This moves the matching of AVGFloor and AVGCeil into a place where
demand bit are available, so that it can detect more cases for more
folds. It changes the transform to start from a shift, not from a
truncate. We match the pattern shr(add(ext(A), ext(B)), 1), transforming
to ext(hadd(A, B)).
For signed values, because only the bottom bits are demanded llvm will
transform the above to use a lshr too, as opposed to ashr. In order to
correctly detect the hadd we need to know the demanded bits to turn it
back. Depending on whether the shift is signed (ashr) or logical (lshr),
and the extensions are signed or unsigned we can create different nodes.
If the shift is signed:
Needs >= 2 sign bits. https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/h4gQAW generating signed rhadd.
Needs >= 2 zero bits. https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/B64DUA generating unsigned rhadd.
If the shift is unsigned:
Needs >= 1 zero bits. https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/ByD8sj generating unsigned rhadd.
Needs 1 demanded bit zero and >= 2 sign bits https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/hvPGxX and
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/32P5n1 generating signed rhadd.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119072
None of the external users actual touch these (they're purely used internally down the recursive call) - its trivial to add another wrapper if anything ever does want to track known elements.
I have updated TargetLowering::isConstTrueVal to also consider
SPLAT_VECTOR nodes with constant integer operands. This allows the
optimisation to also work for targets that support scalable vectors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117210
We already call SimplifyDemandedVectorElts using whether each vector mask element is zero/nonzero, this just extends this to also try SimplifyDemandedBits using the demanded bits mask generated from the nonzero elements.
This also requires an additional TargetLowering::SimplifyDemandedBits DemandedBits/DemandedElts wrapper.
Fixes parity codegen issue where we know all but the lowest bit is zero, we can replace the ICMPNE with 0 comparison with a ext/trunc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117983
Fixes parity codegen issue where we know all but the lowest bit is zero, we can replace the ICMPNE with 0 comparison with a ext/trunc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117983
This was noted as a potential cleanup in D117508.
getShiftAmountTy() has checks for vector, phase, etc. so it should
handle anything that the caller was trying to account for.
A possible codegen regression for PowerPC is noted in D117406
because we don't recognize a pattern that demands only 1 byte
from a bswap.
This fold has existed in IR since close to the beginning of LLVM:
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blame/main/llvm/lib/Transforms/InstCombine/InstCombineSimplifyDemanded.cpp#L794
...so this patch copies that code as much as possible and adapts
it for SDAG.
The test for PowerPC that would change in D117406 is over-reduced
with undefs, so I recreated it for AArch64 and x86 by passing in
pointer args and renamed the values to make the logic clearer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117508
When we know the value we're extending is a negative constant then it
makes sense to use SIGN_EXTEND because this may improve code quality in
some cases, particularly when doing a constant splat of an unpacked vector
type. For example, for SVE when splatting the value -1 into all elements
of a vector of type <vscale x 2 x i32> the element type will get promoted
from i32 -> i64. In this case we want the splat value to sign-extend from
(i32 -1) -> (i64 -1), whereas currently it zero-extends from
(i32 -1) -> (i64 0xFFFFFFFF). Sign-extending the constant means we can use
a single mov immediate instruction.
New tests added here:
CodeGen/AArch64/sve-vector-splat.ll
I believe we see some code quality improvements in these existing
tests too:
CodeGen/AArch64/reduce-and.ll
CodeGen/AArch64/unfold-masked-merge-vector-variablemask.ll
The apparent regressions in CodeGen/AArch64/fast-isel-cmp-vec.ll only
occur because the test disables codegen prepare and branch folding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114357
Use the AttributeSet constructor instead. There's no good reason
why AttrBuilder itself should exact the AttributeSet from the
AttributeList. Moving this out of the AttrBuilder generally results
in cleaner code.
When we know the value we're extending is a negative constant then it
makes sense to use SIGN_EXTEND because this may improve code quality in
some cases, particularly when doing a constant splat of an unpacked vector
type. For example, for SVE when splatting the value -1 into all elements
of a vector of type <vscale x 2 x i32> the element type will get promoted
from i32 -> i64. In this case we want the splat value to sign-extend from
(i32 -1) -> (i64 -1), whereas currently it zero-extends from
(i32 -1) -> (i64 0xFFFFFFFF). Sign-extending the constant means we can use
a single mov immediate instruction.
