Commit Graph

175 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sam Parker 37289615c0 [NFCI][CostModel] Unify getCmpSelInstrCost
Add cases for icmp, fcmp and select into the switch statement of the
generic getUserCost implementation with getInstructionThroughput then
calling into it. The BasicTTI and backend implementations have be set
to return a default value (1) when a cost other than throughput is
being queried.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80550
2020-06-09 07:41:22 +01:00
Sam Parker 772349de88 [PPC] Try to fix builbots
Attempt to handle unsupported types, such as structs, in
getMemoryOpCost. The backend now checks for a supported type and
calls into BasicTTI as a fallback. BasicTTI will now also perform
the same check and will default to an expensive cost of 4 for 'Other'
MVTs.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80984
2020-06-08 09:13:37 +01:00
Sam Parker 9303546b42 [CostModel] Unify getMemoryOpCost
Use getMemoryOpCost from the generic implementation of getUserCost
and have getInstructionThroughput return the result of that for loads
and stores.

This also means that the X86 implementation of getUserCost can be
removed with the functionality folded into its getMemoryOpCost.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80984
2020-06-05 10:13:38 +01:00
Lei Huang 2368bf52cd [PowerPC] Add support for -mcpu=pwr10 in both clang and llvm
Summary:
This patch simply adds support for the new CPU in anticipation of
Power10. There isn't really any functionality added so there are no
associated test cases at this time.

Reviewers: stefanp, nemanjai, amyk, hfinkel, power-llvm-team, #powerpc

Reviewed By: stefanp, nemanjai, amyk, #powerpc

Subscribers: NeHuang, steven.zhang, hiraditya, llvm-commits, wuzish, shchenz, cfe-commits, kbarton, echristo

Tags: #clang, #powerpc, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80020
2020-05-27 13:14:25 -05:00
Lei Huang 559845f8fe Revert "[PowerPC] Add support for -mcpu=pwr10 in both clang and llvm"
This reverts commit 7eb666b155.
2020-05-27 09:40:21 -05:00
Lei Huang 7eb666b155 [PowerPC] Add support for -mcpu=pwr10 in both clang and llvm
Summary:
This patch simply adds support for the new CPU in anticipation of
Power10. There isn't really any functionality added so there are no
associated test cases at this time.

Reviewers: stefanp, nemanjai, amyk, hfinkel, power-llvm-team, #powerpc

Reviewed By: stefanp, nemanjai, amyk, #powerpc

Subscribers: NeHuang, steven.zhang, hiraditya, llvm-commits, wuzish, shchenz, cfe-commits, kbarton, echristo

Tags: #clang, #powerpc, #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80020
2020-05-26 13:48:22 -05:00
Sam Parker 8aaabadece [CostModel] Unify getCastInstrCost
Add the remaining cast instruction opcodes to the base implementation
of getUserCost and directly return the result. This allows
getInstructionThroughput to return getUserCost for the casts. This
has required changes to PPC and SystemZ because they implement
getUserCost and/or getCastInstrCost with adjustments for vector
operations. Adjusts have also been made in the remaining backends
that implement the method so that they still produce a cost of zero
or one for cost kinds other than throughput.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79848
2020-05-26 11:29:57 +01:00
Craig Topper 7392820f98 [Align] Remove operations on MaybeAlign that asserted that it had a defined value.
If the caller needs to reponsible for making sure the MaybeAlign
has a value, then we should just make the caller convert it to an Align
with operator*.

I explicitly deleted the relational comparison operators that
were being inherited from Optional. It's unclear what the meaning
of two MaybeAligns were one is defined and the other isn't
should be. So make the caller reponsible for defining the behavior.

I left the ==/!= operators from Optional. But now that exposed a
weird quirk that ==/!= between Align and MaybeAlign required the
MaybeAlign to be defined. But now we use the operator== from
Optional that takes an Optional and the Value.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80455
2020-05-22 21:54:28 -07:00
Sam Parker fb3ba38021 [CostModel] Remove getExtCost
This has not been implemented by any backends which appear to cover
the functionality through getCastInstrCost. Sink what there is in the
default implementation into BasicTTI.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78922
2020-05-21 07:18:06 +01:00
Sam Parker 8cc911fa5b [NFCI][CostModel] Refactor getIntrinsicInstrCost
Combine the two API calls into one by introducing a structure to hold
the relevant data. This has the added benefit of moving the boiler
plate code for arguments and flags, into the constructors. This is
intended to be a non-functional change, but the complicated web of
logic involved here makes it very hard to guarantee.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79941
2020-05-20 11:59:08 +01:00
Christopher Tetreault 0d5d5a75e2 [SVE] Remove usages of VectorType::getNumElements() from PowerPC
Reviewers: efriedma, sdesmalen, c-rhodes, hfinkel

Reviewed By: c-rhodes

Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, tschuett, hiraditya, kbarton, rkruppe, psnobl, shchenz, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79821
2020-05-15 12:30:56 -07:00
Justin Hibbits 0138cc0125 PowerPC: Treat llvm.fma.f* intrinsic as using CTR with SPE
Summary:
The SPE doesn't have a 'fma' instruction, so the intrinsic becomes a
libcall.  It really should become an expansion to two instructions, but
for some reason the compiler doesn't think that's as optimal as a
branch.  Since this lowering is done after CTR is allocated for loops,
tell the optimizer that CTR may be used in this case.  This prevents a
"Invalid PPC CTR loop!" assertion in the case that a fma() function call
is used in a C/C++ file, and clang converts it into an intrinsic.

Reviewed By: shchenz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78668
2020-05-12 17:19:43 -05:00
Sam Parker 40574fefe9 [NFC][CostModel] Add TargetCostKind to relevant APIs
Make the kind of cost explicit throughout the cost model which,
apart from making the cost clear, will allow the generic parts to
calculate better costs. It will also allow some backends to
approximate and correlate the different costs if they wish. Another
benefit is that it will also help simplify the cost model around
immediate and intrinsic costs, where we currently have multiple APIs.

RFC thread:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-April/141263.html

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79002
2020-05-05 10:35:54 +01:00
Sam Parker e9c9329aa4 [TTI] Add TargetCostKind argument to getUserCost
There are several different types of cost that TTI tries to provide
explicit information for: throughput, latency, code size along with
a vague 'intersection of code-size cost and execution cost'.

