Summary:
DataLayout keeps the string used for its creation.
As a side effect it is no longer needed in the Module.
This is "almost" NFC, the string is no longer
canonicalized, you can't rely on two "equals" DataLayout
having the same string returned by getStringRepresentation().
Get rid of DataLayoutPass: the DataLayout is in the Module
The DataLayout is "per-module", let's enforce this by not
duplicating it more than necessary.
One more step toward non-optionality of the DataLayout in the
module.
Make DataLayout Non-Optional in the Module
Module->getDataLayout() will never returns nullptr anymore.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: resistor, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7992
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231270
Do not instrument direct accesses to stack variables that can be
proven to be inbounds, e.g. accesses to fields of structs on stack.
But it eliminates 33% of instrumentation on webrtc/modules_unittests
(number of memory accesses goes down from 290152 to 193998) and
reduces binary size by 15% (from 74M to 64M) and improved compilation time by 6-12%.
The optimization is guarded by asan-opt-stack flag that is off by default.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7583
llvm-svn: 231241
RewriteStatepointsForGC pass emits an alloca for each GC pointer which will be relocated. It then inserts stores after def and all relocations, and inserts loads before each use as well. In the end, mem2reg is used to update IR with relocations in SSA form.
However, there is a problem with inserting stores for values defined by invoke instructions. The code didn't expect a def was a terminator instruction, and inserting instructions after these terminators resulted in malformed IR.
This patch fixes this problem by handling invoke instructions as a special case. If the def is an invoke instruction, the store will be inserted at the beginning of the normal destination block. Since return value from invoke instruction does not dominate the unwind destination block, no action is needed there.
Patch by: Chen Li
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7923
llvm-svn: 231183
Introduce -mllvm -sanitizer-coverage-8bit-counters=1
which adds imprecise thread-unfriendly 8-bit coverage counters.
The run-time library maps these 8-bit counters to 8-bit bitsets in the same way
AFL (http://lcamtuf.coredump.cx/afl/technical_details.txt) does:
counter values are divided into 8 ranges and based on the counter
value one of the bits in the bitset is set.
The AFL ranges are used here: 1, 2, 3, 4-7, 8-15, 16-31, 32-127, 128+.
These counters provide a search heuristic for single-threaded
coverage-guided fuzzers, we do not expect them to be useful for other purposes.
Depending on the value of -fsanitize-coverage=[123] flag,
these counters will be added to the function entry blocks (=1),
every basic block (=2), or every edge (=3).
Use these counters as an optional search heuristic in the Fuzzer library.
Add a test where this heuristic is critical.
llvm-svn: 231166
Selection conditions may be vectors or scalars. Make sure InstCombine
doesn't indiscriminately assume that a select which is value dependent
on another select have identical select condition types.
This fixes PR22773.
llvm-svn: 231156
The assertion was just checking a class invariant that's pretty easy to
verify by inspection (no mutating operations, and the two non-copy ctors
already ensure the state is maintained) so remove the explicit copy ctor
in favor of the default, thus allowing the use of the default copy
assignment operator without hitting the C++11 deprecation here.
llvm-svn: 231143
Accidentally committed a few more of these cleanup changes than
intended. Still breaking these out & tidying them up.
This reverts commit r231135.
llvm-svn: 231136
There doesn't seem to be any need to assert that iterator assignment is
between iterators over the same node - if you want to reuse an iterator
variable to iterate another node, that's perfectly acceptable. Just
don't mix comparisons between iterators into disjoint sequences, as
usual.
llvm-svn: 231135
By loading from indexed offsets into a byte array and applying a mask, a
program can test bits from the bit set with a relatively short instruction
sequence. For example, suppose we have 15 bit sets to lay out:
A (16 bits), B (15 bits), C (14 bits), D (13 bits), E (12 bits),
F (11 bits), G (10 bits), H (9 bits), I (7 bits), J (6 bits), K (5 bits),
L (4 bits), M (3 bits), N (2 bits), O (1 bit)
These bits can be laid out in a 16-byte array like this:
Byte Offset
0123456789ABCDEF
Bit
7 HHHHHHHHHIIIIIII
6 GGGGGGGGGGJJJJJJ
5 FFFFFFFFFFFKKKKK
4 EEEEEEEEEEEELLLL
3 DDDDDDDDDDDDDMMM
2 CCCCCCCCCCCCCCNN
1 BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBO
0 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
For example, to test bit X of A, we evaluate ((bits[X] & 1) != 0), or to
test bit X of I, we evaluate ((bits[9 + X] & 0x80) != 0). This can be done
in 1-2 machine instructions on x86, or 4-6 instructions on ARM.
This uses the LPT multiprocessor scheduling algorithm to lay out the bits
efficiently.
Saves ~450KB of instructions in a recent build of Chromium.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7954
llvm-svn: 231043
There's really no reason to have them have entries in the symbol table
anymore. Old versions of ld64 had some bugs in this area but those have
been fixed long ago.
llvm-svn: 231041
This re-lands change r230921. r230921 was reverted because it broke a
clang test; a checkin fixing the clang test will be commited shortly.
Summary:
As far as I can tell, the real bug causing the issue was fixed in
r230533. SCEVExpander should mark an increment operation as nuw or nsw
only if it can *prove* that the operation does not overflow. There
shouldn't be any situation where we have to do something different
because of no-wrap flags generated by SCEVExpander.
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Allow LFTR to fire more often"
This reverts commit 1ade0f0faa98877b688e0b9da58e876052c1e04e (SVN: 222213).
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Don't let LFTR compare against a poison value"
This reverts commit c0f2b8b528d8a37b0a1522aae90af649d6357eb5 (SVN: 217102).
Reviewers: majnemer, atrick, spatel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7979
llvm-svn: 231018
Summary:
As far as I can tell, the real bug causing the issue was fixed in
r230533. SCEVExpander should mark an increment operation as nuw or nsw
only if it can *prove* that the operation does not overflow. There
shouldn't be any situation where we have to do something different
because of no-wrap flags generated by SCEVExpander.
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Allow LFTR to fire more often"
This reverts commit 1ade0f0faa98877b688e0b9da58e876052c1e04e (SVN: 222213).
Revert "IndVarSimplify: Don't let LFTR compare against a poison value"
This reverts commit c0f2b8b528d8a37b0a1522aae90af649d6357eb5 (SVN: 217102).
Reviewers: majnemer, atrick, spatel
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7979
llvm-svn: 230921
Leaving empty blocks around just opens up a can of bugs like PR22704. Deleting
them early also slightly simplifies code.
Thanks to Sanjay for the IR test case.
llvm-svn: 230856
All of the cases were just appending from random access iterators to a
vector. Using insert/append can grow the vector to the perfect size
directly and moves the growing out of the loop. No intended functionalty
change.
llvm-svn: 230845
It turns out the naming of inserted phis and selects is sensative to the order in which two sets are iterated. We need to nail this down to avoid non-deterministic output and possible test failures.
The modified test is the one I first noticed something odd in. The change is making it more strict to report the error. With the test change, but without the code change, the test fails roughly 1 in 5. With the code change, I've run ~30 runs without error.
Long term, the right fix here is to adjust the naming scheme. I'm checking in this hack to avoid any possible non-determinism in the tests over the weekend. HJust because I only noticed one case doesn't mean it's actually the only case. I hope to get to the right change Monday.
std->llvm data structure changes bugfix change #3
llvm-svn: 230835
Inserting into a DenseMap you're iterating over is not well defined. This is unfortunate since this is well defined on a std::map.
"cleanup per llvm code style standards" bug #2
llvm-svn: 230827
These tests cover the 'base object' identification and rewritting portion of RewriteStatepointsForGC. These aren't completely exhaustive, but they've proven to be reasonable effective over time at finding regressions.
In the process of porting these tests over, I found my first "cleanup per llvm code style standards" bug. We were relying on the order of iteration when testing the base pointers found for a derived pointer. When we switched from std::set to DenseSet, this stopped being a safe assumption. I'm suspecting I'm going to find more of those. In particular, I'm now really wondering about the main iteration loop for this algorithm. I need to go take a closer look at the assumptions there.
I'm not really happy with the fact these are testing what is essentially debug output (i.e. enabled via command line flags). Suggestions for how to structure this better are very welcome.
llvm-svn: 230818
Currently, the ASan executables built with -O0 are unnecessarily slow.
The main reason is that ASan instrumentation pass inserts redundant
checks around promotable allocas. These allocas do not get instrumented
under -O1 because they get converted to virtual registered by mem2reg.
With this patch, ASan instrumentation pass will only instrument non
promotable allocas, giving us a speedup of 39% on a collection of
benchmarks with -O0. (There is no measurable speedup at -O1.)
llvm-svn: 230724
InstCombine has long had logic to convert aligned Altivec load/store intrinsics
into regular loads and stores. This mirrors that functionality for QPX vector
load/store intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 230660
Use the IRBuilder helpers for gc.statepoint and gc.result, instead of
coding the construction by hand. Note that the gc.statepoint IRBuilder
handles only CallInst, not InvokeInst; retain that part of hand-coding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7518
llvm-svn: 230591
This symbol exists only to pull in the required pieces of the runtime,
so nothing ever needs to refer to it. Making it hidden avoids the
potential for issues with duplicate symbols when linking profiled
libraries together.
llvm-svn: 230566
This is a follow-on to r227491 which tightens the check for propagating FP
values. If a non-constant value happens to be a zero, we would hit the same
bug as before.
Bug noted and patch suggested by Eli Friedman.
llvm-svn: 230564
Summary: SROA generates code that isn't quite as easy to optimize and contains unusual-sized shuffles, but that code is generally correct. As discussed in D7487 the right place to clean things up is InstCombine, which will pick up the type-punning pattern and transform it into a more obvious bitcast+extractelement, while leaving the other patterns SROA encounters as-is.
Test Plan: make check
Reviewers: jvoung, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
llvm-svn: 230560
This change aligns globals to the next highest power of 2 bytes, up to a
maximum of 128. This makes it more likely that we will be able to compress
bit sets with a greater alignment. In many more cases, we can now take
advantage of a new optimization also introduced in this patch that removes
bit set checks if the bit set is all ones.
The 128 byte maximum was found to provide the best tradeoff between instruction
overhead and data overhead in a recent build of Chromium. It allows us to
remove ~2.4MB of instructions at the cost of ~250KB of data.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7873
llvm-svn: 230540
Summary:
This change fixes the FIXME that you recently added when you committed
(a modified version of) my patch. When `InstCombine` combines a load and
store of an pointer to those of an equivalently-sized integer, it currently
drops any `!nonnull` metadata that might be present. This change replaces
`!nonnull` metadata with `!range !{ 1, -1 }` metadata instead.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7621
llvm-svn: 230462
The builder is based on a layout algorithm that tries to keep members of
small bit sets together. The new layout compresses Chromium's bit sets to
around 15% of their original size.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7796
llvm-svn: 230394
When AddressSanitizer only a single dynamic alloca and no static allocas, due to an early exit from FunctionStackPoisoner::poisonStack we forget to unpoison the dynamic alloca. This patch fixes that.
Reviewed at http://reviews.llvm.org/D7810
llvm-svn: 230316
This case is interesting because ScalarEvolutionExpander lowers min(a,
b) as ~max(~a,~b). I think the profitability heuristics can be made
more clever/aggressive, but this is a start.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7821
llvm-svn: 230285
This patch adds the isProfitableToHoist API. For AArch64, we want to prevent a
fmul from being hoisted in cases where it is more profitable to form a
fmsub/fmadd.
Phabricator Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7299
Patch by Lawrence Hu <lawrence@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 230241
This refactors the core functionality of LICM: HoistRegion, SinkRegion and
PromoteAliasSet (renamed to promoteLoopAccessesToScalars) as utility functions
in LoopUtils. This will enable other transformations to make use of them
directly.
Patch by Ashutosh Nema.
llvm-svn: 230178
work with a non-canonical induction variable.
This is currently a non-functional change because we only ever call
computeSafeIterationSpace on a canonical induction variable; but the
generalization will be useful in a later commit.
llvm-svn: 230151
calculations. Semantically non-functional change.
This gets rid of some of the SCEV -> Value -> SCEV round tripping and
the Construct(SMin|SMax)Of and MaybeSimplify helper routines.
llvm-svn: 230150
Previously, this pass ran over every function in the Module if added to the pass order. With this change, it runs only over those with a GC attribute where the GC explicitly opts in. A GC can also choose which of entry safepoint polls, backedge safepoint polls, and call safepoints it wants. I hope to get these exposed as checks on the GCStrategy at some point, but for now, the checks are manual string comparisons.
llvm-svn: 230097
These are internal options. I need to go through, evaluate which are worth keeping and which not. Many of them should probably be renamed as well. Until I have time to do that, we can at least stop poluting the standard opt -help output.
llvm-svn: 230088
This should be the last cleanup on non-llvm preferred data structures. I left one use of std::set in an assertion; DenseSet didn't seem to have a tombstone for CallSite defined. That might be worth fixing, but wasn't worth it for a debug only use.
llvm-svn: 230084
I'd done the work of extracting the typedef in a previous commit, but didn't actually change it. Hopefully this will make any subtle changes easier to isolate.
llvm-svn: 230081
The notion of a range of inserted safepoint related code is no longer really applicable. This survived over from an earlier implementation. Just saving the inserted gc.statepoint and working from that is far clearer given the current code structure. Particularly when invokable statepoints get involved.
llvm-svn: 230063
Yet another chapter in the endless story. While this looks like we leave
the loop in a non-canonical state this replicates the logic in
LoopSimplify so it doesn't diverge from the canonical form in any way.
PR21968
llvm-svn: 230058
This patch introduces a new mechanism that allows IR modules to co-operatively
build pointer sets corresponding to addresses within a given set of
globals. One particular use case for this is to allow a C++ program to
efficiently verify (at each call site) that a vtable pointer is in the set
of valid vtable pointers for the class or its derived classes. One way of
doing this is for a toolchain component to build, for each class, a bit set
that maps to the memory region allocated for the vtables, such that each 1
bit in the bit set maps to a valid vtable for that class, and lay out the
vtables next to each other, to minimize the total size of the bit sets.
The patch introduces a metadata format for representing pointer sets, an
'@llvm.bitset.test' intrinsic and an LTO lowering pass that lays out the globals
and builds the bitsets, and documents the new feature.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7288
llvm-svn: 230054
When doing style cleanup, I noticed a minor bug in this code. If we have a pointer that we think is unused after a statepoint and thus doesn't need relocation, we store a null pointer into the alloca we're about to promote. This helps turn a mistake in liveness analysis into an easily debuggable crash. It turned out this code had never been updated to handle invoke statepoints.
There's no test for this. Without a bug in liveness, it appears impossible to make this trigger in a way which is visible in the resulting IR. We might store the null, but when promoting the alloca, there will be no uses and thus nothing to test against. Suggestions on how to test are very welcome.
llvm-svn: 230047
Starting to update variable naming and types to match LLVM style. This will be an incremental process to minimize the chance of breakage as I work. Step one, rename member variables to LLVM CamelCase and use llvm's ADT. Much more to come.
llvm-svn: 230042
Before calling Function::getGC to test for enablement, we need to make sure there's actually a GC at all via Function::hasGC. Otherwise, we'd crash on functions without a GC. Thankfully, this only mattered if you manually scheduled the pass, but still, oops. :(
llvm-svn: 230040
This change addresses a deficiency pointed out in PR22629. To copy from the bug
report:
[from the bug report]
Consider this code:
int f(int x) {
int a[] = {12};
return a[x];
}
GCC knows to optimize this to
movl $12, %eax
ret
The code generated by recent Clang at -O3 is:
movslq %edi, %rax
movl .L_ZZ1fiE1a(,%rax,4), %eax
retq
.L_ZZ1fiE1a:
.long 12 # 0xc
[end from the bug report]
This definitely seems worth fixing. I've also seen this kind of code before (as
the base case of generic vector wrapper templates with one element).
The general idea is to look at the GEP feeding a load or a store, which has
some variable as its first non-zero index, and determine if that index must be
zero (or else an out-of-bounds access would occur). We can do this for allocas
and globals with constant initializers where we know the maximum size of the
underlying object. When we find such a GEP, we create a new one for the memory
access with that first variable index replaced with a constant zero.
Even if we can't eliminate the memory access (and sometimes we can't), it is
still useful because it removes unnecessary indexing calculations.
llvm-svn: 229959
When back merging the changes in 229945 I noticed that I forgot to mark the test cases with the appropriate GC. We want the rewriting to be off by default (even when manually added to the pass order), not on-by default. To keep the current test working, mark them as using the statepoint-example GC and whitelist that GC.
Longer term, we need a better selection mechanism here for both actual usage and testing. As I migrate more tests to the in tree version of this pass, I will probably need to update the enable/disable logic as well.
llvm-svn: 229954
This patch consists of a single pass whose only purpose is to visit previous inserted gc.statepoints which do not have gc.relocates inserted yet, and insert them. This can be used either immediately after IR generation to perform 'early safepoint insertion' or late in the pass order to perform 'late insertion'.
This patch is setting the stage for work to continue in tree. In particular, there are known naming and style violations in the current patch. I'll try to get those resolved over the next week or so. As I touch each area to make style changes, I need to make sure we have adequate testing in place. As part of the cleanup, I will be cleaning up a collection of test cases we have out of tree and submitting them upstream. The tests included in this change are very basic and mostly to provide examples of usage.
The pass has several main subproblems it needs to address:
- First, it has identify any live pointers. In the current code, the use of address spaces to distinguish pointers to GC managed objects is hard coded, but this will become parametrizable in the near future. Note that the current change doesn't actually contain a useful liveness analysis. It was seperated into a followup change as the code wasn't ready to be shared. Instead, the current implementation just considers any dominating def of appropriate pointer type to be live.
- Second, it has to identify base pointers for each live pointer. This is a fairly straight forward data flow algorithm.
