are the same. I had already fixed a similar problem where the source and
destination were different bitcasts derived from the same alloca, but the
previous fix still did not handle the case where both operands are exactly
the same value. Radar 7552893.
llvm-svn: 93848
load is needed when we have a small store into a large alloca (at which
point we get a load/insert/store sequence), but when you do a full-sized
store, this load ends up being dead.
This dead load is bad in really large nasty testcases where the load ends
up causing mem2reg to insert large chains of dependent phi nodes which only
ADCE can delete. Instead of doing this, just don't insert the dead load.
This fixes rdar://6864035
llvm-svn: 91917
missing check that an array reference doesn't go past the end of the array,
and remove some redundant checks for in-bound array and vector references
that are no longer needed.
llvm-svn: 91897
two-element arrays. After restructuring the SROA code, it was not safe to
do this without adding more checking. It is not clear that this special-case
has really been useful, and removing this simplifies the code quite a bit.
llvm-svn: 91828
* change FindElementAndOffset to return a uint64_t instead of unsigned, and
to identify the type to be used for that result in a GEP instruction.
* move "isa<ConstantInt>" to be first in conditional.
* replace some dyn_casts with casts.
* add a comment about handling mem intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 91762
problem", this broke llvm-gcc bootstrap for release builds on
x86_64-apple-darwin10.
This reverts commit db22309800b224a9f5f51baf76071d7a93ce59c9.
llvm-svn: 91534
found last time. Instead of trying to modify the IR while iterating over it,
I've change it to keep a list of WeakVH references to dead instructions, and
then delete those instructions later. I also added some special case code to
detect and handle the situation when both operands of a memcpy intrinsic are
referencing the same alloca.
llvm-svn: 91459
While scanning through the uses of an alloca, keep track of the current offset
relative to the start of the alloca, and check memory references to see if
the offset & size correspond to a component within the alloca. This has the
nice benefit of unifying much of the code from isSafeUseOfAllocation,
isSafeElementUse, and isSafeUseOfBitCastedAllocation. The code to rewrite
the uses of a promoted alloca, after it is determined to be safe, is
reorganized in the same way.
Also, when rewriting GEP instructions, mark them as "in-bounds" since all the
indices are known to be safe.
llvm-svn: 91184
array indexes. The "complex" case of SRoA still handles them, and correctly.
This fixes a weirdness where we'd correctly avoid transforming A[0][42] if
the 42 was too large, but we'd only do it if it was one gep, not two separate
ones.
llvm-svn: 90007
the new predicates I added) instead of going through a context and doing a
pointer comparison. Besides being cheaper, this allows a smart compiler
to turn the if sequence into a switch.
llvm-svn: 83297
a Twine, e.g., for names).
- I am a little ambivalent about this; we don't want the string conversion of
utostr, but using overload '+' mixed with string and integer arguments is
sketchy. On the other hand, this particular usage is something of an idiom.
llvm-svn: 77579
This adds location info for all llvm_unreachable calls (which is a macro now) in
!NDEBUG builds.
In NDEBUG builds location info and the message is off (it only prints
"UREACHABLE executed").
llvm-svn: 75640
Make llvm_unreachable take an optional string, thus moving the cerr<< out of
line.
LLVM_UNREACHABLE is now a simple wrapper that makes the message go away for
NDEBUG builds.
llvm-svn: 75379
RewriteStoreUserOfWholeAlloca deal with tail padding because
isSafeUseOfBitCastedAllocation expects them to. Otherwise, we crash
trying to erase the bitcast.
llvm-svn: 72688
method, fixing a crash on PR4146. While the store will
ultimately overwrite the "padded size" number of bits in memory,
the stored value may be a subset of this size. This function
only wants to handle the case where all bits are stored.
llvm-svn: 71224
testsuite:
Running /Volumes/Sandbox/Buildbot/llvm/full-llvm/build/llvmCore/test/CodeGen/X86/dg.exp ...