New tests added here:
CodeGen/AArch64/sve-vector-splat.ll
I believe we see some code quality improvements in these existing
tests too:
CodeGen/AArch64/dag-numsignbits.ll
CodeGen/AArch64/reduce-and.ll
CodeGen/AArch64/unfold-masked-merge-vector-variablemask.ll
The apparent regressions in CodeGen/AArch64/fast-isel-cmp-vec.ll only
occur because the test disables codegen prepare and branch folding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114357
Completely rework how we handle X constrained labels for inline asm.
X should really be treated as i. Then existing tests can be moved to use
i D115410 and clang can just emit i D115311. (D115410 and D115311 are
callbr, but this can be done for label inputs, too).
Coincidentally, this simplification solves an ICE uncovered by D87279
based on assumptions made during D69868.
This is the third approach considered. See also discussions v1 (D114895)
and v2 (D115409).
Reported-by: kernel test robot <lkp@intel.com>
Fixes: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1512
Reviewed By: void, jyknight
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115688
This is the last part of D116531. Fetch the type of the indirect
inline asm operand from the elementtype attribute, rather than
the pointer element type.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52928.
This function returns an upper bound on the number of bits needed
to represent the signed value. Use "Max" to match similar functions
in KnownBits like countMaxActiveBits.
Rename APInt::getMinSignedBits->getSignificantBits. Keeping the old
name around to keep this patch size down. Will do a bulk rename as
follow up.
Rename KnownBits::countMaxSignedBits->countMaxSignificantBits.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, RKSimon, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116522
getShiftAmountTy used to directly return the shift amount type from
the target which could be too small for large illegal types. For
example, X86 always returns i8.
The code here detected this and used i32 instead if it won't fit. This
behavior was added to getShiftAmountTy in D112469 so we no longer need
this workaround.
Fix issue in TargetLowering::expandROT where we only attempt to flip a rotation if the other direction has better support - this matches TargetLowering::expandFunnelShift
This allows us to enable ISD::ROTR lowering on SSE targets, which particularly simplifies/improves codegen for splat amount and AVX2 per-element shifts.
MVE can treat v16i1, v8i1, v4i1 and v2i1 as different views onto the
same 16bit VPR.P0 register, with v2i1 holding two 8 bit values for the
two halves. This was never treated as a legal type in llvm in the past
as there are not many 64bit instructions and no 64bit compares. There
are a few instructions that could use it though, notably a VSELECT (as
it can handle any size using the underlying v16i8 VPSEL), AND/OR/XOR for
similar reasons, some gathers/scatter and long multiplies and VCTP64
instructions.
This patch goes through and makes v2i1 a legal type, handling all the
cases that fall out of that. It also makes VSELECT legal for v2i64 as a
side benefit. A lot of the codegen changes as a result - usually in way
that is a little better or a little worse, but still expensive. Costs
can change a little too in the process, again in a way that expensive
things remain expensive. A lot of the tests that changed are mainly to
ensure correctness - the code can hopefully be improved in the future
where it comes up in practice.
The intrinsics currently remain using the v4i1 they previously did to
emulate a v2i1. This will be changed in a followup patch but this one
was already large enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114449
This patch begins extending handling for peeking through bitcast nodes to big-endian targets as well as the existing little-endian case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114676
If we only demand bits from one half of a rotation pattern, see if we can simplify to a logical shift.
For the ARM/AArch64 rev16/32 patterns, I had to drop a fold to prevent srl(bswap()) -> rotr(bswap) -> srl(bswap) infinite loops. I've replaced this with an isel PatFrag which should do the same task.
Reapplied with fix for AArch64 rev patterns to matching the ARM fix.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/iroxki (rol -> shl by amt iff demanded bits has at least as many trailing zeros as the shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/4ez_U- (ror -> shl by revamt iff demanded bits has at least as many trailing zeros as the reverse shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/cD7dR- (ror -> lshr by amt iff demanded bits has at least as many leading zeros as the shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/_XGHtQ (rol -> lshr by revamt iff demanded bits has at least as many leading zeros as the reverse shift amount)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114354
If we only demand bits from one half of a rotation pattern, see if we can simplify to a logical shift.
For the ARM rev16 patterns, I had to drop a fold to prevent srl(bswap()) -> rotr(bswap) -> srl(bswap) infinite loops. I've replaced this with an isel PatFrag which should do the same task.
