Add support for min/max flavor selects in computeConstantRange(),
which allows us to fold comparisons of a min/max against a constant
in InstSimplify. This was suggested by spatel as an alternative
approach to D59378. I've also added the infinite looping test from
that revision here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59506
llvm-svn: 356415
This is preparation for D59506. The InstructionSimplify abs handling
is moved into computeConstantRange(), which is the general place for
such calculations. This is NFC and doesn't affect the existing tests
in test/Transforms/InstSimplify/icmp-abs-nabs.ll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59511
llvm-svn: 356409
This reinstates r347934, along with a tweak to address a problem with
PHI node ordering that that commit created (or exposed). (That commit
was reverted at r348426, due to the PHI node issue.)
Original commit message:
r320789 suppressed moving the insertion point of SCEV expressions with
dev/rem operations to the loop header in non-loop-invariant situations.
This, and similar, hoisting is also unsafe in the loop-invariant case,
since there may be a guard against a zero denominator. This is an
adjustment to the fix of r320789 to suppress the movement even in the
loop-invariant case.
This fixes PR30806.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57428
llvm-svn: 356392
This is the same change as rL356290, but for signed add. It replaces
the existing ripple logic with the overflow logic in ConstantRange.
This is NFC in that it should return NeverOverflow in exactly the
same cases as the previous implementation. However, it does make
computeOverflowForSignedAdd() more powerful by now also determining
AlwaysOverflows conditions. As none of its consumers handle this yet,
this has no impact on optimization. Making use of AlwaysOverflows
in with.overflow folding will be handled as a followup.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59450
llvm-svn: 356345
Following the suggestion in D59450, I'm moving the code for constructing
a ConstantRange from KnownBits out of ValueTracking, which also allows us
to test this code independently.
I'm adding this method to ConstantRange rather than KnownBits (which
would have been a bit nicer API wise) to avoid creating a dependency
from Support to IR, where ConstantRange lives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59475
llvm-svn: 356339
Use the methods introduced in rL356276 to implement the
computeOverflowForUnsigned(Add|Sub) functions in ValueTracking, by
converting the KnownBits into a ConstantRange.
This is NFC: The existing KnownBits based implementation uses the same
logic as the the ConstantRange based one. This is not the case for the
signed equivalents, so I'm only changing unsigned here.
This is in preparation for D59386, which will also intersect the
computeConstantRange() result into the range determined from KnownBits.
llvm-svn: 356290
Summary:
The AliasSummary previously contained the AliaseeGUID, which was only
populated when reading the summary from bitcode. This patch changes it
to instead hold the ValueInfo of the aliasee, and always populates it.
This enables more efficient access to the ValueInfo (specifically in the
recent patch r352438 which needed to perform an index hash table lookup
using the aliasee GUID).
As noted in the comments in AliasSummary, we no longer technically need
to keep a pointer to the corresponding aliasee summary, since it could
be obtained by walking the list of summaries on the ValueInfo looking
for the summary in the same module. However, I am concerned that this
would be inefficient when walking through the index during the thin
link for various analyses. That can be reevaluated in the future.
By always populating this new field, we can remove the guard and special
handling for a 0 aliasee GUID when dumping the dot graph of the summary.
An additional improvement in this patch is when reading the summaries
from LLVM assembly we now set the AliaseeSummary field to the aliasee
summary in that same module, which makes it consistent with the behavior
when reading the summary from bitcode.
Reviewers: pcc, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57470
llvm-svn: 356268
The shift argument is defined to be modulo the bitwidth, so if that argument
is a constant, we can always reduce the constant to its minimal form to allow
better CSE and other follow-on transforms.
We need to be careful to ignore constant expressions here, or we will likely
infinite loop. I'm adding a general vector constant query for that case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59374
llvm-svn: 356192
Summary:
This fixes an extremely long compile time caused by recursive analysis
of truncs, which were not previously subject to any depth limits unlike
some of the other ops. I decided to use the same control used for
sext/zext, since the routines analyzing these are sometimes mutually
recursive with the trunc analysis.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, sanjoy
Subscribers: sanjoy, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58994
llvm-svn: 355949
This is addressing the issue that we're not modeling the cost of clib functions
in TTI::getIntrinsicCosts and thus we're basically addressing this fixme:
// FIXME: This is wrong for libc intrinsics.
To enable analysis of clib functions, we not only need an intrinsic ID and
formal arguments, but also the actual user of that function so that we can e.g.
look at alignment and values of arguments. So, this is the initial plumbing to
pass the user of an intrinsinsic on to getCallCosts, which queries
getIntrinsicCosts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D59014
llvm-svn: 355901
Change from original commit: move test (that uses an X86 triple) into the X86
subdirectory.
Original description:
Gating vectorizing reductions on *all* fastmath flags seems unnecessary;
`reassoc` should be sufficient.
Reviewers: tvvikram, mkuper, kristof.beyls, sdesmalen, Ayal
Reviewed By: sdesmalen
Subscribers: dcaballe, huntergr, jmolloy, mcrosier, jlebar, bixia, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57728
llvm-svn: 355889
InstructionSimplify currently has some code to determine the constant
range of integer instructions for some simple cases. It is used to
simplify icmps.
This change moves the relevant code into ValueTracking as
llvm::computeConstantRange(), so it can also be reused for other
purposes.
In particular this is with the optimization of overflow checks in
mind (ref D59071), where constant ranges cover some cases that
known bits don't.
llvm-svn: 355781
Commit r355068 "Fix IR/Analysis layering issue with OptBisect" uses the
template
return Gate.isEnabled() && !Gate.shouldRunPass(this, getDescription(...));
for all pass kinds. For the RegionPass, it left out the not operator,
causing region passes to be skipped as soon as a pass gate is used.
llvm-svn: 355733
Summary:
Right now, when we encounter a string equality check,
e.g. `if (memcmp(a, b, s) == 0)`, we try to expand to a comparison if `s` is a
small compile-time constant, and fall back on calling `memcmp()` else.
This is sub-optimal because memcmp has to compute much more than
equality.
This patch replaces `memcmp(a, b, s) == 0` by `bcmp(a, b, s) == 0` on platforms
that support `bcmp`.
`bcmp` can be made much more efficient than `memcmp` because equality
compare is trivially parallel while lexicographic ordering has a chain
dependency.
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jyknight, ckennelly, gchatelet, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56593
llvm-svn: 355672
In the DJ-graph based computation of iterated dominance frontiers,
SuccNode->getIDom() == Node is one of the tests to check if (Node,Succ)
is a J-edge. If it is true, since Node is dominated by Root,
SuccLevel = level(Node)+1 > RootLevel
which means the next test SuccLevel > RootLevel will also be true. test
the check is redundant and can be deleted as it also involves one
indirection and provides no speed-up.
llvm-svn: 355589
A SCEV is not low-cost just because you can divide it by a power of 2. We need to also
check what we are dividing to make sure it too is not a high-code expansion. This helps
to not expand the exit value of certain loops, helping not to bloat the code.
The change in no-iv-rewrite.ll is reverting back to what it was testing before rL194116,
and looks a lot like the other tests in replace-loop-exit-folds.ll.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58435
llvm-svn: 355393
There are no tests for this case, and I'm not sure how it could ever work,
so I'm just removing this option from the matcher. This should fix PR40940:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40940
llvm-svn: 355292
InputIsKnownDead check is shared by all operands. Compute it once.
For non-integer instructions, use Visited.insert(I).second to replace a
find() and an insert().
llvm-svn: 355290
In some cases, MaxBECount can be less precise than ExactBECount for AND
and OR (the AND case was PR26207). In the OR test case, both ExactBECounts are
undef, but MaxBECount are different, so we hit the assertion below. This
patch uses the same solution the AND case already uses.
Assertion failed:
((isa<SCEVCouldNotCompute>(ExactNotTaken) || !isa<SCEVCouldNotCompute>(MaxNotTaken))
&& "Exact is not allowed to be less precise than Max"), function ExitLimit
This patch also consolidates test cases for both AND and OR in a single
test case.
Fixes https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=13245
Reviewers: sanjoy, efriedma, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58853
llvm-svn: 355259
The value stored in SCEVConstant is of type ConstantInt*, which can
never be UndefValue. So we should never hit that code.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, sanjoy
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58851
llvm-svn: 355257
We have two sources of known bits:
1. For adds leading ones of either operand are preserved. For sub
leading zeros of LHS and leading ones of RHS become leading zeros in
the result.
2. The saturating math is a select between add/sub and an all-ones/
zero value. As such we can carry out the add/sub known bits
calculation, and only preseve the known one/zero bits respectively.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58329
llvm-svn: 355223
GCC correctly moans that PlainCFGBuilder::isExternalDef(llvm::Value*) and
StackSafetyDataFlowAnalysis::verifyFixedPoint() are defined but not used
in Release builds. Hide them behind 'ifndef NDEBUG'.
llvm-svn: 355205
Part 2 of CSPGO changes (mostly related to ProfileSummary).
Note that I use a default parameter in setProfileSummary() and getSummary().
This is to break the dependency in clang. I will make the parameter explicit
after changing clang in a separated patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54175
llvm-svn: 355131
Second part of D58593.
Compute precise overflow conditions based on all known bits, rather
than just the sign bits. Unsigned a - b overflows iff a < b, and we
can determine whether this always/never happens based on the minimal
and maximal values achievable for a and b subject to the known bits
constraint.
llvm-svn: 355109
Summary:
The description of KnownBits::zext() and
KnownBits::zextOrTrunc() has confusingly been telling
that the operation is equivalent to zero extending the
value we're tracking. That has not been true, instead
the user has been forced to explicitly set the extended
bits as known zero afterwards.
This patch adds a second argument to KnownBits::zext()
and KnownBits::zextOrTrunc() to control if the extended
bits should be considered as known zero or as unknown.
Reviewers: craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: javed.absar, hiraditya, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58650
llvm-svn: 355099
Part of D58593.
Compute precise overflow conditions based on all known bits, rather
than just the sign bits. Unsigned a + b overflows iff a > ~b, and we
can determine whether this always/never happens based on the minimal
and maximal values achievable for a and ~b subject to the known bits
constraint.
llvm-svn: 355072
OptBisect is in IR due to LLVMContext using it. However, it uses IR units from
Analysis as well. This change moves getDescription functions from OptBisect
to their respective IR units. Generating names for IR units will now be up
to the callers, keeping the Analysis IR units in Analysis. To prevent
unnecessary string generation, isEnabled function is added so that callers know
when the description needs to be generated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58406
llvm-svn: 355068
Summary:
The original assumption for the insertDef method was that it would not
materialize Defs out of no-where, hence it will not insert phis needed
after inserting a Def.
However, when cloning an instruction (use case used in LICM), we do
materialize Defs "out of no-where". If the block receiving a Def has at
least one other Def, then no processing is needed. If the block just
received its first Def, we must check where Phi placement is needed.
The only new usage of insertDef is in LICM, hence the trigger for the bug.
But the original goal of the method also fails to apply for the move()
method. If we move a Def from the entry point of a diamond to either the
left or right blocks, then the merge block must add a phi.
While this usecase does not currently occur, or may be viewed as an
incorrect transformation, MSSA must behave corectly given the scenario.
Resolves PR40749 and PR40754.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, jdoerfert, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58652
llvm-svn: 355040
As discussed on llvm-dev:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2019-February/130491.html
We can't remove the compare+select in the general case because
we are treating funnel shift like a standard instruction (as
opposed to a special instruction like select/phi).
That means that if one of the operands of the funnel shift is
poison, the result is poison regardless of whether we know that
the operand is actually unused based on the instruction's
particular semantics.
The motivating case for this transform is the more specific
rotate op (rather than funnel shift), and we are preserving the
fold for that case because there is no chance of introducing
extra poison when there is no anonymous extra operand to the
funnel shift.
llvm-svn: 354905
This requires a couple of tweaks to existing vectorization functions as they were assuming that only the second call argument (ctlz/cttz/powi) could ever be the 'always scalar' argument, but for smul.fix + umul.fix its the third argument.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58616
llvm-svn: 354790
Summary:
This patch separates two semantics of `applyUpdates`:
1. User provides an accurate CFG diff and the dominator tree is updated according to the difference of `the number of edge insertions` and `the number of edge deletions` to infer the status of an edge before and after the update.
2. User provides a sequence of hints. Updates mentioned in this sequence might never happened and even duplicated.
Logic changes:
Previously, removing invalid updates is considered a side-effect of deduplication and is not guaranteed to be reliable. To handle the second semantic, `applyUpdates` does validity checking before deduplication, which can cause updates that have already been applied to be submitted again. Then, different calls to `applyUpdates` might cause unintended consequences, for example,
```
DTU(Lazy) and Edge A->B exists.
1. DTU.applyUpdates({{Delete, A, B}, {Insert, A, B}}) // User expects these 2 updates result in a no-op, but {Insert, A, B} is queued
2. Remove A->B
3. DTU.applyUpdates({{Delete, A, B}}) // DTU cancels this update with {Insert, A, B} mentioned above together (Unintended)
```
But by restricting the precondition that updates of an edge need to be strictly ordered as how CFG changes were made, we can infer the initial status of this edge to resolve this issue.
Interface changes:
The second semantic of `applyUpdates` is separated to `applyUpdatesPermissive`.
These changes enable DTU(Lazy) to use the first semantic if needed, which is quite useful in `transforms/utils`.
Reviewers: kuhar, brzycki, dmgreen, grosser
Reviewed By: brzycki
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58170
llvm-svn: 354669
The m_APFloat matcher does not work with anything but strict
splat vector constants, so we could miss these folds and then
trigger an assertion in instcombine:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=13201
The previous attempt at this in rL354406 had a logic bug that
actually triggered a regression test failure, but I failed to
notice it the first time.
llvm-svn: 354467
The m_APFloat matcher does not work with anything but strict
splat vector constants, so we could miss these folds and then
trigger an assertion in instcombine:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=13201
llvm-svn: 354406
Constant hoisting may have hidden a constant behind a bitcast so that
it isn't folded into its users. However, this prevents BPI from
calculating some of its heuristics that are based upon constant
values. So, I've added a simple helper function to look through these
casts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D58166
llvm-svn: 354119
as long as their uses does not contain calls to functions that capture
the argument (potentially allowing the blockaddress to "escape" the
lifetime of the caller).
TODO:
- add more tests
- fix crash in llvm::updateCGAndAnalysisManagerForFunctionPass when
invoking Transforms/Inline/blockaddress.ll
llvm-svn: 354079
Side effects of widenable condition intrinsic are modelled via
InaccessibleMemOnly, and there is no way to say that it isn't
really writing any memory. This patch teaches MemoryWriteTracking
ignore this intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 354021
It seems that, since VC19, the `float` C99 math functions are supported for all
targets, unlike the C89 ones.
According to the discussion at https://reviews.llvm.org/D57625.
llvm-svn: 353758
Summary:
This verification may fail after certain transformations due to
BasicAA's fragility. Added a small explanation and a testcase that
triggers the assert in checkClobberSanity (before its removal).
Addresses PR40509.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits, Prazek
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57973
llvm-svn: 353739
Loop::setAlreadyUnrolled() and
LoopVectorizeHints::setLoopAlreadyUnrolled() both add loop metadata that
stops the same loop from being transformed multiple times. This patch
merges both implementations.
In doing so we fix 3 potential issues:
* setLoopAlreadyUnrolled() kept the llvm.loop.vectorize/interleave.*
metadata even though it will not be used anymore. This already caused
problems such as http://llvm.org/PR40546. Change the behavior to the
one of setAlreadyUnrolled which deletes this loop metadata.
* setAlreadyUnrolled() used to create a new LoopID by calling
MDNode::get with nullptr as the first operand, then replacing it by
the returned references using replaceOperandWith. It is possible
that MDNode::get would instead return an existing node (due to
de-duplication) that then gets modified. To avoid, use a fresh
TempMDNode that does not get uniqued with anything else before
replacing it with replaceOperandWith.
* LoopVectorizeHints::matchesHintMetadataName() only compares the
suffix of the attribute to set the new value for. That is, when
called with "enable", would erase attributes such as
"llvm.loop.unroll.enable", "llvm.loop.vectorize.enable" and
"llvm.loop.distribute.enable" instead of the one to replace.
Fortunately, function was only called with "isvectorized".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57566
llvm-svn: 353738
It seems that the run time for Windows has changed and supports more math
functions than it used to, especially on AArch64, ARM, and AMD64.
Fixes PR40541.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57625
llvm-svn: 353733
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
Summary: Assumption cache's self-updating mechanism does not correctly handle the case when blocks are extracted from the function by the CodeExtractor. As a result function's assumption cache may have stale references to the llvm.assume calls that were moved to the outlined function. This patch fixes this problem by removing extracted llvm.assume calls from the function’s assumption cache.
Reviewers: hfinkel, vsk, fhahn, davidxl, sanjoy
Reviewed By: hfinkel, vsk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57215
llvm-svn: 353500
Modify GenerateConstantOffsetsImpl to create offsets that can be used
by indexed addressing modes. If formulae can be generated which
result in the constant offset being the same size as the recurrence,
we can generate a pre-indexed access. This allows the pointer to be
updated via the single pre-indexed access so that (hopefully) no
add/subs are required to update it for the next iteration. For small
cores, this can significantly improve performance DSP-like loops.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55373
llvm-svn: 353403
Summary:
Experimentally we found that promotion to scalars carries less benefits
than sinking and hoisting in LICM. When using MemorySSA, we build an
AliasSetTracker on demand in order to reuse the current infrastructure.
We only build it if less than AccessCapForMSSAPromotion exist in the
loop, a cap that is by default set to 250. This value ensures there are
no runtime regressions, and there are small compile time gains for
pathological cases. A much lower value (20) was found to yield a single
regression in the llvm-test-suite and much higher benefits for compile
times. Conservatively we set the current cap to a high value, but we will
explore lowering it when MemorySSA is enabled by default.
Reviewers: sanjoy, chandlerc
Subscribers: nemanjai, jlebar, Prazek, george.burgess.iv, jfb, jsji, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56625
llvm-svn: 353339
Summary:
Pass the alias info to addPointer when available. Will save an alias()
call for must sets when adding a known Must or May alias.
[Part of a series of cleanup patches]
Reviewers: reames, mkazantsev
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56613
llvm-svn: 353335
DomTreeUpdater depends on headers from Analysis, but is in IR. This is a
layering violation since Analysis depends on IR. Relocate this code from IR
to Analysis to fix the layering violation.
llvm-svn: 353265
Summary:
Use a small cache for Values tested by nonEscapingLocalObject().
