Currently isReallyTriviallyReMaterializableGeneric() implementation
prevents rematerialization on any virtual register use on the grounds
that is not a trivial rematerialization and that we do not want to
extend liveranges.
It appears that LRE logic does not attempt to extend a liverange of
a source register for rematerialization so that is not an issue.
That is checked in the LiveRangeEdit::allUsesAvailableAt().
The only non-trivial aspect of it is accounting for tied-defs which
normally represent a read-modify-write operation and not rematerializable.
The test for a tied-def situation already exists in the
/CodeGen/AMDGPU/remat-vop.mir,
test_no_remat_v_cvt_f32_i32_sdwa_dst_unused_preserve.
The change has affected ARM/Thumb, Mips, RISCV, and x86. For the targets
where I more or less understand the asm it seems to reduce spilling
(as expected) or be neutral. However, it needs a review by all targets'
specialists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106408
This changes a couple of calls to LiveRegs.contains to
!LiveRegs.available, one in Thumb1FrameLoweringInfo (which modifies a
test to look more correct to me, given r7 should be the frame pointer so
is not available), and another in the ARMLoadStoreOptimizer, that I
don't have a test for, it was just found by inspection.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107454
This will currently accept the old number of bytes syntax, and convert
it to a scalar. This should be removed in the near future (I think I
converted all of the tests already, but likely missed a few).
Not sure what the exact syntax and policy should be. We can continue
printing the number of bytes for non-generic instructions to avoid
test churn and only allow non-scalar types for generic instructions.
This will currently print the LLT in parentheses, but accept parsing
the existing integers and implicitly converting to scalar. The
parentheses are a bit ugly, but the parser logic seems unable to deal
without either parentheses or some keyword to indicate the start of a
type.
Prior to the changes from D52010, clobbering Thumb's high registers in
inline asm would cause incorrect code to be generated - or an assertion
failure for debug builds. Now that the issue is no longer reproducible,
this patch adds a MIR test to cover that scenario.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96335
Re-applying this patch after bots failures. Should be fine now.
The function __multi3() is undefined on 32-bit ARM, so a call to it should
never be emitted. Instead, plain instructions need to be generated to
perform 128-bit multiplications.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103906
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
Given a sextload i16, we can usually generate "ldrsh [rn. rm]". If we
don't naturally have a rn, rm addressing mode, we can either generate
"ldrh [rn, #0]; sxth" or "mov rm, #0; ldrsh [rn. rm]".
We currently generate the first, always creating a sxth. They are both
the same number of instructions, but if we generate the second then the
mov #0 will likely be CSE'd or pulled out of a loop, etc.
This adjusts the ISel patterns to do that, creating a mov instead of a
sxth.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D98693
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
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
If a 16-bit thumb STM with writeback stores the base register but it isn't the
first register in the list, then an unknown value is stored. The load/store
optimizer knows this and generates a 32-bit STM without writeback instead, but
thumb2 size reduction converts it into a 16-bit STM. Fix this by having thumb2
size reduction notice such STMs and leave them as they are.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78493
If the stack pointer is altered for local variables and we are generating
Thumb2 execute-only code the .pad directive is missing.
Usually the size of the adjustment is stored in a PC-relative location
and loaded into a register which is then added to the stack pointer.
However when we are generating execute-only code code the size of the
adjustment is instead generated using the MOVW/MOVT instruction pair.
As a by product of handling the execute-only case this also fixes an
existing issue that in the none execute-only case the .pad directive was
generated against the load of the constant to a register instruction,
instead of the instruction which adds the register to the stack pointer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76849
When decided whether to generate a post-inc load/store, look at the
other memory nodes that use the same base address and, if any proceed
the current node, then don't do the combine.
The change only seems to be affecting the Arm backend, which I was
surprised at, but it appears to fix a lot of our issues around MVE
masked load/stores having to store a temporary address after an early
post-increment on a shared base address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75847
The new behavior matches GNU objdump. A pair of angle brackets makes tests slightly easier.
`.foo:` is not unique and thus cannot be used in a `CHECK-LABEL:` directive.
Without `-LABEL`, the CHECK line can match the `Disassembly of section`
line and causes the next `CHECK-NEXT:` to fail.
```
Disassembly of section .foo:
0000000000001634 .foo:
```
Bdragon: <> has metalinguistic connotation. it just "feels right"
Reviewed By: rupprecht
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75713
Summary:
It is not safe for ARMConstantIslands to undoLRSpillRestore. PrologEpilogInserter is
the one to ensure stack alignment, taking into consideration LR is spilled or not.
For noreturn function with StackAlignment 8 (function contains call/alloc),
undoLRSpillRestore cause stack be mis-aligned. Fixing stack alignment in
ARMConstantIslands doesn't give us much benefit, as undo LR spill/restore only
occur in large function with near branches only, also doesn't have callee-saved LR spill.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, rengolin, efriedma, apazos, samparker, ostannard
Reviewed By: ostannard
Subscribers: dmgreen, ostannard, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75288
This adds infrastructure to print and parse MIR MachineOperand comments.
