /
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8232 which wrongly assumed that any and/or
trees can be represented by conditional compare sequences, however there
are some restrictions to that. This version fixes this and adds comments
that explain exactly what types of and/or trees can actually be
implemented as conditional compare sequences.
Related to http://llvm.org/PR20927, rdar://18326194
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10579
llvm-svn: 242436
This reverts commit r242300.
This is causing buildbot failures which we are investigating.
I'll reapply once we know whats going on, but for now want to
get the bots green.
llvm-svn: 242428
Internalizing an individual comdat group member without also internalizing
the other members of the comdat can break comdat semantics. For example,
if a module contains a reference to an internalized comdat member, and the
linker chooses a comdat group from a different object file, this will break
the reference to the internalized member.
This change causes the internalizer to only internalize comdat members if all
other members of the comdat are not externally visible. Once a comdat group
has been fully internalized, there is no need to apply comdat rules to its
members; later optimization passes (e.g. globaldce) can legally drop individual
members of the comdat. So we drop the comdat attribute from all comdat members.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10679
llvm-svn: 242423
This adds new intrinsics "*absdiff" for absolute difference ops to facilitate efficient code generation for "sum of absolute differences" operation.
The patch also contains the introduction of corresponding SDNodes and basic legalization support.Sanity of the generated code is tested on X86.
This is 1st of the three patches.
Patch by Shahid Asghar-ahmad!
llvm-svn: 242409
Summary:
The checking pointer grouping algorithm assumes that the
starts/ends of the pointers are well formed (start <= end).
The runtime memory checking algorithm also assumes this by doing:
start0 < end1 && start1 < end0
to detect conflicts. This check only works if start0 <= end0 and
start1 <= end1.
This change correctly orders the interval ends by either checking
the stride (if it is constant) or by using min/max SCEV expressions.
Reviewers: anemet, rengolin
Subscribers: rengolin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11149
llvm-svn: 242400
This allows more call sequences to use pushes instead of movs when optimizing for size.
In particular, calling conventions that pass some parameters in registers (e.g. thiscall) are now supported.
This should no longer cause miscompiles, now that a bug in emitPrologue was fixed in r242395.
llvm-svn: 242398
The testcase failed on non X86 targets, because I forgot to pass the
'-march=x86-64' option into llc for one of the X86 specific tests.
llvm-svn: 242370
pairs for 32-bit immediates.
This change is needed to avoid emitting movt/movw pairs when doing LTO
and do so on a per-function basis.
Out-of-tree projects currently using cl::opt option -arm-use-movt=0 or
false to avoid emitting movt/movw pairs should make changes to add
subtarget feature "+no-movt" (see the changes made to clang in r242368).
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11026
llvm-svn: 242369
The jump table info is serialized using a YAML mapping that contains its kind
and a YAML sequence of jump table entries. A jump table entry is a YAML mapping
that has an ID and an inline YAML sequence of machine basic block references.
The testcase 'CodeGen/MIR/X86/jump-table-info.mir' doesn't have any instructions
because one of them contains a jump table index operand. The jump table index
operands will be serialized in a follow up patch, and the appropriate
instructions will be added to this testcase.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 242357
This commit serializes the references to the named LLVM alloca instructions from
the stack objects in the machine frame info. This commit adds a field 'Name' to
the struct 'yaml::MachineStackObject'. This new field is used to store the name
of the alloca instruction when the alloca is present and when it has a name.
llvm-svn: 242339
emit debug info, according to the preferences of the different
debuggers used on various targets.
Darwin and FreeBSD default to tuning for LLDB; PS4 defaults to tuning for
the SCE (Sony Computer Entertainment) debugger. All others default to GDB.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8506
llvm-svn: 242338
Self-referential constants containing references to a merged function
no longer cause the MergeFunctions pass to infinite loop. Also adds a
reproduction IR which would otherwise fail, which was isolated from a similar
issue in Chromium.
Author: jrkoenig
Reviewers: nlewycky, jfb
Subscribers: llvm-commits, nlewycky, jfb
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11208
llvm-svn: 242337
Summary:
This patch allows phi nodes like
%x = phi [ %incptr, ... ] [ %var, ... ]
%incptr = getelementptr %x, 1
to be analyzed by BasicAliasAnalysis.
In aliasPHI, we can detect incoming values that are recursive GEPs with a
constant offset. Instead of trying to analyze a recursive GEP (and failing),
we now ignore it and instead set the size of the memory referenced by
the PHINode to UnknownSize. This represents all the possible memory
locations the pointer represented by the PHINode could be advanced to
by the GEP.
For now, this new behavior is turned off by default to allow debugging of
performance degradations seen with SPEC/x86 and Hexagon benchmarks.
The flag -basicaa-recphi turns it on.
Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy
Subscribers: tobiasvk_caf, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10368
llvm-svn: 242320
This is a necessary prerequisite for bootstrapping the emission
of debug info inside modules.
- Adds a FlagExternalTypeRef to DICompositeType.
External types must have a unique identifier.
- External type references are emitted using a forward declaration
with a DW_AT_signature([DW_FORM_ref_sig8]) based on the UID.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9612
llvm-svn: 242302
These were the cause of a verifier error when building 7zip with
-verify-machineinstrs. Running 'make check' with the verifier
triggered the same error on the test here so i've updated the test
to run the verifier on one of its runs instead of adding a new one.
While looking at this code, there was a stale comment that these
instructions were only used for disassembly. This probably used to
be the case, but they are now used in the 'ARM load / store optimization pass' too.
llvm-svn: 242300
- Teaches the ValueTracker in the PeepholeOptimizer to look through PHI
instructions.
- Add findNextSourceAndRewritePHI method to lookup into multiple sources
returnted by the ValueTracker and rewrite PHIs with new sources.
With these changes we can find more register sources and rewrite more
copies to allow coaslescing of bitcast instructions. Hence, we eliminate
unnecessary VR64 <-> GR64 copies in x86, but it could be extended to
other archs by marking "isBitcast" on target specific instructions. The
x86 example follows:
A:
psllq %mm1, %mm0
movd %mm0, %r9
jmp C
B:
por %mm1, %mm0
movd %mm0, %r9
jmp C
C:
movd %r9, %mm0
pshufw $238, %mm0, %mm0
Becomes:
A:
psllq %mm1, %mm0
jmp C
B:
por %mm1, %mm0
jmp C
C:
pshufw $238, %mm0, %mm0
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11197
rdar://problem/20404526
llvm-svn: 242295
Current implementation handles unordered comparison poorly in soft-float mode.
Consider (a ULE b) which is a <= b. It is lowered to (ledf2(a, b) <= 0 || unorddf2(a, b) != 0) (in general). We can do better job by lowering it to (__gtdf2(a, b) <= 0).
Such replacement is true for other CMP's (ult, ugt, uge). In general, we just call same function as for ordered case but negate comparison against zero.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10804
llvm-svn: 242280
This is a direct port of the code from the X86 backend (r239486/r240361), which
uses the MachineCombiner to reassociate (floating-point) adds/muls to increase
ILP, to the PowerPC backend. The rationale is the same.
There is a lot of copy-and-paste here between the X86 code and the PowerPC
code, and we should extract at least some of this into CodeGen somewhere.
However, I don't want to do that until this code is enhanced to handle FMAs as
well. After that, we'll be in a better position to extract the common parts.
llvm-svn: 242279
Bitpatterns rejected by the decoder method of `MSR (immediate)` should be
decoded as the `extended MSR (register)` instruction.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7174
llvm-svn: 242276
When FixedLenDecoder matches an input bitpattern of form [01]+ with an
instruction bitpattern of form [01?]+ (where 0/1 are static bits and ? are
mixed/variable bits) it passes the input bitpattern to a specific instruction
decoder method which then makes a final decision whether the bitpattern is a
valid instruction or not. This means the decoder must handle all possible
values of the variable bits which sometimes leads to opcode rewrites in the
decoder method when the instructions are not fully orthogonal.
The patch provides a way for the decoder method to say that when it returns
Fail it does not necessarily mean the bitpattern is invalid, but rather that
the bitpattern is definitely not an instruction that is recognized by the
decoder method. The decoder can then try to match the input bitpattern with
other possible instruction bitpatterns.
For example, this allows to solve a situation on AArch64 where the `MSR
(immediate)` instruction has form:
1101 0101 0000 0??? 0100 ???? ???1 1111
but not all values of the ? bits are allowed. The rejected values should be
handled by the `extended MSR (register)` instruction:
1101 0101 000? ???? ???? ???? ???? ????
The decoder will first try to decode an input bitpattern that matches both
bitpatterns as `MSR (immediate)` but currently this puts the decoder method of
`MSR (immediate)` into a situation when it must be able to decode all possible
values of the ? bits, i.e. it would need to rewrite the instruction to `MSR
(register)` when it is not `MSR (immediate)`.
The patch allows to specify that the decoder method cannot determine if the
instruction is valid for all variable values. The decoder method can simply
return Fail when it knows it is definitely not `MSR (immediate)`. The decoder
will then backtrack the decoding and find that it can match the input
bitpattern with the more generic `MSR (register)` bitpattern too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7174
llvm-svn: 242274
During estimation of unrolling effect we should be able to propagate
constants through casts.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10207
llvm-svn: 242257
Summary:
processFunctionBeforeCalleeSavedScan was renamed to determineCalleeSaves and now takes a BitVector parameter as of rL242165, reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D10909
WebAssembly is still marked as experimental and therefore doesn't build by default. It does, however, grep by default! I notice that processFunctionBeforeCalleeSavedScan is still mentioned in a few comments and error messages, which I also fixed.
Reviewers: qcolombet, sunfish
Subscribers: jfb, dsanders, hfinkel, MatzeB, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11199
llvm-svn: 242242
Follow-up r235483, with the corresponding support in PPC. We use a regular call
for symbolic targets (because they're much cheaper than indirect calls).
llvm-svn: 242239
We used to take the address specified as the direct target of the patchpoint
and did no TOC-pointer handling. This, however, as not all that useful,
because MCJIT tends to create a lot of modules, and they have their own TOC
sections. Thus, to call from the generated code to other generated code, you
really need to switch TOC pointers. Make this work as expected, and under
ELFv1, tread the address as the function descriptor address so that the correct
TOC pointer can be loaded.
llvm-svn: 242217
For now the Archive owns the buffers of the thin archive members.
This makes for a simple API, but all the buffers are destructed
only when the archive is destructed. This should be fine since we
close the files after mmap so we should not hit an open file
limit.
llvm-svn: 242215
Sometimes an incidentally created instruction can duplicate a Value used
elsewhere. It then often doesn't end up in the leader table. If it's later
removed, we attempt to remove it from the leader table and segfault.
Instead we should just ignore the removal request, which won't cause any
problems. The reverse situation, where the original instruction is replaced by
the new one (which you might think could leave the leader table empty) cannot
occur, because the incidental instruction will never be found in the first
place.
llvm-svn: 242199
PowerPC uses itineraries to describe processor pipelines (and dispatch-group
restrictions for P7/P8 cores). Unfortunately, the target-independent
implementation of TII.getInstrLatency calls ItinData->getStageLatency, and that
looks for the largest cycle count in the pipeline for any given instruction.
This, however, yields the wrong answer for the PPC itineraries, because we
don't encode the full pipeline. Because the functional units are fully
pipelined, we only model the initial stages (there are no relevant hazards in
the later stages to model), and so the technique employed by getStageLatency
does not really work. Instead, we should take the maximum output operand
latency, and that's what PPCInstrInfo::getInstrLatency now does.
This caused some test-case churn, including two unfortunate side effects.
First, the new arrangement of copies we get from function parameters now
sometimes blocks VSX FMA mutation (a FIXME has been added to the code and the
test cases), and we have one significant test-suite regression:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/BenchmarkGame/spectral-norm
56.4185% +/- 18.9398%
In this benchmark we have a loop with a vectorized FP divide, and it with the
new scheduling both divides end up in the same dispatch group (which in this
case seems to cause a problem, although why is not exactly clear). The grouping
structure is hard to predict from the bottom of the loop, and there may not be
much we can do to fix this.
Very few other test-suite performance effects were really significant, but
almost all weakly favor this change. However, in light of the issues
highlighted above, I've left the old behavior available via a
command-line flag.
llvm-svn: 242188
Summary:
Before this change, personality directives were not emitted
if there was no invoke left in the function (of course until
recently this also meant that we couldn't know what
the personality actually was). This patch forces personality directives
to still be emitted, unless it is known to be a noop in the absence of
invokes, or the user explicitly specified `nounwind` (and not
`uwtable`) on the function.
Reviewers: majnemer, rnk
Subscribers: rnk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10884
llvm-svn: 242185
This can be done only with moves which theoretically
will optimize better later.
Although this transform increases the instruction count,
it should be code size / cycle count neutral in the worst
VALU case. It also seems to slightly improve a couple
of testcases due to other DAG combines this exposes.
This is probably slightly worse for the SALU case, so
it might be better to handle this during moveToVALU,
although then you lose some simplifications like
the load width reducing in the simple testcase.
llvm-svn: 242177
If the read2 produced was supposed to be writing into a
super register, it would use the wrong subregister indices.
Fix this by inserting copies, so we only ever write to a vreg_64.
Run the register coalescer again to clean this up, although this
isn't ideal and often does result in an extra move.
Also remove the assert that offset1 > offset0.
There isn't a real reason to not allow this other than a minor
convenience in the compiler, and it doesn't seem worth the effort
of avoiding it.
llvm-svn: 242174
The ones committed were orthogonal to the change and would have passed before
that revision. What it *did* do was prevent an assertion failure when
generating object files.
llvm-svn: 242166
This changes TargetFrameLowering::processFunctionBeforeCalleeSavedScan():
- Rename the function to determineCalleeSaves()
- Pass a bitset of callee saved registers by reference, thus avoiding
the function-global PhysRegUsed bitset in MachineRegisterInfo.
- Without PhysRegUsed the implementation is fine tuned to not save
physcial registers which are only read but never modified.
Related to rdar://21539507
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10909
llvm-svn: 242165
Summary:
- Signed 16-bit should have priority over unsigned.
- For la, unsigned 16-bit must use ori+addu rather than directly use ori.
- Correct tests on 32-bit immediates with 64-bit predicates by
sign-extending the immediate beforehand. For example, isInt<16>(0xffff8000)
should be true and use addiu.
Also split li/la testing into separate files due to their size.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10967
llvm-svn: 242139
Volatile loads and stores are made visible in global state regardless of
what memory is involved. It is not correct to disregard the ordering
and synchronization scope because it is possible to synchronize with
memory operations performed by hardware.
This partially addresses PR23737.
llvm-svn: 242126
- Factor out code to query and modify the sign bit of a floatingpoint
value as an integer. This also works if none of the targets integer
types is big enough to hold all bits of the floatingpoint value.
- Legalize FABS(x) as FCOPYSIGN(x, 0.0) if FCOPYSIGN is available,
otherwise perform bit manipulation on the sign bit. The previous code
used "x >u 0 ? x : -x" which is incorrect for x being -0.0! It also
takes 34 instructions on ARM Cortex-M4. With this patch we only
require 5:
vldr d0, LCPI0_0
vmov r2, r3, d0
lsrs r2, r3, #31
bfi r1, r2, #31, #1
bx lr
(This could be further improved if the compiler would recognize that
r2, r3 is zero).
- Only lower FCOPYSIGN(x, y) = sign(x) ? -FABS(x) : FABS(x) if FABS is
available otherwise perform bit manipulation on the sign bit.
- Perform the sign(x) test by masking out the sign bit and comparing
with 0 rather than shifting the sign bit to the highest position and
testing for "<s 0". For x86 copysignl (on 80bit values) this gets us:
testl $32768, %eax
rather than:
shlq $48, %rax
sets %al
testb %al, %al
llvm-svn: 242107
Previously we would refrain from attempting to increase the linkage of
available_externally globals because they were considered weak for the
linker. Now they are treated more like a declaration instead of a weak
definition.
This was causing SSE alignment faults in Chromuim, when some code
assumed it could increase the alignment of a dllimported global that it
didn't control. http://crbug.com/509256
llvm-svn: 242091
This patch allows VSX swap optimization to succeed more frequently.
Specifically, it is concerned with common code sequences that occur
when copying a scalar floating-point value to a vector register. This
patch currently handles cases where the floating-point value is
already in a register, but does not yet handle loads (such as via an
LXSDX scalar floating-point VSX load). That will be dealt with later.
A typical case is when a scalar value comes in as a floating-point
parameter. The value is copied into a virtual VSFRC register, and
then a sequence of SUBREG_TO_REG and/or COPY operations will convert
it to a full vector register of the class required by the context. If
this vector register is then used as part of a lane-permuted
computation, the original scalar value will be in the wrong lane. We
can fix this by adding a swap operation following any widening
SUBREG_TO_REG operation. Additional COPY operations may be needed
around the swap operation in order to keep register assignment happy,
but these are pro forma operations that will be removed by coalescing.
If a scalar value is otherwise directly referenced in a computation
(such as by one of the many XS* vector-scalar operations), we
currently disable swap optimization. These operations are
lane-sensitive by definition. A MentionsPartialVR flag is added for
use in each swap table entry that mentions a scalar floating-point
register without having special handling defined.
A common idiom for PPC64LE is to convert a double-precision scalar to
a vector by performing a splat operation. This ensures that the value
can be referenced as V[0], as it would be for big endian, whereas just
converting the scalar to a vector with a SUBREG_TO_REG operation
leaves this value only in V[1]. A doubleword splat operation is one
form of an XXPERMDI instruction, which takes one doubleword from a
first operand and another doubleword from a second operand, with a
two-bit selector operand indicating which doublewords are chosen. In
the general case, an XXPERMDI can be permitted in a lane-swapped
region provided that it is properly transformed to select the
corresponding swapped values. This transformation is to reverse the
order of the two input operands, and to reverse and complement the
bits of the selector operand (derivation left as an exercise to the
reader ;).
A new test case that exercises the scalar-to-vector and generalized
XXPERMDI transformations is added as CodeGen/PowerPC/swaps-le-5.ll.
The patch also requires a change to CodeGen/PowerPC/swaps-le-3.ll to
use CHECK-DAG instead of CHECK for two independent instructions that
now appear in reverse order.
There are two small unrelated changes that are added with this patch.
First, the XXSLDWI instruction was incorrectly omitted from the list
of lane-sensitive instructions; this is now fixed. Second, I observed
that the same webs were being rejected over and over again for
different reasons. Since it's sufficient to reject a web only once, I
added a check for this to speed up the compilation time slightly.
llvm-svn: 242081
This test case was breaking the hexagon elf bot. The failing lines
were actually unnecessary as checking that the store still reads the
correct value demonstrates that everything is working fine now.
llvm-svn: 242073
When spotting that a loop can use ctpop, we were incorrectly replacing all uses of a value with a value derived from ctpop.
The bug here was exposed because we were replacing a use prior to the ctpop with the ctpop value and so we have a use before def, i.e., we changed
%tobool.5 = icmp ne i32 %num, 0
store i1 %tobool.5, i1* %ptr
br i1 %tobool.5, label %for.body.lr.ph, label %for.end
to
store i1 %1, i1* %ptr
%0 = call i32 @llvm.ctpop.i32(i32 %num)
%1 = icmp ne i32 %0, 0
br i1 %1, label %for.body.lr.ph, label %for.end
Even if we inserted the ctpop so that it dominates the store here, that would still be incorrect. The store doesn’t want the result of ctpop.
The fix is very simple, and involves replacing only the branch condition with the ctpop instead of all uses.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 242068
The outlined funclets call intrinsics which reference labels from the
LSDA. This situation can easily arise in small functions with a single
cleanup at -O0, where Clang marks a definition as nounwind, and then
WinEHPrepare "discovers" that the landingpad is dead by accident and
deletes it.
We now need to ask the LLVM IR Function for it's personality directly,
rather than going through MachineModuleInfo.
Fixes PR23892.
llvm-svn: 242063
Enable runtime unrolling for loops with unroll count metadata ("#pragma unroll N")
and a runtime trip count. Also, do not unroll loops with unroll full metadata if the
loop has a runtime loop count. Previously, such loops would be unrolled with a
very large threshold (pragma-unroll-threshold) if runtime unrolled happened to be
enabled resulting in a very large (and likely unwise) unroll factor.
llvm-svn: 242047
This commit serializes the fixed stack objects, including fixed spill slots.
The fixed stack objects are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline
mappings. Each mapping has the object's ID, type, size, offset, and alignment.
The objects that aren't spill slots also serialize the isImmutable and isAliased
flags.
The fixed stack objects are a part of the machine function's YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 242045
It had accidently accepted a symbol+offset value (and emitted
incorrect code for it, keeping only the offset part) instead of
properly reporting the constraint as invalid.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11039
llvm-svn: 242040
The two-address instruction pass will convert these back to v_mad_f32
if necessary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11060
llvm-svn: 242038
The 64/128-bit vector types are legal if NEON instructions are
available. However, there was no matching patterns for @llvm.cttz.*()
intrinsics and result in fatal error.
This commit fixes the problem by lowering cttz to:
a. ctpop((x & -x) - 1)
b. width - ctlz(x & -x) - 1
llvm-svn: 242037
Summary:
The iteration order within a member of DepCands is deterministic
and therefore we don't have to sort the accesses within a member.
We also don't have to copy the indices of the pointers into a
vector, since we can iterate over the members of the class.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11145
llvm-svn: 242033
In this patch I have only encoding. Intrinsics and DAG lowering will be in the next patch.
I temporary removed the old intrinsics test (just to split this patch).
Half types are not covered here.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11134
llvm-svn: 242023
Summary:
This at least saves compile time. I also encountered a case where
ephemeral values affect whether other variables are promoted, causing
performance issues. It may be a bug in LSR, but I didn't manage to
reduce it yet. Anyhow, I believe it's in general not worth considering
ephemeral values in LSR.
Reviewers: atrick, hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11115
llvm-svn: 242011
Register r12 ('ip') is used by GCC for this purpose
and hence is used here. As discussed on the GCC mailing
list, the register choice is an ABI issue and so
choosing the same register as GCC means
__builtin_call_with_static_chain is compatible.
A similar patch has just gone in the AArch64 backend,
so this is just the ARM counterpart, following the same
discussion.
Patch by Stephen Cross.
llvm-svn: 241996
While the v4i32 shl operation is already vectorized using a cvttps2dq/pmulld pattern, the lshr/ashr opeations are still scalarized.
This patch adds vectorization support for non-uniform v4i32 shift operations - it splats constant shift amounts to allow them to use the immediate sse shift instructions, or extracts/zero-extends non-constant shift amounts. The individual results are then blended together.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11063
llvm-svn: 241989
There is no suitable basic block to sink instructions in loops without
exits. The only way an instruction in a loop without exits can be used
is as an incoming value to a PHI. In such cases, the incoming block for
the corresponding value is unreachable.
This fixes PR24013.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10903
llvm-svn: 241987
r238842 added the TargetRecip system for controlling use of reciprocal
estimates for sqrt and division using a set of parameters that can be set by
the frontend. Clang now supports a sophisticated -mrecip option, and this will
allow that option to effectively control the relevant code-generation
functionality of the PPC backend.
llvm-svn: 241985
This adds support for the 'nest' attribute, which allows the static chain
register to be set for functions calls under non-Darwin PPC/PPC64 targets. r11
is the chain register (which the PPC64 ELF ABI calls the "environment
pointer"). For indirect calls under PPC64 ELFv1, this would normally be loaded
from the function descriptor, but providing an explicit 'nest' parameter will
override that process and use the value provided.
This allows __builtin_call_with_static_chain to work as expected on PowerPC.
llvm-svn: 241984
r236894 caused PR23626 (Clang miscompiles webkit's base64 decoder), and was
reverted in r237984. This reapplies the patch with an additional test case for
PR23626 and the associated fix (both scales and offsets in the
BasicAliasAnalysis::constantOffsetHeuristic should initially be zero).
Patch by Nick White, thanks!
llvm-svn: 241981
This change adds new attribute called "argmemonly". Function marked with this attribute can only access memory through it's argument pointers. This attribute directly corresponds to the "OnlyAccessesArgumentPointees" ModRef behaviour in alias analysis.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10398
llvm-svn: 241979
This in turn would sometimes introduce new cleanupblocks that didn't
previously exist. The uses were being introduced by SSA value demotion.
We actually want to *promote* uses of EH pointers and selectors, so I
added some spcecial casing to avoid demoting such instructions. This is
getting overly complicated, but hopefully we'll come along and delete it
in the new representation.
llvm-svn: 241950
The motivation is to allow GatherAllAliases / FindBetterChain
to not give up on dependent loads of a pointer from constant memory.
This is important for AMDGPU, because most loads are pointers
derived from a load of a kernel argument from constant memory.
llvm-svn: 241948
Fixes PR23804: assertion failure in emitPrologue in the case of a
function with an empty frame and a dynamic alloca that needs stack
realignment. This is a typical case for AddressSanitizer.
llvm-svn: 241943
This commit factors out common code from MergeBaseUpdateLoadStore() and
MergeBaseUpdateLSMultiple() and introduces a new function
MergeBaseUpdateLSDouble() which merges adds/subs preceding/following a
strd/ldrd instruction into an strd/ldrd instruction with writeback where
possible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10676
llvm-svn: 241928
If our two inputs have known top-zero bit counts M and N, we trivially
know that the output cannot have any bits set in the top (min(M, N)-1)
bits, since nothing could carry past that point.
llvm-svn: 241927
This commit implements the initial serialization of stack objects from the
MachineFrameInfo class. It can only serialize the ordinary stack objects
(including ordinary spill slots), but it doesn't serialize variable sized or
fixed stack objects yet.
The stack objects are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline mappings.
Each mapping has the object's ID, type, size, offset and alignment. The stack
objects are a part of machine function's YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
llvm-svn: 241922
This improves the logic in several ways and is a preparation for
followup patches:
- First perform an analysis and create a list of merge candidates, then
transform. This simplifies the code in that you have don't have to
care to much anymore that you may be holding iterators to
MachineInstrs that get removed.
- Analyze/Transform basic blocks in reverse order. This allows to use
LivePhysRegs to find free registers instead of the RegisterScavenger.
The RegisterScavenger will become less precise in the future as it
relies on the deprecated kill-flags.
- Return the newly created node in MergeOps so there's no need to look
around in the schedule to find it.
- Rename some MBBI iterators to InsertBefore to make their role clear.
- General code cleanup.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10140
llvm-svn: 241920
FCmp behaves a lot like a floating-point binary operator in many ways,
and can benefit from fast-math information. Flags such as nsz and nnan
can affect if this fcmp (in combination with a select) can be treated
as a fminnum/fmaxnum operation.
This adds backwards-compatible bitcode support, IR parsing and writing,
LangRef changes and IRBuilder changes. I'll need to audit InstSimplify
and InstCombine in a followup to find places where flags should be
copied.
llvm-svn: 241901
After changes in rL231820 loop re-rotation is performed even in -Oz mode. Since loop rotation is disabled for -Oz, it seems loop re-rotation should be disabled too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10961
llvm-svn: 241897
Summary:
This introduces new instructions neccessary to implement MSVC-compatible
exception handling support. Most of the middle-end and none of the
back-end haven't been audited or updated to take them into account.
Reviewers: rnk, JosephTremoulet, reames, nlewycky, rjmccall
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11041
llvm-svn: 241888
Not doing this can lead to misoptimizations down the line, e.g. because
of range metadata on the replacing load excluding values that are valid
for the load that is being replaced.
llvm-svn: 241886
Summary:
Without this patch, LoopVectorizer in certain cases (see loop-vectorize.ll)
produces code with complex control flow which hurts later optimizations. Since
NVPTX doesn't have vector registers in LLVM's sense
(NVPTXTTI::getRegisterBitWidth(true) == 32), we for now declare no vector
registers to effectively disable loop vectorization.
Reviewers: jholewinski
Subscribers: jingyue, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11089
llvm-svn: 241884
Apparently this is important, otherwise _except_handler3 assumes that
the registration node is corrupted and ignores it.
Also fix a bug in WinEHPrepare where we would insert code after a
terminator instruction.
llvm-svn: 241877
The virtual registers are serialized using a YAML sequence of YAML inline
mappings. Each mapping has the id of the virtual register and the register
class.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10981
llvm-svn: 241868
The runtime does not restore CSRs when transferring control back to the
function handling the exception. According to the experts on IRC, LLVM's
register allocator has no way to model register clobbers that only
happen on one edge of the CFG. For now, don't worry about trying to use
the meager three CSRs available on 32-bit X86 and just say that such
invokes preserve nothing.
llvm-svn: 241865
This commit adds a new error which is reported when the MIR Parser encounters
a machine function without any machine basic blocks. The machine verifier
expects that the machine functions have at least one MBB, and this error will
prevent machine functions without MBBs from reaching the machine verifier and
crashing with an assertion.
llvm-svn: 241862
Summary:
Before this change ImplicitNullChecks would only pick loads of the form:
```
test Reg, Reg
jz elsewhere
fallthrough:
movl 32(Reg), Reg2
```
but not (say)
```
test Reg, Reg
jz elsewhere
fallthrough:
inc Reg3
movl 32(Reg), Reg2
```
This change teaches ImplicitNullChecks to look through "unrelated"
instructions like `inc Reg3` when searching for a load instruction
to convert to a trapping load.
Reviewers: atrick, JosephTremoulet, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11044
llvm-svn: 241850
They should probably be created on anything that is not windows or linux, but I will
test on freebsd before changing that.
With this it is possible to bootstrap with llvm-ar instead of ar+ranlib on OS X.
llvm-svn: 241849
This commit serializes the 13 scalar boolean and integer attributes from the
MachineFrameInfo class: IsFrameAddressTaken, IsReturnAddressTaken, HasStackMap,
HasPatchPoint, StackSize, OffsetAdjustment, MaxAlignment, AdjustsStack,
HasCalls, MaxCallFrameSize, HasOpaqueSPAdjustment, HasVAStart, and
HasMustTailInVarArgFunc. These attributes are serialized as part
of the frameInfo YAML mapping, which itself is a part of the machine function's
YAML mapping.
llvm-svn: 241844
It looks like ld64 requires it. With this we seem to be able to bootstrap using
llvm-ar+/usr/bin/true instead of ar+ranlib (currently on stage2).
llvm-svn: 241842
Summary:
In RewriteLoopExitValues, before expanding out an SCEV expression using
SCEVExpander, try to see if an existing LLVM IR expression already
computes the value we're interested in. If so use that existing
expression.
