It used to work correctly even with a KILL, but there is
no reason to consider meta instructions since they do not
create real HW uses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100135
After D99249 we use three different loop pass managers for LICM,
LoopRotate and LICM+LoopUnswitch. This happens because LazyBFI
and LazyBPI are not preserved by LoopRotate (note that D74640
is no longer needed). Avoid this by marking them as preserved.
My understanding of D86156 is that it is okay to simply preserve
them (which LoopUnswitch already does for the same reason) and
rely on callbacks to deal with deleted blocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99843
Look through copies to find more cases where the two values being
selected are identical. The motivation for this is just to be able to
remove the weird special case where tryFoldCndMask was called from
foldInstOperand, part way through folding a move-immediate into its
users, without regressing any lit tests.
ScratchExecCopy needs to be marked as live, we cannot use that register
while EXEC is stored in there.
Marking SGPRForFPSaveRestoreCopy and SGPRForBPSaveRestoreCopy as
available is unnecessary, they should not be live at that point anway.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100098
Test CodeGen/AMDGPU/amdgpu.private-memory.ll and
CodeGen/AMDGPU/private-memory-r600.ll have a block of CHECK directives
whose prefix is inconsistent: R600-CHECK Vs R600. This leads to a
R600-NOT directive using an undefined CHAN variable due to R600-CHECK
directives never being considered by FileCheck. Fixing the prefix leads
to the testcase failing. As per https://reviews.llvm.org/D99865#2675235
this commit removes the directives instead since it is not possible to
write a reliable check.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99865
This fixes an oversight in D99747 which moved the IMG init code from
SIAddIMGInit to AdjustInstrPostInstrSelection, but did not set the
hasPostISelHook flag on gather4 instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99953
This allows these optimisations to apply to e.g. `urem i16` directly
before `urem` is promoted to i32 on architectures where i16 operations
are not intrinsically legal (such as on Aarch64). The legalization then
later can happen more directly and generated code gets a chance to avoid
wasting time on computing results in types wider than necessary, in the end.
Seems like mostly an improvement in terms of results at least as far as x86_64 and aarch64 are concerned, with a few regressions here and there. It also helps in preventing regressions in changes like {D87976}.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88785
This includes gfx908 which only has a no-return version of the
global_atomic_add_f32 instruction, using the same hack that was
previously implemented for selecting from the
llvm.amdgcn.global.atomic.fadd intrinsic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97767
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
Note, only src0 and src1 will be commuted if the isCommutable flag
is set. This patch does not change that, it just makes it possible
to commute src0 and src1 of more instructions.
Reviewed By: foad, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99376
Change-Id: I61e20490962d95ea429beb355c55f55c024dafdc
D89239 adjusts the stack offset of emergency spill slots for overaligned
stacks. However the adjustment is not valid for targets whose stack
grows up (such as AMDGPU).
This change makes the adjustment conditional only to those targets whose
stack grows down.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49686
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99504
If the result of an atomic operation is not used then it can be more
efficient to build a reduction across all lanes instead of a scan. Do
this for GFX10, where the permlanex16 instruction makes it viable. For
wave64 this saves a couple of dpp operations. For wave32 it saves one
readlane (which are generally bad for performance) and one dpp
operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98953
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
Folding EXEC copy into it's single use may lead to constant bus constraint violation as it adds one more SGPR operand.
This change makes it validate the user instruction with the new SGPR operand and only fold it if it is legal.
Reviewed By: rampitec, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98888
I don't think there's any need for this test to use compressed exports.
Using normal exports seems a bit more straightforwards and avoids a tiny
bit of bitcasting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99167
This restores previous behaviour and is a step toward removing
unbundling entirely.
Reviewed By: foad, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99061
Lookup tables generate non PIC-friendly code, which requires dynamic relocation as described in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45244
This patch adds a new pass that converts lookup tables to relative lookup tables to make them PIC-friendly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94355
Pass no longer handles skips. Pass now removes unnecessary
unconditional branches and lowers early termination branches.
Hence rename to SILateBranchLowering.
Move code to handle returns to epilog from SIPreEmitPeephole
into SILateBranchLowering. This means SIPreEmitPeephole only
contains optional optimisations, and all required transforms
are in SILateBranchLowering.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98915
SIRemoveShortExecBranches is an optimisation so fits well in the
context of SIPreEmitPeephole.
Test changes relate to early termination from kills which have now
been lowered prior to considering branches for removal.
As these use s_cbranch the execz skips are now retained instead.
Currently either behaviour is valid as kill with EXEC=0 is a nop;
however, if early termination is used differently in future then
the new behaviour is the correct one.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98917
Add code so duplication index register changes can be removed from
inside bundles.
Reviewed By: rampitec, foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98940
Reuse the existing KnownBits multiplication code to handle the 'extend + multiply + extract high bits' pattern for multiply-high ops.
Noticed while looking at the codegen for D88785 / D98587 - the patch helps division-by-constant expansion code in particular, which suggests that we might have some further KnownBits div/rem cases we could handle - but this was far easier to implement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98857
Add some atomic optimizer tests where there is no use of the result of
the atomic operation, which is a common case in real code. NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98952
[amdgpu] Update med3 combine to skip i64
Fixes an assumption that a type which is not i32 will be i16. This asserts
when trying to sign/zero extend an i64 to i32.
Test case was cut down from an openmp application. Variations on it are hit by
other combines before reaching the problematic one, e.g. replacing the
immediate values with other function arguments changes the codegen path and
misses this combine.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98872
byval requires an implicit copy between the caller and callee such
that the callee may write into the stack area without it modifying the
value in the parent. Previously, this was passing through the raw
pointer value which would break if the callee wrote into it.
Most of the time, this copy can be optimized out (however we don't
have the optimization SelectionDAG does yet).
This will trigger more fallbacks for AMDGPU now, since we don't have
legalization for memcpy yet (although we should stop using byval
anyway).
RA can insert something like a sub1_sub2 COPY of a wide VGPR
tuple which results in the unaligned acces with v_pk_mov_b32
after the copy is expanded. This is regression after D97316.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98549
Replace individual operands GLC, SLC, and DLC with a single cache_policy
bitmask operand. This will reduce the number of operands in MIR and I hope
the amount of code. These operands are mostly 0 anyway.
Additional advantage that parser will accept these flags in any order unlike
now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96469
[amdgpu] Implement lower function LDS pass
Local variables are allocated at kernel launch. This pass collects global
variables that are used from non-kernel functions, moves them into a new struct
type, and allocates an instance of that type in every kernel. Uses are then
replaced with a constantexpr offset.
Prior to this pass, accesses from a function are compiled to trap. With this
pass, most such accesses are removed before reaching codegen. The trap logic
is left unchanged by this pass. It is still reachable for the cases this pass
misses, notably the extern shared construct from hip and variables marked
constant which survive the optimizer.
This is of interest to the openmp project because the deviceRTL runtime library
uses cuda shared variables from functions that cannot be inlined. Trunk llvm
therefore cannot compile some openmp kernels for amdgpu. In addition to the
unit tests attached, this patch applied to ROCm llvm with fixed-abi enabled
and the function pointer hashing scheme deleted passes the openmp suite.
This lowering will use more LDS than strictly necessary. It is intended to be
a functionally correct fallback for cases that are difficult to target from
future optimisation passes.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94648
When tracking defined lanes through phi nodes in the live range
graph each branch of the phi must be handled independently.
Also rewrite the marking algorithm to reduce unnecessary
operations.
Previously a shared set of defined lanes was used which caused
marking to stop prematurely. This was observable in existing lit
tests, but test patterns did not cover this detail.
Reviewed By: piotr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98614
This reverts commit 329aeb5db4,
and relands commit 61f006ac65.
This is a continuation of D89456.
As it was suggested there, now that SCEV models `PtrToInt`,
we can try to improve SCEV's pointer handling.
In particular, i believe, i will need this in the future
to further fix `SCEVAddExpr`operation type handling.
This removes special handling of `ConstantPointerNull`
from `ScalarEvolution::createSCEV()`, and add constant folding
into `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`.
This way, `null` constants stay as such in SCEV's,
but gracefully become zero integers when asked.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98147
This is a continuation of D89456.
As it was suggested there, now that SCEV models `PtrToInt`,
we can try to improve SCEV's pointer handling.
In particular, i believe, i will need this in the future
to further fix `SCEVAddExpr`operation type handling.
This removes special handling of `ConstantPointerNull`
from `ScalarEvolution::createSCEV()`, and add constant folding
into `ScalarEvolution::getPtrToIntExpr()`.