FAIL: /Volumes/Sandbox/Buildbot/llvm/full-llvm/build/llvmCore/test/CodeGen/X86/nancvt.ll
Failed with exit(1) at line 2
while running: grep 2147027116 nancvt.ll.tmp | count 3
count: expected 3 lines and got 0.
child process exited abnormally
FAIL: /Volumes/Sandbox/Buildbot/llvm/full-llvm/build/llvmCore/test/CodeGen/X86/vec_ins_extract.ll
Failed with exit(1) at line 1
while running: llvm-as < /Volumes/Sandbox/Buildbot/llvm/full-llvm/build/llvmCore/test/CodeGen/X86/vec_ins_extract.ll | opt -scalarrepl -instcombine | llc -march=x86 -mcpu=yonah | not /usr/bin/grep sub.*esp
subl $28, %esp
subl $28, %esp
child process exited abnormally
And more.
llvm-svn: 65758
accessed at least once as a vector. This prevents it from
compiling the example in not-a-vector into:
define double @test(double %A, double %B) {
%tmp4 = insertelement <7 x double> undef, double %A, i32 0
%tmp = insertelement <7 x double> %tmp4, double %B, i32 4
%tmp2 = extractelement <7 x double> %tmp, i32 4
ret double %tmp2
}
instead, producing the integer code. Producing vectors when they
aren't otherwise in the program is dangerous because a lot of other
code treats them carefully and doesn't want to break them down.
OTOH, many things want to break down tasty i448's.
llvm-svn: 63638
With the new world order, it can handle cases where the first
store into the alloca is an element of the vector, instead of
requiring the first analyzed store to have the vector type
itself. This allows us to un-xfail
test/CodeGen/X86/vec_ins_extract.ll.
llvm-svn: 63590
be able to handle *ANY* alloca that is poked by loads and stores of
bitcasts and GEPs with constant offsets. Before the code had a number
of annoying limitations and caused it to miss cases such as storing into
holes in structs and complex casts (as in bitfield-sroa) where we had
unions of bitfields etc. This also handles a number of important cases
that are exposed due to the ABI lowering stuff we do to pass stuff by
value.
One case that is pretty great is that we compile
2006-11-07-InvalidArrayPromote.ll into:
define i32 @func(<4 x float> %v0, <4 x float> %v1) nounwind {
%tmp10 = call <4 x i32> @llvm.x86.sse2.cvttps2dq(<4 x float> %v1)
%tmp105 = bitcast <4 x i32> %tmp10 to i128
%tmp1056 = zext i128 %tmp105 to i256
%tmp.upgrd.43 = lshr i256 %tmp1056, 96
%tmp.upgrd.44 = trunc i256 %tmp.upgrd.43 to i32
ret i32 %tmp.upgrd.44
}
which turns into:
_func:
subl $28, %esp
cvttps2dq %xmm1, %xmm0
movaps %xmm0, (%esp)
movl 12(%esp), %eax
addl $28, %esp
ret
Which is pretty good code all things considering :).
One effect of this is that SROA will start generating arbitrary bitwidth
integers that are a multiple of 8 bits. In the case above, we got a
256 bit integer, but the codegen guys assure me that it can handle the
simple and/or/shift/zext stuff that we're doing on these operations.
This addresses rdar://6532315
llvm-svn: 63469
loads from allocas that cover the entire aggregate. This handles
some memcpy/byval cases that are produced by llvm-gcc. This triggers
a few times in kc++ (with std::pair<std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator
<kc::impl_abstract_phylum*>,bool>) and once in 176.gcc (with %struct..0anon).
llvm-svn: 61915
integer to a (transitive) bitcast the alloca and if that integer
has the full size of the alloca, then it clobbers the whole thing.
Handle this by extracting pieces out of the stored integer and
filing them away in the SROA'd elements.
This triggers fairly frequently because the CFE uses integers to
pass small structs by value and the inliner exposes these. For
example, in kimwitu++, I see a bunch of these with i64 stores to
"%struct.std::pair<std::_Rb_tree_const_iterator<kc::impl_abstract_phylum*>,bool>"
In 176.gcc I see a few i32 stores to "%struct..0anon".
In the testcase, this is a difference between compiling test1 to:
_test1:
subl $12, %esp
movl 20(%esp), %eax
movl %eax, 4(%esp)
movl 16(%esp), %eax
movl %eax, (%esp)
movl (%esp), %eax
addl 4(%esp), %eax
addl $12, %esp
ret
vs:
_test1:
movl 8(%esp), %eax
addl 4(%esp), %eax
ret
The second half of this will be to handle loads of the same form.
llvm-svn: 61853