- Third, the information in the previous steps is used to actually introduce rewrites. Rather than trying to do this by hand, we simply re-purpose the code behind Mem2Reg to do this for us.
llvm-svn: 229945
This is different from CanAlterRefCount since CanDecrementRefCount is
attempting to prove specifically whether or not an instruction can
decrement instead of the more general question of whether it can
decrement or increment.
llvm-svn: 229936
This is much better than the previous manner of just using
short-curcuiting booleans from:
1. A "naive" efficiency perspective: we do not have to rely on the
compiler to change the short circuiting boolean operations into a
switch.
2. An understanding perspective by making the implicit behavior of
negative predicates explicit.
3. A maintainability perspective through the covered switch flag making
it easy to know where to update code when adding new ARCInstKinds.
llvm-svn: 229906
The only difference between these two is that VectorizerReport adds a
vectorizer-specific prefix to its messages. When LAA is used in the
vectorizer context the prefix is added when we promote the
LoopAccessReport into a VectorizerReport via one of the constructors.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229897
When I split out LoopAccessReport from this, I need to create some temps
so constness becomes necessary.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229896
Also add pass name as an argument to VectorizationReport::emitAnalysis.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229894
This is a function pass that runs the analysis on demand. The analysis
can be initiated by querying the loop access info via LAA::getInfo. It
either returns the cached info or runs the analysis.
Symbolic stride information continues to reside outside of this analysis
pass. We may move it inside later but it's not a priority for me right
now. The idea is that Loop Distribution won't support run-time stride
checking at least initially.
This means that when querying the analysis, symbolic stride information
can be provided optionally. Whether stride information is used can
invalidate the cache entry and rerun the analysis. Note that if the
loop does not have any symbolic stride, the entry should be preserved
across Loop Distribution and LV.
Since currently the only user of the pass is LV, I just check that the
symbolic stride information didn't change when using a cached result.
On the LV side, LoopVectorizationLegality requests the info object
corresponding to the loop from the analysis pass. A large chunk of the
diff is due to LAI becoming a pointer from a reference.
A test will be added as part of the -analyze patch.
Also tested that with AVX, we generate identical assembly output for the
testsuite (including the external testsuite) before and after.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229893
LAA will be an on-demand analysis pass, so we need to cache the result
of the analysis. canVectorizeMemory is renamed to analyzeLoop which
computes the result. canVectorizeMemory becomes the query function for
the cached result.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229892
The transformation passes will query this and then emit them as part of
their own report. The currently only user LV is modified to do just
that.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229891
As LAA is becoming a pass, we can no longer pass the params to its
constructor. This changes the command line flags to have external
storage. These can now be accessed both from LV and LAA.
VectorizerParams is moved out of LoopAccessInfo in order to shorten the
code to access it.
This commits also has the fix (D7731) to the break dependence cycle
between the analysis and vector libraries.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229890
This reverts commit r229651.
I'd like to ultimately revert r229650 but this reformat stands in the
way. I'll reformat the affected files once the the loop-access pass is
fully committed.
llvm-svn: 229889
The RCIdentity root ("Reference Count Identity Root") of a value V is a
dominating value U for which retaining or releasing U is equivalent to
retaining or releasing V. In other words, ARC operations on V are
equivalent to ARC operations on U.
This is a useful property to ascertain since we can use this in the ARC
optimizer to make it easier to match up ARC operations by always mapping
ARC operations to RCIdentityRoots instead of pointers themselves. Then
we perform pairing of retains, releases which are applied to the same
RCIdentityRoot.
In general, the two ways that we see RCIdentical values in ObjC are via:
1. PointerCasts
2. Forwarding Calls that return their argument verbatim.
As such in ObjC, two RCIdentical pointers must always point to the same
memory location.
Previously this concept was implicit in the code and various methods
that dealt with this concept were given functional names that did not
conform to any name in the "ARC" model. This often times resulted in
code that was hard for the non-ARC acquanted to understand resulting in
unhappiness and confusion.
llvm-svn: 229796
Don't spend the entire iteration space in the scalar loop prologue if
computing the trip count overflows. This change also gets rid of the
backedge check in the prologue loop and the extra check for
overflowing trip-count.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7715
llvm-svn: 229731
r229622: "[LoopAccesses] Make VectorizerParams global"
r229623: "[LoopAccesses] Stash the report from the analysis rather than emitting it"
r229624: "[LoopAccesses] Cache the result of canVectorizeMemory"
r229626: "[LoopAccesses] Create the analysis pass"
r229628: "[LoopAccesses] Change debug messages from LV to LAA"
r229630: "[LoopAccesses] Add canAnalyzeLoop"
r229631: "[LoopAccesses] Add missing const to APIs in VectorizationReport"
r229632: "[LoopAccesses] Split out LoopAccessReport from VectorizerReport"
r229633: "[LoopAccesses] Add -analyze support"
r229634: "[LoopAccesses] Change LAA:getInfo to return a constant reference"
r229638: "Analysis: fix buildbots"
llvm-svn: 229650
The only difference between these two is that VectorizerReport adds a
vectorizer-specific prefix to its messages. When LAA is used in the
vectorizer context the prefix is added when we promote the
LoopAccessReport into a VectorizerReport via one of the constructors.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229632
When I split out LoopAccessReport from this, I need to create some temps
so constness becomes necessary.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229631
Also add pass name as an argument to VectorizationReport::emitAnalysis.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229628
This is a function pass that runs the analysis on demand. The analysis
can be initiated by querying the loop access info via LAA::getInfo. It
either returns the cached info or runs the analysis.
Symbolic stride information continues to reside outside of this analysis
pass. We may move it inside later but it's not a priority for me right
now. The idea is that Loop Distribution won't support run-time stride
checking at least initially.
This means that when querying the analysis, symbolic stride information
can be provided optionally. Whether stride information is used can
invalidate the cache entry and rerun the analysis. Note that if the
loop does not have any symbolic stride, the entry should be preserved
across Loop Distribution and LV.
Since currently the only user of the pass is LV, I just check that the
symbolic stride information didn't change when using a cached result.
On the LV side, LoopVectorizationLegality requests the info object
corresponding to the loop from the analysis pass. A large chunk of the
diff is due to LAI becoming a pointer from a reference.
A test will be added as part of the -analyze patch.
Also tested that with AVX, we generate identical assembly output for the
testsuite (including the external testsuite) before and after.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229626
blockNeedsPredication is in LoopAccess in order to share it with the
vectorizer. It's a utility needed by LoopAccess not strictly provided
by it but it's a good place to share it. This makes the function static
so that it no longer required to create an LoopAccessInfo instance in
order to access it from LV.
This was actually causing problems because it would have required
creating LAI much earlier that LV::canVectorizeMemory().
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229625
LAA will be an on-demand analysis pass, so we need to cache the result
of the analysis. canVectorizeMemory is renamed to analyzeLoop which
computes the result. canVectorizeMemory becomes the query function for
the cached result.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229624
The transformation passes will query this and then emit them as part of
their own report. The currently only user LV is modified to do just
that.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229623
As LAA is becoming a pass, we can no longer pass the params to its
constructor. This changes the command line flags to have external
storage. These can now be accessed both from LV and LAA.
VectorizerParams is moved out of LoopAccessInfo in order to shorten the
code to access it.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229622
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used as the name of the pass.
This is part of the patchset that converts LoopAccessAnalysis into an
actual analysis pass.
llvm-svn: 229621
InstCombiner::visitGetElementPtrInst was using getFirstNonPHI to compute the
insertion point, which caused the verifier to complain when a GEP was inserted
before a landingpad instruction. This commit fixes it to use getFirstInsertionPt
instead.
rdar://problem/19394964
llvm-svn: 229619
When visiting the initial list of "root" instructions (those which must always
be alive), for those that are integer-valued (such as invokes returning an
integer), we mark their bits as (initially) all dead (we might, obviously, find
uses of those bits later, but all bits are assumed dead until proven
otherwise). Don't do so, however, if we're already seen a use of those bits by
another root instruction (such as a store).
Fixes a miscompile of the sanitizer unit tests on x86_64.
Also, add a debug line for visiting the root instructions, and remove a debug
line which tried to print instructions being removed (printing dead
instructions is dangerous, and can sometimes crash).
llvm-svn: 229618
The problem was in store-sink barrier check.
Store sink barrier should be checked for ModRef (read-write) mode.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22613
llvm-svn: 229495
BDCE is a bit-tracking dead code elimination pass. It is based on ADCE (the
"aggressive DCE" pass), with the added capability to track dead bits of integer
valued instructions and remove those instructions when all of the bits are
dead.
Currently, it does not actually do this all-bits-dead removal, but rather
replaces the instruction's uses with a constant zero, and lets instcombine (and
the later run of ADCE) do the rest. Because we essentially get a run of ADCE
"for free" while tracking the dead bits, we also do what ADCE does and removes
actually-dead instructions as well (this includes instructions newly trivially
dead because all bits were dead, but not all such instructions can be removed).
The motivation for this is a case like:
int __attribute__((const)) foo(int i);
int bar(int x) {
x |= (4 & foo(5));
x |= (8 & foo(3));
x |= (16 & foo(2));
x |= (32 & foo(1));
x |= (64 & foo(0));
x |= (128& foo(4));
return x >> 4;
}
As it turns out, if you order the bit-field insertions so that all of the dead
ones come last, then instcombine will remove them. However, if you pick some
other order (such as the one above), the fact that some of the calls to foo()
are useless is not locally obvious, and we don't remove them (without this
pass).
I did a quick compile-time overhead check using sqlite from the test suite
(Release+Asserts). BDCE took ~0.4% of the compilation time (making it about
twice as expensive as ADCE).
I've not looked at why yet, but we eliminate instructions due to having
all-dead bits in:
External/SPEC/CFP2006/447.dealII/447.dealII
External/SPEC/CINT2006/400.perlbench/400.perlbench
External/SPEC/CINT2006/403.gcc/403.gcc
MultiSource/Applications/ClamAV/clamscan
MultiSource/Benchmarks/7zip/7zip-benchmark
llvm-svn: 229462
We won't find a root with index zero in any loop that we are able to reroll.
However, we may find one in a non-rerollable loop, so bail gracefully instead
of failing hard.
llvm-svn: 229406
If a PHI has no users, don't crash; bail gracefully. This shouldn't
happen often, but we can make no guarantees that previous passes didn't leave
dead code around.
llvm-svn: 229405
The "dereferenceable" attribute cannot be added via .addAttribute(),
since it also expects a size in bytes. AttrBuilder#addAttribute or
AttributeSet#addAttribute is wrapped by classes Function, InvokeInst,
and CallInst. Add corresponding wrappers to
AttrBuilder#addDereferenceableAttr.
Having done this, propagate the dereferenceable attribute via
gc.relocate, adding a test to exercise it. Note that -datalayout is
required during execution over and above -instcombine, because
InstCombine only optionally requires DataLayoutPass.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7510
llvm-svn: 229265
Canonicalize access to function attributes to use the simpler API.
getAttributes().getAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> getFnAttribute(Kind)
getAttributes().hasAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> hasFnAttribute(Kind)
llvm-svn: 229202
If we know that the sign bit of a value being sign extended is zero, we can use a zero extension instead. This is motivated by the fact that zero extensions are generally cheaper on x86 (and most other architectures?). We already apply a similar transform in DAGCombine, this just extends that to the IR level.
This comes up when we eagerly canonicalize gep indices to the width of a machine register (i64 on x86_64). To do so, we insert sign extensions (sext) to promote smaller types.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7255
llvm-svn: 229189
This patch fixes a problem I accidentally introduced in an instruction combine
on select instructions added at r227197. That revision taught the instruction
combiner how to fold a cttz/ctlz followed by a icmp plus select into a single
cttz/ctlz with flag 'is_zero_undef' cleared.
However, the new rule added at r227197 would have produced wrong results in the
case where a cttz/ctlz with flag 'is_zero_undef' cleared was follwed by a
zero-extend or truncate. In that case, the folded instruction would have
been inserted in a wrong location thus leaving the CFG in an inconsistent
state.
This patch fixes the problem and add two reproducible test cases to
existing test 'InstCombine/select-cmp-cttz-ctlz.ll'.
llvm-svn: 229124
LLVM's include tree and the use of using declarations to hide the
'legacy' namespace for the old pass manager.
This undoes the primary modules-hostile change I made to keep
out-of-tree targets building. I sent an email inquiring about whether
this would be reasonable to do at this phase and people seemed fine with
it, so making it a reality. This should allow us to start bootstrapping
with modules to a certain extent along with making it easier to mix and
match headers in general.
The updates to any code for users of LLVM are very mechanical. Switch
from including "llvm/PassManager.h" to "llvm/IR/LegacyPassManager.h".
Qualify the types which now produce compile errors with "legacy::". The
most common ones are "PassManager", "PassManagerBase", and
"FunctionPassManager".
llvm-svn: 229094
The issues with the new unroll analyzer are more fundamental than code
cleanup, algorithm, or data structure changes. I've sent an email to the
original commit thread with details and a proposal for how to redesign
things. I'm disabling this for now so that we don't spend time
debugging issues with it in its current state.
llvm-svn: 229064
- First, there's a crash when we try to combine that pointers into `icmp`
directly by creating a `bitcast`, which is invalid if that two pointers are
from different address spaces.
- It's not always appropriate to cast one pointer to another if they are from
different address spaces as that is not no-op cast. Instead, we only combine
`icmp` from `ptrtoint` if that two pointers are of the same address space.
llvm-svn: 229063
UnrollAnalyzer.
Now they share a single worklist and have less implicit state between
them. There was no real benefit to separating these two things out.
I'm going to subsequently refactor things to share even more code.
llvm-svn: 229062
contained in it each time we try to add it to the worklist, just check
this when pulling it off the worklist. That way we do it at most once
per instruction with the cost of the worklist set we would need to pay
anyways.
llvm-svn: 229060
vector.
In addition to dramatically reducing the work required for contrived
example loops, this also has to correct some serious latent bugs in the
cost computation. Previously, we might add an instruction onto the
worklist once for every load which it used and was simplified. Then we
would visit it many times and accumulate "savings" each time.
I mean, fortunately this couldn't matter for things like calls with 100s
of operands, but even for binary operators this code seems like it must
be double counting the savings.
I just noticed this by inspection and due to the runtime problems it can
introduce, I don't have any test cases for cases where the cost produced
by this routine is unacceptable.
llvm-svn: 229059
In the unroll analyzer, it is checking each user to see if that user
will become dead. However, it first checked if that user was missing
from the simplified values map, and then if was also missing from the
dead instructions set. We add everything from the simplified values map
to the dead instructions set, so the first step is completely subsumed
by the second. Moreover, the first step requires *inserting* something
into the simplified value map which isn't what we want at all.
This also replaces a dyn_cast with a cast as an instruction cannot be
used by a non-instruction.
llvm-svn: 229057
check.
Also hoist this into the enqueue process as it is faster even than
testing the worklist set, we should just directly filter these out much
like we filter out constants and such.
llvm-svn: 229056
We don't just want to handle duplicate operands within an instruction,
but also duplicates across operands of different instructions. I should
have gone straight to this, but I had convinced myself that it wasn't
going to be necessary briefly. I've come to my senses after chatting
more with Nick, and am now happier here.
llvm-svn: 229054
reasonably quickly.
I don't have a reduced test case, but for a version of FFMPEG, this
makes the loop unroller start finishing at all (after over 15 minutes of
running, it hadn't terminated for me, no idea if it was a true infloop
or just exponential work).
The key thing here is to check the DeadInstructions set when pulling
things off the worklist. Without this, we would re-walk the user list of
already dead instructions again and again and again. Consider phi nodes
with many, many operands and other patterns.
The other important aspect of this is that because we would keep
re-visiting instructions that were already known dead, we kept adding
their cost savings to this! This would cause our cost savings to be
*insanely* inflated from this.
While I was here, I also rotated the operand walk out of the worklist
loop to make the code easier to read. There is still work to be done to
minimize worklist traffic because we don't de-duplicate operands. This
means we may add the same instruction onto the worklist 1000s of times
if it shows up in 1000s of operansd to a PHI node for example.
Still, with this patch, the ffmpeg testcase I have finishes quickly and
I can't measure the runtime impact of the unroll analysis any more. I'll
probably try to do a few more cleanups to this code, but not sure how
much cleanup I can justify right now.
llvm-svn: 229038
readable.
The biggest thing that was causing me problems is recognizing the
references vs. poniters here. I also found that for maps naming the loop
variable as KeyValue helps make it obvious why you don't actually use it
directly. Finally, using 'auto' instead of 'User *' doesn't seem like
a good tradeoff. Much like with the other cases, I like to know its
a pointer, and 'User' is just as long and tells the reader a lot more.
llvm-svn: 229033
propagating of metadata.
We were propagating !nonnull metadata even when the newly formed load is
no longer of a pointer type. This is clearly broken and results in LLVM
failing the verifier and aborting. This patch just restricts the
propagation of !nonnull metadata to when we actually have a pointer
type.
This bug report and the initial version of this patch was provided by
Charles Davis! Many thanks for finding this!
We still need to add logic to round-trip the metadata correctly if we
combine from pointer types to integer types and then back by using range
metadata for the integer type loads. But this is the minimal and safe
version of the patch, which is important so we can backport it into 3.6.
llvm-svn: 229029
hard to type and read for me, and is inconsistent with the other
abbreviation in the base class "Inst". For most of these (where they are
used widely) I prefer just spelling it out as Instruction. I've changed
two of the short-lived variables to use "Inst" to match the base class.
llvm-svn: 229028
This is much more efficient. In particular, the query with the user
instruction has to insert a false for every missing instruction into the
set. This is just a cleanup a long the way to fixing the underlying
algorithm problems here.
llvm-svn: 228994
When we try to estimate number of potentially removed instructions in
loop unroller, we analyze first N iterations and then scale the
computed number by TripCount/N. We should bail out early if N is 0.
llvm-svn: 228988
We can't solve the full subgraph isomorphism problem. But we can
allow obvious cases, where for example two instructions of different
types are out of order. Due to them having different types/opcodes,
there is no ambiguity.
llvm-svn: 228931
I've built some tests in WebRTC with and without this change. With this change number of __tsan_read/write calls is reduced by 20-40%, binary size decreases by 5-10% and execution time drops by ~5%. For example:
$ ls -l old/modules_unittests new/modules_unittests
-rwxr-x--- 1 dvyukov 41708976 Jan 20 18:35 old/modules_unittests
-rwxr-x--- 1 dvyukov 38294008 Jan 20 18:29 new/modules_unittests
$ objdump -d old/modules_unittests | egrep "callq.*__tsan_(read|write|unaligned)" | wc -l
239871
$ objdump -d new/modules_unittests | egrep "callq.*__tsan_(read|write|unaligned)" | wc -l
148365
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7069
llvm-svn: 228917
Apparently some code finally started to tickle this after my
canonicalization changes to instcombine.