Apart from reducing IndVars' reliance on the rest of the compilation
pipeline, this also prevents IndVars from concluding some expressions as
"high cost" when they're not. For instance,
`InductiveRangeCheckElimination` often emits code of the following form:
```
len = umin(len_A, len_B)
loop:
...
if (i++ < len)
goto loop
outside_loop:
use(i)
```
`SCEVExpander` refuses to rewrite the use of `i` in `outside_loop`,
since it thinks the value of `i` on loop exit, `len`, is a high cost
expansion since it contains an `umax` in it. With this change,
`IndVars` can see that it can re-use `len` instead of creating a new
expression to compute `umin(len_A, len_B)`.
I considered putting this cleverness in `SCEVExpander`, but I was
worried that it may then have a deterimental effect on other passes
that use it. So I decided it was better to just do this in the one
place where it seems like an obviously good idea, with the intent of
generalizing later if needed.
Reviewers: atrick, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10782
llvm-svn: 241838
Don't let the disassembler pick call <.text> if a function happens to
live at the start of the section by only using function symbols.
llvm-svn: 241830
This patch allows the read_register and write_register intrinsics to
read/write the RBP/EBP registers on X86 iff the targeted register is
the frame pointer for the containing function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10977
llvm-svn: 241827
This patch fixes bugs that were exposed by the addition of fast-math-flags in the DAG:
r237046 ( http://reviews.llvm.org/rL237046 ):
1. When replacing a division node, it's not enough to RAUW.
We should call CombineTo() to delete dead nodes and combine again.
2. Because we are changing the DAG, we can't return an empty SDValue
after the transform. As the code comments say:
Visitation implementation - Implement dag node combining for different node types.
The semantics are as follows: Return Value:
SDValue.getNode() == 0 - No change was made
SDValue.getNode() == N - N was replaced, is dead and has been handled.
otherwise - N should be replaced by the returned Operand.
The new test case shows no difference with or without this patch, but it will crash if
we re-apply r237046 or enable FMF via the current -enable-fmf-dag cl::opt.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9893
llvm-svn: 241826
Summary:
We were missing a corner case where DepCands was not available,
but we were using DepCands to compute the checking pointer
groups.
This adds a test for that regression.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11068
llvm-svn: 241818
Summary:
The checking pointer group construction algorithm relied on the iteration on DepCands.
We would need the same leaders across runs and the same iteration order over the underlying std::set for determinism.
This changes the algorithm to process the pointers in the order in which they were added to the runtime check, which is deterministic.
We need to update the tests, since the order in which pointers appear has changed.
No new tests were added, since it is impossible to test for non-determinism.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11064
llvm-svn: 241809
Summary: If shift amount is a constant value > 64 bit it is handled incorrectly during type legalization and X86 lowering. This patch the type of shift amount argument in function DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandShiftByConstant from unsigned to APInt.
Reviewers: nadav, majnemer, sanjoy, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10767
llvm-svn: 241806
Summary: If shift amount is a constant value > 64 bit it is handled incorrectly during type legalization and X86 lowering. This patch the type of shift amount argument in function DAGTypeLegalizer::ExpandShiftByConstant from unsigned to APInt.
Reviewers: nadav, majnemer, sanjoy, RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10767
llvm-svn: 241790
The justification of this change is here: http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2015-March/082989.html
According to the current GEP syntax, vector GEP requires that each index must be a vector with the same number of elements.
%A = getelementptr i8, <4 x i8*> %ptrs, <4 x i64> %offsets
In this implementation I let each index be or vector or scalar. All vector indices must have the same number of elements. The scalar value will mean the splat vector value.
(1) %A = getelementptr i8, i8* %ptr, <4 x i64> %offsets
or
(2) %A = getelementptr i8, <4 x i8*> %ptrs, i64 %offset
In all cases the %A type is <4 x i8*>
In the case (2) we add the same offset to all pointers.
The case (1) covers C[B[i]] case, when we have the same base C and different offsets B[i].
The documentation is updated.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10496
llvm-svn: 241788
Column information is present in CodeView when the line table subsection
has bit 0 set to 1 in it's flags field. The column information is
represented as a pair of 16-bit quantities: a starting and ending
column. This information is present at the end of the chunk, after all
the line-PC pairs.
llvm-svn: 241764
This commit ([LAA] Fix estimation of number of memchecks) regressed the
logic a bit. We shouldn't quit the analysis if we encounter a pointer
without known bounds *unless* we actually need to emit a memcheck for
it.
The original code was using NumComparisons which is now computed
differently. Instead I compute NeedRTCheck from NumReadPtrChecks and
NumWritePtrChecks.
As side note, I find the separation of NeedRTCheck and CanDoRT
confusing, so I will try to merge them in a follow-up patch.
llvm-svn: 241756
All the usual X86 target-specific conventions are collapsed to the
normal Win64 convention, but the custom conventions like GHC and webkit
should not be.
Previously we would assume that the caller allocated 32 bytes of shadow
space for us, which is not how webkit_jscc or other custom conventions
are supposed to work.
Based on a patch by peavo@outlook.com.
Fixes PR24051.
llvm-svn: 241725
No support for the symbol table yet (but will hopefully add it today).
We always use the long filename format so that we can align the member,
which is an advantage of the BSD format.
llvm-svn: 241721
This commit changes the type of the field 'Name' in the struct
'yaml::MachineBasicBlock' from 'std::string' to 'yaml::StringValue'. This change
allows the MIR parser to report errors related to the MBB name with the proper
source locations.
llvm-svn: 241718
The inferred output file name is based on the first input file, not the
first one with extension .obj. The output file was also being written to
the wrong directory; it needs to be written to whichever directory on the
libpath it was found in. This change fixes both issues.
llvm-svn: 241710
The 32-bit lowering assumed that WinEHPrepare had this invariant.
WinEHPrepare did it for C++, but not SEH. The result was that we would
insert calls to llvm.x86.seh.restoreframe in normal basic blocks, which
corrupted the frame pointer.
llvm-svn: 241699
- Implement copying ASR to/from GPR regs.
- Mark ASRs as non-allocatable, so it won't try to arbitrarily use
them inappropriately.
- Instead of inserting explicit WRASR/RDASR nodes in the MUL/DIV
routines, just do normal register copies.
- Also...mark div as using Y, not just writing it.
Added a test case with some code which previously died with an
assertion failure (with -O0), or produced wrong code (otherwise).
(Third time's the charm?)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10401
llvm-svn: 241686
Use AddressAlign field's value to properly align sections content in the
yaml2obj tool. Before this change the yaml2obj ignored AddressAlign and
always aligned section on 16 bytes boundary.
llvm-svn: 241674
Summary:
Often filter-like loops will do memory accesses that are
separated by constant offsets. In these cases it is
common that we will exceed the threshold for the
allowable number of checks.
However, it should be possible to merge such checks,
sice a check of any interval againt two other intervals separated
by a constant offset (a,b), (a+c, b+c) will be equivalent with
a check againt (a, b+c), as long as (a,b) and (a+c, b+c) overlap.
Assuming the loop will be executed for a sufficient number of
iterations, this will be true. If not true, checking against
(a, b+c) is still safe (although not equivalent).
As long as there are no dependencies between two accesses,
we can merge their checks into a single one. We use this
technique to construct groups of accesses, and then check
the intervals associated with the groups instead of
checking the accesses directly.
Reviewers: anemet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10386
llvm-svn: 241673
option that works with all object container formats.
Now that clang modules/PCH are object containers this option is useful to
to construct pipes like
llvm-objdump -raw-clang-ast foo.pcm | llvm-bcanalyzer -
to inspect the AST contents in a PCH container.
Will be tested via clang.
Belatedly addresses review feedback for r233390.
llvm-svn: 241659
The incoming EBP value points to the end of a local stack allocation, so
we can use that to restore ESI, the base pointer. Once we do that, we
can use local stack allocations. If we know we need stack realignment,
spill the original frame pointer in the prologue and reload it after
restoring ESI.
llvm-svn: 241648
Tim Northover has told me that they can occur when the compiler cleverly
constructs constants - as demonstrated in the test case.
rdar://21703486
llvm-svn: 241641
Summary:
Initially, these intrinsics seemed like part of a family of "frame"
related intrinsics, but now I think that's more confusing than helpful.
Initially, the LangRef specified that this would create a new kind of
allocation that would be allocated at a fixed offset from the frame
pointer (EBP/RBP). We ended up dropping that design, and leaving the
stack frame layout alone.
These intrinsics are really about sharing local stack allocations, not
frame pointers. I intend to go further and add an `llvm.localaddress()`
intrinsic that returns whatever register (EBP, ESI, ESP, RBX) is being
used to address locals, which should not be confused with the frame
pointer.
Naming suggestions at this point are welcome, I'm happy to re-run sed.
Reviewers: majnemer, nicholas
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11011
llvm-svn: 241633
getSymbolValue now returns a value that in convenient for most callers:
* 0 for undefined
* symbol size for common symbols
* offset/address for symbols the rest
Code that needs something more specific can check getSymbolFlags.
llvm-svn: 241605
This commit changes the target arch to fix the test case commited in r241566
that was failing on ninja-x64-msvc-RA-centos6. Also add checks to make sure
the callee's address is loaded to blx's operand.
llvm-svn: 241588
They are implemented like that in some object formats, but for the interface
provided by lib/Object, SF_Undefined and SF_Common are different things.
This matches the ELF and COFF implementation and fixes llvm-nm for MachO.
llvm-svn: 241587
be emitted.
This is needed to enable ARM long calls for LTO and enable and disable it on a
per-function basis.
Out-of-tree projects currently using EnableARMLongCalls to emit long calls
should start passing "+long-calls" to the feature string (see the changes made
to clang in r241565).
rdar://problem/21529937
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9364
llvm-svn: 241566
This commit verifies that the parsed machine instructions contain the implicit
register operands as specified by the MCInstrDesc. Variadic and call
instructions aren't verified.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10781
llvm-svn: 241537
This commit serializes the implicit flag for the register machine operands. It
introduces two new keywords into the machine instruction syntax: 'implicit' and
'implicit-def'. The 'implicit' keyword is used for the implicit register
operands, and the 'implicit-def' keyword is used for the register operands that
have both the implicit and the define flags set.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10709
llvm-svn: 241519
The vperm2f128/vperm2i128 shuffle mask decoding was not attempting to deal with shuffles that give zero lanes. This patch fixes this so that the assembly printer can provide shuffle comments.
As this decoder is also used in X86ISelLowering for shuffle combining, I've added an early-out to match existing behaviour. The hope is that we can add zero support in the future, this would allow other ops' decodes (e.g. insertps) to be combined as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10593
llvm-svn: 241516
Extend the reassociation optimization of http://reviews.llvm.org/rL240361 (D10460)
to SSE scalar FP SP adds in addition to AVX scalar FP SP adds.
With the 'switch' in place, we can trivially add other opcodes and test cases in
future patches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10975
llvm-svn: 241515
This patch adds vectorization support for uniform constant i64 arithmetic shift right operators.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9645
llvm-svn: 241514
The previous code put the load after the terminator, leading to invalid
IR and downstream crashes. This caused http://crbug.com/506446.
llvm-svn: 241509
This patch adds support for v8i16 and v16i8 shuffle lowering using the immediate versions of the SSE4A EXTRQ and INSERTQ instructions. Although rather limited (they can only act on the lower 64-bits of the source vectors, leave the upper 64-bits of the result vector undefined and don't have VEX encoded variants), the instructions are still useful for the zero extension of any lane (EXTRQ) or inserting a lane into another vector (INSERTQ). Testing demonstrated that it wasn't typically worth it to use these instructions for v2i64 or v4i32 vector shuffles although they are capable of it.
As well as adding specific pattern matching for the shuffles, the patch uses EXTRQ for zero extension cases where SSE41 isn't available and its more efficient than the SSE2 'unpack' default approach. It also adds shuffle decode support for the EXTRQ / INSERTQ cases when the instructions are handling full byte-sized extractions / insertions.
From this foundation, future patches will be able to make use of the instructions for situations that use their ability to extract/insert at the bit level.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10146
llvm-svn: 241508
This commit adds a 'run-pass' option to llc, which instructs the compiler to run
one specific code generation pass only.
Llc already has the 'start-after' and the 'stop-after' options, and this new
option complements the other two by making it easier to write tests that want
to invoke a single pass only.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10776
llvm-svn: 241476
We don't have a good way to detect most situations where
DS offsets are usable on SI, so add an option to force using
them even if unsafe for debugging performance problems.
llvm-svn: 241462
These are mostly from the chart in the SparcV8 spec, section "A.3
Synthetic Instructions".
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9834
llvm-svn: 241461
When talking about the virtual address of sections the coff spec says:
... for simplicity, compilers should set this to zero. Otherwise, it is an
arbitrary value that is subtracted from offsets during relocation.
We don't currently subtract it, so check that it is zero.
If some producer does create such files, we can change getRelocationOffset
instead.
llvm-svn: 241447
Add support for resolving MIPS32r6 relocations in MCJIT.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10687
llvm-svn: 241442
Correctly support assembling "pushw $imm8" on x86-64 targets.
Also some cleanup of the PUSH instructions (PUSH64i16 and PUSHi16 actually
represent the same instruction)
This fixes PR23996
Patch by: david.l.kreitzer@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10878
llvm-svn: 241404
Followup to D10433 and D10589 that fixes i8/i16 uint2fp vector conversions by zero extending to i32 and using the sint2fp path (unless the target does actually support uint2fp).
llvm-svn: 241394
Requested by Eugene Rozenfeld of the LLILC team, this feature allows JIT
clients to skip relocations for selected external symbols by returning ~0ULL
from their symbol resolver. If this value is returned for a given symbol,
RuntimeDyld will skip all relocations for that symbol. The client will be
responsible for applying the skipped relocations manually before the code
is executed.
llvm-svn: 241383
SHT_NOBITS sections do not have content in an object file. Now the yaml2obj
tool does not accept `Content` field for such sections, and the obj2yaml
tool does not attempt to read the section content from a file.
Restore r241350 and r241352.
llvm-svn: 241377
r241350 broke lld tests.
r241352 depends on r241350.
Original messages:
"[ELFYAML] Fix handling SHT_NOBITS sections by obj2yaml/yaml2obj tools"
"[ELFYAML] Make the Size field for .bss section optional"
llvm-svn: 241354
SHT_NOBITS sections do not have content in an object file. Now yaml2obj
tool does not accept `Content` field for such sections, and obj2yaml
tool does not attempt to read the section content from a file.
llvm-svn: 241350
Add support for v2i8/v2i16 to v2f64 by using a sign extension to v2i32 before conversion to v2f64.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10589
llvm-svn: 241325
This patch adds support for sign extension for sub 128-bit vectors, such as to v2i32. It concatenates with UNDEF subvectors up to 128-bits, performs the sign extension (i.e. as v4i32) and then extracts the target subvector.
Patch 1/2 of D10589 - the second patch covers the conversion of v2i8/v2i16 to v2f64.
llvm-svn: 241323
The assertion in getCopyFromPartsVector assumed that the vector 'part' must
match the type of argument (arguments are potentially split into multiple
parts). However, in some cases the targets return a 'part' of the right size
but with a different type. We already handle this case correctly later on
and generate a bitcast. This commit just makes sure that we are actually
checking the property that we care about.
llvm-svn: 241312
This commit changes normal isel and fast isel to read the user-defined trap
function name from function attribute "trap-func-name" attached to llvm.trap or
llvm.debugtrap instead of from TargetOptions::TrapFuncName. This is needed to
use clang's command line option "-ftrap-function" for LTO and enable changing
the trap function name on a per-call-site basis.
Out-of-tree projects currently using TargetOptions::TrapFuncName to specify the
trap function name should attach attribute "trap-func-name" to the call sites
of llvm.trap and llvm.debugtrap instead.
rdar://problem/21225723
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10832
llvm-svn: 241305
In r241285, I removed the SUBREG_TO_REG restriction from VSX swap
removal, determining that this was overly conservative. We have
another form of the same restriction in that we check for the presence
of implicit subregs in vector operations. As with SUBREG_TO_REG for
partial register conversions, an implicit subreg is safe in and of
itself, provided no other operation makes a lane-sensitive assumption
about the result. This patch removes that restriction, by removing
the HasImplicitSubreg flag and all code that relies on it.
I've added a test case that fails to optimize before this patch is
applied, and optimizes properly with the patch. Test based on a
report from Anton Blanchard.
llvm-svn: 241290
With a previous patch, the VSX swap optimization is able to recognize
the doubleword load-splat idiom that can be implemented using lxvdsx.
However, that does not cover a doubleword splat where the source is a
register. We can implement this using xxspltd (a special form of
xxpermdi). This patch teaches the swap optimization pass about this
idiom.
As a prerequisite, it also permits swap optimization to succeed for
all forms of SUBREG_TO_REG. Previously we were conservative and only
allowed SUBREG_TO_REG when it copied a full register. However, on
reflection any form of SUBREG_TO_REG is safe in and of itself, so long
as an unsafe operation is not performed on its result. In particular,
a widening SUBREG_TO_REG often occurs as an input to a doubleword
splat idiom, particularly in auto-vectorized code.
The doubleword splat idiom is an XXPERMDI operation where both source
registers are identical, and the selection mask is either 0 (splat the
first element) or 3 (splat the second element). To determine whether
the registers are identical, we use the existing mechanism for looking
through "copy-like" operations. That mechanism has a side effect of
marking the XXPERMDI operation as using a physical register, which
would invalidate its presence in a swap-optimized region. This is
correct for the form of XXPERMDI that performs a swap and hence would
be removed, but is not what we want for a doubleword-splat variety of
XXPERMDI. Therefore we reset the physical-register flag on the
XXPERMDI when it represents a splat.
A simple test case is added to verify that we generate the splat and
that we also remove the xxswapd instructions that would otherwise be
associated with the load and store of another operand.
llvm-svn: 241285
The test part of r241149 has been reverted in r241451, due to misplaced test cases.
This patch splits those test cases among the appropriate targets.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10897
llvm-svn: 241283
When trying to upgrade @llvm.x86.sse2.psrl.dq while parsing a module,
BitcodeReader adds the function to its worklist twice, resulting in a
crash when accessing it the second time.
This patch replaces the worklist vector by a map.
Patch by Philip Pfaffe.
llvm-svn: 241281
The code responsible for shl folding in the DAGCombiner was assuming incorrectly that all constants are less than 64 bits. This patch simply changes the way values are compared.
It has been reverted previously because of some problems with comparing APInt with raw uint64_t. That has been fixed/changed with r241204.
llvm-svn: 241254
Summary:
r240039 adds a test case to check that CallGraph does the right thing
with respect to non-leaf intrinsics like statepoint and patchpoint.
This ports the same test case to LazyCallGraph. LazyCallGraph already
does the right thing with respect to escaping function pointers so there
is no need to change any code.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10582
llvm-svn: 241226
This checks subtarget feature compatibility for inlining by verifying
that the callee is a strict subset of the caller's features. This includes
the cpu as part of the subtarget we can get via the incoming functions as
the backend takes CPUs as feature sets.
This allows us to inline things like:
int foo() { return baz(); }
int __attribute__((target("sse4.2"))) bar() {
return foo();
}
so that generic code can be inlined into specialized functions.
llvm-svn: 241221
TwoAddressInstructionPass stops after a successful commuting but 3 Addr
conversion might be good for some cases.
Consider:
int foo(int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
Before this commit, we emit:
addl %esi, %edi
movl %edi, %eax
ret
After this commit, we try 3 Addr conversion:
leal (%rsi,%rdi), %eax
ret
Patch by Volkan Keles <vkeles@apple.com>!
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10851
llvm-svn: 241206
This is mostly an NFC, which increases code readability (instead of
saving old terminator, generating new one in front of old, and deleting
old, we just call a function). However, it would additionaly copy
the debug location from old instruction to replacement, which
would help PR23837.
llvm-svn: 241197
Summary:
According to PTX ISA:
For convenience, ld, st, and cvt instructions permit source and destination data operands to be wider than the instruction-type size, so that narrow values may be loaded, stored, and converted using regular-width registers. For example, 8-bit or 16-bit values may be held directly in 32-bit or 64-bit registers when being loaded, stored, or converted to other types and sizes. The operand type checking rules are relaxed for bit-size and integer (signed and unsigned) instruction types; floating-point instruction types still require that the operand type-size matches exactly, unless the operand is of bit-size type.
So, the ISA does not support load with extending/store with truncatation for floating numbers. This is reflected in setting the loadext/truncstore actions to expand in the code for floating numbers, but vectors of floating numbers are not taken care of.
As a result, loading a vector of floats followed by a fp_extend may be combined by DAGCombiner to a extload, and the extload may be lowered to NVPTXISD::LoadV2 with extending information. However, NVPTXISD::LoadV2 does not perform extending, and no extending instructions are inserted. Finally, PTX instructions with mismatched types are generated, like
ld.v2.f32 {%fd3, %fd4}, [%rd2]
This patch adds the correct actions for vectors of floats, so DAGCombiner would not create loads with extending, and correct code is generated.
Patched by Gang Hu.
Test Plan: Test case attached.
Reviewers: jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10876
llvm-svn: 241191
Summary:
Offset of frame index is calculated by NVPTXPrologEpilogPass. Before
that the correct offset of stack objects cannot be obtained, which
leads to wrong offset if there are more than 2 frame objects. This patch
move NVPTXPeephole after NVPTXPrologEpilogPass. Because the frame index
is already replaced by %VRFrame in NVPTXPrologEpilogPass, we check
VRFrame register instead, and try to remove the VRFrame if there
is no usage after NVPTXPeephole pass.
Patched by Xuetian Weng.
Test Plan:
Strengthened test/CodeGen/NVPTX/local-stack-frame.ll to check the
offset calculation based on SP and SPL.
Reviewers: jholewinski, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10853
llvm-svn: 241185
When adding little-endian vector support for PowerPC last year, I
inadvertently disabled an optimization that recognizes a load-splat
idiom and generates the lxvdsx instruction. This patch moves the
offending logic so lxvdsx is once again generated.
This pattern is frequently generated by the vectorizer for scalar
loads of an effective constant. Previously the lxvdsx instruction was
wrongly listed as lane-sensitive for the VSX swap optimization (since
both doublewords are identical, swaps are safe). This patch fixes
this as well, so that vectorized code using lxvdsx can now have swaps
removed from the computation.
There is an existing test (@test50) in test/CodeGen/PowerPC/vsx.ll
that checks for the missing optimization. However, vsx.ll was only
being tested for POWER7 with big-endian code generation. I've added
a little-endian RUN statement and expected LE code generation for all
the tests in vsx.ll to give us a bit better VSX coverage, including
what's needed for this patch.
llvm-svn: 241183
This patch is not intended to change existing codegen behavior for any target.
It just exposes the JumpIsExpensive setting on the command-line to allow for
easier testing and emergency overrides.
Also, change the existing regression test to use FileCheck, explicitly specify
the jump-is-expensive option, and use more precise checks.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10846
llvm-svn: 241179
The EH code might have been deleted as unreachable and the personality
pruned while the filter is still present. Currently I'm hitting this at
-O0 due to the clang bug PR24009.
llvm-svn: 241170
This patch teaches the AsmParser to accept add/adds/sub/subs/cmp/cmn
with a negative immediate operand and convert them as shown:
add Rd, Rn, -imm -> sub Rd, Rn, imm
sub Rd, Rn, -imm -> add Rd, Rn, imm
adds Rd, Rn, -imm -> subs Rd, Rn, imm
subs Rd, Rn, -imm -> adds Rd, Rn, imm
cmp Rn, -imm -> cmn Rn, imm
cmn Rn, -imm -> cmp Rn, imm
Those instructions are an alternate syntax available to assembly coders,
and are needed in order to support code already compiling with some other
assemblers (gas). They are documented in the "ARMv8 Instruction Set
Overview", in the "Arithmetic (immediate)" section. This makes llvm-mc
a programmer-friendly assembler !
This also fixes PR20978: "Assembly handling of adding negative numbers
not as smart as gas".
llvm-svn: 241166
This also improves the logic of what is an error:
* getSection(uint_32): only return an error if the index is out of bounds. The
index 0 corresponds to a perfectly valid entry.
* getSection(Elf_Sym): Returns null for symbols that normally don't have
sections and error for out of bound indexes.
In many places this just moves the report_fatal_error up the stack, but those
can then be fixed in smaller patches.
llvm-svn: 241156
Function static variables, typedefs and records (class, struct or union) declared inside
a lexical scope were associated with the function as their parent scope, rather than the
lexical scope they are defined or declared in.
This fixes PR19238
Patch by: amjad.aboud@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9758
llvm-svn: 241153
Only consider an instruction a candidate for relaxation if the last operand of the
instruction is an expression. We previously checked whether any operand is an expression,
which is useless, since for all instructions concerned, the only operand that may be
affected by relaxation is the last one.
In addition, this removes the check for having RIP as an argument, since it was
plain wrong - even when one of the arguments is RIP, relaxation may still be needed.
This fixes PR9807.
Patch by: david.l.kreitzer@intel.com
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10766
llvm-svn: 241152
The AArch32 assembler parses the '@' as a comment symbol, so the error message shouldn't suggest
that '@<type>' is a valid replacement when assembling for AArch32 target.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10651
llvm-svn: 241149
We would create a phi node with a zero initialized operand instead of
undef in the case where no value was originally available. This was
problematic for x86_mmx which has no null value.
llvm-svn: 241143
Surprisingly, this is a correctness issue: the mmx type exists for
calling convention purposes, LLVM doesn't have a zero representation for
them.
This partially fixes PR23999.
llvm-svn: 241142
Summary:
nsw are flaky and can often be removed by optimizations. This patch enhances
nsw by leveraging @llvm.assume in the IR. Specifically, NaryReassociate now
understands that
assume(a + b >= 0) && assume(a >= 0) ==> a +nsw b
As a result, it can split more sext(a + b) into sext(a) + sext(b) for CSE.
Test Plan: nary-gep.ll
Reviewers: broune, meheff
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10822
llvm-svn: 241139
The incoming EBP value established by the runtime is actually a pointer
to the end of the EH registration object, and not the true parent
function frame pointer. Clang doesn't need llvm.x86.seh.exceptioninfo
anymore because we know that the exception info pointer is at a fixed
offset from this incoming EBP.
The llvm.x86.seh.recoverfp intrinsic takes an EBP value provided by the
EH runtime and returns a pointer that is usable with llvm.framerecover.
The llvm.x86.seh.restoreframe intrinsic is inserted by the 32-bit
specific preparation pass in blocks targetted by the EH runtime. It
re-establishes any physical registers used by the parent function to
address the stack, such as the frame, base, and stack pointers.
Neither of these intrinsics correctly handle stack realignment prologues
yet, but it's possible to add that later.
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10848
llvm-svn: 241125
Summary:
This change introduces a !make.implicit metadata that allows the
frontend to pre-select the set of explicit null checks that will be
considered for transformation into implicit null checks.
The reason for not using profiling data instead of !make.implicit is
explained in the change to `FaultMaps.rst`.
Reviewers: atrick, reames, pgavlin, JosephTremoulet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10824
llvm-svn: 241116
It is mandatory to specify a comdat in order to receive comdat semantics
for a symbol. We were previously getting this wrong in -function-sections
mode; linker-weak symbols were being emitted in a selectany comdat. This
change causes such symbols to use a noduplicates comdat instead, fixing
the inconsistency.
Also correct an inaccuracy in the docs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10828
llvm-svn: 241103
Summary:
Really check if %SP is not used in other places, instead of checking only exact
one non-dbg use.
Patched by Xuetian Weng.
Test Plan:
@foo4 in test/CodeGen/NVPTX/local-stack-frame.ll, create a case that
SP will appear twice.
Reviewers: jholewinski, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sfantao, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10844
llvm-svn: 241099
This commit implements serialization of the machine basic block successors. It
uses a YAML flow sequence that contains strings that have the MBB references.
The MBB references in those strings use the same syntax as the MBB machine
operands in the machine instruction strings.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10699
llvm-svn: 241093
Duplicating an FP register "as itself" is a bad idea, since it violates the
invariant that every FP register is mapped to at most one FPU stack slot.
Use the scratch FP register instead.
This fixes PR23957.
llvm-svn: 241069
These directives are used to set the default value of the SoftFloat feature.
They have the same effect as setting -m{soft, hard}-float from the command line.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9073
llvm-svn: 241066
A call to removeEmptySubranges() is necessary after every operation that
potentially removes all segments from a subregister range; this case in
the register coalescer was missing.
llvm-svn: 241027
It is meant to be used to record modules @imported by the current
compile unit, so a debugger an import the same modules to replicate this
environment before dropping into the expression evaluator.
DIModule is a sibling to DINamespace and behaves quite similarly.
In addition to the name of the module it also records the module
configuration details that are necessary to uniquely identify the module.
This includes the configuration macros (e.g., -DNDEBUG), the include path
where the module.map file is to be found, and the isysroot.
The idea is that the backend will turn this into a DW_TAG_module.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9614
rdar://problem/20965932
llvm-svn: 241017
This change unifies how LTOModule and the backend obtain linker flags
for globals: via a new TargetLoweringObjectFile member function named
emitLinkerFlagsForGlobal. A new function LTOModule::getLinkerOpts() returns
the list of linker flags as a single concatenated string.
This change affects the C libLTO API: the function lto_module_get_*deplibs now
exposes an empty list, and lto_module_get_*linkeropts exposes a single element
which combines the contents of all observed flags. libLTO should never have
tried to parse the linker flags; it is the linker's job to do so. Because
linkers will need to be able to parse flags in regular object files, it
makes little sense for libLTO to have a redundant mechanism for doing so.
The new API is compatible with the old one. It is valid for a user to specify
multiple linker flags in a single pragma directive like this:
#pragma comment(linker, "/defaultlib:foo /defaultlib:bar")
The previous implementation would not have exposed
either flag via lto_module_get_*deplibs (as the test in
TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF::getDepLibFromLinkerOpt was case sensitive)
and would have exposed "/defaultlib:foo /defaultlib:bar" as a single flag via
lto_module_get_*linkeropts. This may have been a bug in the implementation,
but it does give us a chance to fix the interface.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10548
llvm-svn: 241010
When the store sequence being combined actually stores the base register, we
should not mark it as killed until the end.
rdar://21504262
llvm-svn: 241003
This is a new version of http://reviews.llvm.org/D10260.
It turned out that when you specify an integer register in inline asm on
x86 you get the register of the required type size back. That means that
X86TargetLowering::getRegForInlineAsmConstraint() has to accept any of
the integer registers and adapt its size to the given target size which
may be any 8/16/32/64 bit sized type. Surprisingly that means given a
constraint of "{ax}" and a type of MVT::F32 we need to return X86::EAX.