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/iroxki (rol -> shl by amt iff demanded bits has at least as many trailing zeros as the shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/4ez_U- (ror -> shl by revamt iff demanded bits has at least as many trailing zeros as the reverse shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/cD7dR- (ror -> lshr by amt iff demanded bits has at least as many leading zeros as the shift amount)
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/_XGHtQ (rol -> lshr by revamt iff demanded bits has at least as many leading zeros as the reverse shift amount)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114354
Fixed the vector type issue that where we used getVectorNumElements()
should be replaced by getVectorElementCount() when lowering these
intrinsics.
This is similar to D94149
Signed-off-by: Eric Tang <tangxingxin1008@gmail.com>
Reviewed By: craig.topper, frasercrmck
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109809
If we have a large enough floating point type that can exactly
represent the integer value, we can convert the value to FP and
use the exponent to calculate the leading/trailing zeros.
The exponent will contain log2 of the value plus the exponent bias.
We can then remove the bias and convert from log2 to leading/trailing
zeros.
This doesn't work for zero since the exponent of zero is zero so we
can only do this for CTLZ_ZERO_UNDEF/CTTZ_ZERO_UNDEF. If we need
a value for zero we can use a vmseq and a vmerge to handle it.
We need to be careful to make sure the floating point type is legal.
If it isn't we'll continue using the integer expansion. We could split the vector
and concatenate the results but that needs some additional work and evaluation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111904
If we've only demanded the 0'th element, and it comes from a (one-use) AND, try to convert the zero_extend_vector_inreg into a mask and constant fold it with the AND.
As suggested on D113371, this adds a wrapper to SelectionDAG::ComputeNumSignBits, similar to the llvm::ComputeMinSignedBits wrapper.
I've included some usage, its not exhaustive, just the more obvious cases where the intention is obvious.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113396
Instead of returning a bool to indicate success and a separate
SDValue, return the SDValue and have the callers check if it is
null.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112331
There is no need to return a bool and have an SDValue output
parameter. Just return the SDValue and let the caller check if it
is null.
I have another patch to add more callers of these so I thought
I'd clean up the interface first.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D112267
Our fallback expansion for CTLZ/CTTZ relies on CTPOP. If CTPOP
isn't legal or custom for a vector type we would scalarize the
CTLZ/CTTZ. This is different than CTPOP itself which would use a
vector expansion.
This patch teaches expandCTLZ/CTTZ to rely on the vector CTPOP
expansion instead of scalarizing. To do this I had to add additional
checks to make sure the operations used by CTPOP expansions are all
supported. Some of the operations were already needed for the CTLZ/CTTZ
expansion.
This is a huge improvement to the RISCV which doesn't have a scalar
ctlz or cttz in the base ISA.
For WebAssembly, I've added Custom lowering to keep the scalarizing
behavior. I've also extended the scalarizing to CTPOP.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111919
When inserting a scalable subvector into a scalable vector through
the stack, the index to store to needs to be scaled by vscale.
Before this patch, that didn't yet happen, so it would generate the
wrong offset, thus storing a subvector to the incorrect address
and overwriting the wrong lanes.
For some insert:
nxv8f16 insert_subvector(nxv8f16 %vec, nxv2f16 %subvec, i64 2)
The offset was not scaled by vscale:
orr x8, x8, #0x4
st1h { z0.h }, p0, [sp]
st1h { z1.d }, p1, [x8]
ld1h { z0.h }, p0/z, [sp]
And is changed to:
mov x8, sp
st1h { z0.h }, p0, [sp]
st1h { z1.d }, p1, [x8, #1, mul vl]
ld1h { z0.h }, p0/z, [sp]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111633
Inspired by D111968, provide a isNegatedPowerOf2() wrapper instead of obfuscating code with (-Value).isPowerOf2() patterns, which I'm sure are likely avenues for typos.....
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111998
Stop using APInt constructors and methods that were soft-deprecated in
D109483. This fixes all the uses I found in llvm, except for the APInt
unit tests which should still test the deprecated methods.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110807
While these functions are only used in one location in upstream,
it has been reused in multiple downstreams. Restore this file to
a globally visibile location (outside of APInt.h) to eliminate
donwstream breakage and enable potential future reuse.
Additionally, this patch renames types and cleans up
clang-tidy issues.
APInt is used to describe a bit mask in a variety of value tracking and demanded bits/elts functions.
When traversing through dst/src operands, we have a number of places where these masks need to widened/narrowed to translate through bitcasts, reductions etc. to a different type.
This patch add a APIntOps::ScaleBitMask common helper, adds unit test coverage, and updates a number of cases to use the the helper instead of their own implementation.
