This enables subreg liveness in the arm backend when MVE is present,
which allows the register allocator to detect when subregister are
alive/dead, compared to only acting on full registers. This can helps
produce better code on MVE with the way MQPR registers are made up of
SPR registers, but is especially helpful for MQQPR and MQQQQPR
registers, where there are very few "registers" available and being able
to split them up into subregs can help produce much better code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107642
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
It simplifies the logic by moving the predecessor (preHeader or it's predecessor) above the target (or loopExit),
instead of moving the target to after the predecessor.
Since the loopExit is no longer being moved, directions of any branches within/to it are unaffected.
While the predecessor is being moved, the backwards movement simplifies some considerations,
and the only consideration now required is that a forward WLS to the predecessor should not become backwards.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100094
The patch makes two updates to the arm-block-placement pass:
- Handle arbitrarily nested loops
- Extends the search (for t2WhileLoopStartLR) to the predecessor of the
preHeader.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99649
This adds an extra pattern for inserting an f16 into a odd vector lane
via an VINS. If the dual-insert-lane pattern does not happen to apply,
this can help with some simple cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95471
Recently we improved the lowering of low overhead loops and tail
predicated loops, but concentrated first on the DLS do style loops. This
extends those improvements over to the WLS while loops, improving the
chance of lowering them successfully. To do this the lowering has to
change a little as the instructions are terminators that produce a value
- something that needs to be treated carefully.
Lowering starts at the Hardware Loop pass, inserting a new
llvm.test.start.loop.iterations that produces both an i1 to control the
loop entry and an i32 similar to the llvm.start.loop.iterations
intrinsic added for do loops. This feeds into the loop phi, properly
gluing the values together:
%wls = call { i32, i1 } @llvm.test.start.loop.iterations.i32(i32 %div)
%wls0 = extractvalue { i32, i1 } %wls, 0
%wls1 = extractvalue { i32, i1 } %wls, 1
br i1 %wls1, label %loop.ph, label %loop.exit
...
loop:
%lsr.iv = phi i32 [ %wls0, %loop.ph ], [ %iv.next, %loop ]
..
%iv.next = call i32 @llvm.loop.decrement.reg.i32(i32 %lsr.iv, i32 1)
%cmp = icmp ne i32 %iv.next, 0
br i1 %cmp, label %loop, label %loop.exit
The llvm.test.start.loop.iterations need to be lowered through ISel
lowering as a pair of WLS and WLSSETUP nodes, which each get converted
to t2WhileLoopSetup and t2WhileLoopStart Pseudos. This helps prevent
t2WhileLoopStart from being a terminator that produces a value,
something difficult to control at that stage in the pipeline. Instead
the t2WhileLoopSetup produces the value of LR (essentially acting as a
lr = subs rn, 0), t2WhileLoopStart consumes that lr value (the Bcc).
These are then converted into a single t2WhileLoopStartLR at the same
point as t2DoLoopStartTP and t2LoopEndDec. Otherwise we revert the loop
to prevent them from progressing further in the pipeline. The
t2WhileLoopStartLR is a single instruction that takes a GPR and produces
LR, similar to the WLS instruction.
%1:gprlr = t2WhileLoopStartLR %0:rgpr, %bb.3
t2B %bb.1
...
bb.2.loop:
%2:gprlr = PHI %1:gprlr, %bb.1, %3:gprlr, %bb.2
...
%3:gprlr = t2LoopEndDec %2:gprlr, %bb.2
t2B %bb.3
The t2WhileLoopStartLR can then be treated similar to the other low
overhead loop pseudos, eventually being lowered to a WLS providing the
branches are within range.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97729
This removes the existing patterns for inserting two lanes into an
f16/i16 vector register using VINS, instead using a DAG combine to
pattern match the same code sequences. The tablegen patterns were
already on the large side (foreach LANE = [0, 2, 4, 6]) and were not
handling all the cases they could. Moving that to a DAG combine, whilst
not less code, allows us to better control and expand the selection of
VINSs. Additionally this allows us to remove the AddedComplexity on
VCVTT.
The extra trick that this has learned in the process is to move two
adjacent lanes using a single f32 vmov, allowing some extra
inefficiencies to be removed.
Differenial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96876
Given a floating point store from an extracted vector, with an integer
VGETLANE that already exists, storing the existing VGETLANEu directly
can be better for performance. As the value is known to already be in an
integer registers, this can help reduce fp register pressure, removed
the need for the fp extract and allows use of more integer post-inc
stores not available with vstr.