Since the calls to PointerMayBeCaptured are fairly expensive, this saves
a good amount of compile time for anything relying heavily on
BasicAA.alias() calls.
This uses the same approach as the AliasCache, i.e. the cache is reset
after each alias() call. The cache is not used or updated by modRefInfo
calls since it's harder to know when to reset the cache.
Testcases that show improvements with this patch are too large to
include. Example compile time improvement: 7s to 6s.
Reviewers: chandlerc, sunfish
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57627
llvm-svn: 353245
It seems that the run time for Windows has changed and supports more math
functions than before. Since LLVM requires at least VS2015, I assume that
this is the run time that would be redistributed with programs built with
Clang. Thus, I based this update on the header file `math.h` that
accompanies it.
This patch addresses the PR40541. Unfortunately, I have no access to a
Windows development environment to validate it.
llvm-svn: 353114
Summary:
While compiling openJDK11 (also other workloads), some make files would pass both CFLAGS and LDFLAGS at link step ; resulting in duplicate options on the command line when one is using LTO and trying to influence the inliner. Most of the internal flags are ZeroOrMore, this diff changes the remaining ones.
Reviewers: david2050, twoh, modocache
Reviewed By: twoh
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, dexonsmith, eraman, haicheng, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57537
Patch by: Abdoul-Kader Keita
llvm-svn: 353071
Currently, SCEV creates SCEVUnknown for every node of unreachable code. If we
have a huge amounts of such code, we will be littering SE with these nodes. We could
just state that they all are undef and save some memory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57567
Reviewed By: sanjoy
llvm-svn: 353017
Summary:
The analysis result of DA caches pointers to AA, SCEV, and LI, but it
never checks for their invalidation. Fix that.
Reviewers: chandlerc, dmgreen, bogner
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: hiraditya, bollu, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56381
llvm-svn: 352986
InlineCost's isInlineViable() is changed to return InlineResult
instead of bool. This provides messages for failure reasons and
allows to get more specific messages for cases where callsites
are not viable for inlining.
Reviewed By: xbolva00, anemet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57089
llvm-svn: 352849
Summary:
EarlyCSE needs to optimize MemoryPhis after an access is removed and has
special handling for it. This should be handled by MemorySSA instead.
The default remains that MemoryPhis are *not* optimized after an access
is removed.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57199
llvm-svn: 352787
Currently SCEV attempts to limit transformations so that they do not work with
big SCEVs (that may take almost infinite compile time). But for this, it uses heuristics
such as recursion depth and number of operands, which do not give us a guarantee
that we don't actually have big SCEVs. This situation is still possible, though it is not
likely to happen. However, the bug PR33494 showed a bunch of simple corner case
tests where we still produce huge SCEVs, even not reaching big recursion depth etc.
This patch introduces a concept of 'huge' SCEVs. A SCEV is huge if its expression
size (intoduced in D35989) exceeds some threshold value. We prohibit optimizing
transformations if any of SCEVs we are dealing with is huge. This gives us a reliable
check that we don't spend too much time working with them.
As the next step, we can possibly get rid of old limiting mechanisms, such as recursion
depth thresholds.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35990
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 352728
This is meant to be used with clang's __builtin_dynamic_object_size.
When 'true' is passed to this parameter, the intrinsic has the
potential to be folded into instructions that will be evaluated
at run time. When 'false', the objectsize intrinsic behaviour is
unchanged.
rdar://32212419
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56761
llvm-svn: 352664
The code of AddRec simplification is using wrong loop when it creates a new
AddRecExpr. It should be using AddRecLoop which we have saved and against which
all gate checks are made, and not calling AddRec->getLoop() over and over
again because AddRec may change and become an AddRecurrency from outer loop
during the transform iterations.
Considering this change trivial, commiting for postcommit review.
llvm-svn: 352451
Summary:
I found that there currently isn't a way to invoke exportToDot from
the command line for a per-module summary index, and therefore no
testing of that case. Add an internal option and use it to test dumping
of per module summary indexes.
In particular, I am looking at fixing the limitation that causes the
aliasee GUID in the per-module summary to be 0, and want to be able to
test that change.
Reviewers: evgeny777
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57206
llvm-svn: 352441
Bitcast and certain Ptr2Int/Int2Ptr instructions will not alter the
value of their operand and can therefore be looked through when we
determine non-nullness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54956
llvm-svn: 352293
A volatile operation cannot be used to prove an address points to normal
memory. (LangRef was recently updated to state it explicitly.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D57040
llvm-svn: 352109
This patch adds a function to detect guards expressed in explicit control
flow form as branch by `and` with widenable condition intrinsic call:
%wc = call i1 @llvm.experimental.widenable.condition()
%guard_cond = and i1, %some_cond, %wc
br i1 %guard_cond, label %guarded, label %deopt
deopt:
<maybe some non-side-effecting instructions>
deoptimize()
This form can be used as alternative to implicit control flow guard
representation expressed by `experimental_guard` intrinsic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56074
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 351791
Deopt operands are generally intended to record information about a site in code with minimal perturbation of the surrounding code. Idiomatically, they also tend to appear down rare paths. Putting these together, we have an obvious case for extending CVP w/deopt operand constant folding. Arguably, we should be doing this for all operands on all instructions, but that's definitely a much larger and risky change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55678
llvm-svn: 351774
This patch introduces the field `ExpressionSize` in SCEV. This field is
calculated only once on SCEV creation, and it represents the complexity of
this SCEV from arithmetical point of view (not from the point of the number
of actual different SCEV nodes that are used in the expression). Roughly
saying, it is the number of operands and operations symbols when we print this
SCEV.
A formal definition is following: if SCEV `X` has operands
`Op1`, `Op2`, ..., `OpN`,
then
Size(X) = 1 + Size(Op1) + Size(Op2) + ... + Size(OpN).
Size of SCEVConstant and SCEVUnknown is one.
Expression size may be used as a universal way to limit SCEV transformations
for huge SCEVs. Currently, we have a bunch of options that represents various
limits (such as recursion depth limit) that may not make any sense from the
point of view of a LLVM users who is not familiar with SCEV internals, and all
these different options pursue one goal. A more general rule that may
potentially allow us to get rid of this redundancy in options is "do not make
transformations with SCEVs of huge size". It can apply to all SCEV traversals
and transformations that may need to visit a SCEV node more than once, hence
they are prone to combinatorial explosions.
This patch only introduces SCEV sizes calculation as NFC, its utilization will
be introduced in follow-up patches.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35989
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 351725
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
Summary:
If LTOUnit splitting is disabled, the module summary analysis computes
the summary information necessary to perform single implementation
devirtualization during the thin link with the index and no IR. The
information collected from the regular LTO IR in the current hybrid WPD
algorithm is summarized, including:
1) For vtable definitions, record the function pointers and their offset
within the vtable initializer (subsumes the information collected from
IR by tryFindVirtualCallTargets).
2) A record for each type metadata summarizing the vtable definitions
decorated with that metadata (subsumes the TypeIdentiferMap collected
from IR).
Also added are the necessary bitcode records, and the corresponding
assembly support.
The index-based WPD will be sent as a follow-on.
Depends on D53890.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54815
llvm-svn: 351453
Summary:
Check to make sure that the caller and the callee have compatible
function arguments before promoting arguments. This uses the same
TargetTransformInfo queries that are used to determine if attributes
are compatible for inlining.
The goal here is to avoid breaking ABI when a called function's ABI
depends on a target feature that is not enabled in the caller.
This is a very conservative fix for PR37358. Ideally we would have a more
sophisticated check for ABI compatiblity rather than checking if the
attributes are compatible for inlining.
Reviewers: echristo, chandlerc, eli.friedman, craig.topper
Reviewed By: echristo, chandlerc
Subscribers: nikic, xbolva00, rkruppe, alexcrichton, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53554
llvm-svn: 351296
DemandedBits currently uses a simple vector for the worklist, which
means that instructions may be inserted multiple times into it.
Especially in combination with the deep lattice, this may cause
instructions too be recomputed very often. To avoid this, switch
to a SetVector.
Reapplying with a smaller number of inline elements in the
SmallSetVector, to avoid running into the SmallDenseMap issue
described in D56455.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56362
llvm-svn: 350997
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=40110.
This implements handling of undef operands for integer intrinsics in
ConstantFolding, in particular for the bitcounting intrinsics (ctpop,
cttz, ctlz), the with.overflow intrinsics, the saturating math
intrinsics and the funnel shift intrinsics.
The undef behavior follows what InstSimplify does for the general cas
e of non-constant operands. For the bitcount intrinsics (where
InstSimplify doesn't do undef handling -- there cannot be a combination
of an undef + non-constant operand) I'm using a 0 result if the intrinsic
is defined for zero and undef otherwise.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55950
llvm-svn: 350971
Summary:
Records in the module summary index whether the bitcode was compiled
with the option necessary to enable splitting the LTO unit
(e.g. -fsanitize=cfi, -fwhole-program-vtables, or -fsplit-lto-unit).
The information is passed down to the ModuleSummaryIndex builder via a
new module flag "EnableSplitLTOUnit", which is propagated onto a flag
on the summary index.
This is then used during the LTO link to check whether all linked
summaries were built with the same value of this flag. If not, an error
is issued when we detect a situation requiring whole program visibility
of the class hierarchy. This is the case when both of the following
conditions are met:
1) We are performing LowerTypeTests or Whole Program Devirtualization.
2) There are type tests or type checked loads in the code.
Note I have also changed the ThinLTOBitcodeWriter to also gate the
module splitting on the value of this flag.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: ormris, mehdi_amini, Prazek, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, dang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53890
llvm-svn: 350948
Sanity will fail for this, since we're exploring getting a clobber
further than the sanity check expects.
Ideally we need to teach the sanity check to differentiate between the
two walkers based on the SkipSelf bool in the query.
llvm-svn: 350895
Summary:
Instead of using two separate callbacks to return the entry count and the
relative block frequency, use a single callback to return callsite
count. This would allow better supporting hybrid mode in the future as
the count of callsite need not always be derived from entry count (as in
sample PGO).
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, steven_wu, dexonsmith, dang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56464
llvm-svn: 350755
Summary: All a non-default title for the debugging this debugging aide
Reviewers: twoh, Kader, modocache
Reviewed By: twoh
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56499
llvm-svn: 350749
Current strategy of dropping `InstructionPrecedenceTracking` cache is to
invalidate the entire basic block whenever we change its contents. In fact,
`InstructionPrecedenceTracking` has 2 internal strictures: `OrderedInstructions`
that is needed to be invalidated whenever the contents changes, and the map
with first special instructions in block. This second map does not need an
update if we add/remove a non-special instuction because it cannot
affect the contents of this map.
This patch changes API of `InstructionPrecedenceTracking` so that it now
accounts for reasons under which we invalidate blocks. This should lead
to much less recalculations of the map and should save us some compile time
because in practice we don't typically add/remove special instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54462
Reviewed By: efriedma
llvm-svn: 350694
The new-pm version of DA is untested. Testing requires a printer, so
add that and use it in the existing DA tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56386
llvm-svn: 350624
Summary:
The option enables loop transformations to hoist accesses that do not
have clobbers in the loop. If the clobber queries skips the starting
access, the result may be outside the loop instead of the header Phi.
Adding the walker that uses this option in a separate patch.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55944
llvm-svn: 350551
DemandedBits currently uses a simple vector for the worklist, which
means that instructions may be inserted multiple times into it.
Especially in combination with the deep lattice, this may cause
instructions too be recomputed very often. To avoid this, switch
to a SetVector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56362
llvm-svn: 350547
update client code.
Also rename it to use the more generic term `call` instead of something
that could be confused with a praticular type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56183
llvm-svn: 350508
minted `CallBase` class instead of the `CallSite` wrapper.
This moves the largest interwoven collection of APIs that traffic in
`CallSite`s. While a handful of these could have been migrated with
a minorly more shallow migration by converting from a `CallSite` to
a `CallBase`, it hardly seemed worth it. Most of the APIs needed to
migrate together because of the complex interplay of AA APIs and the
fact that converting from a `CallBase` to a `CallSite` isn't free in its
current implementation.
Out of tree users of these APIs can fairly reliably migrate with some
combination of `.getInstruction()` on the `CallSite` instance and
casting the resulting pointer. The most generic form will look like `CS`
-> `cast_or_null<CallBase>(CS.getInstruction())` but in most cases there
is a more elegant migration. Hopefully, this migrates enough APIs for
users to fully move from `CallSite` to the base class. All of the
in-tree users were easily migrated in that fashion.
Thanks for the review from Saleem!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55641
llvm-svn: 350503
In addition to finding dead uses of instructions, also find dead uses
of function arguments, and replace them with zero as well.
I'm changing the way the known bits are computed here to remove the
coupling between the transfer function and the algorithm. It previously
relied on the first op being visited first and computing known bits --
unless the first op is not an instruction, in which case they're computed
on the second op. I could have adjusted this to check for "instruction
or argument", but I think it's better to avoid the repeated calculation
with an explicit flag.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56247
llvm-svn: 350435
GetPointerBaseWithConstantOffset include this code, where ByteOffset
and GEPOffset are both of type llvm::APInt :
ByteOffset += GEPOffset.getSExtValue();
The problem with this line is that getSExtValue() returns an int64_t, but
the += matches an overload for uint64_t. The problem is that the resulting
APInt is no longer considered to be signed. That in turn causes assertion
failures later on if the relevant pointer type is > 64 bits in width and
the GEPOffset was negative.
Changing it to
ByteOffset += GEPOffset.sextOrTrunc(ByteOffset.getBitWidth());
resolves the issue and explicitly performs the sign-extending
or truncation. Additionally, instead of asserting later if the result
is > 64 bits, it breaks out of the loop in that case.
See also
https://reviews.llvm.org/D24729https://reviews.llvm.org/D24772
This commit must be merged after D38662 in order for the test to pass.
Patch by Michael Ferguson <mpfergu@gmail.com>.
Reviewers: reames, sanjoy, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38501
llvm-svn: 350395
Motivated by the discussion in D38499, this patch updates BasicAA to support
arbitrary pointer sizes by switching most remaining non-APInt calculations to
use APInt. The size of these APInts is set to the maximum pointer size (maximum
over all address spaces described by the data layout string).
Most of this translation is straightforward, but this patch contains a fix for
a bug that revealed itself during this translation process. In order for
test/Analysis/BasicAA/gep-and-alias.ll to pass, which is run with 32-bit
pointers, the intermediate calculations must be performed using 64-bit
integers. This is because, as noted in the patch, when GetLinearExpression
decomposes an expression into C1*V+C2, and we then multiply this by Scale, and
distribute, to get (C1*Scale)*V + C2*Scale, it can be the case that, even
through C1*V+C2 does not overflow for relevant values of V, (C2*Scale) can
overflow. If this happens, later logic will draw invalid conclusions from the
(base) offset value. Thus, when initially applying the APInt conversion,
because the maximum pointer size in this test is 32 bits, it started failing.
Suspicious, I created a 64-bit version of this test (included here), and that
failed (miscompiled) on trunk for a similar reason (the multiplication can
overflow).
After fixing this overflow bug, the first test case (at least) in
Analysis/BasicAA/q.bad.ll started failing. This is also a 32-bit test, and was
relying on having 64-bit intermediate values to have BasicAA return an accurate
result. In order to fix this problem, and because I believe that it is not
uncommon to use i64 indexing expressions in 32-bit code (especially portable
code using int64_t), it seems reasonable to always use at least 64-bit
integers. In this way, we won't regress our analysis capabilities (and there's
a command-line option added, so experimenting with this should be easy).
As pointed out by Eli during the review, there are other potential overflow
conditions that this patch does not address. Fixing those is left to follow-up
work.
Patch by me with contributions from Michael Ferguson (mferguson@cray.com).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38662
llvm-svn: 350220
This (mostly) fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39771.
BDCE currently detects instructions that don't have any demanded bits
and replaces their uses with zero. However, if an instruction has
multiple uses, then some of the uses may be dead (have no demanded bits)
even though the instruction itself is still live. This patch extends
DemandedBits/BDCE to detect such uses and replace them with zero.
While this will not immediately render any instructions dead, it may
lead to simplifications (in the motivating case, by converting a rotate
into a simple shift), break dependencies, etc.
The implementation tries to strike a balance between analysis power and
complexity/memory usage. Originally I wanted to track demanded bits on
a per-use level, but ultimately we're only really interested in whether
a use is entirely dead or not. I'm using an extra set to track which uses
are dead. However, as initially all uses are dead, I'm not storing uses
those user is also dead. This case is checked separately instead.
The previous attempt to land this lead to miscompiles, because cases
where uses were initially dead but were later found to be live during
further analysis were not always correctly removed from the DeadUses
set. This is fixed now and the added test case demanstrates such an
instance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55563
llvm-svn: 350188
Trying to keep these patches super small so they're easily post-commit
verifiable, as requested in D44748.
This one sadly isn't *super* small, but all of the changes here are
either to:
- libfuncs that are passed a constant size (memcpy, memset, ...)
- instructions that store/load a constant size
So they have to be precise
llvm-svn: 350017
Keeping these patches super small so they're easily post-commit
verifiable, as requested in D44748.
This tries to find literal loads/stores of the given type, so this has
to be precise.
llvm-svn: 350016
Instruction::isLifetimeStartOrEnd() checks whether an Instruction is an
llvm.lifetime.start or an llvm.lifetime.end intrinsic.
This was suggested as a cleanup in D55967.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D56019
llvm-svn: 349964
Summary:
BasicAA has special logic for unescaped allocas, which normally applies
equally well to dynamic and static allocas. However, llvm.stackrestore
has the power to end the lifetime of dynamic allocas, without referring
to them directly.
stackrestore is already marked with the most conservative memory
modification attributes, but because the alloca is not escaped, the
normal logic produces incorrect results. I think BasicAA needs a special
case here to teach it about the relationship between dynamic allocas and
stackrestore.
Fixes PR40118
Reviewers: gbiv, efriedma, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55969
llvm-svn: 349945
If we found unsafe dependences other than 'unknown', we already know at
compile time that they are unsafe and the runtime checks should always
fail. So we can avoid generating them in those cases.
This should have no negative impact on performance as the runtime checks
that would be created previously should always fail. As a sanity check,
I measured the test-suite, spec2k and spec2k6 and there were no regressions.