This change makes this face explicit, the previous code seemed like
working by accident because there it never returned an error once a
register was found. On the other hand this rewrite allows to actually
return errors for invalid situations like requesting an integer register
for an i128 type.
Related to rdar://21042280
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10813
llvm-svn: 241002
Set debug location for terminator instruction in loop backedge block
(which is an unconditional jump to loop header). We can't copy debug
location from original backedges, as there can be several of them,
with different debug info locations. So, we follow the approach of
SplitBlockPredecessors, and copy the debug info from first non-PHI
instruction in the header (i.e. destination block).
This is yet another change for PR23837.
llvm-svn: 240999
Summary: This patch fixes the cases of sext/zext constant folding in DAG combiner where constans do not fit 64 bits. The fix simply removes un$
Test Plan: New regression test included.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: RKSimon, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10607
llvm-svn: 240991
This commit implements serialization of the register mask machine
operands. This commit serializes only the call preserved register
masks that are defined by a target, it doesn't serialize arbitrary
register masks.
This commit also extends the TargetRegisterInfo class and TableGen so that
the users of TRI can get the list of all the call preserved register masks and
their names.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10673
llvm-svn: 240966
This moves the error checking for string tables to getStringTable which returns
an ErrorOr<StringRef>.
This improves error checking, makes it uniform across all string tables and
makes it possible to check them once instead of once per name.
llvm-svn: 240950
Some of the the permissible ARM -mfpu options, which are supported in GCC,
are currently not present in llvm/clang.This patch adds the options:
'neon-fp16', 'vfpv3-fp16', 'vfpv3-d16-fp16', 'vfpv3xd' and 'vfpv3xd-fp16.
These are related to half-precision floating-point and single precision.
Reviewers: rengolin, ranjeet.singh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10645
llvm-svn: 240930
We had a hack in SDAGBuilder in place to work around this but now we
can avoid that. Call BuildExactSDIV from BuildSDIV so DAGCombiner can
perform this trick automatically.
The added check in DAGCombiner is necessary to prevent exact sdiv by pow2
from regressing as the target-specific pow2 lowering is not aware of
exact bits yet.
This is mostly covered by existing tests. One side effect is that we
get the better lowering for exact vector sdivs now too :)
llvm-svn: 240891
the DW_AT_bit_offset computation, the byte offset is in fact also
endian-dependent as it needs to point to the storage unit containing the
most-significant bit of the the bitfield.
I'm so looking forward to emitting the endian-agnostic DWARF 3 version
instead.
llvm-svn: 240890
Summary:
Previously it (incorrectly) used GPR's.
Patch by Simon Dardis. A couple small corrections by myself.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10567
llvm-svn: 240883
If we are dealing with a pointer induction variable, isInductionPHI
gives back a step value of Stride / size of pointer. However, we might
be indexing with a legal type wider than the pointer width.
Handle this by inserting casts where appropriate instead of crashing.
This fixes PR23954.
llvm-svn: 240877
The PruneEH pass tries to annotate functions as 'noreturn' if it doesn't
see a ReturnInst. However, a naked function containing inline assembly
can contain control flow leaving the function.
This fixes PR23971.
llvm-svn: 240876
This case had been failing on testers that didn't have x86 support. Rather
than XFAIL it on testers without x86 support, I've just assembled it and used
the raw object as the test input.
llvm-svn: 240875
Summary:
The current implementation doesn't always flush all pending labels
beforeemitting data which can result in an incorrectly placed labels in
case when when instruction bundling is enabled and -mc-relax-all flag is
being used. To address this issue, we always flush pending labels before
emitting data.
The change was tested by running PNaCl toolchain trybots with
-mc-relax-all flag set.
Fixes https://code.google.com/p/nativeclient/issues/detail?id=4063
Test Plan: Regression test attached
Reviewers: mseaborn
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10325
llvm-svn: 240870
Summary:
Ensure that fragments are bundle aligned when instruction bundling
is enabled and the -mc-relax-all flag is set. This is implicitly
assumed by the bundle padding implementation but this assumption
does not hold when custom alignment is being used.
The change was tested by running PNaCl toolchain trybots with
-mc-relax-all flag set.
Fixes https://code.google.com/p/nativeclient/issues/detail?id=4063
Test Plan: Regression test attached
Reviewers: mseaborn
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10044
llvm-svn: 240869
It is possible for a global to be substituted with another global of a
different type or a different kind (i.e. an alias) at IR link time. One
example of this scenario is when a Microsoft ABI vtable is substituted with
an alias referring to a larger vtable containing an RTTI reference.
This will cause the global to be RAUW'd with a possibly bitcasted reference
to the other global. This will of course also affect any references to the
global in bitset metadata.
The right way to handle such metadata is simply to ignore it. This is sound
because the linked module should contain another copy of the bitset entries as
applied to the new global.
llvm-svn: 240866
The parser provides a convenient interface for reading llvm stackmap v1 sections
in object files.
This patch also includes a new option for llvm-readobj, '-stackmap', which uses
the parser to pretty-print stackmap sections for debugging/testing purposes.
llvm-svn: 240860
This commit serializes the global address machine operands.
This commit doesn't serialize the operand's offset and target
flags, it serializes only the global value reference.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10671
llvm-svn: 240851
This change extends the detection of base pointers for vector constructs to handle arbitrary phi and select nodes. The existing non-vector code already handles those, so this is basically just extending the vector special case to be less special cased. It still isn't generalized vector handling since we can't handle arbitrary vector instructions (e.g. shufflevectors), but it's a lot closer.
The general structure of the change is as follows:
* Extend the base defining value relation over a subset of vector instructions and vector typed phi & select instructions.
* Move scalarization from before base pointer rewriting to after base pointer rewriting. The extension of the BDV relation is sufficient to find vector base phis for vector inputs.
* Preserve the existing special case logic for when the base of a vector element is locally obvious. This general idea could be extended to the scalar case as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10461#inline-84275
llvm-svn: 240850
Summary:
Some front ends make kernel pointers global already. In that case,
handlePointerParams does nothing.
Test Plan: more tests in lower-kernel-ptr-arg.ll
Reviewers: grosser
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10779
llvm-svn: 240849
Summary: We need to set MTYPE = 2 for VI shaders when targeting the HSA runtime.
Reviewers: arsenm
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10777
llvm-svn: 240841
We support invoking a subset of llvm's intrinsics, but the verifier didn't account for this. We had previously added a special case to verify invokes of statepoints. By generalizing the code in terms of CallSite, we can verify invokes of other intrinsics as well. Interestingly, this found one test case which was invalid.
Note: I'm deliberately leaving the naming change from CI to CS to a follow up change. That will happen shortly, I just wanted to reduce the diff to make it clear what was happening with this one.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10118
llvm-svn: 240836
Summary:
This way the function symbol points to the start of amd_kernel_code_t
rather than the start of the function.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10705
llvm-svn: 240829
If we have a caller that knows a particular argument can never be null, we can exploit this fact while simplifying values in the inline cost analysis. This has the effect of reducing the cost for inlining when a null check is present in the callee, but the value is known non null in the caller. In particular, any dependent control flow can be discounted from the cost estimate.
Note that we use the parameter attributes at the call site to memoize the analysis within the caller's code. The setting of this attribute is done in InstCombine, the inline cost analysis just consumes it. This is intentional and important because we want the inline cost analysis results to be easily cachable themselves. We're not currently doing so, but initial results on LTO indicate this will quickly become important.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9129
llvm-svn: 240828
If pseudoToMCOpcode failed, we would return the original opcode, so operands
would be swapped, but the instruction would remain the same.
It resulted in LSHLREV a, b ---> LSHLREV b, a.
This fixes Glamor text rendering and
piglit/arb_sample_shading-builtin-gl-sample-mask on VI.
This is a candidate for stable branches.
v2: the test was simplified by Tom Stellard
llvm-svn: 240824
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10638
This is the back end portion of patch
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10637
It just adds the code gen and intrinsic functions necessary to support that patch to the back end.
llvm-svn: 240820
This patch fixes the error in ARM.td which stated that Cortex-R5
floating point unit can do only single precision, when it can do double as well.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10769
llvm-svn: 240799
Summary:
Scalar evolution does not propagate the non-wrapping flags to values
that are derived from a non-wrapping induction variable because
the non-wrapping property could be flow-sensitive.
This change is a first attempt to establish the non-wrapping property in
some simple cases. The main idea is to look through the operations
defining the pointer. As long as we arrive to a non-wrapping AddRec via
a small chain of non-wrapping instruction, the pointer should not wrap
either.
I believe that this essentially is what Andy described in
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.cvs/220731 as the way
forward.
Reviewers: aschwaighofer, nadav, sanjoy, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10472
llvm-svn: 240798
This commit serializes machine basic block operands. The
machine basic block operands use the following syntax:
%bb.<id>[.<name>]
This commit also modifies the YAML representation for the
machine basic blocks - a new, required field 'id' is added
to the MBB YAML mapping.
The id is used to resolve the MBB references to the
actual MBBs. And while the name of the MBB can be
included in a MBB reference, this name isn't used to
resolve MBB references - as it's possible that multiple
MBBs will reference the same BB and thus they will have the
same name. If the name is specified, the parser will verify
that it is equal to the name of the MBB with the specified id.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10608
llvm-svn: 240792
Summary:
This only adds support for ULW of an immediate address with/without a source register.
It does not include support for ULW of the address of a symbol.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9663
llvm-svn: 240782
Cortex-R4F TRM states that fpu supports both single and double precision.
This patch corrects the information in ARM.td file and corresponding test.
Reviewers: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10763
llvm-svn: 240776
Do not instrument globals that are placed in sections containing "__llvm"
in their name.
This fixes a bug in ASan / PGO interoperability. ASan interferes with LLVM's
PGO, which places its globals into a special section, which is memcpy-ed by
the linker as a whole. When those goals are instrumented, ASan's memcpy wrapper
reports an issue.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10541
llvm-svn: 240723
While looking at a couple of bugs in the debug info output for bitfields
I noticed that there wasn't a single regression test to test my changes
against, so here's a start.
llvm-svn: 240717
r224810 fixed the handling of macro debug locations in AsmParser. This patch
fixes the logic to actually do what was intended: it uses the first macro of
the macro stack instead of the last one. The updated testcase shows that the
current scheme doesn't work when macro instanciations are nested and multiple
files are used.
Reviewers: compnerd
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10463
llvm-svn: 240705
Summary:
Fixes PR23809. Without passing the context to SimplifyICmpInst, we would
use the assume to prove that the condition feeding the assume is
trivially true (see isValidAssumeForContext in ValueTracking.cpp),
causing the removal of the assume which may be useful for later
optimizations.
Test Plan: pr23800.ll
Reviewers: hfinkel, majnemer
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: henryhu, llvm-commits, wengxt, broune, meheff, eliben
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10695
llvm-svn: 240683
This previously caused miscompilations as a result of phi nodes receiving
undef incoming values from blocks dominated by such successors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10726
llvm-svn: 240670
This patch adds support for the vector merge even word and vector merge odd word
instructions introduced in POWER8.
Phabricator review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10704
llvm-svn: 240650
Check for symbols in MCValue before using them. Bail out early in case
they are null. This fixes PR23779.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10712
rdar://problem/21532830
llvm-svn: 240649
Summary:
In an expression such as "(((a+b)+c)+d)", parseParenExpression() would only parse the "a+b)+c", which would result in an error later on in the parser.
This means that we can only parse one level of inner parentheses.
In order to fix this, I added a new function called parseParenExprOfDepth(), which parses a specified number of trailing parenthesis expressions
(except for the outermost parenthesis), and changed MipsAsmParser to use it in parseMemOffset instead of parseParenExpression().
Reviewers: dsanders, rafael
Reviewed By: dsanders, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9742
llvm-svn: 240625
We don't always have FMA, for example when using 'clang -mavx512f'
without an explicit CPU.
Also check for an explicit +avx512f instead of CPUs in a couple
related tests.
llvm-svn: 240616
Summary
This change turns on the emission of
__LLVM_Stackmaps section when generating COFF binaries.
Test Plan
Added a scenario to the test case:
test\CodeGen\X86\statepoint-stackmap-format.ll.
Code Review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10680
llvm-svn: 240613
We performed a simple, but incomplete, intersection when it came time to
CSE instructions. It didn't handle, for example, the 'exact' flag.
This fixes PR23922.
llvm-svn: 240595
Reassociate mutated existing instructions in order to form negations
which would create additional reassociate opportunities.
This fixes PR23926.
llvm-svn: 240593
Summary:
This patch first change the register that holds local address for stack
frame to %SPL. Then the new NVPTXPeephole pass will try to scan the
following pattern
%vreg0<def> = LEA_ADDRi64 <fi#0>, 4
%vreg1<def> = cvta_to_local %vreg0
and transform it into
%vreg1<def> = LEA_ADDRi64 %VRFrameLocal, 4
Patched by Xuetian Weng
Test Plan: test/CodeGen/NVPTX/local-stack-frame.ll
Reviewers: jholewinski, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: eliben, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10549
llvm-svn: 240587
This commit serializes the 3 scalar boolean attributes from the
MachineRegisterInfo class: IsSSA, TracksRegLiveness, and
TracksSubRegLiveness. These attributes are serialized as part
of the machine function YAML mapping.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10618
llvm-svn: 240579
Summary:
Because LSR happens at a late stage where mul of a power of 2 is
typically canonicalized to shl, this canonicalization emits code that
can be better CSE'ed.
Test Plan:
Transforms/LoopStrengthReduce/shl.ll shows how this change makes GVN more
powerful. Fixes some existing tests due to this change.
Reviewers: sanjoy, majnemer, atrick
Reviewed By: majnemer, atrick
Subscribers: majnemer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10448
llvm-svn: 240573
This commit serializes the null register machine operands.
It uses the '_' keyword to represent them, but the parser
also allows the '%noreg' named register syntax.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10580
llvm-svn: 240558
With option OptForSize enabled, the Loop Vectorizer is not supposed to
create tail loop. The condition checking that was invalid and was not
matching to the comment above.
Patch by Marianne Mailhot-Sarrasin.
llvm-svn: 240556
Summary:
This patch fixes PR23405 (https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23405).
During a node unscheduling an entry in LiveRegGens can be replaced with a new value. That corrupts the live reg tracking and LiveReg* structure is not cleared as should be during unscheduling. Problematic condition that enforces Gen replacement is `I->getSUnit()->getHeight() < LiveRegGens[I->getReg()]->getHeight()`. This condition should be checked only if LiveRegGen was set in current node unscheduling.
Test Plan: Regression test included.
Reviewers: hfinkel, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9993
llvm-svn: 240538
COFF and MachO only define symbol sizes for common symbols. Reflect that
in the class hierarchy by having a method for common symbols only in the base
and a general one in ELF.
This avoids the need of using a magic value for the size, which had a few
problems
* Most callers didn't check for it.
* The ones that did could not tell the magic value from a file actually having
that value.
llvm-svn: 240529
We used to erroneously match:
(v4i64 shuffle (v2i64 load), <0,0,0,0>)
Whereas vbroadcasti128 is more like:
(v4i64 shuffle (v2i64 load), <0,1,0,1>)
This problem doesn't exist for vbroadcastf128, which kept matching
the intrinsic after r231182. We should perhaps re-introduce the
intrinsic here as well, but that's a separate issue still being
discussed.
While there, add some proper vbroadcastf128 tests. We don't currently
match those, like for loading vbroadcastsd/ss on AVX (the reg-reg
broadcasts where added in AVX2).
Fixes PR23886.
llvm-svn: 240488
This commit translates the source locations for MIParser diagnostics from
the locations in the machine instruction string to the locations in the
MIR file.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10574
llvm-svn: 240474
Currently some users of this function do this explicitly, and all the
rest forget to do this.
ThreadSanitizer was one of such users, and had missing debug
locations for calls into TSan runtime handling atomic operations,
eventually leading to poorly symbolized stack traces and malfunctioning
suppressions.
This is another change relevant to PR23837.
llvm-svn: 240460
This commit introduces functionality that's used to serialize machine operands.
Only the physical register operands are serialized by this commit.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10525
llvm-svn: 240425
Only common symbol on MachO and COFF have a size.
For COFF we already had a custom format.
For MachO, there is no native objdump and we were printing it as ELF. Now
we only print the sizes for symbols that actually have them.
llvm-svn: 240422
Summary:
This only adds support for ULHU of an immediate address with/without a source register.
It does not include support for ULHU of the address of a symbol.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9671
llvm-svn: 240410
So far, LLVM has not emitted correct addend for N64 and N32 ABI. This patch
fixes that. It also removes fixup from MCJIT for R_MIPS_PC16 relocation.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10565
llvm-svn: 240404
This causes errors like:
ld: error: blah.o: requires dynamic R_X86_64_PC32 reloc against '' which
may overflow at runtime; recompile with -fPIC
blah.cc:function f(): error: undefined reference to ''
blah.o:g(): error: undefined reference to ''
I have not yet come up with an appropriate reproduction.
llvm-svn: 240394
Dissasembly tests depends on target. The problem is that it disable
all tests if all targets are not compiled. This moves things around in
order to get target specific code in a target specific folder.
Patch by Amaury Sechet. Thanks!
llvm-svn: 240380
Currently ( D10321, http://reviews.llvm.org/rL239486 ), we can use the machine combiner pass
to reassociate the following sequence to reduce the critical path:
A = ? op ?
B = A op X
C = B op Y
-->
A = ? op ?
B = X op Y
C = A op B
'op' is currently limited to x86 AVX scalar FP adds (with fast-math on), but in theory, it could
be any associative math/logic op (see TODO in code comment).
This patch generalizes the pattern match to ignore the instruction that defines 'A'. So instead of
a sequence of 3 adds, we now only need to find 2 dependent adds and decide if it's worth
reassociating them.
This generalization has a compile-time cost because we can now match more instruction sequences
and we rely more heavily on the machine combiner to discard sequences where reassociation doesn't
improve the critical path.
For example, in the new test case:
A = M div N
B = A add X
C = B add Y
We'll match 2 reassociation patterns, but this transform doesn't reduce the critical path:
A = M div N
B = A add Y
C = B add X
We need the combiner to reject that pattern but select this:
A = M div N
B = X add Y
C = B add A
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10460
llvm-svn: 240361
As with the previous patch, the goal is to turn the class into a general
loop-versioning class. This patch removes any references to loop
distribution.
llvm-svn: 240352
The reason we need to search by name rather than by Triple::ArchType
is to handle subarchitecture correclty. There is no different ArchType
for the x86_64h architecture (it identifies itself as x86_64), or for
the various ARM subarches. The only way to get to the subarch slice
in an universal binary is to search by name.
This issue led to hard to debug and transient symbolication failures
in Asan tests (it mostly works, because the files are very similar).
This also affects the Profiling infrastucture as it is the other user
of that API.
Reviewers: samsonov, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10604
llvm-svn: 240339
The _Int instructions are special, in that they operate on the full
VR128 instead of FR32. The load folding then looks at MOVSS, at the
user, and bails out when it sees a size mismatch.
What we really know is that the rm_Int instructions don't load the
higher lanes, so folding is fine.
This happens for the straightforward intrinsic code, e.g.:
_mm_add_ss(a, _mm_load_ss(p));
Fixes PR23349.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10554
llvm-svn: 240326
This commit adds a function that tokenizes the string containing
the machine instruction. This commit also adds a struct called
'MIToken' which is used to represent the lexer's tokens.
Reviewers: Sean Silva
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10521
llvm-svn: 240323
This avoids creating an unnecessary undefined reference on targets such as
NVPTX that require such references to be declared in asm output.
llvm-svn: 240321
According to the documentation, .thumb_set is 'the equivalent of a .set directive'.
We didn't have equivalent behaviour in terms of all the errors we could throw, for
example, when a symbol is redefined.
This change refactors parseAssignment so that it can be used by .set and .thumb_set
and implements tests for .thumb_set for all the errors thrown by that method.
Reviewed by Rafael Espíndola.
llvm-svn: 240318
D8982 ( checked in at http://reviews.llvm.org/rL239001 ) added command-line
options to allow reciprocal estimate instructions to be used in place of
divisions and square roots.
This patch changes the default settings for x86 targets to allow that recip
codegen (except for scalar division because that breaks too much code) when
using -ffast-math or its equivalent.
This matches GCC behavior for this kind of codegen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10396
llvm-svn: 240310
Summary:
The parser is exercised by llvm-objdump using -print-fault-maps. As is
probably obvious, the code itself was "heavily inspired" by
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10434.
Reviewers: reames, atrick, JosephTremoulet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10491
llvm-svn: 240304
Now that pr23900 is fixed, we can bring it back with no changes.
Original message:
Make all temporary symbols unnamed.
What this does is make all symbols that would otherwise start with a .L
(or L on MachO) unnamed.
Some of these symbols still show up in the symbol table, but we can just
make them unnamed.
In order to make sure we produce identical results when going thought assembly,
all .L (not just the compiler produced ones), are now unnamed.
Running llc on llvm-as.opt.bc, the peak memory usage goes from 208.24MB to
205.57MB.
llvm-svn: 240302
This commit implements initial machine instruction serialization. It
serializes machine instruction names. The instructions are represented
using a YAML sequence of string literals and are a part of machine
basic block YAML mapping.
This commit introduces a class called 'MIParser' which will be used to
parse the machine instructions and operands.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10481
llvm-svn: 240295
Summary: The code responsible for shl folding in the DAGCombiner was assuming incorrectly that all constants are less than 64 bits. This patch simply changes the way values are compared.
Test Plan: A regression test included.
Reviewers: andreadb
Reviewed By: andreadb
Subscribers: andreadb, test, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10602
llvm-svn: 240291
Summary: In this case, we're supposed to load the immediate in AT and then ADDu it with the source register and put it in the destination register.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9367
llvm-svn: 240278
Summary:
In this case, we're supposed to load the address of the symbol in AT and then ADDu it with the source register and
put it in the destination register.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9366
llvm-svn: 240273
This allows more call sequences to use pushes instead of movs when optimizing for size.
In particular, calling conventions that pass some parameters in registers (e.g. thiscall) are now supported.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10500
llvm-svn: 240257
If we don't know how to represent a .debug_loc entry, skip the entry
entirely rather than emitting an empty one. Similarly, if a .debug_loc
list has no entries, don't create the list.
We still want to create the variables, just in an optimized-out form
that doesn't have a DW_AT_location.
llvm-svn: 240244
Sparse switches with profile info are lowered as weight-balanced BSTs. For
example, if the node weights are {1,1,1,1,1,1000}, the right-most node would
end up in a tree by itself, bringing it closer to the top.
However, a leaf in this BST can contain up to 3 cases, and having a single
case in a leaf node as in the example means the tree might become
unnecessarily high.
This patch adds a heauristic to the pivot selection algorithm that moves more
cases into leaf nodes unless that would lower their rank. It still doesn't
yield the optimal tree in every case, but I believe it's conservatibely correct.
llvm-svn: 240224
Merged separate (but equivalent) SSE2/AVX512F tests.
Removed codegen tests since these are already done better in test/CodeGen/X86.
The actual cost values still need to be updated to match recent codegen improvements.
llvm-svn: 240219
Summary:
Since FunctionMap has llvm::Function pointers as keys, the order in
which the traversal happens can differ from run to run, causing spurious
FileCheck failures. Have CallGraph::print sort the CallGraphNodes by
name before printing them.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10575
llvm-svn: 240191
This patch changes getRelocationAddend to use ErrorOr and considers it an error
to try to get the addend of a REL section.
If, for example, a x86_64 file has a REL section, that file is corrupted and
we should reject it.
Using ErrorOr is not ideal since we check the section type once per relocation
instead of once per section.
Checking once per section would involve getRelocationAddend just asserting and
callers checking the section before iterating over the relocations.
In any case, this is an improvement and includes a test.
llvm-svn: 240176
This commit implements the initial serialization of machine basic blocks in a
machine function. Only the simple, scalar MBB attributes are serialized. The
reference to LLVM IR's basic block is preserved when that basic block has a name.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10465
llvm-svn: 240145
What this does is make all symbols that would otherwise start with a .L
(or L on MachO) unnamed.
Some of these symbols still show up in the symbol table, but we can just
make them unnamed.
In order to make sure we produce identical results when going thought assembly,
all .L (not just the compiler produced ones), are now unnamed.
Running llc on llvm-as.opt.bc, the peak memory usage goes from 208.24MB to
205.57MB.
llvm-svn: 240130
Currently, we canonicalize shuffles that produce a result larger than
their operands with:
shuffle(concat(v1, undef), concat(v2, undef))
->
shuffle(concat(v1, v2), undef)
because we can access quad vectors (see PerformVECTOR_SHUFFLECombine).
This is useful in the general case, but there are special cases where
native shuffles produce larger results: the two-result ops.
We can look through the concat when lowering them:
shuffle(concat(v1, v2), undef)
->
concat(VZIP(v1, v2):0, :1)
This lets us generate the native shuffles instead of scalarizing to
dozens of VMOVs.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10424
llvm-svn: 240118
The test 'llvm/test/CodeGen/MIR/machine-function.mir' was disabled on
x86 msc18 in r239805 as it failed. My commit r240054 have fixed the
problem, so this commit reverts the commit that disabled the test as
it should pass now.
llvm-svn: 240074
In a relocation target can take 3 basic forms
* A r_value in scattered relocations.
* A symbol in external relocations.
* A section is non-external relocations.
Have the dump reflect that. With this change we go from
CHECK-NEXT: Extern: 0
CHECK-NEXT: Type: X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR (5)
CHECK-NEXT: Symbol: 0x2
CHECK-NEXT: Scattered: 0
To just
// CHECK-NEXT: Type: X86_64_RELOC_SUBTRACTOR (5)
// CHECK-NEXT: Section: __data (2)
Since the relocation is with a section, we print the seciton name and don't
need to say that it is not scattered or external.
Someone motivated can add further special cases for things like
ARM64_RELOC_ADDEND and ARM_RELOC_PAIR.
llvm-svn: 240073
To same compile time, the analysis to find dense case-clusters in switches is
not done at -O0. However, when the whole switch is dense enough, it is easy to
turn it into a jump table, resulting in much faster code with no extra effort.
llvm-svn: 240071
1. Used update_llc_test_checks.py to tighten checks
2. Fixed triple (nothing Darwin-specific here)
3. Replaced CPU specifiers with attributes
4. Fixed comments
5. Removed IvyBridge run because it did not add any coverage
llvm-svn: 240058
Summary:
Currently intrinsics don't affect the creation of the call graph.
This is not accurate with respect to statepoint and patchpoint
intrinsics -- these do call (or invoke) LLVM level functions.
This change fixes this inconsistency by adding a call to the external
node for call sites that call these non-leaf intrinsics. This coupled
with the fact that these intrinsics also escape the function pointer
they call gives us a conservatively correct call graph.
Reviewers: reames, chandlerc, atrick, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10526
llvm-svn: 240039
They had been getting emitted as a section + offset reference, which
is bogus since the value needs to be the offset within the GOT, not
the actual address of the symbol's object.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10441
llvm-svn: 240020
- zext the value to alloc size first, then check if the value repeats
with zero padding included. If so we can still emit a .space
- Do the checking with APInt.isSplat(8), which handles non-pow2 types
- Also handle large constants (bit width > 64)
- In a ConstantArray all elements have the same type, so it's sufficient
to check the first constant recursively and then just compare if all
following constants are the same by pointer compare
llvm-svn: 239977
Added explicit sign extension for v4i16/v8i16 to v4i32/v8i32 before conversion to floats. Matches existing support for v4i8/v8i8.
Follow up to D10433
llvm-svn: 239966
Summary:
This is done by first adding two additional instructions to convert the
alloca returned address to local and convert it back to generic. Then
replace all uses of alloca instruction with the converted generic
address. Then we can rely NVPTXFavorNonGenericAddrSpace pass to combine
the generic addresscast and the corresponding Load, Store, Bitcast, GEP
Instruction together.
Patched by Xuetian Weng (xweng@google.com).
Test Plan: test/CodeGen/NVPTX/lower-alloca.ll
Reviewers: jholewinski, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: meheff, broune, eliben, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10483
llvm-svn: 239964
The personality routine currently lives in the LandingPadInst.
This isn't desirable because:
- All LandingPadInsts in the same function must have the same
personality routine. This means that each LandingPadInst beyond the
first has an operand which produces no additional information.
- There is ongoing work to introduce EH IR constructs other than
LandingPadInst. Moving the personality routine off of any one
particular Instruction and onto the parent function seems a lot better
than have N different places a personality function can sneak onto an
exceptional function.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10429
llvm-svn: 239940
It's been used before to avoid infinite loops caused by separate CGP
optimizations undoing one another. We found one more such issue
caused by r238054. To avoid it, generalize the "InsertedTruncs"
set to any inst, and use it to avoid touching those again.
llvm-svn: 239938
If globals can be unnamed, there is no reason for aliases to be different.
The restriction was there since the original implementation in r36435. I
can only guess it was there because of the old bison parser for the old
alias syntax.
llvm-svn: 239921
Summary:
This does not include support for the immediate variants of these pseudo-instructions.
Fixes llvm.org/PR20968.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: seanbruno, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8537
llvm-svn: 239905
Summary:
Call MCSymbolRefExpr::create() with a MCSymbol* argument, not with a StringRef
of the Symbol's name, in order to avoid creating invalid temporary symbols for
relative labels (e.g. {$,.L}tmp00, {$,.L}tmp10 etc.).
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10498
llvm-svn: 239901
Summary:
Previously, MCSymbolRefExpr::create() was called with a StringRef of the symbol
name, which it would then search for in the Symbols StringMap (from MCContext).
However, relative labels (which are temporary symbols) are apparently not stored
in the Symbols StringMap, so we end up creating a new {$,.L}tmp symbol
({$,.L}tmp00, {$,.L}tmp10 etc.) each time we create an MCSymbolRefExpr by
passing in the symbol name as a StringRef.
Fortunately, there is a version of MCSymbolRefExpr::create() which takes an
MCSymbol* and we already have an MCSymbol* at that point, so we can just pass
that in instead of the StringRef.
I also removed the local StringRef calls to MCSymbolRefExpr::create() from
expandMemInst(), as those cases can be handled by evaluateRelocExpr() anyway.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9938
llvm-svn: 239897
Change builtin function name and signature ( add third parameter - rounding mode ).
Added tests for intrinsics.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10473
llvm-svn: 239888
The patch triggers a miscompile on SPEC 2006 403.gcc with the (ref)
200.i and scilab.i inputs. I opened PR23866 to track analysis of this.