The vectorizer is a keen user of RecipThroughput and there's at least
'getInstructionThroughput' and 'getArithmeticInstrCost' designed to
help with this cost. The latency cost has a single use and a single
implementation. The intersection cost appears to cover most of the
rest of the API.

getUserCost is explicitly called from within TTI when the user has
been explicit in wanting the code size (also only one use) as well
as a few passes which are concerned with a mixture of size and/or
a relative cost. In many cases these costs are closely related, such
as when multiple instructions are required, but one evident diverging
cost in this function is for div/rem.

This patch adds an argument so that the cost required is explicit,
so that we can make the important distinction when necessary.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78635
2020-04-28 08:57:45 +01:00
Craig Topper a58b62b4a2 [IR] Replace all uses of CallBase::getCalledValue() with getCalledOperand().
This method has been commented as deprecated for a while. Remove
it and replace all uses with the equivalent getCalledOperand().

I also made a few cleanups in here. For example, to removes use
of getElementType on a pointer when we could just use getFunctionType
from the call.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78882
2020-04-27 22:17:03 -07:00
Christopher Tetreault 49fd24fe9e Clean up usages of asserting vector getters in Type
Summary:
Remove usages of asserting vector getters in Type in preparation for the
VectorType refactor. The existence of these functions complicates the
refactor while adding little value.

Reviewers: hfinkel, efriedma, sdesmalen

Reviewed By: efriedma

Subscribers: wuzish, nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77266
2020-04-08 16:10:55 -07:00
Teresa Johnson 8f5e3c74b6 [PowerPC] Fix compile time issue in recursive CTR analysis code
Summary:
Avoid re-examining operands on recursive walk looking for CTR.
This was causing huge compile time after some earlier optimization
created a large expression.

The start of the expression (created by IndVarSimplify) looked like:

%469 = lshr i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 udiv (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 ptrtoint (i8 @_ZN4absl13hash_internal13CityHashState5kSeedE to i64), i64 120) to i128), i128 8192506886679785011), i128 64), i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 ptrtoint (i8 @_ZN4absl13hash_internal13CityHashState5kSeedE to i64), i64 120) to i128), i128 8192506886679785011)) to i64), i64 45) to i128), i128 8192506886679785011), i128 64), i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 trunc (i128 xor (i128 lshr (i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 ptrtoint (i8 @_ZN4absl13hash_internal13CityHashState5kSeedE to i64), i64 120) to i128), i128 8192506886679785011), i128 64), i128 mul (i128 zext (i64 add (i64 ptrtoint (i8 @_ZN4absl13hash_internal13CityHashState5kSeedE to i64), i64 120) to i128), i128 8192506886679785011)) to i64), i64 45) to i128), ...

with the _ZN4absl13hash_internal13CityHashState5kSeedE referenced many times.

Reviewers: hfinkel

Subscribers: nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, jsji, shchenz, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75790
2020-03-11 16:11:14 -07:00
Anna Welker a6d3bec83f [TTI][ARM][MVE] Refine gather/scatter cost model
Refines the gather/scatter cost model, but also changes the TTI
function getIntrinsicInstrCost to accept an additional parameter
which is needed for the gather/scatter cost evaluation.
This did require trivial changes in some non-ARM backends to
adopt the new parameter.
Extending gathers and truncating scatters are now priced cheaper.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75525
2020-03-11 10:23:41 +00:00
Zheng Chen 04377a81ae [Powerpc] set instruction count as lsr first priority of lsr.
On Powerpc, set instruction count as lsr first priority of lsr by default.
Add an option ppc-lsr-no-insns-cost to return back to default lsr cost model.

Reviewed By: steven.zhang, jsji

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72683
2020-02-16 21:04:55 -05:00
Jinsong Ji e29a2e6be4 [PowerPC][LoopVectorize] Extend getRegisterClassForType to consider double and other floating point type
In https://reviews.llvm.org/D67148, we use isFloatTy to test floating
point type, otherwise we return GPRRC.
So 'double' will be classified as GPRRC, which is not accurate.

This patch covers other floating point types.

Reviewed By: #powerpc, nemanjai

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71946
2020-01-06 18:44:59 +00:00
Fangrui Song 7a7334663c Delete llvm.{sig,}{setjmp,longjmp} remnant after r136821
Intrinsic has incorrect argument type!
  i32 (i32*)* @llvm.setjmp

*wipes tear*
2019-12-27 00:00:14 -08:00
Nemanja Ivanovic a5da8d90da [PowerPC] Add missing legalization for vector BSWAP
We somehow missed doing this when we were working on Power9 exploitation.
This just adds the missing legalization and cost for producing the vector
intrinsics.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70436
2019-12-17 19:07:34 -06:00
Reid Kleckner 85ba5f637a Rename TTI::getIntImmCost for instructions and intrinsics
Soon Intrinsic::ID will be a plain integer, so this overload will not be
possible.

Rename both overloads to ensure that downstream targets observe this as
a build failure instead of a runtime failure.

Split off from D71320

Reviewers: efriedma

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71381
2019-12-11 18:00:20 -08:00
David Green be7a107070 [ARM] Teach the Arm cost model that a Shift can be folded into other instructions
This attempts to teach the cost model in Arm that code such as:
  %s = shl i32 %a, 3
  %a = and i32 %s, %b
Can under Arm or Thumb2 become:
  and r0, r1, r2, lsl #3

So the cost of the shift can essentially be free. To do this without
trying to artificially adjust the cost of the "and" instruction, it
needs to get the users of the shl and check if they are a type of
instruction that the shift can be folded into. And so it needs to have
access to the actual instruction in getArithmeticInstrCost, which if
available is added as an extra parameter much like getCastInstrCost.

We otherwise limit it to shifts with a single user, which should
hopefully handle most of the cases. The list of instruction that the
shift can be folded into include ADC, ADD, AND, BIC, CMP, EOR, MVN, ORR,
ORN, RSB, SBC and SUB. This translates to Add, Sub, And, Or, Xor and
ICmp.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70966
2019-12-09 10:24:33 +00:00
Stefan Pintilie dcceab1a0a [PowerPC] Add new Future CPU for PowerPC in LLVM
This is a continuation of D70262
The previous patch as listed above added the future CPU in clang. This patch
adds the future CPU in the PowerPC backend. At this point the patch simply
assumes that a future CPU will have the same characteristics as pwr9. Those
characteristics may change with later patches.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70333
2019-11-27 14:30:06 -06:00
Kit Barton 85e4f5bcf6 [PowerPC] Rename DarwinDirective to CPUDirective (NFC)
Summary:
This patch renames the DarwinDirective (used to identify which CPU was defined)
to CPUDirective. It also adds the getCPUDirective() method and replaces all uses
of getDarwinDirective() with getCPUDirective().

