This adds a flag to LLVM and clang to always generate a .debug_frame
section, even if other debug information is not being generated. In
situations where .eh_frame would normally be emitted, both .debug_frame
and .eh_frame will be used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67216
MipsMCAsmInfo was using '$' prefix for Mips32 and '.L' for Mips64
regardless of -target-abi option. By passing MCTargetOptions to MCAsmInfo
we can find out Mips ABI and pick appropriate prefix.
Tags: #llvm, #clang, #lldb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66795
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, sdardis, jvesely, nhaehnle, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, atanasyan, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69216
llvm-svn: 375398
MachineInstr.h included AliasAnalysis.h, which includes a world of IR
constructs mostly unneeded in CodeGen. Prune it. Same for
DebugInfoMetadata.h.
Noticed with -ftime-trace.
llvm-svn: 375311
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Jim, lenary, s.egerton, pzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D68993
llvm-svn: 375084
Re-apply 9fdfb045ae8b/r365676 with fixes for PPC and Hexagon. This involved
moving defaults from TargetTransformInfoImplBase to MCSubtargetInfo.
Rework the TTI cache and software prefetching APIs to prepare for the
introduction of a general system model. Changes include:
- Marking existing interfaces const and/or override as appropriate
- Adding comments
- Adding BasicTTIImpl interfaces that delegate to a subtarget
implementation
- Moving the default TargetTransformInfoImplBase implementation to a default
MCSubtarget implementation
Only a handful of targets use these interfaces currently: AArch64, Hexagon, PPC
and SystemZ. AArch64 already has a custom subtarget implementation, so its
custom TTI implementation is migrated to use the new facilities in BasicTTIImpl
to invoke its custom subtarget implementation. The custom TTI implementations
continue to exist for the other targets with this change. They are not moved
over to subtarget-based implementations.
The end goal is to have the default subtarget implementation defer to the system
model defined by the target. With this change, the default MCSubtargetInfo
implementation essentially returns the defaults TargetTransformInfoImplBase used
to return. Existing users of TTI defaults will hit the defaults now in
MCSubtargetInfo. Targets that define their own custom TTI implementations won't
use the BasicTTIImpl implementations that route to the subtarget.
Once system models are in place for the targets that use these interfaces, their
custom TTI implementations can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63614
llvm-svn: 374205
Replace with the MachineFunction. X86 is the only user, and only uses
it for the function. This removes one obstacle from using this in
GlobalISel. The other is the more tolerable EVT argument.
The X86 use of the function seems questionable to me. It checks hasFP,
before frame lowering.
llvm-svn: 373292
The static analyzer is warning about a potential null dereference, but we should be able to use cast<MCConstantExpr> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
llvm-svn: 372956
Rename old function to explicitly show that it cares only about alignment.
The new allowsMemoryAccess call the function related to alignment by default
and can be overridden by target to inform whether the memory access is legal or
not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67121
llvm-svn: 372935
The static analyzer is warning about potential null dereference, but we should be able to use cast<ConstantFPSDNode> directly and if not assert will fire for us.
llvm-svn: 372499
Recommit: fix asan errors.
The way MachinePipeliner uses these target hooks is stateful - we reduce trip
count by one per call to reduceLoopCount. It's a little overfit for hardware
loops, where we don't have to worry about stitching a loop induction variable
across prologs and epilogs (the induction variable is implicit).
This patch introduces a new API:
/// Analyze loop L, which must be a single-basic-block loop, and if the
/// conditions can be understood enough produce a PipelinerLoopInfo object.
virtual std::unique_ptr<PipelinerLoopInfo>
analyzeLoopForPipelining(MachineBasicBlock *LoopBB) const;
The return value is expected to be an implementation of the abstract class:
/// Object returned by analyzeLoopForPipelining. Allows software pipelining
/// implementations to query attributes of the loop being pipelined.
class PipelinerLoopInfo {
public:
virtual ~PipelinerLoopInfo();
/// Return true if the given instruction should not be pipelined and should
/// be ignored. An example could be a loop comparison, or induction variable
/// update with no users being pipelined.
virtual bool shouldIgnoreForPipelining(const MachineInstr *MI) const = 0;
/// Create a condition to determine if the trip count of the loop is greater
/// than TC.
///
/// If the trip count is statically known to be greater than TC, return
/// true. If the trip count is statically known to be not greater than TC,
/// return false. Otherwise return nullopt and fill out Cond with the test
/// condition.
virtual Optional<bool>
createTripCountGreaterCondition(int TC, MachineBasicBlock &MBB,
SmallVectorImpl<MachineOperand> &Cond) = 0;
/// Modify the loop such that the trip count is
/// OriginalTC + TripCountAdjust.
virtual void adjustTripCount(int TripCountAdjust) = 0;
/// Called when the loop's preheader has been modified to NewPreheader.
virtual void setPreheader(MachineBasicBlock *NewPreheader) = 0;
/// Called when the loop is being removed.
virtual void disposed() = 0;
};
The Pipeliner (ModuloSchedule.cpp) can use this object to modify the loop while
allowing the target to hold its own state across all calls. This API, in
particular the disjunction of creating a trip count check condition and
adjusting the loop, improves the code quality in ModuloSchedule.cpp.
llvm-svn: 372463
The way MachinePipeliner uses these target hooks is stateful - we reduce trip
count by one per call to reduceLoopCount. It's a little overfit for hardware
loops, where we don't have to worry about stitching a loop induction variable
across prologs and epilogs (the induction variable is implicit).
This patch introduces a new API:
/// Analyze loop L, which must be a single-basic-block loop, and if the
/// conditions can be understood enough produce a PipelinerLoopInfo object.
virtual std::unique_ptr<PipelinerLoopInfo>
analyzeLoopForPipelining(MachineBasicBlock *LoopBB) const;
The return value is expected to be an implementation of the abstract class:
/// Object returned by analyzeLoopForPipelining. Allows software pipelining
/// implementations to query attributes of the loop being pipelined.
class PipelinerLoopInfo {
public:
virtual ~PipelinerLoopInfo();
/// Return true if the given instruction should not be pipelined and should
/// be ignored. An example could be a loop comparison, or induction variable
/// update with no users being pipelined.
virtual bool shouldIgnoreForPipelining(const MachineInstr *MI) const = 0;
/// Create a condition to determine if the trip count of the loop is greater
/// than TC.
///
/// If the trip count is statically known to be greater than TC, return
/// true. If the trip count is statically known to be not greater than TC,
/// return false. Otherwise return nullopt and fill out Cond with the test
/// condition.
virtual Optional<bool>
createTripCountGreaterCondition(int TC, MachineBasicBlock &MBB,
SmallVectorImpl<MachineOperand> &Cond) = 0;
/// Modify the loop such that the trip count is
/// OriginalTC + TripCountAdjust.
virtual void adjustTripCount(int TripCountAdjust) = 0;
/// Called when the loop's preheader has been modified to NewPreheader.
virtual void setPreheader(MachineBasicBlock *NewPreheader) = 0;
/// Called when the loop is being removed.
virtual void disposed() = 0;
};
The Pipeliner (ModuloSchedule.cpp) can use this object to modify the loop while
allowing the target to hold its own state across all calls. This API, in
particular the disjunction of creating a trip count check condition and
adjusting the loop, improves the code quality in ModuloSchedule.cpp.
llvm-svn: 372376
This reverts r372314, reapplying r372285 and the commits which depend
on it (r372286-r372293, and r372296-r372297)
This was missing one switch to getTargetConstant in an untested case.
llvm-svn: 372338
This broke the Chromium build, causing it to fail with e.g.
fatal error: error in backend: Cannot select: t362: v4i32 = X86ISD::VSHLI t392, Constant:i8<15>
See llvm-commits thread of r372285 for details.
