InstSimplify should do all transformations that ConstProp does, but
one thing that ConstProp does that InstSimplify wouldn't is inline
vector instructions that are constants, e.g. into a ret.
Previously vector instructions wouldn't be inlined in InstSimplify
because llvm::Simplify*Instruction() would return nullptr for specific
instructions, such as vector instructions that were actually constants,
if it couldn't simplify them.
This changes SimplifyInsertElementInst, SimplifyExtractElementInst, and
SimplifyShuffleVectorInst to return a vector constant when possible.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85946
This recommits the following patches now that D85684 has landed
1cf6f210a2 [IR] Disable select ? C : undef -> C fold in ConstantFoldSelectInstruction unless we know C isn't poison.
469da663f2 [InstSimplify] Re-enable select ?, undef, X -> X transform when X is provably not poison
122b0640fc [InstSimplify] Don't fold vectors of partial undef in SimplifySelectInst if the non-undef element value might produce poison
ac0af12ed2 [InstSimplify] Add test cases for opportunities to fold select ?, X, undef -> X when we can prove X isn't poison
9b1e95329a [InstSimplify] Remove select ?, undef, X -> X and select ?, X, undef -> X transforms
Similar to what we do in IIQ, add an isUndefValue() helper that
checks for undef values while respective CanUseUndef. This makes
it much easier to search for places that don't respect the flag
yet.
This is the replacement for D84250 based on D84792. As we recursively
fold with the same value twice, we need to disable undef folds,
to prevent an undef from being folded to two different values.
Reverting rG00f3579aea6e3d4a4b7464c3db47294f71cef9e4 and using the
test case from https://reviews.llvm.org/D83360#2145793, it no longer
performs the incorrect fold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85684
I think this is the last remaining translation of an existing
instcombine transform for the corresponding cmp+sel idiom.
This interpretation is more general though - we can remove
mismatched signed/unsigned combinations in addition to the
more obvious cases.
min/max(X, Y) must produce X or Y as the result, so this is
just another clause in the existing transform that was already
matching a min/max of min/max.
Making use of undef is not safe if the simplification result is not used
to replace all uses of the result. This leads to problems in NewGVN,
which does not replace all uses in the IR directly. See PR33165 for more
details.
This patch adds an option to SimplifyQuery to disable the use of undef.
Note that I've only guarded uses if isa<UndefValue>/m_Undef where
SimplifyQuery is currently available. If we agree on the general
direction, I'll update the remaining uses.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84792
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/pZEr
Name: mul nuw with icmp eq
Pre: (C2 %u C1) != 0
%a = mul nuw i8 %x, C1
%r = icmp eq i8 %a, C2
=>
%r = false
Name: mul nuw with icmp ne
Pre: (C2 %u C1) != 0
%a = mul nuw i8 %x, C1
%r = icmp ne i8 %a, C2
=>
%r = true
There are potentially several other transforms we need to add based on:
D51625
...but it doesn't look like there was follow-up to that patch.
This revision adds the following peephole optimization
and it's negation:
%a = urem i64 %x, %y
%b = icmp ule i64 %a, %x
====>
%b = true
With John Regehr's help this optimization was checked with Alive2
which suggests it should be valid.
This pattern occurs in the bound checks of Rust code, the program
const N: usize = 3;
const T = u8;
pub fn split_mutiple(slice: &[T]) -> (&[T], &[T]) {
let len = slice.len() / N;
slice.split_at(len * N)
}
the method call slice.split_at will check that len * N is within
the bounds of slice, this bounds check is after some transformations
turned into the urem seen above and then LLVM fails to optimize it
any further. Adding this optimization would cause this bounds check
to be fully optimized away.
ref: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/74938
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85092
This is based on the existing code for the non-intrinsic idioms
in InstCombine.
The vector constant constraint is non-obvious: undefs should be
ok in the outer call, but they can't propagate safely from the
inner call in all cases. Example:
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/-2bVbM
define <2 x i8> @src(<2 x i8> %x) {
%0:
%m = umin <2 x i8> %x, { 7, undef }
%m2 = umin <2 x i8> { 9, 9 }, %m
ret <2 x i8> %m2
}
=>
define <2 x i8> @tgt(<2 x i8> %x) {
%0:
%m = umin <2 x i8> %x, { 7, undef }
ret <2 x i8> %m
}
Transformation doesn't verify!