This reverts commit r238793.
llvm-svn: 239880
This patch enables support for the conversion of v2i32 to v2f64 to use the CVTDQ2PD xmm instruction and stay on the SSE unit instead of scalarizing, sign extending to i64 and using CVTSI2SDQ scalar conversions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10433
llvm-svn: 239855
The original change broke clang side tests. I will be submitting those momentarily. This change includes post commit feedback on the original change from from Pete Cooper.
Original Submission comments:
If a parameter to a function is known non-null, use the existing parameter attributes to record that fact at the call site. This has no optimization benefit by itself - that I know of - but is an enabling change for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9129.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9132
llvm-svn: 239849
Before this patch the bitcode reader would read a module from a file
that contained in order:
* Any number of non MODULE_BLOCK sub blocks.
* One MODULE_BLOCK
* Any number of non MODULE_BLOCK sub blocks.
* 4 '\n' characters to handle OS X's ranlib.
Since we support lazy reading of modules, any information that is relevant
for the module has to be in the MODULE_BLOCK or before it. We don't gain
anything from checking what is after.
This patch then changes the reader to stop once the MODULE_BLOCK has been
successfully parsed.
This avoids the ugly special case for .bc files in an archive and makes it
easier to embed bitcode files.
llvm-svn: 239845
Summary:
When propagating mass through irregular loops, the mass flowing through
each loop header may not be equal. This was causing wrong frequencies
to be computed for irregular loop headers.
Fixed by keeping track of masses flowing through each of the headers in
an irregular loop. To do this, we now keep track of per-header backedge
weights. After the loop mass is distributed through the loop, the
backedge weights are used to re-distribute the loop mass to the loop
headers.
Since each backedge will have a mass proportional to the different
branch weights, the loop headers will end up with a more approximate
weight distribution (as opposed to the current distribution that assumes
that every loop header is the same).
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10348
llvm-svn: 239843
This commit reports an error when a machine function from a MIR file that contains
LLVM IR can't find a function with the same name in the loaded LLVM IR module.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10468
llvm-svn: 239831
The mftb instruction was incorrectly marked as deprecated in the PPC
Backend. Instead, it should not be treated as deprecated, but rather be
implemented using the mfspr instruction. A similar patch was put into GCC last
year. Details can be found at:
https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2014-11/msg00383.html.
This change will replace instances of the mftb instruction with the mfspr
instruction for all CPUs except 601 and pwr3. This will also be the default
behaviour.
Additional details can be found in:
https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=23680
Phabricator review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10419
llvm-svn: 239827
Reapply r239539. Don't assume the collected number of
stores is the same vector size. Just take the first N
stores to fill the vector.
llvm-svn: 239825
Any combination of +-inf/+-inf is NaN so it's already ignored with
nnan and we can skip checking for ninf. Also rephrase logic in comments
a bit.
llvm-svn: 239821
Summary:
Relocs that can be converted from absolute to PC-relative now do so if IsPCRel
is true. Relocs that require PC-relative now call llvm_unreachable() if IsPCRel
is false and similarly those that require absolute assert that IsPCRel is false.
Note that while it looks like some relocs (e.g. R_MIPS_26) can be converted into
the MIPS32r6/MIPS64r6 relocs (R_MIPS_PC*_S2), it isn't actually valid to do so.
Placeholders have been left in the testcase for unsupported relocs and relocs
that cannot be generated at the moment.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rafael
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10184
llvm-svn: 239817
Summary:
GetTarget() may modify TripleName without also updating TheTriple.
This can lead to situations where the MCObjectStreamer has a different triple
to the rest of LLVM.
This inconsistency caused sparc-little-endian.s to pass on Windows because most
of LLVM had sparcel-pc-win32 while MCObjectStreamer had "". I believe the same
kind of thing was also true of Darwin.
Reviewers: rengolin
Reviewed By: rengolin
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rengolin, rafael
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10450
llvm-svn: 239808
When we multiply two 64-bit vectors, we extract lower and upper part and use the PMULUDQ instruction.
When one of the operands is a constant, the upper part may be zero, we know this at compile time.
Example: %a = mul <4 x i64> %b, <4 x i64> < i64 5, i64 5, i64 5, i64 5>.
I'm checking the value of the upper part and prevent redundant "multiply", "shift" and "add" operations.
llvm-svn: 239802
These are really immediate DUPs, and suffer from the same problem
with long instructions with a high/2 variant (e.g. smull).
By extending a MOVI (or DUP, before this patch), we can avoid an ext
on the other operand of the long instruction, e.g. turning:
ext.16b v0, v0, v0, #8
movi.4h v1, #0x53
smull.4s v0, v0, v1
into:
movi.8h v1, #0x53
smull2.4s v0, v0, v1
While there, add a now-necessary combine to fold (VT NVCAST (VT x)).
llvm-svn: 239799
If a parameter to a function is known non-null, use the existing parameter attributes to record that fact at the call site. This has no optimization benefit by itself - that I know of - but is an enabling change for http://reviews.llvm.org/D9129.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9132
llvm-svn: 239795
This commit serializes the simple, scalar attributes from the
'MachineFunction' class.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10449
llvm-svn: 239790
This commit creates a dummy LLVM IR function with one basic block and an unreachable
instruction for each parsed machine function when the MIR file doesn't have LLVM IR.
This change is required as the machine function analysis pass creates machine
functions only for the functions that are defined in the current LLVM module.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10135
llvm-svn: 239778
This commit reports an error when the MIR parser encounters a machine
function with the name that is the same as the name of a different
machine function.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10130
llvm-svn: 239774
constants in commented-out part of LLVMAttribute enum. Add tests that verify
that the safestack attribute is only allowed as a function attribute.
llvm-svn: 239772
This patch adds the safe stack instrumentation pass to LLVM, which separates
the program stack into a safe stack, which stores return addresses, register
spills, and local variables that are statically verified to be accessed
in a safe way, and the unsafe stack, which stores everything else. Such
separation makes it much harder for an attacker to corrupt objects on the
safe stack, including function pointers stored in spilled registers and
return addresses. You can find more information about the safe stack, as
well as other parts of or control-flow hijack protection technique in our
OSDI paper on code-pointer integrity (http://dslab.epfl.ch/pubs/cpi.pdf)
and our project website (http://levee.epfl.ch).
The overhead of our implementation of the safe stack is very close to zero
(0.01% on the Phoronix benchmarks). This is lower than the overhead of
stack cookies, which are supported by LLVM and are commonly used today,
yet the security guarantees of the safe stack are strictly stronger than
stack cookies. In some cases, the safe stack improves performance due to
better cache locality.
Our current implementation of the safe stack is stable and robust, we
used it to recompile multiple projects on Linux including Chromium, and
we also recompiled the entire FreeBSD user-space system and more than 100
packages. We ran unit tests on the FreeBSD system and many of the packages
and observed no errors caused by the safe stack. The safe stack is also fully
binary compatible with non-instrumented code and can be applied to parts of
a program selectively.
This patch is our implementation of the safe stack on top of LLVM. The
patches make the following changes:
- Add the safestack function attribute, similar to the ssp, sspstrong and
sspreq attributes.
- Add the SafeStack instrumentation pass that applies the safe stack to all
functions that have the safestack attribute. This pass moves all unsafe local
variables to the unsafe stack with a separate stack pointer, whereas all
safe variables remain on the regular stack that is managed by LLVM as usual.
- Invoke the pass as the last stage before code generation (at the same time
the existing cookie-based stack protector pass is invoked).
- Add unit tests for the safe stack.
Original patch by Volodymyr Kuznetsov and others at the Dependable Systems
Lab at EPFL; updates and upstreaming by myself.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6094
llvm-svn: 239761
This commit connects the machine function analysis pass (which creates machine
functions) to the MIR parser, which will initialize the machine functions
with the state from the MIR file and reconstruct the machine IR.
This commit introduces a new interface called 'MachineFunctionInitializer',
which can be used to provide custom initialization for the machine functions.
This commit also introduces a new diagnostic class called
'DiagnosticInfoMIRParser' which is used for MIR parsing errors.
This commit modifies the default diagnostic handling in LLVMContext - now the
the diagnostics are printed directly into llvm::errs() so that the MIR parsing
errors can be printed with colours.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9928
llvm-svn: 239753
LLVM targeting aarch64 doesn't correctly produce aligned accesses for non-aligned
data at -O0/fast-isel (-mno-unaligned-access).
The root cause seems to be in fast-isel not producing unaligned access correctly
for -mno-unaligned-access.
The patch just aborts fast-isel for loads and stores when -mno-unaligned-access is
present.
The regression test is updated to check this new test case (-mno-unaligned-access
together with fast-isel).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10360
llvm-svn: 239732
Summary:
ValueTracking used to overwrite the analysis results computed from
assumes and dominating conditions. This patch fixes this issue.
Test Plan: test/Analysis/ValueTracking/assume.ll
Reviewers: hfinkel, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10283
llvm-svn: 239718
Re-commit after adding "-aarch64-neon-syntax=generic" to fix the failure on OS X.
This patch was firstly committed in r239514, then reverted in r239544 because of a syntax incompatible failure on OS X.
llvm-svn: 239711
- Add glc, slc, and tfe operands to flat instructions
- Add missing flat instructions
- Fix the encoding of flat_load_dwordx3 and flat_store_dwordx3.
llvm-svn: 239637
ARMTargetParser::getFPUFeatures should disable fp16 whenever it
disables vfp4, as otherwise something like -mcpu=cortex-a7 -mfpu=none
leaves us with fp16 enabled (though the only effect that will have is
a wrong build attribute).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10397
llvm-svn: 239599
It is valid for globals to be unnamed, but aliases must have a name. To avoid
creating invalid IR, we need to assign names to any aliases we create that
point to unnamed objects that have been moved into combined globals.
llvm-svn: 239590
Summary:
A side effect of this change is that it IRBuilder now automatically
created debug info locations for new instructions, which is the
same as debug location of insertion point. This is fine for the
functions in questions (GetStoreValueForLoad and
GetMemInstValueForLoad), as they are used in two situations:
* GVN::processLoad, which tries to eliminate a load. In this case
new instructions would have the same debug location as the load they
eventually replace;
* MaterializeAdjustedValue, which adds new instructions to the end
of the basic blocks, which could later be used to replace the load
definition. In this case we don't yet know the way the load would
be eventually replaced (either by assembling the precomputed values
via PHI, or by using them directly), so just using the basic block
strategy seems to be reasonable. There is also a special case
in the code that *would* adjust the location of the last
instruction replacing the load definition to the location of the
load.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: echristo, dberlin, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10405
llvm-svn: 239585
We were putting them in the filter field, which is correct for 64-bit
but wrong for 32-bit.
Also switch the order of scope table entry emission so outermost entries
are emitted first, and fix an obvious state assignment bug.
llvm-svn: 239574
This intrinsic is like framerecover plus a load. It recovers the EH
registration stack allocation from the parent frame and loads the
exception information field out of it, giving back a pointer to an
EXCEPTION_POINTERS struct. It's designed for clang to use in SEH filter
expressions instead of accessing the EXCEPTION_POINTERS parameter that
is available on x64.
This required a minor change to MC to allow defining a label variable to
another absolute framerecover label variable.
llvm-svn: 239567
We cannot prepend __imp_ in the IR mangler because a function reference may
be emitted unmangled in a constant initializer. The linker is expected to
resolve such references to thunks. This is covered by the new test case.
Strictly speaking we ought to emit two undefined symbols, one with __imp_ and
one without, as we cannot know which symbol the final object file will refer
to. However, this would require rather intrusive changes to IRObjectFile,
and lld works fine without it for now.
This reimplements r239437, which was reverted in r239502.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10400
llvm-svn: 239560
This improves debug locations in passes that do a lot of basic block
transformations. Important case is LoopUnroll pass, the test for correct
debug locations accompanies this change.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: dblaikie, sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10367
llvm-svn: 239551
Revert "[AArch64] Match interleaved memory accesses into ldN/stN instructions."
Revert "Fixing MSVC 2013 build error."
The test/CodeGen/AArch64/aarch64-interleaved-accesses.ll test was failing on OS X.
llvm-svn: 239544
This only updates one of the uses. The other is used in cases
that may never touch memory, so I'm not sure why this is even
calling it. Perhaps there should be a new, similar hook for such
cases or pass -1 for unknown address space.
llvm-svn: 239540
Now actually stores the non-zero constant instead of 0.
I somehow forgot to include this part of r238108.
The test change was just an independent instruction order swap,
so just add another check line to satisfy CHECK-NEXT.
llvm-svn: 239539
This patch ensures that SHL/SRL/SRA shifts for i8 and i16 vectors avoid scalarization. It builds on the existing i8 SHL vectorized implementation of moving the shift bits up to the sign bit position and separating the 4, 2 & 1 bit shifts with several improvements:
1 - SSE41 targets can use (v)pblendvb directly with the sign bit instead of performing a comparison to feed into a VSELECT node.
2 - pre-SSE41 targets were masking + comparing with an 0x80 constant - we avoid this by using the fact that a set sign bit means a negative integer which can be compared against zero to then feed into VSELECT, avoiding the need for a constant mask (zero generation is much cheaper).
3 - SRA i8 needs to be unpacked to the upper byte of a i16 so that the i16 psraw instruction can be correctly used for sign extension - we have to do more work than for SHL/SRL but perf tests indicate that this is still beneficial.
The i16 implementation is similar but simpler than for i8 - we have to do 8, 4, 2 & 1 bit shifts but less shift masking is involved. SSE41 use of (v)pblendvb requires that the i16 shift amount is splatted to both bytes however.
Tested on SSE2, SSE41 and AVX machines.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9474
llvm-svn: 239509
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D10096
This is the back end portion of the patch related to D10095.
The patch adds the instructions and back end intrinsics for:
vbpermq
vgbbd
llvm-svn: 239505
This reverts commit r239437.
This broke clang-cl self-hosts. We'd end up calling the __imp_ symbol
directly instead of using it to do an indirect function call.
llvm-svn: 239502
If the first argument to a function is a 'this' argument and the second
has the sret attribute, the ArgumentPromotion pass may promote the 'this'
argument to more than one argument, violating the IR constraint that 'sret'
may only be applied to the first or second argument.
Although this IR constraint is arguably unnecessary, it highlighted the fact
that ArgPromotion does not need to preserve this attribute. Dropping the
attribute reduces register pressure in the backend by avoiding the register
copy required by sret. Because sret implies noalias, we also replace the
former with the latter.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10353
llvm-svn: 239488
This is a reimplementation of D9780 at the machine instruction level rather than the DAG.
Use the MachineCombiner pass to reassociate scalar single-precision AVX additions (just a
starting point; see the TODO comments) to increase ILP when it's safe to do so.
The code is closely based on the existing MachineCombiner optimization that is implemented
for AArch64.
This patch should not cause the kind of spilling tragedy that led to the reversion of r236031.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10321
llvm-svn: 239486
Determining proper debug locations for instructions created in
PHITransAddr is tricky. We use a simple approach here and simply copy
debug locations from instructions computing load address to
"corresponding" instructions re-creating the address computation
in predecessor basic blocks.
This may not always be correct, given all the rearrangement and
simplification going on, and debug locations may jump around a lot,
as the basic blocks we copy locations between may be very far from
each other.
Still, this would work good in most simple cases (e.g. when chain
of address computing instruction is short, or our mapping turns out
to be 1-to-1), and we desire to have *some* reasonable debug locations
associated with newly inserted instructions.
See http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351 review thread for more details.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: spatel, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10351
llvm-svn: 239479
During statepoint lowering we can sometimes avoid spilling of the value if we know that it was already spilled for previous statepoint.
We were doing this by checking if incoming statepoint value was lowered into load from stack slot. This was working only in boundaries of one basic block.
But instead of looking at the lowered node we can look directly at the llvm-ir value and if it was gc.relocate (or some simple modification of it) look up stack slot for it's derived pointer and reuse stack slot from it. This allows us to look across basic block boundaries.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10251
llvm-svn: 239472
Use a "safeseh" string attribute to do this. You would think we chould
just accumulate the set of personalities like we do on dwarf, but this
fails to account for the LSDA-loading thunks we use for
__CxxFrameHandler3. Each of those needs to make it into .sxdata as well.
The string attribute seemed like the most straightforward approach.
llvm-svn: 239448
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: eugenis, dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10343
llvm-svn: 239438
Summary:
We used to assume V->RAUW only modifies the operand list of V's user.
However, if V and V's user are Constants, RAUW may replace and invalidate V's
user entirely.
This patch fixes the above issue by letting the caller replace the
operand instead of calling RAUW on Constants.
Test Plan: @nested_const_expr and @rauw in access-non-generic.ll
Reviewers: broune, jholewinski
Reviewed By: broune, jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10345
llvm-svn: 239435
llvm-lib is intended to be a lib.exe compatible utility that also
understands bitcode. The implementation lives in a library so that
lld can use it to implement /lib.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10297
llvm-svn: 239434
This gets all the handler info through to the asm printer and we can
look at the .xdata tables now. I've convinced one small catch-all test
case to work, but other than that, it would be a stretch to say this is
functional.
The state numbering algorithm avoids doing any scope reconstruction as
we do for C++ to simplify the implementation.
llvm-svn: 239433
Store instructions do not modify register values and therefore it's safe
to form a store pair even if the source register has been read in between
the two store instructions.
Previously, the read of w1 (see below) prevented the formation of a stp.
str w0, [x2]
ldr w8, [x2, #8]
add w0, w8, w1
str w1, [x2, #4]
ret
We now generate the following code.
stp w0, w1, [x2]
ldr w8, [x2, #8]
add w0, w8, w1
ret
All correctness tests with -Ofast on A57 with Spec200x and EEMBC pass.
Performance results for SPEC2K were within noise.
llvm-svn: 239432
that was resetting it.
Remove the uses of DisableTailCalls in subclasses of TargetLowering and use
the value of function attribute "disable-tail-calls" instead. Also,
unconditionally add pass TailCallElim to the pipeline and check the function
attribute at the start of runOnFunction to disable the pass on a per-function
basis.
This is part of the work to remove TargetMachine::resetTargetOptions, and since
DisableTailCalls was the last non-fast-math option that was being reset in that
function, we should be able to remove the function entirely after the work to
propagate IR-level fast-math flags to DAG nodes is completed.
Out-of-tree users should remove the uses of DisableTailCalls and make changes
to attach attribute "disable-tail-calls"="true" or "false" to the functions in
the IR.
rdar://problem/13752163
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10099
llvm-svn: 239427
array of bytes. The generation of this byte arrays was expecting
the host to be little endian, which prevents big endian hosts to be
used in the generation of the PTX code. This patch fixes the
problem by changing the way the bytes are extracted so that it
works for either little and big endian.
llvm-svn: 239412
Summary:
For some branches, GAS accepts an immediate instead of the 2nd register operand.
We only implement this for BNE and BEQ for now. Other branch instructions can be added later, if needed.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: seanbruno, emaste, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9666
llvm-svn: 239396
Summary: I noticed an object file with `DW_OP_reg4 DW_OP_breg4 0` as a DWARF expression,
which I traced to a missing break (and `++I`) in this code snippet.
While I was at it, I also added support for a few other corner cases
along the same lines that I could think of.
Test Plan: Hand-crafted test case to exercises these cases is included.
Reviewers: echristo, dblaikie, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10302
llvm-svn: 239380
The following code triggers a fatal error in the compiler instrumentation
of ASan on Darwin because we place the attribute into llvm.metadata section,
which does not have the proper MachO section name.
void foo() __attribute__((annotate("custom")));
void foo() {;}
This commit reorders the checks so that we skip everything in llvm.metadata
first. It also removes the hard failure in case the section name does not
parse. That check will be done lower in the compilation pipeline anyway.
(Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D9093.)
llvm-svn: 239379
Summary:
This cleans up most allocas NVPTXLowerKernelArgs emits for byval
parameters.
Test Plan: makes bug21465.ll more stronger to verify no redundant local load/store.
Reviewers: eliben, jholewinski
Reviewed By: eliben, jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10322
llvm-svn: 239368
We don't want to replace function A by Function B in one module and Function B
by Function A in another module.
If these functions are marked with linkonce_odr we would end up with a function
stub calling B in one module and a function stub calling A in another module. If
the linker decides to pick these two we will have two stubs calling each other.
rdar://21265586
llvm-svn: 239367
on a per-function basis.
Previously some of the passes were conditionally added to ARM's pass pipeline
based on the target machine's subtarget. This patch makes changes to add those
passes unconditionally and execute them conditonally based on the predicate
functor passed to the pass constructors. This enables running different sets of
passes for different functions in the module.
rdar://problem/20542263
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8717
llvm-svn: 239325
While we have some code to transform specification like {ax} into
{eax}/{rax} if the operand type isn't 16bit, we should reject cases
where there is no sane way to do this, like the i128 type in the
example.
Related to rdar://21042280
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10260
llvm-svn: 239309
This patch adds support for system register MMFR4_EL1 (memory model feature register) in the assembler.
This register provides information about the implemented memory model and memory management support.
llvm-svn: 239302
This patch adds R_MIPS_PC32 relocation for Mips64.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10235
llvm-svn: 239301
Implemented DAG lowering for all these forms.
Added tests for DAG lowering and encoding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10310
llvm-svn: 239300
For GEP instructions isDereferenceablePointer checks that all indices are constant and within bounds. Replace this index calculation logic to a call to accumulateConstantOffset. Separated from the http://reviews.llvm.org/D9791
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9874
llvm-svn: 239299
Summary:
We need to add a runtime memcheck for pair of accesses (x,y) where at least one of x and y
are writes.
Assuming we have w writes and r reads, currently this number is estimated as being
w* (w+r-1). This estimation will count (write,write) pairs twice and will overestimate
the number of checks required.
This change adds a getNumberOfChecks method to RuntimePointerCheck, which
will count the number of runtime checks needed (similar in implementation to
needsAnyChecking) and uses it to produce the correct number of runtime checks.
Test Plan:
llvm test suite
spec2k
spec2k6
Performance results: no changes observed (not surprising since the formula for 1 writer is basically the same, which would covers most cases - at least with the current check limit).
Reviewers: anemet
Reviewed By: anemet
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10217
llvm-svn: 239295
Interleaved memory accesses are grouped and vectorized into vector load/store and shufflevector.
E.g. for (i = 0; i < N; i+=2) {
a = A[i]; // load of even element
b = A[i+1]; // load of odd element
... // operations on a, b, c, d
A[i] = c; // store of even element
A[i+1] = d; // store of odd element
}
The loads of even and odd elements are identified as an interleave load group, which will be transfered into vectorized IRs like:
%wide.vec = load <8 x i32>, <8 x i32>* %ptr
%vec.even = shufflevector <8 x i32> %wide.vec, <8 x i32> undef, <4 x i32> <i32 0, i32 2, i32 4, i32 6>
%vec.odd = shufflevector <8 x i32> %wide.vec, <8 x i32> undef, <4 x i32> <i32 1, i32 3, i32 5, i32 7>
The stores of even and odd elements are identified as an interleave store group, which will be transfered into vectorized IRs like:
%interleaved.vec = shufflevector <4 x i32> %vec.even, %vec.odd, <8 x i32> <i32 0, i32 4, i32 1, i32 5, i32 2, i32 6, i32 3, i32 7>
store <8 x i32> %interleaved.vec, <8 x i32>* %ptr
This optimization is currently disabled by defaut. To try it by adding '-enable-interleaved-mem-accesses=true'.
llvm-svn: 239291
Summary:
canUnrollCompletely takes `unsigned` values for `UnrolledCost` and
`RolledDynamicCost` but is passed in `uint64_t`s that are silently
truncated. Because of this, when `UnrolledSize` is a large integer
that has a small remainder with UINT32_MAX, LLVM tries to completely
unroll loops with high trip counts.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10293
llvm-svn: 239218
CVP wants to analyze the condition operand of a select along an edge.
It succeeds in getting back a Constant but not a ConstantInt. Instead,
it gets a ConstantExpr. It then assumes that the Constant must be equal
to false because it isn't equal to true.
Instead, perform an additional comparison.
This fixes PR23752.
llvm-svn: 239217
If we have (select a, b, c), it is sometimes valid to simplify this to a
single select operand. However, doing so is only valid if the
computation doesn't inject poison into the computation.
It might be helpful to consider the following example:
(select (icmp ne %i, INT_MAX), (add nsw %i, 1), INT_MIN)
The select is equivalent to (add %i, 1) but not (add nsw %i, 1).
Self hosting on x86_64 revealed that this occurs very, very rarely so
bailing out is hopefully pretty reasonable.
llvm-svn: 239215
Linking the debug frame section is actually very easy as we just have to
patch the start address in the FDE header and then copy the rest of the
FDE without even looking at it. The only small complexity comes from the
handling of the CIEs that we should unique across object file. This is
also really easy by using a StringMap keyed on the raw contents of the
CIE.
llvm-svn: 239198
The main use of the YAML debug map format is for testing inside LLVM. If we have IR
files in the tests used to generate object files, then we obviously don't know the
addresses of the symbols inside the object files beforehand.
This change lets the YAML import lookup the addresses in the object files and rewrite
them. This will allow to have test that really don't need any binary input.
llvm-svn: 239189
This reverts commit r239141. This commit was an attempt to reintroduce
a previous patch that broke many self-hosting bots with clang timeouts,
but it still has slowdown issues, at least on ARM, increasing the
compilation time (stage 2, clang's) by 5x.
llvm-svn: 239175
For targets with a free fneg, this fold is always a net loss if it
ends up duplicating the multiply, so definitely avoid it.
This might be true for some targets without a free fneg too, but
I'll leave that for future investigation.
llvm-svn: 239167
The new naming is (to me) much easier to understand. Here is a summary
of the new state of the world:
- '*Threshold' is the threshold for full unrolling. It is measured
against the estimated unrolled cost as computed by getUserCost in TTI
(or CodeMetrics, etc). We will exceed this threshold when unrolling
loops where unrolling exposes a significant degree of simplification
of the logic within the loop.
- '*PercentDynamicCostSavedThreshold' is the percentage of the loop's
estimated dynamic execution cost which needs to be saved by unrolling
to apply a discount to the estimated unrolled cost.
- '*DynamicCostSavingsDiscount' is the discount applied to the estimated
unrolling cost when the dynamic savings are expected to be high.
When actually analyzing the loop, we now produce both an estimated
unrolled cost, and an estimated rolled cost. The rolled cost is notably
a dynamic estimate based on our analysis of the expected execution of
each iteration.
While we're still working to build up the infrastructure for making
these estimates, to me it is much more clear *how* to make them better
when they have reasonably descriptive names. For example, we may want to
apply estimated (from heuristics or profiles) dynamic execution weights
to the *dynamic* cost estimates. If we start doing that, we would also
need to track the static unrolled cost and the dynamic unrolled cost, as
only the latter could reasonably be weighted by profile information.
This patch is sadly not without functionality change for the new unroll
analysis logic. Buried in the heuristic management were several things
that surprised me. For example, we never subtracted the optimized
instruction count off when comparing against the unroll heursistics!
I don't know if this just got lost somewhere along the way or what, but
with the new accounting of things, this is much easier to keep track of
and we use the post-simplification cost estimate to compare to the
thresholds, and use the dynamic cost reduction ratio to select whether
we can exceed the baseline threshold.
The old values of these flags also don't necessarily make sense. My
impression is that none of these thresholds or discounts have been tuned
yet, and so they're just arbitrary placehold numbers. As such, I've not
bothered to adjust for the fact that this is now a discount and not
a tow-tier threshold model. We need to tune all these values once the
logic is ready to be enabled.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9966
llvm-svn: 239164
These are added mainly for the benefit of clang, but this also means that they
are now allowed in .fpu directives and we emit the correct .fpu directive when
single-precision-only is used.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10238
llvm-svn: 239151
Summary:
Only restoring AvailableFeatures is not enough and will lead to buggy behaviour.
For example, if we have a feature enabled and we ".set pop", the next time we try
to ".set" that feature nothing will happen because the "!(STI.getFeatureBits()[Feature])"
check will be false, because we didn't restore STI.FeatureBits.
In order to fix this, we need to make MipsAssemblerOptions remember the STI.FeatureBits
instead of the AvailableFeatures and then regenerate AvailableFeatures each time we ".set pop".
This is because, AFAIK, there is no way to convert from AvailableFeatures back to STI.FeatureBits,
but the reverse is possible by using ComputeAvailableFeatures(STI.FeatureBits).
I also moved the updating of AssemblerOptions inside the "if" statement in
setFeatureBits() and clearFeatureBits(), as there is no reason to update if
nothing changes.
Reviewers: dsanders, mkuper
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9156
llvm-svn: 239144
isInductionPHI wants to calculate the stride based on the pointee size.
However, this is not possible when the pointee is zero sized.
This fixes PR23763.
llvm-svn: 239143
Also, moved test cases from CodeGen/X86/fold-buildvector-bug.ll into
CodeGen/X86/buildvec-insertvec.ll and regenerated CHECK lines using
update_llc_test_checks.py.
llvm-svn: 239142
I don't have the IR which is causing the build bot breakage but I can
postulate as to why they are timing out:
1. SimplifyWithOpReplaced was stripping flags from the simplified value.
2. visitSelectInstWithICmp was overriding SimplifyWithOpReplaced because
it's simplification wasn't correct.
3. InstCombine would revisit the add instruction and note that it can
rederive the flags.
4. By modifying the value, we chose to revisit instructions which reuse
the value. One of the instructions is the original select, causing
LLVM to never reach fixpoint.
Instead, strip the flags only when we are sure we are going to perform
the simplification.
llvm-svn: 239141
We cleverly handle cases where computation done in one argument of a select
instruction is suitable for the other operand, thus obviating the need
of the select and the comparison. However, the other operand cannot
have flags.
This fixes PR23757.
llvm-svn: 239115
gc.statepoint intrinsics with a far immediate call target
were lowered incorrectly as pc-rel32 calls.
This change fixes the problem, and generates an indirect call
via a scratch register.
For example:
Intrinsic:
%safepoint_token = call i32 (i64, i32, void ()*, i32, i32, ...) @llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint.p0f_isVoidf(i64 0, i32 0, void ()* inttoptr (i64 140727162896504 to void ()*), i32 0, i32 0, i32 0, i32 0)
Old Incorrect Lowering:
callq 140727162896504
New Correct Lowering:
movabsq $140727162896504, %rax
callq *%rax
In lowerCallFromStatepoint(), the callee-target was modified and
represented as a "TargetConstant" node, rather than a "Constant" node.
Undoing this modification enabled LowerCall() to generate the
correct CALL instruction.
llvm-svn: 239114
Summary:
A small bit that I missed when I updated the X86 backend to account for
the Win64 calling convention on non-Windows. Now we don't use dead
non-volatile registers when emitting a Win64 indirect tail call on
non-Windows.