The motivation for the ARM backend is to print condition code names instead of
magic constants that are difficult to read (for human beings). For example,
instead of this:
dead renamable $r2, $cpsr = tEOR killed renamable $r2, renamable $r1, 14, $noreg
t2Bcc %bb.4, 0, killed $cpsr
we now print this:
dead renamable $r2, $cpsr = tEOR killed renamable $r2, renamable $r1, 14 /* CC::always */, $noreg
t2Bcc %bb.4, 0 /* CC:eq */, killed $cpsr
This shows that MachineOperand comments are enclosed between /* and */. In this
example, the EOR instruction is not conditionally executed (i.e. it is "always
executed"), which is encoded by the 14 immediate machine operand. Thus, now
this machine operand has /* CC::always */ as a comment. The 0 on the next
conditional branch instruction represents the equal condition code, thus now
this operand has /* CC:eq */ as a comment.
As it is a comment, the MI lexer/parser completely ignores it. The benefit is
that this keeps the change in the lexer extremely minimal and no target
specific parsing needs to be done. The changes on the MIPrinter side are also
minimal, as there is only one target hooks that is used to create the machine
operand comments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74306
Summary:
Backends should fold the subtraction into the comparison, but not all
seem to. Moreover, on targets where pointers are not integers, such as
CHERI, an integer subtraction is not appropriate. Instead we should just
compare the two pointers directly, as this should work everywhere and
potentially generate more efficient code.
Reviewers: bogner, lebedev.ri, efriedma, t.p.northover, uweigand, sunfish
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, arichardson, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74454
All of
"no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf"
"no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf"="true"
"no-frame-pointer-elim-non-leaf"="false"
mean "frame-pointer"="non-leaf", which is quite counter-intuitive.
llvmorg-10-init-16046-ga36ddf0aa9d accidentally broke it.
This fixes the -DLLVM_ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS=On test:
```
*** Bad machine code: Non-flag-setting Thumb1 mov is v6-only ***
- function: pass_C
- basic block: %bb.0 entry (0x1fc9bf0)
- instruction: $r0 = tMOVr killed $r6, 14, $noreg
```
Provides support for using r6-r11 as globally scoped
register variables. This requires a -ffixed-rN flag
in order to reserve rN against general allocation.
If for a given GRV declaration the corresponding flag
is not found, or the the register in question is the
target's FP, we fail with a diagnostic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68862
InstrEmitter's virtual register handling assumes that clones are emitted
after the cloned node. Make sure this assumption actually holds.
Fixes a "Node emitted out of order - early" assertion on the testcase.
This is probably a very rare case to actually hit in practice; even
without the explicit edge, the scheduler will usually end up scheduling
the nodes in the expected order due to other constraints.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68068
llvm-svn: 373782
Darwin platforms need the frame register to always point at a valid record even
if it's not updated in a leaf function. Backtraces are more important than one
extra GPR.
llvm-svn: 373738
Summary:
This catches malformed mir files which specify alignment as log2 instead of pow2.
See https://reviews.llvm.org/D65945 for reference,
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: MatzeB, qcolombet, dschuff, arsenm, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, hiraditya, kbarton, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Petar.Avramovic, asbirlea, s.egerton, pzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67433
llvm-svn: 371608
Patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D43256 introduced more aggressive loop layout optimization which depends on profile information. If profile information is not available, the statically estimated profile information(generated by BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp) is used. If user program doesn't behave as BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp expected, the layout may be worse.
To be conservative this patch restores the original layout algorithm in plain mode. But user can still try the aggressive layout optimization with -force-precise-rotation-cost=true.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65673
llvm-svn: 369664
It caused assertions to fire when building Chromium:
lib/CodeGen/LiveDebugValues.cpp:331: bool
{anonymous}::LiveDebugValues::OpenRangesSet::empty() const: Assertion
`Vars.empty() == VarLocs.empty() && "open ranges are inconsistent"' failed.
See https://crbug.com/992871#c3 for how to reproduce.
> Patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D43256 introduced more aggressive loop layout optimization which depends on profile information. If profile information is not available, the statically estimated profile information(generated by BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp) is used. If user program doesn't behave as BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp expected, the layout may be worse.
>
> To be conservative this patch restores the original layout algorithm in plain mode. But user can still try the aggressive layout optimization with -force-precise-rotation-cost=true.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65673
llvm-svn: 368579
Patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D43256 introduced more aggressive loop layout optimization which depends on profile information. If profile information is not available, the statically estimated profile information(generated by BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp) is used. If user program doesn't behave as BranchProbabilityInfo.cpp expected, the layout may be worse.
To be conservative this patch restores the original layout algorithm in plain mode. But user can still try the aggressive layout optimization with -force-precise-rotation-cost=true.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65673
llvm-svn: 368339
Fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42760. A tBR_JTr
instruction is duplicated by tail duplication, which results in
the same jumptable with the same label being emitted twice.