This way, `null` constants stay as such in SCEV's,
but gracefully become zero integers when asked.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98147
This also briefly tests a larger set of architectures than the more
exhaustive functionality tests for AArch64 and x86.
As requested in D88785
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98339
byval arguments need to be assumed writable. Only implicitly stack
passed arguments which aren't addressable in the IR can be assumed
immutable.
Mips is still broken since for some reason its doing its own thing
with the ValueHandlers (and x86 doesn't actually handle byval
arguments now, although some of the code is there).
This was essentially ignoring byval and treating them as a pointer
argument which needed to be loaded from. This should copy the frame
index value to the virtual register, not insert a load from the frame
index into the pointer value.
For AMDGPU, this was producing a load from the byval pointer argument,
to a pointer used for the byval arguments. I do not understand how
AArch64 managed to work before since it appears to be similarly
broken.
We could also change the ValueHandler API to avoid the extra copy from
the frame index, since currently it returns a new register.
I believe there is still an issue with outgoing byval arguments. These
should have a copy inserted in case the callee decided to overwrite
the memory.
As llvm.amdgcn.kill is lowered to a terminator it can cause
else branch annotations to end up in the wrong block.
Do not annotate conditionals as else branches where there is
a kill to avoid this.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97427
This instruction is only valid on 2D MSAA and 2D MSAA Array
surfaces. Remove intrinsic support for other dimension types,
and block assembly for unsupported dimensions.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98397
We have amdgpu_gfx functions that have high register pressure. If
we do not reserve VGPR for SGPR spill, we will fall into the path
to spill the SGPR to memory, which does not only have correctness issue,
but also have really bad performance.
I don't know why there is the check for hasStackObjects(), in our case,
we don't have stack objects at the time of finalizeLowering(). So just
remove the check that we always reserve a VGPR for possible SGPR spill
in non-entry functions.
Reviewed by: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98345
For attribute sets, the return index is at 0, and arguments start at
1. getParamAlignment adds the offset of 1, so we need to convert from
attribute index back to IR index.
As we may overwrite inactive lanes of a caller-save-vgpr, we should
always save/restore the reserved vgpr for sgpr spill.
Reviewed by: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98319
D57708 changed SIInstrInfo::isReallyTriviallyReMaterializable to reject
V_MOVs with extra implicit operands, but it accidentally rejected all
V_MOVs because of their implicit use of exec. Fix it but avoid adding a
moderately expensive call to MI.getDesc().getNumImplicitUses().
In real graphics shaders this changes quite a few vgpr copies into move-
immediates, which is good for avoiding stalls on GFX10.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98347
It is good to have a combined `divrem` instruction when the
`div` and `rem` are computed from identical input operands.
Some targets can lower them through a single expansion that
computes both division and remainder. It effectively reduces
the number of instructions than individually expanding them.
Reviewed By: arsenm, paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96013
AMDGPU target tries to handle the SGPR and VGPR spills in a
custom pass before the actual frame lowering pass. Once they
are handled and the respective frames are eliminated in the
custom pass, certain uses of them still remain. For instance,
the DBG_VALUE instructions inserted by the allocator alongside
the spill instruction will use the corresponding frame index.
They become dead later during PEI and causes a crash while trying to
replace the frame indices. We should possibly avoid this custom pass.
For now, replacing such dead references with null register value.
Reviewed By: arsenm, scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98038
This is already deprecated, so remove code working on this.
Also update the tests by using S_CBRANCH_EXECZ instead of SI_MASK_BRANCH.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97545
The result of ISD::USUBSAT will never be larger than the LHS. We
can use this to put a bound on the number of leading zeros.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98133
gfx1030 added a new way to implement readcyclecounter using the
SHADER_CYCLES hardware register, but the s_memtime instruction still
exists, so the MC layer should still accept it and the
llvm.amdgcn.s.memtime intrinsic should still work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97928
Same as other memory instructions, ds instructions add latency even if
exec is zero. Jumping over them if exec=0 is cheaper than executing
them.
With this change, the branch instruction that skips over a basic block
if exec=0 is not removed when the block contains a ds instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97922
Recommit bf5a582650. Depends on
4c8fb7ddd6 which was reverted.
RegBankSelect creates zext and trunc when it selects banks for uniform i1.
Add zext_trunc_fold from generic combiner to post RegBankSelect combiner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95432
The hazard where a VMEM reads an SGPR written by a VALU counts as a data
dependency hazard, so no nops are required on GFX10. Tested with Vulkan
CTS on GFX10.1 and GFX10.3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97926
This is recommit of 4c8fb7ddd6.
MIR in one unit test had mismatched types.
For vectors we consider a bit as known if it is the same for all demanded
vector elements (all elements by default). KnownBits BitWidth for vector
type is size of vector element. Add support for G_BUILD_VECTOR.
This allows combines of urem_pow2_to_mask in pre-legalizer combiner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96122
:: (store 1 + 4, addrspace 1)
->
:: (store 1 into undef + 4, addrspace 1)
An offset without a base isn't terribly useful but it's convenient to update
the offset without checking the value. For example, when breaking apart
stores into smaller units
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97812
RegBankSelect creates zext and trunc when it selects banks for uniform i1.
Add zext_trunc_fold from generic combiner to post RegBankSelect combiner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95432
For vectors we consider a bit as known if it is the same for all demanded
vector elements (all elements by default). KnownBits BitWidth for vector
type is size of vector element. Add support for G_BUILD_VECTOR.
This allows combines of urem_pow2_to_mask in pre-legalizer combiner.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96122
VirtRegRewriter may sometimes fail to correctly apply the kill flag where necessary,
which causes unecessary code gen on PowerPC. This patch fixes the way masks for
defined lanes are computed and the way mask for used lanes is computed.
Contact albion.fung@ibm.com instead of author for problems related to this commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92405
Refactor insertion of the asserting ops. This enables using them for
AMDGPU.
This code should essentially be the same for every target. Mips, X86
and ARM all have different code there now, but this seems to be an
accident. The assignment functions are called with different types
than they would be in the DAG, so this is all likely an assortment of
hacks to get around that.
* Add amdgcn_strict_wqm intrinsic.
* Add a corresponding STRICT_WQM machine instruction.
* The semantic is similar to amdgcn_strict_wwm with a notable difference that not all threads will be forcibly enabled during the computations of the intrinsic's argument, but only all threads in quads that have at least one thread active.
* The difference between amdgc_wqm and amdgcn_strict_wqm, is that in the strict mode an inactive lane will always be enabled irrespective of control flow decisions.
Reviewed By: critson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96258
* Introduce the new intrinsic amdgcn_strict_wwm
* Deprecate the old intrinsic amdgcn_wwm
The change is done for consistency as the "strict"
prefix will become an important, distinguishing factor
between amdgcn_wqm and amdgcn_strictwqm in the future.
The "strict" prefix indicates that inactive lanes do not
take part in control flow, specifically an inactive lane
enabled by a strict mode will always be enabled irrespective
of control flow decisions.
The amdgcn_wwm will be removed, but doing so in two steps
gives users time to switch to the new name at their own pace.
Reviewed By: critson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96257
While the underlying instruction is called image_msaa_load,
the resource must be x component only.
Rename the intrinsic for clarity.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97829
This merges more AMDGPU ABI lowering code into the generic call
lowering. Start cleaning up by factoring away more of the pack/unpack
logic into the buildCopy{To|From}Parts functions. These could use more
improvement, and the SelectionDAG versions are significantly more
complex, and we'll eventually have to emulate all of those cases too.
This is mostly NFC, but does result in some minor instruction
reordering. It also removes some of the limitations with mismatched
sizes the old code had. However, similarly to the merge on the input,
this is forcing gfx6/gfx7 to use the gfx8+ ABI (which is what we
actually want, but SelectionDAG is stuck using the weird emergent
ABI).
This also changes the load/store size for stack passed EVTs for
AArch64, which makes it consistent with the DAG behavior.
-amdgpu-inline-max-bb option could lead to a suboptimal
codegen preventing inlining of really simple functions
including pure wrapper calls. Relax the cutoff by allowing
to call a function with a single block on the grounds
that it will not increase total number of blocks after
inlining.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97744
The situation with inline asm/MC error reporting is kind of messy at the
moment. The errors from MC layout are not reliably propagated and users
have to specify an inlineasm handler separately to get inlineasm
diagnose. The latter issue is not a correctness issue but could be improved.
* Kill LLVMContext inlineasm diagnose handler and migrate it to use
DiagnoseInfo/DiagnoseHandler.
* Introduce `DiagnoseInfoSrcMgr` to diagnose SourceMgr backed errors. This
covers use cases like inlineasm, MC, and any clients using SourceMgr.