Should fix PR23710.
Test Plan: Added test for the correct behavior based on the case I posted to PR23710.
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10258
llvm-svn: 239111
Report proper error code from MachOObjectFile constructor if we
can't parse another segment load command (we already return a proper
error if segment load command contents is suspicious).
llvm-svn: 239109
The big/small ordering here is based on signed values so SmallValue will
be INT_MIN and BigValue 0. This shouldn't be a problem but the code
assumed that BigValue always had more bits set than SmallValue.
We used to just miss the transformation, but a recent refactoring of
mine turned this into an assertion failure.
llvm-svn: 239105
Basic block selection involves checking successor BBs for PHI nodes
that depend on the current BB. In case such BBs are found, the value
being selected is a constant and such constant already exists in
current BB, it's value is reused.
This might lead to wrong locations in some situations, especially if
same constant value ends up being materialized twice in two different
ways, which discards that sharing and leaves us with wrong debug
location in the successor BB.
In code this involves the following sequence of calls:
SelectionDAGBuilder::HandlePHINodesInSuccessorBlocks ->
SelectionDAGBuilder::CopyValueToVirtualRegister ->
SelectionDAGBuilder::getNonRegisterValue
llvm-svn: 239089
Now that we can look at users, we can trivially do this: when we would
have otherwise disabled GlobalMerge (currently -O<3), we can just run
it for minsize functions, as it's usually a codesize win.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10054
llvm-svn: 239087
Fix the FIXME and remove this old as(1) compat option. It was useful for
bringup of the integrated assembler to diff object files, but now it's
just causing more relocations than strictly necessary to be generated.
rdar://21201804
llvm-svn: 239084
Summary:
With this patch, NVPTXLowerKernelArgs converts a kernel pointer argument to a
pointer in the global address space. This change, along with
NVPTXFavorNonGenericAddrSpaces, allows the NVPTX backend to emit ld.global.*
and st.global.* for accessing kernel pointer arguments.
Minor changes:
1. refactor: extract function convertToPointerInAddrSpace
2. fix a bug in the test case in bug21465.ll
Test Plan: lower-kernel-ptr-arg.ll
Reviewers: eliben, meheff, jholewinski
Reviewed By: jholewinski
Subscribers: wengxt, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10154
llvm-svn: 239082
Summary:
Properly report the error in segment load commands from MachOObjectFile
constructor instead of crashing the program.
Adjust the test case accordingly.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael, filcab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239081
Summary:
Currently all load commands are parsed in MachOObjectFile constructor.
If the next load command cannot be parsed, or if command size is too
small, properly report it through the error code and fail to construct
the object, instead of crashing the program.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael, filcab
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239080
Summary: Instead, properly report this error from MachOObjectFile constructor.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 239078
Summary:
-march=bpf -> host endian
-march=bpf_le -> little endian
-match=bpf_be -> big endian
Test Plan:
v1 was tested by IBM s390 guys and appears to be working there.
It bit rots too fast here.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10177
llvm-svn: 239071
Method 'visitBUILD_VECTOR' in the DAGCombiner knows how to combine a
build_vector of a bunch of extract_vector_elt nodes and constant zero nodes
into a shuffle blend with a zero vector.
However, method 'visitBUILD_VECTOR' forgot that a floating point
build_vector may contain negative zero as well as positive zero.
Example:
define <2 x double> @example(<2 x double> %A) {
entry:
%0 = extractelement <2 x double> %A, i32 0
%1 = insertelement <2 x double> undef, double %0, i32 0
%2 = insertelement <2 x double> %1, double -0.0, i32 1
ret <2 x double> %2
}
Before this patch, llc (with -mattr=+sse4.1) wrongly generated
movq %xmm0, %xmm0 # xmm0 = xmm0[0],zero
So, the sign bit of the negative zero was effectively lost.
This patch fixes the problem by adding explicit checks for positive zero.
With this patch, llc produces the following code for the example above:
movhpd .LCPI0_0(%rip), %xmm0
where .LCPI0_0 referes to a 'double -0'.
llvm-svn: 239070
* If the input file is missing;
* If the type of input object file can't be recognized;
* If the object file can't be parsed correctly.
llvm-svn: 239065
Now that we sometimes know the address space, this can
theoretically do a better job.
This needs better test coverage, but this mostly depends on
first updating the loop optimizatiosn to provide the address
space.
llvm-svn: 239053
When checking (High - Low + 1).sle(BitWidth), BitWidth would be truncated
to the size of the left-hand side. In the case of this PR, the left-hand
side was i4, so BitWidth=64 got truncated to 0 and the assert failed.
llvm-svn: 239048
Section symbols exist as an optimization: instead of having multiple relocations
point to different symbols, many of them can point to a single section symbol.
When that optimization is unused, a section symbol is also unused and adds no
extra information to the object file.
This saves a bit of space on the object files and makes the output of
llvm-objdump -t easier to read and consequently some tests get quite a bit
simpler.
llvm-svn: 239045
If the compare in a select pattern has another use then it can't be removed, so we'd just
be creating repeated code if we created a min/max node.
Spotted by Matt Arsenault!
llvm-svn: 239037
We don't need to go through LSR to trigger this bug. Instead,
hand-craft a tricky GEP and get the constant folder to hack on it when
parsing the IR.
llvm-svn: 239017
The first try (r238051) to land this was reverted due to ExecutionEngine build failure;
that was hopefully addressed by r238788.
The second try (r238842) to land this was reverted due to BUILD_SHARED_LIBS failure;
that was hopefully addressed by r238953.
This patch adds a TargetRecip class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other x86 CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 239001
With a couple more constructors that GCC thinks are necessary.
Original commit message:
[dsymutil] Accept a YAML debug map as input instead of a binary.
To do this, the user needs to pass the new -y flag.
As it wasn't tested before, the debug map YAML deserialization was
completely buggy (mainly because the DebugMapObject has a dual
mapping that allows to search by name and by address, but only the
StringMap got populated). It's fixed and tested in this commit by
augmenting some test with a 2 stage dwarf link: a frist llvm-dsymutil
reads the debug map and pipes it in a second instance that does the
actual link without touching the initial binary.
llvm-svn: 238959
To do this, the user needs to pass the new -y flag.
As it wasn't tested before, the debug map YAML deserialization was
completely buggy (mainly because the DebugMapObject has a dual
mapping that allows to search by name and by address, but only the
StringMap got populated). It's fixed and tested in this commit by
augmenting some test with a 2 stage dwarf link: a frist llvm-dsymutil
reads the debug map and pipes it in a second instance that does the
actual link without touching the initial binary.
llvm-svn: 238941
As the serialized debug map is becoming a first class citizen, a way
to cleanly dump it is required. We used -parse-only combined with
-v for that purpose before, but it dumps a lot of unrelated debug
stuff. Dumping the debug map was the only use of the -parse-only flag
anyway, so replace it with a more useful option.
llvm-svn: 238940
The existing code would unnecessarily break LDRD/STRD apart with
non-adjacent registers, on thumb2 this is not necessary.
Ideally on thumb2 we shouldn't match for ldrd/strd pre-regalloc anymore
as there is not reason to set register hints anymore, changing that is
something for a future patch however.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9694
Recommiting after the revert in r238821, the buildbot still failed with
the patch removed so there seems to be another reason for the breakage.
llvm-svn: 238935
AVX-512: Implemented GETEXP instruction for KNL and SKX
Added rounding mode modifier for SQRTPS/PD
Added tests for encoding and intrinsics.
CR:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9991
llvm-svn: 238923
The windows buildbot originally failed because the check expressions are
evaluated as 64-bit values, even for 32-bit symbols. Fixed this by comparing
bottom 32-bits of the expressions.
The host/target endian mismatch issue is that it's invalid to read/write target
values using a host pointer without taking care of endian differences between
the target and host. Most (if not all) instances of
reinterpret_cast<uint32_t*>() in the RuntimeDyld are examples of this bug.
This has been fixed for Mips using the endian aware read/write functions.
The original commits were:
r238838:
[mips] Add RuntimeDyld tests for currently supported O32 relocations.
Reviewers: petarj, vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: vkalintiris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10126
r238844:
[mips][mcjit] Add support for R_MIPS_PC32.
Summary:
This allows us to resolve relocations for DW_EH_PE_pcrel TType encodings
in the exception handling LSDA.
Also fixed a nearby typo.
Reviewers: petarj, vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: vkalintiris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10127
llvm-svn: 238915
The ELF spec is very clear:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
If the value is non-zero, it represents a string table index that gives the
symbol name. Otherwise, the symbol table entry has no name.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
In particular, a st_name of 0 most certainly doesn't mean that the symbol has
the same name as the section.
llvm-svn: 238899
Source for the test:
@bloom = global <3 x i32> <i32 0, i32 1, i32 42>
Plus bit twiddling to set the vector numelts to 0 (in the bc file).
llvm-svn: 238894
Summary:
Once a gc.statepoint has been rewritten to relocate live references, the
SSA values represent physical pointers instead of logical references.
Logical dereferencability does not imply physical dereferencability and
after RewriteStatepointsForGC has run any attributes that imply
dereferencability of the logical references need to be stripped.
This current approach is conservative, and can be made more precise
later if needed. For starters, we need to strip dereferencable
attributes only from pointers that live in the GC address space.
Reviewers: reames, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10105
llvm-svn: 238883
Summary:
LLVM's MI level notion of invariant_load is different from LLVM's IR
level notion of invariant_load with respect to dereferenceability. The
IR notion of invariant_load only guarantees that all *non-faulting*
invariant loads result in the same value. The MI notion of invariant
load guarantees that the load can be legally moved to any location
within its containing function. The MI notion of invariant_load is
stronger than the IR notion of invariant_load -- an MI invariant_load is
an IR invariant_load + a guarantee that the location being loaded from
is dereferenceable throughout the function's lifetime.
Reviewers: hfinkel, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10075
llvm-svn: 238881
If the first character in a metadata attachment's name is a digit, it has
to be output using an escape sequence, otherwise it's not valid text IR.
Removed an over-zealous assert from LLVMContext which didn't allow this.
The rule should only apply to text IR. Actual names can have any sequence
of non-NUL bytes.
Also added some documentation on accepted names.
Bug found with AFL fuzz.
llvm-svn: 238867
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
Previous attempts at committing this broke the buildbots due to bugs in IAS.
These bugs have now been fixed so trying again.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238863
As a follow-up to r235955, actually support up to 65535 arguments in a
subprogram. r235955 missed assembly support, having only tested the new
limit via C++ unit tests. Code patch by Amjad Aboud.
llvm-svn: 238854
Summary:
This allows us to resolve relocations for DW_EH_PE_pcrel TType encodings
in the exception handling LSDA.
Also fixed a nearby typo.
Reviewers: petarj, vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: vkalintiris, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10127
llvm-svn: 238844
The first try (r238051) to land this was reverted due to bot failures
that were hopefully addressed by r238788.
This patch adds a TargetRecip class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other x86 CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 238842
Summary:
With this change we are able to realign the stack dynamically, whenever it
contains objects with alignment requirements that are larger than the
alignment specified from the given ABI.
We have to use the $fp register as the frame pointer when we perform
dynamic stack realignment. In complex stack frames, with variably-sized
objects, we reserve additionally the callee-saved register $s7 as the
base pointer in order to reference locals.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8633
llvm-svn: 238829
This reverts commit r238795, as it broke the Thumb2 self-hosting buildbot.
Since self-hosting issues with Clang are hard to investigate, I'm taking the
liberty to revert now, so we can investigate it offline.
llvm-svn: 238821
Summary:
Make mips-expansions.s more readable by grouping the instructions with their respective CHECK's.
This test is going to get a lot bigger soon and it will become essentially unreadable if the current formatting is kept.
I've also made the comments more useful and accurate, and I've restricted the RUN lines to under 80 columns.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10089
llvm-svn: 238817
Summary: These directives are used to set the current value of the SoftFloat feature.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mpf
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9074
llvm-svn: 238813
The existing code would unnecessarily break LDRD/STRD apart with
non-adjacent registers, on thumb2 this is not necessary.
Ideally on thumb2 we shouldn't match for ldrd/strd pre-regalloc anymore
as there is not reason to set register hints anymore, changing that is
something for a future patch however.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9694
llvm-svn: 238795
Previously CCMP/FCCMP instructions were only used by the
AArch64ConditionalCompares pass for control flow. This patch uses them
for SELECT like instructions as well by matching patterns in ISelLowering.
PR20927, rdar://18326194
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8232
llvm-svn: 238793
If a dead instruction we may not only have a last-use in the main live
range but also in a subregister range if subregisters are tracked. We
need to partially rebuild live ranges in both cases.
The testcase only broke when subregister liveness was enabled. I
commited it in the current form because there is currently no flag to
enable/disable subregister liveness.
This fixes PR23720.
llvm-svn: 238785
Doing so will allow us to also accept a YAML debug map in input as using
YAMLIO gives us the parsing for free. Being able to have textual debug
maps will in turn allow much more control over the tests, because 1/
no need to check-in a binary containing the debug map and 2/ it will allow
to use the same objects/IR files with made-up debug-maps to test
different scenari.
llvm-svn: 238781
Summary: Implement bswap intrinsic for MIPS FastISel. It's very different for misp32 r1/r2 .
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
bswap1.ll
test-suite
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7219
llvm-svn: 238760
Summary:
Implement the intrinsics memset, memcopy and memmove in MIPS FastISel.
Make some needed infrastructure fixes so that this can work.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
memtest1.ll
The patch passes test-suite for mips32 r1/r2 and at O0/O2
Reviewers: rkotler, dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7158
llvm-svn: 238759
Summary: Implement the LLVM assembly urem/srem and sdiv/udiv instructions in MIPS FastISel.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
srem1.ll
div1.ll
test-suite at O0/O2 for mips32 r1/r2
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7028
llvm-svn: 238757
Summary: Implement the LLVM IR select statement for MIPS FastISelsel.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
"Make check" test included now.
Passes test-suite at O2/O0 mips32 r1/r2.
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6774
llvm-svn: 238756
Summary:
The contents of the HI/LO registers are unpredictable after the execution of
the MUL instruction. In addition to implicitly defining these registers in the
MUL instruction definition, we have to mark those registers as dead too.
Without this the fast register allocator is running out of registers when the
MUL instruction is followed by another one that tries to allocate the AC0
register.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Reviewers: dsanders, rkotler
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9825
llvm-svn: 238755
Unreachable values may use themselves in strange ways due to their
dominance property. Attempting to translate through them can lead to
infinite recursion, crashing LLVM. Instead, claim that we weren't able
to translate the value.
This fixes PR23096.
llvm-svn: 238702
This fixes a bug in the line info handling in the dwarf code, based on a
problem I when implementing RelocVisitor support for MachO.
Since addr+size will give the first address past the end of the function,
we need to back up one line table entry. Fix this by looking up the
end_addr-1, which is the last address in the range. Note that this also
removes a duplicate output from the llvm-rtdyld line table dump. The
relevant line is the end_sequence one in the line table and has an offset
of the first address part the end of the range and hence should not be
included.
Also factor out the common functionality into a separate function.
This comes up on MachO much more than on ELF, since MachO
doesn't store the symbol size separately, hence making
said situation always occur.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9925
llvm-svn: 238699
The original version didn't properly account for the base register
being modified before the final jump, so caused miscompilations in
Chromium and LLVM. I've fixed this and tested with an LLVM self-host
(I don't have the means to build & test Chromium).
The general idea remains the same: in pathological cases jump tables
can be too far away from the instructions referencing them (like other
constants) so they need to be movable.
Should fix PR23627.
llvm-svn: 238680
This commit adds partial support for MachO relocations to RelocVisitor.
A simple test case is added to show that relocations are indeed being
applied and that using llvm-dwarfdump on MachO files no longer errors.
Correctness is not yet tested, due to an unrelated bug in DebugInfo,
which will be fixed with appropriate testcase in a followup commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8148
llvm-svn: 238663
best approach of each.
For vNi16, we use SHL + ADD + SRL pattern that seem easily the best.
For vNi32, we use the PUNPCK + PSADBW + PACKUSWB pattern. In some cases
there is a huge improvement with this in IACA's estimated throughput --
over 2x higher throughput!!!! -- but the measurements are too good to be
true. In one narrow case, the SHL + ADD + SHL + ADD + SRL pattern looks
slightly faster, but I'm not sure I believe any of the measurements at
this point. Both are the exact same uops though. Hard to be confident of
anything past that.
If anyone wants to collect very detailed (Agner-level) timings with the
result of this patch, or with the i32 case replaced with SHL + ADD + SHl
+ ADD + SRL, I'd be very interested. Note that you'll need to test it on
both Ivybridge and Haswell, with both SSE3, SSSE3, and AVX selected as
I saw unique behavior in each of these buckets with IACA all of which
should be checked against measured performance.
But this patch is still a useful improvement by dropping duplicate work
and getting the much nicer PSADBW lowering for v2i64.
I'd still like to rephrase this in terms of generic horizontal sum. It's
a bit lame to have a special case of that just for popcount.
llvm-svn: 238652
helper that skips creating a cast when it isn't necessary.
It's really somewhat concerning that this was caused by the the presence
of a no-op bitcast, but...
llvm-svn: 238642
shifting vectors of bytes as x86 doesn't have direct support for that.
This removes a bunch of redundant masking in the generated code for SSE2
and SSE3.
In order to avoid the really significant code size growth this would
have triggered, I also factored the completely repeatative logic for
shifting and masking into two lambdas which in turn makes all of this
much easier to read IMO.
llvm-svn: 238637
in-register LUT technique.
Summary:
A description of this technique can be found here:
http://wm.ite.pl/articles/sse-popcount.html
The core of the idea is to use an in-register lookup table and the
PSHUFB instruction to compute the population count for the low and high
nibbles of each byte, and then to use horizontal sums to aggregate these
into vector population counts with wider element types.
On x86 there is an instruction that will directly compute the horizontal
sum for the low 8 and high 8 bytes, giving vNi64 popcount very easily.
Various tricks are used to get vNi32 and vNi16 from the vNi8 that the
LUT computes.
The base implemantion of this, and most of the work, was done by Bruno
in a follow up to D6531. See Bruno's detailed post there for lots of
timing information about these changes.
I have extended Bruno's patch in the following ways:
0) I committed the new tests with baseline sequences so this shows
a diff, and regenerated the tests using the update scripts.
1) Bruno had noticed and mentioned in IRC a redundant mask that
I removed.
2) I introduced a particular optimization for the i32 vector cases where
we use PSHL + PSADBW to compute the the low i32 popcounts, and PSHUFD
+ PSADBW to compute doubled high i32 popcounts. This takes advantage
of the fact that to line up the high i32 popcounts we have to shift
them anyways, and we can shift them by one fewer bit to effectively
divide the count by two. While the PSHUFD based horizontal add is no
faster, it doesn't require registers or load traffic the way a mask
would, and provides more ILP as it happens on different ports with
high throughput.
3) I did some code cleanups throughout to simplify the implementation
logic.
4) I refactored it to continue to use the parallel bitmath lowering when
SSSE3 is not available to preserve the performance of that version on
SSE2 targets where it is still much better than scalarizing as we'll
still do a bitmath implementation of popcount even in scalar code
there.
With #1 and #2 above, I analyzed the result in IACA for sandybridge,
ivybridge, and haswell. In every case I measured, the throughput is the
same or better using the LUT lowering, even v2i64 and v4i64, and even
compared with using the native popcnt instruction! The latency of the
LUT lowering is often higher than the latency of the scalarized popcnt
instruction sequence, but I think those latency measurements are deeply
misleading. Keeping the operation fully in the vector unit and having
many chances for increased throughput seems much more likely to win.
With this, we can lower every integer vector popcount implementation
using the LUT strategy if we have SSSE3 or better (and thus have
PSHUFB). I've updated the operation lowering to reflect this. This also
fixes an issue where we were scalarizing horribly some AVX lowerings.
Finally, there are some remaining cleanups. There is duplication between
the two techniques in how they perform the horizontal sum once the byte
population count is computed. I'm going to factor and merge those two in
a separate follow-up commit.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10084
llvm-svn: 238636
a separate routine, generalize it to work for all the integer vector
sizes, and do general code cleanups.
This dramatically improves lowerings of byte and short element vector
popcount, but more importantly it will make the introduction of the
LUT-approach much cleaner.
The biggest cleanup I've done is to just force the legalizer to do the
bitcasting we need. We run these iteratively now and it makes the code
much simpler IMO. Other changes were minor, and mostly naming and
splitting things up in a way that makes it more clear what is going on.
The other significant change is to use a different final horizontal sum
approach. This is the same number of instructions as the old method, but
shifts left instead of right so that we can clear everything but the
final sum with a single shift right. This seems likely better than
a mask which will usually have to read the mask from memory. It is
certaily fewer u-ops. Also, this will be temporary. This and the LUT
approach share the need of horizontal adds to finish the computation,
and we have more clever approaches than this one that I'll switch over
to.
llvm-svn: 238635
It turns out that _except_handler3 and _except_handler4 really use the
same stack allocation layout, at least today. They just make different
choices about encoding the LSDA.
This is in preparation for lowering the llvm.eh.exceptioninfo().
llvm-svn: 238627
For some history here see the commit messages of r199797 and r169060.
The original intent was to fix cases like:
%EAX<def> = COPY %ECX<kill>, %RAX<imp-def>
%RCX<def> = COPY %RAX<kill>
where simply removing the copies would have RCX undefined as in terms of
machine operands only the ECX part of it is defined. The machine
verifier would complain about this so 169060 changed such COPY
instructions into KILL instructions so some super-register imp-defs
would be preserved. In r199797 it was finally decided to always do this
regardless of super-register defs.
But this is wrong, consider:
R1 = COPY R0
...
R0 = COPY R1
getting changed to:
R1 = KILL R0
...
R0 = KILL R1
It now looks like R0 dies at the first KILL and won't be alive until the
second KILL, while in reality R0 is alive and must not change in this
part of the program.
As this only happens after register allocation there is not much code
still performing liveness queries so the issue was not noticed. In fact
I didn't manage to create a testcase for this, without unrelated changes
I am working on at the moment.
The fix is simple: As of r223896 the MachineVerifier allows reads from
partially defined registers, so the whole transforming COPY->KILL thing
is not necessary anymore. This patch also changes a similar (but more
benign case as the def and src are the same register) case in the
VirtRegRewriter.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10117
llvm-svn: 238588
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9941
It adds the various FMA instructions introduced in the version 2.07 of
the ISA along with the testing for them. These are operations on single
precision scalar values in VSX registers.
llvm-svn: 238578
This commit translates the line and column numbers for LLVM IR
errors from the numbers in the YAML block scalar to the numbers
in the MIR file so that the MIRParser users can report LLVM IR
errors with the correct line and column numbers.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10108
llvm-svn: 238576
Small (really small!) C++ exception handling examples work on 32-bit x86
now.
This change disables the use of .seh_* directives in WinException when
CFI is not in use. It also uses absolute symbol references in the tables
instead of imagerel32 relocations.
Also fixes a cache invalidation bug in MMI personality classification.
llvm-svn: 238575
Summary:
In continuation to an earlier commit to DependenceAnalysis.cpp by jingyue (r222100), the type for all subscripts in a coupled group need to be the same since constraints from one subscript may be propagated to another during testing. During testing, new SCEVs may be created and the operands for these need to be the same.
This patch extends unifySubscriptType() to work on lists of subscript pairs, ensuring a common extended type for all of them.
Test Plan:
Added a test case to NonCanonicalizedSubscript.ll which causes dependence analysis to crash without this fix.
All regression tests pass.
Reviewers: spop, sebpop, jingyue
Reviewed By: jingyue
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9698
llvm-svn: 238573
Fixes PR23455, where, when TableGen generates the matcher from the
AsmString, it splits "cmp${cc}ss" into tokens, and the "ss" suffix
is recognized as the SS register.
I can't think of a situation where that's a feature, not a bug, hence:
when a token is "isolated", i.e., it is followed and preceded by
separators, it shouldn't be parsed as a register.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9844
llvm-svn: 238536
organize them by the width of vector.
This makes it a lot easier to see that we're covering all of the vector
types but not doing so excessively. This also adds tests across the
spectrum of SSE versions in addition to the AVX versions.
If you're really tired of seeing the *massive* sprawl of scalarized code
for this, don't worry, I'm just about to land Bruno's patch that
dramatically improve the situation for SSSE3 and newer.
llvm-svn: 238520
This commit introduces a serializable structure called
'llvm::yaml::MachineFunction' that stores the machine
function's name. This structure will mirror the machine
function's state in the future.
This commit prints machine functions as YAML documents
containing a YAML mapping that stores the state of a machine
function. This commit also parses the YAML documents
that contain the machine functions.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9841
llvm-svn: 238519
This moves all the state numbering code for C++ EH to WinEHPrepare so
that we can call it from the X86 state numbering IR pass that runs
before isel.
Now we just call the same state numbering machinery and insert a bunch
of stores. It also populates MachineModuleInfo with information about
the current function.
llvm-svn: 238514
ELF has no restrictions on where undefined symbols go relative to other defined
symbols. In fact, gas just sorts them together. Do the same.
This was there since r111174 probably just because the MachO writer has it.
llvm-svn: 238513
The patch evaluates the expansion cost of exitValue in indVarSimplify pass, and only does the rewriting when the expansion cost is low or loop can be deleted with the rewriting. It provides an option "-replexitval=" to control the default aggressiveness of the exitvalue rewriting. It also fixes some missing cases in SCEVExpander::isHighCostExpansionHelper to enhance the evaluation of SCEV expansion cost.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9800
llvm-svn: 238507
For x86 targets, do not do sibling call optimization when materializing
the callee's address would require a GOT relocation. We can still do
tail calls to internal functions, hidden functions, and protected
functions, because they do not require this kind of relocation. It is
still possible to get GOT relocations when the user explicitly asks for
it with musttail or -tailcallopt, both of which are supposed to
guarantee TCO.
Based on a patch by Chih-hung Hsieh.
Reviewers: srhines, timmurray, danalbert, enh, void, nadav, rnk
Subscribers: joerg, davidxl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9799
llvm-svn: 238487
It caused a smaller number of failures than the previous attempt at committing but still caused a couple on the llvm-linux-mips builder. Reverting while I investigate the remainder.
llvm-svn: 238483
We were previously codegen'ing these as regular load/store operations and
hoping that the register allocator would allocate registers in ascending order
so that we could apply an LDM/STM combine after register allocation. According
to the commit that first introduced this code (r37179), we planned to teach
the register allocator to allocate the registers in ascending order. This
never got implemented, and up to now we've been stuck with very poor codegen.
A much simpler approach for achiveing better codegen is to create LDM/STM
instructions with identical sets of virtual registers, let the register
allocator pick arbitrary registers and order register lists when printing an
MCInst. This approach also avoids the need to repeatedly calculate offsets
which ultimately ought to be eliminated pre-RA in order to decrease register
pressure.
This is implemented by lowering the memcpy intrinsic to a series of SD-only
MCOPY pseudo-instructions which performs a memory copy using a given number
of registers. During SD->MI lowering, we lower MCOPY to LDM/STM. This is a
little unusual, but it avoids the need to encode register lists in the SD,
and we can take advantage of SD use lists to decide whether to use the _UPD
variant of the instructions.
Fixes PR9199.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9508
llvm-svn: 238473
Currently we only fold a BitCast into a Load when the BitCast is its
only user.
Do the same for any no-op cast.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9152
llvm-svn: 238452
Octeon CPUs use dmtc2 rt,imm16 and dmfcp2 rt,imm16 for the crypto coprocessor.
E.g. dmtc2 rt,0x4057 starts calculation of sha-1.
I had to introduce a new deconding namespace to avoid a decoding conflict.
Reviewed By: dsanders
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10083
llvm-svn: 238439
This adds support for the 64-bit DWARF format, but is still limited to
less than 4GB of debug data by the DataExtractor class. Some versions
of the GNU MIPS toolchain generate 64-Bit DWARF even though it isn't
actually necessary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D1988
llvm-svn: 238434
This was a bug for bug compatibility with gas that is completely unnecessary.
If a _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_ symbol is used, it will already be created by
the time we get to the ELF writer.
llvm-svn: 238432
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238427
Add support for resolving MIPS64r2 and MIPS64r6 relocations in MCJIT.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9667
llvm-svn: 238424
Canonicalizing 'x [+-] (-Constant * y)' is not a win if we don't *know*
we will open up CSE opportunities.
If the multiply was 'nsw', then negating 'y' requires us to clear the
'nsw' flag. If this is actually worth pursuing, it is probably more
appropriate to do so in GVN or EarlyCSE.
This fixes PR23675.
llvm-svn: 238397
Summary:
This patch made two improvements to NaryReassociate and the NVPTX pipeline
1. Run EarlyCSE/GVN after NaryReassociate to get rid of redundant common
expressions.
2. When adding an instruction to SeenExprs, maps both the SCEV before and after
reassociation to that instruction.
Test Plan: updated @reassociate_gep_nsw in nary-gep.ll
Reviewers: meheff, broune
Reviewed By: broune
Subscribers: dberlin, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9947
llvm-svn: 238396
Extracted from the D6531 patch by Bruno Cardoso Lopes, and re-generated
to reflect the current state of the world. This should let Bruno's D6531
actually show the delta between the approaches by running the x86 test
case update script after re-building.
llvm-svn: 238391
This fixes a bit I forgot in r238335. In addition to the data record and
the counter, we can also move the name of the counter to the comdat for
the associated function.
I'm also adding an IR test case to check that these three elements are
placed in the proper comdat.
llvm-svn: 238351
Now that most of the methods in Clang and LLVM that were parsing arch/cpu/fpu
strings are using ARMTargetParser, it's time to make it a bit more conforming
with what the ABI says.
This commit adds some clarification on what build attributes are accepted and
which are "non-standard". It also makes clear that the "defaultCPU" and
"defaultArch" methods were really just build attribute getters.
It also diverges from GCC's behaviour to say that armv2/armv3 are really an
ARMv4 in the build attributes, when the ABI has a clear state for that: Pre-v4.
llvm-svn: 238344
This commit a 3rd attempt at comitting the initial MIR serialization patch.
The first commit (r237708) was reverted in 237730. Then the second commit
(r237954) was reverted in r238007, as the MIR library under CodeGen caused
a circular dependency where the CodeGen library depended on MIR and MIR
library depended on CodeGen.
This commit has fixed the dependencies between CodeGen and MIR by
reorganizing the MIR serialization code - the code that prints out
MIR has been moved to CodeGen, and the MIR library has been renamed
to MIRParser. Now the CodeGen library doesn't depend on the
MIRParser library, thus the circular dependency no longer exists.