Reviewers: Ayal, anemet, hsaito
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55798
llvm-svn: 349794
The current llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access metadata has a problem in that
it uses LoopIDs. LoopID unfortunately is not loop identifier. It is
neither unique (there's even a regression test assigning the some LoopID
to multiple loops; can otherwise happen if passes such as LoopVersioning
make copies of entire loops) nor persistent (every time a property is
removed/added from a LoopID's MDNode, it will also receive a new LoopID;
this happens e.g. when calling Loop::setLoopAlreadyUnrolled()).
Since most loop transformation passes change the loop attributes (even
if it just to mark that a loop should not be processed again as
llvm.loop.isvectorized does, for the versioned and unversioned loop),
the parallel access information is lost for any subsequent pass.
This patch unlinks LoopIDs and parallel accesses.
llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access metadata on instruction is replaced by
llvm.access.group metadata. llvm.access.group points to a distinct
MDNode with no operands (avoiding the problem to ever need to add/remove
operands), called "access group". Alternatively, it can point to a list
of access groups. The LoopID then has an attribute
llvm.loop.parallel_accesses with all the access groups that are parallel
(no dependencies carries by this loop).
This intentionally avoid any kind of "ID". Loops that are clones/have
their attributes modifies retain the llvm.loop.parallel_accesses
attribute. Access instructions that a cloned point to the same access
group. It is not necessary for each access to have it's own "ID" MDNode,
but those memory access instructions with the same behavior can be
grouped together.
The behavior of llvm.mem.parallel_loop_access is not changed by this
patch, but should be considered deprecated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52116
llvm-svn: 349725
This (mostly) fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39771.
BDCE currently detects instructions that don't have any demanded bits
and replaces their uses with zero. However, if an instruction has
multiple uses, then some of the uses may be dead (have no demanded bits)
even though the instruction itself is still live. This patch extends
DemandedBits/BDCE to detect such uses and replace them with zero.
While this will not immediately render any instructions dead, it may
lead to simplifications (in the motivating case, by converting a rotate
into a simple shift), break dependencies, etc.
The implementation tries to strike a balance between analysis power and
complexity/memory usage. Originally I wanted to track demanded bits on
a per-use level, but ultimately we're only really interested in whether
a use is entirely dead or not. I'm using an extra set to track which uses
are dead. However, as initially all uses are dead, I'm not storing uses
those user is also dead. This case is checked separately instead.
The test case has a couple of cases that are not simplified yet. In
particular, we're only looking at uses of instructions right now. I think
it would make sense to also extend this to arguments. Furthermore
DemandedBits doesn't yet know some of the tricks that InstCombine does
for the demanded bits or bitwise or/and/xor in combination with known
bits information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55563
llvm-svn: 349674
This patch adds a VectorizationSafetyStatus enum, which will be extended
in a follow up patch to distinguish between 'safe with runtime checks'
and 'known unsafe' dependences.
Reviewers: anemet, anna, Ayal, hsaito
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54892
llvm-svn: 349556
We're moving ARC optimisation and ARC emission in clang away from runtime methods
and towards intrinsics. This is the part which actually uses the intrinsics in the ARC
optimizer when both analyzing the existing calls and emitting new ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55348
Reviewers: ahatanak
llvm-svn: 349534
This is a follow up for rL347910. In the original patch I somehow forgot to pass
the limit from wrappers to the function which actually does the job.
llvm-svn: 349438
If a saturating add/sub has one constant operand, then we can
determine the possible range of outputs it can produce, and simplify
an icmp comparison based on that.
The implementation is based on a similar existing mechanism for
simplifying binary operator + icmps.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55735
llvm-svn: 349369
ProfileSampleAccurate is used to indicate the profile has exact match to the
code to be optimized.
Previously ProfileSampleAccurate is handled in ProfileSummaryInfo::isColdCallSite
and ProfileSummaryInfo::isColdBlock. A better solution is to initialize function
entry count to 0 when ProfileSampleAccurate is true, so we don't have to handle
ProfileSampleAccurate in multiple places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55660
llvm-svn: 349088
Summary:
This patch computes the synthetic function entry count on the whole
program callgraph (based on module summary) and writes the entry counts
to the summary. After function importing, this count gets attached to
the IR as metadata. Since it adds a new field to the summary, this bumps
up the version.
Reviewers: tejohnson
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43521
llvm-svn: 349076
When multiple loop transformation are defined in a loop's metadata, their order of execution is defined by the order of their respective passes in the pass pipeline. For instance, e.g.
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
is the same as
#pragma clang loop distribute(enable)
#pragma clang loop unroll_and_jam(enable)
and will try to loop-distribute before Unroll-And-Jam because the LoopDistribute pass is scheduled after UnrollAndJam pass. UnrollAndJamPass only supports one inner loop, i.e. it will necessarily fail after loop distribution. It is not possible to specify another execution order. Also,t the order of passes in the pipeline is subject to change between versions of LLVM, optimization options and which pass manager is used.
This patch adds 'followup' attributes to various loop transformation passes. These attributes define which attributes the resulting loop of a transformation should have. For instance,
!0 = !{!0, !1, !2}
!1 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.enable"}
!2 = !{!"llvm.loop.unroll_and_jam.followup_inner", !3}
!3 = !{!"llvm.loop.distribute.enable"}
defines a loop ID (!0) to be unrolled-and-jammed (!1) and then the attribute !3 to be added to the jammed inner loop, which contains the instruction to distribute the inner loop.
Currently, in both pass managers, pass execution is in a fixed order and UnrollAndJamPass will not execute again after LoopDistribute. We hope to fix this in the future by allowing pass managers to run passes until a fixpoint is reached, use Polly to perform these transformations, or add a loop transformation pass which takes the order issue into account.
For mandatory/forced transformations (e.g. by having been declared by #pragma omp simd), the user must be notified when a transformation could not be performed. It is not possible that the responsible pass emits such a warning because the transformation might be 'hidden' in a followup attribute when it is executed, or it is not present in the pipeline at all. For this reason, this patche introduces a WarnMissedTransformations pass, to warn about orphaned transformations.
Since this changes the user-visible diagnostic message when a transformation is applied, two test cases in the clang repository need to be updated.
To ensure that no other transformation is executed before the intended one, the attribute `llvm.loop.disable_nonforced` can be added which should disable transformation heuristics before the intended transformation is applied. E.g. it would be surprising if a loop is distributed before a #pragma unroll_and_jam is applied.
With more supported code transformations (loop fusion, interchange, stripmining, offloading, etc.), transformations can be used as building blocks for more complex transformations (e.g. stripmining+stripmining+interchange -> tiling).
Reviewed By: hfinkel, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49281
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55288
llvm-svn: 348944
For SampleFDO, when a callsite doesn't appear in the profile, it will not be marked as cold callsite unless the option -profile-sample-accurate is specified.
But profile-sample-accurate doesn't cover function isFunctionColdInCallGraph which is used to decide whether a function should be put into text.unlikely section, so even if the user knows the profile is accurate and specifies profile-sample-accurate, those functions not appearing in the sample profile are still not be put into text.unlikely section right now.
The patch fixes that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55567
llvm-svn: 348940
Struct types may have leading zero-size elements like [0 x i32], in
which case the "real" element at offset 0 will not necessarily coincide
with the 0th element of the aggregate. ConstantFoldLoadThroughBitcast()
wants to drill down the element at offset 0, but currently always picks
the 0th aggregate element to do so. This patch changes the code to find
the first non-zero-size element instead, for the struct case.
The motivation behind this change is https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/48627.
Rust is fond of emitting [0 x iN] separators between struct elements to
enforce alignment, which prevents constant folding in this particular case.
The additional tests with [4294967295 x [0 x i32]] check that we don't
end up unnecessarily looping over a large number of zero-size elements
of a zero-size array.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55169
llvm-svn: 348895
IR-printing AfterPass instrumentation might be called on a loop
that has just been invalidated. We should skip printing it to
avoid spurious asserts.
Reviewed By: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54740
llvm-svn: 348887
Currently memcpyopt optimizes cases like
memset(a, byte, N);
memcpy(b, a, M);
to
memset(a, byte, N);
memset(b, byte, M);
if M <= N. Often this allows further simplifications down the line,
which drop the first memset entirely.
This patch extends this optimization for the case where M > N, but we
know that the bytes a[N..M] are undef due to alloca/lifetime.start.
This situation arises relatively often for Rust code, because Rust does
not initialize trailing structure padding and loves to insert redundant
memcpys. This also fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39844.
For the implementation, I'm reusing a bit of code for a similar existing
optimization (direct memcpy of undef). I've also added memset support to
MemDepAnalysis GetLocation -- Instead, getPointerDependencyFrom could be
used, but it seems to make more sense to add this to GetLocation and thus
make the computation cachable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55120
llvm-svn: 348645
DemandedBits and BDCE currently only support scalar integers. This
patch extends them to also handle vector integer operations. In this
case bits are not tracked for individual vector elements, instead a
bit is demanded if it is demanded for any of the elements. This matches
the behavior of computeKnownBits in ValueTracking and
SimplifyDemandedBits in InstCombine.
Unlike the previous iteration of this patch, getDemandedBits() can now
again be called on arbirary (sized) instructions, even if they don't
have integer or vector of integer type. (For vector types the size of the
returned mask will now be the scalar size in bits though.)
The added LoopVectorize test case shows a case which triggered an
assertion failure with the previous attempt, because getDemandedBits()
was called on a pointer-typed instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55297
llvm-svn: 348602
DemandedBits and BDCE currently only support scalar integers. This
patch extends them to also handle vector integer operations. In this
case bits are not tracked for individual vector elements, instead a
bit is demanded if it is demanded for any of the elements. This matches
the behavior of computeKnownBits in ValueTracking and
SimplifyDemandedBits in InstCombine.
The getDemandedBits() method can now only be called on instructions that
have integer or vector of integer type. Previously it could be called on
any sized instruction (even if it was not particularly useful). The size
of the return value is now always the scalar size in bits (while
previously it was the type size in bits).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55297
llvm-svn: 348549
This change caused SEGVs in instcombine. (The r347934 change seems to me to be a
precipitating cause, not a root cause. Details are on the llvm-commits thread
for r347934.)
llvm-svn: 348426
There are potential improvements to the structure of this API
raised by D54994, but remove some cosmetic blemishes before
making any functional changes.
llvm-svn: 348149
It appears that print-module-scope was not implemented for legacy SCC passes.
Fixed to print a whole module instead of just current SCC.
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54793
llvm-svn: 348144
If the shift amount is known, we can determine the known bits of the
output based on the known bits of two inputs.
This is essentially the same functionality as implemented in D54869,
but for ValueTracking rather than InstCombine SimplifyDemandedBits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55140
llvm-svn: 348091
We were duplicating code around the existing isImpliedCondition() that
checks for a predecessor block/dominating condition, so make that a
wrapper call.
llvm-svn: 348088
Summary:
Follow up to D54270, which allowed importing of var args functions
unless they called va_start. As pointed out in the post-commit comments
on that patch, the inliner can handle functions that call va_start in
certain situations as well. Go ahead and enable importing of all var
args functions. Measurements on a large binary show that this increases
imports and binary size by an insignificant amount.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54607
llvm-svn: 348068
Summary:
This is patch #3 of the new DivergenceAnalysis
<https://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123606.html>
The GPUDivergenceAnalysis is intended to eventually supersede the existing
LegacyDivergenceAnalysis. The existing LegacyDivergenceAnalysis produces
incorrect results on unstructured Control-Flow Graphs:
<https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37185>
This patch adds the option -use-gpu-divergence-analysis to the
LegacyDivergenceAnalysis to turn it into a transparent wrapper for the
GPUDivergenceAnalysis.
Reviewers: nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: jholewinski, jvesely, jfb, llvm-commits, alex-t, sameerds, arsenm, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53493
llvm-svn: 348048
Adding a new reduction pattern match for vectorizing code similar
to TSVC s3111:
for (int i = 0; i < N; i++)
if (a[i] > b)
sum += a[i];
This patch adds support for fadd, fsub and fmull, as well as multiple
branches and different (but compatible) instructions (ex. add+sub) in
different branches.
The difference from the previous patch(https://reviews.llvm.org/D49168)
is as follows:
- Added check of fast-math property of fp-instruction to the
previous patch
- Fix/add some pattern for if-reduction.ll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54464
Patch by Takahiro Miyoshi <takahiro.miyoshi@linaro.org>
and Masakazu Ueno <masakazu.ueno@linaro.org>
llvm-svn: 347989
r320789 suppressed moving the insertion point of SCEV expressions with
dev/rem operations to the loop header in non-loop-invariant situations.
This, and similar, hoisting is also unsafe in the loop-invariant case,
since there may be a guard against a zero denominator. This is an
adjustment to the fix of r320789 to suppress the movement even in the
loop-invariant case.
This fixes PR30806.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54713
llvm-svn: 347934
Currently CaptureTracker gives up if it encounters a value with more than 20
uses. The motivation for this cap is to keep it relatively cheap for
BasicAliasAnalysis use case, where the results can't be cached. Although, other
clients of CaptureTracker might be ok with higher cost. This patch introduces an
argument for PointerMayBeCaptured functions to specify the max number of uses to
explore. The motivation for this change is a downstream user of CaptureTracker,
but I believe upstream clients of CaptureTracker might also benefit from more
fine grained cap.
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D55042
llvm-svn: 347910
This is an almost direct move of the functionality from InstCombine to
InstSimplify. There's no reason not to do this in InstSimplify because
we never create a new value with this transform.
(There's a question of whether any dominance-based transform belongs in
either of these passes, but that's a separate issue.)
I've changed 1 of the conditions for the fold (1 of the blocks for the
branch must be the block we started with) into an assert because I'm not
sure how that could ever be false.
We need 1 extra check to make sure that the instruction itself is in a
basic block because passes other than InstCombine may be using InstSimplify
as an analysis on values that are not wired up yet.
The 3-way compare changes show that InstCombine has some kind of
phase-ordering hole. Otherwise, we would have already gotten the intended
final result that we now show here.
llvm-svn: 347896
Always-overflow was already determined for unsigned addition, but
not subtraction. This patch establishes parity.
This allows us to perform some additional simplifications for
signed saturating subtractions.
This change is part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D54534.
llvm-svn: 347771
Summary:
IPA is implemented as module pass which produce map from Function or Alias to
StackSafetyInfo for a single function.
From prototype by Evgenii Stepanov and Vlad Tsyrklevich.
Reviewers: eugenis, vlad.tsyrklevich, pcc, glider
Subscribers: hiraditya, mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54543
llvm-svn: 347611
Summary:
Analysis produces StackSafetyInfo which contains information with how allocas
and parameters were used in functions.
From prototype by Evgenii Stepanov and Vlad Tsyrklevich.
Reviewers: eugenis, vlad.tsyrklevich, pcc, glider
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54504
llvm-svn: 347603
Add support for funnel shifts to the DemandedBits analysis. The
demanded bits of the first two operands can be determined if the
shift amount is constant. The demanded bits of the third operand
(shift amount) can be determined if the bitwidth is a power of two.
This is basically the same functionality as implemented in D54869
and D54478, but for DemandedBits rather than InstCombine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54876
llvm-svn: 347561
This changeset is modeled after Intel's submission for SVML. It enables
trigonometry functions vectorization via SLEEF: http://sleef.org/.
* A new vectorization library enum is added to TargetLibraryInfo.h: SLEEF.
* A new option is added to TargetLibraryInfoImpl - ClVectorLibrary: SLEEF.
* A comprehensive test case is included in this changeset.
* In a separate changeset (for clang), a new vectorization library argument is
added to -fveclib: -fveclib=SLEEF.
Trigonometry functions that are vectorized by sleef:
acos
asin
atan
atanh
cos
cosh
exp
exp2
exp10
lgamma
log10
log2
log
sin
sinh
sqrt
tan
tanh
tgamma
Patch by Stefan Teleman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53927
llvm-svn: 347510
LVI was symbolically executing binary operators only when the RHS was
constant, missing the case where we have a ConstantRange for the RHS,
but not an actual constant. Tested using check-all and by
bootstrapping. Compile time is not impacted measurably.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D19859
llvm-svn: 347379
Support saturating add/sub in constant folding, based on the APInt methods introduced in D54332.
Patch by: @nikic (Nikita Popov)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54531
llvm-svn: 347328
Add methods to BasicBlock which make it easier to efficiently check
whether a block has N (or more) predecessors.
This can be more efficient than using pred_size(), which is a linear
time operation.
We might consider adding similar methods for successors. I haven't done
so in this patch because succ_size() is already O(1).
With this patch applied, I measured a 0.065% compile-time reduction in
user time for running `opt -O3` on the sqlite3 amalgamation (30 trials).
The change in mergeStoreIntoSuccessor alone saves 45 million linked list
iterations in a stage2 Release build of llc.
See llvm.org/PR39702 for a harder but more general way of achieving
similar results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54686
llvm-svn: 347256
Summary:
Currently, when vectorizing stores to uniform addresses, the only
instance we prevent vectorization is if there are multiple stores to the
same uniform address causing an unsafe dependency.
This patch teaches LAA to avoid vectorizing loops that have an unsafe
cross-iteration dependency between a load and a store to the same uniform address.
Fixes PR39653.
Reviewers: Ayal, efriedma
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54538
llvm-svn: 347220
Legacy loop pass manager is issuing "Made Modification" message after each Loop Pass
run, however condition for issuing it is accumulated among all the runs.
That leads to confusing 'modification' messages as soon as the first modification is done.
Changing condition to be "current pass made modifications", similar to how
it is being done in all other pass managers.
llvm-svn: 347215
Every Analysis pass has a get method that returns a reference of the Result of
the Analysis, for example, BlockFrequencyInfo
&BlockFrequencyInfoWrapperPass::getBFI(). I believe that
ProfileSummaryInfo::getPSI() is the only exception to that, as it was returning
a pointer.
Another change is renaming isHotBB and isColdBB to isHotBlock and isColdBlock,
respectively. Most methods use BB as the argument of variable names while
methods usually refer to Basic Blocks as Blocks, instead of BB. For example,
Function::getEntryBlock, Loop:getExitBlock, etc.
I also fixed one of the comments.
Patch by Rodrigo Caetano Rocha!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54669
llvm-svn: 347182
An attempt to recommit r346584 after failure on OSX build bot.
Fixed cache key computation in ThinLTOCodeGenerator and added
test case
llvm-svn: 347033
This is a problem seen in common rotate idioms as noted in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34924
Note that we are not canonicalizing standard IR (shifts and logic) to the intrinsics yet.
(Although I've written this before...) I think this is the last step before we enable
that transform. Ie, we could regress code by doing that transform without this
simplification in place.