* Move AsmPrinter::SrcMgrDiagInfo and its instance to MCContext. The next step
is to combine MCContext::SrcMgr and MCContext::InlineSrcMgr because in all
use cases, only one of them is used.
* If LLVMContext is available, let MCContext uses LLVMContext's diagnose
handler; if LLVMContext is not available, MCContext uses its own default
diagnose handler which just prints SMDiagnostic.
* Change a few clients(Clang, llc, lldb) to use the new way of reporting.
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97449
This seems to be more of a Clang thing rather than a generic LLVM thing,
so this moves it out of LLVM pipelines and as Clang extension hooks into
LLVM pipelines.
Move the post-inline EEInstrumentation out of the backend pipeline and
into a late pass, similar to other sanitizer passes. It doesn't fit
into the codegen pipeline.
Also fix up EntryExitInstrumentation not running at -O0 under the new
PM. PR49143
Reviewed By: hans
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97608
The expected use case is for frontends to insert this into
shaders that are to be run under a debugger. The shader can
then be resumed or single stepped from the point of the call
under debugger control.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97670
SelectionDAG forces us to have a weird ABI for 16-bit values without
legal 16-bit operations, but currently GlobalISel bypasses this and
sometimes ends up using the gfx8+ ABI in some contexts. Make sure
we're testing the normal ABI to avoid a test change in a future patch.
Previously we would use a bundle to hint the register allocator to not
overwrite the pointers in a sequence of loads to avoid breaking soft
clauses. This bundling was based on a fuzzy register pressure
heuristic, so we could not guarantee using more registers than are
really available. This would result in register allocator failing on
unsatisfiable bundles. Use a kill to artificially extend the live
ranges, so we can always succeed at register allocation even if it
means extra spills in the worst case.
This seems to capture most of the benefit of the bundle while avoiding
most of the risk presented by the bundle. However the lit tests do
show a handful of regressions. In some cases with sequences of
volatile loads, unused load components end up getting reallocated to
the next load which forces a wait between. There are also a few small
scheduling regressions where a hazard used to be avoided, and one
spill torture test which for some reason nearly doubles the stack
usage. There is also a bit of noise from leftover kills (it may make
sense for post-RA pseudos to strip all of these out).
This allows GlobalISel to use this instruction where available. I assume
SelectionDAG always selects s_xnor_b32 so it isn't affected by this
change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97560
gfx90a operations require even aligned registers, but this was
previously achieved by reserving registers inside the full class.
Ideally this would be captured in the static instruction definitions
for the operands, and we would have different instructions per
subtarget. The hackiest part of this is we need to manually reassign
AGPR register classes after instruction selection (we get away without
this for VGPRs since those types are actually registered for legal
types).
Update the GlobalISel version of llvm.amdgcn.workitem.id.ll to mostly
match the SelctionDAG version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97377
Prefer to keep uniform (non-divergent) multiplies on the scalar ALU when
possible. This significantly improves some game cases by eliminating
v_readfirstlane instructions when the result feeds into a scalar
operation, like the address calculation for a scalar load or store.
Since isDivergent is only an approximation of whether a value is in
SGPRs, it can potentially regress some situations where a uniform value
ends up in a VGPR. These should be rare in real code, although the test
changes do contain a number of examples.
Most of the test changes are just using s_mul instead of v_mul/mad which
is generally better for both register pressure and latency (at least on
GFX10 where sgpr pressure doesn't affect occupancy and vector ALU
instructions have significantly longer latency than scalar ALU). Some
R600 tests now use MULLO_INT instead of MUL_UINT24.
GlobalISel appears to handle more scenarios in the desirable way,
although it can also be thrown off and fails to select the 24-bit
multiplies in some cases.
Alternative solution considered and rejected was to allow selecting
MUL_[UI]24 to S_MUL_I32. I've rejected this because the definition of
those SD operations works is don't-care on the most significant 8 bits,
and this fact is used in some combines via SimplifyDemandedBits.
Based on a patch by Nicolai Hähnle.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97063
Change some test cases to use divergent addresses for vector loads,
which should be the common case in real world code. Using uniform
addresses causes poor instruction selection for the surrounding
code which has to be fixed up post-register-allocation, and this causes
a lot of testsuite churn for a forthcoming patch to stop selecting
24-bit vector multiply instructions for uniform multiplies.
This shows up some problems in the idot tests where we fail to select
v_dot instructions because the patterns only match MUL_[UI]24 ISD nodes,
but the DAG contains i16 mul nodes instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97062
Enabled "bound_ctrl:1" and disabled "bound_ctrl:-1" syntax.
Corrected printer to output "bound_ctrl:1" instead of "bound_ctrl:0".
See bug 35397 for detailed issue description.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97048
This enables use of MemorySSA instead of MemDep in MemCpyOpt. To
allow this without significant compile-time impact, the MemCpyOpt
pass is moved directly before DSE (in the cases where this was not
already the case), which allows us to reuse the existing MemorySSA
analysis.
Unlike the MemDep-based implementation, the MemorySSA-based MemCpyOpt
can also perform simple optimizations across basic blocks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94376
fixed-abi uses pre-defined and predictable
SGPR/VGPRs for passing arguments. This patch makes
this scheme default when HSA OS is specified in triple.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96340
Track lanes when processing definitions for marking WQM/WWM.
If all lanes have been defined then marking can stop.
This prevents marking unnecessary instructions as WQM/WWM.
In particular this fixes a bug where values passing through
V_SET_INACTIVE would me marked as requiring WWM.
Reviewed By: piotr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95503
This is a somewhat reduced testcase that regressed, causing the revert
in 477e3fe4f8.
This was producing a bundle that could not be allocated. This is a
tricky one to reduce/reproduce, but I do like having some sanity check
for this.
AMDGPU currently has a lot of pre-processing code to pre-split
argument types into 32-bit pieces before passing it to the generic
code in handleAssignments. This is a bit sloppy and also requires some
overly fancy iterator work when building the calls. It's better if all
argument marshalling code is handled directly in
handleAssignments. This handles more situations like decomposing large
element vectors into sub-element sized pieces.
This should mostly be NFC, but does change the generated code by
shifting where the initial argument packing instructions are placed. I
think this is nicer looking, since it now emits the packing code
directly after the relevant copies, rather than after the copies for
the remaining arguments.
This doubles down on gfx6/gfx7 using the gfx8+ ABI for 16-bit
types. This is ultimately the better option, but incompatible with the
DAG. Fixing this requires more work, especially for f16.
Same implementation as G_SEXT_INREG.
Add a testcase to combine-sext-inreg for a concrete example, and a testcase
to KnownBitsTest.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96897
* Update skip-if-dead.ll with tests for wave32.
* Fix the crash in verifier in one newly enabled test by adding
missing fixImplicitOperands in branch insertion code.
```
*** Bad machine code: Using an undefined physical register ***
- function: test_kill_divergent_loop
- basic block: %bb.2 bb (0xad96308)
- instruction: S_CBRANCH_VCCNZ %bb.1, implicit $vcc_lo
- operand 1: implicit $vcc_lo
LLVM ERROR: Found 1 machine code errors.
```
* Simplify "cbranch_kill" to not use interp instructions.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96793
The helper function isBoolSGPR is too aggressive when determining
when a v_cndmask can be skipped on a boolean value because the
function does not check the operands of and/or/xor.
This can be problematic for the Add/Sub combines that can leave
bits set even for inactive lanes leading to wrong results.
Fix this by inspecting the operands of and/or/xor recursively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86878
The AMD GPU SIMemoryLegalizer was using the ordering address space
rather than the instruction address space when determining the
s_waitcnt to generate to ensure that a read-modify-write atomic has
completed. This resulted in additional unnecessary counters being
waited on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96743
Similar to D96622, we're better off just promoting uaddsat(x,y) -> umin(add(x,y),c) instead of trying to perform a shifted uaddsat.
I initially tried to just use shifted promotion in cases where we didn't have a legal/custom umin - but we don't appear to have any targets that have uaddsat but not umin, so imo we're better off always using the umin and avoid an untested shifted uaddsat code path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96767
In a future commit, soft clauses will be hinted with kill instructions
rather than forced together with bundles. Look for kills that look
like this, and erase them. I'm not sure if the check for specific uses
is worthwhile, or if it would be better to just unconditionally erase
kills.
This reduces test churn in a future patch.
This was allowing debug instructions to break the bundling, which
would change scheduling behavior. Bundle debug info / kills inside
the bundle. This seems to work OK, although the asm printer doesn't
understand these in a bundle. This implicitly expects the memory
legalizer to unbundle. It would probably be slightly nicer to move
these after.