--Original Commit Message--
MIR Serialization: print and parse LLVM IR using MIR format.
This commit is the initial commit for the MIR serialization project.
It creates a new library under CodeGen called 'MIR'. This new
library adds a new machine function pass that prints out the LLVM IR
using the MIR format. This pass is then added as a last pass when a
'stop-after' option is used in llc. The new library adds the initial
functionality for parsing of MIR files as well. This commit also
extends the llc tool so that it can recognize and parse MIR input files.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith, Matthias Braun, Philip Reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9616
llvm-svn: 238341
This broke the llvm-mips-linux builder and several of our out-of-tree builders.
Initial investigations show that the commit probably isn't the problem but
reverting anyway while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 238302
With this patch the x86 backend is now shrink-wrapping capable
and this functionality can be tested by using the
-enable-shrink-wrap switch.
The next step is to make more test and enable shrink-wrapping by
default for x86.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821487>
llvm-svn: 238293
model the dense vector instruction bonuses.
Previously, this code really didn't effectively compute the density of
inlined vector instructions and apply the intended inliner bonus. It
would try to compute it repeatedly while analyzing the function and
didn't handle the case where future vector instructions would tip the
scales back towards the bonus.
Instead, speculatively apply all possible bonuses to the threshold
initially. Once we *know* that a certain bonus can not be applied,
subtract it. This should delay early bailout enough to get much more
consistent results without actually causing us to analyze huge swaths of
code. I expect some (hopefully mild) compile time hit here, and some
swings in performance, but this was definitely the intended behavior of
these bonuses.
This also dramatically simplifies the computation of the bonuses to not
interact with each other in confusing ways. The previous code didn't do
a good job of this and the values for bonuses may be surprising but are
at least now clearly written in the code.
Finally, fix code to be in line with comments and use zero as the
bailout condition.
Patch by Easwaran Raman, with some comment tweaks by me to try and
further clarify what is going on with this code.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8267
llvm-svn: 238276
This gets gas and llc -filetype=obj to agree on the order of prefixes.
For llvm-mc we need to fix the asm parser to know that it makes a difference
on which line the "lock" is in.
Part of pr23594.
llvm-svn: 238232
Previously, subtarget features were a bitfield with the underlying type being uint64_t.
Since several targets (X86 and ARM, in particular) have hit or were very close to hitting this bound, switching the features to use a bitset.
No functional change.
The first several times this was committed (e.g. r229831, r233055), it caused several buildbot failures.
Apparently the reason for most failures was both clang and gcc's inability to deal with large numbers (> 10K) of bitset constructor calls in tablegen-generated initializers of instruction info tables.
This should now be fixed.
llvm-svn: 238192
Summary:
Following on from r209907 which made personality encodings indirect, do the
same for TType encodings. This fixes the case where a try/catch block needs
to generate references to, for example, std::exception in the
.gcc_except_table.
This commit uses DW_EH_PE_sdata8 for N64 as far as is possible at the moment.
However, it is possible to end up with DW_EH_PE_sdata4 when a TargetMachine is
not available. There's no risk of issues with inconsistency here since the
tables are self describing but it does mean there is a small chance of the
PC-relative offset being out of range for particularly large programs.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: srhines, joerg, tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9669
llvm-svn: 238190
Summary:
In case of functions that have a pointer argument and only pass it to
each other, the function attributes pass deduces that the pointer should
get the readnone attribute, but fails to remove a readonly attribute
that may already have been present.
Reviewers: nlewycky
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9995
llvm-svn: 238152
Part of D9474, this patch extends AVX2 v16i16 types to 2 x 8i32 vectors and uses i32 shift variable shifts before packing back to i16.
Adds AVX2 tests for v8i16 and v16i16
llvm-svn: 238149
in POWER8:
vadduqm
vaddeuqm
vaddcuq
vaddecuq
vsubuqm
vsubeuqm
vsubcuq
vsubecuq
In addition to adding the instructions themselves, it also adds support for the
v1i128 type for intrinsics (Intrinsics.td, Function.cpp, and
IntrinsicEmitter.cpp).
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9081
llvm-svn: 238144
The semantics of the scalar FMA intrinsics are that the high vector elements are copied from the first source.
The existing pattern switches src1 and src2 around, to match the "213" order, which ends up tying the original src2 to the dest. Since the actual scalar fma3 instructions copy the high elements from the dest register, the wrong values are copied.
This modifies the pattern to leave src1 and src2 in their original order.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9908
llvm-svn: 238131
Change `DwarfStringPool` to calculate byte offsets on-the-fly, and
update `DwarfUnit::getLocalString()` to use a `DIEInteger` instead of a
`DIEDelta` when Dwarf doesn't use relocations (i.e., Mach-O). This
eliminates another call to `EmitLabelDifference()`, and drops memory
usage from 865 MB down to 861 MB, around 0.5%.
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`;
see r236629 for details.)
llvm-svn: 238114
This test was relying on the numbering of preceding .set directives, but
an upcoming commit is going to remove some of them. Make the CHECKs
more nuanced.
llvm-svn: 238113
On GPU targets, materializing constants is cheap and stores are
expensive, so only doing this for zero vectors was silly.
Most of the new testcases aren't optimally merged, and are for
later improvements.
llvm-svn: 238108
When the compare feeding a branch was in a different BB from the branch, we'd
try to "regenerate" the compare in the block with the branch, possibly trying
to make use of values not available there. Copy a page from AArch64's play book
here to fix the problem (at least in terms of correctness).
Fixes PR23640.
llvm-svn: 238097
This is part of the work to remove TargetMachine::resetTargetOptions.
In this patch, instead of updating global variable NoFramePointerElim in
resetTargetOptions, its use in DisableFramePointerElim is replaced with a call
to TargetFrameLowering::noFramePointerElim. This function determines on a
per-function basis if frame pointer elimination should be disabled.
There is no change in functionality except that cl:opt option "disable-fp-elim"
can now override function attribute "no-frame-pointer-elim".
llvm-svn: 238080
Normally an ELF .o has two string tables, one for symbols, one for section
names.
With the scheme of naming sections like ".text.foo" where foo is a symbol,
there is a big potential saving in using a single one.
Building llvm+clang+lld with master and with this patch the results were:
master: 193,267,008 bytes
patch: 186,107,952 bytes
master non unique section names: 183,260,192 bytes
patch non unique section names: 183,118,632 bytes
So using non usique saves 10,006,816 bytes, and the patch saves 7,159,056 while
still using distinct names for the sections.
llvm-svn: 238073
This patch extends EarlyCSE to take advantage of the information that a controlling branch gives us about the value of a Value within this and dominated basic blocks. If the current block has a single predecessor with a controlling branch, we can infer what the branch condition must have been to execute this block. The actual change to support this is downright simple because EarlyCSE's existing scoped hash table logic deals with most of the complexity around merging.
The patch actually implements two optimizations.
1) The first is analogous to JumpThreading in that it enables EarlyCSE's CSE handling to fold branches which are exactly redundant due to a previous branch to branches on constants. (It doesn't actually replace the branch or change the CFG.) This is pretty clearly a win since it enables substantial CFG simplification before we start trying to inline.
2) The second is analogous to CVP in that it exploits the knowledge gained to replace dominated *uses* of the original value. EarlyCSE does not otherwise reason about specific uses, so this is the more arguable one. It does enable further simplication and constant folding within the rest of the visit by EarlyCSE.
In both cases, the added code only handles the easy dominance based case of each optimization. The general case is deferred to the existing passes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9763
llvm-svn: 238071
InstCombine transforms A *nsw B +nsw A *nsw C to A *nsw (B + C).
This is incorrect -- e.g. if A = -1, B = 1, C = INT_SMAX. Then
nothing in the LHS overflows, but the multiplication in RHS overflows.
We need to first make sure that we won't multiple by INT_SMAX + 1.
Test case `add_of_mul` contributed by Sanjoy Das.
This fixes PR23635.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9629
llvm-svn: 238066
The usual CodeGenPrepare trickery, on a target-specific intrinsic.
Without this, the expansion of atomics will usually have the zext
be hoisted out of the loop, defeating the various patterns we have
to catch this precise case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9930
llvm-svn: 238054
This patch adds a class for processing many recip codegen possibilities.
The TargetRecip class is intended to handle both command-line options to llc as well
as options passed in from a front-end such as clang with the -mrecip option.
The x86 backend is updated to use the new functionality.
Only -mcpu=btver2 with -ffast-math should see a functional change from this patch.
All other CPUs continue to *not* use reciprocal estimates by default with -ffast-math.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8982
llvm-svn: 238051
The problem was that I slipped a change required for shrink-wrapping, namely I
used getFirstTerminator instead of the getLastNonDebugInstr that was here before
the refactoring, whereas the surrounding code is not yet patched for that.
Original message:
[X86] Refactor the prologue emission to prepare for shrink-wrapping.
- Add a late pass to expand pseudo instructions (tail call and EH returns).
Instead of doing it in the prologue emission.
- Factor some static methods in X86FrameLowering to ease code sharing.
NFC.
Related to <rdar://problem/20821487>
llvm-svn: 238035
This patch adds support for the ISA 2.07 additions involving the
branch history rolling buffer and event-based branching. These will
not be used by typical applications, so built-in support is not
required. They will only be available via inline assembly.
Assembly/disassembly tests are included in the patch.
llvm-svn: 238032
MachO and COFF quite reasonably only define the size for common symbols.
We used to try to figure out the "size" by computing the gap from one symbol to
the next.
This would not be correct in general, since a part of a section can belong to no
visible symbol (padding, private globals).
It was also really expensive, since we would walk every symbol to find the size
of one.
If a caller really wants this, it can sort all the symbols once and get all the
gaps ("size") in O(n log n) instead of O(n^2).
On MachO this also has the advantage of centralizing all the checks for an
invalid n_sect.
llvm-svn: 238028
The list of subtarget features for the 7em triple contains 't2xtpk',
which actually disables that subtarget feature. Correct that to
'+t2xtpk' and test that the instructions enabled by that feature do
actually work.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9936
llvm-svn: 238022
This change does a few things:
- Move some InstCombine transforms to InstSimplify
- Run SimplifyCall from within InstCombine::visitCallInst
- Teach InstSimplify to fold [us]mul_with_overflow(X, undef) to 0.
llvm-svn: 237995
PR23608 pointed out that using the preheader to gain a context instruction isn't always legal because a loop might not have a preheader. When looking into that, I realized that using the preheader to determine legality for sinking is questionable at best. Given no test covers that case and the original commit didn't seem to intend it, I restructured the code to only ask context sensative queries for hoising of loads and stores. This is effectively a partial revert of 237593.
llvm-svn: 237985
Summary:
x = &a[i];
y = &a[i + j];
=>
y = x + j;
along with some refactoring work such as extracting method
findClosestMatchingDominator.
Depends on D9786 which provides the ScalarEvolution::getGEPExpr interface.
Test Plan: nary-gep.ll
Reviewers: meheff, broune
Reviewed By: broune
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9802
llvm-svn: 237971
Summary:
This supersedes http://reviews.llvm.org/D4010, hopefully properly
dealing with the JIT case and also adds an actual test case.
DwarfContext was basically already usable for the JIT (and back when
we were overwriting ELF files it actually worked out of the box by
accident), but in order to resolve relocations correctly it needs
to know the load address of the section.
Rather than trying to get this out of the ObjectFile or requiring
the user to create a new ObjectFile just to get some debug info,
this adds the capability to pass in that info directly.
As part of this I separated out part of the LoadedObjectInfo struct
from RuntimeDyld, since it is now required at a higher layer.
Reviewers: lhames, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: vtjnash, friss, rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6961
llvm-svn: 237961
This commit is a 2nd attempt at committing the initial MIR serialization patch.
The first commit (r237708) made the incremental buildbots unstable and was
reverted in r237730. The original commit didn't add a terminating null
character to the LLVM IR source which was passed to LLParser, and this
sometimes caused the test 'llvmIR.mir' to fail with a parsing error because
the LLVM IR source didn't have a null character immediately after the end
and thus LLLexer encountered some garbage characters that ultimately caused
the error.
This commit also includes the other test fixes I committed in
r237712 (llc path fix) and r237723 (remove target triple) which
also got reverted in r237730.
--Original Commit Message--
MIR Serialization: print and parse LLVM IR using MIR format.
This commit is the initial commit for the MIR serialization project.
It creates a new library under CodeGen called 'MIR'. This new
library adds a new machine function pass that prints out the LLVM IR
using the MIR format. This pass is then added as a last pass when a
'stop-after' option is used in llc. The new library adds the initial
functionality for parsing of MIR files as well. This commit also
extends the llc tool so that it can recognize and parse MIR input files.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith, Matthias Braun, Philip Reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9616
llvm-svn: 237954
My recent patch to add support for ISA 2.07 vector pack/unpack
instructions didn't properly check for availability of the vpkudum
instruction when recognizing it as a special vector shuffle case.
This causes us to leave the vector shuffle in place (rather than
converting it to a vector permute) so that it can be recognized later
as a vpkudum, but that pattern is invalid for processors prior to
POWER8. Thus LLVM crashes with an "unable to select" message. We
observed this since one of our buildbots is configured to generate
code for a POWER7.
This patch fixes the problem by checking for availability of the
vpkudum instruction during custom lowering of vector shuffles.
I've added a test case variant for the vpkudum pattern when the
instruction isn't available.
llvm-svn: 237952
so DWARF skeleton CUs can be expression in IR. A skeleton CU is a
(typically empty) DW_TAG_compile_unit that has a DW_AT_(GNU)_dwo_name and
a DW_AT_(GNU)_dwo_id attribute. It is used to refer to external debug info.
This is a prerequisite for clang module debugging as discussed in
http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/cfe-dev/2014-November/040076.html.
In order to refer to external types stored in split DWARF (dwo) objects,
such as clang modules, we need to emit skeleton CUs, which identify the
dwarf object (i.e., the clang module) by filename (the SplitDebugFilename)
and a hash value, the dwo_id.
This patch only contains the IR changes. The idea is that a CUs with a
non-zero dwo_id field will be emitted together with a DW_AT_GNU_dwo_name
and DW_AT_GNU_dwo_id attribute.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9488
rdar://problem/20091852
llvm-svn: 237949
On X86 (and similar OOO cores) unrolling is very limited, and even if the
runtime unrolling is otherwise profitable, the expense of a division to compute
the trip count could greatly outweigh the benefits. On the A2, we unroll a lot,
and the benefits of unrolling are more significant (seeing a 5x or 6x speedup
is not uncommon), so we're more able to tolerate the expense, on average, of a
division to compute the trip count.
llvm-svn: 237947
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9891
Following up on the VSX single precision loads and stores added earlier, this
adds support for elementary arithmetic operations on single precision values
in VSX registers. These instructions utilize the new VSSRC register class.
Instructions added:
xsaddsp
xsdivsp
xsmulsp
xsresp
xsrsqrtesp
xssqrtsp
xssubsp
llvm-svn: 237937
Predicate UseAVX depricates pattern selection on AVX-512.
This predicate is necessary for DAG selection to select EVEX form.
But mapping SSE intrinsics to AVX-512 instructions is not ready yet.
So I replaced UseAVX with HasAVX for intrinsics patterns.
llvm-svn: 237903
One of the testcases introduced by D9365 had incorrect !dereferenceable metadata on load. It must fail but it doesn't due to incorrect order of CHECK/CHECK-NOT commands in test. Fixed both.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9877
llvm-svn: 237897
This patch improves support for sign extension of the lower lanes of vectors of integers by making use of the SSE41 pmovsx* sign extension instructions where possible, and optimizing the sign extension by shifts on pre-SSE41 targets (avoiding the use of i64 arithmetic shifts which require scalarization).
It converts SIGN_EXTEND nodes to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG where necessary, that more closely matches the pmovsx* instruction than the default approach of using SIGN_EXTEND_INREG which splits the operation (into an ANY_EXTEND lowered to a shuffle followed by shifts) making instruction matching difficult during lowering. Necessary support for SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG has been added to the DAGCombiner.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9848
llvm-svn: 237885
We had not been trying hard enough to resolve def names inside multiclasses
that had complex concatenations, etc. Now we'll try harder.
Patch by Amaury Sechet!
llvm-svn: 237877
In effect a partial revert of r237858, which was a dumb shortcut.
Looking at the dependencies of the destination should be the proper
fix: if the new memset would depend on anything other than itself,
the transformation isn't correct.
llvm-svn: 237874
Fixes PR23599, another miscompile introduced by r235232: when there is
another dependency on the destination of the created memset (i.e., the
part of the original destination that the memcpy doesn't depend on)
between the memcpy and the original memset, we would insert the created
memset after the memcpy, and thus after the other dependency.
Instead, insert the created memset right after the old one.
llvm-svn: 237858
Ideally this is going to be and LLVM IR pass (shared, among others
with AArch64), but for the time being just enable it if consumers
ask us for optimization and not unconditionally.
Discussed with Tim Northover on IRC.
llvm-svn: 237837
Make sure if we're truncating a constant that would then be sign extended
that the sign extension of the truncated constant is the same as the
original constant.
> Canonicalize min/max expressions correctly.
>
> This patch introduces a canonical form for min/max idioms where one operand
> is extended or truncated. This often happens when the other operand is a
> constant. For example:
>
> %1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
> %2 = sext i32 %a to i64
> %3 = select i1 %1, i64 %2, i64 0
>
> Would now be canonicalized into:
>
> %1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
> %2 = select i1 %1, i32 %a, i32 0
> %3 = sext i32 %2 to i64
>
> This builds upon a patch posted by David Majenemer
> (https://www.marc.info/?l=llvm-commits&m=143008038714141&w=2). That pass
> passively stopped instcombine from ruining canonical patterns. This
> patch additionally actively makes instcombine canonicalize too.
>
> Canonicalization of expressions involving a change in type from int->fp
> or fp->int are not yet implemented.
llvm-svn: 237821
Summary:
During icmp lowering it can happen that a constant value can be larger than expected (see the code around the change).
APInt::getMinSignedBits() must be checked again as the shift before can change the constant sign to positive.
I'm not sure it is the best fix possible though.
Test Plan: Regression test included.
Reviewers: resistor, chandlerc, spatel, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9147
llvm-svn: 237812
fixed extract-insert i1 element,
load i1, zextload i1 should be with "and $1, %reg" to prevent loading garbage.
added a bunch of new tests.
llvm-svn: 237793
Summary:
-check-prefix replaces the default CHECK prefix rather than adding to it and
must be explicitly re-added.
Also added the N32 cases.
Reviewers: petarj
Reviewed By: petarj
Subscribers: tberghammer, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9668
llvm-svn: 237790
Summary:
For N32/N64, private labels begin with '.L' but for O32 they begin with '$'.
MCAsmInfo now has an initializer function which can be used to provide information from the TargetMachine to control the assembly syntax.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: jfb, sandeep, llvm-commits, rafael
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9821
llvm-svn: 237789
This change implements support for lowering of the gc.relocates tied to the invoke statepoint.
This is acomplished by storing frame indices of the lowered values in "StatepointRelocatedValues" map inside FunctionLoweringInfo instead of storing them in per-basic block structure StatepointLowering.
After this change StatepointLowering is used only during "LowerStatepoint" call and it is not necessary to store it as a field in SelectionDAGBuilder anymore.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7798
llvm-svn: 237786
This change adds a new GC strategy for supporting the CoreCLR runtime.
This strategy is currently identical to Statepoint-example GC,
but is necessary for several upcoming changes specific to CoreCLR, such as:
1. Base-pointers not explicitly reported for interior pointers
2. Different format for stack-map encoding
3. Location of Safe-point polls: polls are only needed before loop-back edges and before tail-calls (not needed at function-entry)
4. Runtime specific handshake between calls to managed/unmanaged functions.
llvm-svn: 237753
We were special casing a handful of intrinsics as not needing a safepoint before them. After running into another valid case - memset - I took a closer look and realized that almost no intrinsics need to have a safepoint poll before them. Restructure the code to make that apparent so that we stop hitting these bugs. The only intrinsics which need a safepoint poll before them are ones which can run arbitrary code.
llvm-svn: 237744
The incremental buildbots entered a pass-fail cycle where during the fail
cycle one of the tests from this commit fails for an unknown reason. I
have reverted this commit and will investigate the cause of this problem.
llvm-svn: 237730
This change implements basic support for DWARF alternate sections
proposal: http://www.dwarfstd.org/ShowIssue.php?issue=120604.1&type=open
LLVM tools now understand new forms: DW_FORM_GNU_ref_alt and
DW_FORM_GNU_strp_alt, which are used as references to .debug_info and
.debug_str sections respectively, stored in a separate file, and
possibly shared between different executables / shared objects.
llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-symbolizer don't yet know how to access this
alternate debug file (usually pointed by .gnu_debugaltlink section),
but they can at lease properly parse and dump regular files, which
refer to it.
This change should fix crashes of llvm-dwarfdump and llvm-symbolizer on
files produced by running "dwz" tool. Such files are already installed
on some modern Linux distributions.
llvm-svn: 237721
Summary:
Introduce dereferenceable, dereferenceable_or_null metadata for loads
with the same semantic as corresponding attributes.
This patch depends on http://reviews.llvm.org/D9253
Patch by Artur Pilipenko!
Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy, reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9365
llvm-svn: 237720
Summary:
Also tagged a FIXME comment, and added information about why it breaks.
Bug found using AFL fuzz.
Reviewers: rafael, craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9729
llvm-svn: 237709
This commit is the initial commit for the MIR serialization project.
It creates a new library under CodeGen called 'MIR'. This new
library adds a new machine function pass that prints out the LLVM IR
using the MIR format. This pass is then added as a last pass when a
'stop-after' option is used in llc. The new library adds the initial
functionality for parsing of MIR files as well. This commit also
extends the llc tool so that it can recognize and parse MIR input files.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith, Matthias Braun, Philip Reames
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9616
llvm-svn: 237708
Summary:
The documentation writes vectors highest-index first whereas LLVM-IR writes
them lowest-index first. As a result, instructions defined in terms of
left_half() and right_half() had the halves reversed.
In addition to correcting them, they have been improved to allow shuffles
that use the same operand twice or in reverse order. For example, ilvev
used to accept masks of the form:
<0, n, 2, n+2, 4, n+4, ...>
but now accepts:
<0, 0, 2, 2, 4, 4, ...>
<n, n, n+2, n+2, n+4, n+4, ...>
<0, n, 2, n+2, 4, n+4, ...>
<n, 0, n+2, 2, n+4, 4, ...>
One further improvement is that splati.[bhwd] is now the preferred instruction
for splat-like operations. The other special shuffles are no longer used
for splats. This lead to the discovery that <0, 0, ...> would not cause
splati.[hwd] to be selected and this has also been fixed.
This fixes the enc-3des test from the test-suite on Mips64r6 with MSA.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9660
llvm-svn: 237689
This changes the ABI used on 32-bit x86 for passing vector arguments.
Historically, clang passes the first 4 vector arguments in-register, and additional vector arguments on the stack, regardless of platform. That is different from the behavior of gcc, icc, and msvc, all of which pass only the first 3 arguments in-register.
The 3-register convention is documented, unofficially, in Agner's calling convention guide, and, officially, in the recently released version 1.0 of the i386 psABI.
Darwin is kept as is because the OS X ABI Function Call Guide explicitly documents the current (4-register) behavior.
This fixes PR21510
Differential revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9644
llvm-svn: 237682
This reverts commit r237210.
Also fix X86/complex-fca.ll to match the code that we used to generate
on win32 and now generate everwhere to conform to SysV.
llvm-svn: 237639
ld64 currently mishandles internal pointer relocations (i.e.
ARM64_RELOC_UNSIGNED referred to by section & offset rather than symbol). The
existing __cfstring clause was an early discovery and workaround for this, but
the problem is wider and we should avoid such relocations wherever possible for
now.
This code should be reverted to allowing internal relocations as soon as
possible.
PR23437.
llvm-svn: 237621
Summary:
Added isLoadableOrStorableType to PointerType.
We were doing some checks in some places, occasionally assert()ing instead
of telling the caller. With this patch, I'm putting all type checking in
the same place for load/store type instructions, and verifying the same
thing every time.
I also added a check for load/store of a function type.
Applied extracted check to Load, Store, and Cmpxcg.
I don't have exhaustive tests for all of these, but all Error() calls in
TypeCheckLoadStoreInst are being tested (in invalid.test).
Reviewers: dblaikie, rafael
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9785
llvm-svn: 237619
Summary: Add an assertion in verifier.cpp to make sure gc_relocate relocate a gc pointer, and its return type has the same address space with the relocated pointer.
Reviewers: reames, AndyAyers, sanjoy, pgavlin
Reviewed By: pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9695
llvm-svn: 237605
Summary: When PlaceSafepoints pass replaces old return result with gc_result from statepoint, it asserts that gc_result can not have preceding phis in its parent block. This is only true on invoke statepoint, which terminates the block and puts its result at the beginning of the normal successor block. Call statepoint does not terminate the block and thus its result is in the same block with it. There should be no restriction on whether there are phis or not.
Reviewers: reames, igor-laevsky
Reviewed By: igor-laevsky
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9803
llvm-svn: 237597
Summary:
Allow hoisting of loads from values marked with dereferenceable_or_null
attribute. For values marked with the attribute perform
context-sensitive analysis to determine whether it's known-non-null or
not.
Patch by Artur Pilipenko!
Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy, reames
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9253
llvm-svn: 237593
Previously, they were forced to immediately follow the actual branch
instruction. This was usually OK (the LEAs actually accessing them got emitted
nearby, and weren't usually separated much afterwards). Unfortunately, a
sufficiently nasty phi elimination dumps many instructions right before the
basic block terminator, and this can increase the range too much.
This patch frees them up to be placed as usual by the constant islands pass,
and consequently has to slightly modify the form of TBB/TBH tables to refer to
a PC-relative label at the final jump. The other jump table formats were
already position-independent.
rdar://20813304
llvm-svn: 237590
This pseudo-instruction expands into 'sethi' and 'or' instructions,
or, just one of them, if the other isn't necessary for a given value.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9089
llvm-svn: 237585
At the present time, we don't have a way to represent general dependency
relationships, so everything is represented using memory dependency. In order
to preserve the data dependency of a READ_REGISTER on WRITE_REGISTER, we need
to model WRITE_REGISTER as writing (which we had been doing) and model
READ_REGISTER as reading (which we had not been doing). Fix this, and also the
way that the chain operands were generated at the SDAG level.
Patch by Nicholas Paul Johnson, thanks! Test case by me.
llvm-svn: 237584
- Adds support for the asm syntax, which has an immediate integer
"ASI" (address space identifier) appearing after an address, before
a comma.
- Adds the various-width load, store, and swap in alternate address
space instructions. (ldsba, ldsha, lduba, lduha, lda, stba, stha,
sta, swapa)
This does not attempt to hook these instructions up to pointer address
spaces in LLVM, although that would probably be a reasonable thing to
do in the future.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8904
llvm-svn: 237581
(Note that register "Y" is essentially just ASR0).
Also added some test cases for divide and multiply, which had none before.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8670
llvm-svn: 237580
This patch implements LLVM support for the ACLE special register intrinsics in
section 10.1, __arm_{w,r}sr{,p,64}.
This patch is intended to lower the read/write_register instrinsics, used to
implement the special register intrinsics in the clang patch for special
register intrinsics (see http://reviews.llvm.org/D9697), to ARM specific
instructions MRC,MCR,MSR etc. to allow reading an writing of coprocessor
registers in AArch32 and AArch64. This is done by inspecting the register
string passed to the intrinsic and then lowering to the appropriate
instruction.
Patch by Luke Cheeseman.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9699
llvm-svn: 237579
When dependence analysis encounters a non-constant distance between
memory accesses it aborts the analysis and falls back to run-time checks
only. In this case we weren't resetting the array of dependences.
llvm-svn: 237574
"Store to invariant address..." is moved as the last line. This is not
the prime result of the analysis. Plus it simplifies some of the tests.
llvm-svn: 237573
instructions. These intrinsics are comming with rounding mode.
Added intrinsics for MAXSS/D, MINSS/D - with and without sae.
By Asaf Badouh (asaf.badouh@intel.com)
llvm-svn: 237560
If some commits are happy, and some commits are sad, this is a sad commit. It
is sad because it restricts instruction scheduling to work around a binutils
linker bug, and moreover, one that may never be fixed. On 2012-05-21, GCC was
updated not to produce code triggering this bug, and now we'll do the same...
When resolving an address using the ELF ABI TOC pointer, two relocations are
generally required: one for the high part and one for the low part. Only
the high part generally explicitly depends on r2 (the TOC pointer). And, so,
we might produce code like this:
.Ltmp526:
addis 3, 2, .LC12@toc@ha
.Ltmp1628:
std 2, 40(1)
ld 5, 0(27)
ld 2, 8(27)
ld 11, 16(27)
ld 3, .LC12@toc@l(3)
rldicl 4, 4, 0, 32
mtctr 5
bctrl
ld 2, 40(1)
And there is nothing wrong with this code, as such, but there is a linker bug
in binutils (https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=18414) that will
misoptimize this code sequence to this:
nop
std r2,40(r1)
ld r5,0(r27)
ld r2,8(r27)
ld r11,16(r27)
ld r3,-32472(r2)
clrldi r4,r4,32
mtctr r5
bctrl
ld r2,40(r1)
because the linker does not know (and does not check) that the value in r2
changed in between the instruction using the .LC12@toc@ha (TOC-relative)
relocation and the instruction using the .LC12@toc@l(3) relocation.
Because it finds these instructions using the relocations (and not by
scanning the instructions), it has been asserted that there is no good way
to detect the change of r2 in between. As a result, this bug may never be
fixed (i.e. it may become part of the definition of the ABI). GCC was
updated to add extra dependencies on r2 to instructions using the @toc@l
relocations to avoid this problem, and we'll do the same here.
This is done as a separate pass because:
1. These extra r2 dependencies are not really properties of the
instructions, but rather due to a linker bug, and maybe one day we'll be
able to get rid of them when targeting linkers without this bug (and,
thus, keeping the logic centralized here will make that
straightforward).
2. There are ISel-level peephole optimizations that propagate the @toc@l
relocations to some user instructions, and so the exta dependencies do
not apply only to a fixed set of instructions (without undesirable
definition replication).
The test case was reduced with the help of bugpoint, with minimal cleaning. I'm
looking forward to our upcoming MI serialization support, and with that, much
better tests can be created.
llvm-svn: 237556
SimplifyDemandedBits was "simplifying" a constant by removing just sign bits.