Once this patch lands and downstream users of the getDarwinDirective() method
have switched to the getCPUDirective() method, the old getDarwinDirective()
method will be removed.

Reviewers: nemanjai, hfinkel, power-llvm-team, jsji, echristo, #powerpc, jhibbits

Reviewed By: hfinkel, jsji, jhibbits

Subscribers: hiraditya, shchenz, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D70352
2019-11-25 14:26:08 -06:00
Nemanja Ivanovic 97e3626070 [PowerPC] Do not emit HW loop if the body contains calls to lrint/lround
These two intrinsics are lowered to calls so should prevent the formation of
CTR loops. In a subsequent patch, we will handle all currently known intrinsics
and prevent the formation of HW loops if any unknown intrinsics are encountered.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68841
2019-10-28 17:23:08 -05:00
Guillaume Chatelet a4783ef58d [Alignment][NFC] getMemoryOpCost uses MaybeAlign
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790

Reviewers: courbet

Subscribers: nemanjai, hiraditya, kbarton, MaskRay, jsji, llvm-commits

Tags: #llvm

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69307
2019-10-25 21:26:59 +02:00
Zi Xuan Wu 9802268ad3 recommit: [LoopVectorize][PowerPC] Estimate int and float register pressure separately in loop-vectorize
In loop-vectorize, interleave count and vector factor depend on target register number. Currently, it does not
estimate different register pressure for different register class separately(especially for scalar type,
float type should not be on the same position with int type), so it's not accurate. Specifically,
it causes too many times interleaving/unrolling, result in too many register spills in loop body and hurting performance.

So we need classify the register classes in IR level, and importantly these are abstract register classes,
and are not the target register class of backend provided in td file. It's used to establish the mapping between
the types of IR values and the number of simultaneous live ranges to which we'd like to limit for some set of those types.

For example, POWER target, register num is special when VSX is enabled. When VSX is enabled, the number of int scalar register is 32(GPR),
float is 64(VSR), but for int and float vector register both are 64(VSR). So there should be 2 kinds of register class when vsx is enabled,
and 3 kinds of register class when VSX is NOT enabled.

It runs on POWER target, it makes big(+~30%) performance improvement in one specific bmk(503.bwaves_r) of spec2017 and no other obvious degressions.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67148

llvm-svn: 374634
2019-10-12 02:53:04 +00:00
David Greene 2e6f6b4dad [System Model] [TTI] Update cache and prefetch TTI interfaces
Re-apply 9fdfb045ae8b/r365676 with fixes for PPC and Hexagon.  This involved
moving defaults from TargetTransformInfoImplBase to MCSubtargetInfo.

Rework the TTI cache and software prefetching APIs to prepare for the
introduction of a general system model.  Changes include:

- Marking existing interfaces const and/or override as appropriate
- Adding comments
- Adding BasicTTIImpl interfaces that delegate to a subtarget
  implementation
- Moving the default TargetTransformInfoImplBase implementation to a default
  MCSubtarget implementation

Only a handful of targets use these interfaces currently: AArch64, Hexagon, PPC
and SystemZ.  AArch64 already has a custom subtarget implementation, so its
custom TTI implementation is migrated to use the new facilities in BasicTTIImpl
to invoke its custom subtarget implementation.  The custom TTI implementations
continue to exist for the other targets with this change.  They are not moved
over to subtarget-based implementations.

The end goal is to have the default subtarget implementation defer to the system
model defined by the target.  With this change, the default MCSubtargetInfo
implementation essentially returns the defaults TargetTransformInfoImplBase used
to return.  Existing users of TTI defaults will hit the defaults now in
MCSubtargetInfo.  Targets that define their own custom TTI implementations won't
use the BasicTTIImpl implementations that route to the subtarget.

Once system models are in place for the targets that use these interfaces, their
custom TTI implementations can be removed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63614

llvm-svn: 374205
2019-10-09 19:51:48 +00:00
Jinsong Ji 9912232b46 Revert "[LoopVectorize][PowerPC] Estimate int and float register pressure separately in loop-vectorize"
Also Revert "[LoopVectorize] Fix non-debug builds after rL374017"

This reverts commit 9f41deccc0.
This reverts commit 18b6fe07bc.

The patch is breaking PowerPC internal build, checked with author, reverting
on behalf of him for now due to timezone.

llvm-svn: 374091
2019-10-08 17:32:56 +00:00
Zi Xuan Wu 9f41deccc0 [LoopVectorize][PowerPC] Estimate int and float register pressure separately in loop-vectorize
In loop-vectorize, interleave count and vector factor depend on target register number. Currently, it does not
estimate different register pressure for different register class separately(especially for scalar type,
float type should not be on the same position with int type), so it's not accurate. Specifically,
it causes too many times interleaving/unrolling, result in too many register spills in loop body and hurting performance.

So we need classify the register classes in IR level, and importantly these are abstract register classes,
and are not the target register class of backend provided in td file. It's used to establish the mapping between
the types of IR values and the number of simultaneous live ranges to which we'd like to limit for some set of those types.

For example, POWER target, register num is special when VSX is enabled. When VSX is enabled, the number of int scalar register is 32(GPR),
float is 64(VSR), but for int and float vector register both are 64(VSR). So there should be 2 kinds of register class when vsx is enabled,
and 3 kinds of register class when VSX is NOT enabled.

It runs on POWER target, it makes big(+~30%) performance improvement in one specific bmk(503.bwaves_r) of spec2017 and no other obvious degressions.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67148

llvm-svn: 374017
2019-10-08 03:28:33 +00:00
Roland Froese 18db4e9ae1 Recommit [PowerPC] Update P9 vector costs for insert/extract
Now that the v1i128 smin regression has been fixed, recommit the P9 cost
updates from D60160.

llvm-svn: 369952
2019-08-26 19:26:08 +00:00
David Greene d300a493df Revert "[System Model] [TTI] Update cache and prefetch TTI interfaces"
This broke some PPC prefetching tests.

This reverts commit 9fdfb045ae.

llvm-svn: 365680
2019-07-10 18:25:58 +00:00
David Greene 9fdfb045ae [System Model] [TTI] Update cache and prefetch TTI interfaces
Rework the TTI cache and software prefetching APIs to prepare for the
introduction of a general system model.  Changes include:

- Marking existing interfaces const and/or override as appropriate
- Adding comments
- Adding BasicTTIImpl interfaces that delegate to a subtarget
  implementation
- Adding a default "no information" subtarget implementation

Only a handful of targets use these interfaces currently: AArch64,
Hexagon, PPC and SystemZ.  AArch64 already has a custom subtarget
implementation, so its custom TTI implementation is migrated to use
the new facilities in BasicTTIImpl to invoke its custom subtarget
implementation.  The custom TTI implementations continue to exist for
the other targets with this change.  They are not moved over to
subtarget-based implementations.