This also reverts r372286, r372287, r372288, r372289, r372290, r372291,
r372292, r372293, r372296, and r372297, which seemed to depend on the
main commit.
> Encode them directly as an imm argument to G_INTRINSIC*.
>
> Since now intrinsics can now define what parameters are required to be
> immediates, avoid using registers for them. Intrinsics could
> potentially want a constant that isn't a legal register type. Also,
> since G_CONSTANT is subject to CSE and legalization, transforms could
> potentially obscure the value (and create extra work for the
> selector). The register bank of a G_CONSTANT is also meaningful, so
> this could throw off future folding and legalization logic for AMDGPU.
>
> This will be much more convenient to work with than needing to call
> getConstantVRegVal and checking if it may have failed for every
> constant intrinsic parameter. AMDGPU has quite a lot of intrinsics wth
> immarg operands, many of which need inspection during lowering. Having
> to find the value in a register is going to add a lot of boilerplate
> and waste compile time.
>
> SelectionDAG has always provided TargetConstant for constants which
> should not be legalized or materialized in a register. The distinction
> between Constant and TargetConstant was somewhat fuzzy, and there was
> no automatic way to force usage of TargetConstant for certain
> intrinsic parameters. They were both ultimately ConstantSDNode, and it
> was inconsistently used. It was quite easy to mis-select an
> instruction requiring an immediate. For SelectionDAG, start emitting
> TargetConstant for these arguments, and using timm to match them.
>
> Most of the work here is to cleanup target handling of constants. Some
> targets process intrinsics through intermediate custom nodes, which
> need to preserve TargetConstant usage to match the intrinsic
> expectation. Pattern inputs now need to distinguish whether a constant
> is merely compatible with an operand or whether it is mandatory.
>
> The GlobalISelEmitter needs to treat timm as a special case of a leaf
> node, simlar to MachineBasicBlock operands. This should also enable
> handling of patterns for some G_* instructions with immediates, like
> G_FENCE or G_EXTRACT.
>
> This does include a workaround for a crash in GlobalISelEmitter when
> ARM tries to uses "imm" in an output with a "timm" pattern source.
llvm-svn: 372314
Encode them directly as an imm argument to G_INTRINSIC*.
Since now intrinsics can now define what parameters are required to be
immediates, avoid using registers for them. Intrinsics could
potentially want a constant that isn't a legal register type. Also,
since G_CONSTANT is subject to CSE and legalization, transforms could
potentially obscure the value (and create extra work for the
selector). The register bank of a G_CONSTANT is also meaningful, so
this could throw off future folding and legalization logic for AMDGPU.
This will be much more convenient to work with than needing to call
getConstantVRegVal and checking if it may have failed for every
constant intrinsic parameter. AMDGPU has quite a lot of intrinsics wth
immarg operands, many of which need inspection during lowering. Having
to find the value in a register is going to add a lot of boilerplate
and waste compile time.
SelectionDAG has always provided TargetConstant for constants which
should not be legalized or materialized in a register. The distinction
between Constant and TargetConstant was somewhat fuzzy, and there was
no automatic way to force usage of TargetConstant for certain
intrinsic parameters. They were both ultimately ConstantSDNode, and it
was inconsistently used. It was quite easy to mis-select an
instruction requiring an immediate. For SelectionDAG, start emitting
TargetConstant for these arguments, and using timm to match them.
Most of the work here is to cleanup target handling of constants. Some
targets process intrinsics through intermediate custom nodes, which
need to preserve TargetConstant usage to match the intrinsic
expectation. Pattern inputs now need to distinguish whether a constant
is merely compatible with an operand or whether it is mandatory.
The GlobalISelEmitter needs to treat timm as a special case of a leaf
node, simlar to MachineBasicBlock operands. This should also enable
handling of patterns for some G_* instructions with immediates, like
G_FENCE or G_EXTRACT.
This does include a workaround for a crash in GlobalISelEmitter when
ARM tries to uses "imm" in an output with a "timm" pattern source.
llvm-svn: 372285
* Reordered MVT simple types to group scalable vector types
together.
* New range functions in MachineValueType.h to only iterate over
the fixed-length int/fp vector types.
* Stopped backends which don't support scalable vector types from
iterating over scalable types.
Reviewers: sdesmalen, greened
Reviewed By: greened
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66339
llvm-svn: 372099
The result integer does not need to be the same width as the input.
AMDGPU, NVPTX, and Hexagon all have patterns working around the types
matching. GlobalISel defines these as being different type indexes.
llvm-svn: 371797
Reapply with fix to reduce resources required by the compiler - use
unsigned[2] instead of std::pair. This causes clang and gcc to compile
the generated file multiple times faster, and hopefully will reduce
the resource requirements on Visual Studio also. This fix is a little
ugly but it's clearly the same issue the previous author of
DFAPacketizer faced (the previous tables use unsigned[2] rather uglily
too).
This patch allows the DFAPacketizer to be queried after a packet is formed to work out which
resources were allocated to the packetized instructions.
This is particularly important for targets that do their own bundle packing - it's not
sufficient to know simply that instructions can share a packet; which slots are used is
also required for encoding.
This extends the emitter to emit a side-table containing resource usage diffs for each
state transition. The packetizer maintains a set of all possible resource states in its
current state. After packetization is complete, all remaining resource states are
possible packetization strategies.
The sidetable is only ~500K for Hexagon, but the extra tracking is disabled by default
(most uses of the packetizer like MachinePipeliner don't care and don't need the extra
maintained state).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66936
llvm-svn: 371399
This patch allows the DFAPacketizer to be queried after a packet is formed to work out which
resources were allocated to the packetized instructions.
This is particularly important for targets that do their own bundle packing - it's not
sufficient to know simply that instructions can share a packet; which slots are used is
also required for encoding.
This extends the emitter to emit a side-table containing resource usage diffs for each
state transition. The packetizer maintains a set of all possible resource states in its
current state. After packetization is complete, all remaining resource states are
possible packetization strategies.
The sidetable is only ~500K for Hexagon, but the extra tracking is disabled by default
(most uses of the packetizer like MachinePipeliner don't care and don't need the extra
maintained state).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66936
........
Reverted as this is causing "compiler out of heap space" errors on MSVC 2017/19 NDEBUG builds
llvm-svn: 371393
Summary:
This is the first change to enable the TLI to be built per-function so
that -fno-builtin* handling can be migrated to use function attributes.
See discussion on D61634 for background. This is an enabler for fixing
handling of these options for LTO, for example.
This change should not affect behavior, as the provided function is not
yet used to build a specifically per-function TLI, but rather enables
that migration.
Most of the changes were very mechanical, e.g. passing a Function to the
legacy analysis pass's getTLI interface, or in Module level cases,
adding a callback. This is similar to the way the per-function TTI
analysis works.