This caused a canonicalization race between different parts of instcombine.
Fix and regression test added - third time lucky?
llvm-svn: 237539
The AArch64 LNT bot is unhappy - I've found that the problem is in
SimpliftDemandedBits, but that's going to require another code review
so reverting in the meantime.
llvm-svn: 237528
... I'd copied the check-next lines from a previous test so they were
slightly wrong, and had managed to test the wrong source tree. D'oh!
llvm-svn: 237521
The test timeouts were due to instcombine fighting itself. Regression test added.
Original log message:
Canonicalize min/max expressions correctly.
This patch introduces a canonical form for min/max idioms where one operand
is extended or truncated. This often happens when the other operand is a
constant. For example:
%1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
%2 = sext i32 %a to i64
%3 = select i1 %1, i64 %2, i64 0
Would now be canonicalized into:
%1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
%2 = select i1 %1, i32 %a, i32 0
%3 = sext i32 %2 to i64
This builds upon a patch posted by David Majenemer
(https://www.marc.info/?l=llvm-commits&m=143008038714141&w=2). That pass
passively stopped instcombine from ruining canonical patterns. This
patch additionally actively makes instcombine canonicalize too.
Canonicalization of expressions involving a change in type from int->fp
or fp->int are not yet implemented.
llvm-svn: 237520
There's no point in copying around constants, so, when all else fails,
we can still transform memcpy of memset into two independent memsets.
To quote the example, we can turn:
memset(dst1, c, dst1_size);
memcpy(dst2, dst1, dst2_size);
into:
memset(dst1, c, dst1_size);
memset(dst2, c, dst2_size);
When dst2_size <= dst1_size.
Like r235232 for copy constructors, this can occur in move constructors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9682
llvm-svn: 237506
This patch adds support for the following new instructions in the
Power ISA 2.07:
vpksdss
vpksdus
vpkudus
vpkudum
vupkhsw
vupklsw
These instructions are available through the vec_packs, vec_packsu,
vec_unpackh, and vec_unpackl built-in interfaces. These are
lane-sensitive instructions, so the built-ins have different
implementations for big- and little-endian, and the instructions must
be marked as killing the vector swap optimization for now.
The first three instructions perform saturating pack operations. The
fourth performs a modulo pack operation, which means it can be
represented with a vector shuffle, and conversely the appropriate
vector shuffles may cause this instruction to be generated. The other
instructions are only generated via built-in support for now.
Appropriate tests have been added.
There is a companion patch to clang for the rest of this support.
llvm-svn: 237499
Summary:
This is a pass for speculative execution of instructions for simple if-then (triangle) control flow. It's aimed at GPUs, but could perhaps be used in other contexts. Enabling this pass gives us a 1.0% geomean improvement on Google benchmark suites, with one benchmark improving 33%.
Credit goes to Jingyue Wu for writing an earlier version of this pass.
Patched by Bjarke Roune.
Test Plan:
This patch adds a set of tests in test/Transforms/SpeculativeExecution/spec.ll
The pass is controlled by a flag which defaults to having the pass not run.
Reviewers: eliben, dberlin, meheff, jingyue, hfinkel
Reviewed By: jingyue, hfinkel
Subscribers: majnemer, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9360
llvm-svn: 237459
This reverts r237453 - it was causing timeouts on some bots. Reverting
while I investigate (it's probably InstCombine fighting itself...)
llvm-svn: 237458
Summary:
Consider (B | i) * S as (B + i) * S if B and i have no bits set in
common.
Test Plan: @or in slsr-mul.ll
Reviewers: broune, meheff
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9788
llvm-svn: 237456
This patch introduces a canonical form for min/max idioms where one operand
is extended or truncated. This often happens when the other operand is a
constant. For example:
%1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
%2 = sext i32 %a to i64
%3 = select i1 %1, i64 %2, i64 0
Would now be canonicalized into:
%1 = icmp slt i32 %a, i32 0
%2 = select i1 %1, i32 %a, i32 0
%3 = sext i32 %2 to i64
This builds upon a patch posted by David Majenemer
(https://www.marc.info/?l=llvm-commits&m=143008038714141&w=2). That pass
passively stopped instcombine from ruining canonical patterns. This
patch additionally actively makes instcombine canonicalize too.
Canonicalization of expressions involving a change in type from int->fp
or fp->int are not yet implemented.
llvm-svn: 237453
This has caused some local failures. Updating the test case to be more
like the majority of the similar test cases.
Committing on behalf of Hubert Tong (hstong@ca.ibm.com).
llvm-svn: 237449
collectUpperBound hits an assertion when the back edge count is wider then the desired type.
If that happens, truncate the backedge count.
Patch by Philip Pfaffe!
llvm-svn: 237439
Summary:
To maintain compatibility with GAS, we need to stop treating negative 32-bit immediates as 64-bit values when expanding LI/DLI.
This currently happens because of sign extension.
To do this we need to choose the 32-bit value expansion for values which use their upper 33 bits only for sign extension (i.e. no 0's, only 1's).
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8662
llvm-svn: 237428
Transfer the calling convention from the invoke being replaced by
PlaceStatepoints to the new invoke to gc.statepoint created. Add a test
case that would have caught this issue.
llvm-svn: 237414
rL236672 would generate all invoke statepoints with deopt args set to a
list containing the single element "0", instead of an empty list.
Also add a test case that would have caught this.
llvm-svn: 237413
Summary:
Extract method haveNoCommonBitsSet so that we don't have to duplicate this logic in
InstCombine and SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP.
This patch also makes SeparateConstOffsetFromGEP more precise by passing
DominatorTree to computeKnownBits.
Test Plan: value-tracking-domtree.ll that tests ValueTracking indeed leverages dominating conditions
Reviewers: broune, meheff, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9734
llvm-svn: 237407
This is to cleanup some redundency generated by LoopUnroll pass. Such redundency may not be cleaned up by existing passes after LoopUnroll.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9777
llvm-svn: 237395
The induction variable in the vectorized loop wasn't
recognized properly, so a hardware loop wasn't generated.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9722
llvm-svn: 237388
Function 'ConstantFoldScalarCall' (in ConstantFolding.cpp) works under the
wrong assumption that a call to 'convert.from.fp16' returns a value of
type 'float'.
However, intrinsic 'convert.from.fp16' can be overloaded; for example, we
can call 'convert.from.fp16.f64' to convert from half to double; etc.
Before this patch, the following example would have triggered an assertion
failure in opt (with -constprop):
```
define double @foo() {
entry:
%0 = call double @llvm.convert.from.fp16.f64(i16 0)
ret double %0
}
```
This patch fixes the problem in ConstantFolding.cpp. When folding a call to
convert.from.fp16, we perform a different kind of conversion based on the call
return type.
Added test 'Transform/ConstProp/convert-from-fp16.ll'.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9771
llvm-svn: 237377
After converting a loop to a hardware loop, the pass should remove
any unnecessary instructions from the old compare-and-branch
code. This patch removes a dead constant assignment that was
used in the compare instruction.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9720
llvm-svn: 237373
If the loop trip count may underflow or wrap, the compiler should
not generate a hardware loop since the trip count will be
incorrect.
llvm-svn: 237365
Summary:
When we are trying to fill the delay slot of a call instruction, we must avoid
filler instructions that use the $ra register. This fixes the test
MultiSource/Applications/JM/lencod when we enable the forward delay slot filler.
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9670
llvm-svn: 237362
Summary:
This implements the initial version as was proposed earlier this year
(http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2015-January/080462.html).
Since then Loop Access Analysis was split out from the Loop Vectorizer
and was made into a separate analysis pass. Loop Distribution becomes
the second user of this analysis.
The pass is off by default and can be enabled
with -enable-loop-distribution. There is currently no notion of
profitability; if there is a loop with dependence cycles, the pass will
try to split them off from other memory operations into a separate loop.
I decided to remove the control-dependence calculation from this first
version. This and the issues with the PDT are actively discussed so it
probably makes sense to treat it separately. Right now I just mark all
terminator instruction required which keeps identical CFGs for each
distributed loop. This seems to be working pretty well for 456.hmmer
where even though there is an empty if-then block in the distributed
loop initially, it gets completely removed.
The pass keeps DominatorTree and LoopInfo updated. I've tested this
with -loop-distribute-verify with the testsuite where we distribute ~90
loops. SimplifyLoop is violated in some cases and I have a FIXME
covering this.
Reviewers: hfinkel, nadav, aschwaighofer
Reviewed By: aschwaighofer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8831
llvm-svn: 237358
i1 type is a legal type on AVX-512 and can be passed as parameter or return value.
i1 is promoted to i8 on return and to i32 for call arguments (i8 is also promoted to i32 here).
The result code is similar to the previous X86 targets, where i1 is allways promoted to i8.
llvm-svn: 237350
Other targets probably should as well. Since r237161, compiler-rt has
both, but I don't see why anything other than gnueabi would use a
gnueabi naming scheme.
llvm-svn: 237324
This commit implements the parsing of YAML block scalars.
Some code existed for it before, but it couldn't parse block
scalars.
This commit adds a new yaml node type to represent the block
scalar values.
This commit also deletes the 'spec-09-27' and 'spec-09-28' tests
as they are identical to the test file 'spec-09-26'.
This commit introduces 3 new utility functions to the YAML scanner
class: `skip_s_space`, `advanceWhile` and `consumeLineBreakIfPresent`.
Reviewers: Duncan P. N. Exon Smith
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9503
llvm-svn: 237314
llvm-cov was truncating numbers that were larger than a particular
fixed width, which is as confusing as it is useless. Instead, we use
engineering notation with SI prefix for magnitude.
llvm-svn: 237307
Summary:
This patch teaches the PlaceSafepoints pass about two `CallSite`
function attributes:
* "statepoint-id": if the string value of this attribute can be parsed
as an integer, then it is propagated to the ID parameter of the
statepoint created.
* "statepoint-num-patch-bytes": if the string value of this attribute
can be parsed as an integer, then it is propagated to the `num patch
bytes` parameter of the statepoint created.
This change intentionally does not assert on a malformed value for these
attributes, given that they're not "official" attributes.
Reviewers: reames, pgavlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9735
llvm-svn: 237286
Avoid running forever by checking we are not reassociating an expression into
the same form.
Tested with @avoid_infinite_loops in nary-add.ll
llvm-svn: 237269
This patch uses the new function profile metadata "function_entry_count"
to annotate entry counts from sample profiles.
In a sampling profile, the total samples collected at the function entry
are an approximation for the number of times that function was invoked.
llvm-svn: 237265
Summary:
This adds three Function methods to handle function entry counts:
setEntryCount() and getEntryCount().
Entry counts are stored under the MD_prof metadata node with the name
"function_entry_count". They are unsigned 64 bit values set by profilers
(instrumentation and sample profiler changes coming up).
Added documentation for new profile metadata and tests.
Reviewers: dexonsmith, bogner
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9628
llvm-svn: 237260
The hardware loop pass should try to generate a hardware loop
instruction when the original loop has a critical edge.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9678
llvm-svn: 237258
Summary: A side-effect of this is that LA gains proper handling of unsigned and positive signed 16-bit immediates and more accurate error messages.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9290
llvm-svn: 237255
Summary: Also did some minor reformatting in the resulting test.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9702
llvm-svn: 237242
Several updates for [DebugInfo] Add debug locations to constant SD nodes (r235989).
Includes:
* re-enabling the change (disabled recently);
* missing change for FP constants;
* resetting debug location of constant node if it's used more than at one place
to prevent emission of wrong locations in case of coalesced constants;
* a couple of additional tests.
Now all look ups in CSEMap are wrapped by additional method.
Comment in D9084 suggests that debug locations aren't useful for "target constants",
so there might be one more change related to this API (namely, dropping debug
locations for getTarget*Constant methods).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9604
llvm-svn: 237237
Previously, subtarget features were a bitfield with the underlying type being uint64_t.
Since several targets (X86 and ARM, in particular) have hit or were very close to hitting this bound, switching the features to use a bitset.
No functional change.
The first two times this was committed (r229831, r233055), it caused several buildbot failures.
At least some of the ARM and MIPS ones were due to gcc/binutils issues, and should now be fixed.
llvm-svn: 237234
Summary:
This change adds two new parameters to the statepoint intrinsic, `i64 id`
and `i32 num_patch_bytes`. `id` gets propagated to the ID field
in the generated StackMap section. If the `num_patch_bytes` is
non-zero then the statepoint is lowered to `num_patch_bytes` bytes of
nops instead of a call (the spill and reload code remains unchanged).
A non-zero `num_patch_bytes` is useful in situations where a language
runtime requires complete control over how a call is lowered.
This change brings statepoints one step closer to patchpoints. With
some additional work (that is not part of this patch) it should be
possible to get rid of `TargetOpcode::STATEPOINT` altogether.
PlaceSafepoints generates `statepoint` wrappers with `id` set to
`0xABCDEF00` (the old default value for the ID reported in the stackmap)
and `num_patch_bytes` set to `0`. This can be made more sophisticated
later.
Reviewers: reames, pgavlin, swaroop.sridhar, AndyAyers
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9546
llvm-svn: 237214
Summary:
If the branch that leads to the PHI node and the Select instruction
depend on correlated conditions, we might be able to directly use the
corresponding value from the Select instruction as the incoming value
for the PHI node, allowing later removal of the select instruction.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9051
llvm-svn: 237201
When relocating a pointer, we need to determine a base pointer for the derived pointer being relocated. We have limited support for handling a pointer extracted from a vector; the current code only handled the case where the entire vector was known to contain base pointers. This patch extends the reasoning to handle chains of insertelements where the indices are constants. This case turns out to be fairly common in vectorized code. We can now handle vectors which contains mixtures of base and derived pointers provided the insertelements use constant indices.
Note that this doesn't solve the general problem. To handle variable indexed insertelements, we'd need to scalarize and introduce conditional branching based on the index. Alternatively, we could eagerly scalarize, but the code structure doesn't currently make either fix easy. The patch also doesn't handle shufflevector or other vector manipulation for much the same reasons. I plan to defer this work until I have a motivating test case.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9676
llvm-svn: 237200
Summary:
This rule was always in the old SysV i386 ABI docs and the new ones that
H.J. Lu has put together, but we never noticed:
EAX scratch register; also used to return integer and pointer values
from functions; also stores the address of a returned struct or union
Fixes PR23491.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9715
llvm-svn: 237175
As a step towards getting rid of internal pass manager hack entirely, remove the need for loop simplify to run in the inner pass manager. The new code does produce slightly different loop structures, so this isn't technically NFC.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9585
llvm-svn: 237172
Summary:
This patch reimplements heuristic that tries to estimate optimization beneftis
from complete loop unrolling.
In this patch I kept the minimal changes - e.g. I removed code handling
branches and folding compares. That's a promising area, but now there
are too many questions to discuss before we can enable it.
Test Plan: Tests are included in the patch.
Reviewers: hfinkel, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8816
llvm-svn: 237156
On Mips, frame pointer points to the same side of the frame as the stack
pointer. This function is used to decide where to put register scavenging
spill slot. So far, it was put on the wrong side of the frame, and thus it
was too far away from $fp when frame was larger than 2^15 bytes.
Patch by Vladimir Radosavljevic.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D8895
llvm-svn: 237153
Spilling can insert instructions almost anywhere, and this can mess
up control flow lowering in a multitude of ways, due to instruction
reordering. Let's sort this out the easy way: never spill registers
involved with control flow, i.e. saved EXEC masks.
Unfortunately, this does not work at all with optimizations disabled,
as the register allocator ignores spill weights. This should be
addressed in a future commit.
The test was reduced from the "stacks" shader of [1]. Some issues
trigger the machine verifier while another one is checked manually.
[1] http://madebyevan.com/webgl-path-tracing/
v2: only insert pass with optimizations enabled, merge test runs.
Patch by: Grigori Goronzy
llvm-svn: 237152
The DWARF-4 specification added 2 new fields in the CIE header called
address_size and segment_size.
Create these 2 new fields when generating dwarf-4 CIE entries, print out
the new fields when dumping the CIE and update tests
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9558
llvm-svn: 237145
The other changes in the LowerShift() are not functional,
just to make the code more convenient.
So, the functional changes for SKX only.
llvm-svn: 237129
AEABI defines aligned variants of memcpy etc. that can be faster than
the default version due to not having to do alignment checks. When
emitting target code for these functions make use of these aligned
variants if possible. Also convert memset to memclr if possible.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8060
llvm-svn: 237127
According to the documentation in StackMap section for the safepoint we should have:
"The first Location in each pair describes the base pointer for the object. The second is the derived pointer actually being relocated."
But before this change we emitted them in reverse order - derived pointer first, base pointer second.
llvm-svn: 237126
Summary: Allow calls with non legal integer types based on i8 and i16 to be processed by mips fast-isel.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
"Make check" test forthcoming.
Test-suite passes at O0/O2 and with mips32 r1/r2
Reviewers: rkotler, dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6770
llvm-svn: 237121
Summary:
Try to compute addresses when the offset from a memory location is a constant
expression.
Based on a patch by Reed Kotler.
Test Plan:
Passes test-suite for -O0/O2 and mips 32 r1/r2
Reviewers: rkotler, dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits, aemerson, rfuhler
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6767
llvm-svn: 237117
The X86-specific DAGCombine for stores should not assume vector types are always simple.
This fixes PR23476.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9659
llvm-svn: 237097
to use the information in the module rather than TargetOptions.
We've had and clang has used the use-soft-float attribute for some
time now so have the backends set a subtarget feature based on
a particular function now that subtargets are created based on
functions and function attributes.
For the one middle end soft float check go ahead and create
an overloadable TargetLowering::useSoftFloat function that
just checks the TargetSubtargetInfo in all cases.
Also remove the command line option that hard codes whether or
not soft-float is set by using the attribute for all of the
target specific test cases - for the generic just go ahead and
add the attribute in the one case that showed up.
llvm-svn: 237079
This fixes another miscompile introduced by r235232: when there was a
dependency on the memcpy destination other than the memset, we would
ignore it, because we only looked at the source dependency.
It was a mistake to use SrcDepInfo. Instead, just use DepInfo.
llvm-svn: 237066
Summary:
In RewriteStatepointsForGC pass, we create a gc_relocate intrinsic for
each relocated pointer, and the gc_relocate has the same type with the
pointer. During the creation of gc_relocate intrinsic, llvm requires to
mangle its type. However, llvm does not support mangling of all possible
types. RewriteStatepointsForGC will hit an assertion failure when it
tries to create a gc_relocate for pointer to vector of pointers because
mangling for vector of pointers is not supported.
This patch changes the way RewriteStatepointsForGC pass creates
gc_relocate. For each relocated pointer, we erase the type of pointers
and create an unified gc_relocate of type i8 addrspace(1)*. Then a
bitcast is inserted to convert the gc_relocate to the correct type. In
this way, gc_relocate does not need to deal with different types of
pointers and the unsupported type mangling is no longer a problem. This
change would also ease further merge when LLVM erases types of pointers
and introduces an unified pointer type.
Some minor changes are also introduced to gc_relocate related part in
InstCombineCalls, CodeGenPrepare, and Verifier accordingly.
Patch by Chen Li!
Reviewers: reames, AndyAyers, sanjoy
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9592
llvm-svn: 237009
Summary:
r235215 adds support for f16 to be considered as a load/store type and
promote f16 operations to f32.
This patch has miscellaneous fixes for the X86 backend so all f16
operations are handled:
1. Set loadextaction for f16 vectors to expand.
2. Handle FP_EXTEND in a switch statement when handling v2f32
3. Do not fold (FP_TO_SINT (load f16)) into FP_TO_INT*_IN_MEM or
(store (SINT_TO_FP )) to a FILD.
Tests included.
Reviewers: ab, srhines, delena
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9092
llvm-svn: 237004
Summary:
Now it's much easier to follow what's happening in this test.
Also removed some unused metadata entries.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9601
llvm-svn: 236981
The QPX single-precision load/store intrinsics have implied
truncation/extension from/to the declared value type of <4 x double> to the
memory type of <4 x float>. When we can prove the alignment of the pointer
argument, and thus replace the intrinsic with a regular load or store, we need
to load or store the correct data type (<4 x float>) instead of (<4 x double>).
llvm-svn: 236973
The bug showed up as a compile-time assertion failure:
Assertion `NumBits >= MIN_INT_BITS && "bitwidth too small"' failed
when building msan tests on x86-64.
Prior to r236850, this bug was masked due to a bogus alignment check,
which also accidentally rejected non-byte-sized accesses. Afterwards,
an invalid ElementSizeBytes == 0 got further into the function, and
triggered the assertion failure.
It would probably be a good idea to allow it to handle merging stores
of unusual widths as well, but for now, to un-break it, I'm just
making the minimal fix.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9626
llvm-svn: 236927
When emitting something like 'add x, 1000' if we remat the 1000 then we should be able to
mark the vreg containing 1000 as killed. Given that we go bottom up in fast-isel, a later
use of 1000 will be higher up in the BB and won't kill it, or be impacted by the lower kill.
However, rematerialised constant expressions aren't generated bottom up. The local value save area
grows downwards. This means that if you remat 2 constant expressions which both use 1000 then the
first will kill it, then the second, which is *lower* in the BB will read a killed register.
This is the case in the attached test where the 2 GEPs both need to generate 'add x, 6680' for the constant offset.
Note that this commit only makes kill flag generation conservative. There's nothing else obviously wrong with
the local value save area growing downwards, and in fact it needs to for handling arbitrarily complex constant expressions.
However, it would be nice if there was a solution which would let us generate more accurate kill flags, or just kill flags completely.
llvm-svn: 236922
The code that builds the dependence graph assumes that two PseudoSourceValues
don't alias. In a tail calling function two FixedStackObjects might refer to the
same location. Worse 'immutable' fixed stack objects like function arguments are
not immutable and will be clobbered.
Change this so that a load from a FixedStackObject is not invariant in a tail
calling function and don't return a PseudoSourceValue for an instruction in tail
calling functions when building the dependence graph so that we handle function
arguments conservatively.
Fix for PR23459.
rdar://20740035
llvm-svn: 236916
When selecting an extract instruction, we don't actually generate code but instead work out which register we are reading, and rewrite uses of the extract def to the source register. This is done via updateValueMap,.
However, its possible that the source register we are rewriting *to* to also have uses. If those uses are after a kill of the value we are rewriting *from* then we have uses after a kill and the verifier fails.
This code checks for the case where the to register is also used, and if so it clears all kill on the from register. This is conservative, but better that always clearing kills on the from register.
llvm-svn: 236897
Refactored parts of the hardware loop pass to generate
more. Also, added more tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9568
llvm-svn: 236896
Summary:
There are several unhandled edge cases in BasicAA's GetLinearExpression
method. This changes fixes outstanding issues, including zext / sext of
a constant with the sign bit set, and the refusal to decompose zexts or
sexts of wrapping arithmetic.
Test Plan: Unit tests added in //q.ext.ll//.
Patch by Nick White.
Reviewers: hfinkel, sanjoy
Reviewed By: hfinkel, sanjoy
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits, hfinkel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6682
llvm-svn: 236894
A trunc from i32 to i1 on x86_64 generates an instruction such as
%vreg19<def> = COPY %vreg9:sub_8bit<kill>; GR8:%vreg19 GR32:%vreg9
However, the copy here should only have the kill flag on the 32-bit path, not the 64-bit one.
Otherwise, we are killing the source of the truncate which could be used later in the program.
llvm-svn: 236890
This changes the shape of the statepoint intrinsic from:
@llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint(anyptr target, i32 # call args, i32 unused, ...call args, i32 # deopt args, ...deopt args, ...gc args)
to:
@llvm.experimental.gc.statepoint(anyptr target, i32 # call args, i32 flags, ...call args, i32 # transition args, ...transition args, i32 # deopt args, ...deopt args, ...gc args)
This extension offers the backend the opportunity to insert (somewhat) arbitrary code to manage the transition from GC-aware code to code that is not GC-aware and back.
In order to support the injection of transition code, this extension wraps the STATEPOINT ISD node generated by the usual lowering lowering with two additional nodes: GC_TRANSITION_START and GC_TRANSITION_END. The transition arguments that were passed passed to the intrinsic (if any) are lowered and provided as operands to these nodes and may be used by the backend during code generation.
Eventually, the lowering of the GC_TRANSITION_{START,END} nodes should be informed by the GC strategy in use for the function containing the intrinsic call; for now, these nodes are instead replaced with no-ops.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9501
llvm-svn: 236888
Summary:
I noticed this bug when deubging a WIP on LSR. I wonder whether and how we
should add a regression test for this.
Test Plan: no tests failed.
Reviewers: atrick
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9536
llvm-svn: 236887
The test here was sinking the AND here to a lower BB:
%vreg7<def> = ANDWri %vreg8, 0; GPR32common:%vreg7,%vreg8
TBNZW %vreg8<kill>, 0, <BB#1>; GPR32common:%vreg8
which meant that vreg8 was read after it was killed.
This commit changes the code from clearing kill flags on the AND to clearing flags on all registers used by the AND.
llvm-svn: 236886
Improved the AnalyzeBranch, InsertBranch, and RemoveBranch
functions in order to handle more of our branch instructions.
This requires changes to analyzeCompare and PredicateInstructions.
Specifically, we've added support for new value compare jumps,
improved handling of endloop, added more compare instructions,
and improved support for predicate instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9559
llvm-svn: 236876
The function 'getTargetShuffleMask' already knows how to deal with PSHUFB nodes
where the mask node is a load from constant pool, and the constant pool node
is wrapped by a X86ISD::Wrapper node. This patch extends that logic by teaching
it how to also look through X86ISD::WrapperRIP.
This helps function combineX86ShufflesRecusively to combine more shuffle
sequences containing PSHUFB nodes if we are in RIPRel PIC mode.
Before this change, llc (with -relocation-model=pic -march=x86-64) was unable
to decode a pshufb where the mask was loaded from a constant pool. For example,
the no-op shuffle from test 'x86-fold-pshufb.ll' was not folded into its
operand, so instead of generating a single 'movaps' the backend always
generated a sub-optimal 'movdqa + pshufb' sequence.
Added test x86-fold-pshufb.ll.
llvm-svn: 236863
1) check whether the alignment of the memory is sufficient for the
*merged* store or load to be efficient.
Not doing so can result in some ridiculously poor code generation, if
merging creates a vector operation which must be aligned but isn't.
2) DON'T check that the alignment of each load/store is equal. If
you're merging 2 4-byte stores, the first *might* have 8-byte
alignment, but the second certainly will have 4-byte alignment. We do
want to allow those to be merged.
llvm-svn: 236850
Summary:
In microMIPS, labels need to know whether they are on code or data. This is
indicated with STO_MIPS_MICROMIPS and can be inferred by being followed
by instructions. For empty basic blocks, we can ensure this by emitting the
.insn directive after the label.
Also, this fixes some failures in our out-of-tree microMIPS buildbots, for the
exception handling regression tests under: SingleSource/Regression/C++/EH
Reviewers: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9530
llvm-svn: 236815
If we duplicate an instruction then we must also clear kill flags on any uses we rewrite.
Otherwise we might be killing a register which was used in other BBs.
For example, here the entry BB ended up with these instructions, the ADD having been tail duplicated.
%vreg24<def> = t2ADDri %vreg10<kill>, 1, pred:14, pred:%noreg, opt:%noreg; GPRnopc:%vreg24 rGPR:%vreg10
%vreg22<def> = COPY %vreg10; GPR:%vreg22 rGPR:%vreg10
The copy here is inserted after the add and so needs vreg10 to be live.
llvm-svn: 236782
We were accidentally folding a sign/zero extend in to address arithmetic in a different BB when the extend wasn't available there.
Cross BB fast-isel isn't safe, so restrict this to only when the extend is in the same BB as the use.
llvm-svn: 236764
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9440
It adds a new register class to the PPC back end to contain single precision
values in VSX registers. Additionally, it adds scalar loads and stores for
VSX registers.
llvm-svn: 236755
This commit enables the tests located in test/YAMLParser directory.
Those tests were never actually enabled, as llvm-lit didn't pick up the
files with the 'data' extension. The commit renames those test files to files
with the 'test' extension so that llvm-lit would find them.
This commit also modifies yaml-bench so that it returns an error status
if an error occurred during parsing. It also adds the '-use-color'
command line option to yaml-bench (to make sure that file check matches
the error messages in the output stream).
This commit modifies some of the renamed tests so that they wouldn't
fail. It gets rid of XFAILs and uses the 'not' command instead for
some of the tests that have to fail during parsing. This commit
also adds some 'FIXME' comments to a couple of tests that are
supposed to fail but currently pass because of various bugs
in the implementation of the yaml parser.
Reviewers: Justin Bogner
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9448
llvm-svn: 236754
Summary:
This addresses PR 22718. When branch weights are too large, they were
being clamped to the range [1, MaxWeightForBB]. But this clamping is
only applied to edges that go outside the range, so it distorts the
relative branch probabilities.
This patch changes the weight calculation to scale every branch so the
relative probabilities are preserved. The scaling is done differently
now. First, all the branch weights are added up, and if the sum exceeds
32 bits, it computes an integer scale to bring all the weights within
the range.
The patch fixes an existing test that had slightly wrong branch
probabilities due to the previous clamping. It now gets branch weights
scaled accordingly.
Reviewers: dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9442
llvm-svn: 236750
Finish the job that was abandoned in D6958 following the refactoring in
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL230221:
1. Uncomment the intrinsic def for the AVX r_Int instruction.
2. Add missing r_Int entries to the load folding tables; there are already
tests that check these in "test/Codegen/X86/fold-load-unops.ll", so I
haven't added any more in this patch.
3. Add patterns to solve PR21507 ( https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21507 ).
So instead of this:
movaps %xmm0, %xmm1
rcpss %xmm1, %xmm1
movss %xmm1, %xmm0
We should now get:
rcpss %xmm0, %xmm0
And instead of this:
vsqrtss %xmm0, %xmm0, %xmm1
vblendps $1, %xmm1, %xmm0, %xmm0 ## xmm0 = xmm1[0],xmm0[1,2,3]
We should now get:
vsqrtss %xmm0, %xmm0, %xmm0
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9504
llvm-svn: 236740
Added intrinsics for the instructions. CC parameter of the intrinsics was changed from i8 to i32 according to the spec.
By Igor Breger (igor.breger@intel.com)
llvm-svn: 236714
Summary: This will enable the IAS to reject floating point instructions if soft-float is enabled.
Reviewers: dsanders, echristo
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits, mpf
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9053
llvm-svn: 236713
Summary:
One step further getting aggregate loads and store being optimized
properly. This will only handle struct with one element at this point.
Test Plan: Added unit tests for the new supported cases.