Rewrite the loop to be clearer and make sure we don't end a bundle on
a meta instruction, only allow them in between other valid bundle
instructions.
We are using AtomicNoRet map in multiple places to determine
if an instruction atomic, rtn or nortn atomic. This method
does not work always since we have some instructions which
only has rtn or nortn version.
One such instruction is ds_wrxchg_rtn_b32 which does not have
nortn version. This has caused changes in memory legalizer
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96639
Add intrinsic which demotes all active lanes to helper lanes.
This is used to implement demote to helper Vulkan extension.
In practice demoting a lane to helper simply means removing it
from the mask of live lanes used for WQM/WWM/Exact mode.
Where the shader does not use WQM, demotes just become kills.
Additionally add llvm.amdgcn.live.mask intrinsic to complement
demote operations. In theory llvm.amdgcn.ps.live can be used
to detect helper lanes; however, ps.live can be moved by LICM.
The movement of ps.live cannot be remedied without changing
its type signature and such a change would require ps.live
users to update as well.
Reviewed By: piotr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94747
As we don't sort local symbols, don't sort non-local symbols. This makes
non-local symbols appear in their register order, which matches GNU as. The
register order is nice in that you can write tests with interleaved CHECK
prefixes, e.g.
```
// CHECK: something about foo
.globl foo
foo:
// CHECK: something about bar
.globl bar
bar:
```
With the lexicographical order, the user needs to place lexicographical smallest
symbol first or keep CHECK prefixes in one place.
As discussed on D96413, as long as the promoted bits of the args are zero we can use the basic ISD::USUBSAT pattern directly, without the shifting like we do for other ops.
I think something similar should be possible for ISD::UADDSAT as well, which I'll look at later.
Also, create a ISD::USUBSAT node directly - this will be expanded back by the legalizer later on if necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96622
Begin transitioning the X86 vector code to recognise sub(umax(a,b) ,b) or sub(a,umin(a,b)) USUBSAT patterns to make it more generic and available to all targets.
This initial patch just moves the basic umin/umax patterns to DAG, removing some vector-only checks on the way - these are some of the patterns that the legalizer will try to expand back to so we can be reasonably relaxed about matching these pre-legalization.
We can handle the trunc(sub(..))) variants as well, which helps with patterns where we were promoting to a wider type to detect overflow/saturation.
The remaining x86 code requires some cleanup first - some of it isn't actually tested etc. I also need to resurrect D25987.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96413
Implements same logis as in SelectionDAG.
G_FMINNUM_IEEE and G_FMAXNUM_IEEE are never SNaN by definition and
never NaN when one operand is known non-NaN and other known non-SNaN.
G_FMINNUM and G_FMAXNUM are never NaN/SNaN when one of the operands
is known non-NaN/SNaN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91716
If we have an instruction where more than one pointer operands
are derived from the same promoted alloca, we are fixing it for
one argument and do not fix a second use considering this user
done.
Fix this by deferring processing of memory intrinsics until all
potential operands are replaced.
Fixes: SWDEV-271358
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96386
Fixes a testcase that was overcommitting large register tuples to a
bundle, which the register allocator could not possibly satisfy. This
was producing a bundle which used nearly all of the available SGPRs
with a series of 16-dword loads (not all of which are freely available
to use).
This is a quick hack for some deeper issues with how the clause
bundler tracks register pressure.
Overall the pressure tracking used here doesn't make sense and is too
imprecise for what it needs to avoid the allocator failing. The
pressure estimate does not account for the alignment requirements of
large SGPR tuples, so this was really underestimating the pressure
impact. This also ignores the impact of the extended live range of the
use registers after the bundle is introduced. Additionally, it didn't
account for some wide tuples not being available due to reserved
registers.
This regresses a few cases. These end up introducing more
spilling. This is also a function of the global pressure being used in
the decision to bundle, not the local pressure impact of the bundle
itself.
When merging a pair of DS reads or writes needs to materialize the base
offset in a vgpr, choose a value that is aligned to as high a power of
two as possible. This maximises the chance that different pairs can use
the same base offset, in which case the base offset registers can be
commoned up by MachineCSE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96421
Move implementation of kill intrinsics to WQM pass. Add live lane
tracking by updating a stored exec mask when lanes are killed.
Use live lane tracking to enable early termination of shader
at any point in control flow.
Reviewed By: piotr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94746
We need to avoid setting the kill flag on the CSR spill if there's an
additional use of the register after the spill.
This does rely on consistency between the entry block liveins and the
MRI's function live ins, which is not something the verifier checks
now.
When running the tests on PowerPC and x86, the lit test GlobalISel/trunc.ll fails at the memory sanitize step. This seems to be due to wrong invalid logic (which matches even if it shouldn't) and likely missing variable initialisation."
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95878
When widening, each half of the v2s16 operands needs to be sign extended
for G_ASHR or zero extended for G_LSHR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96048
SALU min/max s32 instructions exist so use them. This means that
regbankselect can handle min/max much like add/sub/mul/shifts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96047
If amdgpu-unsafe-fp-atomics is specified, allow {flat|global}_atomic_add_f32 even if atomic modes don't match.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95391
When SGPRs are spilled to VGPRs, they can overwrite any lane. We need
to preserve the value of inactive lanes in function calls, so we save
the register even if it is marked as caller saved.
Also, teach buildPrologSpill to work when no registers are free like in
CodeGen/AMDGPU/pei-scavenge-vgpr-spill.mir and update the comment on
findScratchNonCalleeSaveRegister as it is not used anymore to realign
the stack pointer since D95865.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95946
This was only adding undef to the use if the copy itself had a
subregister index. It did not consider the subrange liveness if the
use had a subreg index to begin with.
If we had a pair of copies inside a loop which introduced new liveness
to a subregister which was undef before the loop, we would have a
dummy phi-only segment remaining across the loop body. Later, this
false segment would confuse RenameIndependentSubregs causing it to
introduce IMPLICIT_DEFs with broken value numbering.
It seems always adding the lanes to ShrinkMask is OK, so any
conditions should be purely a compile time filter.
For the fixed ABI, set this in the initial argument constructor,
rather than relying on the allocation logic to set the values. Also
stop passing them for amdgpu_gfx, since the DAG path seems to skip
these. I'm unclear on what amdgpu_gfx's expectations are. This will
allow moving the special input registers out of the normal argument
range.
This reverts commits 62af0305b7cc..677a3529d3e6 from D93708.
They cause failures in the sanitizer builds because of uninitialized
values.
A fix is in D95878, but it might take some time until this is pushed,
so reverting the changes for now.
We don't register i128 as a legal type with addRegisterClass, but it
appears in the list of legal register types. This inconsistency
resulted in the asm constraint lowering trying to use 2 128-bit
registers for these operands. This would leave behind a dead def that
would waste registers.
Regresses GlobalISel tests for i128 load/store, but these aren't very
important right now. Ideally these would not depend on the list of
register types.
This should only consider whether the pressure impact of the bundle at
the given point in the program will decrease the occupancy. High VGPR
pressure was incorrectly blocking the formation of scalar bundles, and
vice versa. This was also blocking bundling from high pressure
situations at other points in the program.
The temporary register is only used to compute the frame pointer.
The frame pointer is overwritten and not used in between, so we
can reuse the frame pointer for the computation, saving one register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95865
Saving callee-save registers happens in whole wave mode. Exec is saved
to a free register, which can be reused to save the frame pointer.
Therefore, saving the fp needs to happen after saving csrs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95861
I guess instructions were marked as frame-setup by accident, they are
restores as part of the epilog.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95783
DBG_VALUES placed between memory instructions would change
codegen. Skip over these and re-insert them after the bundle instead
of giving up on bundling.
This would assert with amdgpu-spill-sgpr-to-vgpr disabled when trying to
spill the FP.
Fixes: SWDEV-262704
Reviewed By: RamNalamothu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95768
With a context instruction, this would produce a context
error. However, it would continue on and do an out of bounds access of
the empty allocation order array.
SCC was not correctly preserved when entering WWM.
Current lit test was unable to detect this as entry block is
handled differently.
Additionally fix an issue where SCC was unnecessarily preserved
when exiting from WWM to Exact mode.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95500
V_SET_INACTIVE is implemented with S_NOT which clobbers SCC.
Mark sure it is marked appropriately.
Reviewed By: piotr
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95509
These are widened to a wider UADDE/USUBE, with the overflow value
unused, and with the same synthesis of a new overflow value as for the
O operations.
Reviewed By: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95326
Look throught G_PTRTOINT and G_PTR_ADD nodes when looking for constant
offset for buffer stores. This also helps with merging of these instructions
later on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95242
Before the patch it was possible to trigger a constant bus
violation when folding immediates into a shrunk instruction.