In PR34924, I questioned whether this is a valid transform for target-independent IR,
but I convinced myself this is ok. If we're speculating a funnel shift by turning cmp+br
into select, then SimplifyCFG has already determined that the transform is justified.
It's possible that SimplifyCFG is not taking into account profile or other metadata,
but if that's true, then it's a bug independent of funnel shifts.
Also, we do have CGP code to restore a guard like this around an intrinsic if it can't
be lowered cheaply. But that isn't necessary for funnel shift because the default
expansion in SelectionDAGBuilder includes this same cmp+select.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54552
llvm-svn: 346960
Summary:
Previously we marked all vararg functions as non-inlinable in the
function summary, which prevented their importing. However, the
corresponding inliner restriction was loosened in r321940/r342675
to only apply to functions calling va_start. Adjust the summary
flag computation to match.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54270
llvm-svn: 346883
This patch turns InterleaveGroup into a template with the instruction type
being a template parameter. It also adds a VPInterleavedAccessInfo class, which
only contains a mapping from VPInstructions to their respective InterleaveGroup.
As we do not have access to scalar evolution in VPlan, we can re-use
convert InterleavedAccessInfo to VPInterleavedAccess info.
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, hfinkel, dcaballe, rengolin, mkuper, hsaito
Reviewed By: rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49489
llvm-svn: 346758
This just identifies the intrinsics as candidates for vectorization.
It does not mean we will attempt to vectorize under normal conditions
(the test file is forcing vectorization).
The cost model must be fixed to show that the transform is profitable
in general.
Allowing vectorization with these intrinsics is required to avoid
potential regressions from canonicalizing to the intrinsics from
generic IR:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37417
llvm-svn: 346661
This patch relaxes overconservative checks on whether or not we could write
memory before we execute an instruction. This allows us to hoist guards out of
loops even if they are not in the header block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50891
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 346643
This patch allows internalising globals if all accesses to them
(from live functions) are from non-volatile load instructions
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49362
llvm-svn: 346584
For SK_ExtractSubvector, the default 'Ty' type is the source operand type and 'SubTy' is the destination subvector type
I got this the wrong way around when I added rL346510
llvm-svn: 346534
We have a lot of various bugs that are caused by misuse of SCEV (in particular in LV),
all of them can simply be described as "we ask SCEV to prove some fact on invalid IR".
Some of examples of those are PR36311, PR37221, PR39160.
The problem is that these failues manifest differently (what we saw was failure of various
asserts across SCEV, but there can also be miscompiles). This patch adds an assert into two
SCEV methods that strongly rely on correctness of the IR and are involved in known failues.
This will at least allow us to have a clear indication of what was wrong in this case.
This patch also fixes a unit test with incorrect IR that fails this verification.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52930
Reviewed By: fhahn
llvm-svn: 346389
This allows testing AMDGPU alias analysis like any
other alias analysis pass. This fixes the existing
test pointlessly running opt -O3 when it really
just wants to run the one analysis.
Before there was no way to test this using -aa-eval
with opt, since the default constructed pass
is run. The wrapper subclass allows the
default constructor to pass the necessary callback.
llvm-svn: 346353
This adds the llvm-side support for post-inlining evaluation of the
__builtin_constant_p GCC intrinsic.
Also fixed SCCPSolver::visitCallSite to not blow up when seeing a call
to a function where canConstantFoldTo returns true, and one of the
arguments is a struct.
Updated from patch initially by Janusz Sobczak.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D4276
llvm-svn: 346322
Summary:
This is replacement for patch in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49460.
When we fork, the counters are duplicate as they're and so the values are finally wrong when writing gcda for parent and child.
So just before to fork, we flush the counters and so the parent and the child have new counters set to zero.
For exec** functions, we need to flush before the call to have some data.
Reviewers: vsk, davidxl, marco-c
Reviewed By: marco-c
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sylvestre.ledru, marco-c
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53593
llvm-svn: 346313
Summary:
The NotEligibleToImport flag on the GlobalValueSummary was set if it
isn't legal to import (e.g. because it references unpromotable locals)
and when it can't be inlined (in which case importing is pointless).
I split out the inlinable piece into a separate flag on the
FunctionSummary (doesn't make sense for aliases or global variables),
because in the future we may want to import for reasons other than
inlining.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, arphaman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53345
llvm-svn: 346261
This is NFCI for InstCombine because it calls InstSimplify,
so I left the tests for this transform there. As noted in
the code comment, we can allow this fold more often by using
FMF and/or value tracking.
llvm-svn: 346169
We currently seem to underestimate the size of functions with loops in them,
both in terms of absolute code size and in the difficulties of dealing with
such code. (Calls, for example, can be tail merged to further reduce
codesize). At -Oz, we can then increase code size by inlining small loops
multiple times.
This attempts to penalise functions with loops at -Oz by adding a CallPenalty
for each top level loop in the function. It uses LI (and hence DT) to calculate
the number of loops. As we are dealing with minsize, the inline threshold is
small and functions at this point should be relatively small, making the
construction of these cheap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52716
llvm-svn: 346134
In PR39475:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
..we may fail to recognize/simplify fabs() in some cases because we do not
canonicalize fcmp with a -0.0 operand.
Adding that canonicalization can cause regressions on min/max FP tests, so
that's this patch: for the purpose of determining whether something is min/max,
let the value returned by the select determine how we treat a 0.0 operand in the fcmp.
This patch doesn't actually change the -0.0 to +0.0. It just changes the analysis, so
we don't fail to recognize equivalent min/max patterns that only differ in the
signbit of 0.0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54001
llvm-svn: 346097
This patch gives the IR ComputeNumSignBits the same functionality as the
DAG version (the code is derived from the existing code).
This an extension of the single input shuffle analysis added with D53659.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53987
llvm-svn: 346071
Summary:
The hot and cold count thresholds are derived from the summary, but for
debugging purposes it is convenient to provide the actual thresholds.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54040
llvm-svn: 346005
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
When we calculate a product of 2 AddRecs, we end up making quite massive
computations to deduce the operands of resulting AddRec. This process can
be optimized by computing all args of intermediate sum and then calling
`getAddExpr` once rather than calling `getAddExpr` with intermediate
result every time a new argument is computed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53189
Reviewed By: rtereshin
llvm-svn: 345813
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
Summary:
Attempting to simplify the addPointer interface.
Currently there's code decomposing a MemoryLocation into (Ptr, Size, AAMDNodes) only to recreate the MemoryLocation inside the call.
Reviewers: reames, mkazantsev
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53836
llvm-svn: 345548
The motivating case is from PR37549:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37549
The analysis improvement allows us to form a vector 'select' out of
bitwise logic (the use of ComputeNumSignBits was added at rL345149).
The smaller test shows another InstCombine improvement - we use
ComputeNumSignBits to add 'nsw' to shift-left. But the negative
test shows an example where we must not add 'nsw' - when the shuffle
mask contains undef elements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53659
llvm-svn: 345429
optimizing for size
LV is careful to respect -Os and not to create a scalar epilog in all cases
(runtime tests, trip-counts that require a remainder loop) except for peeling
due to gaps in interleave-groups. This patch fixes that; -Os will now have us
invalidate such interleave-groups and vectorize without an epilog.
The patch also removes a related FIXME comment that is now obsolete, and was
also inaccurate:
"FIXME: return None if loop requiresScalarEpilog(<MaxVF>), or look for a smaller
MaxVF that does not require a scalar epilog."
(requiresScalarEpilog() has nothing to do with VF).
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53420
llvm-svn: 344883
Summary:
This is patch 2 of the new DivergenceAnalysis (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50433).
This patch contains a generic divergence analysis implementation for
unstructured, reducible Control-Flow Graphs. It contains two new classes.
The `SyncDependenceAnalysis` class lazily computes sync dependences, which
relate divergent branches to points of joining divergent control. The
`DivergenceAnalysis` class contains the generic divergence analysis
implementation.
Reviewers: nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: sameerds, kristina, nhaehnle, xbolva00, tschuett, mgorny, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51491
llvm-svn: 344734
Summary:
Teach vectorizer about vectorizing variant value stores to uniform
address. Similar to rL343028, we do not allow vectorization if we have
multiple stores to the same uniform address.
Cost model already has the change for considering the extract
instruction cost for a variant value store. See added test cases for how
vectorization is done.
The patch also contains changes to the ORE messages.
Reviewers: Ayal, mkuper, anemet, hsaito
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52656
llvm-svn: 344613
This is an alternative implementation of LoopSafetyInfo that uses the implicit
control flow tracking to give precise answers on queries "whether or not this
block contains throwing instructions". This rules out false-positive answers on
LoopSafetyInfo's queries.
This patch only introduces the new implementation. It is not currently used in
any pass. The enabling patches will go separately, through review.
The plan is to completely replace all uses of LoopSafetyInfo with
ICFLoopSafetyInfo in the future, but to avoid introducing functional problems,
we will do it pass by pass.
llvm-svn: 344601
SCEV's transform that turns `{A1,+,A2,+,...,+,An}<L> * {B1,+,B2,+,...,+,Bn}<L>` into
a single AddRec of size `2n+1` with complex combinatorial coefficients can easily
trigger exponential growth of the SCEV (in case if nothing gets folded and simplified).
We tried to restrain this transform using the option `scalar-evolution-max-add-rec-size`,
but its default value seems to be insufficiently small: the test attached to this patch
with default value of this option `16` has a SCEV of >3M symbols (when printed out).
This patch reduces the simplification limit. It is not a cure to combinatorial
explosions, but at least it reduces this corner case to something more or less
reasonable.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53282
Reviewed By: sanjoy
llvm-svn: 344584
by `getTerminator()` calls instead be declared as `Instruction`.
This is the biggest remaining chunk of the usage of `getTerminator()`
that insists on the narrow type and so is an easy batch of updates.
Several files saw more extensive updates where this would cascade to
requiring API updates within the file to use `Instruction` instead of
`TerminatorInst`. All of these were trivial in nature (pervasively using
`Instruction` instead just worked).
llvm-svn: 344502
LLVM APIs. There weren't very many.
We still have the instruction visitor, and APIs with TerminatorInst as
a return type or an output parameter.
llvm-svn: 344494
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
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
Adding a new reduction pattern match for vectorizing code similar to TSVC s3111:
for (int i = 0; i < N; i++)
if (a[i] > b)
sum += a[i];
This patch adds support for fadd, fsub and fmull, as well as multiple
branches and different (but compatible) instructions (ex. add+sub) in
different branches.
I have forwarded to trunk, added fsub and fmul functionality and
additional tests, but the credit goes to Takahiro, who did most of the
actual work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49168
Patch by Takahiro Miyoshi <takahiro.miyoshi@linaro.org>.
llvm-svn: 344172
There are places where we need to merge multiple LocationSizes of
different sizes into one, and get a sensible result.
There are other places where we want to optimize aggressively based on
the value of a LocationSizes (e.g. how can a store of four bytes be to
an area of storage that's only two bytes large?)
This patch makes LocationSize hold an 'imprecise' bit to note whether
the LocationSize can be treated as an upper-bound and lower-bound for
the size of a location, or just an upper-bound.
This concludes the series of patches leading up to this. The most recent
of which is r344108.
Fixes PR36228.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748
llvm-svn: 344114
This is the third patch in a series intended to make
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748 more easily reviewable. Please see that
patch for more context. The second being r344013.
The intent is to make the output of printing a LocationSize more
precise. The main motivation for this is that we plan to add a bit to
distinguish whether a given LocationSize is an upper-bound or is
precise; making that information available in pretty-printing is nice.
llvm-svn: 344108
prefix.
Use this to direct these files to a specific location in the test suite
so that we don't write files out to random directories (or fail if the
working directory isn't writable).
llvm-svn: 344014
This is the second in a series of changes intended to make
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748 more easily reviewable. Please see that
patch for more context. The first change being r344012.
Since I was requested to do all of this with post-commit review, this is
about as small as I can make this patch.
This patch makes LocationSize into an actual type that wraps a uint64_t;
users are required to call getValue() in order to get the size now. If
the LocationSize has an Unknown size (e.g. if LocSize ==
MemoryLocation::UnknownSize), getValue() will assert.
This also adds DenseMap specializations for LocationInfo, which required
taking two more values from the set of values LocationInfo can
represent. Hence, heavy users of multi-exabyte arrays or structs may
observe slightly lower-quality code as a result of this change.
The intent is for getValue()s to be very close to a corresponding
hasValue() (which is often spelled `!= MemoryLocation::UnknownSize`).
Sadly, small diff context appears to crop that out sometimes, and the
last change in DSE does require a bit of nonlocal reasoning about
control-flow. :/
This also removes an assert, since it's now redundant with the assert in
getValue().
llvm-svn: 344013
This is one of a series of changes intended to make
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748 more easily reviewable. Please see that
patch for more context.
Since I was requested to do all of this with post-commit review, this is
about as small as I can make it (beyond committing changes to these few
files separately, but they're incredibly similar in spirit, so...)
On its own, this change doesn't make a great deal of sense. I plan on
having a follow-up Real Soon Now(TM) to make the bits here make more
sense. :)
In particular, the next change in this series is meant to make
LocationSize an actual type, which you have to call .getValue() on in
order to get at the uint64_t inside. Hence, this change refactors code
so that:
- we only need to call the soon-to-come getValue() once in most cases,
and
- said call to getValue() happens very closely to a piece of code that
checks if the LocationSize has a value (e.g. if it's != UnknownSize).
llvm-svn: 344012
This patch fixes PR39099.
When strided loads are predicated, each of them will form an interleaved-group
(with gaps). However, subsequent stages of vectorization (planning and
transformation) assume that if a load is part of an Interleave-Group it is not
predicated, resulting in wrong code - unmasked wide loads are created.
The Interleaving Analysis does take care not to have conditional interleave
groups of size > 1, but until we extend the planning and transformation stages
to support masked-interleave-groups we should also avoid having them for
size == 1.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52682
llvm-svn: 343931
Call getOperandInfo() instead of using (near) duplicated code in
LoopVectorizationCostModel::getInstructionCost().
This gets the OperandValueKind and OperandValueProperties values for a Value
passed as operand to an arithmetic instruction.
getOperandInfo() used to be a static method in TargetTransformInfo.cpp, but
is now instead a public member.
Review: Florian Hahn
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52883
llvm-svn: 343852
Summary:
This CL allows constant vectors of floats to be recognized as non-NaN
and non-zero in select patterns. This change makes
`matchSelectPattern` more powerful generally, but was motivated
specifically because I wanted fminnan and fmaxnan to be created for
vector versions of the scalar patterns they are created for.
Tested with check-all on all targets. A testcase in the WebAssembly
backend that tests the non-nan codepath is in an upcoming CL.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52324
llvm-svn: 343364
Summary:
Add a dominance check to ensure that the possible devirtualizable
call is actually dominated by the type test/checked load intrinsic being
analyzed. With PGO, after indirect call promotion is performed during
the compile step, followed by inlining, we may have a type test in the
promoted and inlined sequence that allows an indirect call in that
sequence to be devirtualized. That indirect call (inserted by inlining
after promotion) will share the same vtable pointer as the fallback
indirect call that cannot be devirtualized.
Before this patch the code was incorrectly devirtualizing the fallback
indirect call.
See the new test and the example described there for more details.
Reviewers: pcc, vitalybuka
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, Prazek, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52514
llvm-svn: 343226
Summary:
We are overly conservative in loop vectorizer with respect to stores to loop
invariant addresses.
More details in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38546
This is the first part of the fix where we start with vectorizing loop invariant
values to loop invariant addresses.
This also includes changes to ORE for stores to invariant address.
Reviewers: anemet, Ayal, mkuper, mssimpso
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50665
llvm-svn: 343028
Implementing -print-before-all/-print-after-all/-filter-print-func support
through PassInstrumentation callbacks.
- PrintIR routines implement printing callbacks.
- StandardInstrumentations class provides a central place to manage all
the "standard" in-tree pass instrumentations. Currently it registers
PrintIR callbacks.
Reviewers: chandlerc, paquette, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50923
llvm-svn: 342896
Summary:
his code was in CGDecl.cpp and really belongs in LLVM's isBytewiseValue. Teach isBytewiseValue the tricks clang's isRepeatedBytePattern had, including merging undef properly, and recursing on more types.
clang part of this patch: D51752
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51751
llvm-svn: 342709
Summary:
rL323619 marks functions that are calling va_end as not viable for
inlining. This patch reverses that since this va_end doesn't need
access to the vriadic arguments list that are saved on the stack, only
va_start does.
Reviewers: efriedma, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: eraman, haicheng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52067
llvm-svn: 342675
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix
asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342664
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342597
Summary:
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342544
getLoopID has different control flow for two cases: If there is a
single loop latch and for any other number of loop latches (0 and more
than one). The latter case should return the same result if there is
only a single latch. We can save the preceding redundant search for a
latch by handling both cases with the same code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52118
llvm-svn: 342406
Move the 2 classes out of LoopVectorize.cpp to make it easier to re-use
them for VPlan outside LoopVectorize.cpp
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, rengolin, dcaballe, mkuper, hsaito, hfinkel, xbolva00
Reviewed By: rengolin, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49488
llvm-svn: 342027
This fixes a layering violation:
Analysis/IVDescrtors.cpp can't include Transforms/Utils/BasicBlockUtils.h,
since TransformUtils depends on Analysis.
llvm-svn: 342024
Summary:
The InductionDescriptor and RecurrenceDescriptor classes basically analyze the IR to identify the respective IVs. So, it is better to have them in the "Analysis" directory instead of the "Transforms" directory.
The rationale for this is to make the Induction and Recurrence descriptor classes available for analysis passes. Currently including them in an analysis pass produces link error (http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-July/124456.html).
Induction and Recurrence descriptors are moved from Transforms/Utils/LoopUtils.h|cpp to Analysis/IVDescriptors.h|cpp.
Reviewers: dmgreen, llvm-commits, hfinkel
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Subscribers: mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51153
llvm-svn: 342016
Fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38807, which occurred
while compiling SemaTemplateInstantiate.cpp with clang and GVNHoist
enabled. In the following example:
1=def(entry)
/ \
2=def(1) 4=def(1)
3=def(2) 5=def(4)
When removing the MemoryDef 2=def(1) from its basic block, and just
before adding it to the end of the parent basic block, we first
replace all its uses with the defining memory access:
3=def(2) -> 3=def(1)
Then we call insertDef for adding 2=def(1) to the parent basic block,
where we replace the uses of 1=def(entry) with 2=def(1). Doing so we
create a self reference:
2=def(1) -> 2=def(2) (bad)
3=def(1) -> 3=def(2) (ok)
4=def(1) -> 4=def(2) (ok)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51801
llvm-svn: 341947
The previous implementation traversed all loop blocks and bailed if one
was not a latch block. Since we are only interested in latch blocks, we
should only traverse those.
llvm-svn: 341926
This patch does the following things:
1. update SymbolicallyEvaluateGEP so that it bails out if it cannot preserve inrange arribute;
2. update llvm/test/Analysis/ConstantFolding/gep.ll to remove UB in it;
3. remove inaccurate comment above ConstantFoldInstOperandsImpl in llvm/lib/Analysis/ConstantFolding.cpp;
4. add a new regression test that makes sure that no optimizations change an inrange GEP in an unexpected way.