There was one place where we were looking for builtins but not in the
context of a specific function. See FindCXAAtExit in
lib/Transforms/IPO/GlobalOpt.cpp. I'm somewhat concerned my workaround
could provide the wrong behavior in some corner cases. Suggestions
welcome.
Reviewers: chandlerc, hfinkel
Subscribers: arsenm, dschuff, jvesely, nhaehnle, mehdi_amini, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, aheejin, steven_wu, george.burgess.iv, dexonsmith, jfb, asbirlea, gchatelet, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66428
llvm-svn: 371284
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: nemanjai, javed.absar, hiraditya, kbarton, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, s.egerton, pzheng, ychen, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67267
llvm-svn: 371212
Summary:
This is patch is part of a series to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet
Subscribers: jyknight, sdardis, nemanjai, javed.absar, hiraditya, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, s.egerton, pzheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D67229
llvm-svn: 371200
This patch allows the DFAPacketizer to be queried after a packet is formed to work out which
resources were allocated to the packetized instructions.
This is particularly important for targets that do their own bundle packing - it's not
sufficient to know simply that instructions can share a packet; which slots are used is
also required for encoding.
This extends the emitter to emit a side-table containing resource usage diffs for each
state transition. The packetizer maintains a set of all possible resource states in its
current state. After packetization is complete, all remaining resource states are
possible packetization strategies.
The sidetable is only ~500K for Hexagon, but the extra tracking is disabled by default
(most uses of the packetizer like MachinePipeliner don't care and don't need the extra
maintained state).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D66936
llvm-svn: 371198
Summary:
This patch renames functions that takes or returns alignment as log2, this patch will help with the transition to llvm::Align.
The renaming makes it explicit that we deal with log(alignment) instead of a power of two alignment.
A few renames uncovered dubious assignments:
- `MirParser`/`MirPrinter` was expecting powers of two but `MachineFunction` and `MachineBasicBlock` were using deal with log2(align). This patch fixes it and updates the documentation.
- `MachineBlockPlacement` exposes two flags (`align-all-blocks` and `align-all-nofallthru-blocks`) supposedly interpreted as power of two alignments, internally these values are interpreted as log2(align). This patch updates the documentation,
- `MachineFunctionexposes` exposes `align-all-functions` also interpreted as power of two alignment, internally this value is interpreted as log2(align). This patch updates the documentation,
Reviewers: lattner, thegameg, courbet
Subscribers: dschuff, arsenm, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, hiraditya, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, dexonsmith, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Jim, s.egerton, llvm-commits, courbet
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65945
llvm-svn: 371045
This requires std::intializer_list to be a literal type, which it is
starting with C++14. The downside is that std::bitset is still not
constexpr-friendly so this change contains a re-implementation of most
of it.
Shrinks clang by ~60k.
llvm-svn: 369847
Prefer `MCFixupKind` where possible and add getTargetKind() to
convert to `unsigned` when needed rather than scattering cast
operators around the place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59890
llvm-svn: 369720
Summary:
This clang-tidy check is looking for unsigned integer variables whose initializer
starts with an implicit cast from llvm::Register and changes the type of the
variable to llvm::Register (dropping the llvm:: where possible).
Partial reverts in:
X86FrameLowering.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
X86FixupLEAs.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
X86FrameLowering.cpp - Some functions return unsigned and arguably should be MCRegister
HexagonBitSimplify.cpp - Function takes BitTracker::RegisterRef which appears to be unsigned&
MachineVerifier.cpp - Ambiguous operator==() given MCRegister and const Register
PPCFastISel.cpp - No Register::operator-=()
PeepholeOptimizer.cpp - TargetInstrInfo::optimizeLoadInstr() takes an unsigned&
MachineTraceMetrics.cpp - MachineTraceMetrics lacks a suitable constructor
Manual fixups in:
ARMFastISel.cpp - ARMEmitLoad() now takes a Register& instead of unsigned&
HexagonSplitDouble.cpp - Ternary operator was ambiguous between unsigned/Register
HexagonConstExtenders.cpp - Has a local class named Register, used llvm::Register instead of Register.
PPCFastISel.cpp - PPCEmitLoad() now takes a Register& instead of unsigned&
Depends on D65919
Reviewers: arsenm, bogner, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: RKSimon, craig.topper, lenary, aemerson, wuzish, jholewinski, MatzeB, qcolombet, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, sbc100, jgravelle-google, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, javed.absar, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, tpr, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, Petar.Avramovic, asbirlea, Jim, s.egerton, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65962
llvm-svn: 369041
Now that we've moved to C++14, we no longer need the llvm::make_unique
implementation from STLExtras.h. This patch is a mechanical replacement
of (hopefully) all the llvm::make_unique instances across the monorepo.
llvm-svn: 369013
Summary:
This is patch is part of a serie to introduce an Alignment type.
See this thread for context: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-July/133851.html
See this patch for the introduction of the type: https://reviews.llvm.org/D64790
Reviewers: courbet, jfb, jakehehrlich
Reviewed By: jfb
Subscribers: wuzish, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, MaskRay, zzheng, edward-jones, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, dexonsmith, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, s.egerton, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65514
llvm-svn: 367828
Summary:
As part of this, define DenseMapInfo for MCRegister (and Register while I'm at it)
Depends on D65599
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: MatzeB, qcolombet, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D65605
llvm-svn: 367719
Summary:
This was originally reported in D62818.
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/oPH
InstCombine does the opposite fold, in hope that `C l>>/<< Y` expression
will be hoisted out of a loop if `Y` is invariant and `X` is not.
But as it is seen from the diffs here, if it didn't get hoisted,
the produced assembly is almost universally worse.
Much like with my recent "hoist add/sub by/from const" patches,
we should get almost universal win if we hoist constant,
there is almost always an "and/test by imm" instruction,
but "shift of imm" not so much, so we may avoid having to
materialize the immediate, and thus need one less register.
And since we now shift not by constant, but by something else,
the live-range of that something else may reduce.
Special care needs to be applied not to disturb x86 `BT` / hexagon `tstbit`
instruction pattern. And to not get into endless combine loop.
Reviewers: RKSimon, efriedma, t.p.northover, craig.topper, spatel, arsenm
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: hiraditya, MaskRay, wuzish, xbolva00, nikic, nemanjai, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, javed.absar, tpr, kristof.beyls, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62871
llvm-svn: 366955
Rework the TTI cache and software prefetching APIs to prepare for the
introduction of a general system model. Changes include:
- Marking existing interfaces const and/or override as appropriate
- Adding comments
- Adding BasicTTIImpl interfaces that delegate to a subtarget
implementation
- Adding a default "no information" subtarget implementation
Only a handful of targets use these interfaces currently: AArch64,
Hexagon, PPC and SystemZ. AArch64 already has a custom subtarget
implementation, so its custom TTI implementation is migrated to use
the new facilities in BasicTTIImpl to invoke its custom subtarget
implementation. The custom TTI implementations continue to exist for
the other targets with this change. They are not moved over to
subtarget-based implementations.
The end goal is to have the default subtarget implementation defer to
the system model defined by the target. With this change, the default
subtarget implementation essentially returns "no information" for
these interfaces. None of the existing users of TTI will hit that
implementation because they define their own custom TTI
implementations and won't use the BasicTTIImpl implementations.