This can be a bit narrow in scope, but helps with certain biquad kernels
that store shuffled vector elements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96159
A One-Off Identity mask is a shuffle that is mostly an identity mask
from as single source but contains a single element out-of-place, either
from a different vector or from another position in the same vector. As
opposed to lowering this via a ARMISD::BUILD_VECTOR we can generate an
extract/insert pair directly. Under ARM with individually accessible
lane elements this often becomes a simple lane move.
This also alters the LowerVECTOR_SHUFFLEUsingMovs code to use v4f32 (not
v4i32), a more natural type for lane moves.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95551
A DLS lr, lr instruction only moves lr to itself. It need not be emitted
on it's own to save a instruction in the loop preheader.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78916
Until fairly recently the calling convention for IR half was not handled
correctly in the ARM backend, meaning we needed to pass pointers that
were loaded/stored. Now that that is fixed we can switch to using the
type directly instead.
I have previously tried doing that in
b33fbbaa34 / d38205144f,
but eventually it was pointed out that the approach taken there
was just broken wrt how the uses of bonus instructions are updated
to account for the fact that they should now use either bonus instruction
or the cloned bonus instruction. In particluar, all that manual handling
of PHI nodes in successors was just wrong.
But, the fix is actually much much simpler than my initial approach:
just tell SSAUpdate about both instances of bonus instruction,
and let it deal with all the PHI handling.
Alive2 confirms that the reproducers from the original bugs (@pr48450*)
are now handled correctly.
This effectively reverts commit 59560e8589,
effectively relanding b33fbbaa34.
It turns our that the BranchFolder and IfCvt does not like unanalyzable
branches that fall-through. This means that removing the unconditional
branches from the end of tail predicated instruction can run into
asserts and verifier issues.
This effectively reverts 372eb2bbb6, but
adds handling to t2DoLoopEndDec which are not branches, so can be safely
skipped.
This treats low overhead loop branches the same as jump tables and
indirect branches in analyzeBranch - they cannot be analyzed but the
direct branches on the end of the block may be removed. This helps
remove the unnecessary branches earlier, which can help produce better
codegen (and change block layout in a number of cases).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94392
This was orginally committed in 2245fb8aaa.
but was immediately reverted in f3abd54958
because of a PHI handling issue.
Original commit message:
1. It doesn't make sense to enforce that the bonus instruction
is only used once in it's basic block. What matters is
whether those user instructions fit within our budget, sure,
but that is another question.
2. It doesn't make sense to enforce that said bonus instructions
are only used within their basic block. Perhaps the branch
condition isn't using the value computed by said bonus instruction,
and said bonus instruction is simply being calculated
to be used in successors?
So iff we can clone bonus instructions, to lift these restrictions,
we just need to carefully update their external uses
to use the new cloned instructions.
Notably, this transform (even without this change) appears to be
poison-unsafe as per alive2, but is otherwise (including the patch) legal.
We don't introduce any new PHI nodes, but only "move" the instructions
around, i'm not really seeing much potential for extra cost modelling
for the transform, especially since now we allow at most one such
bonus instruction by default.
This causes the fold to fire +11.4% more (13216 -> 14725)
as of vanilla llvm test-suite + RawSpeed.
The motivational pattern is IEEE-754-2008 Binary16->Binary32
extension code:
ca57d77fb2/src/librawspeed/common/FloatingPoint.h (L115-L120)
^ that should be a switch, but it is not now: https://godbolt.org/z/bvja5v
That being said, even thought this seemed like this would fix it: https://godbolt.org/z/xGq3TM
apparently that fold is happening somewhere else afterall,
so something else also has a similar 'artificial' restriction.
This hints the operand of a t2DoLoopStart towards using LR, which can
help make it more likely to become t2DLS lr, lr. This makes it easier to
move if needed (as the input is the same as the output), or potentially
remove entirely.
The hint is added after others (from COPY's etc) which still take
precedence. It needed to find a place to add the hint, which currently
uses the post isel custom inserter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89883
This changes the definition of t2DoLoopStart from
t2DoLoopStart rGPR
to
GPRlr = t2DoLoopStart rGPR
This will hopefully mean that low overhead loops are more tied together,
and we can more reliably generate loops without reverting or being at
the whims of the register allocator.
This is a fairly simple change in itself, but leads to a number of other
required alterations.
- The hardware loop pass, if UsePhi is set, now generates loops of the
form:
%start = llvm.start.loop.iterations(%N)
loop:
%p = phi [%start], [%dec]
%dec = llvm.loop.decrement.reg(%p, 1)
%c = icmp ne %dec, 0
br %c, loop, exit
- For this a new llvm.start.loop.iterations intrinsic was added, identical
to llvm.set.loop.iterations but produces a value as seen above, gluing
the loop together more through def-use chains.