Patch by Zhaomo Yang!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51698
llvm-svn: 341888
Summary:
End goal is to update MemorySSA in all loop passes. LoopUnswitch clones all blocks in a loop. SimpleLoopUnswitch clones some blocks. LoopRotate clones some instructions.
Some of these loop passes also make CFG changes.
This is an API based on what I found needed in LoopUnswitch, SimpleLoopUnswitch, LoopRotate, LoopInstSimplify, LoopSimplifyCFG.
Adding dependent patches using this API for context.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, dberlin
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45299
llvm-svn: 341855
The only point to this change is the test diffs. When I remove this code entirely (in favor of the recently added generic handling), I don't want there to be any confusion due to spurious test diffs.
As an aside, the fact out tests are AST construction order dependent is not great. I thought about fixing that, but the reasonable schemes I might want (e.g. sort by name) need the test diffs anyways.
Philip
llvm-svn: 341841
AliasSetTracker has special case handling for memset, memcpy and memmove which pre-existed argmemonly on functions and readonly and writeonly on arguments. This patch generalizes it using the AA infrastructure to any call correctly annotated.
The motivation here is to cut down on confusion, not performance per se. For most instructions, there is a direct mapping to alias set. However, this is not guaranteed by the interface and was not in fact true for these three intrinsics *and only these three intrinsics*. I kept getting myself confused about this invariant, so I figured it would be good to clearly distinguish between a instructions and alias sets. Calls happened to be an easy target.
The nice side effect is that custom implementations of memset/memcpy/memmove - including wrappers discovered by IPO - can now be optimized the same as builts by LICM.
Note: The actual removal of the memset/memtransfer specific handling will happen in a follow on NFC patch. It was originally part of this one, but separate for ease of review and rebase.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50730
llvm-svn: 341713
Summary:
Block splitting is done with either identical edges being merged, or not.
Only critical edges can be split without merging identical edges based on an option.
Teach the memoryssa updater to take this into account: for the same edge between two blocks only move one entry from the Phi in Old to the new Phi in New.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51563
llvm-svn: 341709
This patch adds per-function size information remarks. Previously, passing
-Rpass-analysis=size-info would only give you per-module changes. By adding
the ability to do this per-function, it's easier to see which functions
contributed the most to size changes.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51467
llvm-svn: 341588
Currently it has a set KnownBlocks that marks blocks as having cached
answers and a map FirstSpecialInsts that maps these blocks to first
special instructions in them. The value in the map is always non-null,
and for blocks that are known to have no special instructions the map
does not have an instance.
This patch removes KnownBlocks as obsolete. Instead, for blocks that
are known to have no special instructions, we just put a nullptr value.
This makes the code much easier to read.
llvm-svn: 341531
This validation patch has been reverted as rL341147 because of conserns raised by
@reames. This revision returns it as is to raise a discussion and address the concerns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51523
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 341526
In basic block, loop, and function passes, we already have a function that
we can use to emit optimization remarks. We can use that instead of searching
the module for the first suitable function (that is, one that contains at
least one basic block.)
llvm-svn: 341253
Instead of counting the size of the entire module every time we run a pass,
pass along a delta instead and use that to emit the remark.
This means we only have to use (on average) smaller IR units to calculate
instruction counts. E.g, in a BB pass, we only need to look at the delta of
the BB instead of the delta of the entire module.
6/6
(This improved compile time for size remarks on sqlite3 + O2 significantly)
llvm-svn: 341250
Same vein as the previous commits. Pre-calculate the size of
the module and use that to decide if we're going to emit a
remark.
This one comes with a FIXME and TODO. First off, CallGraphSCC
and CallGraphNode don't have a getInstructionCount function. So,
for now, we do the same thing as in a module pass.
Second off, we're not really saving anything here yet, because
as before, I need to change emitInstrCountChangedRemark to take
in a delta. Keeping the patches small though, so that's coming up
next.
5/6
llvm-svn: 341249
Another commit reducing compile time in size remarks.
Cache the size of the module and loop, and update values based
off of deltas instead. Avoid recalculating the size of the
whole module whenever possible.
3/6
llvm-svn: 341247
Summary:
This is patch 1 of the new DivergenceAnalysis (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50433).
The purpose of this patch is to free up the name DivergenceAnalysis for the new generic
implementation. The generic implementation class will be shared by specialized
divergence analysis classes.
Patch by: Simon Moll
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: jvesely, jholewinski, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50434
Change-Id: Ie8146b11be2c50d5312f30e11c7a3036a15b48cb
llvm-svn: 341071
These classes don't make any changes to IR and have no reason to be in
Transform/Utils. This patch moves them to Analysis folder. This will allow
us reusing these classes in some analyzes, like MustExecute.
llvm-svn: 341015
rL340921 has been reverted by rL340923 due to linkage dependency
from Transform/Utils to Analysis which is not allowed. In this patch
this has been fixed, a new utility function moved to Analysis.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51152
llvm-svn: 341014
Teach LICM to hoist stores out of loops when the store writes to a location otherwise unused in the loop, writes a value which is invariant, and is guaranteed to execute if the loop is entered.
Worth noting is that this transformation is partially overlapping with the existing promotion transformation. Reasons this is worthwhile anyway include:
* For multi-exit loops, this doesn't require duplication of the store.
* It kicks in for case where we can't prove we exit through a normal exit (i.e. we may throw), but can prove the store executes before that possible side exit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50925
llvm-svn: 340974
We have multiple places in code where we try to identify whether or not
some instruction is a guard. This patch factors out this logic into a separate
utility function which works uniformly in all places.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51152
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 340921
Moving PassTimingInfo from legacy pass manager code into a separate header.
Making it suitable for both legacy and new pass manager.
Adding a test on -time-passes main functionality.
llvm-svn: 340872
Summary:
Correct to use set like behaviour of AllocType. Should check for
subset, not precise value.
Reviewers: theraven
Reviewed By: theraven
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50959
llvm-svn: 340807
verify*() methods are intended to have no side-effects (unless we detect
broken MSSA, in which case they assert()), and all of the other verify
methods are wrapped by `#ifndef NDEBUG`.
llvm-svn: 340793
This reverts r319889.
Unfortunately, wrapping flags are not a part of SCEV's identity (they
do not participate in computing a hash value or in equality
comparisons) and in fact they could be assigned after the fact w/o
rebuilding a SCEV.
Grep for const_cast's to see quite a few of examples, apparently all
for AddRec's at the moment.
So, if 2 expressions get built in 2 slightly different ways: one with
flags set in the beginning, the other with the flags attached later
on, we may end up with 2 expressions which are exactly the same but
have their operands swapped in one of the commutative N-ary
expressions, and at least one of them will have "sorted by complexity"
invariant broken.
2 identical SCEV's won't compare equal by pointer comparison as they
are supposed to.
A real-world reproducer is added as a regression test: the issue
described causes 2 identical SCEV expressions to have different order
of operands and therefore compare not equal, which in its turn
prevents LoadStoreVectorizer from vectorizing a pair of consecutive
loads.
On a larger example (the source of the test attached, which is a
bugpoint) I have seen even weirder behavior: adding a constant to an
existing SCEV changes the order of the existing terms, for instance,
getAddExpr(1, ((A * B) + (C * D))) returns (1 + (C * D) + (A * B)).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40645
llvm-svn: 340777
This is a bit awkward in a handful of places where we didn't even have
an instruction and now we have to see if we can build one. But on the
whole, this seems like a win and at worst a reasonable cost for removing
`TerminatorInst`.
All of this is part of the removal of `TerminatorInst` from the
`Instruction` type hierarchy.
llvm-svn: 340701
The core get and set routines move to the `Instruction` class. These
routines are only valid to call on instructions which are terminators.
The iterator and *generic* range based access move to `CFG.h` where all
the other generic successor and predecessor access lives. While moving
the iterator here, simplify it using the iterator utilities LLVM
provides and updates coding style as much as reasonable. The APIs remain
pointer-heavy when they could better use references, and retain the odd
behavior of `operator*` and `operator->` that is common in LLVM
iterators. Adjusting this API, if desired, should be a follow-up step.
Non-generic range iteration is added for the two instructions where
there is an especially easy mechanism and where there was code
attempting to use the range accessor from a specific subclass:
`indirectbr` and `br`. In both cases, the successors are contiguous
operands and can be easily iterated via the operand list.
This is the first major patch in removing the `TerminatorInst` type from
the IR's instruction type hierarchy. This change was discussed in an RFC
here and was pretty clearly positive:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123407.html
There will be a series of much more mechanical changes following this
one to complete this move.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47467
llvm-svn: 340698
The way that PhiValues is integrated with BasicAA it is possible for a pass
which uses BasicAA to pick up an instance of BasicAA that uses PhiValues without
intending to, and then delete values from a function in a way that causes
PhiValues to return dangling pointers to these deleted values. Fix this by
having a set of callback value handles to invalidate values when they're
deleted.
llvm-svn: 340613
We need to allow ConstantExpr Selects in addition to SelectInst.
I'll try to put together a test case, but I wanted to fix the issues being reported.
Fixes PR38677
llvm-svn: 340546
If we have a min/max pair we can do a better job of counting sign bits if we look at them together. This is similar to what is done in the SelectionDAG version of computeNumSignBits for ISD::SMAX/SMIN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51112
llvm-svn: 340480
We're currently getting this behavior implicitly, since we determine if
a Def's optimization is valid based on the ID of its defining access.
This is incorrect, though I wouldn't be surprised if this was masked in
part by that we're using a WeakVH to track what Defs are optimized to.
(Not to mention that we don't move Defs super often, AFAICT). I'll
submit a patch to fix this shortly.
This also includes a minor refactor to reduce duplication a bit.
No test is included, since like said, this already happens to be our
behavior. I'll add a test for this with my fix to the other bug
mentioned above.
llvm-svn: 340461
There's no need to track a seperate variable for argmemonly aliasing. This falls out naturally of the modinfo union. Note that we may return earlier than we would have earlier if all arguments are explicitly readnone. The overall result doesn't change, just how we get there.
llvm-svn: 340443
We're calling these functions quite a bit from outside of MemorySSA.cpp
now. Given that they're relatively simple one-liners, I think the style
preference is to have them inline.
llvm-svn: 340430
Volatility is not an aliasing property. We used to model volatile as if it had extremely conservative aliasing implications, but that hasn't been true for several years now. So, it doesn't make sense to be in AliasSet.
It also turns out the code is entirely a noop. Outside of the AST code to update it, there was only one user: load store promotion in LICM. L/S promotion doesn't need the check since it walks all the users of the address anyway. It already checks each load or store via !isUnordered which causes us to bail for volatile accesses. (Look at the lines immediately following the two remove asserts.)
There is the possibility of some small compile time impact here, but the only case which will get noticeably slower is a loop with a large number of loads and stores to the same address where only the last one we inspect is volatile. This is sufficiently rare it's not worth optimizing for..
llvm-svn: 340312
Remove duplicate tests from InstCombine that were added with
D50582. I left negative tests there to verify that nothing
in InstCombine tries to go overboard. If isKnownNeverNaN is
improved to handle the FP binops or other cases, we should
have coverage under InstSimplify, so we could remove more
duplicate tests from InstCombine at that time.
llvm-svn: 340279
These intrinsics are modelled as writing for control flow purposes, but they don't actually write to any location. Marking these - as we did for guards - allows LICM to hoist loads out of loops containing invariant.starts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50861
llvm-svn: 340245
Summary:
Create the ability to compute IDF using a CFG View.
For this, we'll need a new DT created using a list of Updates (to be refactored later to a GraphDiff), and the GraphTraits based on the same GraphDiff.
Reviewers: kuhar, george.burgess.iv, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50675
llvm-svn: 340052
NewGVN uses InstructionSimplify for simplifications of leaders of
congruence classes. It is not guaranteed that the metadata or other
flags/keywords (like nsw or exact) of the leader is available for all members
in a congruence class, so we cannot use it for simplification.
This patch adds a InstrInfoQuery struct with a boolean field
UseInstrInfo (which defaults to true to keep the current behavior as
default) and a set of helper methods to get metadata/keywords for a
given instruction, if UseInstrInfo is true. The whole thing might need a
better name, to avoid confusion with TargetInstrInfo but I am not sure
what a better name would be.
The current patch threads through InstrInfoQuery to the required
places, which is messier then it would need to be, if
InstructionSimplify and ValueTracking would share the same Query struct.
The reason I added it as a separate struct is that it can be shared
between InstructionSimplify and ValueTracking's query objects. Also,
some places do not need a full query object, just the InstrInfoQuery.
It also updates some interfaces that do not take a Query object, but a
set of optional parameters to take an additional boolean UseInstrInfo.
See https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37540.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide, efriedma, sebpop, hiraditya
Reviewed By: hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47143
llvm-svn: 340031
This is another step towards being able to canonicalize to the funnel shift
intrinsics in IR (see D49242 for the initial patch).
We should not have any loss of simplification power in IR between these and
the equivalent IR constructs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50848
llvm-svn: 340022
The description of `isGuaranteedToExecute` does not correspond to its implementation.
According to description, it should return `true` if an instruction is executed under the
assumption that its loop is *entered*. However there is a sophisticated alrogithm inside
that tries to prove that the instruction is executed if the loop is *exited*, which is not the
same thing for infinite loops. There is an attempt to protect from dealing with infinite loops
by prohibiting loops without exit blocks, however an infinite loop can have exit blocks.
As result of that, MustExecute can falsely consider some blocks that are never entered as
mustexec, and LICM can hoist dangerous instructions out of them basing on this fact.
This may introduce UB to programs which did not contain it initially.
This patch removes the problematic algorithm and replaced it with a one which tries to
prove what is required in description.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50558
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 339984
The fix is fairly simple, but is says something unpleasant about the usage and testing of invariant.start/end scopes that this went undetected. To put this in perspective, *any* invariant.end in a loop flowing through LICM crashed. I haven't bothered to figure out just how far back this goes, but it's not caused by any of the recent changes. We're probably talking months if not years.
llvm-svn: 339936
Main value is just simplifying code. I'll further simply the argument handling case in a bit, but that involved a slightly orthogonal change so I went with the mildy ugly intermediate for this patch.
Note that the isSized check in the old LICM code was not carried across. It turns out that check was dead. a) no test exercised it, and b) langref and verifier had been updated to disallow unsized types used in loads.
llvm-svn: 339930
Summary:
Profile count of a block is computed by multiplying its block frequency
by entry count and dividing the result by entry block frequency. Do
rounded division in the last step and update test cases appropriately.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50822
llvm-svn: 339835
Summary: Expose VerifyMemorySSA as a debug option. If set, passes will call the MSSA->verifyMemorySSA() after calling into the updater's APIs when MemorySSA should be valid.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50749
llvm-svn: 339795
The `experimental_guard` intrinsic has memory write semantics to model the thread-exiting
logic, but does not do any actual writes to memory. Currently, `AliasSetTracker` treats it as a
normal memory write. As result, a loop-invariant load cannot be hoisted out of loop because
the guard may possibly alias with it.
This patch makes `AliasSetTracker` so that it doesn't treat guards as memory writes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50497
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 339753
Summary:
Calls marked 'tail' cannot read or write allocas from the current frame
because the current frame might be destroyed by the time they run.
However, a tail call may use an alloca with byval. Calling with byval
copies the contents of the alloca into argument registers or stack
slots, so there is no lifetime issue. Tail calls never modify allocas,
so we can return just ModRefInfo::Ref.
Fixes PR38466, a longstanding bug.
Reviewers: hfinkel, nlewycky, gbiv, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50679
llvm-svn: 339636
Summary:
We've supported constant folding for sse versions for many years. This patch adds support for the avx512 versions including unsigned with the default rounding mode. We could probably do more with other roundings modes and SAE in the future.
The test cases are largely based on the sse.ll test cases. But I did add some test cases to ensure the unsigned versions don't accept negative values. Also checked the bounds of f64->i32 conversions to make sure unsigned has a larger positive range than signed.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, chandlerc
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50553
llvm-svn: 339529
MemorySSA currently creates MemoryAccesses for lifetime intrinsics, and
sometimes treats them as clobbers. This may/may not be the best way
forward, but while we're doing it, we should consider
MayAlias/PartialAlias to be clobbers.
The ideal fix here is probably to remove all of this reasoning about
lifetimes from MemorySSA + put it into the passes that need to care. But
that's a wayyy broader fix that needs some consensus, and we have
miscompiles + a release branch today, and this should solve the
miscompiles just as well.
differential revision is D43269. Landing without an explicit LGTM (and
without using the special please-autoclose-this syntax) so we can still
use that revision as a place to decide what the right fix here is.
llvm-svn: 339411
getOrCompHotCountThreshold/getOrCompColdCountThreshold introduced in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D45377 contain a bad mistake and will only return 1 or 0
instead of the true hot/cold cutoff value. The patch fixes the mistake. But the
mistake seems not causing big performance difference according to internal server
benchmarks testing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50370
llvm-svn: 339162
The patch was reverted because of bug detected by sanitizer. The bug is fixed,
respective tests added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50172
llvm-svn: 339005
Multiple failues reported by sanitizer-x86_64-linux, seem to be caused by this
patch. Reverting to see if they sustain without it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50172
llvm-svn: 338994
`isKnownNonNullFromDominatingCondition` is able to prove non-null basing on `br` or `guard`
by `%p != null` condition, but is unable to do so basing on `(%p != null) && %other_cond`.
This patch allows it to do so.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50172
Reviewed By: reames
llvm-svn: 338990
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338969
This is the second patch of the series which intends to enable jump threading for an inlined method whose return type is std::pair<int, bool> or std::pair<bool, int>.
The first patch is https://reviews.llvm.org/rL338485.
This patch handles code sequences that merges two values using `shl` and `or`, then extracts one value using `and`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49981
llvm-svn: 338817
This adds the NAN checks suggested in PR37776:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37776
If both operands to maxnum are NAN, that should get constant folded, so we don't
have to handle that case. This is the same assumption as other FP ops in this
function. Returning 'false' is always conservatively correct.