Once system models are in place for the targets that use these
interfaces, their custom TTI implementations can be removed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63614
llvm-svn: 365676
Avoids using a plain unsigned for registers throughoug codegen.
Doesn't attempt to change every register use, just something a little
more than the set needed to build after changing the return type of
MachineOperand::getReg().
llvm-svn: 364191
As discussed on D62910, we need to check whether particular types of memory access are allowed, not just their alignment/address-space.
This NFC patch adds a MachineMemOperand::Flags argument to allowsMemoryAccess and allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses, and wires up calls to pass the relevant flags to them.
If people are happy with this approach I can then update X86TargetLowering::allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses to handle misaligned NT load/stores.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D63075
llvm-svn: 363179
Implement necessary target hooks to enable MachinePipeliner for P9 only.
The pass is off by default, can be enabled with -ppc-enable-pipeliner for P9.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D62164
llvm-svn: 363085
As suggested by @arsenm on D63075 - this adds a TargetLowering::allowsMemoryAccess wrapper that takes a Load/Store node's MachineMemOperand to handle the AddressSpace/Alignment arguments and will also implicitly handle the MachineMemOperand::Flags change in D63075.
llvm-svn: 363048
This reverts r362990 (git commit 374571301d)
This was causing linker warnings on Darwin:
ld: warning: direct access in function 'llvm::initializeEvexToVexInstPassPass(llvm::PassRegistry&)'
from file '../../lib/libLLVMX86CodeGen.a(X86EvexToVex.cpp.o)' to global weak symbol
'void std::__1::__call_once_proxy<std::__1::tuple<void* (&)(llvm::PassRegistry&),
std::__1::reference_wrapper<llvm::PassRegistry>&&> >(void*)' from file '../../lib/libLLVMCore.a(Verifier.cpp.o)'
means the weak symbol cannot be overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by different translation
units being compiled with different visibility settings.
llvm-svn: 363028
Summary:
For builds with LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF
this change makes all symbols in the target specific libraries hidden
by default.
A new macro called LLVM_EXTERNAL_VISIBILITY has been added to mark symbols in these
libraries public, which is mainly needed for the definitions of the
LLVMInitialize* functions.
This patch reduces the number of public symbols in libLLVM.so by about
25%. This should improve load times for the dynamic library and also
make abi checker tools, like abidiff require less memory when analyzing
libLLVM.so
One side-effect of this change is that for builds with
LLVM_BUILD_LLVM_DYLIB=ON and LLVM_LINK_LLVM_DYLIB=ON some unittests that
access symbols that are no longer public will need to be statically linked.
Before and after public symbol counts (using gcc 8.2.1, ld.bfd 2.31.1):
nm before/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
36221
nm after/libLLVM-9svn.so | grep ' [A-Zuvw] ' | wc -l
26278
Reviewers: chandlerc, beanz, mgorny, rnk, hans
Reviewed By: rnk, hans
Subscribers: Jim, hiraditya, michaelplatings, chapuni, jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, kristina, jsji, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54439
llvm-svn: 362990
HexagonInstPrinter.cpp was not using any APIs from HexagonAsmPrinter.h.
Doing so is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is
also a layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362389
HexagonMCInstrInfo.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so
is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362387
HexagonMCCodeEmitter.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing
so is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also
a layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362386
HexagonMCCompound.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so
is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362385
HexagonShuffler.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h, and was only
including it for transitive dependencies. Doing so is problematic from
include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a layering issue (it
creates a dependency cycle between the primary Hexagon target library
and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362384
HexagonMCChecker.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so is
problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362383
HexagonMCTargetDesc.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so
is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362382
HexagonMCShuffler.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so
is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362381
HexagonELFObjectWriter.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h, and
was only including it for transitive dependencies. Doing so is
problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362376
HexagonAsmBackend.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so
is problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362372
HexagonAsmParser.cpp was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h. Doing so is
problematic from include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a
layering issue (it creates a dependency cycle between the primary
Hexagon target library and the AsmParser library).
llvm-svn: 362370
HexagonShuffler.h was not using any APIs from Hexagon.h, and was only
including it for transitive dependencies. Doing so is problematic from
include-what-you-use perspective, but it is also a layering issue (it
creates a dependency cycle between the primary Hexagon target library
and the MCTargetDesc library).
llvm-svn: 362369
Keep it optional in cases this is ever needed in some global
context. Currently it's only used for getting an upper bound inline
asm code size.
For AMDGPU, gfx10 increases the maximum instruction size to
20-bytes. This avoids penalizing older subtargets when estimating code
size, and making some annoying branch relaxation test adjustments.
llvm-svn: 361405
Move the declarations of getThe<Name>Target() functions into a new header in
TargetInfo and make users of these functions include this new header.
This fixes a layering problem.
llvm-svn: 360724
The MachineFunction wasn't used in getOptimalMemOpType, but more importantly,
this allows reuse of findOptimalMemOpLowering that is calling getOptimalMemOpType.
This is the groundwork for the changes in D59766 and D59787, that allows
implementation of TTI::getMemcpyCost.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59785
llvm-svn: 359537
Summary:
Targets like ARM, MSP430, PPC, and SystemZ have complex behavior when
printing the address of a MachineOperand::MO_GlobalAddress. Move that
handling into a new overriden method in each base class. A virtual
method was added to the base class for handling the generic case.
Refactors a few subclasses to support the target independent %a, %c, and
%n.
The patch also contains small cleanups for AVRAsmPrinter and
SystemZAsmPrinter.
It seems that NVPTXTargetLowering is possibly missing some logic to
transform GlobalAddressSDNodes for
TargetLowering::LowerAsmOperandForConstraint to handle with "i" extended
inline assembly asm constraints.
Fixes:
- https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41402
- https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/449
Reviewers: echristo, void
Reviewed By: void
Subscribers: void, craig.topper, jholewinski, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, atanasyan, jsji, llvm-commits, kees, tpimh, nathanchance, peter.smith, srhines
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60887
llvm-svn: 359337
Summary:
The basic idea here is to make it possible to use
MachineInstr::mayAlias also when the MachineInstr
is const (or the "Other" MachineInstr is const).
The addition of const in MachineInstr::mayAlias
then rippled down to the need for adding const
in several other places, such as
TargetTransformInfo::getMemOperandWithOffset.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, MatzeB, arsenm, jvesely, nhaehnle, hiraditya, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60856
llvm-svn: 358744
Summary:
None of these derived classes do anything that the base class cannot.
If we remove these case statements, then the base class can handle them
just fine.
Reviewers: peter.smith, echristo
Reviewed By: echristo
Subscribers: nemanjai, javed.absar, eraman, kristof.beyls, hiraditya, kbarton, jsji, llvm-commits, srhines
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60803
llvm-svn: 358603
The Hexagon Vector Loop Carried Reuse pass was allowing reuse between
two shufflevectors with different masks. The reason is that the masks
are not instruction objects, so the code that checks each operand
just skipped over the operands.
This patch fixes the bug by checking if the operands are the same
when they are not instruction objects. If the objects are not the
same, then the code assumes that reuse cannot occur.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60019
llvm-svn: 358292
Summary:
The InlineAsm::AsmDialect is only required for X86; no architecture
makes use of it and as such it gets passed around between arch-specific
and general code while being unused for all architectures but X86.