This came up on D109065 where we currently have to add yet another implementation of the same code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109683
Soft deprecrate isNullValue/isAllOnesValue and update in tree
callers. This matches the changes to the APInt interface from
D109483.
Reviewed By: lattner
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109535
This renames the primary methods for creating a zero value to `getZero`
instead of `getNullValue` and renames predicates like `isAllOnesValue`
to simply `isAllOnes`. This achieves two things:
1) This starts standardizing predicates across the LLVM codebase,
following (in this case) ConstantInt. The word "Value" doesn't
convey anything of merit, and is missing in some of the other things.
2) Calling an integer "null" doesn't make any sense. The original sin
here is mine and I've regretted it for years. This moves us to calling
it "zero" instead, which is correct!
APInt is widely used and I don't think anyone is keen to take massive source
breakage on anything so core, at least not all in one go. As such, this
doesn't actually delete any entrypoints, it "soft deprecates" them with a
comment.
Included in this patch are changes to a bunch of the codebase, but there are
more. We should normalize SelectionDAG and other APIs as well, which would
make the API change more mechanical.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109483
This moves one mid-size function out of line, inlines the
trivial tcAnd/tcOr/tcXor/tcComplement methods into their only
caller, and moves the magic/umagic functions into SelectionDAG
since they are implementation details of its algorithm. This
also removes the unit tests for magic, but these are already
tested in the divide lowering logic for various targets.
This also upgrades some C style comments to C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109476
Pulled out of D109149, this folds set_cc seteq (ashr X, BW-1), -1 ->
set_cc setlt X, 0 to prevent some regressions later on when folding
select_cc setgt X, -1, C, ~C -> xor (ashr X, BW-1), C
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109214
Please refer to
https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2021-September/152440.html
(and that whole thread.)
TLDR: the original patch had no prior RFC, yet it had some changes that
really need a proper RFC discussion. It won't be productive to discuss
such an RFC, once it's actually posted, while said patch is already
committed, because that introduces bias towards already-committed stuff,
and the tree is potentially in broken state meanwhile.
While the end result of discussion may lead back to the current design,
it may also not lead to the current design.
Therefore i take it upon myself
to revert the tree back to last known good state.
This reverts commit 4c4093e6e3.
This reverts commit 0a2b1ba33a.
This reverts commit d9873711cb.
This reverts commit 791006fb8c.
This reverts commit c22b64ef66.
This reverts commit 72ebcd3198.
This reverts commit 5fa6039a5f.
This reverts commit 9efda541bf.
This reverts commit 94d3ff09cf.
I believe, the profitability reasoning here is correct
"sub"reg is already located within the 0'th subreg of wider reg,
so if we have suvector insertion at index 0 into undef,
then it's always free do to.
After this, D109065 finally avoids the regression in D108382.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109074
When expanding a SMULFIXSAT ISD node (usually originating from
a smul.fix.sat intrinsic) we've applied some optimizations for
the special case when the scale is zero. The idea has been that
it would be cheaper to use an SMULO instruction (if legal) to
perform the multiplication and at the same time detect any overflow.
And in case of overflow we could use some SELECT:s to replace the
result with the saturated min/max value. The only tricky part
is to know if we overflowed on the min or max value, i.e. if the
product is positive or negative. Unfortunately the implementation
has been incorrect as it has looked at the product returned by the
SMULO to determine the sign of the product. In case of overflow that
product is truncated and won't give us the correct sign bit.
This patch is adding an extra XOR of the multiplication operands,
which is used to determine the sign of the non truncated product.
This patch fixes PR51677.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108938
We can halve the number of mask constants by masking before shl
and after srl.
This can reduce the number of mov immediate or constant
materializations. Or reduce the number of constant pool loads
for X86 vectors.
I think we might be able to do something similar for bswap. I'll
look at it next.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108738
This changes the lowering of saddsat and ssubsat so that instead of
using:
r,o = saddo x, y
c = setcc r < 0
s = c ? INTMAX : INTMIN
ret o ? s : r
into using asr and xor to materialize the INTMAX/INTMIN constants:
r,o = saddo x, y
s = ashr r, BW-1
x = xor s, INTMIN
ret o ? x : r
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/TYufgD
This seems to reduce the instruction count in most testcases across most
architectures. X86 has some custom lowering added to compensate for
cases where it can increase instruction count.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105853
This commit adds the isnan intrinsic and provides a default expansion
for it in the SDAG. However, it makes the assumption that types
it operates on are IEEE-compliant types. This is not always the case.