Copying from the bug report:
Currently, we have this for "when is cannotBeOrderedLessThanZero
(mustBePositiveOrNaN) true for maxnum":
L
-------------------
| Pos | Neg | NaN |
------------------------
|Pos | x | x | x |
------------------------
R |Neg | x | | x |
------------------------
|NaN | x | x | x |
------------------------
The cases with (Neg & NaN) are wrong. We should have:
L
-------------------
| Pos | Neg | NaN |
------------------------
|Pos | x | x | x |
------------------------
R |Neg | x | | |
------------------------
|NaN | x | | x |
------------------------
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50081
llvm-svn: 338716
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338494
This patch intends to enable jump threading when a method whose return type is std::pair<int, bool> or std::pair<bool, int> is inlined.
For example, jump threading does not happen for the if statement in func.
std::pair<int, bool> callee(int v) {
int a = dummy(v);
if (a) return std::make_pair(dummy(v), true);
else return std::make_pair(v, v < 0);
}
int func(int v) {
std::pair<int, bool> rc = callee(v);
if (rc.second) {
// do something
}
SROA executed before the method inlining replaces std::pair by i64 without splitting in both callee and func since at this point no access to the individual fields is seen to SROA.
After inlining, jump threading fails to identify that the incoming value is a constant due to additional instructions (like or, and, trunc).
This series of patch add patterns in InstructionSimplify to fold extraction of members of std::pair. To help jump threading, actually we need to optimize the code sequence spanning multiple BBs.
These patches does not handle phi by itself, but these additional patterns help NewGVN pass, which calls instsimplify to check opportunities for simplifying instructions over phi, apply phi-of-ops optimization to result in successful jump threading.
SimplifyDemandedBits in InstCombine, can do more general optimization but this patch aims to provide opportunities for other optimizers by supporting a simple but common case in InstSimplify.
This first patch in the series handles code sequences that merges two values using shl and or and then extracts one value using lshr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48828
llvm-svn: 338485
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338387
This is being done in order to make GVN able to better optimize certain inputs.
MemDep doesn't use PhiValues directly, but does need to notifiy it when things
get invalidated.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48489
llvm-svn: 338384
By using PhiValuesAnalysis we can get all the values reachable from a phi, so
we can be more precise instead of giving up when a phi has phi operands. We
can't make BaseicAA directly use PhiValuesAnalysis though, as the user of
BasicAA may modify the function in ways that PhiValuesAnalysis can't cope with.
For this optional usage to work correctly BasicAAWrapperPass now needs to be not
marked as CFG-only (i.e. it is now invalidated even when CFG is preserved) due
to how the legacy pass manager handles dependent passes being invalidated,
namely the depending pass still has a pointer to the now-dead dependent pass.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44564
llvm-svn: 338242
Summary:
In non-integral address spaces, we're not allowed to introduce inttoptr/ptrtoint
intrinsics. Instead, we need to expand any pointer arithmetic as geps on the
base pointer. Luckily this is a common task for SCEV, so all we have to do here
is hook up the corresponding helper function and add test case.
Fixes PR38290
Reviewers: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49832
llvm-svn: 338073
Only wanting to pass a single SCEV operand to use as the offset of
the GEP is a common operation. Right now this requires creating a
temporary stack array at every call site. Add an overload
that encapsulates that pattern and simplify the call sites.
Suggested-By: sanjoy (in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49832)
llvm-svn: 338072
as well as sext(C + x + ...) -> (D + sext(C-D + x + ...))<nuw><nsw>
similar to the equivalent transformation for zext's
if the top level addition in (D + (C-D + x * n)) could be proven to
not wrap, where the choice of D also maximizes the number of trailing
zeroes of (C-D + x * n), ensuring homogeneous behaviour of the
transformation and better canonicalization of such AddRec's
(indeed, there are 2^(2w) different expressions in `B1 + ext(B2 + Y)` form for
the same Y, but only 2^(2w - k) different expressions in the resulting `B3 +
ext((B4 * 2^k) + Y)` form, where w is the bit width of the integral type)
This patch generalizes sext(C1 + C2*X) --> sext(C1) + sext(C2*X) and
sext{C1,+,C2} --> sext(C1) + sext{0,+,C2} transformations added in
r209568 relaxing the requirements the following way:
1. C2 doesn't have to be a power of 2, it's enough if it's divisible by 2
a sufficient number of times;
2. C1 doesn't have to be less than C2, instead of extracting the entire
C1 we can split it into 2 terms: (00...0XXX + YY...Y000), keep the
second one that may cause wrapping within the extension operator, and
move the first one that doesn't affect wrapping out of the extension
operator, enabling further simplifications;
3. C1 and C2 don't have to be positive, splitting C1 like shown above
produces a sum that is guaranteed to not wrap, signed or unsigned;
4. in AddExpr case there could be more than 2 terms, and in case of
AddExpr the 2nd and following terms and in case of AddRecExpr the
Step component don't have to be in the C2*X form or constant
(respectively), they just need to have enough trailing zeros,
which in turn could be guaranteed by means other than arithmetics,
e.g. by a pointer alignment;
5. the extension operator doesn't have to be a sext, the same
transformation works and profitable for zext's as well.
Apparently, optimizations like SLPVectorizer currently fail to
vectorize even rather trivial cases like the following:
double bar(double *a, unsigned n) {
double x = 0.0;
double y = 0.0;
for (unsigned i = 0; i < n; i += 2) {
x += a[i];
y += a[i + 1];
}
return x * y;
}
If compiled with `clang -std=c11 -Wpedantic -Wall -O3 main.c -S -o - -emit-llvm`
(!{!"clang version 7.0.0 (trunk 337339) (llvm/trunk 337344)"})
it produces scalar code with the loop not unrolled with the unsigned `n` and
`i` (like shown above), but vectorized and unrolled loop with signed `n` and
`i`. With the changes made in this commit the unsigned version will be
vectorized (though not unrolled for unclear reasons).
How it all works:
Let say we have an AddExpr that looks like (C + x + y + ...), where C
is a constant and x, y, ... are arbitrary SCEVs. Let's compute the
minimum number of trailing zeroes guaranteed of that sum w/o the
constant term: (x + y + ...). If, for example, those terms look like
follows:
i
XXXX...X000
YYYY...YY00
...
ZZZZ...0000
then the rightmost non-guaranteed-zero bit (a potential one at i-th
position above) can change the bits of the sum to the left (and at
i-th position itself), but it can not possibly change the bits to the
right. So we can compute the number of trailing zeroes by taking a
minimum between the numbers of trailing zeroes of the terms.
Now let's say that our original sum with the constant is effectively
just C + X, where X = x + y + .... Let's also say that we've got 2
guaranteed trailing zeros for X:
j
CCCC...CCCC
XXXX...XX00 // this is X = (x + y + ...)
Any bit of C to the left of j may in the end cause the C + X sum to
wrap, but the rightmost 2 bits of C (at positions j and j - 1) do not
affect wrapping in any way. If the upper bits cause a wrap, it will be
a wrap regardless of the values of the 2 least significant bits of C.
If the upper bits do not cause a wrap, it won't be a wrap regardless
of the values of the 2 bits on the right (again).
So let's split C to 2 constants like follows:
0000...00CC = D
CCCC...CC00 = (C - D)
and represent the whole sum as D + (C - D + X). The second term of
this new sum looks like this:
CCCC...CC00
XXXX...XX00
----------- // let's add them up
YYYY...YY00
The sum above (let's call it Y)) may or may not wrap, we don't know,
so we need to keep it under a sext/zext. Adding D to that sum though
will never wrap, signed or unsigned, if performed on the original bit
width or the extended one, because all that that final add does is
setting the 2 least significant bits of Y to the bits of D:
YYYY...YY00 = Y
0000...00CC = D
----------- <nuw><nsw>
YYYY...YYCC
Which means we can safely move that D out of the sext or zext and
claim that the top-level sum neither sign wraps nor unsigned wraps.
Let's run an example, let's say we're working in i8's and the original
expression (zext's or sext's operand) is 21 + 12x + 8y. So it goes
like this:
0001 0101 // 21
XXXX XX00 // 12x
YYYY Y000 // 8y
0001 0101 // 21
ZZZZ ZZ00 // 12x + 8y
0000 0001 // D
0001 0100 // 21 - D = 20
ZZZZ ZZ00 // 12x + 8y
0000 0001 // D
WWWW WW00 // 21 - D + 12x + 8y = 20 + 12x + 8y
therefore zext(21 + 12x + 8y) = (1 + zext(20 + 12x + 8y))<nuw><nsw>
This approach could be improved if we move away from using trailing
zeroes and use KnownBits instead. For instance, with KnownBits we could
have the following picture:
i
10 1110...0011 // this is C
XX X1XX...XX00 // this is X = (x + y + ...)
Notice that some of the bits of X are known ones, also notice that
known bits of X are interspersed with unknown bits and not grouped on
the rigth or left.
We can see at the position i that C(i) and X(i) are both known ones,
therefore the (i + 1)th carry bit is guaranteed to be 1 regardless of
the bits of C to the right of i. For instance, the C(i - 1) bit only
affects the bits of the sum at positions i - 1 and i, and does not
influence if the sum is going to wrap or not. Therefore we could split
the constant C the following way:
i
00 0010...0011 = D
10 1100...0000 = (C - D)
Let's compute the KnownBits of (C - D) + X:
XX1 1 = carry bit, blanks stand for known zeroes
10 1100...0000 = (C - D)
XX X1XX...XX00 = X
--- -----------
XX X0XX...XX00
Will this add wrap or not essentially depends on bits of X. Adding D
to this sum, however, is guaranteed to not to wrap:
0 X
00 0010...0011 = D
sX X0XX...XX00 = (C - D) + X
--- -----------
sX XXXX XX11
As could be seen above, adding D preserves the sign bit of (C - D) +
X, if any, and has a guaranteed 0 carry out, as expected.
The more bits of (C - D) we constrain, the better the transformations
introduced here canonicalize expressions as it leaves less freedom to
what values the constant part of ((C - D) + x + y + ...) can take.
Reviewed By: mzolotukhin, efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48853
llvm-svn: 337943
Currently ComputeNumSignBits does early exit while processing some
of the operations (add, sub, mul, and select). This prevents the
function from using AssumptionCacheTracker if passed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49759
llvm-svn: 337936
if the top level addition in (D + (C-D + x + ...)) could be proven to
not wrap, where the choice of D also maximizes the number of trailing
zeroes of (C-D + x + ...), ensuring homogeneous behaviour of the
transformation and better canonicalization of such expressions.
This enables better canonicalization of expressions like
1 + zext(5 + 20 * %x + 24 * %y) and
zext(6 + 20 * %x + 24 * %y)
which get both transformed to
2 + zext(4 + 20 * %x + 24 * %y)
This pattern is common in address arithmetics and the transformation
makes it easier for passes like LoadStoreVectorizer to prove that 2 or
more memory accesses are consecutive and optimize (vectorize) them.
Reviewed By: mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48853
llvm-svn: 337859
Summary:
Check if the parent basic block and caller exists
before calling CS.getCaller when constant folding
strip.invariant.group instrinsic.
This avoids a crash when the function containing the intrinsic
is being inlined. The instruction is checked for any simplifiction
but has not yet been added to a basic block.
Reviewers: Prazek, rsmith, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49690
llvm-svn: 337742
Bug fix for PR37445. The underlying problem and its fix are similar to PR37808.
The bug lies in MemorySSAUpdater::getPreviousDefRecursive(), where PhiOps is
computed before the call to tryRemoveTrivialPhi() and it ends up being out of
date, pointing to stale data. We have now turned each of the PhiOps into a
TrackingVH<MemoryAccess>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49425
llvm-svn: 337680
Summary:
This takes 22ms out of ~20s compiling sqlite3.c because we call it
for every unit of compilation and every pass.
Reviewers: paquette, anemet
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49586
llvm-svn: 337654
Summary:
When splitting predecessors in BasicBlockUtils, we create a new block as an immediate predecessor of the original BB, then we connect a given set of predecessors to the new block.
The API in this patch will be used to update MemoryPhis for this CFG change.
If all predecessors are being moved, we move the MemoryPhi directly. Otherwise we create a new MemoryPhi in the NewBB and populate its incoming values, while deleting them from BB's Phi.
[Split from D45299 for easier review]
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49156
llvm-svn: 337581
SCEV tries to constant-fold arguments of trunc operands in SCEVAddExpr, and when it does
that, it passes wrong flags into the recursion. It is only valid to pass flags that are proved for
narrow type into a computation in wider type if we can prove that trunc instruction doesn't
actually change the value. If it did lose some meaningful bits, we may end up proving wrong
no-wrap flags for sum of arguments of trunc.
In the provided test we end up with `nuw` where it shouldn't be because of this bug.
The solution is to conservatively pass `SCEV::FlagAnyWrap` which is always a valid thing to do.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49471
llvm-svn: 337435
Bug fix for PR37808. The regression test is a reduced version of the
original reproducer attached to the bug report. As stated in the report,
the problem was that InsertedPHIs was keeping dangling pointers to
deleted Memory-Phis. MemoryPhis are created eagerly and sometimes get
zapped shortly afterwards. I've used WeakVH instead of an expensive
removal operation from the active workset.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48372
llvm-svn: 337149
This fold is repeated/misplaced in instcombine, but I'm
not sure if it's safe to remove that yet because some
other folds appear to be asserting that the transform
has occurred within instcombine itself.
This isn't the best fix for PR37776, but it probably
hides the bug with the given code example:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37776
We have another test to demonstrate the more general bug.
llvm-svn: 337127
This reverts commit r336419: use-after-free on CallGraph::FunctionMap elements
due to the use of a stale iterator in CGPassManager::runOnModule.
The iterator may be invalidated if a pass removes a function, ex.:
llvm::LegacyInlinerBase::inlineCalls
inlineCallsImpl
llvm::CallGraph::removeFunctionFromModule
llvm-svn: 337018
Summary:
This commit does two things:
1. modified the existing DivergenceAnalysis::dump() so it dumps the
whole function with added DIVERGENT: annotations;
2. added code to do that dump if the appropriate -debug-only option is
on.
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47700
Change-Id: Id97b605aab1fc6f5a11a20c58a99bbe8c565bf83
llvm-svn: 336998
Summary:
The move APIs added in this patch will be used to update MemorySSA when CFG changes merge or split blocks, by moving memory accesses accordingly in MemorySSA's internal data structures.
[Split from D45299 for easier review]
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48897
llvm-svn: 336860
Summary:
Support for this option is needed for building Linux kernel.
This is a very frequently requested feature by kernel developers.
More details : https://lkml.org/lkml/2018/4/4/601
GCC option description for -fdelete-null-pointer-checks:
This Assume that programs cannot safely dereference null pointers,
and that no code or data element resides at address zero.
-fno-delete-null-pointer-checks is the inverse of this implying that
null pointer dereferencing is not undefined.
This feature is implemented in LLVM IR in this CL as the function attribute
"null-pointer-is-valid"="true" in IR (Under review at D47894).
The CL updates several passes that assumed null pointer dereferencing is
undefined to not optimize when the "null-pointer-is-valid"="true"
attribute is present.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, efriedma, jyknight, chandlerc, rnk, srhines, void, george.burgess.iv
Reviewed By: efriedma, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: eraman, haicheng, george.burgess.iv, drinkcat, theraven, reames, sanjoy, xbolva00, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47895
llvm-svn: 336613
In non-zero address spaces, we were reporting that an object at `null`
always occupies zero bytes. This is incorrect in many cases, so just
return `unknown` in those cases for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48860
llvm-svn: 336611
This patch ports hasDedicatedExits, getUniqueExitBlocks and
getUniqueExitBlock in Loop to LoopBase so that they can be used
from other LoopBase sub-classes.
Reviewers: chandlerc, sanjoy, hfinkel, fhahn
Reviewed By: chandlerc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48817
llvm-svn: 336572
It's a bit neater to write T.isIntOrPtrTy() over `T.isIntegerTy() ||
T.isPointerTy()`.
I used Python's re.sub with this regex to update users:
r'([\w.\->()]+)isIntegerTy\(\)\s*\|\|\s*\1isPointerTy\(\)'
llvm-svn: 336462
Previously we only iterated over functions reachable from the set of
external functions in the module. But since some of the passes under
this (notably the always-inliner and coroutine lowerer) are required for
correctness, they need to run over everything.
This just adds an extra layer of iteration over the CallGraph to keep
track of which functions we've already visited and get the next batch of
SCCs.
Should fix PR38029.
llvm-svn: 336419
Summary:
Comment on Transforms/LoopVersioning/incorrect-phi.ll: With the change
SCEV is able to prove that the loop doesn't wrap-self (due to zext i16
to i64), disabling the entire loop versioning pass. Removed the zext and
just use i64.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: jlebar, hiraditya, javed.absar, bixia, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48409
llvm-svn: 336140
Summary:
This patch introduce new intrinsic -
strip.invariant.group that was described in the
RFC: Devirtualization v2
Reviewers: rsmith, hfinkel, nlopes, sanjoy, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: arsenm, nhaehnle, JDevlieghere, hiraditya, xbolva00, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47103
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 336073
Summary:
MemoryPhis now have APIs analogous to BB Phis to remove an incoming value/block.
The MemorySSAUpdater uses the above APIs when updating MemorySSA given a set of dead blocks about to be deleted.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48396
llvm-svn: 336015
Extends the CFGPrinter and CallPrinter with heat colors based on heuristics or
profiling information. The colors are enabled by default and can be toggled
on/off for CFGPrinter by using the option -cfg-heat-colors for both
-dot-cfg[-only] and -view-cfg[-only]. Similarly, the colors can be toggled
on/off for CallPrinter by using the option -callgraph-heat-colors for both
-dot-callgraph and -view-callgraph.
Patch by Rodrigo Caetano Rocha!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40425
llvm-svn: 335996
We can have AddRec with loops having many predecessors.
This changes an assert to an early return.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48766
llvm-svn: 335965
Summary:
An alternative to D48597.
Fixes [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37936 | PR37936 ]].
The problem is as follows:
1. `indvars` marks `%dec` as `NUW`.
2. `loop-instsimplify` runs `instsimplify`, which constant-folds `%dec` to -1 (D47908)
3. `loop-reduce` tries to do some further modification, but crashes
with an type assertion in cast, because `%dec` is no longer an `Instruction`,
If the runline is split into two, i.e. you first run `-indvars -loop-instsimplify`,
store that into a file, and then run `-loop-reduce`, there is no crash.
