9345ab3a45 updated generateOverflowCheck to skip creating checks that
always evaluate to false. This in turn means that we only need to check
for overflows if the result of the multiplication is actually used.
Sink the Or for the overflow check into ComputeEndCheck, so it is only
created when there's an actual check.
Currently generateOverflowCheck always creates code for Step being
negative and positive, followed by a select at the end depending on
Step's sign.
This patch updates the code to only create either the checks for step
being positive or negative, if the sign is known.
Follow-up to D116696.
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116747
This patch updates SCEVExpander::expandUnionPredicate to not create
redundant 'or false, x' instructions. While those are trivially
foldable, they can be easily avoided and hinder code that checks the
size/cost of the generated checks before further folds.
I am planning on look into a few other similar improvements to code
generated by SCEVExpander.
I remember a while ago @lebedev.ri working on doing some trivial folds
like that in IRBuilder itself, but there where concerns that such
changes may subtly break existing code.
Reviewed By: reames, lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116696
The basic idea to this is that a) having a single canonical type makes CSE easier, and b) many of our transforms are inconsistent about which types we end up with based on visit order.
I'm restricting this to constants as for non-constants, we'd have to decide whether the simplicity was worth extra instructions. For constants, there are no extra instructions.
We chose the canonical type as i64 arbitrarily. We might consider changing this to something else in the future if we have cause.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115387
Drop changes to consecutive-ptr-uniforms.ll since that test checks boths IR output and debug messages. I'd missed this in the original commit, and Florian pointed it out in post-commit review.
Original commit message:
These are the ones my first round of scripting couldn't handle that required a bit of manual messaging. This should be the last batch in llvm-check.
This reverts commit bbba86764a.
This reverts commit bbfaf0b170.
Post commit review noted a case where my manual update lost intentional check lines. Given I've abandoned the motivating patch, I'm just reverting the autogen prep.
This patch simplifies handling of redundant induction casts, by
removing dead cast instructions after initial VPlan construction.
This has the following benefits:
1. fixes a crash
(see @test_optimized_cast_induction_feeding_first_order_recurrence)
2. Simplifies VPWidenIntOrFpInduction to a single-def recipes
3. Retires recordVectorLoopValueForInductionCast.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115112
Unfortunately sinking recipes for first-order recurrences relies on
the original position of recipes. So if a recipes needs to be sunk after
an optimized induction, it needs to stay in the original position, until
sinking is done. This is causing PR52460.
To fix the crash, keep the recipes in the original position until
sink-after is done.
Post-commit follow-up to c45045bfd0 to address PR52460.
All phi-like recipes should be at the beginning of a VPBasicBlock with
no other recipes in between. Ensure that the recurrence-splicing recipe
is not added between phi-like recipes, but after them.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D111301
This reverts the revert commit b1777b04dc.
The patch originally got reverted due to a crash:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1232798#c2
The underlying issue was that we were not using the stored values from
the modified memory recipes, but the out-of-date values directly from
the IR (accessed via the VPlan). This should be fixed in d995d6376. A
reduced version of the reproducer has been added in 93664503be.
This patch adds a VPFirstOrderRecurrencePHIRecipe, to further untangle
VPWidenPHIRecipe into distinct recipes for distinct use cases/lowering.
See D104989 for a new recipe for reduction phis.
This patch also introduces a new `FirstOrderRecurrenceSplice`
VPInstruction opcode, which is used to make the forming of the vector
recurrence value explicit in VPlan. This more accurately models def-uses
in VPlan and also simplifies code-generation. Now, the vector recurrence
values are created at the right place during VPlan-codegeneration,
rather than during post-VPlan fixups.
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105008
This patch marks the induction increment of the main induction variable
of the vector loop as NUW when not folding the tail.
If the tail is not folded, we know that End - Start >= Step (either
statically or through the minimum iteration checks). We also know that both
Start % Step == 0 and End % Step == 0. We exit the vector loop if %IV +
%Step == %End. Hence we must exit the loop before %IV + %Step unsigned
overflows and we can mark the induction increment as NUW.
This should make SCEV return more precise bounds for the created vector
loops, used by later optimizations, like late unrolling.
At the moment quite a few tests still need to be updated, but before
doing so I'd like to get initial feedback to make sure I am not missing
anything.
Note that this could probably be further improved by using information
from the original IV.
Attempt of modeling of the assumption in Alive2:
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/H_DL_g
Part of a set of fixes required for PR50412.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103255
The vector reduction intrinsics started life as experimental ops, so backend support
was lacking. As part of promoting them to 1st-class intrinsics, however, codegen
support was added/improved:
D58015
D90247
So I think it is safe to now remove this complication from IR.