Since the AsmDialect is queried from a MachineInstr, which we also pass
around, remove the additional AsmDialect parameter and query for it deep
in the X86AsmPrinter only when needed/as late as possible.
This refactor should help later planned refactors to AsmPrinter, as this
difference in the X86AsmPrinter makes it harder to make AsmPrinter more
generic.
Reviewers: craig.topper
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, dschuff, jyknight, dylanmckay, sdardis, nemanjai, jvesely, nhaehnle, javed.absar, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, hiraditya, aheejin, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, atanasyan, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX, jocewei, jsji, llvm-commits, peter.smith, srhines
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D60488
llvm-svn: 358101
Create method `optForNone()` testing for the function level equivalent of
`-O0` and refactor appropriately.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59852
llvm-svn: 357638
This allows better code size for aarch64 floating point materialization
in a future patch.
Reviewers: evandro
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58690
llvm-svn: 356389
For the design in question, overloads seem to be a much simpler and less subtle solution.
This removes ODR issues, and errors of the kind where code that uses the
specialization in question will accidentally and erroneously specialize
the primary template. This only "works" by accident; the program is
ill-formed NDR.
(Found with -Wundefined-func-template.)
Patch by Thomas Köppe!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58998
llvm-svn: 355880
AMDGPU target run out of Subtarget feature flags hitting the limit of 64.
AssemblerPredicates uses at most uint64_t for their representation.
At the same time CodeGen has exhausted this a long time ago and switched
to a FeatureBitset with the current limit of 192 bits.
This patch completes transition to the bitset for feature bits extending
it to asm matcher and MC code emitter.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59002
llvm-svn: 355839
As requested during review of D57601, be equally conservative for atomic MMOs as for volatile MMOs in all in tree backends. At the moment, all atomic MMOs are also volatile, but I'm about to change that.
Reviewed as part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D58490, with other backends still pending review.
llvm-svn: 354740
The trap instruction is intercepted by various runtime environments,
and instead of a crash it creates confusion.
This reapplies r354606 with a fix.
llvm-svn: 354611
This patch accompanies the RFC posted here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-October/127239.html
This patch adds a new CallBr IR instruction to support asm-goto
inline assembly like gcc as used by the linux kernel. This
instruction is both a call instruction and a terminator
instruction with multiple successors. Only inline assembly
usage is supported today.
This also adds a new INLINEASM_BR opcode to SelectionDAG and
MachineIR to represent an INLINEASM block that is also
considered a terminator instruction.
There will likely be more bug fixes and optimizations to follow
this, but we felt it had reached a point where we would like to
switch to an incremental development model.
Patch by Craig Topper, Alexander Ivchenko, Mikhail Dvoretckii
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53765
llvm-svn: 353563
This patch removes hidden codegen flag -print-schedule effectively reverting the
logic originally committed as r300311
(https://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?view=revision&revision=300311).
Flag -print-schedule was originally introduced by r300311 to address PR32216
(https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=32216). That bug was about adding "Better
testing of schedule model instruction latencies/throughputs".
These days, we can use llvm-mca to test scheduling models. So there is no longer
a need for flag -print-schedule in LLVM. The main use case for PR32216 is
now addressed by llvm-mca.
Flag -print-schedule is mainly used for debugging purposes, and it is only
actually used by x86 specific tests. We already have extensive (latency and
throughput) tests under "test/tools/llvm-mca" for X86 processor models. That
means, most (if not all) existing -print-schedule tests for X86 are redundant.
When flag -print-schedule was first added to LLVM, several files had to be
modified; a few APIs gained new arguments (see for example method
MCAsmStreamer::EmitInstruction), and MCSubtargetInfo/TargetSubtargetInfo gained
a couple of getSchedInfoStr() methods.
Method getSchedInfoStr() had to originally work for both MCInst and
MachineInstr. The original implmentation of getSchedInfoStr() introduced a
subtle layering violation (reported as PR37160 and then fixed/worked-around by
r330615).
In retrospect, that new API could have been designed more optimally. We can
always query MCSchedModel to get the latency and throughput. More importantly,
the "sched-info" string should not have been generated by the subtarget.
Note, r317782 fixed an issue where "print-schedule" didn't work very well in the
presence of inline assembly. That commit is also reverted by this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57244
llvm-svn: 353043
This cleans up all CallInst creation in LLVM to explicitly pass a
function type rather than deriving it from the pointer's element-type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57170
llvm-svn: 352909
Recommit r352791 after tweaking DerivedTypes.h slightly, so that gcc
doesn't choke on it, hopefully.
Original Message:
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352827
This reverts commit f47d6b38c7 (r352791).
Seems to run into compilation failures with GCC (but not clang, where
I tested it). Reverting while I investigate.
llvm-svn: 352800
The FunctionCallee type is effectively a {FunctionType*,Value*} pair,
and is a useful convenience to enable code to continue passing the
result of getOrInsertFunction() through to EmitCall, even once pointer
types lose their pointee-type.
Then:
- update the CallInst/InvokeInst instruction creation functions to
take a Callee,
- modify getOrInsertFunction to return FunctionCallee, and
- update all callers appropriately.
One area of particular note is the change to the sanitizer
code. Previously, they had been casting the result of
`getOrInsertFunction` to a `Function*` via
`checkSanitizerInterfaceFunction`, and storing that. That would report
an error if someone had already inserted a function declaraction with
a mismatching signature.
However, in general, LLVM allows for such mismatches, as
`getOrInsertFunction` will automatically insert a bitcast if
needed. As part of this cleanup, cause the sanitizer code to do the
same. (It will call its functions using the expected signature,
however they may have been declared.)
Finally, in a small number of locations, callers of
`getOrInsertFunction` actually were expecting/requiring that a brand
new function was being created. In such cases, I've switched them to
Function::Create instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57315
llvm-svn: 352791
This broke the RISCV build, and even with that fixed, one of the RISCV
tests behaves surprisingly differently with asserts than without,
leaving there no clear test pattern to use. Generally it seems bad for
hte IR to differ substantially due to asserts (as in, an alloca is used
with asserts that isn't needed without!) and nothing I did simply would
fix it so I'm reverting back to green.
This also required reverting the RISCV build fix in r351782.
llvm-svn: 351796
to reflect the new license.
We understand that people may be surprised that we're moving the header
entirely to discuss the new license. We checked this carefully with the
Foundation's lawyer and we believe this is the correct approach.
Essentially, all code in the project is now made available by the LLVM
project under our new license, so you will see that the license headers
include that license only. Some of our contributors have contributed
code under our old license, and accordingly, we have retained a copy of
our old license notice in the top-level files in each project and
repository.
llvm-svn: 351636
That is, remove many of the calls to Type::getNumContainedTypes(),
Type::subtypes(), and Type::getContainedType(N).
I'm not intending to remove these accessors -- they are
useful/necessary in some cases. However, removing the pointee type
from pointers would potentially break some uses, and reducing the
number of calls makes it easier to audit.
llvm-svn: 350835
Both of these places reference memset-like loops. Memset is precise.
Trying to keep these patches super small so they're easily post-commit
verifiable, as requested in D44748.
llvm-svn: 350044
- Check if an operand is an immediate before calling getImm. Some operands
that take constant values can actually have global symbols or other
constant expressions.