The bug stems from trying to form a vector type out of scalars that
aren't compatible at all. In this example, from x86_mmx values. The code
in the vectorizer that checks for reasonable types whas checking for
aggregates or vectors, but there are lots of other types that should
just never reach the vectorizer.
Debugging this was made more confusing by the lie in an assert in
VectorType::get() -- it isn't that the types are *primitive*. The types
must be integer, pointer, or floating point types. No other types are
allowed.
I've improved the assert and added a helper to the vectorizer to handle
the element type validity checks. It now re-uses the VectorType static
function and then further excludes weird target-specific types that we
probably shouldn't be touching here (x86_fp80 and ppc_fp128). Neither of
these are really reachable anyways (neither 80-bit nor 128-bit things
will get vectorized) but it seems better to just eagerly exclude such
nonesense.
I've added a test case, but while it definitely covers two of the paths
through this code there may be more paths that would benefit from test
coverage. I'm not familiar enough with the SLP vectorizer to synthesize
test cases for all of these, but was able to update the code itself by
inspection.
llvm-svn: 228899
I mistakenly thought the liveness of each "RetVal(F, i)" depended only on F. It
actually depends on the index too, which means we need to be careful about how
the results are combined before return. In particular if a single Use returns
Live, that counts for the entire object, at the granularity we're considering.
llvm-svn: 228885
Summary:
When trying to canonicalize negative constants out of
multiplication expressions, we need to check that the
constant is not INT_MIN which cannot be negated.
Reviewers: mcrosier
Reviewed By: mcrosier
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7286
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 228872
analysis.
We're already using TTI in SimplifyCFG, so remove the hard-baked "cheapness"
heuristic and use TTI directly. Generally NFC intended, but we're using a slightly
different heuristic now so there is a slight test churn.
Test changes:
* combine-comparisons-by-cse.ll: Removed unneeded branch check.
* 2014-08-04-muls-it.ll: Test now doesn't branch but emits muleq.
* coalesce-subregs.ll: Superfluous block check.
* 2008-01-02-hoist-fp-add.ll: fadd is safe to speculate. Change to udiv.
* PhiBlockMerge.ll: Superfluous CFG checking code. Main checks still present.
* select-gep.ll: A variable GEP is not expensive, just TCC_Basic, according to the TTI.
llvm-svn: 228826
A DAGRootSet models an induction variable being used in a rerollable
loop. For example:
x[i*3+0] = y1
x[i*3+1] = y2
x[i*3+2] = y3
Base instruction -> i*3
+---+----+
/ | \
ST[y1] +1 +2 <-- Roots
| |
ST[y2] ST[y3]
There may be multiple DAGRootSets, for example:
x[i*2+0] = ... (1)
x[i*2+1] = ... (1)
x[i*2+4] = ... (2)
x[i*2+5] = ... (2)
x[(i+1234)*2+5678] = ... (3)
x[(i+1234)*2+5679] = ... (3)
This concept is similar to the "Scale" member used previously, but allows
multiple independent sets of roots based off the same induction variable.
llvm-svn: 228821
This allows IDEs to recognize the entire set of header files for
each of the core LLVM projects.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7526
Reviewed By: Chris Bieneman
llvm-svn: 228798
Add handling for __llvm_coverage_mapping to the InstrProfiling
pass. We need to make sure the constant and any profile names it
refers to are in the correct sections, which is easier and cleaner to
do here where we have to know about profiling sections anyway.
This is really tricky to test without a frontend, so I'm committing
the test for the fix in clang. If anyone knows a good way to test this
within LLVM, please let me know.
Fixes PR22531.
llvm-svn: 228793
If the landingpad of the invoke is using a personality function that
catches asynch exceptions, then it can catch a trap.
Also add some landingpads to invalid LLVM IR test cases that lack them.
Over-the-shoulder reviewed by David Majnemer.
llvm-svn: 228782
Unless we meet an insertvalue on a path from some value to a return, that value
will be live if *any* of the return's components are live, so all of those
components must be added to the MaybeLiveUses.
Previously we were deleting arguments if sub-value 0 turned out to be dead.
llvm-svn: 228731
This commit isn't using the correct context, and is transfoming calls
that are operands to loads rather than calls that are operands to an
icmp feeding into an assume. I've replied on the original review thread
with a very reduced test case and some thoughts on how to rework this.
llvm-svn: 228677
I realized that my early fix for this was overly complicated. Rather than scatter checks around in a bunch of places, just exit early when we visit the poll function itself.
Thinking about it a bit, the whole inlining mechanism used with gc.safepoint_poll could probably be cleaned up a bit. Originally, poll insertion was fused with gc relocation rewriting. It might be worth going back to see if we can simplify the chain of events now that these two are seperated. As one thought, maybe it makes sense to rewrite calls inside the helper function before inlining it to the many callers. This would require us to visit the poll function before any other functions though..
llvm-svn: 228634
for any padding introduced by SROA. In particular, do not emit debug info
for an alloca that represents only the padding introduced by a previous
iteration.
Fixes PR22495.
llvm-svn: 228632
intermediate representation. This
- increases consistency by using the same granularity everywhere
- allows for pieces < 1 byte
- DW_OP_piece didn't actually allow storing an offset.
Part of PR22495.
llvm-svn: 228631
Summary:
It's important that our users immediately know what gc.safepoint_poll
is. Also fix the style of the declaration of CreateGCStatepoint, in
preparation for another change that will wrap it.
Reviewers: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7517
llvm-svn: 228626
`DIExpression` deals with `uint64_t`, so it doesn't make sense that
`createExpression()` is created from `int64_t`. Switch to `uint64_t` to
unify them.
I've temporarily left in the `int64_t` version, which forwards to the
`uint64_t` version. I'll delete it once I've updated the callers.
llvm-svn: 228619
This is just adding really simple tests which should have been part of the original submission. When doing so, I discovered that I'd mistakenly removed required pieces when preparing the patch for upstream submission. I fixed two such bugs in this submission.
llvm-svn: 228610
wrong basic block.
This would happen when the result of an invoke was used by a phi instruction
in the invoke's normal destination block. An instruction to reload the invoke's
value would get inserted before the critical edge was split and a new basic
block (which is the correct insertion point for the reload) was created. This
commit fixes the bug by splitting the critical edge before all the reload
instructions are inserted.
Also, hoist up the code which computes the insertion point to the only place
that need that computation.
rdar://problem/15978721
llvm-svn: 228566
Some parts of DeadArgElim were only considering the individual fields
of StructTypes separately, but others (where insertvalue &
extractvalue instructions occur) also looked into ArrayTypes.
This one is an actual bug; the mismatch can lead to an argument being
considered used by a return sub-value that isn't being tracked (and
hence is dead by default). It then gets incorrectly eliminated.
llvm-svn: 228559
Previously, a non-extractvalue use of an aggregate return value meant
the entire return was considered live (the algorithm gave up
entirely). This was correct, but conservative. It's better to actually
look at that Use, making the analysis results apply to all sub-values
under consideration.
E.g.
%val = call { i32, i32 } @whatever()
[...]
ret { i32, i32 } %val
The return is using the entire aggregate (sub-values 0 and 1). We can
still simplify @whatever if we can prove that this return is itself
unused.
Also unifies the logic slightly between aggregate and non-aggregate
cases..
llvm-svn: 228558
Make assume (load (call|invoke) != null) set nonNull return attribute
for the call and invoke. Also include tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7107
llvm-svn: 228556
Summary:
The alias.scope metadata represents sets of things an instruction might
alias with. When generically combining the metadata from two
instructions the result must be the union of the original sets, because
the new instruction might alias with anything any of the original
instructions aliased with.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7490
llvm-svn: 228525
The only difference between deleteIfDeadInstruction and
RecursivelyDeleteTriviallyDeadInstructions is that the former also
manually invalidates SCEV. That's unnecessary because SCEV automatically
gets informed when an instruction is deleted via a ValueHandle. NFC.
llvm-svn: 228508
An atomic store always make the target location fully initialized (in the
current implementation). It should not store origin. Initialized memory can't
have meaningful origin, and, due to origin granularity (4 bytes) there is a
chance that this extra store would overwrite meaningfull origin for an adjacent
location.
llvm-svn: 228444
If complete-unroll could help us to optimize away N% of instructions, we
might want to do this even if the final size would exceed loop-unroll
threshold. However, we don't want to unroll huge loop, and we are add
AbsoluteThreshold to avoid that - this threshold will never be crossed,
even if we expect to optimize 99% instructions after that.
llvm-svn: 228434
It is a variation of SimplifyBinOp, but it takes into account
FastMathFlags.
It is needed in inliner and loop-unroller to accurately predict the
transformation's outcome (previously we dropped the flags and were too
conservative in some cases).
Example:
float foo(float *a, float b) {
float r;
if (a[1] * b)
r = /* a lot of expensive computations */;
else
r = 1;
return r;
}
float boo(float *a) {
return foo(a, 0.0);
}
Without this patch, we don't inline 'foo' into 'boo'.
llvm-svn: 228432
This will allow it to be shared with the new Loop Distribution pass.
getFirstInst is currently duplicated across LoopVectorize.cpp and
LoopAccessAnalysis.cpp. This is a short-term work-around until we figure out
a better solution.
NFC. (The code moved is adjusted a bit for the name of the Loop member and
that PtrRtCheck is now a reference rather than a pointer.)
llvm-svn: 228418
Normalize
select(C0, select(C1, a, b), b) -> select((C0 & C1), a, b)
select(C0, a, select(C1, a, b)) -> select((C0 | C1), a, b)
This normal form may enable further combines on the And/Or and shortens
paths for the values. Many targets prefer the other but can go back
easily in CodeGen.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7399
llvm-svn: 228409
By default, store all local variables in dynamic alloca instead of
static one. It reduces the stack space usage in use-after-return mode
(dynamic alloca will not be called if the local variables are stored
in a fake stack), and improves the debug info quality for local
variables (they will not be described relatively to %rbp/%rsp, which
are assumed to be clobbered by function calls).
llvm-svn: 228336
Complete loop unrolling can make some loads constant, thus enabling a
lot of other optimizations. To catch such cases, we look for loads that
might become constants and estimate number of instructions that would be
simplified or become dead after substitution.
Example:
Suppose we have:
int a[] = {0, 1, 0};
v = 0;
for (i = 0; i < 3; i ++)
v += b[i]*a[i];
If we completely unroll the loop, we would get:
v = b[0]*a[0] + b[1]*a[1] + b[2]*a[2]
Which then will be simplified to:
v = b[0]* 0 + b[1]* 1 + b[2]* 0
And finally:
v = b[1]
llvm-svn: 228265
We were previously doing a post-order traversal and operating on the
list in reverse, however this would occasionaly cause backedges for
loops to be visited before some of the other blocks in the loop.
We know use a reverse post-order traversal, which avoids this issue.
The reverse post-order traversal is not completely ideal, so we need
to manually fixup the list to ensure that inner loop backedges are
visited before outer loop backedges.
llvm-svn: 228186
Track unresolved nodes under distinct `MDNode`s during `MapMetadata()`,
and resolve them at the end. Previously, these cycles wouldn't get
resolved.
llvm-svn: 228180
Summary:
This change allows users to create SpecialCaseList objects from
multiple local files. This is needed to implement a proper support
for -fsanitize-blacklist flag (allow users to specify multiple blacklists,
in addition to default blacklist, see PR22431).
DFSan can also benefit from this change, as DFSan instrumentation pass now
accepts ABI-lists both from -fsanitize-blacklist= and -mllvm -dfsan-abilist flags.
Go bindings are fixed accordingly.
Test Plan: regression test suite
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, axw, kcc
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7367
llvm-svn: 228155
This pass is responsible for figuring out where to place call safepoints and safepoint polls. It doesn't actually make the relocations explicit; that's the job of the RewriteStatepointsForGC pass (http://reviews.llvm.org/D6975).
Note that this code is not yet finalized. Its moving in tree for incremental development, but further cleanup is needed and will happen over the next few days. It is not yet part of the standard pass order.
Planned changes in the near future:
- I plan on restructuring the statepoint rewrite to use the functions add to the IRBuilder a while back.
- In the current pass, the function "gc.safepoint_poll" is treated specially but is not an intrinsic. I plan to make identifying the poll function a property of the GCStrategy at some point in the near future.
- As follow on patches, I will be separating a collection of test cases we have out of tree and submitting them upstream.
- It's not explicit in the code, but these two patches are introducing a new state for a statepoint which looks a lot like a patchpoint. There's no a transient form which doesn't yet have the relocations explicitly represented, but does prevent reordering of memory operations. Once this is in, I need to update actually make this explicit by reserving the 'unused' argument of the statepoint as a flag, updating the docs, and making the code explicitly check for such a thing. This wasn't really planned, but once I split the two passes - which was done for other reasons - the intermediate state fell out. Just reminds us once again that we need to merge statepoints and patchpoints at some point in the not that distant future.
Future directions planned:
- Identifying more cases where a backedge safepoint isn't required to ensure timely execution of a safepoint poll.
- Tweaking the insertion process to generate easier to optimize IR. (For example, investigating making SplitBackedge) the default.
- Adding opt-in flags for a GCStrategy to use this pass. Once done, add this pass to the actual pass ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6981
llvm-svn: 228090
I've noticed this while trying to move addRuntimeCheck to LoopAccessAnalysis.
I think that the intention was to early exit from the overflow checking before
the code for the memchecks. This is the entire reason why we compute
FirstCheckInst but then we don't use that as the splitting instruction but the
final check. Looks like an oversight.
llvm-svn: 228056
Summary:
Straight-line strength reduction (SLSR) is implemented in GCC but not yet in
LLVM. It has proven to effectively simplify statements derived from an unrolled
loop, and can potentially benefit many other cases too. For example,
LLVM unrolls
#pragma unroll
foo (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
sum += foo((b + i) * s);
}
into
sum += foo(b * s);
sum += foo((b + 1) * s);
sum += foo((b + 2) * s);
However, no optimizations yet reduce the internal redundancy of the three
expressions:
b * s
(b + 1) * s
(b + 2) * s
With SLSR, LLVM can optimize these three expressions into:
t1 = b * s
t2 = t1 + s
t3 = t2 + s
This commit is only an initial step towards implementing a series of such
optimizations. I will implement more (see TODO in the file commentary) in the
near future. This optimization is enabled for the NVPTX backend for now.
However, I am more than happy to push it to the standard optimization pipeline
after more thorough performance tests.
Test Plan: test/StraightLineStrengthReduce/slsr.ll
Reviewers: eliben, HaoLiu, meheff, hfinkel, jholewinski, atrick
Reviewed By: jholewinski, atrick
Subscribers: karthikthecool, jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7310
llvm-svn: 228016
For the time being, it is still hardcoded to support only the 39 VA bits
variant, I plan to work on supporting 42 and 48 VA bits variants, but I
don't have access to such hardware at the moment.
Patch by Chrystophe Lyon.
llvm-svn: 227965
Summary: MSVC can compile "LoopID->getOperand(0) == LoopID" when LoopID is MDNode*.
Test Plan: no regression
Reviewers: mkuper
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7327
llvm-svn: 227853
The commit r225977 uncovered this bug. The problem was that the vectorizer tried to
read the second operand of an already deleted instruction.
The bug didn't show up before r225977 because the freed memory still contained a non-null pointer.
With r225977 deletion of instructions is delayed and the read operand pointer is always null.
llvm-svn: 227800
Other than moving code and adding the boilerplate for the new files, the code
being moved is unchanged.
There are a few global functions that are shared with the rest of the
LoopVectorizer. I moved these to the new module as well (emitLoopAnalysis,
stripIntegerCast, replaceSymbolicStrideSCEV) along with the Report class used
by emitLoopAnalysis. There is probably room for further improvement in this
area.
I kept DEBUG_TYPE "loop-vectorize" because it's used as the PassName with
emitOptimizationRemarkAnalysis. This will obviously have to change.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227756
This class needs to remain public because it's used by
LoopVectorizationLegality::addRuntimeCheck.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227755
Rather than using globals use a structure to pass parameters from the
vectorizer. This prepares the class to be moved outside the LoopVectorizer.
It's not great how all this is passed through in LoopAccessAnalysis but this
is all expected to change once the class start servicing the Loop Distribution
pass as well where some of these parameters make no sense.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227754
Move the canVectorizeMemory functionality from LoopVectorizationLegality to a
new class LoopAccessAnalysis and forward users.
Currently the collection of the symbolic stride information is kept with
LoopVectorizationLegality and it becomes an input to LoopAccessAnalysis.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227751
These members are moving to LoopAccessAnalysis. The accessors help to hide
this.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227750
This class will become public in the new LoopAccessAnalysis header so the name
needs to be more global.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227749
The logic in emitAnalysis is duplicated across multiple functions. This
splits it into a function. Another use will be added by the patchset.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227748
RuntimePointerCheck will be used through LoopAccessAnalysis in
LoopVectorizationLegality. Later in the patchset it will become a local class
of LoopAccessAnalysis.
NFC. This is part of the patchset that splits out the memory dependence logic
from LoopVectorizationLegality into a new class LoopAccessAnalysis.
LoopAccessAnalysis will be used by the new Loop Distribution pass.
llvm-svn: 227747
getTTI method used to get an actual TTI object.
No functionality changed. This just threads the argument and ensures
code like the inliner can correctly look up the callee's TTI rather than
using a fixed one.