The end goal is to have the default subtarget implementation defer to
the system model defined by the target.  With this change, the default
subtarget implementation essentially returns "no information" for
these interfaces.  None of the existing users of TTI will hit that
implementation because they define their own custom TTI
implementations and won't use the BasicTTIImpl implementations.

Once system models are in place for the targets that use these
interfaces, their custom TTI implementations can be removed.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63614

llvm-svn: 365676
2019-07-10 18:07:01 +00:00
Chen Zheng dfdccbb26b [PowerPC] exclude ICmpZero in LSR if icmp can be replaced in later hardware loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63477

llvm-svn: 364993
2019-07-03 01:49:03 +00:00
Jordan Rupprecht 351b7e7b24 Revert Recommit [PowerPC] Update P9 vector costs for insert/extract element
This reverts r364557 (git commit 9f7f5858fe)

This crashes as reported on the commit thread. Repro instructions TBD.

llvm-svn: 364876
2019-07-01 23:29:46 +00:00
Roland Froese 9f7f5858fe Recommit [PowerPC] Update P9 vector costs for insert/extract element
Recommit patch D60160 after regression fix patch D63463.

llvm-svn: 364557
2019-06-27 16:20:24 +00:00
Clement Courbet 3bc5ad551a [ExpandMemCmp] Move all options to TargetTransformInfo.
Split off from D60318.

llvm-svn: 364281
2019-06-25 08:04:13 +00:00
Chen Zheng c5b918de58 [NFC] move some hardware loop checking code to a common place for other using.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63478

llvm-svn: 363758
2019-06-19 01:26:31 +00:00
Sam Parker c5ef502ee8 [CodeGen] Generic Hardware Loop Support
Patch which introduces a target-independent framework for generating
hardware loops at the IR level. Most of the code has been taken from
PowerPC CTRLoops and PowerPC has been ported over to use this generic
pass. The target dependent parts have been moved into
TargetTransformInfo, via isHardwareLoopProfitable, with
HardwareLoopInfo introduced to transfer information from the backend.
    
Three generic intrinsics have been introduced:
- void @llvm.set_loop_iterations
  Takes as a single operand, the number of iterations to be executed.
- i1 @llvm.loop_decrement(anyint)
  Takes the maximum number of elements processed in an iteration of
  the loop body and subtracts this from the total count. Returns
  false when the loop should exit.
- anyint @llvm.loop_decrement_reg(anyint, anyint)
  Takes the number of elements remaining to be processed as well as
  the maximum numbe of elements processed in an iteration of the loop
  body. Returns the updated number of elements remaining.

llvm-svn: 362774
2019-06-07 07:35:30 +00:00
David L. Jones fccb505f0f Revert "[llvm] r359313 - [PowerPC] Update P9 vector costs for insert/extract element"
This causes segfaults during optimized builds. More details, including a reproducer, are on the llvm-commits thread for r359313.

llvm-svn: 359648
2019-05-01 05:01:03 +00:00
Simon Pilgrim 2755b73ba0 Fix operator precedence warning. NFCI.
Reported in https://www.viva64.com/en/b/0629/

llvm-svn: 359469
2019-04-29 17:04:14 +00:00
Roland Froese 4b17772b9e [PowerPC] Update P9 vector costs for insert/extract element
The PPC vector cost model values for insert/extract element reflect older
processors that lacked vector insert/extract and move-to/move-from VSR
instructions.  Update getVectorInstrCost to give appropriate values for when
the newer instructions are present.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60160

llvm-svn: 359313
2019-04-26 16:14:17 +00:00
Roland Froese 7f29195c3f test commit (add blank line) NFC
llvm-svn: 352897
2019-02-01 18:55:43 +00:00
Nemanja Ivanovic 7d007ddedf [PowerPC] Update Vector Costs for P9
For the power9 CPU, vector operations consume a pair of execution units rather
than one execution unit like a scalar operation. Update the target transform
cost functions to reflect the higher cost of vector operations when targeting
Power9.

Patch by RolandF.

Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55461

llvm-svn: 352261
2019-01-26 01:18:48 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 2946cd7010 Update the file headers across all of the LLVM projects in the monorepo
to reflect the new license.

We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.

Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.

llvm-svn: 351636
2019-01-19 08:50:56 +00:00
Dorit Nuzman 34da6dd696 [LV] Support vectorization of interleave-groups that require an epilog under
optsize using masked wide loads 

Under Opt for Size, the vectorizer does not vectorize interleave-groups that
have gaps at the end of the group (such as a loop that reads only the even
elements: a[2*i]) because that implies that we'll require a scalar epilogue
(which is not allowed under Opt for Size). This patch extends the support for
masked-interleave-groups (introduced by D53011 for conditional accesses) to
also cover the case of gaps in a group of loads; Targets that enable the
masked-interleave-group feature don't have to invalidate interleave-groups of
loads with gaps; they could now use masked wide-loads and shuffles (if that's
what the cost model selects).

Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn

Reviewed By: Ayal

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53668

llvm-svn: 345705
2018-10-31 09:57:56 +00:00
Dorit Nuzman 38bbf81ade recommit 344472 after fixing build failure on ARM and PPC.
llvm-svn: 344475
2018-10-14 08:50:06 +00:00
Dorit Nuzman 5118c68cde revert 344472 due to failures.
llvm-svn: 344473
2018-10-14 07:21:20 +00:00
Dorit Nuzman 8174368955 [IAI,LV] Add support for vectorizing predicated strided accesses using masked
interleave-group

The vectorizer currently does not attempt to create interleave-groups that
contain predicated loads/stores; predicated strided accesses can currently be
vectorized only using masked gather/scatter or scalarization. This patch makes
predicated loads/stores candidates for forming interleave-groups during the
Loop-Vectorizer's analysis, and adds the proper support for masked-interleave-
groups to the Loop-Vectorizer's planning and transformation stages. The patch
also extends the TTI API to allow querying the cost of masked interleave groups
(which each target can control); Targets that support masked vector loads/
stores may choose to enable this feature and allow vectorizing predicated
strided loads/stores using masked wide loads/stores and shuffles.

Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn, javed.absar

Reviewed By: Ayal

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53011

llvm-svn: 344472
2018-10-14 07:06:16 +00:00
Fangrui Song f78650a8de Remove trailing space
sed -Ei 's/[[:space:]]+$//' include/**/*.{def,h,td} lib/**/*.{cpp,h}

llvm-svn: 338293
2018-07-30 19:41:25 +00:00
Stefan Pintilie ef7c4976bb Revert "[PowerPC] LSR tunings for PowerPC"
Revert the rest of the LST tune commit.
It seems that the LSR tune commit breaks internal tests.
Reverting the commit.

llvm-svn: 327143
2018-03-09 16:08:55 +00:00
Stefan Pintilie f8438e8e59 [PowerPC] LSR tunings for PowerPC
The purpose of this patch is to have LSR generate better code on Power.
This is done by overriding isLSRCostLess.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40855

llvm-svn: 326906
2018-03-07 16:53:09 +00:00
Zaara Syeda 1f59ae311b Re-commit : [PowerPC] Add handling for ColdCC calling convention and a pass to mark
candidates with coldcc attribute.

This recommits r322721 reverted due to sanitizer memory leak build bot failures.

Original commit message:
This patch adds support for the coldcc calling convention for Power.
This changes the set of non-volatile registers. It includes a pass to stress
test the implementation by marking all static directly called functions with
the coldcc attribute through the option -enable-coldcc-stress-test. It also
includes an option, -ppc-enable-coldcc, to add the coldcc attribute to
functions which are cold at all call sites based on BlockFrequencyInfo when
the containing function does not call any non cold functions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38413

llvm-svn: 323778
2018-01-30 16:17:22 +00:00
Zaara Syeda c9dc7b451b Revert [PowerPC] This reverts commit rL322721
Failing build bots. Revert the commit now.

llvm-svn: 322748
2018-01-17 20:00:15 +00:00
Zaara Syeda 8e951fd2f6 [PowerPC] Add handling for ColdCC calling convention and a pass to mark
candidates with coldcc attribute.

This patch adds support for the coldcc calling convention for Power.
This changes the set of non-volatile registers. It includes a pass to stress
test the implementation by marking all static directly called functions with
the coldcc attribute through the option -enable-coldcc-stress-test. It also
includes an option, -ppc-enable-coldcc, to add the coldcc attribute to
functions which are cold at all call sites based on BlockFrequencyInfo when
the containing function does not call any non cold functions.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38413

llvm-svn: 322721
2018-01-17 18:22:55 +00:00
David Blaikie b3bde2ea50 Fix a bunch more layering of CodeGen headers that are in Target
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).

llvm-svn: 318490
2017-11-17 01:07:10 +00:00
Clement Courbet b2c3eb8cf1 [CodeGen][ExpandMemcmp] Allow memcmp to expand to vector loads (2).
- Targets that want to support memcmp expansions now return the list of
   supported load sizes.
 - Expansion codegen does not assume that all power-of-two load sizes
   smaller than the max load size are valid. For examples, this is not the
   case for x86(32bit)+sse2.

Fixes PR34887.

llvm-svn: 316905
2017-10-30 14:19:33 +00:00
Graham Yiu 488782efa3 The cost of splitting a large vector instruction is not being taken into account by the getUserCost function. This was leading to some loops being over unrolled. The cost of a vector instruction is now being multiplied by the cost of the type legalization. This will return a more accurate cost.
Committing on behalf on Brad Nemanich (brad.nemanich@ibm.com)

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38961

llvm-svn: 316174
2017-10-19 18:16:31 +00:00
Clement Courbet 2807c0a442 [CodeGenPrepare][NFC] Rename TargetTransformInfo::expandMemCmp -> TargetTransformInfo::enableMemCmpExpansion.
Summary:
Right now there are two functions with the same name, one does the work
and the other one returns true if expansion is needed. Rename
TargetTransformInfo::expandMemCmp to make it more consistent with other
members of TargetTransformInfo.

Remove the unused Instruction* parameter.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38165

llvm-svn: 314096
2017-09-25 06:35:16 +00:00
Geoff Berry 66d9bdbca8 [LoopUnroll] Pass SCEV to getUnrollingPreferences hook. NFCI.
Reviewers: sanjoy, anna, reames, apilipenko, igor-laevsky, mkuper

Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, mzolotukhin, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, mcrosier, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34531

llvm-svn: 306554
2017-06-28 15:53:17 +00:00
Daniel Neilson c0112ae8da Const correctness for TTI::getRegisterBitWidth
Summary: The method TargetTransformInfo::getRegisterBitWidth() is declared const, but the type erasing implementation classes (TargetTransformInfo::Concept & TargetTransformInfo::Model) that were introduced by Chandler in https://reviews.llvm.org/D7293 do not have the method declared const. This is an NFC to tidy up the const consistency between TTI and its implementation.

Reviewers: chandlerc, rnk, reames

Reviewed By: reames

Subscribers: reames, jfb, arsenm, dschuff, nemanjai, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33903

llvm-svn: 305189
2017-06-12 14:22:21 +00:00
Sean Fertile 457ddd311a [PowerPC] Correctly specify the cache line size for Power 7, 8 and 9.
Fixes PPCTTIImpl::getCacheLineSize() returning the wrong cache line size for
newer ppc processors.

Commiting on behalf of Stefan Pintilie.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33656

llvm-svn: 304317
2017-05-31 18:20:17 +00:00
Zaara Syeda 3a7578c658 [PPC] Inline expansion of memcmp
This patch does an inline expansion of memcmp.
It changes the memcmp library call into an inline expansion when the size is
known at compile time and is under a target specified threshold.
This expansion is implemented in CodeGenPrepare and expands into straight line
code. The target specifies a maximum load size and the expansion works by using
this size to load the two sources, compare, and exit early if a difference is
found. It also has a special case when the memcmp result is used in a compare
to zero equality.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28637

llvm-svn: 304313
2017-05-31 17:12:38 +00:00
Jonas Paulsson fccc7d66c3 [SystemZ] TargetTransformInfo cost functions implemented.
getArithmeticInstrCost(), getShuffleCost(), getCastInstrCost(),
getCmpSelInstrCost(), getVectorInstrCost(), getMemoryOpCost(),
getInterleavedMemoryOpCost() implemented.

Interleaved access vectorization enabled.

BasicTTIImpl::getCastInstrCost() improved to check for legal extending loads,
in which case the cost of the z/sext instruction becomes 0.