An example of that is PPC "double double" which has a representation
that
- Does not need to conform to IEEE requirements for isnan as it is
not an IEEE-compliant type
- Does not have a representation that allows for straightforward
reinterpreting as an integer and use of integer operations
The result was that this commit broke __builtin_isnan for ppc_fp128
making many valid numeric values report a NaN.
This patch simply changes the expansion to always expand to unordered
comparison (regardless of whether FP exceptions are tracked). This
is inline with previous semantics.
This is recommit of the patch 16ff91ebcc,
reverted in 0c28a7c990 because it had
an error in call of getFastMathFlags (base type should be FPMathOperator
but not Instruction). The original commit message is duplicated below:
Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.
* The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.
* Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.
* Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.
Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:
* The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
some optimizations.
* IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.
Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
returns 'false':
std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())
The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
such function returns expected result instead of actually making
checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
'-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
'tests'.
To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
resulting code satisfies requested semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.
* The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.
* Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.
* Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.
Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:
* The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
some optimizations.
* IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.
Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
returns 'false':
std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())
The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
such function returns expected result instead of actually making
checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
'-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
'tests'.
To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
resulting code satisfies requested semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
This patch legalizes the Machine Value Type introduced in D94096 for loads
and stores. A new target hook named getAsmOperandValueType() is added which
maps i512 to MVT::i64x8. GlobalISel falls back to DAG for legalization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94097
This patch extends support for (scalable-vector) splats in the
DAGCombiner via the `ISD::matchBinaryPredicate` function, which enable a
variety of simple combines of constants.
Users of this function may now have to distinguish between
`BUILD_VECTOR` and `SPLAT_VECTOR` vector operands. The way of dealing
with this in-tree follows the approach added for
`ISD::matchUnaryPredicate` implemented in D94501.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106575
I've setup the basic framework for the isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison call and updated DAGCombiner::visitFREEZE to use it, further Opcodes can be handled when we have test coverage.
I'm not aware of any vector test freeze coverage so the DemandedElts (and the Depth) args are not being used yet - but they are in place.
SelectionDAG::isGuaranteedNotToBePoison wrappers have also been added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106668
Inserting into a smaller-than-legal scalable vector would result in an
internal compiler error. For example, inserting a <vscale x 4 x i8> into
a <vscale x 8 x i8> (both illegal vector types for SVE) would cause a
crash.
This crash was happening because there was no code to promote (legalise)
the result of an INSERT_SUBVECTOR node.
This patch implements PromoteIntRes_INSERT_SUBVECTOR, which legalises
the ISD node. This is currently done by going through memory. This is
necessary because of the requirement that the SubVec parameter of the
INSERT_SUBVECTOR node must be smaller than the Vec parameter, which
means that INSERT_SUBVECTOR cannot always have a legal result/operand
types.
Co-Authored-by: Joe Ellis <joe.ellis@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102766
When clamping the index for a memory access to a stacked vector we must
take into account the entire type being accessed, not just assume that
we are accessing only a single element.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105016
This is a mechanical change. This actually also renames the
similarly named methods in the SmallString class, however these
methods don't seem to be used outside of the llvm subproject, so
this doesn't break building of the rest of the monorepo.
We don't constant fold based on demanded bits elsewhere in
SimplifyDemandedBits, so I don't think we should shrink them either.
The affected ARM test changes because a constant become non-opaque
and eventually enabled some constant folding. This no longer happens.
I checked and InstCombine is able to simplify this test. I'm not sure exactly
what it was trying to test.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104832
Iff we have `SCALAR_TO_VECTOR` (and we demand it's only defined 0'th element),
and said scalar was produced by `EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT` from the 0'th element
of some vector, then we can just continue traversal into said source vector.
This comes up in X86 vector uniform shift lowering.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104250
Needs to be discussed more.
This reverts commit 255a5c1baa6020c009934b4fa342f9f6dbbcc46
This reverts commit df2056ff3730316f376f29d9986c9913b95ceb1
This reverts commit faff79b7ca144e505da6bc74aa2b2f7cffbbf23
This reverts commit d2a9020785c6e02afebc876aa2778fa64c5cafd
For opaque pointers, we're trying to avoid uses of
PointerType::getElementType().
A couple of ISel places use PointerType::getElementType(). Some of these
are easy to fix by using ArgListEntry's indirect types.
The inalloca type wasn't stored there, as opposed to preallocated and
byval which have their indirect types available, so add it and use it.