The patch adds a check to enforce the legality of the new operand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95527
We cannot call LRM::unassign() if LRM::assign() was never called
before, these are symmetrical calls. There are two ways of
assigning a physical register to virtual, via LRM::assign() and
via VRM::assignVirt2Phys(). LRM::assign() will call the VRM to
assign the register and then update LiveIntervalUnion. Inline
spiller calls VRM directly and thus LiveIntervalUnion never gets
updated. A call to LRM::unassign() then asserts about inconsistent
liveness.
We have to note that not all callers of the InlineSpiller even
have LRM to pass, RegAllocPBQP does not have it, so we cannot
always pass LRM into the spiller.
The only way to get into that spiller LRE_DidCloneVirtReg() call
is from LiveRangeEdit::eliminateDeadDefs if we split an LI.
This patch refuses to reassign a LiveInterval created by a split
to workaround the problem. In fact we cannot reassign a spill
anyway as all registers of the needed class are occupied and we
are spilling.
Fixes: SWDEV-267996
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95489
Just use the existing `Known.sextInReg` implementation.
- Update KnownBitsTest.cpp.
- Update combine-redundant-and.mir for a more concrete example.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95484
Support for XNACK and SRAMECC is not static on some GPUs. We must be able
to differentiate between different scenarios for these dynamic subtarget
features.
The possible settings are:
- Unsupported: The GPU has no support for XNACK/SRAMECC.
- Any: Preference is unspecified. Use conservative settings that can run anywhere.
- Off: Request support for XNACK/SRAMECC Off
- On: Request support for XNACK/SRAMECC On
GCNSubtarget will track the four options based on the following criteria. If
the subtarget does not support XNACK/SRAMECC we say the setting is
"Unsupported". If no subtarget features for XNACK/SRAMECC are requested we
must support "Any" mode. If the subtarget features XNACK/SRAMECC exist in the
feature string when initializing the subtarget, the settings are "On/Off".
The defaults are updated to be conservatively correct, meaning if no setting
for XNACK or SRAMECC is explicitly requested, defaults will be used which
generate code that can be run anywhere. This corresponds to the "Any" setting.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85882
If a function has stack objects, and a call, we require an FP. If we
did not initially have any stack objects, and only introduced them
during PrologEpilogInserter for CSR VGPR spills, SILowerSGPRSpills
would end up spilling the FP register as if it were a normal
register. This would result in an assert in a debug build, or
redundant handling of the FP register in a release build.
Try to predict that we will have an FP later, although this is ugly.
Frame-base materialization may insert vector instructions before EXEC is initialised.
Fix this by moving lowering of llvm.amdgcn.init.exec later in backend.
Also remove SI_INIT_EXEC_LO pseudo as this is not necessary.
Reviewed By: ruiling
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94645
In RISC-V there is a single addressing mode of the form imm(reg) where
imm is a signed integer of 12-bit with a range of [-2048..2047] bytes
from reg.
The test MultiSource/UnitTests/C++11/frame_layout of the LLVM test-suite
exercises several scenarios with the stack, including function calls
where the stack will need to be realigned to to a local variable having
a large alignment of 4096 bytes.
In situations of large stacks, the RISC-V backend (in
RISCVFrameLowering) reserves an extra emergency spill slot which can be
used (if no free register is found) by the register scavenger after the
frame indexes have been eliminated. PrologEpilogInserter already takes
care of keeping the emergency spill slots as close as possible to the
stack pointer or frame pointer (depending on what the function will
use). However there is a final alignment step to honour the maximum
alignment of the stack that, when using the stack pointer to access the
emergency spill slots, has the side effect of setting them farther from
the stack pointer.
In the case of the frame_layout testcase, the net result is that we do
have an emergency spill slot but it is so far from the stack pointer
(more than 2048 bytes due to the extra alignment of a variable to 4096
bytes) that it becomes unreachable via any immediate offset.
During elimination of the frame index, many (regular) offsets of the
stack may be immediately unreachable already. Their address needs to be
computed using a register. A virtual register is created and later
RegisterScavenger should be able to find an unused (physical) register.
However if no register is available, RegisterScavenger will pick a
physical register and spill it onto an emergency stack slot, while we
compute the offset (restoring the chosen register after all this). This
assumes that the emergency stack slot is easily reachable (this is,
without requiring another register!).
This is the assumption we seem to break when we perform the extra
alignment in PrologEpilogInserter.
We can "float" the emergency spill slots by increasing (in absolute
value) their offsets from the incoming stack pointer. This way the
emergency spill slots will remain close to the stack pointer (once the
function has allocated storage for the stack, including the needed
realignment). The new size computed in PrologEpilogInserter is padding
so it should be OK to move the emergency spill slots there. Also because
we're increasing the alignment, the new location should stay aligned for
the purpose of the emergency spill slots.
Note that this change also impacts other backends as shown by the tests.
Changes are minor adjustments to the emergency stack slot offset.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89239
The widenScalar implementation for signed and unsigned overflowing
operations were very similar: both are checked by truncating the result
and then re-sign/zero-extending it and checking that it matches the
computed operation.
Using a truncate + zero-extend for the unsigned case instead of manually
producing the AND instruction like before leads to an extra copy
instruction during legalization, but this should be harmless.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95035
Allow parsing generated mir with custom pseudo source value tokens.
Also rename pseudo source values to have more meaningful names.
Relands ba7dcd8542, which had memory leaks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95215
During instruction selection, there is an inconsistency in choosing
the initial soffset value. With certain early passes, this value is
getting modified and that brought additional fixup during
eliminateFrameIndex to work for all cases. This whole transformation
looks trivial and can be handled better.
This patch clearly defines the initial value for soffset and keeps it
unchanged before eliminateFrameIndex. The initial value must be zero
for MUBUF with a frame index. The non-frame index MUBUF forms that
use a raw offset from SP will have the stack register for soffset.
During frame elimination, the soffset remains zero for entry functions
with zero dynamic allocas and no callsites, or else is updated to the
appropriate frame/stack register.
Also, did some code clean up and made all asserts around soffset
stricter to match.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95071
Having a custom inliner doesn't really fit in with the new PM's
pipeline. It's also extra technical debt.
amdgpu-inline only does a couple of custom things compared to the normal
inliner:
1) It disables inlining if the number of BBs in a function would exceed
some limit
2) It increases the threshold if there are pointers to private arrays(?)
These can all be handled as TTI inliner hooks.
There already exists a hook for backends to multiply the inlining
threshold.
This way we can remove the custom amdgpu-inline pass.
This caused inline-hint.ll to fail, and after some investigation, it
looks like getInliningThresholdMultiplier() was previously getting
applied twice in amdgpu-inline (https://reviews.llvm.org/D62707 fixed it
not applying at all, so some later inliner change must have fixed
something), so I had to change the threshold in the test.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94153
This test case demonstrates that the Call Frame Information generation is
totally biased towards whether exceptions are enabled or not. Currently
LLVM does not generate CFI i.e. a .debug_frame for debug purpose even
if --force-dwarf-frame-section is enabled unless exceptions are enabled.
Reviewed By: scott.linder
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94801
If a function doesn't contain loops and does not call non-willreturn
functions, then it is willreturn. Loops are detected by checking
for backedges in the function. We don't attempt to handle finite
loops at this point.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94633
This pass is required to get correct codegen for image instructions with
the tfe or lwe bits set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95132
Allow parsing generated mir with custom pseudo source value tokens.
Also rename pseudo source values to have more meaningful names.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94768
Add DemandedElts support inside the TRUNCATE analysis.
REAPPLIED - this was reverted by @hans at rGa51226057fc3 due to an issue with vector shift amount types, which was fixed in rG935bacd3a724 and an additional test case added at rG0ca81b90d19d
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56387
In case of indirect calls or address taken functions,
skip propagating any attributes to them. We just
propagate features to such functions.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94585
It caused "Vector shift amounts must be in the same as their first arg"
asserts in Chromium builds. See the code review for repro instructions.
> Add DemandedElts support inside the TRUNCATE analysis.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56387
This reverts commit cad4275d69.
If constants are hidden behind G_ANYEXT we can treat them same way as G_SEXT.
For that purpose we extend getConstantVRegValWithLookThrough with option
to handle G_ANYEXT same way as G_SEXT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92219
Use the KnownBits icmp comparisons to determine when a ISD::UMIN/UMAX op is unnecessary should either op be known to be ULT/ULE or UGT/UGE than the other.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94532
Add pseudo instruction to allow early termination of pixel shader
anywhere based on the value of SCC. The intention is to use this
when a mask of live lanes is updated, e.g. live lanes in WQM pass.