ERROR: Value mismatch
Example:
<2 x i8> %x = < undef, undef >
Source:
<2 x i8> %m = < #x00 (0) [based on undef value], #x00 (0) >
<2 x i8> %m2 = < #x00 (0), #x00 (0) >
Target:
<2 x i8> %m = < #x07 (7), #x10 (16) >
Source value: < #x00 (0), #x00 (0) >
Target value: < #x07 (7), #x10 (16) >
It's always safe to pick the earlier abs regardless of the nsw flag. We'll just lose it if it is on the outer abs but not the inner abs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85053
abs() should be rare enough that using value tracking is not going
to be a compile-time cost burden, so use it to reduce a variety of
potential patterns. We do this in DAGCombiner too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85043
This matches the behavior of simplify calls for regular opcodes -
rely on ConstantFolding before spending time on folds with variables.
I am not aware of any diffs from this re-ordering currently, but there was
potential for unintended behavior from the min/max intrinsics because that
code is implicitly assuming that only 1 of the input operands is constant.
This is the main icmp simplification shortcoming seen in D84655.
Alive2 agrees that the basic examples are correct at least:
define <2 x i1> @src(<2 x i8> %x) {
%0:
%r = icmp sle <2 x i8> { undef, 128 }, %x
ret <2 x i1> %r
}
=>
define <2 x i1> @tgt(<2 x i8> %x) {
%0:
ret <2 x i1> { 1, 1 }
}
Transformation seems to be correct!
define <2 x i1> @src(<2 x i32> %X) {
%0:
%A = or <2 x i32> %X, { 63, 63 }
%B = icmp ult <2 x i32> %A, { undef, 50 }
ret <2 x i1> %B
}
=>
define <2 x i1> @tgt(<2 x i32> %X) {
%0:
ret <2 x i1> { 0, 0 }
}
Transformation seems to be correct!
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/omt2eehttps://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/GW4nP_
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84762
This is a step towards trying to remove unnecessary FP compares
with infinity when compiling with -ffinite-math-only or similar.
I'm intentionally not checking FMF on the fcmp itself because
I'm assuming that will go away eventually.
The analysis part of this was added with rGcd481136 for use with
isKnownNeverNaN. Similarly, that could be an enhancement here to
get predicates like 'one' and 'ueq'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D84035
This reverts most of the following patches due to reports of miscompiles.
I've left the added test cases with comments updated to be FIXMEs.
1cf6f210a2 [IR] Disable select ? C : undef -> C fold in ConstantFoldSelectInstruction unless we know C isn't poison.
469da663f2 [InstSimplify] Re-enable select ?, undef, X -> X transform when X is provably not poison
122b0640fc [InstSimplify] Don't fold vectors of partial undef in SimplifySelectInst if the non-undef element value might produce poison
ac0af12ed2 [InstSimplify] Add test cases for opportunities to fold select ?, X, undef -> X when we can prove X isn't poison
9b1e95329a [InstSimplify] Remove select ?, undef, X -> X and select ?, X, undef -> X transforms
Follow up from the transform being removed in D83360. If X is probably not poison, then the transform is safe.
Still plan to remove or adjust the code from ConstantFolding after this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83440
We can't fold to the non-undef value unless we know it isn't poison. So check each element with isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison. This currently rules out all constant expressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83442
These represent the same thing but 64BIT only showed up from
getHostCPUFeatures providing a list of featuers to clang. While
EM64T showed up from getting the features for a named CPU.
EM64T didn't have a string specifically so it would not be passed
up to clang when getting features for a named CPU. While 64bit
needed a name since that's how it is index.
Merge them by filtering 64bit out before sending features to clang
for named CPUs.
This is picking up a loose thread from D69006: We can simplify
(zext x) ule (sext x) and (zext x) sge (sext x) to true, with
various permutations. Oddly, SCEV knows about this identity,
but nothing on the IR level does.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83081
If we assume(x > y), then we should be able to fold the basic
implications of that, like x >= y. This already happens if either
one of the operands is constant (LVI) or if the conditions are
exactly the same (GVN), but not if we have an implication with
non-constant operands. Support this by querying AssumptionCache.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40149.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D82717
Summary:
simplifyDivRem attempts to walk a VectorType elementwise. Ensure that it
only does so for FixedVectorType
Reviewers: efriedma, spatel, lebedev.ri, david-arm, kmclaughlin
Reviewed By: spatel, david-arm
Subscribers: tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D81856
This intrinsic implements IEEE-754 operation roundToIntegralTiesToEven,
and performs rounding to the nearest integer value, rounding halfway
cases to even. The intrinsic represents the missed case of IEEE-754
rounding operations and now llvm provides full support of the rounding
operations defined by the standard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75670
No changes relative to last time, but after a mitigation for
an AMDGPU regression landed.