- When a load-constant instruction can be folded into users, make sure to
only delete it when all users have been successfully converted.
llvm-svn: 348802
Adds fatal errors for any target that does not support the Tiny or Kernel
codemodels by rejigging the getEffectiveCodeModel calls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50141
llvm-svn: 348585
Currently, instructions doing memory accesses through a base operand that is
not a register can not be analyzed using `TII::getMemOpBaseRegImmOfs`.
This means that functions such as `TII::shouldClusterMemOps` will bail
out on instructions using an FI as a base instead of a register.
The goal of this patch is to refactor all this to return a base
operand instead of a base register.
Then in a separate patch, I will add FI support to the mem op clustering
in the MachineScheduler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54846
llvm-svn: 347746
This is a long-awaited follow-up suggested in D33578. Since then, we've picked up even more
opportunities for vector narrowing from changes like D53784, so there are a lot of test diffs.
Apart from 2-3 strange cases, these are all wins.
I've structured this to be no-functional-change-intended for any target except for x86
because I couldn't tell if AArch64, ARM, and AMDGPU would improve or not. All of those
targets have existing regression tests (4, 4, 10 files respectively) that would be
affected. Also, Hexagon overrides the shouldReduceLoadWidth() hook, but doesn't show
any regression test diffs. The trade-off is deciding if an extra vector load is better
than a single wide load + extract_subvector.
For x86, this is almost always better (on paper at least) because we often can fold
loads into subsequent ops and not increase the official instruction count. There's also
some unknown -- but potentially large -- benefit from using narrower vector ops if wide
ops are implemented with multiple uops and/or frequency throttling is avoided.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54073
llvm-svn: 346595
Eliminate the stack frame in functions with the noreturn nounwind
attributes, and when the noreturn-stack-elim target feature is
enabled. This reduces the code and stack space needed for noreturn
functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54210
llvm-svn: 346532
Both -fPIC and -G0 disable placement of globals in small data section,
but if a global has an explicit section assigmnent placing it in small
data, it should go there anyway.
llvm-svn: 346523
Change the type in a couple of lists and sets that only store physical
registers from unsigned to MCPhysRegs. The later is only 16bits and
saves us a bit of memory.
llvm-svn: 346254
The main caller of this already has an MVT and several targets called getSimpleVT inside without checking isSimple. This makes the simpleness explicit.
llvm-svn: 346180
These methods were just wrappers around getNode with additional asserts (identical and repeated 3 times). But getNode already has a switch that can be used to hold these asserts that allows them to be shared for all 3 opcodes. This also enables checking on the places that create these nodes without using the wrappers.
The rest of the patch is just changing all callers to use getNode directly.
llvm-svn: 346087
Small-data (i.e. GP-relative) loads and stores allow 16-bit scaled
offset. For a load of a value of type T, the small-data area is
equivalent to an array "T sdata[65536]". This implies that objects
of smaller sizes need to be closer to the beginning of sdata,
while larger objects may be farther away, or otherwise the offset
may be insufficient to reach it. Similarly, an object of a larger
size should not be accessed via a load of a smaller size.
llvm-svn: 345975
I added these annotations in r345878 because I wasn't sure if the
fallthrough was intended. Krzysztof Parzyszek confirmed that they should
be breaks, so that's what this patch does.
Reviewers: kparzysz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53991
llvm-svn: 345883
This patch should not introduce any behavior changes. It consists of
mostly one of two changes:
1. Replacing fall through comments with the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro
2. Inserting 'break' before falling through into a case block consisting
of only 'break'.
We were already using this warning with GCC, but its warning behaves
slightly differently. In this patch, the following differences are
relevant:
1. GCC recognizes comments that say "fall through" as annotations, clang
doesn't
2. GCC doesn't warn on "case N: foo(); default: break;", clang does
3. GCC doesn't warn when the case contains a switch, but falls through
the outer case.
I will enable the warning separately in a follow-up patch so that it can
be cleanly reverted if necessary.
Reviewers: alexfh, rsmith, lattner, rtrieu, EricWF, bollu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53950
llvm-svn: 345882
Clang's -Wimplicit-fallthrough check fires on these switch cases. GCC
does not warn when a case body that ends in a switch falls through to a
case label of an outer switch.
It's not clear if these fall throughs are truly intended. The Hexagon
tests pass regardless of whether these case blocks fall through or
break.
For now, I have applied the intended fallthrough annotation macro with a
FIXME comment to unblock enabling the warning. I will send a follow-up
patch that converts them to breaks to the Hexagon maintainers.
llvm-svn: 345878
Previously this case fell through to unreachable, so it is clearly not
covered by any test case in LLVM. It may be dynamically unreachable, in
fact. However, if it were to run, this is what it would logically do.
The assert suggests that the intended behavior was not to allow folding
offsets from jump table indices, which makes sense.
llvm-svn: 345868
optsize using masked wide loads
Under Opt for Size, the vectorizer does not vectorize interleave-groups that
have gaps at the end of the group (such as a loop that reads only the even
elements: a[2*i]) because that implies that we'll require a scalar epilogue
(which is not allowed under Opt for Size). This patch extends the support for
masked-interleave-groups (introduced by D53011 for conditional accesses) to
also cover the case of gaps in a group of loads; Targets that enable the
masked-interleave-group feature don't have to invalidate interleave-groups of
loads with gaps; they could now use masked wide-loads and shuffles (if that's
what the cost model selects).
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53668
llvm-svn: 345705
The class definition for Call_nr has the itinerary as a
parameter, but the value is never assigned to the Itinerary
field for the instruction. This means the compiler is unable
to schedule and packetize the instruction correctly because
these instrution will not have any resource descritions.
I don't have a specific test case, but the ps_call_nr.ll
test failed with a proposed patch.
llvm-svn: 345442
This will allow other generators of LLVM IR to use the auto-vectorizer
without having to change that flag.
Note: on its own, this patch will enable auto-vectorization on Hexagon
in all cases, regardless of the -fvectorize flag. There is a companion
clang patch that together with this one forms an NFC for clang users.
llvm-svn: 345169
interleave-group
The vectorizer currently does not attempt to create interleave-groups that
contain predicated loads/stores; predicated strided accesses can currently be
vectorized only using masked gather/scatter or scalarization. This patch makes
predicated loads/stores candidates for forming interleave-groups during the
Loop-Vectorizer's analysis, and adds the proper support for masked-interleave-
groups to the Loop-Vectorizer's planning and transformation stages. The patch
also extends the TTI API to allow querying the cost of masked interleave groups
(which each target can control); Targets that support masked vector loads/
stores may choose to enable this feature and allow vectorizing predicated
strided loads/stores using masked wide loads/stores and shuffles.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53011
llvm-svn: 344472
Having a constant value operand in the compound instruction
is not always profitable. This patch improves coremark by ~4% on
Hexagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53152
llvm-svn: 344284
Also, avoid comparing GUIDs when ordering global addresses, because
source file location can cause different GUID to be calculated. As a
result, a pair of symbols can compare "less" in one directory, but
"greater" in another.
llvm-svn: 344271
Moving away from UnknownSize is part of the effort to migrate us to
LocationSizes (e.g. the cleanup promised in D44748).
This doesn't entirely remove all of the uses of UnknownSize; some uses
require tweaks to assume that UnknownSize isn't just some kind of int.