Review: Ulrich Weigand, Renato Golin.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D29631

llvm-svn: 300052
2017-04-12 11:49:08 +00:00
Guozhi Wei 7ec2c72095 [PPC] Give unaligned memory access lower cost on processor that supports it
Newer ppc supports unaligned memory access, it reduces the cost of unaligned memory access significantly. This patch handles this case in PPCTTIImpl::getMemoryOpCost.

This patch fixes pr31492.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28630

This is resubmit of r292680, which was reverted by r293092. The internal application failures were actually caused by a source code bug.

llvm-svn: 295506
2017-02-17 22:29:39 +00:00
Daniel Jasper 65144c852d Revert "[PPC] Give unaligned memory access lower cost on processor that supports it"
This reverts commit r292680. It is causing significantly worse
performance and test timeouts in our internal builds. I have already
routed reproduction instructions your way.

llvm-svn: 293092
2017-01-25 21:21:08 +00:00
Guozhi Wei a5c6ed5a5c [PPC] Give unaligned memory access lower cost on processor that supports it
Newer ppc supports unaligned memory access, it reduces the cost of unaligned memory access significantly. This patch handles this case in PPCTTIImpl::getMemoryOpCost.

This patch fixes pr31492.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28630

llvm-svn: 292680
2017-01-20 23:35:27 +00:00
Mohammed Agabaria 2c96c43388 [X86] updating TTI costs for arithmetic instructions on X86\SLM arch.
updated instructions:
pmulld, pmullw, pmulhw, mulsd, mulps, mulpd, divss, divps, divsd, divpd, addpd and subpd.

special optimization case which replaces pmulld with pmullw\pmulhw\pshuf seq. 
In case if the real operands bitwidth <= 16.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D28104 

llvm-svn: 291657
2017-01-11 08:23:37 +00:00
Guozhi Wei 835de1f3ab [ppc] Correctly compute the cost of loading 32/64 bit memory into VSR
VSX has instructions lxsiwax/lxsdx that can load 32/64 bit value into VSX register cheaply. That patch makes it known to memory cost model, so the vectorization of the test case in pr30990 is beneficial.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D26713

llvm-svn: 288560
2016-12-03 00:41:43 +00:00
Justin Bogner b03fd12cef Replace "fallthrough" comments with LLVM_FALLTHROUGH
This is a mechanical change of comments in switches like fallthrough,
fall-through, or fall-thru to use the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro instead.

llvm-svn: 278902
2016-08-17 05:10:15 +00:00
Nemanja Ivanovic 6e29baf7f5 [Power9] Add support for -mcpu=pwr9 in the back end
This patch corresponds to review:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D19683

Simply adds the bits for being able to specify -mcpu=pwr9 to the back end.

llvm-svn: 268950
2016-05-09 18:54:58 +00:00
Adam Nemet b81f1e0db3 [PPC] Remove -ppc-loop-prefetch-distance in favor of -prefetch-distance
After the previous change, this can now be overridden centrally in the
pass.

llvm-svn: 264807
2016-03-29 23:45:56 +00:00
Hal Finkel fa7057a415 [PowerPC] Refactor popcnt[dw] target features
Instead of using two feature bits, one to indicate the availability of the
popcnt[dw] instructions, and another to indicate whether or not they're fast,
use a single enum. This allows more consistent control via target attribute
strings, and via Clang's command line.

llvm-svn: 264690
2016-03-29 01:36:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel 69ada2f514 [PowerPC] Clarify a comment in PPCTTI about vector loads
This should say that we could do unaligned vector loads on the P7 using VSX
instructions, not that we should.

llvm-svn: 264683
2016-03-28 22:39:35 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7059d41622 [PowerPC] On the A2, popcnt[dw] are very slow
The A2 cores support the popcntw/popcntd instructions, but they're microcoded,
and slower than our default software emulation. Specifically, popcnt[dw] take
approximately 74 cycles, whereas our software emulation takes only 24-28
cycles.

I've added a new target feature to indicate a slow popcnt[dw], instead of just
removing the existing target feature from the a2/a2q processor models, because:
  1. This allows us to return more accurate information via the TTI interface
     (I recognize that this currently makes no practical difference)
  2. Is hopefully easier to understand (it allows the core's features to match
     its manual while still having the desired effect).

llvm-svn: 264600
2016-03-28 17:52:08 +00:00
Adam Nemet dadfbb52f7 [TTI] Add getPrefetchDistance from PPCLoopDataPrefetch, NFC
This patch is part of the work to make PPCLoopDataPrefetch
target-independent
(http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.compilers.llvm.devel/92758).

As it was discussed in the above thread, getPrefetchDistance is
currently using instruction count which may change in the future.

llvm-svn: 258995
2016-01-27 22:21:25 +00:00
Adam Nemet af761104ba [TTI] Add getCacheLineSize
Summary:
And use it in PPCLoopDataPrefetch.cpp.

@hfinkel, please let me know if your preference would be to preserve the
ppc-loop-prefetch-cache-line option in order to be able to override the
value of TTI::getCacheLineSize for PPC.

Reviewers: hfinkel

Subscribers: hulx2000, mcrosier, mssimpso, hfinkel, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16306

llvm-svn: 258419
2016-01-21 18:28:36 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4a7be23976 [PowerPC] Enable interleaved-access vectorization
This adds a basic cost model for interleaved-access vectorization (and a better
default for shuffles), and enables interleaved-access vectorization by default.
The relevant difference from the default cost model for interleaved-access
vectorization, is that on PPC, the shuffles that end up being used are *much*
cheaper than modeling the process with insert/extract pairs (which are
quite expensive, especially on older cores).

llvm-svn: 246824
2015-09-04 00:10:41 +00:00
Hal Finkel 75afa2b6b6 [PowerPC] Always use aggressive interleaving on the A2
On the A2, with an eye toward QPX unaligned-load merging, we should always use
aggressive interleaving. It is generally superior to only using concatenation
unrolling.

llvm-svn: 246819
2015-09-03 23:23:00 +00:00
Hal Finkel f11bc761d8 [PowerPC] Include the permutation cost for unaligned vector loads
Pre-P8, when we generate code for unaligned vector loads (for Altivec and QPX
types), even when accounting for the combining that takes place for multiple
consecutive such loads, there is at least one load instructions and one
permutation for each load. Make sure the cost reported reflects the cost of the
permutes as well.

llvm-svn: 246807
2015-09-03 21:23:18 +00:00
Hal Finkel 79dbf5b562 [PowerPC] Cleanup cost model for unaligned vector loads/stores
I'm adding a regression test to better cover code generation for unaligned
vector loads and stores, but there's no functional change to the code
generation here. There is an improvement to the cost model for unaligned vector
loads and stores, mostly for QPX (for which we were not previously accounting
for the permutation-based loads), and the cost model implementation is cleaner.

llvm-svn: 246712
2015-09-02 21:03:28 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 93205eb966 [TTI] Make the cost APIs in TargetTransformInfo consistently use 'int'
rather than 'unsigned' for their costs.