So it looks like the problem is due to `-loop-instsimplify` not discarding SCEV.
But in this case we can just not crash if it's not an `Instruction`.
This is just a local fix, unlike D48597, so there may very well be other problems.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, uabelho, sanjoy, silviu.baranga, wmi
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Subscribers: evstupac, javed.absar, spatel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48599
llvm-svn: 335950
This pass is being added in order to make the information available to BasicAA,
which can't do caching of this information itself, but possibly this information
may be useful for other passes.
Incorporates code based on Daniel Berlin's implementation of Tarjan's algorithm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47893
llvm-svn: 335857
Summary:
AliasSet::print uses `I->printAsOperand` to print UnknownInstructions. The problem is that not all UnknownInstructions have names (e.g. call instructions). When such instructions are printed, they appear as `<badref>` in AliasSets, which is very confusing, as the values are perfectly valid.
This patch fixes that by printing UnknownInstructions without a name using `print` instead of `printAsOperand`.
Reviewers: asbirlea, chandlerc, sanjoy, grosser
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48609
llvm-svn: 335751
Summary:
Adds a string saver to the ModuleSummaryIndex so it can store value
names in the case of adding a ValueInfo for a GUID when we don't
have the name stored in a Module string table. This is motivated
by the upcoming summary parser patch, where we will read value names
from the summary entry and want to store them, even when a Module
is not available.
Currently this allows us to store the name in the legacy bitcode case,
and I have added a test to show that.
Reviewers: pcc, dexonsmith
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47842
llvm-svn: 335570
Summary:
I discovered when writing the summary parsing support that the
per-module index builder and writer are computing the GUID from the
value name alone (ignoring the linkage type). This was ok since those
GUID were not emitted in the bitcode, and there are never multiple
conflicting names in a single module.
However, I don't see a reason for making the GUID computation different
for the per-module case. It also makes things simpler on the parsing
side to have the GUID computation consistent. So this patch changes the
summary analysis phase and the per-module summary writer to compute the
GUID using the facility on the GlobalValue.
Reviewers: pcc, dexonsmith
Subscribers: llvm-commits, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47844
llvm-svn: 335560
This avoids creating unnecessary casts if the IP used to be a dbg info
intrinsic. Fixes PR37727.
Reviewers: vsk, aprantl, sanjoy, efriedma
Reviewed By: vsk, efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47874
llvm-svn: 335513
There are quite a few if statements that enumerate all these cases. It gets
even worse in our fork of LLVM where we also have a Triple::cheri (which
is mips64 + CHERI instructions) and we had to update all if statements that
check for Triple::mips64 to also handle Triple::cheri. This patch helps to
reduce our diff to upstream and should also make some checks more readable.
Reviewed By: atanasyan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48548
llvm-svn: 335493
We can prove that some delinearized subscripts do not wrap around to become
negative by the fact that they are from inbound geps of load/store locations.
This helps improve the delinearisation in cases where we can't prove that they
are non-negative from SCEV alone.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48481
llvm-svn: 335481
It's easy for domination numbers to get out-of-date, and this is no more
costly than any of the other verifiers we already have, so it seems nice
to have.
A stage3 build with this Works On My Machine, so this hasn't caught any
bugs... yet. :)
llvm-svn: 335444
clear out deleted loops from the current queue beyond just the current
loop.
This is important because SimpleLoopUnswitch will now enqueue the same
loop to be re-processed. When it does this with the legacy PM, we don't
have a way of canceling the rest of the pipeline and so we can end up
deleting the loop before we reprocess it. =/
This change also makes it easy to support deleting other loops in the
queue to process, although I don't have any use cases for that.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48470
llvm-svn: 335317
Summary:
This initiates a discussion on changing Polly accordingly while re-applying r335197 (D48338).
I have never worked on Polly. The proposed change to param_div_div_div_2.ll is not educated, but just patterns that match the output.
All LLVM files are already reviewed in D48338.
Reviewers: jdoerfert, bollu, efriedma
Subscribers: jlebar, sanjoy, hiraditya, llvm-commits, bixia
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48453
llvm-svn: 335292
This enables da-delinearize in Dependence Analysis for delinearizing array
accesses into multiple dimensions. This can help to increase the power of
Dependence analysis on multi-dimensional arrays and prevent having to fall
back to the slower and less accurate MIV tests. It adds static checks on the
bounds of the arrays to ensure that one dimension doesn't overflow into
another, and brings our code in line with our tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45872
llvm-svn: 335217
Summary:
Try to match udiv and urem patterns, and sink zext down to the leaves.
I'm not entirely sure why some unrelated tests change, but the added <nsw>s seem right.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: jlebar, hiraditya, bixia, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48338
llvm-svn: 335197
Summary: Make the MemorySSA verify also check that all Phi incoming blocks are block predecessors.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48333
llvm-svn: 335174
For both operands are unsigned, the following optimizations are valid, and missing:
1. X > Y && X != 0 --> X > Y
2. X > Y || X != 0 --> X != 0
3. X <= Y || X != 0 --> true
4. X <= Y || X == 0 --> X <= Y
5. X > Y && X == 0 --> false
unsigned foo(unsigned x, unsigned y) { return x > y && x != 0; }
should fold to x > y, but I found we haven't done it right now.
besides, unsigned foo(unsigned x, unsigned y) { return x < y && y != 0; }
Has been folded to x < y, so there may be a bug.
Patch by: Li Jia He!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47922
llvm-svn: 335129
The optimizer is getting smarter (eg, D47986) about differentiating shuffles
based on its mask values, so we should make queries on the mask constant
operand generally available to avoid code duplication.
We'll probably use this soon in the vectorizers and instcombine (D48023 and
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37806).
We might clean up TTI a bit more once all of its current 'SK_*' options are
covered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48236
llvm-svn: 335067
This reverts r334428. It incorrectly marks some multiplications as nuw. Tim
Shen is working on a proper fix.
Original commit message:
[SCEV] Add nuw/nsw to mul ops in StrengthenNoWrapFlags where safe.
Summary:
Previously we would add them for adds, but not multiplies.
llvm-svn: 335016
Summary:
Sending for presubmit review out of an abundance of caution; it would be
bad to mess this up.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48238
llvm-svn: 334875
Summary:
Obviates the need for mask/clear/setFlags helpers.
There are some expressions here which can be simplified, but to keep
this easy to review, I have not simplified them in this patch.
No functional change.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48237
llvm-svn: 334874
In particular, when asked to print a MemoryAccess, we'll now print where
defs are optimized to, and we'll print optimized access types.
This patch also introduces an operator<< to make printing AliasResults
easier.
Patch by Juneyoung Lee!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47860
llvm-svn: 334760
Summary:
Specifically, we transform
zext(2^K * (trunc X to iN)) to iM ->
2^K * (zext(trunc X to i{N-K}) to iM)<nuw>
This is helpful because pulling the 2^K out of the zext allows further
optimizations.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, timshen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48158
llvm-svn: 334737
Summary:
Previously we would do this simplification only if it did not introduce
any new truncs (excepting new truncs which replace other cast ops).
This change weakens this condition: If the number of truncs stays the
same, but we're able to transform trunc(X + Y) to X + trunc(Y), that's
still simpler, and it may open up additional transformations.
While we're here, also clean up some duplicated code.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48160
llvm-svn: 334736
As discussed on PR33744, this patch relaxes ShuffleKind::SK_Alternate which requires shuffle masks to only match an alternating pattern from its 2 sources:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7> or <4,1,6,3>
This seems far too restrictive as most SIMD hardware which will implement it using a general blend/bit-select instruction, so replaces it with SK_Select, permitting elements from either source as long as they are inline:
e.g. v4f32: <0,5,2,7>, <4,1,6,3>, <0,1,6,7>, <4,1,2,3> etc.
This initial patch just updates the name and cost model shuffle mask analysis, later patch reviews will update SLP to better utilise this - it still limits itself to SK_Alternate style patterns.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47985
llvm-svn: 334513
As discussed on D47985, identity shuffle masks should probably be free.
I've limited this to the case where the input and output types all match - but we could probably accept all cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47986
llvm-svn: 334506
Summary:
Previously we would add them for adds, but not multiplies.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48038
llvm-svn: 334428
An expression like
(zext i2 {(trunc i32 (1 + %B) to i2),+,1}<%while.body> to i32)
will become zero exactly when the nested value becomes zero in its type.
Strip injective operations from the input value in howFarToZero to make
the value simpler.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47951
llvm-svn: 334318
Summary:
`%ret = add nuw i8 %x, C`
From [[ https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#add-instruction | langref ]]:
nuw and nsw stand for “No Unsigned Wrap” and “No Signed Wrap”,
respectively. If the nuw and/or nsw keywords are present,
the result value of the add is a poison value if unsigned
and/or signed overflow, respectively, occurs.
So if `C` is `-1`, `%x` can only be `0`, and the result is always `-1`.
I'm not sure we want to use `KnownBits`/`LVI` here, because there is
exactly one possible value (all bits set, `-1`), so some other pass
should take care of replacing the known-all-ones with constant `-1`.
The `test/Transforms/InstCombine/set-lowbits-mask-canonicalize.ll` change *is* confusing.
What happening is, before this: (omitting `nuw` for simplicity)
1. First, InstCombine D47428/rL334127 folds `shl i32 1, %NBits`) to `shl nuw i32 -1, %NBits`
2. Then, InstSimplify D47883/rL334222 folds `shl nuw i32 -1, %NBits` to `-1`,
3. `-1` is inverted to `0`.
But now:
1. *This* InstSimplify fold `%ret = add nuw i32 %setbit, -1` -> `-1` happens first,
before InstCombine D47428/rL334127 fold could happen.
Thus we now end up with the opposite constant,
and it is all good: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/OA9https://rise4fun.com/Alive/sldC
Was mentioned in D47428 review.
Follow-up for D47883.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47908
llvm-svn: 334298
Currently the loop branch heuristic is applied before the invoke heuristic which makes us overestimate the probability of the unwind destination of invokes inside loops. This in turn makes us grossly underestimate the frequencies of loops with invokes.
Reviewed By: skatkov, vsk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47371
llvm-svn: 334285
Summary:
`%r = shl nuw i8 C, %x`
As per langref:
```
If the nuw keyword is present, then the shift produces
a poison value if it shifts out any non-zero bits.
```
Thus, if the sign bit is set on `C`, then `%x` can only be `0`,
which means that `%r` can only be `C`.
Or in other words, set sign bit means that the signed value
is negative, so the constant is `<= 0`.
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/WMkhttps://rise4fun.com/Alive/udv
Was mentioned in D47428 review.
We already handle the `0` constant, https://godbolt.org/g/UZq1sJ, so this only handles negative constants.
Could use computeKnownBits() / LazyValueInfo,
but the cost-benefit analysis (https://reviews.llvm.org/D47891)
suggests it isn't worth it.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47883
llvm-svn: 334222
These weren't included in D19544 - probably just an oversight.
D40044 made it more likely that we'll have LLVM math intrinsics rather
than libcalls, so this bug was more easily exposed.
As the tests/code show, we already have the complete mappings for pow/exp/log.
I don't have any experience with SVML, so I don't know if anything else is
missing. It's also not clear to me that we should be doing this transform in
IR rather than DAG/isel, but that's a separate issue.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47610
llvm-svn: 334211
With the upcoming patch to add summary parsing support, IsAnalysis would
be true in contexts where we are not performing module summary analysis.
Rename to the more specific and approprate HaveGVs, which is essentially
what this flag is indicating.
llvm-svn: 334140
When checking a select to see if it matches an abs, allow the true/false values
to be a sign-extension of the comparison value instead of requiring that they're
directly the comparison value, as all the comparison cares about is the sign of
the value.
This fixes a regression due to r333702, where we were no longer generating ctlz
due to isKnownNonNegative failing to match such a pattern.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47631
llvm-svn: 333927
Both weakZeroSrcSIV and weakZeroDstSIV are currently giving the same
direction vectors. Fix weakZeroSrcSIVtest by flipping the directions
it gives.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46678
llvm-svn: 333658
Summary:
The isKnownNonZero() function have checks that abort the recursion when
it reaches the specified max depth. However one of the recursive calls
was placed before the max depth check was done, resulting in a endless
recursion that eventually triggered a segmentation fault.
Fixed the problem by moving the max depth check above the first
recursive call.
Reviewers: Prazek, nlopes, spatel, craig.topper, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, bjope, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47531
llvm-svn: 333557
Summary:
The atomic variants of the memcpy/memmove/memset intrinsics can be treated
the same was as the regular forms, with respect to aliasing. Update the
AliasSetTracker to treat the atomic forms the same was as the regular forms.
llvm-svn: 333551
Summary:
A simple change to derive mod/ref info from the atomic memcpy
intrinsic in the same way as from the regular memcpy intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 333454
Style guide says `else`s after returns are iffy, and I agree. I also
don't know what broke the comments here and in CFLAA, but *shrug*.
llvm-svn: 333332
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
Libfuzzer tests have been fixed to prevent being optimized.
Original commit message:
If the nsw flag is used in the absolute value then it is undefined for INT_MIN. For all other value it will produce a positive number. So we can assume the result is positive.
This breaks some InstCombine abs/nabs combining tests because we simplify the second compare from known bits rather than as the whole pattern. Looks like we can probably fix it by adding a neg+abs/nabs combine to just swap the select operands. N
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47041
llvm-svn: 333300
Summary:
Look past debug intrinsics when querying whether an instruction is the
first instruction in the header block. The commit includes a reproducer
for a case where LICM would not hoist an instruction, due to the presence
of the intrinsic.
A caveat with this commit is that the check will not work properly if
the instruction at hand is a debug intrinsic. I assume that no one
depends on isGuaranteedToExecute() to return true for debug intrinsics
for these cases (and that this might be an indication of another debug
invariant issue), so I thought that it was not worth adding that extra
bit of complexity.
Reviewers: reames, anna
Reviewed By: anna
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47197
llvm-svn: 333274
If the nsw flag is used in the absolute value then it is undefined for INT_MIN. For all other value it will produce a positive number. So we can assume the result is positive.
This breaks some InstCombine abs/nabs combining tests because we simplify the second compare from known bits rather than as the whole pattern. Looks like we can probably fix it by adding a neg+abs/nabs combine to just swap the select operands. Need to check alive to make sure there are no corner cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47041
llvm-svn: 333226
Summary: This patch adds a PDT constructor from Function and lets codes previously using a local class to do this use PostDominatorTree class directly.
Reviewers: davide, kuhar, grosser, dberlin
Reviewed By: kuhar
Author: NutshellySima
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46709
llvm-svn: 333102
Summary:
Patch for capture tracking broke
bootstrap of clang with -fstict-vtable-pointers
which resulted in debbugging nightmare. It was fixed
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46900 but as it turned
out, there were other parts like inliner (computing of
noalias metadata) that I found after bootstraping with enabled
assertions.
Reviewers: hfinkel, rsmith, chandlerc, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, eraman, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47088
llvm-svn: 333070
Summary: Previous patch does not care if a value is changed between calloc and strlen. This needs to be removed from InstCombine and maybe moved to DSE later after some rework.
Reviewers: efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47218
llvm-svn: 333022
This enables us to detect more fast path sdiv cases under cost analysis.
This patch also enables us to handle non-uniform-constant pow2 cases for X86 SDIV costs.
Found while working on D46276
Future patches can then extend the vectorizers to more fully support non-uniform pow2 cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46637
llvm-svn: 332969
Change matchSelectPattern to return X and -X for ABS/NABS in a well defined order. Adjust EarlyCSE to account for this. Ensure the SPF result is some kind of min/max and not abs/nabs in one place in InstCombine that made me nervous.
Prevously we returned the two operands of the compare part of the abs pattern. The RHS is always going to be a 0i, 1 or -1 constant. This isn't a very meaningful thing to return for any one. There's also some freedom in the abs pattern as to what happens when the value is equal to 0. This freedom led to early cse failing to match when different constants were used in otherwise equivalent operations. By returning the input and its negation in a defined order we can ensure an exact match. This also makes sure both patterns use the exact same subtract instruction for the negation. I believe CSE should evebntually make this happen and properly merge the nsw/nuw flags. But I'm not familiar with CSE and what order it does things in so it seemed like it might be good to really enforce that they were the same.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47037
llvm-svn: 332865
Summary:
invariant.group.launder should not stop propagation
of nonnull and dereferenceable, because e.g. we would not be
able to hoist loads speculatively.
Reviewers: rsmith, amharc, kuhar, xbolva00, hfinkel
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46972
llvm-svn: 332788
Summary:
This feature is not needed, but it might be usefull in the future
to use metadata to mark what which function should support it
(and strip it when not).
Reviewers: rsmith, sanjoy, amharc, kuhar
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45419
llvm-svn: 332787
Summary:
Memdep had funny bug related to invariant.groups - because it did not
invalidated cache, in some very rare cases it was possible to show memory
dependence of the instruction that was deleted, but because other
instruction took it's place it resulted in call to vtable!
Thanks @amharc for repro!.
Reviewers: dberlin, kuhar, amharc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45320
Co-authored-by: Krzysztof Pszeniczny <krzysztof.pszeniczny@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 332781
This patch adds a remark which tells the user when a pass changes the number of
IR instructions in a module.
It can be enabled by using -Rpass-analysis=size-info.
The point of this is to make it easier to collect statistics on how passes
modify programs in terms of code size. This is similar in concept to timing
reports, but using a remark-based interface makes it easy to diff changes over
multiple compilations of the same program.
By adding functionality like this, we can see
* Which passes impact code size the most
* How passes impact code size at different optimization levels
* Which pass might have contributed the most to an overall code size
regression
The patch lives in the legacy pass manager, but since it's simply emitting
remarks, it shouldn't be too difficult to adapt the functionality to the new
pass manager as well. This can also be adapted to handle MachineInstr counts in
code gen passes.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D38768
llvm-svn: 332739
CanProveNotTakenFirstIteration utility does not handle the case when
condition of the branch is a constant. Add its handling.
Reviewers: reames, anna, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: reames
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46996
llvm-svn: 332695
Summary:
- Add wasm personality function
- Re-categorize the existing `isFuncletEHPersonality()` function into
two different functions: `isFuncletEHPersonality()` and
`isScopedEHPersonality(). This becomes necessary as wasm EH uses scoped
EH instructions (catchswitch, catchpad/ret, and cleanuppad/ret) but not
outlined funclets.