This patch is intended to just be a trivial replacement for all places
where LocationSize::unknown() will Just Work.
llvm-svn: 344186
Finally all targets are enabling multiple regalloc hints, so the hook to
disable this can now be removed.
NFC.
Review: Simon Pilgrim
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52316
llvm-svn: 343851
The pattern had a couple of problems:
- It was checking for loads of bytes in the reverse order to what it
should have been looking for.
- It would replace loads of bytes with a load of a word without making
sure that the alignment was correct.
Thanks to Eli Friedman for pointing it out.
llvm-svn: 343514
This involves changing the shouldExpandAtomicCmpXchgInIR interface, but I have
updated the in-tree backends using this hook (ARM, AArch64, Hexagon) so they
will see no functional change. Previously this hook returned bool, but it now
returns AtomicExpansionKind.
This hook allows targets to select how a given cmpxchg is to be expanded.
D48131 uses this to expand part-word cmpxchg to a target-specific intrinsic.
See my associated RFC for more info on the motivation for this change
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123993.html>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48130
llvm-svn: 342550
- Instead of having both `SUnit::dump(ScheduleDAG*)` and
`ScheduleDAG::dumpNode(ScheduleDAG*)`, just keep the latter around.
- Add `ScheduleDAG::dump()` and avoid code duplication in several
places. Implement it for different ScheduleDAG variants.
- Add `ScheduleDAG::dumpNodeName()` in favor of the `SUnit::print()`
functions. They were only ever used for debug dumping and putting the
function into ScheduleDAG is consistent with the `dumpNode()` change.
llvm-svn: 342520
Shufflevector instructions in LLVM IR that extract a subset of elements
of a longer input into a shorter vector can be done using VECTOR_SHUFFLEs.
This will avoid expanding them into constly extracts and inserts.
llvm-svn: 342091
Scalarization of a shuffle will break up the source vectors into individual
elements, and use them to assemble the resulting vector. An element type of
a legal vector type may not necessarily be a legal scalar type, so make
sure that the extracted values are extended to a legal scalar type.
llvm-svn: 342079
Disassemblers cannot depend on main target headers. The same is true for
MCTargetDesc, but there's a lot more cleanup needed for that.
llvm-svn: 341822
This replaces r337723. The global list in the module can be huge with LTO,
plus the module can change between different invocations of the pass, so
there is no easy way to deterministically cache the ordering (especially
in the presence of multiple threads).
llvm-svn: 341478
This removes the FrameAccess struct that was added to the interface
in D51537, since the PseudoValue from the MachineMemoryOperand
can be safely casted to a FixedStackPseudoSourceValue.
Reviewers: MatzeB, thegameg, javed.absar
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51617
llvm-svn: 341454
For instructions that spill/fill to and from multiple frame-indices
in a single instruction, hasStoreToStackSlot and hasLoadFromStackSlot
should return an array of accesses, rather than just the first encounter
of such an access.
This better describes FI accesses for AArch64 (paired) LDP/STP
instructions.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51537
llvm-svn: 341301
a generically extensible collection of extra info attached to
a `MachineInstr`.
The primary change here is cleaning up the APIs used for setting and
manipulating the `MachineMemOperand` pointer arrays so chat we can
change how they are allocated.
Then we introduce an extra info object that using the trailing object
pattern to attach some number of MMOs but also other extra info. The
design of this is specifically so that this extra info has a fixed
necessary cost (the header tracking what extra info is included) and
everything else can be tail allocated. This pattern works especially
well with a `BumpPtrAllocator` which we use here.
I've also added the basic scaffolding for putting interesting pointers
into this, namely pre- and post-instruction symbols. These aren't used
anywhere yet, they're just there to ensure I've actually gotten the data
structure types correct. I'll flesh out support for these in
a subsequent patch (MIR dumping, parsing, the works).
Finally, I've included an optimization where we store any single pointer
inline in the `MachineInstr` to avoid the allocation overhead. This is
expected to be the overwhelmingly most common case and so should avoid
any memory usage growth due to slightly less clever / dense allocation
when dealing with >1 MMO. This did require several ergonomic
improvements to the `PointerSumType` to reasonably support the various
usage models.
This also has a side effect of freeing up 8 bits within the
`MachineInstr` which could be repurposed for something else.
The suggested direction here came largely from Hal Finkel. I hope it was
worth it. ;] It does hopefully clear a path for subsequent extensions
w/o nearly as much leg work. Lots of thanks to Reid and Justin for
careful reviews and ideas about how to do all of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50701
llvm-svn: 339940
`MachineMemOperand` pointers attached to `MachineSDNodes` and instead
have the `SelectionDAG` fully manage the memory for this array.
Prior to this change, the memory management was deeply confusing here --
The way the MI was built relied on the `SelectionDAG` allocating memory
for these arrays of pointers using the `MachineFunction`'s allocator so
that the raw pointer to the array could be blindly copied into an
eventual `MachineInstr`. This creates a hard coupling between how
`MachineInstr`s allocate their array of `MachineMemOperand` pointers and
how the `MachineSDNode` does.
This change is motivated in large part by a change I am making to how
`MachineFunction` allocates these pointers, but it seems like a layering
improvement as well.
This would run the risk of increasing allocations overall, but I've
implemented an optimization that should avoid that by storing a single
`MachineMemOperand` pointer directly instead of allocating anything.
This is expected to be a net win because the vast majority of uses of
these only need a single pointer.
As a side-effect, this makes the API for updating a `MachineSDNode` and
a `MachineInstr` reasonably different which seems nice to avoid
unexpected coupling of these two layers. We can map between them, but we
shouldn't be *surprised* at where that occurs. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50680
llvm-svn: 339740
Vgather requires must be in a packet with a store, which contradicts
the no-packets feature. As a consequence, gather/scatter could not be
used with no-packets. Relax this, and allow gather packets as exceptions
to the no-packets requirements.
llvm-svn: 339177
This will remove suboptimal branching from the generated ll/sc loops.
The extra simplification pass affects a lot of testcases, which have
been modified to accommodate this change: either by modifying the
test to become immune to the CFG simplification, or (less preferablt)
by adding option -hexagon-initial-cfg-clenaup=0.
llvm-svn: 338774
For example v = <2 x i1> is represented as bbbbaaaa in a predicate register,
where b = v[1], a = v[0]. Extracting v[1] is equivalent to extracting bit 4
from the predicate register.
llvm-svn: 337934
If an HVX vector register is to be coalesced into a vector pair, make
sure that the vector pair will not have a function call in its live range,
unless it already had one. All HVX vector registers are volatile, so
any vector register live across a function call will have to be spilled.
If a vector needs to be spilled, and it's coalesced into a vector pair
then the whole pair will need to be spilled (even if only a part of it is
live), taking extra stack space.
llvm-svn: 337073
A TableGen instruction record usually contains a DAG pattern that will
describe the SelectionDAG operation that can be implemented by this
instruction. However, there will be cases where several different DAG
patterns can all be implemented by the same instruction. The way to
represent this today is to write additional patterns in the Pattern
(or usually Pat) class that map those extra DAG patterns to the
instruction. This usually also works fine.
However, I've noticed cases where the current setup seems to require
quite a bit of extra (and duplicated) text in the target .td files.