For something like costs in particular there is a natural "negative"
value, that of savings or saved cost. As a consequence, there is a lot
of code that subtracts or creates negative values based on cost, all of
which is prone to awkwardness or bugs when dealing with an unsigned
type. Similarly, we *never* want these values to wrap, as that would
cause Very Bad code generation (likely percieved as an infinite loop as
we try to emit over 2^32 instructions or some such insanity).

All around 'int' seems a much better fit for these basic metrics. I've
added asserts to ensure that at least the TTI interface never returns
negative numbers here. If we ever have a use case for negative numbers,
we can remove this, but this way a bug where someone used '-1' to
produce a 'very large' cost will be caught by the assert.

This passes all tests, and is also UBSan clean.

No functional change intended.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11741

llvm-svn: 244080
2015-08-05 18:08:10 +00:00
Mehdi Amini 44ede33a69 Make TargetLowering::getPointerTy() taking DataLayout as an argument
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.

Reviewers: echristo

Subscribers: jholewinski, ted, yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11028

From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241775
2015-07-09 02:09:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel 3b3c9c3e44 [PPC/LoopUnrollRuntime] Don't avoid high-cost trip count computation on the PPC/A2
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
2015-05-21 20:30:23 +00:00
Wei Mi 062c74484d [X86] Disable loop unrolling in loop vectorization pass when VF is 1.
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
2015-05-06 17:12:25 +00:00
Olivier Sallenave 049d803ce0 Do not restrict interleaved unrolling to small loops, depending on the target.
llvm-svn: 231528
2015-03-06 23:12:04 +00:00
Hal Finkel c93a9a2cb4 [PowerPC] Add support for the QPX vector instruction set
This adds support for the QPX vector instruction set, which is used by the
enhanced A2 cores on the IBM BG/Q supercomputers. QPX vectors are 256 bytes
wide, holding 4 double-precision floating-point values. Boolean values, modeled
here as <4 x i1> are actually also represented as floating-point values
(essentially  { -1, 1 } for { false, true }). QPX shares many features with
Altivec and VSX, but is distinct from both of them. One major difference is
that, instead of adding completely-separate vector registers, QPX vector
registers are extensions of the scalar floating-point registers (lane 0 is the
corresponding scalar floating-point value). The operations supported on QPX
vectors mirrors that supported on the scalar floating-point values (with some
additional ones for permutations and logical/comparison operations).

I've been maintaining this support out-of-tree, as part of the bgclang project,
for several years. This is not the entire bgclang patch set, but is most of the
subset that can be cleanly integrated into LLVM proper at this time. Adding
this to the LLVM backend is part of my efforts to rebase bgclang to the current
LLVM trunk, but is independently useful (especially for codes that use LLVM as
a JIT in library form).

The assembler/disassembler test coverage is complete. The CodeGen test coverage
is not, but I've included some tests, and more will be added as follow-up work.

llvm-svn: 230413
2015-02-25 01:06:45 +00:00
Olivier Sallenave 05e69157b6 Change max interleave factor to 12 for POWER7 and POWER8.
llvm-svn: 228973
2015-02-12 22:57:58 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ab5cb36c40 [multiversion] Remove the function parameter from the unrolling
preferences interface on TTI now that all of TTI is per-function.

llvm-svn: 227741
2015-02-01 14:31:23 +00:00
Chandler Carruth c956ab6603 [multiversion] Switch the TTI queries from TargetMachine to Subtarget
now that we have a correct and cached subtarget specific to the
function.

Also, finish providing a cached per-function subtarget in the core
LLVMTargetMachine -- that layer hadn't switched over yet.

The only use of the TargetMachine was to re-lookup a subtarget for
a particular function to work around the fact that TTI was immutable.
Now that it is per-function and we haved a cached subtarget, use it.

This still leaves a few interfaces with real warts on them where we were
passing Function objects through the TTI interface. I'll remove these
and clean their usage up in subsequent commits now that this isn't
necessary.

llvm-svn: 227738
2015-02-01 14:22:17 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 93dcdc47db [PM] Switch the TargetMachine interface from accepting a pass manager
base which it adds a single analysis pass to, to instead return the type
erased TargetTransformInfo object constructed for that TargetMachine.

This removes all of the pass variants for TTI. There is now a single TTI
*pass* in the Analysis layer. All of the Analysis <-> Target
communication is through the TTI's type erased interface itself. While
the diff is large here, it is nothing more that code motion to make
types available in a header file for use in a different source file
within each target.

I've tried to keep all the doxygen comments and file boilerplate in line
with this move, but let me know if I missed anything.

With this in place, the next step to making TTI work with the new pass
manager is to introduce a really simple new-style analysis that produces
a TTI object via a callback into this routine on the target machine.
Once we have that, we'll have the building blocks necessary to accept
a function argument as well.

llvm-svn: 227685
2015-01-31 11:17:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 705b185f90 [PM] Change the core design of the TTI analysis to use a polymorphic
type erased interface and a single analysis pass rather than an
extremely complex analysis group.

The end result is that the TTI analysis can contain a type erased
implementation that supports the polymorphic TTI interface. We can build
one from a target-specific implementation or from a dummy one in the IR.

I've also factored all of the code into "mix-in"-able base classes,
including CRTP base classes to facilitate calling back up to the most
specialized form when delegating horizontally across the surface. These
aren't as clean as I would like and I'm planning to work on cleaning
some of this up, but I wanted to start by putting into the right form.

There are a number of reasons for this change, and this particular
design. The first and foremost reason is that an analysis group is
complete overkill, and the chaining delegation strategy was so opaque,
confusing, and high overhead that TTI was suffering greatly for it.
Several of the TTI functions had failed to be implemented in all places
because of the chaining-based delegation making there be no checking of
this. A few other functions were implemented with incorrect delegation.
The message to me was very clear working on this -- the delegation and
analysis group structure was too confusing to be useful here.