The next change will use this to implement per-function subtarget usage
by TTI. The changes after that should eliminate the need for FTTI as that
will have become the default.
llvm-svn: 227730
This should be sufficient to replace the initial (minor) function pass
pipeline in Clang with the new pass manager. I'll probably add an (off
by default) flag to do that just to ensure we can get extra testing.
llvm-svn: 227726
I've added RUN lines both to the basic test for EarlyCSE and the
target-specific test, as this serves as a nice test that the TTI layer
in the new pass manager is in fact working well.
llvm-svn: 227725
Summary:
CUDA driver can unroll loops when jit-compiling PTX. To prevent CUDA
driver from unrolling a loop marked with llvm.loop.unroll.disable is not
unrolled by CUDA driver, we need to emit .pragma "nounroll" at the
header of that loop.
This patch also extracts getting unroll metadata from loop ID metadata
into a shared helper function.
Test Plan: test/CodeGen/NVPTX/nounroll.ll
Reviewers: eliben, meheff, jholewinski
Reviewed By: jholewinski
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7041
llvm-svn: 227703
aggregate or scalar, the debug info needs to refer to the absolute offset
(relative to the entire variable) instead of storing the offset inside
the smaller aggregate.
llvm-svn: 227702
type erased interface and a single analysis pass rather than an
extremely complex analysis group.
The end result is that the TTI analysis can contain a type erased
implementation that supports the polymorphic TTI interface. We can build
one from a target-specific implementation or from a dummy one in the IR.
I've also factored all of the code into "mix-in"-able base classes,
including CRTP base classes to facilitate calling back up to the most
specialized form when delegating horizontally across the surface. These
aren't as clean as I would like and I'm planning to work on cleaning
some of this up, but I wanted to start by putting into the right form.
There are a number of reasons for this change, and this particular
design. The first and foremost reason is that an analysis group is
complete overkill, and the chaining delegation strategy was so opaque,
confusing, and high overhead that TTI was suffering greatly for it.
Several of the TTI functions had failed to be implemented in all places
because of the chaining-based delegation making there be no checking of
this. A few other functions were implemented with incorrect delegation.
The message to me was very clear working on this -- the delegation and
analysis group structure was too confusing to be useful here.
The other reason of course is that this is *much* more natural fit for
the new pass manager. This will lay the ground work for a type-erased
per-function info object that can look up the correct subtarget and even
cache it.
Yet another benefit is that this will significantly simplify the
interaction of the pass managers and the TargetMachine. See the future
work below.
The downside of this change is that it is very, very verbose. I'm going
to work to improve that, but it is somewhat an implementation necessity
in C++ to do type erasure. =/ I discussed this design really extensively
with Eric and Hal prior to going down this path, and afterward showed
them the result. No one was really thrilled with it, but there doesn't
seem to be a substantially better alternative. Using a base class and
virtual method dispatch would make the code much shorter, but as
discussed in the update to the programmer's manual and elsewhere,
a polymorphic interface feels like the more principled approach even if
this is perhaps the least compelling example of it. ;]
Ultimately, there is still a lot more to be done here, but this was the
huge chunk that I couldn't really split things out of because this was
the interface change to TTI. I've tried to minimize all the other parts
of this. The follow up work should include at least:
1) Improving the TargetMachine interface by having it directly return
a TTI object. Because we have a non-pass object with value semantics
and an internal type erasure mechanism, we can narrow the interface
of the TargetMachine to *just* do what we need: build and return
a TTI object that we can then insert into the pass pipeline.
2) Make the TTI object be fully specialized for a particular function.
This will include splitting off a minimal form of it which is
sufficient for the inliner and the old pass manager.
3) Add a new pass manager analysis which produces TTI objects from the
target machine for each function. This may actually be done as part
of #2 in order to use the new analysis to implement #2.
4) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and the targets so that it is
easier to understand and less verbose to type erase.
5) Work on narrowing the API between TTI and its clients so that it is
easier to understand and less verbose to forward.
6) Try to improve the CRTP-based delegation. I feel like this code is
just a bit messy and exacerbating the complexity of implementing
the TTI in each target.
Many thanks to Eric and Hal for their help here. I ended up blocked on
this somewhat more abruptly than I expected, and so I appreciate getting
it sorted out very quickly.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7293
llvm-svn: 227669
analyses back into the LTO code generator.
The pass manager builder (and the transforms library in general)
shouldn't be referencing the target machine at all.
This makes the LTO population work like the others -- the data layout
and target transform info need to be pre-populated.
llvm-svn: 227576
Previously, only -1 and +1 step values are supported for induction variables. This patch extends LV to support
arbitrary constant steps.
Initial patch by Alexey Volkov. Some bug fixes are added in the following version.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6051 and http://reviews.llvm.org/D7193
llvm-svn: 227557
The validation algorithm used an incremental approach, building each
iteration's data structures temporarily, validating them, then
adding them to a global set.
This does not scale well to having multiple sets of Root nodes, as the
set of instructions used in each iteration is the union over all
the root nodes. Therefore, refactor the logic to create a single, simple
container to which later logic then refers. This makes it simpler
control-flow wise to make the creation of the container more complex with
the addition of multiple root sets.
llvm-svn: 227499
In http://reviews.llvm.org/D6911, we allowed GVN to propagate FP equalities
to allow some simple value range optimizations. But that introduced a bug
when comparing to -0.0 or 0.0: these compare equal even though they are not
bitwise identical.
This patch disallows propagating zero constants in equality comparisons.
Fixes: http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22376
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7257
llvm-svn: 227491
reroll() was slightly monolithic and a pain to modify. Refactor
a bunch of its state from local variables to member variables
of a helper class, and do some trivial simplification while we're
there.
llvm-svn: 227439
Patch by: Igor Laevsky <igor@azulsystems.com>
"Currently SplitBlockPredecessors generates incorrect code in case if basic block we are going to split has a landingpad. Also seems like it is fairly common case among it's users to conditionally call either SplitBlockPredecessors or SplitLandingPadPredecessors. Because of this I think it is reasonable to add this condition directly into SplitBlockPredecessors."
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7157
llvm-svn: 227390
abomination.
For starters, this API is incredibly slow. In order to lookup the name
of a pass it must take a memory fence to acquire a pointer to the
managed static pass registry, and then potentially acquire locks while
it consults this registry for information about what passes exist by
that name. This stops the world of LLVMs in your process no matter
how little they cared about the result.
To make this more joyful, you'll note that we are preserving many passes
which *do not exist* any more, or are not even analyses which one might
wish to have be preserved. This means we do all the work only to say
"nope" with no error to the user.
String-based APIs are a *bad idea*. String-based APIs that cannot
produce any meaningful error are an even worse idea. =/
I have a patch that simply removes this API completely, but I'm hesitant
to commit it as I don't really want to perniciously break out-of-tree
users of the old pass manager. I'd rather they just have to migrate to
the new one at some point. If others disagree and would like me to kill
it with fire, just say the word. =]
llvm-svn: 227294
Summary:
Also add enum types for __C_specific_handler and _CxxFrameHandler3 for
which we know a few things.
Reviewers: majnemer
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7214
llvm-svn: 227284
COMDATs must be identically named to the symbol. When support for COMDATs was
introduced, the symbol rewriter was not updated, resulting in rewriting failing
for symbols which were placed into COMDATs. This corrects the behaviour and
adds test cases for this.
llvm-svn: 227261
This was introduced in a faulty refactoring (r225640, mea culpa):
the tests weren't testing the return values, so, for both
__strcpy_chk and __stpcpy_chk, we would return the end of the
buffer (matching stpcpy) instead of the beginning (for strcpy).
The root cause was the prefix "__" being ignored when comparing,
which made us always pick LibFunc::stpcpy_chk.
Pass the LibFunc::Func directly to avoid this kind of error.
Also, make the testcases as explicit as possible to prevent this.
The now-useful testcases expose another, entangled, stpcpy problem,
with the further simplification. This was introduced in a
refactoring (r225640) to match the original behavior.
However, this leads to problems when successive simplifications
generate several similar instructions, none of which are removed
by the custom replaceAllUsesWith.
For instance, InstCombine (the main user) doesn't erase the
instruction in its custom RAUW. When trying to simplify say
__stpcpy_chk:
- first, an stpcpy is created (fortified simplifier),
- second, a memcpy is created (normal simplifier), but the
stpcpy call isn't removed.
- third, InstCombine later revisits the instructions,
and simplifies the first stpcpy to a memcpy. We now have
two memcpys.
llvm-svn: 227250
Splitting a loop to make range checks redundant is profitable only if
the range check "never" fails. Make this fact a part of recognizing a
range check -- a branch is a range check only if it is expected to
pass (via branch_weights metadata).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7192
llvm-svn: 227249
If a memory access is unaligned, emit __tsan_unaligned_read/write
callbacks instead of __tsan_read/write.
Required to change semantics of __tsan_unaligned_read/write to not do the user memory.
But since they were unused (other than through __sanitizer_unaligned_load/store) this is fine.
Fixes long standing issue 17:
https://code.google.com/p/thread-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=17
llvm-svn: 227231
This patch teaches the Instruction Combiner how to fold a cttz/ctlz followed by
a icmp plus select into a single cttz/ctlz with flag 'is_zero_undef' cleared.
Added test InstCombine/select-cmp-cttz-ctlz.ll.
llvm-svn: 227197
LoopRotate wanted to avoid live range interference by looking at the
uses of a Value in the loop latch and seeing if any lied outside of the
loop. We would wrongly perform this operation on Constants.
This fixes PR22337.
llvm-svn: 227171
object that manages a single run of this pass.
This was already essentially how it worked. Within the run function, it
would point members at *stack local* allocations that were only live for
a single run. Instead, it seems much cleaner to have a utility object
whose lifetime is clearly bounded by the run of the pass over the
function and can use member variables in a more direct way.
This also makes it easy to plumb the analyses used into it from the pass
and will make it re-usable with the new pass manager.
No functionality changed here, its just a refactoring.
llvm-svn: 227162
An unreachable default destination can be exploited by other optimizations and
allows for more efficient lowering. Both the SDag switch lowering and
LowerSwitch can exploit unreachable defaults.
Also make TurnSwitchRangeICmp handle switches with unreachable default.
This is kind of separate change, but it cannot be tested without the change
above, and I don't want to land the change above without this since that would
regress other tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6471
llvm-svn: 227125
This just lifts the logic into a static helper function, sinks the
legacy pass to be a trivial wrapper of that helper fuction, and adds
a trivial wrapper for the new PM as well. Not much to see here.
I switched a test case to run in both modes, but we have to strip the
dead prototypes separately as that pass isn't in the new pass manager
(yet).
llvm-svn: 226999
changed the IR. This is particularly easy as we can just look for the
existence of any expect intrinsic at all to know whether we've changed
the IR.
llvm-svn: 226998
for small switches, and avoid using a complex loop to set up the
weights.
We know what the baseline weights will be so we can just resize the
vector to contain all that value and clobber the one slot that is
likely. This seems much more direct than the previous code that tested
at every iteration, and started off by zeroing the vector.
llvm-svn: 226995
It was already in the Scalar header and referenced extensively as being
in this library, the source file was just in the utils directory for
some reason. No actual functionality changed. I noticed as it didn't
make sense to add a pass header to the utils headers.
llvm-svn: 226991
This is exciting as this is a much more involved port. This is
a complex, existing transformation pass. All of the core logic is shared
between both old and new pass managers. Only the access to the analyses
is separate because the actual techniques are separate. This also uses
a bunch of different and interesting analyses and is the first time
where we need to use an analysis across an IR layer.
This also paves the way to expose instcombine utility functions. I've
got a static function that implements the core pass logic over
a function which might be mildly interesting, but more interesting is
likely exposing a routine which just uses instructions *already in* the
worklist and combines until empty.
I've switched one of my favorite instcombine tests to run with both as
well to make sure this keeps working.
llvm-svn: 226987
SimplifyCFG currently does this transformation, but I'm planning to remove that
to allow other passes, such as this one, to exploit the unreachable default.
This patch takes care to keep track of what case values are unreachable even
after the transformation, allowing for more efficient lowering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6697
llvm-svn: 226934
This reverts commit r176827.
Björn Steinbrink pointed out that this didn't actually fix the bug
(PR15555) it was attempting to fix.
With this reverted, we can now remove landingpad cleanups that
immediately resume unwinding, converting the invoke to a call.
llvm-svn: 226850
Use the struct instead of a std::pair<Value *, Value *>. This makes a
Range an obviously immutable object, and we can now assert that a
range is well-typed (Begin->getType() == End->getType()) on its
construction.
llvm-svn: 226804
There are places where the inductive range check elimination pass
depends on two llvm::Values or llvm::SCEVs to be of the same
llvm::Type when they do not need to be. This patch relaxes those
restrictions (by bailing out of the optimization if the types
mismatch), and adds test cases to trigger those paths.
These issues were found by bootstrapping clang with IRCE running in
the -O3 pass ordering.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7082
llvm-svn: 226793
Even with the current limit on the number of alias checks, the containing loop has quadratic complexity.
This begins to hurt for blocks containing > 1K load/store instructions.
This commit introduces a limit for the loop count. It reduces the runtime for such very large blocks.
llvm-svn: 226792
creating a non-internal header file for the InstCombine pass.
I thought about calling this InstCombiner.h or in some way more clearly
associating it with the InstCombiner clas that it is primarily defining,
but there are several other utility interfaces defined within this for
InstCombine. If, in the course of refactoring, those end up moving
elsewhere or going away, it might make more sense to make this the
combiner's header alone.
Naturally, this is a bikeshed to a certain degree, so feel free to lobby
for a different shade of paint if this name just doesn't suit you.
llvm-svn: 226783
ever stored to always use a legal integer type if one is available.
Regardless of whether this particular type is good or bad, it ensures we
don't get weird differences in generated code (and resulting
performance) from "equivalent" patterns that happen to end up using
a slightly different type.
After some discussion on llvmdev it seems everyone generally likes this
canonicalization. However, there may be some parts of LLVM that handle
it poorly and need to be fixed. I have at least verified that this
doesn't impede GVN and instcombine's store-to-load forwarding powers in
any obvious cases. Subtle cases are exactly what we need te flush out if
they remain.
Also note that this IR pattern should already be hitting LLVM from Clang
at least because it is exactly the IR which would be produced if you
used memcpy to copy a pointer or floating point between memory instead
of a variable.
llvm-svn: 226781
When two calls from the same MDLocation are inlined they currently get
treated as one inlined function call (creating difficulty debugging,
duplicate variables, etc).
Clang worked around this by including column information on inline calls
which doesn't address LTO inlining or calls to the same function from
the same line and column (such as through a macro). It also didn't
address ctor and member function calls.
By making the inlinedAt locations distinct, every call site has an
explicitly distinct location that cannot be coalesced with any other
call.
This can produce linearly (2x in the worst case where every call is
inlined and the call instruction has a non-call instruction at the same
location) more debug locations. Any increase beyond that are in cases
where the Clang workaround was insufficient and the new scheme is
creating necessary distinct nodes that were being erroneously coalesced
previously.
After this change to LLVM the incomplete workarounds in Clang. That
should reduce the number of debug locations (in a build without column
info, the default on Darwin, not the default on Linux) by not creating
pseudo-distinct locations for every call to an inline function.
(oh, and I made the inlined-at chain rebuilding iterative instead of
recursive because I was having trouble wrapping my head around it the
way it was - open to discussion on the right design for that function
(including going back to a recursive solution))
llvm-svn: 226736
Previously we always stored 4 bytes of origin at the destination address
even for 8-byte (and longer) stores.
This should fix rare missing, or incorrect, origin stacks in MSan reports.
llvm-svn: 226658
Because in its primary function pass the combiner is run repeatedly over
the same function until doing so produces no changes, it is essentially
to not re-allocate the worklist. However, as a utility, the more common
pattern would be to put a limited set of instructions in the worklist
rather than the entire function body. That is also the more likely
pattern when used by the new pass manager.
The result is a very light weight combiner that does the visiting with
a separable worklist. This can then be wrapped up in a helper function
for users that want a combiner utility, or as I have here it can be
wrapped up in a pass which manages the iterations used when combining an
entire function's instructions.
Hopefully this removes some of the worst of the interface warts that
became apparant with the last patch here. However, there is clearly more
work. I've again left some FIXMEs for the most egregious. The ones that
stick out to me are the exposure of the worklist and IR builder as
public members, and the use of pointers rather than references. However,
fixing these is likely to be much more mechanical and less interesting
so I didn't want to touch them in this patch.
llvm-svn: 226655
SimplifyLibCalls utility by sinking it into the specific call part of
the combiner.
This will avoid us needing to do any contortions to build this object in
a subsequent refactoring I'm doing and seems generally better factored.
We don't need this utility everywhere and it carries no interesting
state so we might as well build it on demand.
llvm-svn: 226654
a more direct approach: a type-erased glorified function pointer. Now we
can pass a function pointer into this for the easy case and we can even
pass a lambda into it in the interesting case in the instruction
combiner.
I'll be using this shortly to simplify the interfaces to InstCombiner,
but this helps pave the way and seems like a better design for the
libcall simplifier utility.
llvm-svn: 226640
This creates a small internal pass which runs the InstCombiner over
a function. This is the hard part of porting InstCombine to the new pass
manager, as at this point none of the code in InstCombine has access to
a Pass object any longer.
The resulting interface for the InstCombiner is pretty terrible. I'm not
planning on leaving it that way. The key thing missing is that we need
to separate the worklist from the combiner a touch more. Once that's
done, it should be possible for *any* part of LLVM to just create
a worklist with instructions, populate it, and then combine it until
empty. The pass will just be the (obvious and important) special case of
doing that for an entire function body.
For now, this is the first increment of factoring to make all of this
work.
llvm-svn: 226618
don't get muddied up by formatting changes.
Some of these don't really seem like improvements to me, but they also
don't seem any worse and I care much more about not formatting them
manually than I do about the particular formatting. =]
llvm-svn: 226610
This reapplies r225379.
ChangeLog:
- The assertion that this commit previously ran into about the inability
to handle indirect variables has since been removed and the backend
can handle this now.
- Testcases were upgrade to the new MDLocation format.