Reviewers: chandlerc, joker-eph, joker.eph, majnemer
Reviewed By: majnemer
Subscribers: pete, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8339
Patch by Amaury Sechet.
From: Amaury Sechet <amaury@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 236695
If we have recognized that a conditional is constant at a particular location in the code (while trying to decide if we can simplify a conditional branch), we can eagerly replace that condition with a constant if it's definition is post dominated by the branch in question.
In practice, this ends up being a compile time savings at most. JumpThreading would have visited each using branch anyways. CVP would have visited the cmp itself again. Unless LVI gives up early, we shouldn't gain any addition power by doing this transformation early. What we do gain is simplicity and compile time.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9312
llvm-svn: 236684
options.
This commit fixes a bug in llc and opt where "-mcpu" and "-mattr" wouldn't
override function attributes "-target-cpu" and "-target-features" in the IR.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9537
llvm-svn: 236677
Renames the original CreateGCStatepoint to CreateGCStatepointCall, and
moves invoke creating functionality from PlaceSafepoints.cpp to
IRBuilder.cpp.
This changes the labels generated for PlaceSafepoints/invokes.ll so use
a regex there to make the basic block labels more resilient.
llvm-svn: 236672
Since the coverage mapping reader and the instrprof reader were
emitting a shared set of error codes, the error messages you'd get
back from llvm-cov were ambiguous about what was actually wrong. Add
another error category to fix this.
I've also improved the wording on a couple of the instrprof errors,
for consistency.
llvm-svn: 236665
Somehow I dropped this in r233585, and we haven't had `DEBUG_LOC_AGAIN`
records since. Add it back. Also tests that the output assembly looks
okay.
Fixes PR23436.
llvm-svn: 236661
We had code such as this:
r2 = ...
t2Bcc
label1:
ldr ... r2
label2;
return r2<dead, def>
The if converter was transforming this to
r2<def> = ...
return [pred] r2<dead,def>
ldr <r2, kill>
return
which fails the machine verifier because the ldr now reads from a dead def.
The fix here detects dead defs in stepForward and passes them back to the caller in the clobbers list. The caller then clears the dead flag from the def is the value is live.
llvm-svn: 236660
Specifically, this patch correctly respects the -demangle option,
and additionally adds a hidden --relative-address option allows
input addresses to be relative to the module load address instead
of absolute addresses into the image.
llvm-svn: 236653
If called twice in the same BB on the same constant, FastISel::fastEmit_ri_ was marking the materialized vreg as killed on each use, instead of only the last use.
Change this to only mark the last use as killed by making earlier uses check if the vreg is already used elsewhere.
llvm-svn: 236650
When folding a load in to another instruction, we need to fix the class of the index register
Otherwise, it could be something like GR64 not GR64_NOSP and would fail the machine verifier.
llvm-svn: 236644
It's quite possible to encounter an insertvalue instruction that's more deeply
nested than the value we're looking for, but when that happens we really
mustn't compare beyond the end of the index array.
Since I couldn't see any guarantees about what comparisons std::equal makes, we
probably need to directly check the size beforehand. In practice, I suspect
most std::equal implementations would probably bail early, which would be OK.
But just in case...
rdar://20834485
llvm-svn: 236635
Emit the number of bytes in a `.debug_loc` entry directly. The old code
created temp labels (expensive), emitted the difference between them,
and then emitted one on each side of the relevant bytes.
(I'm looking at `llc` memory usage on `verify-uselistorder.lto.opt.bc`
(the optimized version of ld64's `-save-temps` when linking the
`verify-uselistorder` executable in an LTO bootstrap). I've hacked
`MCContext::Allocate()` to just call `malloc()` instead of using the
`BumpPtrAllocator` so that the heap profile is easier to read. As far
as peak memory is concerned, `MCContext::Allocate()` is equivalent to a
leak, since it only gets freed at process teardown.
In my heap profile, this patch drops memory usage of
`DwarfDebug::emitDebugLoc()` from 132.56 MB (11.4%) down to 29.86 MB
(2.7%) at peak memory. Some of that must be noise from `SmallVector`
(or other) allocations -- peak memory only dropped from 1160 MB down to
1100 MB -- but this nevertheless shaves 5% off the top.)
llvm-svn: 236629
Summary:
When computing branch weights in BPI, we used to disallow branches with
weight 0. This is a minor nuisance, because a branch with weight 0 is
different to "don't have information". In the context of
instrumentation, it may mean "never executed", in the context of
sampling, it means "never or seldom executed".
In allowing 0 weight branches, I ran into issues with the switch
expansion code in selection DAG. It is currently hardwired to not handle
branches with weight 0. To maintain the current behaviour, I changed it
to use 1 when it finds 0, but perhaps the algorithm needs changes to
tolerate branches with weight zero.
Reviewers: hansw
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9533
llvm-svn: 236617
The patch disabled unrolling in loop vectorization pass when VF==1 on x86 architecture,
by setting MaxInterleaveFactor to 1. Unrolling in loop vectorization pass may introduce
the cost of overflow check, memory boundary check and extra prologue/epilogue code when
regular unroller will unroll the loop another time. Disable it when VF==1 remove the
unnecessary cost on x86. The same can be done for other platforms after verifying
interleaving/memory bound checking to be not perf critical on those platforms.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9515
llvm-svn: 236613
With neon enabled, we reach SelectBinaryFPOp and are able to get registers for a <2 x double> add.
However, we shouldn't actually attempt arithmetic on it as ARMIselLowering says "v2f64 is legal so that QR subregs can be extracted as f64 elements, but neither Neon nor VFP support any arithmetic operations on it."
This commit disables SelectBinaryFPOp for any vector types. There's already a FIXME to try handle neon. Doing so would require fixing this conditional which isn't safe for vectors 'VT == MVT::f64 || VT == MVT::i64'
llvm-svn: 236609
The initial code drop for VSX swap optimization permitted the
optimization only when all operations in a web of related computation
are lane-insensitive. For some lane-sensitive operations, we can
still permit the optimization provided that we make adjustments to
those operations. This patch adds special handling for vector splats
so that their presence doesn't kill the optimization.
Vector splats are lane-sensitive since they identify by number a
vector element to be used as the source of a splat. When swap
optimizations take place, the desired vector element will move to the
opposite doubleword of the quadword vector. We thus replace the index
I by (I + N/2) % N, where N is the number of elements in the vector.
A new test case is added to test that swap optimization succeeds when
vector splats are present, and that the proper input element is used
as the source of the splat.
An ancillary change removes SH_BUILDVEC as one of the kinds of special
handling that may be required by VSX swap optimization. From
experience with GCC, I had expected to need some modifications for
vector build operations, but I did not find that to be the case.
llvm-svn: 236606
Summary: This patch correctly handles undef case of EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT node where the element index is constant and not less than vector size.
Test Plan:
CodeGen for X86 test included.
Also one incorrect regression test fixed.
Reviewers: qcolombet, chandlerc, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9250
llvm-svn: 236584
Since r234249, i1 are sext instead of zext; because of that, doing
"CMP rN, #0; IT EQ/NE" isn't correct anymore.
"TST #1" is the conservatively correct alternative - the tradeoff being
that it doesn't have a 16-bit encoding -, so use that instead.
llvm-svn: 236569
statepoint-indirect-return.ll breaks on linux systems. Delete the test
case to make the bots green while I figure out what the right fix is.
llvm-svn: 236568
Note, this is a recommit of r236515 after fixing an error in r236514. The buildbot ran fast enough that it picked up r236514 prior to r236515 and threw an error. r236515 itself ran 'make check' without errors.
Original commit message follows:
A regmask (typically seen on a call) clobbers the set of registers it lists. The IfConverter, in UpdatePredRedefs, was handling register defs, but not regmasks.
These are slightly different to a def in that we need to add both an implicit use and def to appease the machine verifier. Otherwise, uses after the if converted call could think they are reading an undefined register.
Reviewed by Matthias Braun and Quentin Colombet.
llvm-svn: 236550
COMDAT groups which have become rendered unused because of inline are
discardable if we can prove that we've made the group empty.
This fixes PR22285.
llvm-svn: 236539
The register set for LDMIA begins at offset 3, not 4. We were previously
missing the short encoding of this instruction in the case where the base
register was the first register in the register set.
Also clean up some dead code:
- The isARMLowRegister check is redundant with what VerifyLowRegs does;
replace with an assert.
- Remove handling of LDMDB instruction, which has no short encoding (and
does not appear in ReduceTable).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9485
llvm-svn: 236535
This patch makes ReplaceExtractVectorEltOfLoadWithNarrowedLoad convert
the element number from getVectorIdxTy() to PtrTy before doing pointer
arithmetic on it. This is needed on z, where element numbers are i32
but pointers are i64.
Original patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236530
For little-endian, the function would convert (extract_vector_elt (load X), Y)
to X + Y*sizeof(elt). For big-endian it would instead use
X + sizeof(vec) - Y*sizeof(elt). The big-endian case wasn't right since
vector index order always follows memory/array order, even for big-endian.
(Note that the current handling has to be wrong for Y==0 since it would
access beyond the end of the vector.)
Original patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236529
When lowering a load or store for TypeWidenVector, the type legalizer
would use a single load or store if the associated integer type was legal.
E.g. it would load a v4i8 as an i32 if i32 was legal.
This patch extends that behavior to promoted integers as well as legal ones.
If the integer type for the full vector width is TypePromoteInteger,
the element type is going to be TypePromoteInteger too, and it's still
better to use a single promoting load or truncating store rather than N
individual promoting loads or truncating stores. E.g. if you have a v2i8
on a target where i16 is promoted to i32, it's better to load the v2i8 as
an i16 rather than load both i8s individually.
Original patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236528
This adds intrinsics to allow access to all of the z13 vector instructions.
Note that instructions whose semantics can be described by standard LLVM IR
do not get any intrinsics.
For each instructions whose semantics *cannot* (fully) be described, we
define an LLVM IR target-specific intrinsic that directly maps to this
instruction.
For instructions that also set the condition code, the LLVM IR intrinsic
returns the post-instruction CC value as a second result. Instruction
selection will attempt to detect code that compares that CC value against
constants and use the condition code directly instead.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236527
The ABI specifies that <1 x i128> and <1 x fp128> are supposed to be
passed in vector registers. We do not yet support those types, and
some infrastructure is missing before we can do so.
In order to prevent accidentally generating code violating the ABI,
this patch adds checks to detect those types and error out if user
code attempts to use them.
llvm-svn: 236526
The ABI allows sub-128 vectors to be passed and returned in registers,
with the vector occupying the upper part of a register. We therefore
want to legalize those types by widening the vector rather than promoting
the elements.
The patch includes some simple tests for sub-128 vectors and also tests
that we can recognize various pack sequences, some of which use sub-128
vectors as temporary results. One of these forms is based on the pack
sequences generated by llvmpipe when no intrinsics are used.
Signed unpacks are recognized as BUILD_VECTORs whose elements are
individually sign-extended. Unsigned unpacks can have the equivalent
form with zero extension, but they also occur as shuffles in which some
elements are zero.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236525
The z13 vector facility includes some instructions that operate only on the
high f64 in a v2f64, effectively extending the FP register set from 16
to 32 registers. It's still better to use the old instructions if the
operands happen to fit though, since the older instructions have a shorter
encoding.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236524
The architecture doesn't really have any native v4f32 operations except
v4f32->v2f64 and v2f64->v4f32 conversions, with only half of the v4f32
elements being used. Even so, using vector registers for <4 x float>
and scalarising individual operations is much better than generating
completely scalar code, since there's much less register pressure.
It's also more efficient to do v4f32 comparisons by extending to 2
v2f64s, comparing those, then packing the result.
This particularly helps with llvmpipe.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236523
This adds ABI and CodeGen support for the v2f64 type, which is natively
supported by z13 instructions.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236522
This the first of a series of patches to add CodeGen support exploiting
the instructions of the z13 vector facility. This patch adds support
for the native integer vector types (v16i8, v8i16, v4i32, v2i64).
When the vector facility is present, we default to the new vector ABI.
This is characterized by two major differences:
- Vector types are passed/returned in vector registers
(except for unnamed arguments of a variable-argument list function).
- Vector types are at most 8-byte aligned.
The reason for the choice of 8-byte vector alignment is that the hardware
is able to efficiently load vectors at 8-byte alignment, and the ABI only
guarantees 8-byte alignment of the stack pointer, so requiring any higher
alignment for vectors would require dynamic stack re-alignment code.
However, for compatibility with old code that may use vector types, when
*not* using the vector facility, the old alignment rules (vector types
are naturally aligned) remain in use.
These alignment rules are not only implemented at the C language level
(implemented in clang), but also at the LLVM IR level. This is done
by selecting a different DataLayout string depending on whether the
vector ABI is in effect or not.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236521
This patch adds support for the z13 processor type and its vector facility,
and adds MC support for all new instructions provided by that facilily.
Apart from defining the new instructions, the main changes are:
- Adding VR128, VR64 and VR32 register classes.
- Making FP64 a subclass of VR64 and FP32 a subclass of VR32.
- Adding a D(V,B) addressing mode for scatter/gather operations
- Adding 1-, 2-, and 3-bit immediate operands for some 4-bit fields.
Until now all immediate operands have been the same width as the
underlying field (hence the assert->return change in decode[SU]ImmOperand).
In addition, sys::getHostCPUName is extended to detect running natively
on a z13 machine.
Based on a patch by Richard Sandiford.
llvm-svn: 236520
This reverts commit b27413cbfd78d959c18e713bfa271fb69e6b3303 (ie r236515).
This is to get the bots green while i investigate the failures.
llvm-svn: 236517
A regmask (typically seen on a call) clobbers the set of registers it lists. The IfConverter, in UpdatePredRedefs, was handling register defs, but not regmasks.
These are slightly different to a def in that we need to add both an implicit use and def to appease the machine verifier. Otherwise, uses after the if converted call could think they are reading an undefined register.
Reviewed by Matthias Braun and Quentin Colombet.
llvm-svn: 236515
It got this in some cases (if one of them was an identified object), but not in all cases.
This caused stores to undef to block load-forwarding in some cases, etc.
Added test to Transforms/GVN to verify optimization occurs as expected.
llvm-svn: 236511
This reverts commit r236360.
This change exposed a bug in WinEHPrepare by opting win32 code into EH
preparation. We already knew that WinEHPrepare has bugs, and is the
status quo for x64, so I don't think that's a reason to hold off on this
change. I disabled exceptions in the sanitizer tests in r236505 and an
earlier revision.
llvm-svn: 236508
This patch introduces a new pass that computes the safe point to insert the
prologue and epilogue of the function.
The interest is to find safe points that are cheaper than the entry and exits
blocks.
As an example and to avoid regressions to be introduce, this patch also
implements the required bits to enable the shrink-wrapping pass for AArch64.
** Context **
Currently we insert the prologue and epilogue of the method/function in the
entry and exits blocks. Although this is correct, we can do a better job when
those are not immediately required and insert them at less frequently executed
places.
The job of the shrink-wrapping pass is to identify such places.
** Motivating example **
Let us consider the following function that perform a call only in one branch of
a if:
define i32 @f(i32 %a, i32 %b) {
%tmp = alloca i32, align 4
%tmp2 = icmp slt i32 %a, %b
br i1 %tmp2, label %true, label %false
true:
store i32 %a, i32* %tmp, align 4
%tmp4 = call i32 @doSomething(i32 0, i32* %tmp)
br label %false
false:
%tmp.0 = phi i32 [ %tmp4, %true ], [ %a, %0 ]
ret i32 %tmp.0
}
On AArch64 this code generates (removing the cfi directives to ease
readabilities):
_f: ; @f
; BB#0:
stp x29, x30, [sp, #-16]!
mov x29, sp
sub sp, sp, #16 ; =16
cmp w0, w1
b.ge LBB0_2
; BB#1: ; %true
stur w0, [x29, #-4]
sub x1, x29, #4 ; =4
mov w0, wzr
bl _doSomething
LBB0_2: ; %false
mov sp, x29
ldp x29, x30, [sp], #16
ret
With shrink-wrapping we could generate:
_f: ; @f
; BB#0:
cmp w0, w1
b.ge LBB0_2
; BB#1: ; %true
stp x29, x30, [sp, #-16]!
mov x29, sp
sub sp, sp, #16 ; =16
stur w0, [x29, #-4]
sub x1, x29, #4 ; =4
mov w0, wzr
bl _doSomething
add sp, x29, #16 ; =16
ldp x29, x30, [sp], #16
LBB0_2: ; %false
ret
Therefore, we would pay the overhead of setting up/destroying the frame only if
we actually do the call.
** Proposed Solution **
This patch introduces a new machine pass that perform the shrink-wrapping
analysis (See the comments at the beginning of ShrinkWrap.cpp for more details).
It then stores the safe save and restore point into the MachineFrameInfo
attached to the MachineFunction.
This information is then used by the PrologEpilogInserter (PEI) to place the
related code at the right place. This pass runs right before the PEI.
Unlike the original paper of Chow from PLDI’88, this implementation of
shrink-wrapping does not use expensive data-flow analysis and does not need hack
to properly avoid frequently executed point. Instead, it relies on dominance and
loop properties.
The pass is off by default and each target can opt-in by setting the
EnableShrinkWrap boolean to true in their derived class of TargetPassConfig.
This setting can also be overwritten on the command line by using
-enable-shrink-wrap.
Before you try out the pass for your target, make sure you properly fix your
emitProlog/emitEpilog/adjustForXXX method to cope with basic blocks that are not
necessarily the entry block.
** Design Decisions **
1. ShrinkWrap is its own pass right now. It could frankly be merged into PEI but
for debugging and clarity I thought it was best to have its own file.
2. Right now, we only support one save point and one restore point. At some
point we can expand this to several save point and restore point, the impacted
component would then be:
- The pass itself: New algorithm needed.
- MachineFrameInfo: Hold a list or set of Save/Restore point instead of one
pointer.
- PEI: Should loop over the save point and restore point.
Anyhow, at least for this first iteration, I do not believe this is interesting
to support the complex cases. We should revisit that when we motivating
examples.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9210
<rdar://problem/3201744>
llvm-svn: 236507
It adds v1i128 to the appropriate register classes and checks parameter passing
and return values.
This is related to http://reviews.llvm.org/D9081, which will add instructions
that exploit the v1i128 datatype.
Phabricator review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9475
llvm-svn: 236503
Summary:
When using the N64 ABI, element-indices use the i64 type instead of i32.
In many cases, we can use iPTR to account for this but additional patterns
and pseudo's are also required.
This fixes most (but not quite all) failures in the test-suite when using
N64 and MSA together.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9342
llvm-svn: 236494
and avoid cloning unused decls into every partition.
Module partitioning showed up as a source of significant overhead when I
profiled some trivial test cases. Avoiding the overhead of partitionging
for uncalled functions helps to mitigate this.
This change also means that it is no longer necessary to have a
LazyEmittingLayer underneath the CompileOnDemand layer, since the
CompileOnDemandLayer will not extract or emit function bodies until they are
called.
llvm-svn: 236465
These changes allow usages where you want to pass an additional
commandline option to all invocations of a specific llvm tool. Example:
> llvm-lit -Dllc=llc -enable-misched -verify-machineinstrs
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9487
llvm-svn: 236461
When deciding whether a value comes from the aggregate or inserted value of an
insertvalue instruction, we compare the indices against those of the location
we're interested in. One of the lists needs reversing because the input data is
backwards (so that modifications take place at the end of the SmallVector), but
we were reversing both before leading to incorrect results.
Should fix PR23408
llvm-svn: 236457
Summary:
The object format can be set to something other than MachO, e.g.
to use ELF-on-Darwin for MCJIT. This already works on Windows, so
there's no reason it shouldn't on Darwin.
Reviewers: lhames, grosbach
Subscribers: rafael, grosbach, t.p.northover, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6185
llvm-svn: 236455
This patch adds the --load-address command line option to
llvm-pdbdump, which dumps all addresses assuming the module has
loaded at the specified address.
Additionally, this patch adds an option to llvm-pdbdump to support
dumping of public symbols (i.e. symbols with external linkage).
llvm-svn: 236342
This pass is responsible for constructing the EH registration object
that gets linked into fs:00, which is all it does in this change. In the
future, it will also insert stores to update the EH state number.
I considered keeping this functionality in WinEHPrepare, but it's pretty
separable and X86 specific. It has conceptually very little to do with
the task of WinEHPrepare, which is currently outlining. WinEHPrepare is
also in theory useful on ARM, but this logic is pretty x86 specific.
Reviewers: andrew.w.kaylor, majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9422
llvm-svn: 236339
Functions with jump tables need an alignment of 4 because they use the ADR
instruction, which aligns the PC to 4 bytes before adding an offset.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9424
llvm-svn: 236327
Summary:
LI should never accept immediates larger than 32 bits.
The additional Is32BitImm boolean also paves the way for unifying the functionality that LA and LI have in common.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9289
llvm-svn: 236313
Summary:
Generate one DSLL32 of 0 instead of two consecutive DSLL of 16.
In order to do this I had to change createLShiftOri's template argument from a bool to an unsigned.
This also gave me the opportunity to rewrite the mips64-expansions.s test, as it was testing the same cases multiple times and skipping over other cases.
It was also somewhat unreadable, as the CHECK lines were grouped in a huge block of text at the beginning of the file.
Reviewers: dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8974
llvm-svn: 236311
This patch fixes issues with vector constant folding not correctly handling scalar input operands if they require implicit truncation - this was tested with llvm-stress as recommended by Patrik H Hagglund.
The patch ensures that integer input scalars from a build vector are correctly truncated before folding, and that constant integer scalar results are promoted to a legal type before inclusion in the new folded build vector.
I have added another crash test case and also a test for UINT_TO_FP / SINT_TO_FP using an non-truncated scalar input, which was failing before this patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9282
llvm-svn: 236308
This pass was generating 'Instruction does not dominate all uses!'
errors for programs which had loops with a condition variable that
depended on the result of a phi instruction from outside of the loop.
The pass was inserting new phi nodes outside of the loop which used values
defined inside the loop.
http://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=90056
llvm-svn: 236306
If we move an instruction from one block down to a MOVC and predicate it,
then the original instruction could be moved in to a loop. In this case,
its invalid for any kill flags to remain on there.
Fails with -verfy-machineinstrs.
rdar://problem/20752113
llvm-svn: 236290
When commuting a thumb instruction in the size reduction pass, thumb
instructions are represented as a bundle and so some operands may be marked
as internal. The internal flag has to move with the operand when commuting.
This test is sensitive to register allocation so can't specifically check that
this error was happening, but so long as it continues to pass with -verify then
hopefully its still ok.
rdar://problem/20752113
llvm-svn: 236282
The expansion for t2ABS was always setting the kill flag on the rsb instruction.
It should instead only be set on rsb if it was set on the original ABS instruction.
rdar://problem/20752113
llvm-svn: 236272
This helps reduce the frequency of stack realignment prologues in 32-bit
X86 Windows code. Before this change and the corresponding clang change,
we would take the max of the type preferred alignment and the explicit
alignment on the alloca.
If you don't override aggregate alignment in datalayout, you get a
default of 8. This dates back to 2007 / r34356, and changing it seems
prohibitively difficult at this point.
llvm-svn: 236270
When optimizing demanded bits of the operands of an Add we have to
remove the nsw/nuw flags as we have no guarantee anymore that we don't
wrap. This is legal here because the top bit is not demanded. In fact
this operaion was already performed but missed in the case of an Add
with a constant on the right side. To fix this this patch refactors the
code to unify the code paths in SimplifyDemandedUseBits() handling of
Add/Sub:
- The transformation of Add->Or is removed from the simplify demand
code because the equivalent transformation exists in
InstCombiner::visitAdd()
- KnownOnes/KnownZero are not adjusted for Add x, C anymore as
computeKnownBits() already performs these computations.
- The simplification of the operands is unified. In this new version
constant on the right side of a Sub are shrunk now as I could not find
a reason why not to do so.
- The special case for clearing nsw/nuw in ShrinkDemandedConstant() is
not necessary anymore as the caller does that already.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9415
llvm-svn: 236269
Revision 220239 exposed a latent bug in method
'TargetInstrInfo::commuteInstruction'. When commuting the operands of a machine
instruction, method 'commuteInstruction' didn't correctly propagate the
'IsUndef' flag to the register operands of the new (commuted) instruction.
Before this patch, the following instruction:
%vreg4<def> = VADDSDrr %vreg14, %vreg5<undef>; FR64:%vreg4,%vreg14,%vreg5
was wrongly converted by method 'commuteInstruction' into:
%vreg4<def> = VADDSDrr %vreg5, %vreg14<undef>; FR64:%vreg4,%vreg5,%vreg14
The correct instruction should have been:
%vreg4<def> = VADDSDrr %vreg5<undef>, %vreg14; FR64:%vreg4,%vreg5,%vreg14
This patch fixes the problem in method 'TargetInstrInfo::commuteInstruction'.
When swapping the operands of a machine instruction, we now make sure that
'IsUndef' flags are correctly set.
Added test case 'pr23103.ll'.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9406
llvm-svn: 236258
option to print the archive headers using raw numeric values. Also add the -archive-member-offsets
for use with these to also trigger printing of the offset of the archive member from the start
of the archive.
llvm-svn: 236252
In the test case here, the 'unreachable' BB was removed by BranchFolding because its empty.
It then rewrote the jump from 'entry' to jump to its fallthrough, which was a landing pad.
This results in 'entry' jumping to 2 different landing pads, which fails the machine verifier.
rdar://problem/20750162
llvm-svn: 236248
temporary.
Because of that:
1. The machine verifier was complaining on such code.
2. The generate code worked just because the thumb reduction size pass fixed the
opcode.
rdar://problem/20749824
llvm-svn: 236247
changes:
Don't apply on hexagon and NVPTX since they no longer claim to support UADDO/USUBO
Add location to getConstant
Drop comment about the ops being turned into expand
llvm-svn: 236240
During ELF writing, there is no need to further relax the sections, so we
should not be creating fragments. This patch avoids doing so in all cases
but debug section compression (that is next).
Also, the ELF format is fairly simple to write. We can do a single pass over
the sections to write them out and compute the section header table.
llvm-svn: 236235
Summary:
The majority of the checks are subtarget independent. The few that aren't
will be corrected shortly.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9340
llvm-svn: 236220
Summary:
This doesn't make much difference to MIPS32, but it will simplify a
MIPS64r6 bugfix which will follow shortly by removing unnecessary
sign-extension of parameters.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9338
llvm-svn: 236216
Summary:
Optimizing these well are especially interesting for IRCE since it
"clamps" values by generating this sort of pattern through SCEV
expressions.
Depends on D9352.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9353
llvm-svn: 236203
Summary:
After this change `MatchSelectPattern` recognizes the following form
of SMIN:
Y >s C ? ~Y : ~C == ~Y <s ~C ? ~Y : ~C = SMIN(~Y, ~C)
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9352
llvm-svn: 236202
At the least it should be guarded by some kind of target hook.
It also introduced catastrophic compile time and code quality
regressions on some out of tree targets (test case still being
reduced/sanitized).
Sanjay agreed with reverting this patch until these issues can be
resolved.
llvm-svn: 236199
This will cause hot nodes to appear closer to the root.
The literature says building the tree like this makes it a near-optimal (in
terms of search time given key frequencies) binary search tree. In LLVM's case,
we can do up to 3 comparisons in each leaf node, so it might be better to opt
for lower tree height in some cases; that's something to look into in the
future.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9318
llvm-svn: 236192
This was breaking sqlite with the machine verifier because operand 0 was a def according to tablegen, but didn't have the 'isDef' flag set.
Looking at the ISA, its clear that this operand is a source as writing to st(0) is implicit. So move the operand to the correct place in the td file.
rdar://problem/20751584
llvm-svn: 236183
32-bit x86 MSVC-style exceptions are functionaly similar to 64-bit, but
they take no arguments. Instead, they implicitly use the value of EBP
passed in by the caller as a pointer to the parent's frame. In LLVM, we
can represent this as llvm.frameaddress(1), and feed that into all of
our calls to llvm.framerecover.
The next steps are:
- Add an alloca to the fs:00 linked list of handlers
- Add something like llvm.sjlj.lsda or generalize it to store in the
alloca
- Move state number calculation to WinEHPrepare, arrange for
FunctionLoweringInfo to call it
- Use the state numbers to insert explicit loads and stores in the IR
llvm-svn: 236172
Instead of accumulating the content in a fragment first, just write it
to the output stream.
Also put it first in the section table, so that we never have to worry
about its index being >= SHN_LORESERVE.
llvm-svn: 236145
x86 Windows uses the '_' prefix for all global symbols, and this was
mistakenly being applied to frameescape labels, which are not externally
visible global symbols. They use the private global prefix 'L'.
The *right* way to fix this is probably to stop masquerading this label
as an ExternalSymbol and create a new SDNode type. These labels are not
"external", and we know they will be resolved by assembly time. Having a
custom SDNode type would allow us to do better X86 address mode
matching, so it's probably worth doing eventually.
llvm-svn: 236123
Finish off PR23080 by renaming the debug info IR constructs from `MD*`
to `DI*`. The last of the `DIDescriptor` classes were deleted in
r235356, and the last of the related typedefs removed in r235413, so
this has all baked for about a week.
Note: If you have out-of-tree code (like a frontend), I recommend that
you get everything compiling and tests passing with the *previous*
commit before updating to this one. It'll be easier to keep track of
what code is using the `DIDescriptor` hierarchy and what you've already
updated, and I think you're extremely unlikely to insert bugs. YMMV of
course.
Back to *this* commit: I did this using the rename-md-di-nodes.sh
upgrade script I've attached to PR23080 (both code and testcases) and
filtered through clang-format-diff.py. I edited the tests for
test/Assembler/invalid-generic-debug-node-*.ll by hand since the columns
were off-by-three. It should work on your out-of-tree testcases (and
code, if you've followed the advice in the previous paragraph).
Some of the tests are in badly named files now (e.g.,
test/Assembler/invalid-mdcompositetype-missing-tag.ll should be
'dicompositetype'); I'll come back and move the files in a follow-up
commit.
llvm-svn: 236120
Reg+%g0 is preferred to Reg+imm0 by the manual, and is what GCC produces.
Futhermore, reg+imm is invalid for the (not yet supported) "alternate
address space" instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8753
llvm-svn: 236107
Summary:
The existing code was correct for 32-bit GPR's but not 64-bit GPR's. It now
accounts for both cases.
Reviewers: vkalintiris
Reviewed By: vkalintiris
Subscribers: llvm-commits, mohit.bhakkad, sagar
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9337
llvm-svn: 236099