---
If SimplifyInstruction() does not succeed in simplifying the
instruction, it will compute the known bits of the instruction
in the hope that all bits are known and the instruction can be
folded to a constant. I have removed a similar optimization
from InstCombine in D75801, and would like to drop this one as well.
On average, we spend ~1% of total compile-time performing this
known bits calculation. However, if we introduce some additional
statistics for known bits computations and how many of them succeed
in simplifying the instruction we get (on test-suite):
instsimplify.NumKnownBits: 216
instsimplify.NumKnownBitsComputed: 13828375
valuetracking.NumKnownBitsComputed: 45860806
Out of ~14M known bits calculations (accounting for approximately
one third of all known bits calculations), only 0.0015% succeed in
producing a constant. Those cases where we do succeed to compute
all known bits will get folded by other passes like InstCombine
later. On test-suite, only lencod.test and GCC-C-execute-pr44858.test
show a hash difference after this change. On lencod we see an
improvement (a loop phi is optimized away), on the GCC torture
test a regression (a function return value is determined only
after IPSCCP, preventing propagation from a noinline function.)
There are various regressions in InstSimplify tests. However, all
of these cases are already handled by InstCombine, and corresponding
tests have already been added there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79294
If SimplifyInstruction() does not succeed in simplifying the
instruction, it will compute the known bits of the instruction
in the hope that all bits are known and the instruction can be
folded to a constant. I have removed a similar optimization
from InstCombine in D75801, and would like to drop this one as well.
On average, we spend ~1% of total compile-time performing this
known bits calculation. However, if we introduce some additional
statistics for known bits computations and how many of them succeed
in simplifying the instruction we get (on test-suite):
instsimplify.NumKnownBits: 216
instsimplify.NumKnownBitsComputed: 13828375
valuetracking.NumKnownBitsComputed: 45860806
Out of ~14M known bits calculations (accounting for approximately
one third of all known bits calculations), only 0.0015% succeed in
producing a constant. Those cases where we do succeed to compute
all known bits will get folded by other passes like InstCombine
later. On test-suite, only lencod.test and GCC-C-execute-pr44858.test
show a hash difference after this change. On lencod we see an
improvement (a loop phi is optimized away), on the GCC torture
test a regression (a function return value is determined only
after IPSCCP, preventing propagation from a noinline function.)
There are various regressions in InstSimplify tests. However, all
of these cases are already handled by InstCombine, and corresponding
tests have already been added there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79294
The more general fold was not poison-safe, so it was removed:
rG5486e00
...but it is ok to have this transform if analysis can determine
the vector contains no poison. The test shows a simple example
of that: constant integer elements are not poison.
PR45481:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=45481
SDAG has an identical transform to this, so there's little
chance of any real-world impact. OTOH, that means we are
effectively sweeping the bug out of sight because poison
exists in codegen too.
This method has been commented as deprecated for a while. Remove
it and replace all uses with the equivalent getCalledOperand().
I also made a few cleanups in here. For example, to removes use
of getElementType on a pointer when we could just use getFunctionType
from the call.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D78882
Summary:
Remove usages of asserting vector getters in Type in preparation for the
VectorType refactor. The existence of these functions complicates the
refactor while adding little value.
Reviewers: sunfish, sdesmalen, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D77273
Instead, represent the mask as out-of-line data in the instruction. This
should be more efficient in the places that currently use
getShuffleVector(), and paves the way for further changes to add new
shuffles for scalable vectors.
This doesn't change the syntax in textual IR. And I don't currently plan
to change the bitcode encoding in this patch, although we'll probably
need to do something once we extend shufflevector for scalable types.
I expect that once this is finished, we can then replace the raw "mask"
with something more appropriate for scalable vectors. Not sure exactly
what this looks like at the moment, but there are a few different ways
we could handle it. Maybe we could try to describe specific shuffles.
Or maybe we could define it in terms of a function to convert a fixed-length
array into an appropriate scalable vector, using a "step", or something
like that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72467
This change implements constant folding to constrained versions of
intrinsics, implementing rounding: floor, ceil, trunc, round, rint and
nearbyint.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72930
Summary:
Skip folds that rely on DataLayout::getTypeAllocSize(). For scalable
vector, only minimal type alloc size is known at compile-time.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, efriedma, spatel, apazos
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75892
Summary:
Support ConstantInt::get() and Constant::getAllOnesValue() for scalable
vector type, this requires ConstantVector::getSplat() to take in 'ElementCount',
instead of 'unsigned' number of element count.