This facilitates early termination of shaders even when EXEC is
incomplete, e.g. in non-uniform control flow.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88777
Previously, instructions which could be
expressed as VOP3 in addition to another
encoding had a _e64 suffix on the tablegen
record name, while those
only available as VOP3 did not. With this
patch, all VOP3s will have the _e64 suffix.
The assembly does not change, only the mir.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94341
Change-Id: Ia8ec8890d47f8f94bbbdac43745b4e9dd2b03423
This seems to only have overridden cold handling, which we probably
shouldn't do. As far as I can tell the wrapper library functions are
still inlined as appropriate.
If SETO/SETUO aren't legal, they'll be expanded and we'll end up
with 3 comparisons.
SETONE is equivalent to (SETOGT || SETOLT)
so if one of those operations is supported use that expansion. We
don't need both since we can commute the operands to make the other.
SETUEQ can be implemented with !(SETOGT || SETOLT) or (SETULE && SETUGE).
I've only implemented the first because it didn't look like most of the
affected targets had legal SETULE/SETUGE.
Reviewed By: frasercrmck, tlively, nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94450
In ST mode, flat scratch instructions have neither an sgpr nor a vgpr
for the address. This lead to an assertion when inserting hard clauses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94406
Memory operands store a base alignment that does not factor in
the effect of the offset on the alignment.
Previously the printing code only printed the base alignment if
it was different than the size. If there is an offset, the reader
would need to figure out the effective alignment themselves. This
has confused me before and someone else was recently confused on
IRC.
This patch prints the possibly offset adjusted alignment if it is
different than the size. And prints the base alignment if it is
different than the alignment. The MIR parser has been updated to
read basealign in addition to align.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94344
This patch finishes addressing unused prefixes under CodeGen: 2
remaining tests fixed, and then undo-ing the lit.local.cfg changes under
various subdirs and moving the policy under CodeGen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94430
We are checking the unsafe-fp-math for sqrt but not for fpow, which behaves inconsistent.
As the direction is to remove this global option, we need to remove the unsafe-fp-math
check for sqrt and update the test with afn fast-math flags.
Reviewed By: Spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93891
Treat a non-atomic volatile load and store as a relaxed atomic at
system scope for the address spaces accessed. This will ensure all
relevant caches will be bypassed.
A volatile atomic is not changed and still only bypasses caches upto
the level specified by the SyncScope operand.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94214
There are various hacks working around limitations in
handleAssignments, and the logical split between different parts isn't
correct. Start separating the type legalization to satisfy going
through the DAG infrastructure from the code required to split into
register types. The type splitting should be moved to generic code.
The fdiv lowering is currently split between an IR pass and codegen,
so make sure this works end to end. We also currently differ from the
DAG on some edge cases, which this will show in a future change.
Summary:
This is to avoid unnecessary analysis since amdgpu.noclobber is only used for globals.
Reviewers:
arsenm
Fixes:
SWDEV-239161
Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D94107
Convert it to v_fma_legacy_f32 if it is profitable to do so, just like
other mac instructions that are converted to their mad equivalents.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94010
This patch disables the FSUB(-0,X)->FNEG(X) DAG combine when we're flushing subnormals. It requires updating the existing AMDGPU tests to use the fneg IR instruction, in place of the old fsub(-0,X) canonical form, since AMDGPU is the only backend currently checking the DenormalMode flags.
Note that this will require follow-up optimizations to make sure the FSUB(-0,X) form is handled appropriately
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93243
An AMDGPUAA class already existed that was supposed to work with the new
PM, but it wasn't tested and was a bit broken.
Fix up the existing classes to have the right keys/parameters.
Wire up AMDGPUAA inside AMDGPUTargetMachine.
Add it to the list of alias analyses for the "default" AAManager since
in adjustPassManager() amdgpu-aa is added into the pipeline at the
beginning.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93914
The legacy PM doesn't run EP_ModuleOptimizerEarly on -O0, so skip
running it here when given O0.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93886
This is a (last big?) part of the patch series to make SimplifyCFG
preserve DomTree. Currently, it still does not actually preserve it,
even thought it is pretty much fully updated to preserve it.
Once the default is flipped, a valid DomTree must be passed into
simplifyCFG, which means that whatever pass calls simplifyCFG,
should also be smart about DomTree's.
As far as i can see from `check-llvm` with default flipped,
this is the last LLVM test batch (other than bugpoint tests)
that needed fixes to not break with default flipped.
The changes here are boringly identical to the ones i did
over 42+ times/commits recently already,
so while AMDGPU is outside of my normal ecosystem,
i'm going to go for post-commit review here,
like in all the other 42+ changes.
Note that while the pass is taught to preserve {,Post}DomTree,
it still doesn't do that by default, because simplifycfg
still doesn't do that by default, and flipping default
in this pass will implicitly flip the default for simplifycfg.
That will happen, but not right now.
As mentioned in D93793, there are quite a few places where unary `IRBuilder::CreateShuffleVector(X, Mask)` can be used
instead of `IRBuilder::CreateShuffleVector(X, Undef, Mask)`.
Let's update them.
Actually, it would have been more natural if the patches were made in this order:
(1) let them use unary CreateShuffleVector first
(2) update IRBuilder::CreateShuffleVector to use poison as a placeholder value (D93793)
The order is swapped, but in terms of correctness it is still fine.
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93923
And add it to the AMDGPU opt pipeline.
This is a function pass instead of a module pass (like the legacy pass)
because it's getting added to a CGSCCPassManager, and you can't put a
module pass in a CGSCCPassManager.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93885
And add to AMDGPU opt pipeline.
Don't pin an opt run to the legacy PM when -enable-new-pm=1 if these
passes (or passes introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D93863) are in
the list of passes.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93875
And add them to the pipeline via
AMDGPUTargetMachine::registerPassBuilderCallbacks(), which mirrors
AMDGPUTargetMachine::adjustPassManager().
These passes can't be unconditionally added to PassRegistry.def since
they are only present when the AMDGPU backend is enabled. And there are
no target-specific headers in llvm/include, so parsing these pass names
must occur somewhere in the AMDGPU directory. I decided the best place
was inside the TargetMachine, since the PassBuilder invokes
TargetMachine::registerPassBuilderCallbacks() anyway. If we come up with
a cleaner solution for target-specific passes in the future that's fine,
but there aren't too many target-specific IR passes living in
target-specific directories so it shouldn't be too bad to change in the
future.
Reviewed By: ychen, arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93863
Basic block containing "if" not necessarily dominates block that is the "false" target for the if.
That "false" target block may have another predecessor besides the "if" block. IR value corresponding to the Exec mask is generated by the
si_if intrinsic and then used by the end_cf intrinsic. In this case IR verifier complains that 'Def does not dominate all uses'.
This change split the edge between the "if" block and "false" target block to make it dominated by the "if" block.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91435
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
Currently, the compiler crashes in instruction selection of global
load/stores in gfx600 due to the lack of FLAT instructions. This patch
fix the crash by selecting MUBUF instructions for global load/stores
in gfx600.
Authored-by: Praveen Velliengiri <Praveen.Velliengiri@amd.com>
Reviewed by: t-tye
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92483
Current approach doesn't work well in cases when multiple paths are predicted to be "cold". By "cold" paths I mean those containing "unreachable" instruction, call marked with 'cold' attribute and 'unwind' handler of 'invoke' instruction. The issue is that heuristics are applied one by one until the first match and essentially ignores relative hotness/coldness
of other paths.
New approach unifies processing of "cold" paths by assigning predefined absolute weight to each block estimated to be "cold". Then we propagate these weights up/down IR similarly to existing approach. And finally set up edge probabilities based on estimated block weights.
One important difference is how we propagate weight up. Existing approach propagates the same weight to all blocks that are post-dominated by a block with some "known" weight. This is useless at least because it always gives 50\50 distribution which is assumed by default anyway. Worse, it causes the algorithm to skip further heuristics and can miss setting more accurate probability. New algorithm propagates the weight up only to the blocks that dominates and post-dominated by a block with some "known" weight. In other words, those blocks that are either always executed or not executed together.
In addition new approach processes loops in an uniform way as well. Essentially loop exit edges are estimated as "cold" paths relative to back edges and should be considered uniformly with other coldness/hotness markers.
Reviewed By: yrouban
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79485
It does not seem to fold offsets but this is not specific
to the flat scratch as getPtrBaseWithConstantOffset() does
not return the split for these tests unlike its SDag
counterpart.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93670
Adjust SITargetLowering::allowsMisalignedMemoryAccessesImpl for
unaligned flat scratch support. Mostly needed for global isel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93669
Errors from MCAssembler, MCObjectStreamer and *ObjectWriter typically cause a crash:
```
% cat c.c
int bar;
extern int foo __attribute__((alias("bar")));
% clang -c -fcommon c.c
fatal error: error in backend: Common symbol 'bar' cannot be used in assignment expr
PLEASE submit a bug report to ...