Fix this by marking tBR_JTr as not duplicable. The corresponding
ARM/Thumb instructions are already marked as not duplicable.
Additionally also mark tTBB_JT and tTBH_JT to be consistent with
Thumb2, even though this shouldn't be strictly necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65606
llvm-svn: 367753
This is extremely specific, but saves three instructions when it's
legal. I don't think the code can be usefully generalized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65351
llvm-svn: 367492
Thumb1 has very limited immediate modes, so turning an "and" into a
shift can save multiple instructions.
It's possible to simplify the generated code for test2 and test3 in
cmp-and-fold.ll a little more, but I'll implement that as a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65175
llvm-svn: 367491
Currently, stack protector loads and stores are resolved during
LocalStackSlotAllocation (if the pass needs to run). When this is the
case, the base register assigned to the frame access is going to be one
of the vregs created during LocalStackSlotAllocation. This means that we
are keeping a pointer to the stack protector slot, and we're using this
pointer to load and store to it.
In case register pressure goes up, we may end up spilling this pointer
to the stack, which can be a security concern.
Instead, leave it to PEI to resolve the frame accesses. In order to do
that, we make all stack protector accesses go through frame index
operands, then PEI will resolve this using an offset from sp/fp/bp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64759
llvm-svn: 367068
The arm condition codes for GE is N==V (and for LT is N!=V). If the source of
flags cannot set V (overflow), such as a cmp against #0, then we can use the
simpler PL and MI conditions that only check N. As these PL/MI conditions are
simpler than GE/LT, other passes like the peephole optimiser can have a better
time optimising away the redundant CMPs.
The exception is the VSEL instruction, which cannot take the PL code, so there
the transform favours GE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64160
llvm-svn: 365117
There were two issues here: one, some of the relevant instructions were
missing the expected "FrameSetup" flag, and two,
ARMAsmPrinter::EmitUnwindingInstruction wasn't expecting "mov"
instructions in the prologue.
I'm sticking the additional state into ARMFunctionInfo so it's obvious
it only applies to the current function.
I considered a few alternative approaches where we would compute the
correct unwind information as part of the prologue/epilogue lowering,
but it seems like a lot of work to introduce pseudo-instructions, and
the current code seems to be reliable enough.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42408.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63964
llvm-svn: 364970
The current implementation of ThumbRegisterInfo::saveScavengerRegister
is bad for two reasons: one, it's buggy, and two, it blocks using R12
for other optimizations. So this patch gets rid of it, and adds the
necessary support for using an ordinary emergency spill slot on Thumb1.
(Specifically, I think saveScavengerRegister was broken by r305625, and
nobody noticed for two years because the codepath is almost never used.
The new code will also probably not be used much, but it now has better
tests, and if we fail to emit a necessary emergency spill slot we get a
reasonable error message instead of a miscompile.)
A rough outline of the changes in the patch:
1. Gets rid of ThumbRegisterInfo::saveScavengerRegister.
2. Modifies ARMFrameLowering::determineCalleeSaves to allocate an
emergency spill slot for Thumb1.
3. Implements useFPForScavengingIndex, so the emergency spill slot isn't
placed at a negative offset from FP on Thumb1.
4. Modifies the heuristics for allocating an emergency spill slot to
support Thumb1. This includes fixing ExtraCSSpill so we don't try to
use "lr" as a substitute for allocating an emergency spill slot.
5. Allocates a base pointer in more cases, so the emergency spill slot
is always accessible.
6. Modifies ARMFrameLowering::ResolveFrameIndexReference to compute the
right offset in the new cases where we're forcing a base pointer.
7. Ensures we never generate a load or store with an offset outside of
its frame object. This makes the heuristics more straightforward.
8. Changes Thumb1 prologue and epilogue emission so it never uses
register scavenging.
Some of the changes to the emergency spill slot heuristics in
determineCalleeSaves affect ARM/Thumb2; hopefully, they should allow
the compiler to avoid allocating an emergency spill slot in cases
where it isn't necessary. The rest of the changes should only affect
Thumb1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63677
llvm-svn: 364490
This patch changes MIR stack-id from an integer to an enum,
and adds printing/parsing support for this in MIR files. The default
stack-id '0' is now renamed to 'default'.
This should make MIR tests that have stack objects with different stack-ids
more descriptive. It also clarifies code operating on StackID.
Reviewers: arsenm, thegameg, qcolombet
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60137
llvm-svn: 363533
Current findBestLoopTop can find and move one kind of block to top, a latch block has one successor. Another common case is:
* a latch block
* it has two successors, one is loop header, another is exit
* it has more than one predecessors
If it is below one of its predecessors P, only P can fall through to it, all other predecessors need a jump to it, and another conditional jump to loop header. If it is moved before loop header, all its predecessors jump to it, then fall through to loop header. So all its predecessors except P can reduce one taken branch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43256
llvm-svn: 363471