For example, in the SystemZ back-end, there are quite a number of
instructions that can implement an "add-with-overflow" operation.
The same instructions also need to be used to implement just plain
addition (simply ignoring the extra overflow output). The current
solution requires creating extra Pat pattern for every instruction,
duplicating the information about which particular add operands
map best to which particular instruction.
This patch enhances TableGen to support a new PatFrags class, which
can be used to encapsulate multiple alternative patterns that may
all match to the same instruction. It operates the same way as the
existing PatFrag class, except that it accepts a list of DAG patterns
to match instead of just a single one. As an example, we can now define
a PatFrags to match either an "add-with-overflow" or a regular add
operation:
def z_sadd : PatFrags<(ops node:$src1, node:$src2),
[(z_saddo node:$src1, node:$src2),
(add node:$src1, node:$src2)]>;
and then use this in the add instruction pattern:
defm AR : BinaryRRAndK<"ar", 0x1A, 0xB9F8, z_sadd, GR32, GR32>;
These SystemZ target changes are implemented here as well.
Note that PatFrag is now defined as a subclass of PatFrags, which
means that some users of internals of PatFrag need to be updated.
(E.g. instead of using PatFrag.Fragment you now need to use
!head(PatFrag.Fragments).)
The implementation is based on the following main ideas:
- InlinePatternFragments may now replace each original pattern
with several result patterns, not just one.
- parseInstructionPattern delays calling InlinePatternFragments
and InferAllTypes. Instead, it extracts a single DAG match
pattern from the main instruction pattern.
- Processing of the DAG match pattern part of the main instruction
pattern now shares most code with processing match patterns from
the Pattern class.
- Direct use of main instruction patterns in InferFromPattern and
EmitResultInstructionAsOperand is removed; everything now operates
solely on DAG match patterns.
Reviewed by: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48545
llvm-svn: 336999
This is marginally helpful for removing redundant extensions, and the
code is easier to read, so it seems like an all-around win. In the new
test i8-phi-ext.ll, we used to emit an AssertSext i8; now we emit an
AssertZext i2, which allows the extension of the return value to be
eliminated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49004
llvm-svn: 336868
An explicit untied use is not sufficient to maintain liveness of a
register redefined in a predicated instruction. For example
%1 = COPY %0
...
%1 = A2_paddif %2, %1, 1
could become
$r1 = COPY $r0
...
$r1 = A2_paddif $p0, $r1, 1
and later
$r1 = COPY $r0 ;; this is not really dead!
...
$r1 = A2_paddif $p0, $r0, 1
llvm-svn: 336662
Add the generic processor for Hexagon so that it can be used
with 3rd party programs that create a back-end with the
"generic" CPU. This patch also enables the JIT for Hexagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48571
llvm-svn: 335641
This value is the first vector instruction type in numerical order. The
previous value was incorrect, leaving TypeCVI_GATHER outside of the range
for vector instructions. This caused vector .new instructions to be
incorrectly encoded in the presence of gather.
llvm-svn: 335065
Implement default legalization of rotates: either in terms of the rotation
in the opposite direction (if legal), or in terms of shifts and ors.
Implement generating of rotate instructions for Hexagon. Hexagon only
supports rotates by an immediate value, so implement custom lowering of
ROTL/ROTR on Hexagon. If a rotate is not legal, use the default expansion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47725
llvm-svn: 334497
On targets like Arm some relaxations may only be performed when certain
architectural features are available. As functions can be compiled with
differing levels of architectural support we must make a judgement on
whether we can relax based on the MCSubtargetInfo for the function. This
change passes through the MCSubtargetInfo for the function to
fixupNeedsRelaxation so that the decision on whether to relax can be made
per function. In this patch, only the ARM backend makes use of this
information. We must also pass the MCSubtargetInfo to applyFixup because
some fixups skip error checking on the assumption that relaxation has
occurred, to prevent code-generation errors applyFixup must see the same
MCSubtargetInfo as fixupNeedsRelaxation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44928
llvm-svn: 334078
Review feedback from r328165. Split out just the one function from the
file that's used by Analysis. (As chandlerc pointed out, the original
change only moved the header and not the implementation anyway - which
was fine for the one function that was used (since it's a
template/inlined in the header) but not in general)
llvm-svn: 333954
Summary:
They've been deprecated in favor of UADDO/ADDCARRY or USUBO/SUBCARRY for a while.
Target that uses these opcodes are changed in order to ensure their behavior doesn't change.
Reviewers: efriedma, craig.topper, dblaikie, bkramer
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, jyknight, sdardis, nemanjai, nhaehnle, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, jrtc27, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, atanasyan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47422
llvm-svn: 333748
The uint64_ts that we pass around AA to represent MemoryLocation sizes
are logically an Optional<uint64_t>. In D44748, we want to add an extra
'imprecise' bit to this Optional<uint64_t> to represent whether a given
MemoryLocation size is an upper-bound or an exact size. For more context
on why, please see D44748.
That patch is quite large, but reviewers seem to be OK with the
approach. In D45581 (my first attempt to split 'noise' out of D44748),
reames asked that I land a precursor that is solely replacing uint64_t
with LocationSize, which starts out as `using LocationSize = uint64_t;`.
He also gave me the OK to submit this rename without further review.
llvm-svn: 333314
When the shuffle mask selected a subvector of the second input vector,
and aligning of the source was performed, the shuffle mask was updated
incorrectly, resulting in an ICE further in the selection process.
llvm-svn: 333279
With this we gain a little flexibility in how the generic object
writer is created.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47045
llvm-svn: 332868
To make this work I needed to add an endianness field to MCAsmBackend
so that writeNopData() implementations know which endianness to use.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47035
llvm-svn: 332857
Provide some free functions to reduce verbosity of endian-writing
a single value, and replace the endianness template parameter with
a field.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47032
llvm-svn: 332757
The idea is that a client that wants split dwarf would create a
specific kind of object writer that creates two files, and use it to
create the streamer.
Part of PR37466.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47050
llvm-svn: 332749
The code that generates post-increments for Hexagon considered
integer values only. This patch adds support to generate them for
floating point values, f32 and f64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47036
llvm-svn: 332748
For RISCV branch instructions, we need to preserve relocation types when linker
relaxation enabled, so then linker could modify offset when the branch offsets
changed.
We preserve relocation types by define shouldForceRelocation.
IsResolved return by evaluateFixup will always false when shouldForceRelocation
return true. It will make RISCV MC Branch Relaxation always relax 16-bit
branches to 32-bit form, even if the symbol actually could be resolved.
To avoid 16-bit branches always relax to 32-bit form when linker relaxation
enabled, we add a new parameter WasForced to indicate that the symbol actually
couldn't be resolved and not forced by shouldForceRelocation return true.
RISCVAsmBackend::fixupNeedsRelaxationAdvanced could relax branches with
unresolved symbols by (!IsResolved && !WasForced).
RISCV MC Branch Relaxation is needed because RISCV could perform 32-bit
to 16-bit transformation in MC layer.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46350
llvm-svn: 332696
Data directives such as .word, .half, .hword are currently parsed using
HexagonAsmParser::ParseDirectiveValue which effectively duplicates logic from
AsmParser::parseDirectiveValue. This patch deletes that duplicated logic in
favour of using addAliasForDirective.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46999
llvm-svn: 332607