This change is needed for D73753.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, efriedma, apazos, spatel, huntergr, willlovett
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D74386
This is part of the IR sibling for:
D75576
(I'm splitting part of the transform as a separate commit
to reduce risk. I don't know of any bugs that might be
exposed by this improved folding, but it's hard to see
those in advance...)
Summary:
For scalable vector, index out-of-bound can not be determined at compile-time.
The same apply for VectorUtil findScalarElement().
Add test cases to check the functionality of SimplifyInsert/ExtractElementInst for scalable vector.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, efriedma, spatel, apazos
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: cameron.mcinally, tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75782
If a call argument has the "returned" attribute, we can simplify
the call to the value of that argument. The "-inst-simplify" pass
already handled this for the constant integer argument case via
known bits, which is invoked in SimplifyInstruction. However,
non-constant (or non-int) arguments are not handled at all right now.
This addresses one of the regressions from D75801.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75815
As pointed out by jdoerfert on D75815, we must be careful when
simplifying musttail calls: We can only replace the return value
if we can eliminate the call entirely. As we can't make this
guarantee for all consumers of InstSimplify, this patch disables
simplification of musttail calls. Without this patch, musttail
simplification currently results in module verification errors.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75824
Summary:
```
br i1 c, BB1, BB2:
BB1:
use1(c)
BB2:
use2(c)
```
In BB1 and BB2, c is never undef or poison because otherwise the branch would have triggered UB.
This is a resubmission of 952ad47 with crash fix of llvm/test/Transforms/LoopRotate/freeze-crash.ll.
Checked with Alive2
Reviewers: xbolva00, spatel, lebedev.ri, reames, jdoerfert, nlopes, sanjoy
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: jdoerfert, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75401
InstSimplify can fold icmps of gep where the base pointers are the
same and the offsets are constant. It does so by constructing a
constant expression icmp and assumes that it gets folded -- but
this doesn't actually happen, because GEP expressions can usually
only be folded by the target-dependent constant folding layer.
As such, we need to explicitly invoke it here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75407
Spin-off from D75407. As described there, ConstantFoldConstant()
currently returns null for non-ConstantExpr/ConstantVector inputs,
but otherwise always returns non-null, independently of whether
any folding has happened or not.
This is confusing and makes consumer code more complicated.
I would expect either that ConstantFoldConstant() returns only if
it actually folded something, or that it always returns non-null.
I'm going to the latter possibility here, which appears to be more
useful considering existing usage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75543
Summary:
```
br i1 c, BB1, BB2:
BB1:
use1(c)
BB2:
use2(c)
```
In BB1 and BB2, c is never undef or poison because otherwise the branch would have triggered UB.
Checked with Alive2
Reviewers: xbolva00, spatel, lebedev.ri, reames, jdoerfert, nlopes, sanjoy
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: jdoerfert, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75401
Summary:
* Most of the simplifications in SimplifyShuffleVectorInst depend on the
concrete value of, or the length of the mask vector. For scalable
vectors, this cannot be known at compile time.
** for these tests, detect if the vector is scalable before attempting
the transformation
* The functions ShuffleVectorInst::getMaskValue and
ShuffleVectorInst::getShuffleMask access the value of the constant mask.
However, since the length of the mask is unknown at compile time, these
function do not work for scalable vectors. Add asserts to ensure that
the input mask is not scalable
Reviewers: efriedma, sdesmalen, apazos, chrisj, huihuiz
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: tschuett, hiraditya, rkruppe, psnobl, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73555
This addresses https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=42801.
The m_c_ICmp() matcher is changed to provide the swapped predicate
if the operands are swapped.
Existing uses of m_c_ICmp() fall in one of two categories: Working
on equality predicates only, where swapping is irrelevant.
Or performing a manual swap, in which case this patch removes it.
The only exception is the foldICmpWithLowBitMaskedVal() fold, which
does not swap the predicate, and instead reasons about whether
a swap occurred or not for each predicate. Getting the swapped
predicate allows us to merge the logic for pairs of predicates,
instead of duplicating it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72976
As mentioned in D72643, we'd like to be able to assert that any select
of equivalent constants has been removed before we're deep into InstCombine.
But there's a loophole in that assertion for vectors with undef elements
that don't match exactly.
This patch should close that gap. If we have undefs, we can't safely
propagate those unless both constants elements for that lane are undef.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72958
This is step 1 of damage control assuming that we need to remove several
over-reaching folds for select-of-booleans because they can cause
miscompiles as shown in D72396.
The scalar case seems obviously safe:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/jSj
And I don't think there's any danger for vectors either - if the
condition is poisoned, then the select must be poisoned too, so undef
elements don't make any difference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72412
shuf (inselt ?, C, IndexC), undef, <IndexC, IndexC...> --> <C, C...>
This is another missing shuffle fold pattern uncovered by the
shuffle correctness fix from D70246.