Stack dump:
...
```
`LLVMTargetMachine::addPassesToEmitFile` constructs `MachineModuleInfoWrapperPass`
which creates a MCContext without SourceMgr. `MCContext::reportError` calls
`report_fatal_error` which gets captured by Clang `LLVMErrorHandler` and gets translated
to the output above.
Since `MCContext::reportError` errors indicate user errors, such a crashing style error
is inappropriate. So this patch changes `report_fatal_error` to `SourceMgr().PrintMessage`.
```
% clang -c -fcommon c.c
<unknown>:0: error: Common symbol 'bar' cannot be used in assignment expr
```
Ideally we should at least recover the original filename (the line information
is generally lost). That requires general improvement to MC diagnostics,
because currently in many cases SMLoc information is lost.
Fast register allocator skips bundled MIs, as the main assignment
loop uses MachineBasicBlock::iterator (= MachineInstrBundleIterator)
This was causing SIInsertWaitcnts to crash which expects all
instructions to have registers assigned.
This patch makes sure to set everything inside bundle to the same
assignments done on BUNDLE header.
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90369
This PR implements the function splitBasicBlockBefore to address an
issue
that occurred during SplitEdge(BB, Succ, ...), inside splitBlockBefore.
The issue occurs in SplitEdge when the Succ has a single predecessor
and the edge between the BB and Succ is not critical. This produces
the result ‘BB->Succ->New’. The new function splitBasicBlockBefore
was added to splitBlockBefore to handle the issue and now produces
the correct result ‘BB->New->Succ’.
Below is an example of splitting the block bb1 at its first instruction.
/// Original IR
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlock
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
br bb1.split
bb1.split:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlockBefore
bb0:
br bb1.split
bb1.split
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92200
This PR implements the function splitBasicBlockBefore to address an
issue
that occurred during SplitEdge(BB, Succ, ...), inside splitBlockBefore.
The issue occurs in SplitEdge when the Succ has a single predecessor
and the edge between the BB and Succ is not critical. This produces
the result ‘BB->Succ->New’. The new function splitBasicBlockBefore
was added to splitBlockBefore to handle the issue and now produces
the correct result ‘BB->New->Succ’.
Below is an example of splitting the block bb1 at its first instruction.
/// Original IR
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlock
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
br bb1.split
bb1.split:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlockBefore
bb0:
br bb1.split
bb1.split
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92200
This PR implements the function splitBasicBlockBefore to address an
issue
that occurred during SplitEdge(BB, Succ, ...), inside splitBlockBefore.
The issue occurs in SplitEdge when the Succ has a single predecessor
and the edge between the BB and Succ is not critical. This produces
the result ‘BB->Succ->New’. The new function splitBasicBlockBefore
was added to splitBlockBefore to handle the issue and now produces
the correct result ‘BB->New->Succ’.
Below is an example of splitting the block bb1 at its first instruction.
/// Original IR
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlock
bb0:
br bb1
bb1:
br bb1.split
bb1.split:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
/// IR after splitEdge(bb0, bb1) using splitBasicBlockBefore
bb0:
br bb1.split
bb1.split
br bb1
bb1:
%0 = mul i32 1, 2
br bb2
bb2:
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92200
Undef subranges are not present in the live range values, except when
they cross block boundaries. In this situation, a identity copy is
inside a loop, and one of the lanes is undefined. It only appears
alive inside the loop due to the copy. Once the copy was erased, it
would leave behind a segment inside the loop body with no
corresponding def anywhere in the program.
When RenameIndependentSubregs processed this dummy interval, it would
introduce a "Multiple connected components in live interval" verifier
error when IMPLICIT_DEFs were added to the other two blocks. I believe
there is a missing verifier check for this type of dummy interval.
I have found additional cases from the same fundamental problem in
other areas I haven't managed to fix yet (e.g. the commented out
prune_subrange_phi_value_* cases).
Summary:
If a store defines (must alias) a load, it clobbers the load.
Fixes: SWDEV-258915
Reviewers:
arsenm
Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D92951
- Once an instruction is simplified, foldable candidates from it should
be invalidated or skipped as the operand index is no longer valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93174
Both ds_read_b128 and ds_read2_b64 are valid for 128bit 16-byte aligned
loads but the one that will be selected is determined either by the order in
tablegen or by the AddedComplexity attribute. Currently ds_read_b128 has
priority.
While ds_read2_b64 has lower alignment requirements, we cannot always
restrict ds_read_b128 to 16-byte alignment because of unaligned-access-mode
option. This was causing ds_read_b128 to be selected for 8-byte aligned
loads regardles of chosen access mode.
To resolve this we use two patterns for selecting ds_read_b128. One
requires alignment of 16-byte and the other requires
unaligned-access-mode option.
Same goes for ds_write2_b64 and ds_write_b128.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92767
It is possible for copies or spills to be inserted in the middle of indirect
addressing sequences which use VGPR indexing. Spills to accvgprs could be
effected by the indexing mode.
Add new pseudo instructions that are expanded after register allocation to avoid
the problematic spill or copy placement.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91048
getMaxWavesPerEU and getVGPRAllocGranule both changed in GFX10.3 and
they both affect the occupancy calculation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92839
* Rename some tests to try to make a convention (where all components
are optional) of:
<addrspace>_<syncscope>_<memory-orders>_<operation>
* Split up at a level of granularity appropriate for the different RUN
lines (i.e. split on addrspace so GFX6 can avoid FLAT) and that makes
running a specific test reasonable in terms of wall time taken. This
also means when run as part of the test suite the testing is not one
serial bottleneck.
* Auto-generate check lines with `update_llc_test_checks.py` to make
future maintenance more tractable.
Reviewed By: rampitec, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91545
Currently, we have some confusion in the codebase regarding the
meaning of LocationSize::unknown(): Some parts (including most of
BasicAA) assume that LocationSize::unknown() only allows accesses
after the base pointer. Some parts (various callers of AA) assume
that LocationSize::unknown() allows accesses both before and after
the base pointer (but within the underlying object).
This patch splits up LocationSize::unknown() into
LocationSize::afterPointer() and LocationSize::beforeOrAfterPointer()
to make this completely unambiguous. I tried my best to determine
which one is appropriate for all the existing uses.
The test changes in cs-cs.ll in particular illustrate a previously
clearly incorrect AA result: We were effectively assuming that
argmemonly functions were only allowed to access their arguments
after the passed pointer, but not before it. I'm pretty sure that
this was not intentional, and it's certainly not specified by
LangRef that way.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91649
Currently, `-indvars` runs first, and then immediately after `-loop-idiom` does.
I'm not really sure if `-loop-idiom` requires `-indvars` to run beforehand,
but i'm *very* sure that `-indvars` requires `-loop-idiom` to run afterwards,
as it can be seen in the phase-ordering test.
LoopIdiom runs on two types of loops: countable ones, and uncountable ones.
For uncountable ones, IndVars obviously didn't make any change to them,
since they are uncountable, so for them the order should be irrelevant.
For countable ones, well, they should have been countable before IndVars
for IndVars to make any change to them, and since SCEV is used on them,
it shouldn't matter if IndVars have already canonicalized them.
So i don't really see why we'd want the current ordering.
Should this cause issues, it will give us a reproducer test case
that shows flaws in this logic, and we then could adjust accordingly.
While this is quite likely beneficial in-the-wild already,
it's a required part for the full motivational pattern
behind `left-shift-until-bittest` loop idiom (D91038).
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91800
Add .shader_functions to pal metadata, which contains the stack frame
size for all non-entry-point functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90036
Also use DataLayout to get type size. Relying on the IR type size is
also pretty broken here, since this won't perfectly capture how types
are legalized.
Extract the scratch offset from the scratch buffer descriptor that is
stored in the global table.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91701
These tests implicitly depend on the target supporting generic pointers,
so to prepare for testing them on GFX6 (which lacks FLAT) remove the
dependency where possible.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91666
We have workarounds for two different cases where vccz can get out of
sync with the value in vcc. This fixes them in two ways:
1. Fix the case where the def of vcc was in a previous basic block, by
pessimistically assuming that vccz might be incorrect at a basic block
boundary.