Note that we still have an IR-level codegen expansion pass for these as discussed
in D95690. Removing that is another step in simplifying the logic. Also note that
x86 was already unconditionally forming reductions in IR, so there should be no
difference for x86.
I spot checked a couple of the tests here by running them through opt+llc and did
not see any asm diffs.
If we do find functional differences for other targets, it should be possible
to (at least temporarily) restore the shuffle IR with the ExpandReductions IR
pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96552
This patch makes SLP and LV emit operations with initial vectors set to poison constant instead of undef.
This is a part of efforts for using poison vector instead of undef to represent "doesn't care" vector.
The goal is to make nice shufflevector optimizations valid that is currently incorrect due to the tricky interaction between undef and poison (see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44185 ).
Reviewed By: fhahn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94061
This patch updates IRBuilder to create insertelement/shufflevector using poison as a placeholder.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93793
Currently undef is used as a don’t-care vector when constructing a vector using a series of insertelement.
However, this is problematic because undef isn’t undefined enough.
Especially, a sequence of insertelement can be optimized to shufflevector, but using undef as its placeholder makes shufflevector a poison-blocking instruction because undef cannot be optimized to poison.
This makes a few straightforward optimizations incorrect, such as:
```
; https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44185
define <4 x float> @insert_not_undef_shuffle_translate_commute(float %x, <4 x float> %y, <4 x float> %q) {
%xv = insertelement <4 x float> %q, float %x, i32 2
%r = shufflevector <4 x float> %y, <4 x float> %xv, <4 x i32> { 0, 6, 2, undef }
ret <4 x float> %r ; %r[3] is undef
}
=>
define <4 x float> @insert_not_undef_shuffle_translate_commute(float %x, <4 x float> %y, <4 x float> %q) {
%r = insertelement <4 x float> %y, float %x, i32 1
ret <4 x float> %r ; %r[3] = %y[3], incorrect if %y[3] = poison
}
Transformation doesn't verify!
ERROR: Target is more poisonous than source
```
I’d like to suggest
1. Using poison as insertelement’s placeholder value (IRBuilder::CreateVectorSplat should be patched too)
2. Updating shufflevector’s semantics to return poison element if mask is undef
Note that poison is currently lowered into UNDEF in SelDag, so codegen part is okay.
m_Undef() matches PoisonValue as well, so existing optimizations will still fire.
The only concern is hidden miscompilations that will go incorrect when poison constant is given.
A conservative way is copying all tests having `insertelement undef` & replacing it with `insertelement poison` & run Alive2 on it, but it will create many tests and people won’t like it. :(
Instead, I’ll simply locally maintain the tests and run Alive2.
If there is any bug found, I’ll report it.
Relevant links: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43958 , http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-November/137242.html
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93586
bo (splat X), (bo Y, OtherOp) --> bo (splat (bo X, Y)), OtherOp
This patch depends on the splat analysis enhancement in D73549.
See the test with comment:
; Negative test - mismatched splat elements
...as the motivation for that first patch.
The motivating case for reassociating splatted ops is shown in PR42174:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42174
In that example, a slight change in order-of-associative math results
in a big difference in IR and codegen. This patch gets all of the
unnecessary shuffles out of the way, but doesn't address the potential
scalarization (see D50992 or D73480 for that).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73703
As it's causing some bot failures (and per request from kbarton).
This reverts commit r358543/ab70da07286e618016e78247e4a24fcb84077fda.
llvm-svn: 358546
At the point when we perform `emitTransformedIndex`, we have a broken IR (in
particular, we have Phis for which not every incoming value is properly set). On
such IR, it is illegal to create SCEV expressions, because their internal
simplification process may try to prove some predicates and break when it
stumbles across some broken IR.
The only purpose of using SCEV in this particular place is attempt to simplify
the generated code slightly. It seems that the result isn't worth it, because
some trivial cases (like addition of zero and multiplication by 1) can be
handled separately if needed, but more generally InstCombine is able to achieve
the goals we want to achieve by using SCEV.
This patch fixes a functional crash described in PR39160, and as side-effect it
also generates a bit smarter code in some simple cases. It also may cause some
optimality loss (i.e. we will now generate `mul` by power of `2` instead of
shift etc), but there is nothing what InstCombine could not handle later. In
case of dire need, we can support more trivial cases just in place.
Note that this patch only fixes one particular case of the general problem that
LV misuses SCEV, attempting to create SCEVs or prove predicates on invalid IR.
The general solution, however, seems complex enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52881
Reviewed By: fhahn, hsaito
llvm-svn: 343954
Summary:
This is a fix for PR23997.
The loop vectorizer is not preserving the inbounds property of GEPs that it creates.