The problem was visible in the post-commit thread example, but
we managed to overcome the limitation for that particular case
with D71220.
This is something like the inverse of the previous fix - there
we didn't demand the inserted scalar, and here we are only
demanding an inserted scalar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71488
GEP index size can be specified in the DataLayout, introduced in D42123. However, there were still places
in which getIndexSizeInBits was used interchangeably with getPointerSizeInBits. This notably caused issues
with Instcombine's visitPtrToInt; but the unit tests was incorrect, so this remained undiscovered.
This fixes the buildbot failures.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68328
Patch by Joseph Faulls!
Removed code duplication in ThreadCmpOverSelect and broke it
into several smaller functions for reusing them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71158
GEP index size can be specified in the DataLayout, introduced in D42123. However, there were still places
in which getIndexSizeInBits was used interchangeably with getPointerSizeInBits. This notably caused issues
with Instcombine's visitPtrToInt; but the unit tests was incorrect, so this remained undiscovered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68328
Patch by Joseph Faulls!
Summary:
Same as D60846 and D69571 but with a fix for the problem encountered
after them. Both times it was a missing context adjustment in the
handling of PHI nodes.
The reproducers created from the bugs that caused the old commits to be
reverted are included.
Reviewers: nikic, nlopes, mkazantsev, spatel, dlrobertson, uabelho, hakzsam, hans
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, asbirlea, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D71181
This is another transform suggested in PR44153:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44153
The backend for some targets already manages to get
this if it converts copysign to bitwise logic.
This is correct for any value including NaN/inf.
We don't have this fold directly in the backend either,
but x86 manages to get it after converting things to bitops.
This caused miscompiles of Chromium (https://crbug.com/1023818). The reduced
repro is small enough to fit here:
$ cat /tmp/a.c
unsigned char f(unsigned char *p) {
unsigned char result = 0;
for (int shift = 0; shift < 1; ++shift)
result |= p[0] << (shift * 8);
return result;
}
$ bin/clang -O2 -S -o - /tmp/a.c | grep -A4 f:
f: # @f
.cfi_startproc
# %bb.0: # %entry
xorl %eax, %eax
retq
That's nicely optimized, but I don't think it's the right result :-)
> Same as D60846 but with a fix for the problem encountered there which
> was a missing context adjustment in the handling of PHI nodes.
>
> The test that caused D60846 to be reverted was added in e15ab8f277.
>
> Reviewers: nikic, nlopes, mkazantsev,spatel, dlrobertson, uabelho, hakzsam
>
> Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
>
> Tags: #llvm
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69571
This reverts commit 57dd4b03e4.
Same as D60846 but with a fix for the problem encountered there which
was a missing context adjustment in the handling of PHI nodes.
The test that caused D60846 to be reverted was added in e15ab8f277.
Reviewers: nikic, nlopes, mkazantsev,spatel, dlrobertson, uabelho, hakzsam
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69571
In similar fashion to D67721, we can simplify FMA multiplications if any
of the operands is NaN or undef. In instcombine, we will simplify the
FMA to an fadd with a NaN operand, which in turn gets folded to NaN.
Note that this just changes SimplifyFMAFMul, so we still not catch the
case where only the Add part of the FMA is Nan/Undef.
Reviewers: cameron.mcinally, mcberg2017, spatel, arsenm
Reviewed By: cameron.mcinally
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68265
llvm-svn: 373459
This is intended to be similar to the constant folding results from
D67446
and earlier, but not all operands are constant in these tests, so the
responsibility for folding is left to InstSimplify.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67721
llvm-svn: 373455
Because we do not constant fold multiplications in SimplifyFMAMul,
we match 1.0 and 0.0 for both operands, as multiplying by them
is guaranteed to produce an exact result (if it is allowed to do so).
Note that it is not enough to just swap the operands to ensure a
constant is on the RHS, as we want to also cover the case with
2 constants.
Reviewers: lebedev.ri, spatel, reames, scanon
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67553
llvm-svn: 372915
As @reames pointed out post-commit, rL371518 adds additional rounding
in some cases, when doing constant folding of the multiplication.
This breaks a guarantee llvm.fma makes and must be avoided.
This patch reapplies rL371518, but splits off the simplifications not
requiring rounding from SimplifFMulInst as SimplifyFMAFMul.
Reviewers: spatel, lebedev.ri, reames, scanon
Reviewed By: reames
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67434
llvm-svn: 372899