- This new instrinsic conceptually produces the same output as input,
which is taught to SCEV so that the checks in MVETailPredication are not
affected.
- Some minor changes are needed to the ARMLowOverheadLoop pass, but it has
been left mostly as before. We should now more reliably be able to tell
that the t2DoLoopStart is correct without having to prove it, but
t2WhileLoopStart and tail-predicated loops will remain the same.
- And all the tests have been updated. There are a lot of them!
This patch on it's own might cause more trouble that it helps, with more
tail-predicated loops being reverted, but some additional patches can
hopefully improve upon that to get to something that is better overall.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89881
This reverts commit 38f625d0d1.
This commit contains some holes in its logic and has been causing
issues since it was commited. The idea sounds OK but some cases were not
handled correctly. Instead of trying to fix that up later it is probably
simpler to revert it and work to reimplement it in a more reliable way.
Fix the ARM backend's analyzeBranch so it doesn't ignore predicated
return instructions, and make the MachineVerifier rule more strict.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40061
This adds sign/zero extending scalar loads/stores to the MVE
instructions added in D77813, allowing us to create up more post-inc
instructions. These are comparatively simple, compared to LDR/STR (which
may be better turned into an LDRD/LDM), but still require some additions
over MVE instructions. Because there are i12 and i8 variants of the
offset loads/stores dealing with different signs, we may need to convert
an i12 address to a i8 negative instruction. t2LDRBi12 can also be
shrunk to a tLDRi under the right conditions, so we need to be careful
with codesize too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78625
As far as I can tell, it should not be necessary for VCTP to be
unpredictable in tail predicated loops. Either it has a a valid loop
counter as a operand which will naturally keep it in the right loop, or
it doesn't and it won't be converted to a tail predicated loop. Not
marking it as having side effects allows it to be scheduled more cleanly
for cases where it is not expected to become a tail predicate loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83907
Given a loop with two subloops, it should be possible for both to be
converted to hardware loops. That's what this patch does, simply enough.
It slightly alters the loop iterating order to try and convert all
subloops. If one (or more) succeeds, it stops as before.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78502
In more complicated loops we can easily hit the complexity limits of
loop strength reduction. If we do and filtering occurs, it's all too
easy to remove the wrong formulae for post-inc preferring accesses due
to it attempting to maximise register re-use. The patch adds an
alternative filtering step when the target is preferring postinc to pick
postinc formulae instead, hopefully lowering the complexity to below the
limit so that aggressive filtering is not needed.
There is also a change in here to stop considering existing addrecs as
free under postinc. We should already be modelling them as a reg so
don't want it to cause us to get the cost wrong. (I'm not sure that code
makes sense in general, but there are X86 tests specifically for it
where it seems to be helping so have left it around for the standard
non-post-inc case).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80273
Under MVE a vdup will always take a gpr register, not a floating point
value. During DAG combine we convert the types to a bitcast to an
integer in an attempt to fold the bitcast into other instructions. This
is OK, but only works inside the same basic block. To do the same trick
across a basic block boundary we need to convert the type in
codegenprepare, before the splat is sunk into the loop.
This adds a convertSplatType function to codegenprepare to do that,
putting bitcasts around the splat to force the type to an integer. There
is then some adjustment to the code in shouldSinkOperands to handle the
extra bitcasts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78728
Some MVE floating point instructions have gpr register variants that take
the scalar gpr value and splat them to all lanes. In order to accept
them in loops, the shuffle_vector and insert need to be sunk down into
the loop, next to the instruction so that ISel can see the whole
pattern.
This does that sinking for FAdd, FSub, FMul and FCmp. The patterns for
mul are slightly more constrained as there are no fms variants taking
register arguments.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76023
This adds a simple fold to combine VMOVrh load to a integer load.
Similar to what is already performed for BITCAST, but needs to account
for the types being of different sizes, creating an zero extending load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76485
The MVE VDUP instruction take a GPR and splats into every lane of a
vector register. Unlike NEON we do not have a VDUPLANE equivalent
instruction, doing the same splat from a fp register. Previously a VDUP
to a v4f32/v8f16 would be represented as a (v4f32 VDUP f32), which
would mean the instruction pattern needs to add a COPY_TO_REGCLASS to
the GPR.
Instead this now converts that earlier during an ISel DAG combine,
converting (VDUP x) to (VDUP (bitcast x)). This can allow instruction
selection to tell that the input needs to be an i32, which in one of the
testcases allows it to use ldr (or specifically ldm) over (vldr;vmov).
Whilst being simple enough for floats, as the types sizes are the same,
these is no BITCAST equivalent for getting a half into a i32. This uses
a VMOVrh ARMISD node, which doesn't know the same tricks yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76292