This is inhibiting some optimizations. This patch preserves the inbounds property in
the case where a load/store is being fed by an inbounds GEP.
Reviewers: mkuper, javed.absar, hsaito
Reviewed By: hsaito
Subscribers: dcaballe, hsaito, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46191
llvm-svn: 331269
Generate a single test to decide if there are enough iterations to jump to the
vectorized loop, or else go to the scalar remainder loop. This test compares the
Scalar Trip Count: if STC < VF * UF go to the scalar loop. If
requiresScalarEpilogue() holds, at-least one iteration must remain scalar; the
rest can be used to form vector iterations. So in this case the test checks
instead if (STC - 1) < VF * UF by comparing STC <= VF * UF, and going to the
scalar loop if so. Otherwise the vector loop is entered for at-least one vector
iteration.
This test covers the case where incrementing the backedge-taken count will
overflow leading to an incorrect trip count of zero. In this (rare) case we will
also avoid the vector loop and jump to the scalar loop.
This patch simplifies the existing tests and effectively removes the basic-block
originally named "min.iters.checked", leaving the single test in block
"vector.ph".
Original observation and initial patch by Evgeny Stupachenko.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34150
llvm-svn: 308421
Summary:
In first order recurrence vectorization, when the previous value is a phi node, we need to
set the insertion point to the first non-phi node.
We can have the previous value being a phi node, due to the generation of new
IVs as part of trunc optimization [1].
[1] https://reviews.llvm.org/rL294967
Reviewers: mssimpso, mkuper
Subscribers: mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32969
llvm-svn: 302532
This patch is part of D28975's breakdown.
induction.ll encodes the specific (and rather arbitrary) numbers given to
predicated basic blocks by the unique naming mechanism, which makes it
sensitive to changes in LV's instruction generation order. This patch replaces
those specific numbers with a numeric pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32404
llvm-svn: 301345
The vectorizer tries to replace truncations of induction variables with new
induction variables having the smaller type. After r295063, this optimization
was applied to all integer induction variables, including non-primary ones.
When optimizing the truncation of a non-primary induction variable, we still
need to transform the new induction so that it has the correct start value.
This should fix PR32419.
Reference: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32419
llvm-svn: 298882
This reapplies commit r294967 with a fix for the execution time regressions
caught by the clang-cmake-aarch64-quick bot. We now extend the truncate
optimization to non-primary induction variables only if the truncate isn't
already free.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29847
llvm-svn: 295063
This reverts commit r294967. This patch caused execution time slowdowns in a
few LLVM test-suite tests, as reported by the clang-cmake-aarch64-quick bot.
I'm reverting to investigate.
llvm-svn: 294973
This patch extends the optimization of truncations whose operand is an
induction variable with a constant integer step. Previously we were only
applying this optimization to the primary induction variable. However, the cost
model assumes the optimization is applied to the truncation of all integer
induction variables (even regardless of step type). The transformation is now
applied to the other induction variables, and I've updated the cost model to
ensure it is better in sync with the transformation we actually perform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29847
llvm-svn: 294967
We previously only created a vector phi node for an induction variable if its
type matched the type of the canonical induction variable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D29776
llvm-svn: 294755
When we predicate an instruction (div, rem, store) we place the instruction in
its own basic block within the vectorized loop. If a predicated instruction has
scalar operands, it's possible to recursively sink these scalar expressions
into the predicated block so that they might avoid execution. This patch sinks
as much scalar computation as possible into predicated blocks. We previously
were able to sink such operands only if they were extractelement instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25632
llvm-svn: 285097
When building the steps for scalar induction variables, we previously attempted
to determine if all the scalar users of the induction variable were uniform. If
they were, we would only emit the step corresponding to vector lane zero. This
optimization was too aggressive. We generally don't know the entire set of
induction variable users that will be scalar. We have
isScalarAfterVectorization, but this is only a conservative estimate of the
instructions that will be scalarized. Thus, an induction variable may have
scalar users that aren't already known to be scalar. To avoid emitting unused
steps, we can only check that the induction variable is uniform. This should
fix PR30542.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=30542
llvm-svn: 282863
If we identify an instruction as uniform after vectorization, we know that we
should only use the value corresponding to the first vector lane of each unroll
iteration. However, when scalarizing such instructions, we still produce values
for the other vector lanes. This patch prevents us from generating the unused
scalars.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24275
llvm-svn: 282087
This patch enables the vectorizer to generate both scalar and vector versions
of an integer induction variable for a given loop. Previously, we only
generated a scalar induction variable if we knew all its users were going to be
scalar. Otherwise, we generated a vector induction variable. In the case of a
loop with both scalar and vector users of the induction variable, we would
generate the vector induction variable and extract scalar values from it for
the scalar users. With this patch, we now generate both versions of the
induction variable when there are both scalar and vector users and select which
version to use based on whether the user is scalar or vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22869
llvm-svn: 277474
This patch refactors the logic in collectLoopUniforms and
collectValuesToIgnore, untangling the concepts of "uniform" and "scalar". It
adds isScalarAfterVectorization along side isUniformAfterVectorization to
distinguish the two. Known scalar values include those that are uniform,
getelementptr instructions that won't be vectorized, and induction variables
and induction variable update instructions whose users are all known to be
scalar.