This is a reland after an MSan fix in D102667.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101713
Ensure we tell getShiftAmountTy that we're working with pre-legalized types to prevent cases where the (legalized) shift type can no longer handle the (non-legalized) type width.
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=34366
This extends any frame record created in the function to include that
parameter, passed in X22.
The new record looks like [X22, FP, LR] in memory, and FP is stored with 0b0001
in bits 63:60 (CodeGen assumes they are 0b0000 in normal operation). The effect
of this is that tools walking the stack should expect to see one of three
values there:
* 0b0000 => a normal, non-extended record with just [FP, LR]
* 0b0001 => the extended record [X22, FP, LR]
* 0b1111 => kernel space, and a non-extended record.
All other values are currently reserved.
If compiling for arm64e this context pointer is address-discriminated with the
discriminator 0xc31a and the DB (process-specific) key.
There is also an "i8** @llvm.swift.async.context.addr()" intrinsic providing
front-ends access to this slot (and forcing its creation initialized to nullptr
if necessary).
For opaque pointers, we're trying to avoid uses of
PointerType::getElementType().
A couple of ISel places use PointerType::getElementType(). Some of these
are easy to fix by using ArgListEntry's indirect types.
The inalloca type wasn't stored there, as opposed to preallocated and
byval which have their indirect types available, so add it and use it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101713
Based off a discussion on D89281 - where the AARCH64 implementations were being replaced to use funnel shifts.
Any target that has efficient funnel shift lowering can handle the shift parts expansion using the same expansion, avoiding a lot of duplication.
I've generalized the X86 implementation and moved it to TargetLowering - so far I've found that AARCH64 and AMDGPU benefit, but many other targets (ARM, PowerPC + RISCV in particular) could easily use this with a few minor improvements to their funnel shift lowering (or the folding of their target ops that funnel shifts lower to).
NOTE: I'm trying to avoid adding full SHIFT_PARTS legalizer handling as I think it might actually be possible to remove these opcodes in the medium-term and use funnel shift / libcall expansion directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101987
Previously we used an i32 constant to store the saturation width, but i32 isn't
legal on RISCV64. This wasn't a big deal to fix, but it is extra work for the
type legalizer.
This patch uses a VTSDNode to store the type similar to SEXT_INREG. This makes
it opaque to the type legalizer.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101262
When trying to clamp a constant index into a scalable vector we can
test if the index is less than the minimum number of elements in the
vector. If so, we can simply return the index because we know it is
guaranteed to fit inside the vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100639
Such attributes can either be unset, or set to "true" or "false" (as string).
throughout the codebase, this led to inelegant checks ranging from
if (Fn->getFnAttribute("no-jump-tables").getValueAsString() == "true")
to
if (Fn->hasAttribute("no-jump-tables") && Fn->getFnAttribute("no-jump-tables").getValueAsString() == "true")
Introduce a getValueAsBool that normalize the check, with the following
behavior:
no attributes or attribute set to "false" => return false
attribute set to "true" => return true
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99299
When we pass a AArch64 Homogeneous Floating-Point
Aggregate (HFA) argument with increased alignment
requirements, for example
struct S {
__attribute__ ((__aligned__(16))) double v[4];
};
Clang uses `[4 x double]` for the parameter, which is passed
on the stack at alignment 8, whereas it should be at
alignment 16, following Rule C.4 in
AAPCS (https://github.com/ARM-software/abi-aa/blob/master/aapcs64/aapcs64.rst#642parameter-passing-rules)
Currently we don't have a way to express in LLVM IR the
alignment requirements of the function arguments. The align
attribute is applicable to pointers only, and only for some
special ways of passing arguments (e..g byval). When
implementing AAPCS32/AAPCS64, clang resorts to dubious hacks
of coercing to types, which naturally have the needed
alignment. We don't have enough types to cover all the
cases, though.
This patch introduces a new use of the stackalign attribute
to control stack slot alignment, when and if an argument is
passed in memory.
The attribute align is left as an optimizer hint - it still
applies to pointer types only and pertains to the content of
the pointer, whereas the alignment of the pointer itself is
determined by the stackalign attribute.
For byval arguments, the stackalign attribute assumes the
role, previously perfomed by align, falling back to align if
stackalign` is absent.
On the clang side, when passing arguments using the "direct"
style (cf. `ABIArgInfo::Kind`), now we can optionally
specify an alignment, which is emitted as the new
`stackalign` attribute.
Patch by Momchil Velikov and Lucas Prates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98794