The other reason of course is that this is *much* more natural fit for
the new pass manager. This will lay the ground work for a type-erased
per-function info object that can look up the correct subtarget and even
cache it.

Yet another benefit is that this will significantly simplify the
interaction of the pass managers and the TargetMachine. See the future
work below.

The downside of this change is that it is very, very verbose. I'm going
to work to improve that, but it is somewhat an implementation necessity
in C++ to do type erasure. =/ I discussed this design really extensively
with Eric and Hal prior to going down this path, and afterward showed
them the result. No one was really thrilled with it, but there doesn't
seem to be a substantially better alternative. Using a base class and
virtual method dispatch would make the code much shorter, but as
discussed in the update to the programmer's manual and elsewhere,
a polymorphic interface feels like the more principled approach even if
this is perhaps the least compelling example of it. ;]

Ultimately, there is still a lot more to be done here, but this was the
huge chunk that I couldn't really split things out of because this was
the interface change to TTI. I've tried to minimize all the other parts
of this. The follow up work should include at least:

1) Improving the TargetMachine interface by having it directly return
   a TTI object. Because we have a non-pass object with value semantics
   and an internal type erasure mechanism, we can narrow the interface
   of the TargetMachine to *just* do what we need: build and return
   a TTI object that we can then insert into the pass pipeline.
2) Make the TTI object be fully specialized for a particular function.
   This will include splitting off a minimal form of it which is
   sufficient for the inliner and the old pass manager.
3) Add a new pass manager analysis which produces TTI objects from the
   target machine for each function. This may actually be done as part
   of #2 in order to use the new analysis to implement #2.
4) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and the targets so that it is
   easier to understand and less verbose to type erase.
5) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and its clients so that it is
   easier to understand and less verbose to forward.
6) Try to improve the CRTP-based delegation. I feel like this code is
   just a bit messy and exacerbating the complexity of implementing
   the TTI in each target.

Many thanks to Eric and Hal for their help here. I ended up blocked on
this somewhat more abruptly than I expected, and so I appreciate getting
it sorted out very quickly.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7293

llvm-svn: 227669
2015-01-31 03:43:40 +00:00
Hal Finkel 934361a4b8 Revert "r225811 - Revert "r225808 - [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support""
This re-applies r225808, fixed to avoid problems with SDAG dependencies along
with the preceding fix to ScheduleDAGSDNodes::RegDefIter::InitNodeNumDefs.
These problems caused the original regression tests to assert/segfault on many
(but not all) systems.

Original commit message:

This commit does two things:

 1. Refactors PPCFastISel to use more of the common infrastructure for call
    lowering (this lets us take advantage of this common code for lowering some
    common intrinsics, stackmap/patchpoint among them).

 2. Adds support for stackmap/patchpoint lowering. For the most part, this is
    very similar to the support in the AArch64 target, with the obvious differences
    (different registers, NOP instructions, etc.). The test cases are adapted
    from the AArch64 test cases.

One difference of note is that the patchpoint call sequence takes 24 bytes, so
you can't use less than that (on AArch64 you can go down to 16). Also, as noted
in the docs, we take the patchpoint address to be the actual code address
(assuming the call is local in the TOC-sharing sense), which should yield
higher performance than generating the full cross-DSO indirect-call sequence
and is likely just as useful for JITed code (if not, we'll change it).

StackMaps and Patchpoints are still marked as experimental, and so this support
is doubly experimental. So go ahead and experiment!

llvm-svn: 225909
2015-01-14 01:07:51 +00:00
Hal Finkel 63fb928109 Revert "r225808 - [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support"
Reverting this while I investiage buildbot failures (segfaulting in
GetCostForDef at ScheduleDAGRRList.cpp:314).

llvm-svn: 225811
2015-01-13 18:25:05 +00:00
Hal Finkel 821befd52b [PowerPC] Add StackMap/PatchPoint support
This commit does two things:

 1. Refactors PPCFastISel to use more of the common infrastructure for call
    lowering (this lets us take advantage of this common code for lowering some
    common intrinsics, stackmap/patchpoint among them).

 2. Adds support for stackmap/patchpoint lowering. For the most part, this is
    very similar to the support in the AArch64 target, with the obvious differences
    (different registers, NOP instructions, etc.). The test cases are adapted
    from the AArch64 test cases.

One difference of note is that the patchpoint call sequence takes 24 bytes, so
you can't use less than that (on AArch64 you can go down to 16). Also, as noted
in the docs, we take the patchpoint address to be the actual code address
(assuming the call is local in the TOC-sharing sense), which should yield
higher performance than generating the full cross-DSO indirect-call sequence
and is likely just as useful for JITed code (if not, we'll change it).

StackMaps and Patchpoints are still marked as experimental, and so this support
is doubly experimental. So go ahead and experiment!

llvm-svn: 225808
2015-01-13 17:48:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel b359b735d6 [PowerPC] Enable late partial unrolling on the POWER7
The P7 benefits from not have really-small loops so that we either have
multiple dispatch groups in the loop and/or the ability to form more-full
dispatch groups during scheduling. Setting the partial unrolling threshold to
44 seems good, empirically, for the P7. Compared to using no late partial
unrolling, this yields the following test-suite speedups:

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Adobe-C++/simple_types_constant_folding
	-66.3253% +/- 24.1975%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/oopack_v1p8
	-44.0169% +/- 29.4881%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/pi
	-27.8351% +/- 12.2712%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Stanford/Bubblesort
	-30.9898% +/- 22.4647%

I've speculatively added a similar setting for the P8. Also, I've noticed that
the unroller does not quite calculate the unrolling factor correctly for really
tiny loops because it neglects to account for the fact that not every loop body
replicant contains an ending branch and counter increment. I'll fix that later.

llvm-svn: 225522
2015-01-09 15:51:16 +00:00
Eric Christopher d85ffb1fc0 Add a new pass FunctionTargetTransformInfo. This pass serves as a
shim between the TargetTransformInfo immutable pass and the Subtarget
via the TargetMachine and Function. Migrate a single call from
BasicTargetTransformInfo as an example and provide shims where TargetMachine
begins taking a Function to determine the subtarget.

No functional change.

llvm-svn: 218004
2014-09-18 00:34:14 +00:00
Sanjay Patel b653de1ada Rename getMaximumUnrollFactor -> getMaxInterleaveFactor; also rename option names controlling this variable.
"Unroll" is not the appropriate name for this variable. Clang already uses 
the term "interleave" in pragmas and metadata for this.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5066

llvm-svn: 217528
2014-09-10 17:58:16 +00:00