- Instead of keeping a DebugDeclares map, we now use
llvm::FindAllocaDbgDeclare().
Original commit message follows.
Debug info: Teach SROA how to update debug info for fragmented variables.
This allows us to generate debug info for extremely advanced code such as
typedef struct { long int a; int b;} S;
int foo(S s) {
return s.b;
}
which at -O1 on x86_64 is codegen'd into
define i32 @foo(i64 %s.coerce0, i32 %s.coerce1) #0 {
ret i32 %s.coerce1, !dbg !24
}
with this patch we emit the following debug info for this
TAG_formal_parameter [3]
AT_location( 0x00000000
0x0000000000000000 - 0x0000000000000006: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rsi, piece 0x00000004
0x0000000000000006 - 0x0000000000000008: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rax, piece 0x00000004 )
AT_name( "s" )
AT_decl_file( "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build.ninja.release/test.c" )
Thanks to chandlerc, dblaikie, and echristo for their feedback on all
previous iterations of this patch!
llvm-svn: 226598
The new code does not create new basic blocks in the case when shadow is a
compile-time constant; it generates either an unconditional __msan_warning
call or nothing instead.
llvm-svn: 226569
along with the other analyses.
The most obvious reason why is because eventually I need to separate out
the pass layer from the rest of the instcombiner. However, it is also
probably a compile time win as every query through the pass manager
layer is pretty slow these days.
llvm-svn: 226550
This patch fixes 2 issues in reorderInputsAccordingToOpcode
1) AllSameOpcodeLeft and AllSameOpcodeRight was being calculated incorrectly resulting in code not being vectorized in few cases.
2) Adds logic to reorder operands if we get longer chain of consecutive loads enabling vectorization. Handled the same for cases were we have AltOpcode.
Thanks Michael for inputs and review.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6677
llvm-svn: 226547
Now that the clone methods used by `MapMetadata()` don't do any
remapping (and return a temporary), they make more sense as member
functions on `MDNode` (and subclasses).
llvm-svn: 226541
a DominatorTree argument as that is the analysis that it wants to
update.
This removes the last non-loop utility function in Utils/ which accepts
a raw Pass argument.
llvm-svn: 226537
As part of PR22235, introduce `DwarfNode` and `GenericDwarfNode`. The
former is a metadata node with a DWARF tag. The latter matches our
current (generic) schema of a header with string (and stringified
integer) data and an arbitrary number of operands.
This doesn't move it into place yet; that change will require a large
number of testcase updates.
llvm-svn: 226529
As pointed out in r226501, the distinction between `MDNode` and
`UniquableMDNode` is confusing. When we need subclasses of `MDNode`
that don't use all its functionality it might make sense to break it
apart again, but until then this makes the code clearer.
llvm-svn: 226520
Take advantage of the new ability of temporary nodes to mutate to
distinct and uniqued nodes to greatly simplify the `MapMetadata()`
helper functions.
llvm-svn: 226511
Change `MDTuple::getTemporary()` and `MDLocation::getTemporary()` to
return (effectively) `std::unique_ptr<T, MDNode::deleteTemporary>`, and
clean up call sites. (For now, `DIBuilder` call sites just call
`release()` immediately.)
There's an accompanying change in each of clang and polly to use the new
API.
llvm-svn: 226504
Remove `MDNodeFwdDecl` (as promised in r226481). Aside from API
changes, there's no real functionality change here.
`MDNode::getTemporary()` now forwards to `MDTuple::getTemporary()`,
which returns a tuple with `isTemporary()` equal to true.
The main point is that we can now add temporaries of other `MDNode`
subclasses, needed for PR22235 (I introduced `MDNodeFwdDecl` in the
first place because I didn't recognize this need, and thought they were
only needed to handle forward references).
A few things left out of (or highlighted by) this commit:
- I've had to remove the (few) uses of `std::unique_ptr<>` to deal
with temporaries, since the destructor is no longer public.
`getTemporary()` should probably return the equivalent of
`std::unique_ptr<T, MDNode::deleteTemporary>`.
- `MDLocation::getTemporary()` doesn't exist yet (worse, it actually
does exist, but does the wrong thing: `MDNode::getTemporary()` is
inherited and returns an `MDTuple`).
- `MDNode` now only has one subclass, `UniquableMDNode`, and the
distinction between them is actually somewhat confusing.
I'll fix those up next.
llvm-svn: 226501
Change `MDNode::isDistinct()` to only apply to 'distinct' nodes (not
temporaries), and introduce `MDNode::isUniqued()` and
`MDNode::isTemporary()` for the other two possibilities.
llvm-svn: 226482
and updated.
This may appear to remove handling for things like alias analysis when
splitting critical edges here, but in fact no callers of SplitEdge
relied on this. Similarly, all of them wanted to preserve LCSSA if there
was any update of the loop info. That makes the interface much simpler.
With this, all of BasicBlockUtils.h is free of Pass arguments and
prepared for the new pass manager. This is tho majority of utilities
that relied on pass arguments.
llvm-svn: 226459
APIs and replace it and numerous booleans with an option struct.
The critical edge splitting API has a really large surface of flags and
so it seems worth burning a small option struct / builder. This struct
can be constructed with the various preserved analyses and then flags
can be flipped in a builder style.
The various users are now responsible for directly passing along their
analysis information. This should be enough for the critical edge
splitting to work cleanly with the new pass manager as well.
This API is still pretty crufty and could be cleaned up a lot, but I've
focused on this change just threading an option struct rather than
a pass through the API.
llvm-svn: 226456
we can while splitting critical edges.
The only code which called this and didn't require simplified loops to
be preserved is polly, and the code behaves correctly there anyways.
Without this change, it becomes really hard to share this code with the
new pass manager where things like preserving loop simplify form don't
make any sense.
If anyone discovers this code behaving incorrectly, what it *should* be
testing for is whether the loops it needs to be in simplified form are
in fact in that form. It should always be trying to preserve that form
when it exists.
llvm-svn: 226443
In case of blocks with many memory-accessing instructions, alias checking can take lot of time
(because calculating the memory dependencies has quadratic complexity).
I chose a limit which resulted in no changes when running the benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 226439
SplitLandingPadPredecessors and remove the Pass argument from its
interface.
Another step to the utilities being usable with both old and new pass
managers.
llvm-svn: 226426
rather than relying on the pass object.
This one is a bit annoying, but will pay off. First, supporting this one
will make the next one much easier, and for utilities like LoopSimplify,
this is moving them (slowly) closer to not having to pass the pass
object around throughout their APIs.
llvm-svn: 226396
interface, removing Pass from its interface.
This also makes those analyses optional so that passes which don't even
preserve these (or use them) can skip the logic entirely.
llvm-svn: 226394
optionally updated by MergeBlockIntoPredecessors.
No functionality changed, just refactoring to clear the way for the new
pass manager.
llvm-svn: 226392
Instead of querying the pass every where we need to, do that once and
cache a pointer in the pass object. This is both simpler and I'm about
to add yet another place where we need to dig out that pointer.
llvm-svn: 226391
accepting a Pass and querying it for analyses.
This is necessary to allow the utilities to work both with the old and
new pass managers, and I also think this makes the interface much more
clear and helps the reader know what analyses the utility can actually
handle. I plan to repeat this process iteratively to clean up all the
pass utilities.
llvm-svn: 226386
cleaner to derive from the generic base.
Thise removes a ton of boiler plate code and somewhat strange and
pointless indirections. It also remove a bunch of the previously needed
friend declarations. To fully remove these, I also lifted the verify
logic into the generic LoopInfoBase, which seems good anyways -- it is
generic and useful logic even for the machine side.
llvm-svn: 226385
This was dead even before I refactored how we initialized it, but my
refactoring made it trivially dead and it is now caught by a Clang
warning. This fixes the warning and should clean up the -Werror bot
failures (sorry!).
llvm-svn: 226376
a LoopInfoWrapperPass to wire the object up to the legacy pass manager.
This switches all the clients of LoopInfo over and paves the way to port
LoopInfo to the new pass manager. No functionality change is intended
with this iteration.
llvm-svn: 226373
IRCE eliminates range checks of the form
0 <= A * I + B < Length
by splitting a loop's iteration space into three segments in a way
that the check is completely redundant in the middle segment. As an
example, IRCE will convert
len = < known positive >
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) {
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
to
len = < known positive >
limit = smin(n, len)
// no first segment
for (i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) { // this check is fully redundant
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
for (i = limit; i < n; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) {
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
IRCE can deal with multiple range checks in the same loop (it takes
the intersection of the ranges that will make each of them redundant
individually).
Currently IRCE does not do any profitability analysis. That is a
TODO.
Please note that the status of this pass is *experimental*, and it is
not part of any default pass pipeline. Having said that, I will love
to get feedback and general input from people interested in trying
this out.
This pass was originally r226201. It was reverted because it used C++
features not supported by MSVC 2012.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6693
llvm-svn: 226238
The change used C++11 features not supported by MSVC 2012. I will fix
the change to use things supported MSVC 2012 and recommit shortly.
llvm-svn: 226216
IRCE eliminates range checks of the form
0 <= A * I + B < Length
by splitting a loop's iteration space into three segments in a way
that the check is completely redundant in the middle segment. As an
example, IRCE will convert
len = < known positive >
for (i = 0; i < n; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) {
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
to
len = < known positive >
limit = smin(n, len)
// no first segment
for (i = 0; i < limit; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) { // this check is fully redundant
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
for (i = limit; i < n; i++) {
if (0 <= i && i < len) {
do_something();
} else {
throw_out_of_bounds();
}
}
IRCE can deal with multiple range checks in the same loop (it takes
the intersection of the ranges that will make each of them redundant
individually).
Currently IRCE does not do any profitability analysis. That is a
TODO.
Please note that the status of this pass is *experimental*, and it is
not part of any default pass pipeline. Having said that, I will love
to get feedback and general input from people interested in trying
this out.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6693
llvm-svn: 226201
This patch was generated by a clang tidy checker that is being open sourced.
The documentation of that checker is the following:
/// The emptiness of a container should be checked using the empty method
/// instead of the size method. It is not guaranteed that size is a
/// constant-time function, and it is generally more efficient and also shows
/// clearer intent to use empty. Furthermore some containers may implement the
/// empty method but not implement the size method. Using empty whenever
/// possible makes it easier to switch to another container in the future.
Patch by Gábor Horváth!
llvm-svn: 226161
The pass is really just a means of accessing a cached instance of the
TargetLibraryInfo object, and this way we can re-use that object for the
new pass manager as its result.
Lots of delta, but nothing interesting happening here. This is the
common pattern that is developing to allow analyses to live in both the
old and new pass manager -- a wrapper pass in the old pass manager
emulates the separation intrinsic to the new pass manager between the
result and pass for analyses.
llvm-svn: 226157
While the term "Target" is in the name, it doesn't really have to do
with the LLVM Target library -- this isn't an abstraction which LLVM
targets generally need to implement or extend. It has much more to do
with modeling the various runtime libraries on different OSes and with
different runtime environments. The "target" in this sense is the more
general sense of a target of cross compilation.
This is in preparation for porting this analysis to the new pass
manager.
No functionality changed, and updates inbound for Clang and Polly.
llvm-svn: 226078
The bug was introduced in r225282. r225282 assumed that sub X, Y is
the same as add X, -Y. This is not correct if we are going to upgrade
the sub to sub nuw. This change fixes the issue by making the
optimization ignore sub instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6979
llvm-svn: 226075
This speeds up the dependency calculations for blocks with many load/store/call instructions.
Beside the improved runtime, there is no functional change.
Compared to the original commit, this re-applied commit contains a bug fix which ensures that there are
no incorrect collisions in the alias cache.
llvm-svn: 225977
Although this makes the `cast<>` assert more often, the
`assert(Node->isResolved())` on the following line would assert in all
those cases. So, no functionality change here.
llvm-svn: 225903
It turns out, all callsites of the simplifier are guarded by a check for
CallInst::getCalledFunction (i.e., to make sure the callee is direct).
This check wasn't done when trying to further optimize a simplified fortified
libcall, introduced by a refactoring in r225640.
Fix that, add a testcase, and document the requirement.
llvm-svn: 225895
The issue was introduced in r214638:
+ for (auto &BSIter : BlocksSchedules) {
+ scheduleBlock(BSIter.second.get());
+ }
Because BlocksSchedules is a DenseMap with BasicBlock* keys, blocks are
scheduled in non-deterministic order, resulting in unpredictable IR.
Patch by Daniel Reynaud!
llvm-svn: 225821
The alias cache has a problem of incorrect collisions in case a new instruction is allocated at the same address as a previously deleted instruction.
llvm-svn: 225790
This speeds up the dependency calculations for blocks with many load/store/call instructions.
Beside the improved runtime, there is no functional change.
llvm-svn: 225786
The functions {pred,succ,use,user}_{begin,end} exist, but many users
have to check *_begin() with *_end() by hand to determine if the
BasicBlock or User is empty. Fix this with a standard *_empty(),
demonstrating a few usecases.
llvm-svn: 225760
Split `GenericMDNode` into two classes (with more descriptive names).
- `UniquableMDNode` will be a common subclass for `MDNode`s that are
sometimes uniqued like constants, and sometimes 'distinct'.
This class gets the (short-lived) RAUW support and related API.
- `MDTuple` is the basic tuple that has always been returned by
`MDNode::get()`. This is as opposed to more specific nodes to be
added soon, which have additional fields, custom assembly syntax,
and extra semantics.
This class gets the hash-related logic, since other sublcasses of
`UniquableMDNode` may need to hash based on other fields.
To keep this diff from getting too big, I've added casts to `MDTuple`
that won't really scale as new subclasses of `UniquableMDNode` are
added, but I'll clean those up incrementally.
(No functionality change intended.)
llvm-svn: 225682
Put them in a separate function, so we can reuse them to further
simplify fortified libcalls as well.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6540
llvm-svn: 225639
The checks are the same for fortified counterparts to the libcalls, so
we might as well do them in a single place.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6539
llvm-svn: 225638
When we compute the size of a loop, we include the branch on the backedge and
the comparison feeding the conditional branch. Under normal circumstances,
these don't get replicated with the rest of the loop body when we unroll. This
led to the somewhat surprising behavior that really small loops would not get
unrolled enough -- they could be unrolled more and the resulting loop would be
below the threshold, because we were assuming they'd take
(LoopSize * UnrollingFactor) instructions after unrolling, instead of
(((LoopSize-2) * UnrollingFactor)+2) instructions. This fixes that computation.
llvm-svn: 225565
The previous code assumed that such instructions could not have any uses
outside CaseDest, with the motivation that the instruction could not
dominate CommonDest because CommonDest has phi nodes in it. That simply
isn't true; e.g., CommonDest could have an edge back to itself.
llvm-svn: 225552
doing Load PRE"
It's not really expected to stick around, last time it provoked a weird LTO
build failure that I can't reproduce now, and the bot logs are long gone. I'll
re-revert it if the failures recur.
Original description: Perform Scalar PRE on gep indices that feed loads before
doing Load PRE.
llvm-svn: 225536
Previously, MemoryDependenceAnalysis::getNonLocalPointerDependency was taking a list of properties about the instruction being queried. Since I'm about to need one more property to be passed down through the infrastructure - I need to know a query instruction is non-volatile in an inner helper - fix the interface once and for all.
I also added some assertions and behaviour clarifications around volatile and ordered field accesses. At the moment, this is mostly to document expected behaviour. The only non-standard instructions which can currently reach this are atomic, but unordered, loads and stores. Neither ordered or volatile accesses can reach here.
The call in GVN is protected by an isSimple check when it first considers the load. The calls in MemDepPrinter are protected by isUnordered checks. Both utilities also check isVolatile for loads and stores.
llvm-svn: 225481
Create new copies of distinct `MDNode`s instead of following the
uniquing `MDNode` logic.
Just like self-references (or other cycles), `MapMetadata()` creates a
new node. In practice most calls use `RF_NoModuleLevelChanges`, in
which case nothing is duplicated anyway.
Part of PR22111.
llvm-svn: 225476
WillNotOverflowUnsignedAdd's smarts will live in ValueTracking as
computeOverflowForUnsignedAdd. It now returns a tri-state result:
never overflows, always overflows and sometimes overflows.
llvm-svn: 225329
This also rolls in the changes discussed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D6766.
Defers migrating the debug info for new allocas until after all partitions
are created.
Thanks to Chandler for reviewing!
llvm-svn: 225272
This is already handled in general when it is known the
conversion can't lose bits with smaller integer types
casted into wider floating point types.
This pattern happens somewhat often in GPU programs that cast
workitem intrinsics to float, which are often compared with 0.
Specifically handle the special case of compares with zero which
should also be known to not lose information. I had a more general
version of this which allows equality compares if the casted float is
exactly representable in the integer, but I'm not 100% confident that
is always correct.
Also fold cases that aren't integers to true / false.
llvm-svn: 225265
Try harder to get rid of bitcast'd calls by ptrtoint/inttoptr'ing
arguments and return values when DataLayout says it is safe to do so.
llvm-svn: 225254
The swap implementation for iplist is currently unsupported. Simply splice the
old list into place, which achieves the same purpose. This is needed in order
to thread the -frewrite-map-file frontend option correctly. NFC.
llvm-svn: 225186
{code}
// loop body
... = a[i] (1)
... = a[i+1] (2)
.......
a[i+1] = .... (3)
a[i] = ... (4)
{code}
The algorithm tries to collect memory access candidates from AliasSetTracker, and then check memory dependences one another. The memory accesses are unique in AliasSetTracker, and a single memory access in AliasSetTracker may map to multiple entries in AccessAnalysis, which could cover both 'read' and 'write'. Originally the algorithm only checked 'write' entry in Accesses if only 'write' exists. This is incorrect and the consequence is it ignored all read access, and finally some RAW and WAR dependence are missed.
For the case given above, if we ignore two reads, the dependence between (1) and (3) would not be able to be captured, and finally this loop will be incorrectly vectorized.
The fix simply inserts a new loop to find all entries in Accesses. Since it will skip most of all other memory accesses by checking the Value pointer at the very beginning of the loop, it should not increase compile-time visibly.
llvm-svn: 225159
assert out of the new pre-splitting in SROA.