This patch includes the following functional changes:
- In collectLoopUniforms, we mark uniform the pointer operands of interleaved
accesses. Although non-consecutive, these pointers are treated like
consecutive pointers during vectorization.
- In collectValuesToIgnore, we insert a value into VecValuesToIgnore if it
isScalarAfterVectorization rather than isUniformAfterVectorization. This
differs from the previous functionaly in that we now add getelementptr
instructions that will not be vectorized into VecValuesToIgnore.
This patch also removes the ValuesNotWidened set used for induction variable
scalarization since, after the above changes, it is now equivalent to
isScalarAfterVectorization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22867
llvm-svn: 277460
This patch moves the update instruction for vectorized integer induction phi
nodes to the end of the latch block. This ensures consistent placement of all
induction updates across all the kinds of int inductions we create (scalar,
splat vector, or vector phi).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22416
llvm-svn: 276339
This patch prevents increases in the number of instructions, pre-instcombine,
due to induction variable scalarization. An increase in instructions can lead
to an increase in the compile-time required to simplify the induction
variables. We now maintain a new map for scalarized induction variables to
prevent us from converting between the scalar and vector forms.
This patch should resolve compile-time regressions seen after r274627.
llvm-svn: 275419
We currently always vectorize induction variables. However, if an induction
variable is only used for counting loop iterations or computing addresses with
getelementptr instructions, we don't need to do this. Vectorizing these trivial
induction variables can create vector code that is difficult to simplify later
on. This is especially true when the unroll factor is greater than one, and we
create vector arithmetic when computing step vectors. With this patch, we check
if an induction variable is only used for counting iterations or computing
addresses, and if so, scalarize the arithmetic when computing step vectors
instead. This allows for greater simplification.
This patch addresses the suboptimal pointer arithmetic sequence seen in
PR27881.
Reference: https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=27881
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21620
llvm-svn: 274627
Previously, we materialized secondary vector IVs from the primary scalar IV,
by offseting the primary to match the correct start value, and then broadcasting
it - inside the loop body. Instead, we can use a real vector IV, like we do for
the primary.
This enables using vector IVs for secondary integer IVs whose type matches the
type of the primary.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20932
llvm-svn: 272283
Previously, whenever we needed a vector IV, we would create it on the fly,
by splatting the scalar IV and adding a step vector. Instead, we can create a
real vector IV. This tends to save a couple of instructions per iteration.
This only changes the behavior for the most basic case - integer primary
IVs with a constant step.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20315
llvm-svn: 271410
Summary:
Some PHIs can have expressions that are not AddRecExprs due to the presence
of sext/zext instructions. In order to prevent the Loop Vectorizer from
bailing out when encountering these PHIs, we now coerce the SCEV
expressions to AddRecExprs using SCEV predicates (when possible).
We only do this when the alternative would be to not vectorize.
Reviewers: mzolotukhin, anemet
Subscribers: mssimpso, sanjoy, mzolotukhin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D17153
llvm-svn: 268633
We were bailing to two places if our runtime checks failed. If the initial overflow check failed, we'd go to ScalarPH. If any other check failed, we'd go to MiddleBlock. This caused us to have to have an extra PHI per induction and reduction as the vector loop's exit block was not dominated by its latch.
There's no need to have this behavior - if we just always go to ScalarPH we can get rid of a bunch of complexity.
llvm-svn: 246637
This reduces the complexity of createEmptyBlock() and will open the door to further refactoring.
The test change is simply because we're now constant folding a trivial test.
llvm-svn: 246634
Vectorized loops only ever have one induction variable. All induction PHIs from the scalar loop are rewritten to be in terms of this single indvar.
We were trying very hard to pick an indvar that already existed, even if that indvar wasn't canonical (didn't start at zero). But trying so hard is really fruitless - creating a new, canonical, indvar only results in one extra add in the worst case and that add is trivially easy to push through the PHI out of the loop by instcombine.
If we try and be less clever here and instead let instcombine clean up our mess (as we do in many other places in LV), we can remove unneeded complexity.
llvm-svn: 246630