2. Fix the handling of pre-existing waitcnt instructions by calling
generateWaitcntInstBefore before examining ScoreBrackets to determine
whether there's an outstanding smem read operation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91636
- In certain cases, a generic pointer could be assumed as a pointer to
the global memory space or other spaces. With a dedicated target hook
to query that address space from a given value, infer-address-space
pass could infer and propagate that to all its users.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91121
This patch adds a new pass to add !annotation metadata for entries in
@llvm.global.anotations, which is generated using
__attribute__((annotate("_name"))) on functions in Clang.
This has been discussed on llvm-dev as part of
RFC: Combining Annotation Metadata and Remarks
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-November/146393.html
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91195
This patch adds a new !annotation metadata kind which can be used to
attach annotation strings to instructions.
It also adds a new pass that emits summary remarks per function with the
counts for each annotation kind.
The intended uses cases for this new metadata is annotating
'interesting' instructions and the remarks should provide additional
insight into transformations applied to a program.
To motivate this, consider these specific questions we would like to get answered:
* How many stores added for automatic variable initialization remain after optimizations? Where are they?
* How many runtime checks inserted by a frontend could be eliminated? Where are the ones that did not get eliminated?
Discussed on llvm-dev as part of 'RFC: Combining Annotation Metadata and Remarks'
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2020-November/146393.html)
Reviewed By: thegameg, jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91188
Also fix a similar issue in SIInsertWaitcnts, but I don't think that fix
has any effect in practice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91290
We can use KnownBitsAnalysis to cover cases when mask is not trivial. It can
also help with cases when mask is not constant but can still be folded into
one. Since 'and' is comutative we should treat both operands as possible
replacements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90674
This sequence of instructions can be simplified if they are single use and
some operands are constants. Additional combines may be applied afterwards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90223
Sequence of same shift instructions with constant operands can be combined into
a single shift instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90217
If the source of S_MOV_{B32,B64}_term is an immediate then it
cannot be lowered to a COPY.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90451
Add a calling convention called amdgpu_gfx for real function calls
within graphics shaders. For the moment, this uses the same calling
convention as other calls in amdgpu, with registers excluded for return
address, stack pointer and stack buffer descriptor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88540
Fix a crash when SCC is defined until end of block and mode change
must be inserted in SCC live region.
Reviewed By: mceier
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90997
Results of convergent operations are implicitly affected by the
enclosing control flows and should not be hoisted out of arbitrary
loops.
Patch by Xiaoqing Wu <xiaoqing_wu@apple.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90361
Removed "implicit def VCC" from declarations of AMDGPU VOPC instructions since they do not implicitly write to VCC in SDWA mode.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89168
This change adds a real glc operand to the return atomic
instead of just string " glc" in the middle of the asm
string.
Improves asm parser diagnostics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90730
Convert GISelKnownBits.computeKnownBitsImpl shift handling to use the common KnownBits implementations, which makes use of the known leading/trailing bits for shifted values in cases where we don't know the shift amount value, as detailed in https://blog.regehr.org/archives/1709
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90527
Summary:
For vector element types which are not byte-sized, we would generate
incorrect scalar offsets and produce incorrect codegen.
This optimization could potentially be supported in the future, e.g. by
loading in bytes, then shifting and masking out the remaining bits of
the vector element. However, without an upstream target to test against
it's best to avoid the bad codegen in the simplest possible way.
Related to this bug:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27600
Reviewed by: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78568
Pseudo-registers allow different register encodings
between gpu generations. Make sure we resolve the
pseudo regs to real regs whenever we get their
hardware encoding.
Using the correct encodings revealed a register
bank conflict and an unnecessary write dependency.
Tests have been updated to match.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90721
Change-Id: I73c154cd24aecc820993b50bebaf4df97a5710ca
The insertion of waterfall loops splits the current basic block into
three blocks. So the basic block that we iterate over must be updated.
This failed assert(!NodePtr->isKnownSentinel()) in ilist_iterator for
divergent calls in branches before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90596
Previously, the default value for ieee mode was
- on for compute kernels and compute shaders,
- off for all shaders except compute shaders.
This commit changes the default to be
- on for compute kernels,
- off for shaders.
This aligns the default value with the settings that are actually in
use. To my knowledge, all users of shader calling conventions (mesa and
llpc) disable the ieee mode by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89388
As discussed on D90527, we should be be trying to move shift handling functionality into KnownBits to avoid code duplication in SelectionDAG/GlobalISel/ValueTracking.
The refactor to use the KnownBits fixed/min/max constant helpers allows us to hit a couple of cases that we were missing before.
We still need the getValidMinimumShiftAmountConstant case as KnownBits doesn't handle per-element vector cases.
This differentiates the Ryzen 4000/4300/4500/4700 series APUs that were
previously included in gfx909.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90419
Change-Id: Ia901a7157eb2f73ccd9f25dbacec38427312377d
These instructions use a scaled offset. We were wrongly selecting them
even when the required offset was not a multiple of the scale factor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90607
It should be enabled only when the load alignment is at least 8-byte.
Fixes: SWDEV-256824
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90404
* Factor out common elements of the input YAML document and use sed to
macro replace the run line specific elements.
* Add checks for the common elements which depend on the ELF class.
* Use non-numeric suffix for temporary files to avoid merge conflicts.
* Sort tests by GFX# ascending.
* Group ELF and YAML tests by GFX#.
Reviewed By: t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90245
This reverts r227987 "R600/SI: Determine target-specific encoding of READLANE and WRITELANE early v2".
All the codegen changes are caused by the post-RA scheduler no longer
treating readlane/writelane as scheduling barriers due to having
unmodelled side effects. (The pseudos are hasSideEffects = 0, but the
real instructions are hasSideEffects = ? which TableGen conservatively
treats as 1.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90401
Reset the tracked emitted instructions when starting scheduling on a new
region.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90347
V_DIV_SCALE_F32/F64 are VOP3B encoded so they can't use the ABS src
modifier, but they can still use NEG and the usual output modifiers.
This partially reverts 3b99f12a4e "AMDGPU: Remove modifiers from v_div_scale_*".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90296
https://reviews.llvm.org/D88060
This adds the following combines
1) build_vector formation from insert_vec_elts
2) insert_vec_elts (build_vector) -> build_vector
SIPreAllocateWWMRegs was being inserted after RegisterCoalescer
but this pass does not exist during FastAlloc so pre-allocation
pass was never being run.
Insert pre-allocation after TwoAddressInstructionPass instead.
Reviewed By: rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90236
- Add an internal option `-amdgpu-use-aa-in-codegen` to enable or
disable this feature. By Default, it's enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89320
Exec mask manipulation inserted by SIWholeQuadMode barriers to
instruction scheduling. Move the entire pass after the machine
instruction scheduler and make changes so pass is correct for
non-SSA operation. These changes should leave the pass still
usable pre-scheduler, although tests have be updated to reflect
post-scheduler results.
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88081
The support is disabled by default. So far there is instruction
selection, spilling, and frame elimination. It also changes SP
from unswizzled to swizzled as used by flat scratch instructions,
so it cannot be mixed with MUBUF stack access.
At the very least missing:
- GlobalISel;
- Some optimizations in frame elimination in between vector
and scalar ALU;
- It shall finally allow to always materialize frame index
as an SGPR, but that is not implemented and frame elimination
cannot handle it yet;
- Unaligned and/or multidword flat scratch shall work, but it
is legalized now for MUBUF;
- Operand folding cannot optimize FI like with MUBUF yet;
- It will need scaling the value of the SP/FP in the DWARF
expression to recover the unswizzled scratch address;
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89170
If no pal metadata is given, default to the msgpack format instead of
the legacy metadata. This makes tests better readable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90035
We use an absolute address for stack objects and
it would be necessary to have a constant 0 for soffset field.
Fixes: SWDEV-228562
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89234
This commit marks i16 MULH as expand in AMDGPU backend,
which is necessary after the refactoring in D80485.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89965
If the end instruction of the scheduling region was a DBG_VALUE, the
uses of the debug instruction were tracked as if they were real
uses. This would then hit the deadDefHasNoUse assertion in
addVRegDefDeps if the only use was the debug instruction.
1. Fixed liveness issue with implicit kills.
2. Fixed potential problem with an indirect mov.
Fixes: SWDEV-256848
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89599
Fixes being overly conservative with the register counts in called
functions. This should try to do a conservative range merge, but for
now just clone.
Also fix not being able to functionally run the pass standalone.
Passes that are run after the post-RA scheduler may insert instructions like
waitcnt which eliminate the need for certain noops. After this patch the
scheduler is still aware of possible latency from hazards but noops will
not be inserted until the dedicated hazard recognizer pass is run.
Depends on D89753.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89754
If a target can encode multiple wait-states into a noop allow emitting such
instructions directly.
Reviewed By: rampitec, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89753