This fix makes the code do what was originally intended -- when we have
a store of a load both dealing in the same alloca, we force them to both
be pre-split with identical offsets. This is really quite hard to do
because we can keep discovering problems as we go along. We have to
track every load over the current alloca which for any resaon becomes
invalid for pre-splitting, and go back to remove all stores of those
loads. I've included a couple of test cases derived from PR22093 that
cover the different ways this can happen. While that PR only really
triggered the first of these two, its the same fundamental issue.
The other challenge here is documented in a FIXME now. We end up being
quite a bit more aggressive for pre-splitting when loads and stores
don't refer to the same alloca. This aggressiveness comes at the cost of
introducing potentially redundant loads. It isn't clear that this is the
right balance. It might be considerably better to require that we only
do pre-splitting when we can presplit every load and store involved in
the entire operation. That would give more consistent if conservative
results. Unfortunately, it requires a non-trivial change to the actual
pre-splitting operation in order to correctly handle cases where we end
up pre-splitting stores out-of-order. And it isn't 100% clear that this
is the right direction, although I'm starting to suspect that it is.
llvm-svn: 225149
a cache of assumptions for a single function, and an immutable pass that
manages those caches.
The motivation for this change is two fold. Immutable analyses are
really hacks around the current pass manager design and don't exist in
the new design. This is usually OK, but it requires that the core logic
of an immutable pass be reasonably partitioned off from the pass logic.
This change does precisely that. As a consequence it also paves the way
for the *many* utility functions that deal in the assumptions to live in
both pass manager worlds by creating an separate non-pass object with
its own independent API that they all rely on. Now, the only bits of the
system that deal with the actual pass mechanics are those that actually
need to deal with the pass mechanics.
Once this separation is made, several simplifications become pretty
obvious in the assumption cache itself. Rather than using a set and
callback value handles, it can just be a vector of weak value handles.
The callers can easily skip the handles that are null, and eventually we
can wrap all of this up behind a filter iterator.
For now, this adds boiler plate to the various passes, but this kind of
boiler plate will end up making it possible to port these passes to the
new pass manager, and so it will end up factored away pretty reasonably.
llvm-svn: 225131
We assumed the output of a match was a Value, this would cause us to
assert because we would fail a cast<>. Instead, use a helper in the
Operator family to hide the distinction between Value and Constant.
This fixes PR22087.
llvm-svn: 225127
WillNotOverflowUnsignedMul's smarts will live in ValueTracking as
computeOverflowForUnsignedMul. It now returns a tri-state result:
never overflows, always overflows and sometimes overflows.
llvm-svn: 225076
a pre-splitting pass over loads and stores.
Historically, splitting could cause enough problems that I hamstrung the
entire process with a requirement that splittable integer loads and
stores must cover the entire alloca. All smaller loads and stores were
unsplittable to prevent chaos from ensuing. With the new pre-splitting
logic that does load/store pair splitting I introduced in r225061, we
can now very nicely handle arbitrarily splittable loads and stores. In
order to fully benefit from these smarts, we need to mark all of the
integer loads and stores as splittable.
However, we don't actually want to rewrite partitions with all integer
loads and stores marked as splittable. This will fail to extract scalar
integers from aggregates, which is kind of the point of SROA. =] In
order to resolve this, what we really want to do is only do
pre-splitting on the alloca slices with integer loads and stores fully
splittable. This allows us to uncover all non-integer uses of the alloca
that would benefit from a split in an integer load or store (and where
introducing the split is safe because it is just memory transfer from
a load to a store). Once done, we make all the non-whole-alloca integer
loads and stores unsplittable just as they have historically been,
repartition and rewrite.
The result is that when there are integer loads and stores anywhere
within an alloca (such as from a memcpy of a sub-object of a larger
object), we can split them up if there are non-integer components to the
aggregate hiding beneath. I've added the challenging test cases to
demonstrate how this is able to promote to scalars even a case where we
have even *partially* overlapping loads and stores.
This restores the single-store behavior for small arrays of i8s which is
really nice. I've restored both the little endian testing and big endian
testing for these exactly as they were prior to r225061. It also forced
me to be more aggressive in an alignment test to actually defeat SROA.
=] Without the added volatiles there, we actually split up the weird i16
loads and produce nice double allocas with better alignment.
This also uncovered a number of bugs where we failed to handle
splittable load and store slices which didn't have a begininng offset of
zero. Those fixes are included, and without them the existing test cases
explode in glorious fireworks. =]
I've kept support for leaving whole-alloca integer loads and stores as
splittable even for the purpose of rewriting, but I think that's likely
no longer needed. With the new pre-splitting, we might be able to remove
all the splitting support for loads and stores from the rewriter. Not
doing that in this patch to try to isolate any performance regressions
that causes in an easy to find and revert chunk.
llvm-svn: 225074
instructions.
I noticed this when working on dialing up how aggressively we can
pre-split loads and stores. My test case wasn't passing because dead
GEPs into the allocas persisted when they were built by this routine.
This isn't terribly harmful, we still rewrote and promoted the alloca
and I can't conceive of how to cause this to happen in a case where we
will keep the exact same alloca but rewrite and promote the uses of it.
If that ever happened, we'd get an assert out of mem2reg.
So I don't have a direct test case yet, but the subsequent commit's test
case wouldn't pass without this. There are other problems fixed by this
patch that I spotted purely by inspection such as the fact that
getAdjustedPtr could have actually deleted dead base pointers. I don't
know how to get a base pointer to go into getAdjustedPtr today, so
I think this bug could never have manifested (and I certainly can't
write a test case for it) but, it wasn't the intent of the code. The
code really just wanted to GC the new instructions built. That can be
done more directly by comparing with the base pointer which is the only
non-new instruction that this code can return.
llvm-svn: 225073
array. This prevents it from walking out of bounds on the splits array.
Bug found with the existing tests by ASan and by the MSVC debug build.
llvm-svn: 225069
a +asserts bootstrap, but my bootstrap had asserts off. Oops.
Anyways, in some places it is reasonable to cast (as a sanity check) the
pointer operand to a load or store to an instruction within SROA --
namely when the pointer operand is expected to be derived from an
alloca, and thus always an instruction. However, the pre-splitting code
also deals with loads and stores to non-alloca pointers and there we
need to just use the Value*. Nothing about the code relied on the
instruction cast, it was only there essentially as an invariant
assertion. Remove the two that don't actually hold.
This should fix the proximate issue in PR22080, but I'm also doing an
asserts bootstrap myself to see if there are other issues lurking.
I'll craft a reduced test case in a moment, but I wanted to get the tree
healthy as quickly as possible.
llvm-svn: 225068
of my new load and store splitting, and fix a bug where it logged
a totally irrelevant slice rather than the actual slice in question.
The logging here previously worked because we used to place new slices
onto the back of the core sequence, but that caused other problems.
I updated the actual code to store new slices in their own vector but
didn't update the logging. There isn't a good way to reuse the logging
any more, and frankly it wasn't needed. We can directly log this bit
more easily.
llvm-svn: 225063
stores.
When there are accesses to an entire alloca with an integer
load or store as well as accesses to small pieces of the alloca, SROA
splits up the large integer accesses. In order to do that, it uses bit
math to merge the small accesses into large integers. While this is
effective, it produces insane IR that can cause significant problems in
the rest of the optimizer:
- It can cause load and store mismatches with GVN on the non-alloca side
where we end up loading an i64 (or some such) rather than loading
specific elements that are stored.
- We can't always get rid of the integer bit math, which is why we can't
always fix the loads and stores to work well with GVN.
- This is especially bad when we have operations that mix poorly with
integer bit math such as floating point operations.
- It will block things like the vectorizer which might be able to handle
the scalar stores that underly the aggregate.
At the same time, we can't just directly split up these loads and stores
in all cases. If there is actual integer arithmetic involved on the
values, then using integer bit math is actually the perfect lowering
because we can often combine it heavily with the surrounding math.
The solution this patch provides is to find places where SROA is
partitioning aggregates into small elements, and look for splittable
loads and stores that it can split all the way to some other adjacent
load and store. These are uniformly the cases where failing to split the
loads and stores hurts the optimizer that I have seen, and I've looked
extensively at the code produced both from more and less aggressive
approaches to this problem.
However, it is quite tricky to actually do this in SROA. We may have
loads and stores to the same alloca, or other complex patterns that are
hard to handle. This complexity leads to the somewhat subtle algorithm
implemented here. We have to do this entire process as a separate pass
over the partitioning of the alloca, and split up all of the loads prior
to splitting the stores so that we can handle safely the cases of
overlapping, including partially overlapping, loads and stores to the
same alloca. We also have to reconstitute the post-split slice
configuration so we can avoid iterating again over all the alloca uses
(the slow part of SROA). But we also have to ensure that when we split
up loads and stores to *other* allocas, we *do* re-iterate over them in
SROA to adapt to the more refined partitioning now required.
With this, I actually think we can fix a long-standing TODO in SROA
where I avoided splitting as many loads and stores as probably should be
splittable. This limitation historically mitigated the fallout of all
the bad things mentioned above. Now that we have more intelligent
handling, I plan to remove the FIXME and more aggressively mark integer
loads and stores as splittable. I'll do that in a follow-up patch to
help with bisecting any fallout.
The net result of this change should be more fine-grained and accurate
scalars being formed out of aggregates. At the very least, Clang now
generates perfect code for this high-level test case using
std::complex<float>:
#include <complex>
void g1(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) {
x += std::complex<float>(a, b);
}
void g2(std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b) {
x -= std::complex<float>(a, b);
}
void foo(const std::complex<float> &x, float a, float b,
std::complex<float> &x1, std::complex<float> &x2) {
std::complex<float> l1 = x;
g1(l1, a, b);
std::complex<float> l2 = x;
g2(l2, a, b);
x1 = l1;
x2 = l2;
}
This code isn't just hypothetical either. It was reduced out of the hot
inner loops of essentially every part of the Eigen math library when
using std::complex<float>. Those loops would consistently and
pervasively hop between the floating point unit and the integer unit due
to bit math extraction and insertion of floating point values that were
"stored" in a 64-bit integer register around the loop backedge.
So far, this change has passed a bootstrap and I have done some other
testing and so far, no issues. That doesn't mean there won't be though,
so I'll be prepared to help with any fallout. If you performance swings
in particular, please let me know. I'm very curious what all the impact
of this change will be. Stay tuned for the follow-up to also split more
integer loads and stores.
llvm-svn: 225061
We are allowed to move the 'B' to the right hand side if we an prove
there is no signed overflow and if the comparison itself is signed.
llvm-svn: 225034
This change implements four basic optimizations:
If a relocated value isn't used, it doesn't need to be relocated.
If the value being relocated is null, relocation doesn't change that. (Technically, this might be collector specific. I don't know of one which it doesn't work for though.)
If the value being relocated is undef, the relocation is meaningless.
If the value being relocated was known nonnull, the relocated pointer also isn't null. (Since it points to the same source language object.)
I outlined other planned work in comments.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6600
llvm-svn: 224968
In LICM, we have a check for an instruction which is guaranteed to execute and thus can't introduce any new faults if moved to the preheader. To handle a function which might unconditionally throw when first called, we check for any potentially throwing call in the loop and give up.
This is unfortunate when the potentially throwing condition is down a rare path. It prevents essentially all LICM of potentially faulting instructions where the faulting condition is checked outside the loop. It also greatly diminishes the utility of loop unswitching since control dependent instructions - which are now likely in the loops header block - will not be lifted by subsequent LICM runs.
define void @nothrow_header(i64 %x, i64 %y, i1 %cond) {
; CHECK-LABEL: nothrow_header
; CHECK-LABEL: entry
; CHECK: %div = udiv i64 %x, %y
; CHECK-LABEL: loop
; CHECK: call void @use(i64 %div)
entry:
br label %loop
loop: ; preds = %entry, %for.inc
%div = udiv i64 %x, %y
br i1 %cond, label %loop-if, label %exit
loop-if:
call void @use(i64 %div)
br label %loop
exit:
ret void
}
The current patch really only helps with non-memory instructions (i.e. divs, etc..) since the maythrow call down the rare path will be considered to alias an otherwise hoistable load. The one exception is that it does kick in for loads which are known to be invariant without regard to other possible stores, i.e. those marked with either !invarant.load metadata of tbaa 'is constant memory' metadata.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6725
llvm-svn: 224965
This patches fixes a miscompile where we were assuming that loading from null is undefined and thus we could assume it doesn't happen. This transform is perfectly legal in address space 0, but is not neccessarily legal in other address spaces.
We really should introduce a hook to control this property on a per target per address space basis. We may be loosing valuable optimizations in some address spaces by being too conservative.
Original patch by Thomas P Raoux (submitted to llvm-commits), tests and formatting fixes by me.
llvm-svn: 224961
within a partition of an alloca in SROA.
This reflects the fact that the organization of the slices isn't really
ideal for analysis, but is the naive way in which the slices are
available while we're processing them in the core partitioning
algorithm.
It is possible we could improve matters, and I've left a FIXME with
one of my ideas for how to do this, but it is a lot of work, the benefit
is somewhat minor, and it isn't clear that it would be strictly better.
=/ Not really satisfying, but I'm out of really good ideas.
This also improves one place where the debug logging failed to mark some
split partitions. Now we log in one place, slightly later, and with
accurate information about whether the slice is split by the partition
being rewritten.
llvm-svn: 224800
operate in terms of the new Partition class, and generally have a more
clear set of arguments. No functionality changed.
The most notable improvements here are consistently using the
terminology of 'partition' for a collection of slices that will be
rewritten together and 'slice' for a region of an alloca that is used by
a particular instruction.
This also makes it more clear that the split things are actually slices
as well, just ones that will be split by the proposed partition.
This doesn't yet address the confusing aspects of the partition's
interface where slices that will be split by the partition and start
prior to the partition are accesssed via Partition::splitSlices() while
the core range of slices exposed by a Partition includes both unsplit
slices and slices which will be split by the end, but started within the
offset range of the partition. This is particularly hard to address
because the algorithm which computes partitions quite literally doesn't
know which slices these will end up being until too late. I'm looking at
whether I can fix that or not, but I'm not optimistic. I'll update the
comments and/or names to further explain this either way. I've also
added one FIXME in this patch relating to this confusion so that I don't
forget about it.
llvm-svn: 224798
- Fix the case where more than 1 common instructions derived from the same
operand cannot be sunk. When a pair of value has more than 1 derived values
in both branches, only 1 derived value could be sunk.
- Replace BB1 -> (BB2, PN) map with joint value map, i.e.
map of (BB1, BB2) -> PN, which is more accurate to track common ops.
llvm-svn: 224757
A cast that was introduced in r209007 was accidentally left in after the changes made to GlobalAlias rules in r210062. This crashes if the aliasee is a now-leggal ConstantExpr.
llvm-svn: 224756
fragmented variables.
This caused codegen to start crashing when we built somewhat large
programs with debug info and optimizations. 'check-msan' hit in, and
I suspect a bootstrap would as well. I mailed a test case to the
review thread.
llvm-svn: 224750
Since these are all created in the DenseMap before they are referenced,
there's no problem with pointer validity by the time it's required. This
removes another use of DeleteContainerSeconds/manual memory management
which I'm cleaning up from time to time.
llvm-svn: 224744
a time into a partition iterator and a Partition class.
There is a lot of knock-on simplification that this enables, largely
stemming from having a Partition object to refer to in lots of helpers.
I've only done a minimal amount of that because enoguh stuff is changing
as-is in this commit.
This shouldn't change any observable behavior. I've worked hard to
preserve the *exact* traversal semantics which were originally present
even though some of them make no sense. I'll be changing some of this in
subsequent commits now that the logic is carefully factored into
a reusable place.
The primary motivation for this change is to break the rewriting into
phases in order to support more intelligent rewriting. For example, I'm
planning to change how split loads and stores are rewritten to remove
the significant overuse of integer bit packing in the resulting code and
allow more effective secondary splitting of aggregates. For any of this
to work, they have to share the exact traversal logic.
llvm-svn: 224742
Take two disjoint Loops L1 and L2.
LoopSimplify fails to simplify some loops (e.g. when indirect branches
are involved). In such situations, it can happen that an exit for L1 is
the header of L2. Thus, when we create PHIs in one of such exits we are
also inserting PHIs in L2 header.
This could break LCSSA form for L2 because these inserted PHIs can also
have uses in L2 exits, which are never handled in the current
implementation. Provide a fix for this corner case and test that we
don't assert/crash on that.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6624
rdar://problem/19166231
llvm-svn: 224740
This allows us to generate debug info for extremely advanced code such as
typedef struct { long int a; int b;} S;
int foo(S s) {
return s.b;
}
which at -O1 on x86_64 is codegen'd into
define i32 @foo(i64 %s.coerce0, i32 %s.coerce1) #0 {
ret i32 %s.coerce1, !dbg !24
}
with this patch we emit the following debug info for this
TAG_formal_parameter [3]
AT_location( 0x00000000
0x0000000000000000 - 0x0000000000000006: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rsi, piece 0x00000004
0x0000000000000006 - 0x0000000000000008: rdi, piece 0x00000008, rax, piece 0x00000004 )
AT_name( "s" )
AT_decl_file( "/Volumes/Data/llvm/_build.ninja.release/test.c" )
Thanks to chandlerc, dblaikie, and echristo for their feedback on all
previous iterations of this patch!
llvm-svn: 224739
much of the glory of clang-format, and now any time I touch it I risk
introducing formatting changes as part of a functional commit.
Also, clang-format is *way* better at formatting my code than I am.
Most of this is a huge improvement although I reverted a couple of
places where I hit a clang-format bug with lambdas that has been filed
but not (fully) fixed.
llvm-svn: 224666
The visitSwitchInst generates SUB constant expressions to recompute the
switch condition. When truncating the condition to a smaller type, SUB
expressions should use the previous type (before trunc) for both
operands. Also, fix code to also return the modified switch when only
the truncation is performed.
This fixes an assertion crash.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6644
rdar://problem/19191835
llvm-svn: 224588
Backends recognize (-0.0 - X) as the canonical form for fneg
and produce better code. Eg, ppc64 with 0.0:
lis r2, ha16(LCPI0_0)
lfs f0, lo16(LCPI0_0)(r2)
fsubs f1, f0, f1
blr
vs. -0.0:
fneg f1, f1
blr
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6723
llvm-svn: 224583
Reverts commit r224574 to appease buildbots:
The visitSwitchInst generates SUB constant expressions to recompute the
switch condition. When truncating the condition to a smaller type, SUB
expressions should use the previous type (before trunc) for both
operands. This fixes an assertion crash.
llvm-svn: 224576
The visitSwitchInst generates SUB constant expressions to recompute the
switch condition. When truncating the condition to a smaller type, SUB
expressions should use the previous type (before trunc) for both
operands. This fixes an assertion crash.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6644
rdar://problem/19191835
llvm-svn: 224574
Instead of reusing the name `MapValue()` when mapping `Metadata`, use
`MapMetadata()`. The old name doesn't make much sense after the
`Metadata`/`Value` split.
llvm-svn: 224566
Some intrinsics, like s/uadd.with.overflow and umul.with.overflow, are already strength reduced.
This change adds other arithmetic intrinsics: s/usub.with.overflow, smul.with.overflow.
It completes the work on PR20194.
llvm-svn: 224417
The loop vectorizer optimizes loops containing conditional memory
accesses by generating masked load and store intrinsics.
This decision is target dependent.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6527
llvm-svn: 224334
- by Ella Bolshinsky
The alias analysis is used define whether the given instruction
is a barrier for store sinking. For 2 identical stores, following
instructions are checked in the both basic blocks, to determine
whether they are sinking barriers.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6420
llvm-svn: 224247
Summary:
InstCombine infinite-loops for the testcase added
It is because InstCombine is generating instructions that can be
optimized by itself. Fix by not optimizing frem if the optimized
type is the same as original type.
rdar://problem/19150820
Reviewers: majnemer
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6634
llvm-svn: 224097
This commit changes the way we get fake stack from ASan runtime
(to find use-after-return errors) and the way we represent local
variables:
- __asan_stack_malloc function now returns pointer to newly allocated
fake stack frame, or NULL if frame cannot be allocated. It doesn't
take pointer to real stack as an input argument, it is calculated
inside the runtime.
- __asan_stack_free function doesn't take pointer to real stack as
an input argument. Now this function is never called if fake stack
frame wasn't allocated.
- __asan_init version is bumped to reflect changes in the ABI.
- new flag "-asan-stack-dynamic-alloca" allows to store all the
function local variables in a dynamic alloca, instead of the static
one. It reduces the stack space usage in use-after-return mode
(dynamic alloca will not be called if the local variables are stored
in a fake stack), and improves the debug info quality for local
variables (they will not be described relatively to %rbp/%rsp, which
are assumed to be clobbered by function calls). This flag is turned
off by default for now, but I plan to turn it on after more
testing.
llvm-svn: 224062
This patch teaches the instruction combiner how to fold a call to 'insertqi' if
the 'length field' (3rd operand) is set to zero, and if the sum between
field 'length' and 'bit index' (4th operand) is bigger than 64.
From the AMD64 Architecture Programmer's Manual:
1. If the sum of the bit index + length field is greater than 64, then the
results are undefined;
2. A value of zero in the field length is defined as a length of 64.
This patch improves the existing combining logic for intrinsic 'insertqi'
adding extra checks to address both point 1. and point 2.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6583
llvm-svn: 224054
patterns.
This is causing Clang to miscompile itself for 32-bit x86 somehow, and likely
also on ARM and PPC. I really don't know how, but reverting now that I've
confirmed this is actually the culprit. I have a reproduction as well and so
should be able to restore this shortly.
This reverts commit r223764.
Original commit log follows:
Teach instcombine to canonicalize "element extraction" from a load of an
integer and "element insertion" into a store of an integer into actual
element extraction, element insertion, and vector loads and stores.
Previously various parts of LLVM (including instcombine itself) would
introduce integer loads and stores into the code as a way of opaquely
loading and storing "bits". In some cases (such as a memcpy of
std::complex<float> object) we will eventually end up using those bits
in non-integer types. In order for SROA to effectively promote the
allocas involved, it splits these "store a bag of bits" integer loads
and stores up into the constituent parts. However, for non-alloca loads
and tsores which remain, it uses integer math to recombine the values
into a large integer to load or store.
All of this would be "fine", except that it forces LLVM to go through
integer math to combine and split up values. While this makes perfect
sense for integers (and in fact is critical for bitfields to end up
lowering efficiently) it is *terrible* for non-integer types, especially
floating point types. We have a much more canonical way of representing
the act of concatenating the bits of two SSA values in LLVM: a vector
and insertelement. This patch teaching InstCombine to use this
representation.
With this patch applied, LLVM will no longer introduce integer math into
the critical path of every loop over std::complex<float> operations such
as those that make up the hot path of ... oh, most HPC code, Eigen, and
any other heavy linear algebra library.
For the record, I looked *extensively* at fixing this in other parts of
the compiler, but it just doesn't work:
- We really do want to canonicalize memcpy and other bit-motion to
integer loads and stores. SSA values are tremendously more powerful
than "copy" intrinsics. Not doing this regresses massive amounts of
LLVM's scalar optimizer.
- We really do need to split up integer loads and stores of this form in
SROA or every memcpy of a trivially copyable struct will prevent SSA
formation of the members of that struct. It essentially turns off
SROA.
- The closest alternative is to actually split the loads and stores when
partitioning with SROA, but this has all of the downsides historically
discussed of splitting up loads and stores -- the wide-store
information is fundamentally lost. We would also see performance
regressions for bitfield-heavy code and other places where the
integers aren't really intended to be split without seemingly
arbitrary logic to treat integers totally differently.
- We *can* effectively fix this in instcombine, so it isn't that hard of
a choice to make IMO.
llvm-svn: 223813
Split `Metadata` away from the `Value` class hierarchy, as part of
PR21532. Assembly and bitcode changes are in the wings, but this is the
bulk of the change for the IR C++ API.
I have a follow-up patch prepared for `clang`. If this breaks other
sub-projects, I apologize in advance :(. Help me compile it on Darwin
I'll try to fix it. FWIW, the errors should be easy to fix, so it may
be simpler to just fix it yourself.
This breaks the build for all metadata-related code that's out-of-tree.
Rest assured the transition is mechanical and the compiler should catch
almost all of the problems.
Here's a quick guide for updating your code:
- `Metadata` is the root of a class hierarchy with three main classes:
`MDNode`, `MDString`, and `ValueAsMetadata`. It is distinct from
the `Value` class hierarchy. It is typeless -- i.e., instances do
*not* have a `Type`.
- `MDNode`'s operands are all `Metadata *` (instead of `Value *`).
- `TrackingVH<MDNode>` and `WeakVH` referring to metadata can be
replaced with `TrackingMDNodeRef` and `TrackingMDRef`, respectively.
If you're referring solely to resolved `MDNode`s -- post graph
construction -- just use `MDNode*`.
- `MDNode` (and the rest of `Metadata`) have only limited support for
`replaceAllUsesWith()`.
As long as an `MDNode` is pointing at a forward declaration -- the
result of `MDNode::getTemporary()` -- it maintains a side map of its
uses and can RAUW itself. Once the forward declarations are fully
resolved RAUW support is dropped on the ground. This means that
uniquing collisions on changing operands cause nodes to become
"distinct". (This already happened fairly commonly, whenever an
operand went to null.)
If you're constructing complex (non self-reference) `MDNode` cycles,
you need to call `MDNode::resolveCycles()` on each node (or on a
top-level node that somehow references all of the nodes). Also,
don't do that. Metadata cycles (and the RAUW machinery needed to
construct them) are expensive.
- An `MDNode` can only refer to a `Constant` through a bridge called
`ConstantAsMetadata` (one of the subclasses of `ValueAsMetadata`).
As a side effect, accessing an operand of an `MDNode` that is known
to be, e.g., `ConstantInt`, takes three steps: first, cast from
`Metadata` to `ConstantAsMetadata`; second, extract the `Constant`;
third, cast down to `ConstantInt`.
The eventual goal is to introduce `MDInt`/`MDFloat`/etc. and have
metadata schema owners transition away from using `Constant`s when
the type isn't important (and they don't care about referring to
`GlobalValue`s).
In the meantime, I've added transitional API to the `mdconst`
namespace that matches semantics with the old code, in order to
avoid adding the error-prone three-step equivalent to every call
site. If your old code was:
MDNode *N = foo();
bar(isa <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
baz(cast <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
bak(cast_or_null <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
bat(dyn_cast <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
bay(dyn_cast_or_null<ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(4)));
you can trivially match its semantics with:
MDNode *N = foo();
bar(mdconst::hasa <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
baz(mdconst::extract <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
bak(mdconst::extract_or_null <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
bat(mdconst::dyn_extract <ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
bay(mdconst::dyn_extract_or_null<ConstantInt>(N->getOperand(4)));
and when you transition your metadata schema to `MDInt`:
MDNode *N = foo();
bar(isa <MDInt>(N->getOperand(0)));
baz(cast <MDInt>(N->getOperand(1)));
bak(cast_or_null <MDInt>(N->getOperand(2)));
bat(dyn_cast <MDInt>(N->getOperand(3)));
bay(dyn_cast_or_null<MDInt>(N->getOperand(4)));
- A `CallInst` -- specifically, intrinsic instructions -- can refer to
metadata through a bridge called `MetadataAsValue`. This is a
subclass of `Value` where `getType()->isMetadataTy()`.
`MetadataAsValue` is the *only* class that can legally refer to a
`LocalAsMetadata`, which is a bridged form of non-`Constant` values
like `Argument` and `Instruction`. It can also refer to any other
`Metadata` subclass.
(I'll break all your testcases in a follow-up commit, when I propagate
this change to assembly.)
llvm-svn: 223802
replaceDbgDeclareForAlloca() replaces an alloca by a value storing the
address of what was the alloca. If there is a dbg.declare corresponding
to that alloca, we need to lower it to a dbg.value describing the additional
dereference operation to be performed to get to the underlying variable.
This is done by adding a DW_OP_deref to the complex location part of the
location description. This deref was added to the end of the operation list,
which is wrong. The expression applies to what is described by the
dbg.{declare,value}, and as we are changing this, we need to apply the
DW_OP_deref as the first operation in the list.
Part of the fix for rdar://19162268.
llvm-svn: 223799
integer and "element insertion" into a store of an integer into actual
element extraction, element insertion, and vector loads and stores.
Previously various parts of LLVM (including instcombine itself) would
introduce integer loads and stores into the code as a way of opaquely
loading and storing "bits". In some cases (such as a memcpy of
std::complex<float> object) we will eventually end up using those bits
in non-integer types. In order for SROA to effectively promote the
allocas involved, it splits these "store a bag of bits" integer loads
and stores up into the constituent parts. However, for non-alloca loads
and tsores which remain, it uses integer math to recombine the values
into a large integer to load or store.
All of this would be "fine", except that it forces LLVM to go through
integer math to combine and split up values. While this makes perfect
sense for integers (and in fact is critical for bitfields to end up
lowering efficiently) it is *terrible* for non-integer types, especially
floating point types. We have a much more canonical way of representing
the act of concatenating the bits of two SSA values in LLVM: a vector
and insertelement. This patch teaching InstCombine to use this
representation.
With this patch applied, LLVM will no longer introduce integer math into
the critical path of every loop over std::complex<float> operations such
as those that make up the hot path of ... oh, most HPC code, Eigen, and
any other heavy linear algebra library.
For the record, I looked *extensively* at fixing this in other parts of
the compiler, but it just doesn't work:
- We really do want to canonicalize memcpy and other bit-motion to
integer loads and stores. SSA values are tremendously more powerful
than "copy" intrinsics. Not doing this regresses massive amounts of
LLVM's scalar optimizer.
- We really do need to split up integer loads and stores of this form in
SROA or every memcpy of a trivially copyable struct will prevent SSA
formation of the members of that struct. It essentially turns off
SROA.
- The closest alternative is to actually split the loads and stores when
partitioning with SROA, but this has all of the downsides historically
discussed of splitting up loads and stores -- the wide-store
information is fundamentally lost. We would also see performance
regressions for bitfield-heavy code and other places where the
integers aren't really intended to be split without seemingly
arbitrary logic to treat integers totally differently.
- We *can* effectively fix this in instcombine, so it isn't that hard of
a choice to make IMO.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6548
llvm-svn: 223764
Introduce the ``llvm.instrprof_increment`` intrinsic and the
``-instrprof`` pass. These provide the infrastructure for writing
counters for profiling, as in clang's ``-fprofile-instr-generate``.
The implementation of the instrprof pass is ported directly out of the
CodeGenPGO classes in clang, and with the followup in clang that rips
that code out to use these new intrinsics this ends up being NFC.
Doing the instrumentation this way opens some doors in terms of
improving the counter performance. For example, this will make it
simple to experiment with alternate lowering strategies, and allows us
to try handling profiling specially in some optimizations if we want
to.
Finally, this drastically simplifies the frontend and puts all of the
lowering logic in one place.
llvm-svn: 223672
Do not realign origin address if the corresponding application
address is at least 4-byte-aligned.
Saves 2.5% code size in track-origins mode.
llvm-svn: 223464
Added instcombine optimizations for BSWAP with AND/OR/XOR ops:
OP( BSWAP(x), BSWAP(y) ) -> BSWAP( OP(x, y) )
OP( BSWAP(x), CONSTANT ) -> BSWAP( OP(x, BSWAP(CONSTANT) ) )
Since its just a one liner, I've also added BSWAP to the DAGCombiner equivalent as well:
fold (OP (bswap x), (bswap y)) -> (bswap (OP x, y))
Refactored bswap-fold tests to use FileCheck instead of just checking that the bswaps had gone.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6407
llvm-svn: 223349
This allows cases like float x; fmin(1.0, x); to be optimized to fminf(1.0f, x);
rdar://19049359
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6496
llvm-svn: 223270
This change makes MemorySanitizer instrumentation a bit more strict
about instructions that have no origin id assigned to them.
This would have caught the bug that was fixed in r222918.
This is re-commit of r222997, reverted in r223211, with 3 more
missing origins added.
llvm-svn: 223236
Try to convert two compares of a signed range check into a single unsigned compare.
Examples:
(icmp sge x, 0) & (icmp slt x, n) --> icmp ult x, n
(icmp slt x, 0) | (icmp sgt x, n) --> icmp ugt x, n
llvm-svn: 223224
Remove an unnecessary `MDNode::replaceAllUsesWith()`. In the preceding
line, `TheLoop->setLoopID()` visits all backedges and sets the new loop
ID. This sufficiently updates the loop metadata.
Metadata RAUW is going away as part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 223210
We were assuming that each back-edge in a region represented a unique
loop, which is not always the case. We need to use LoopInfo to
correctly determine which back-edges are loops.
llvm-svn: 223199
Patch by Ben Gamari!
This redefines the `prefix` attribute introduced previously and
introduces a `prologue` attribute. There are a two primary usecases
that these attributes aim to serve,
1. Function prologue sigils
2. Function hot-patching: Enable the user to insert `nop` operations
at the beginning of the function which can later be safely replaced
with a call to some instrumentation facility
3. Runtime metadata: Allow a compiler to insert data for use by the
runtime during execution. GHC is one example of a compiler that
needs this functionality for its tables-next-to-code functionality.
Previously `prefix` served cases (1) and (2) quite well by allowing the user
to introduce arbitrary data at the entrypoint but before the function
body. Case (3), however, was poorly handled by this approach as it
required that prefix data was valid executable code.
Here we redefine the notion of prefix data to instead be data which
occurs immediately before the function entrypoint (i.e. the symbol
address). Since prefix data now occurs before the function entrypoint,
there is no need for the data to be valid code.
The previous notion of prefix data now goes under the name "prologue
data" to emphasize its duality with the function epilogue.
The intention here is to handle cases (1) and (2) with prologue data and
case (3) with prefix data.
References
----------
This idea arose out of discussions[1] with Reid Kleckner in response to a
proposal to introduce the notion of symbol offsets to enable handling of
case (3).
[1] http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2014-May/073235.html
Test Plan: testsuite
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6454
llvm-svn: 223189
This is the third patch in a small series. It contains the CodeGen support for lowering the gc.statepoint intrinsic sequences (223078) to the STATEPOINT pseudo machine instruction (223085). The change also includes the set of helper routines and classes for working with gc.statepoints, gc.relocates, and gc.results since the lowering code uses them.
With this change, gc.statepoints should be functionally complete. The documentation will follow in the fourth change, and there will likely be some cleanup changes, but interested parties can start experimenting now.
I'm not particularly happy with the amount of code or complexity involved with the lowering step, but at least it's fairly well isolated. The statepoint lowering code is split into it's own files and anyone not working on the statepoint support itself should be able to ignore it.
During the lowering process, we currently spill aggressively to stack. This is not entirely ideal (and we have plans to do better), but it's functional, relatively straight forward, and matches closely the implementations of the patchpoint intrinsics. Most of the complexity comes from trying to keep relocated copies of values in the same stack slots across statepoints. Doing so avoids the insertion of pointless load and store instructions to reshuffle the stack. The current implementation isn't as effective as I'd like, but it is functional and 'good enough' for many common use cases.
In the long term, I'd like to figure out how to integrate the statepoint lowering with the register allocator. In principal, we shouldn't need to eagerly spill at all. The register allocator should do any spilling required and the statepoint should simply record that fact. Depending on how challenging that turns out to be, we may invest in a smarter global stack slot assignment mechanism as a stop gap measure.
Reviewed by: atrick, ributzka
llvm-svn: 223137
Follow up from r222926. Also handle multiple destinations from merged
cases on multiple and subsequent phi instructions.
rdar://problem/19106978
llvm-svn: 223135
Load instructions are inserted into loop preheaders when sinking stores
and later removed if not used by the SSA updater. Avoid sinking if the
loop has no preheader and avoid crashes. This fixes one more side effect
of not handling indirectbr instructions properly on LoopSimplify.
llvm-svn: 223119
An unreachable default destination can be exploited by other optimizations, and
SDag lowering is now prepared to handle them efficiently.
For example, branches to the unreachable destination will be optimized away,
such as in the case of range checks for switch lookup tables.
On 64-bit Linux, this reduces the size of a clang bootstrap by 80 kB (and
Chromium by 30 kB).
llvm-svn: 223050
This change makes MemorySanitizer instrumentation a bit more strict
about instructions that have no origin id assigned to them.
This would have caught the bug that was fixed in r222918.
No functional change.
llvm-svn: 222997
This reverts commit r222632 (and follow-up r222636), which caused a host
of LNT failures on an internal bot. I'll respond to the commit on the
list with a reproduction of one of the failures.
Conflicts:
lib/Target/X86/X86TargetTransformInfo.cpp
llvm-svn: 222936
We may be in a situation where the icmps might not be near each other in
a tree of or instructions. Try to dig out related compare instructions
and see if they combine.
N.B. This won't fire on deep trees of compares because rewritting the
tree might end up creating a net increase of IR. We may have to resort
to something more sophisticated if this is a real problem.
llvm-svn: 222928
Loop simplify skips exit-block insertion when exits contain indirectbr
instructions. This leads to an assertion in LICM when trying to sink
stores out of non-dedicated loop exits containing indirectbr
instructions. This patch fix this issue by re-checking for dedicated
exits in LICM prior to store sink attempts.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6414
rdar://problem/18943047
llvm-svn: 222927
Switch cases statements with sequential values that branch to the same
destination BB may often be handled together in a single new source BB.
In this scenario we need to remove remaining incoming values from PHI
instructions in the destination BB, as to match the number of source
branches.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6415
rdar://problem/19040894
llvm-svn: 222926
MSan does not assign origin for instrumentation temps (i.e. the ones that do
not come from the application code), but "select" instrumentation erroneously
tried to use one of those.
https://code.google.com/p/memory-sanitizer/issues/detail?id=78
llvm-svn: 222918
Fixed missing dominance check.
Original commit message:
This optimization tries to reuse the generated compare instruction, if there is a comparison against the default value after the switch.
Example:
if (idx < tablesize)
r = table[idx]; // table does not contain default_value
else
r = default_value;
if (r != default_value)
...
Is optimized to:
cond = idx < tablesize;
if (cond)
r = table[idx];
else
r = default_value;
if (cond)
...
Jump threading will then eliminate the second if(cond).
llvm-svn: 222891
This optimization tries to reuse the generated compare instruction, if there is a comparison against the default value after the switch.
Example:
if (idx < tablesize)
r = table[idx]; // table does not contain default_value
else
r = default_value;
if (r != default_value)
...
Is optimized to:
cond = idx < tablesize;
if (cond)
r = table[idx];
else
r = default_value;
if (cond)
...
\endcode
Jump threading will then eliminate the second if(cond).
llvm-svn: 222872
This reverts commit r210006, it miscompiled libapr which is used in who
knows how many projects.
A test has been added to ensure that we don't regress again.
I'll work on a rewrite of what the optimization was trying to do later.
llvm-svn: 222856
stored rather than the pointer type.
This change is analogous to r220138 which changed the canonicalization
for loads. The rationale is the same: memory does not have a type,
operations (and thus the values they produce) have a type. We should
match that type as closely as possible rather than reading some form of
semantics into the pointer type.
With this change, loads and stores should no longer be made with
nonsensical types for the values that tehy load and store. This is
particularly important when trying to match specific loaded and stored
types in the process of doing other instcombines, which is what led me
down this twisty maze of miscanonicalization.
I've put quite some effort into looking through IR to find places where
LLVM's optimizer was being unreasonably conservative in the face of
mismatched load and store types, however it is possible (let's say,
likely!) I have missed some. If you see regressions here, or from
r220138, the likely cause is some part of LLVM failing to cope with load
and store types differing. Test cases appreciated, it is important that
we root all of these out of LLVM.
llvm-svn: 222748
clearly only exactly equal width ptrtoint and inttoptr casts are no-op
casts, it says so right there in the langref. Make the code agree.
Original log from r220277:
Teach the load analysis to allow finding available values which require
inttoptr or ptrtoint cast provided there is datalayout available.
Eventually, the datalayout can just be required but in practice it will
always be there today.
To go with the ability to expose available values requiring a ptrtoint
or inttoptr cast, helpers are added to perform one of these three casts.
These smarts are necessary to finish canonicalizing loads and stores to
the operational type requirements without regressing fundamental
combines.
I've added some test cases. These should actually improve as the load
combining and store combining improves, but they may fundamentally be
highlighting some missing combines for select in addition to exercising
the specific added logic to load analysis.
llvm-svn: 222739
We would create an instruction but not inserting it.
Not inserting the unused instruction would lead us to verification
failure.
This fixes PR21653.
llvm-svn: 222659
We tried to get the result of DataLayout::getLargestLegalIntTypeSize but
we didn't have a DataLayout. This resulted in opt crashing.
This fixes PR21651.
llvm-svn: 222645
Introduced new target-independent intrinsics in order to support masked vector loads and stores. The loop vectorizer optimizes loops containing conditional memory accesses by generating these intrinsics for existing targets AVX2 and AVX-512. The vectorizer asks the target about availability of masked vector loads and stores.
Added SDNodes for masked operations and lowering patterns for X86 code generator.
Examples:
<16 x i32> @llvm.masked.load.v16i32(i8* %addr, <16 x i32> %passthru, i32 4 /* align */, <16 x i1> %mask)
declare void @llvm.masked.store.v8f64(i8* %addr, <8 x double> %value, i32 4, <8 x i1> %mask)
Scalarizer for other targets (not AVX2/AVX-512) will be done in a separate patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6191
llvm-svn: 222632
Fixes the self-host fail. Note that this commit activates dominator
analysis in the combiner by default (like the original commit did).
llvm-svn: 222590
The alloca's type is irrelevant, only those types which are used in a
load or store of the exact size of the slice should be considered.
This manifested as an assertion failure when we compared the various
types: we had a size mismatch.
This fixes PR21480.
llvm-svn: 222499
Code seems cleaner and easier to understand this way
This is basically r222416, after fixes for MSVC lack of standard
support, and a few cleaning (got rid of a warning).
Thanks Nakamura Takumi and Nico Weber for the MSVC fixes.
llvm-svn: 222472
Currently LoopUnroll generates a prologue loop before the main loop
body to execute first N%UnrollFactor iterations. Also, this loop is
used if trip-count can overflow - it's determined by a runtime check.
However, we've been mistakenly optimizing this loop to a linear code for
UnrollFactor = 2, not taking into account that it also serves as a safe
version of the loop if its trip-count overflows.
llvm-svn: 222451
This reverts commit r222142. This is causing/exposing an execution-time regression
in spec2006/gcc and coremark on AArch64/A57/Ofast.
Conflicts:
test/Transforms/Reassociate/optional-flags.ll
llvm-svn: 222398
When the BasicBlock containing the return instrution has a PHI with 2
incoming values, FoldReturnIntoUncondBranch will remove the no longer
used incoming value and remove the no longer needed phi as well. This
leaves us with a BB that no longer has a PHI, but the subsequent call
to FoldReturnIntoUncondBranch from FoldReturnAndProcessPred will not
remove the return instruction (which still uses the result of the call
instruction). This prevents EliminateRecursiveTailCall to remove
the value, as it is still being used in a basicblock which has no
predecessors.
The basicblock can not be erased on the spot, because its iterator is
still being used in runTRE.
This issue was exposed when removing the threshold on size for lifetime
marker insertion for named temporaries in clang. The testcase is a much
reduced version of peelOffOuterExpr(const Expr*, const ExplodedNode *)
from clang/lib/StaticAnalyzer/Core/BugReporterVisitors.cpp.
llvm-svn: 222354
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.
This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...
llvm-svn: 222334
If LowerGEP is enabled, it can lower a GEP with multiple indices into GEPs with a single index
or arithmetic operations. Lowering GEPs can always extract structure indices. Lowering GEPs can
also give use more optimization opportunities. It can benefit passes like CSE, LICM and CGP.
Reviewed in http://reviews.llvm.org/D5864
llvm-svn: 222328
Summary:
move the code from BreakCriticalEdges::runOnFunction()
into a separate utility function llvm::SplitAllCriticalEdges()
so that it can be used independently.
No functionality change intended.
Test Plan: check-llvm
Reviewers: nlewycky
Reviewed By: nlewycky
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6313
llvm-svn: 222288
We would attempt to replace an frem's operand with the same operand.
This would cause InstCombine to think real work was done, causing
InstCombine to enter an infinite loop.
This fixes the second part of PR21576.
llvm-svn: 222265
EarlyCSE is giving up on the current instruction immediately when it recognizes that the current instruction makes a previous store trivially dead. There's no reason to do this. Once the previous store has been deleted, it's perfectly legal to remember the value of the current store (for value forwarding) and the fact the store occurred (it could be dead too!).
Reviewed by: Hal
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6301
llvm-svn: 222241
It is impossible for (x & INT_MAX) == 0 && x == INT_MAX to ever be true.
While this sort of reasoning should normally live in InstSimplify,
the machinery that derives this result is not trivial to split out.
llvm-svn: 222230
I added a pessimization in r217102 to prevent miscompiles when the
incremented induction variable was used in a comparison; it would be
poison.
Try to use the incremented induction variable more often when we can be
sure that the increment won't end in poison.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6222
llvm-svn: 222213
When converting a switch to a lookup table we might have to generate a bitmaks
to encode and check for holes in the original switch statement.
The type of this mask depends on the number of switch statements, which can
result in illegal types for pretty much all architectures.
To avoid unnecessary type legalization and help FastISel this commit increases
the size of the bitmask to next power-of-2 value when necessary.
This fixes rdar://problem/18984639.
llvm-svn: 222168
This is a simple optimization for switch table lookup:
It computes the output value directly with an (optional) mul and add if there is a linear mapping between index and output.
Example:
int f1(int x) {
switch (x) {
case 0: return 10;
case 1: return 11;
case 2: return 12;
case 3: return 13;
}
return 0;
}
generates:
define i32 @f1(i32 %x) #0 {
entry:
%0 = icmp ult i32 %x, 4
br i1 %0, label %switch.lookup, label %return
switch.lookup:
%switch.offset = add i32 %x, 10
ret i32 %switch.offset
return:
ret i32 0
}
llvm-svn: 222121
This adds back r222061, but now calls initializePAEvalPass from the correct
library to avoid link problems.
Original message:
Don't make assumptions about the name of private global variables.
Private variables are can be renamed, so it is not reliable to make
decisions on the name.
The name is also dropped by the assembler before getting to the
linker, so using the name causes a disconnect between how llvm makes a
decision (var name) and how the linker makes a decision (section it is
in).
This patch changes one case where we were looking at the variable name to use
the section instead.
Test tuning by Michael Gottesman.
llvm-svn: 222117
Private variables are can be renamed, so it is not reliable to make
decisions on the name.
The name is also dropped by the assembler before getting to the
linker, so using the name causes a disconnect between how llvm makes a
decision (var name) and how the linker makes a decision (section it is
in).
This patch changes one case where we were looking at the variable name to use
the section instead.
Test tuning by Michael Gottesman.
llvm-svn: 222061
We would attempt to replace a fptrunc of an frem with an identical
fptrunc. This would cause the new fptrunc to be added to the worklist.
Of course, this results in an infinite loop because we will keep
visiting the newly created fptruncs.
This fixes PR21576.
llvm-svn: 222040
doing Load PRE"
This commit updates the failing test in
Analysis/TypeBasedAliasAnalysis/gvn-nonlocal-type-mismatch.ll
The failing test is sensitive to the order in which we process loads. This
version turns on the RPO traversal instead of the while DT traversal in GVN.
The new test code is functionally same just the order of loads that are
eliminated is swapped.
This new version also fixes an issue where GVN splits a critical edge and
potentially invalidate the RPO/DT iterator.
llvm-svn: 222039
Prior to this commit fmul and fadd binary operators were being canonicalized for
both scalar and vector versions. We now canonicalize add, mul, and, or, and xor
vector instructions.
llvm-svn: 222006
Hide the fact that `MDString`'s string is stored in `Value::Name` --
that's going to change soon. Update the only in-tree client that was
using it instead of `Value::getString()`.
Part of PR21532.
llvm-svn: 221951
Windows defines NULL to 0, which when used as an argument to a variadic
function, is not a null pointer constant. As a result, Clang's
-Wsentinel fires on this code. Using '0' would be wrong on most 64-bit
platforms, but both MSVC and Clang make it work on Windows. Sidestep the
issue with nullptr.
llvm-svn: 221940
One of them (__memcpy_chk) was already there, the others were checked
by comparing function names.
Note that the fortified libfuncs are now part of TLI, but are always
available, because they aren't generated, only optimized into the
non-checking versions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6179
llvm-svn: 221817
Summary:
Reapply r221772. The old patch breaks the bot because the @indvar_32_bit test
was run whether NVPTX was enabled or not.
IndVarSimplify should not widen an indvar if arithmetics on the wider
indvar are more expensive than those on the narrower indvar. For
instance, although NVPTX64 treats i64 as a legal type, an ADD on i64 is
twice as expensive as that on i32, because the hardware needs to
simulate a 64-bit integer using two 32-bit integers.
Split from D6188, and based on D6195 which adds NVPTXTargetTransformInfo.
Fixes PR21148.
Test Plan:
Added @indvar_32_bit that verifies we do not widen an indvar if the arithmetics
on the wider type are more expensive. This test is run only when NVPTX is
enabled.
Reviewers: jholewinski, eliben, meheff, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6196
llvm-svn: 221799
Summary:
IndVarSimplify should not widen an indvar if arithmetics on the wider
indvar are more expensive than those on the narrower indvar. For
instance, although NVPTX64 treats i64 as a legal type, an ADD on i64 is
twice as expensive as that on i32, because the hardware needs to
simulate a 64-bit integer using two 32-bit integers.
Split from D6188, and based on D6195 which adds NVPTXTargetTransformInfo.
Fixes PR21148.
Test Plan:
Added @indvar_32_bit that verifies we do not widen an indvar if the arithmetics
on the wider type are more expensive.
Reviewers: jholewinski, eliben, meheff, atrick
Reviewed By: atrick
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6196
llvm-svn: 221772
This patch enables the vec_vsx_ld and vec_vsx_st intrinsics for
PowerPC, which provide programmer access to the lxvd2x, lxvw4x,
stxvd2x, and stxvw4x instructions.
New LLVM intrinsics are provided to represent these four instructions
in IntrinsicsPowerPC.td. These are patterned after the similar
intrinsics for lvx and stvx (Altivec). In PPCInstrVSX.td, these
intrinsics are tied to the code gen patterns, with additional patterns
to allow plain vanilla loads and stores to still generate these
instructions.
At -O1 and higher the intrinsics are immediately converted to loads
and stores in InstCombineCalls.cpp. This will open up more
optimization opportunities while still allowing the correct
instructions to be generated. (Similar code exists for aligned
Altivec loads and stores.)
The new intrinsics are added to the code that checks for consecutive
loads and stores in PPCISelLowering.cpp, as well as to
PPCTargetLowering::getTgtMemIntrinsic().
There's a new test to verify the correct instructions are generated.
The loads and stores tend to be reordered, so the test just counts
their number. It runs at -O2, as it's not very effective to test this
at -O0, when many unnecessary loads and stores are generated.
I ended up having to modify vsx-fma-m.ll. It turns out this test case
is slightly unreliable, but I don't know a good way to prevent
problems with it. The xvmaddmdp instructions read and write the same
register, which is one of the multiplicands. Commutativity allows
either to be chosen. If the FMAs are reordered differently than
expected by the test, the register assignment can be different as a
result. Hopefully this doesn't change often.
There is a companion patch for Clang.
llvm-svn: 221767
We currently have two ways of informing the optimizer that the result of a load is never null: metadata and assume. This change converts the second in to the former. This avoids a need to implement optimizations using both forms.
We should probably extend this basic idea to metadata of other forms; in particular, range metadata. We view is that assumes should be considered a "last resort" for when there isn't a more canonical way to represent something.
Reviewed by: Hal
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5951
llvm-svn: 221737
This is a reapplication of r221171, but we only perform the transformation
on expressions which include a multiplication. We do not transform rem/div
operations as this doesn't appear to be safe in all cases.
llvm-svn: 221721
Summary:
This change moves asan-coverage instrumentation
into a separate Module pass.
The other part of the change in clang introduces a new flag
-fsanitize-coverage=N.
Another small patch will update tests in compiler-rt.
With this patch no functionality change is expected except for the flag name.
The following changes will make the coverage instrumentation work with tsan/msan
Test Plan: Run regression tests, chromium.
Reviewers: nlewycky, samsonov
Reviewed By: nlewycky, samsonov
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6152
llvm-svn: 221718
Instead, we're going to separate metadata from the Value hierarchy. See
PR21532.
This reverts commit r221375.
This reverts commit r221373.
This reverts commit r221359.
This reverts commit r221167.
This reverts commit r221027.
This reverts commit r221024.
This reverts commit r221023.
This reverts commit r220995.
This reverts commit r220994.
llvm-svn: 221711
Switch statements may have more than one incoming edge into the same BB if they
all have the same value. When the switch statement is converted these incoming
edges are now coming from multiple BBs. Updating all incoming values to be from
a single BB is incorrect and would generate invalid LLVM IR.
The fix is to only update the first occurrence of an incoming value. Switch
lowering will perform subsequent calls to this helper function for each incoming
edge with a new basic block - updating all edges in the process.
This fixes rdar://problem/18916275.
llvm-svn: 221627
We already use the llvm namespace. Remove the unnecessary prefix. Use the
StringRef::equals method to compare with C strings rather than instantiating
std::strings.
Addresses late review comments from David Majnemer.
llvm-svn: 221564
Visual Studio 2012 apparently does not support using alias declarations. Use
the more traditional typedef approach. This should let the Windows buildbots
pass. NFC.
llvm-svn: 221554