- Changed some callsites of `isFuncletEHPersonality()` to
`isScopedEHPersonality()` if they are related to scoped EH IR-level
stuff.
Reviewers: majnemer, dschuff, rnk
Subscribers: jfb, sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, JDevlieghere, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45559
llvm-svn: 332667
Summary:
There was some unfinished work started for offset tracking in CFLGraph by the author of implementation of Andersen algorithm. This work was completed and support for field sensitivity was added to the core of Andersen algorithm.
The performance results seem promising.
SPEC2006 int_base score was increased by 1.1 % (I compared clang 6.0 with clang 6.0 with this patch). The avergae compile time was increased by +- 1 % according my measures with small and medium C/C++ projects (I did not tested it on the large projects with milions of lines of code)
Reviewers: chandlerc, george.burgess.iv, rja
Reviewed By: rja
Subscribers: rja, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46282
llvm-svn: 332657
Summary:
Require DominatorTree when requiring/preserving LoopInfo in the old pass manager
BreakCriticalEdges tries to keep LoopInfo and DominatorTree updated if they
exist. However, since commit r321653 and r321805, to update LoopInfo we
must have a DominatorTree, or we will hit an assert.
To fix this we now make a couple of passes that only required/preserved
LoopInfo also require DominatorTree.
This solves PR37334.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: efriedma, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46829
llvm-svn: 332583
The existing comment said that the functions were available only
on GNU/Linux (and on certain Android versions), but only checked
T.isGNUEnvironment() which also is true on MinGW (for arch-windows-gnu
triplets), which doesn't have such functions.
Existing checks in the initialize function in TargetLibraryInfo.cpp
also use only T.isOSLinux() to check for glibc features.
This fixes use of stdio on MinGW.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47002
llvm-svn: 332581
r332057 introduced distance() for ranges. Based on post-commit feedback,
this renames distance() to size(). The new size() is also only enabled
when the operation is O(1).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46976
llvm-svn: 332551
Summary:
A recent patch ([[ https://reviews.llvm.org/rL331587 | rL331587 ]]) to Capture Tracking taught it that the `launder_invariant_group` intrinsic captures its argument only by returning it. Unfortunately, BasicAA still considered every call instruction as a possible escape source and hence concluded that the result of a `launder_invariant_group` call cannot alias any local non-escaping value. This led to [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37458 | bug 37458 ]].
This patch updates the relevant check for escape sources in BasicAA.
Reviewers: Prazek, kuhar, rsmith, hfinkel, sanjoy, xbolva00
Reviewed By: hfinkel, xbolva00
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46900
llvm-svn: 332466
Summary: If file stream arg is not captured and source is fopen, we could replace IO calls by unlocked IO ("_unlocked" function variants) to gain better speed,
Reviewers: efriedma, RKSimon, spatel, sanjoy, hfinkel, majnemer, lebedev.ri, rja
Reviewed By: rja
Subscribers: rja, srhines, efriedma, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45736
llvm-svn: 332452
Summary:
After r332167 we started to sort the IDF blocks inside IDF calculation, so
there is no need to re-sort them on the user site. The test changes are due to
a slightly different order we're using now (originally we used DFSInNumber and
now the blocks are sorted by a pair (LevelFromRoot, DFSInNumber)).
Reviewers: dberlin, mgrang
Subscribers: Prazek, hiraditya, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46899
llvm-svn: 332385
The DEBUG() macro is very generic so it might clash with other projects.
The renaming was done as follows:
- git grep -l 'DEBUG' | xargs sed -i 's/\bDEBUG\s\?(/LLVM_DEBUG(/g'
- git diff -U0 master | ../clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py -i -p1 -style LLVM
- Manual change to APInt
- Manually chage DOCS as regex doesn't match it.
In the transition period the DEBUG() macro is still present and aliased
to the LLVM_DEBUG() one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43624
llvm-svn: 332240
Summary:
Currently the order of blocks returned by `IDF::calculate` can be
non-deterministic. This was discovered in several attempts to enable
SSAUpdaterBulk for JumpThreading (which led to miscompare in bootstrap between
stage 3 and stage4). Originally, the blocks were put into a priority queue with
a depth level as their key, and this patch adds a DFSIn number as a second key
to specify a deterministic order across blocks from one level.
The solution was suggested by Daniel Berlin.
Reviewers: dberlin, davide
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46646
llvm-svn: 332167
If the sprintf function is static (as on mingw-w64, where many stdio
functions are static inline wrappers), earlier optimization passes
could optimize out the return value altogether, and make it void,
which could break optimizations of this libcall that touch the
return value.
This fixes the issue discussed in PR37408 for the sprintf function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46752
llvm-svn: 332106
We found current sampleFDO had a performance issue when triaging a regression.
For a callsite with inline instance in the profile, even if hot callsite inliner
cannot inline it, it may still execute enough times and should not be treated as
cold in regular inliner later. However, currently if such callsite is not inlined
by hot callsite inliner, and the BB where the callsite locates doesn't get
samples from other instructions inside of it, the callsite will have no profile
metadata annotated. In regular inliner cost analysis, if the callsite has no
profile annotated and its caller has profile information, it will be treated as
cold.
The fix changes the isCallsiteHot check and chooses to compare
CallsiteTotalSamples with hot cutoff value computed by ProfileSummaryInfo.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45377
llvm-svn: 332058
This commit adds a wrapper for std::distance() which works with ranges.
As it would be a common case to write `distance(predecessors(BB))`, this
also introduces `pred_size()` and `succ_size()` helpers to make that
easier to write.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46668
llvm-svn: 332057
Summary:
Operand 0 is the condition, not the true value.
Use op 1 and op 2 as the correct values.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, nlopes, efriedma
Reviewed By: george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: craig.topper, rjmccall, lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46343
llvm-svn: 331976
During simplification umax we trigger isKnownPredicate twice. As a first attempt it
tries the induction. To do that it tries to get post increment of SCEV.
Re-writing the SCEV may result in simplification of umax. If the SCEV contains a lot
of umax operations this recursion becomes very slow.
The added test demonstrates the slow behavior.
To resolve this we use only simple ways to check whether the predicate is known.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46046
llvm-svn: 331949
In order to set breakpoints on labels and list source code around
labels, we need collect debug information for labels, i.e., label
name, the function label belong, line number in the file, and the
address label located. In order to keep these information in LLVM
IR and to allow backend to generate debug information correctly.
We create a new kind of metadata for labels, DILabel. The format
of DILabel is
!DILabel(scope: !1, name: "foo", file: !2, line: 3)
We hope to keep debug information as much as possible even the
code is optimized. So, we create a new kind of intrinsic for label
metadata to avoid the metadata is eliminated with basic block.
The intrinsic will keep existing if we keep it from optimized out.
The format of the intrinsic is
llvm.dbg.label(metadata !1)
It has only one argument, that is the DILabel metadata. The
intrinsic will follow the label immediately. Backend could get the
label metadata through the intrinsic's parameter.
We also create DIBuilder API for labels to be used by Frontend.
Frontend could use createLabel() to allocate DILabel objects, and use
insertLabel() to insert llvm.dbg.label intrinsic in LLVM IR.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45024
Patch by Hsiangkai Wang.
llvm-svn: 331841
Summary:
launder.invariant.group has the same rules of capturing as
bitcast, gep, etc - the original value is not captured
if the returned pointer is not captured.
With this patch, we mark 40% more functions as noalias when compiling with -fstrict-vtable-pointers;
1078 vs 1778 (39.37%)
Reviewers: sanjoy, davide, nlewycky, majnemer, mehdi_amini
Subscribers: JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32673
llvm-svn: 331587
This patch was temporarily reverted because it has exposed bug 37229 on
PowerPC platform. The bug is unrelated to the patch and was just a general
bug in the optimization done for PowerPC platform only. The bug was fixed
by the patch rL331410.
This patch returns the disabled commit since the bug was fixed.
llvm-svn: 331427
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
See r331124 for how I made a list of files missing the include.
I then ran this Python script:
for f in open('filelist.txt'):
f = f.strip()
fl = open(f).readlines()
found = False
for i in xrange(len(fl)):
p = '#include "llvm/'
if not fl[i].startswith(p):
continue
if fl[i][len(p):] > 'Config':
fl.insert(i, '#include "llvm/Config/llvm-config.h"\n')
found = True
break
if not found:
print 'not found', f
else:
open(f, 'w').write(''.join(fl))
and then looked through everything with `svn diff | diffstat -l | xargs -n 1000 gvim -p`
and tried to fix include ordering and whatnot.
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 331184
The invocation of getExact in ScalarEvolution::getBackedgeTakenInfo is used
only for getting statistic and for assert.
Even if statistics is disabled, the code related to it will be eliminated
the invocation to getExact itself will not be eliminated
because it may have side-effects like creation of new SCEVs.
So do invocation only when we collect statistics or executes asserts.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, sanjoy, javed.absar
Reviewed By: javed.absar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46178
llvm-svn: 331099
Summary:
Currently, we
1. match `LHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `RHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
If that does not match, we swap the `LHS` and `RHS` matchers:
1. match `RHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `LHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
This works ok.
But it complicates writing of commutative matchers, where one would like to match
(`m_Value()`) the value on one side, and use (`m_Specific()`) it on the other side.
This is additionally complicated by the fact that `m_Specific()` stores the `Value *`,
not `Value **`, so it won't work at all out of the box.
The last problem is trivially solved by adding a new `m_c_Specific()` that stores the
`Value **`, not `Value *`. I'm choosing to add a new matcher, not change the existing
one because i guess all the current users are ok with existing behavior,
and this additional pointer indirection may have performance drawbacks.
Also, i'm storing pointer, not reference, because for some mysterious-to-me reason
it did not work with the reference.
The first one appears trivial, too.
Currently, we
1. match `LHS` matcher to the `first` operand of binary operator,
2. and then match `RHS` matcher to the `second` operand of binary operator.
If that does not match, we swap the ~~`LHS` and `RHS` matchers~~ **operands**:
1. match ~~`RHS`~~ **`LHS`** matcher to the ~~`first`~~ **`second`** operand of binary operator,
2. and then match ~~`LHS`~~ **`RHS`** matcher to the ~~`second`~ **`first`** operand of binary operator.
Surprisingly, `$ ninja check-llvm` still passes with this.
But i expect the bots will disagree..
The motivational unittest is included.
I'd like to use this in D45664.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, arsenm, RKSimon
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: xbolva00, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45828
llvm-svn: 331085
We currently have a hard to solve analysis problem around the order of instructions within a potentially throwing block. We can't cheaply determine whether a given instruction is before the first potential throw in the block. While we're working on that in the background, special case the first instruction within the header.
why this particular special case? Well, headers are guaranteed to execute if the loop does, and it turns out we tend to produce this form in practice.
In a follow on patch, I tend to extend LICM with an alternate approach which works for any instruction in the header before the first throw, but this is the best I can come up with other users of the analysis (such as store promotion.)
Note: I can't show the difference in the analysis result since we're ORing in the expensive instruction walk used by SCEV. Using the full walk is not suitable for a general solution.
llvm-svn: 331079
Add new umin creation method which accepts a list of operands.
SCEV does not represents umin which is required in getExact, so
it transforms umin to umax with not. As a result the transformation of
tree of max to max with several operands does not work.
We just use the new introduced method for creation umin from several operands.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46047
llvm-svn: 331015
Summary: If file stream arg is not captured and source is fopen, we could replace IO calls by unlocked IO ("_unlocked" function variants) to gain better speed,
Reviewers: efriedma, RKSimon, spatel, sanjoy, hfinkel, majnemer
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45736
llvm-svn: 331002
This patch adds a new shuffle kind useful for transposing a 2xn matrix. These
transpose shuffle masks read corresponding even- or odd-numbered vector
elements from two n-dimensional source vectors and write each result into
consecutive elements of an n-dimensional destination vector. The transpose
shuffle kind is meant to model the TRN1 and TRN2 AArch64 instructions. As such,
this patch also considers transpose shuffles in the AArch64 implementation of
getShuffleCost.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45982
llvm-svn: 330941
This reverts commit 023c8be90980e0180766196cba86f81608b35d38.
This patch triggers miscompile of zlib on PowerPC platform. Most likely it is
caused by some pre-backend PPC-specific pass, but we don't clearly know the
reason yet. So we temporally revert this patch with intention to return it
once the problem is resolved. See bug 37229 for details.
llvm-svn: 330893
Summary:
The PointerMayBeCapturedBefore function's DomTree arg should be
const instead of non-const. There are no non-const uses of it
in the function.
llvm-svn: 330769
I was reminded today that this patch got reverted in r301885. I can no
longer reproduce the failure that caused the revert locally (...almost
one year later), and the patch applied pretty cleanly, so I guess we'll
see if the bots still get angry about it.
The original breakage was InstSimplify complaining (in "assertion
failed" form) about getting passed some crazy IR when running `ninja
check-sanitizer`. I'm unable to find traces of what, exactly, said crazy
IR was. I suppose we'll find out pretty soon if that's still the case.
:)
Original commit:
Author: gbiv
Date: Mon May 1 18:12:08 2017
New Revision: 301880
URL: http://llvm.org/viewvc/llvm-project?rev=301880&view=rev
Log:
[InstSimplify] Handle selects of GEPs with 0 offset
In particular (since it wouldn't fit nicely in the summary):
(select (icmp eq V 0) P (getelementptr P V)) -> (getelementptr P V)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31435
llvm-svn: 330667
Summary:
This change teaches DSE that the atomic memory intrinsics are stores
that can be eliminated, and can allow other stores to be eliminated.
This change specifically does not teach DSE that these intrinsics
can be partially eliminated (i.e. length reduced, and dest/src changed);
that will be handled in another change.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, skatkov, apilipenko, efriedma, rsmith
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: dmgreen, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45535
llvm-svn: 330629
In the function `simplifyOneLoop` we optimistically assume that changes in the
inner loop only affect this very loop and have no impact on its parents. In fact,
after rL329047 has been merged, we can now calculate exit counts for outer
loops which may depend on inner loops. Thus, we need to invalidate all parents
when we do something to a loop.
There is an evidence of incorrect behavior of `simplifyOneLoop`: when we insert
`SE->verify()` check in the end of this funciton, it fails on a bunch of existing
test, in particular:
LLVM :: Transforms/LoopUnroll/peel-loop-not-forced.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/LoopUnroll/peel-loop-pgo.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/LoopUnroll/peel-loop.ll
LLVM :: Transforms/LoopUnroll/peel-loop2.ll
Note that previously we have fixed issues of this variety, see rL328483.
This patch makes this function invalidate the outermost loop properly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45937
Reviewed By: chandlerc
llvm-svn: 330576
This is the last step in getting constant pattern matchers to allow
undef elements in constant vectors.
I'm adding a dedicated m_ZeroInt() function and building m_Zero() from
that. In most cases, calling code can be updated to use m_ZeroInt()
directly when there's no need to match pointers, but I'm leaving that
efficiency optimization as a follow-up step because it's not always
clear when that's ok.
There are just enough icmp folds in InstSimplify that can be used for
integer or pointer types, that we probably still want a generic m_Zero()
for those cases. Otherwise, we could eliminate it (and possibly add a
m_NullPtr() as an alias for isa<ConstantPointerNull>()).
We're conservatively returning a full zero vector (zeroinitializer) in
InstSimplify/InstCombine on some of these folds (see diffs in InstSimplify),
but I'm not sure if that's actually necessary in all cases. We may be
able to propagate an undef lane instead. One test where this happens is
marked with 'TODO'.
llvm-svn: 330550
Summary:
In order to get the whole fold as specified in [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=6773 | PR6773 ]],
let's first handle the simple straight-forward things.
Let's start with the `and` -> `or` simplification.
The one obvious thing missing here: the constant mask is not handled.
I have an idea how to handle it, but it will require some thinking,
and is not strictly required here, so i've left that for later.
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/Pkmg
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, eli.friedman, jingyue
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45631
llvm-svn: 330101
The function getMinimumVF(ElemWidth) will return the minimum VF for
a vector with elements of size ElemWidth bits. This value will only
apply to targets for which TTI::shouldMaximizeVectorBandwidth returns
true. The value of 0 indicates that there is no minimum VF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45271
llvm-svn: 330062
Improve the alias analysis to account for cases where we
know that src/dst pairs cannot alias due to things like
TBAA. As we know they are noalias, we know no dependency
can occur. Also fixes issues around the size parameter
to AA being incorrect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42381
llvm-svn: 329692
The caching walker used to hold its own caches, which made its `reset()`
function meaningful. Since caching has been moved out of it, there's no
reason to continue to have these cache-related methods.
Similarly, the EXPENSIVE_CHECKS block that's getting removed used to
rerun the query with caching disabled. Since that's how we always do
queries now, it's redundant.
llvm-svn: 329638
Fix PR36484, as suggested:
<quote>
during moves, mark the direct users of the erased things that were phis as "not to be optimized"
<quote>
llvm-svn: 329621
Summary: @llvm.icall.branch.funnel is musttail with variable number of
arguments. After inlining current backend can't separate call targets from call
arguments.
Reviewers: pcc
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45116
llvm-svn: 329235
Summary:
Clang's __builtin_operator_new/delete was recently taught about the aligned allocation overloads (r328134). This patch makes LLVM aware of them as well.
This allows the compiler to perform certain optimizations including eliding new/delete calls.
Reviewers: rsmith, majnemer, dblaikie, vsk, bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: ckennelly, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44769
llvm-svn: 329218
Summary:
Clang's __builtin_operator_new/delete was recently taught about the aligned allocation overloads (r328134). This patch makes LLVM aware of them as well.
This allows the compiler to perform certain optimizations including eliding new/delete calls.
Reviewers: rsmith, majnemer, dblaikie, vsk, bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
Subscribers: ckennelly, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44769
llvm-svn: 329215
This patch teaches SCEV how to prove implications for SCEVUnknown nodes that are Phis.
If we need to prove `Pred` for `LHS, RHS`, and `LHS` is a Phi with possible incoming values
`L1, L2, ..., LN`, then if we prove `Pred` for `(L1, RHS), (L2, RHS), ..., (LN, RHS)` then we can also
prove it for `(LHS, RHS)`. If both `LHS` and `RHS` are Phis from the same block, it is sufficient
to prove the predicate for values that come from the same predecessor block.
The typical case that it handles is that we sometimes need to prove that `Phi(Len, Len - 1) >= 0`
given that `Len > 0`. The new logic was added to `isImpliedViaOperations` and only uses it and
non-recursive reasoning to prove the facts we need, so it should not hurt compile time a lot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44001
Reviewed By: anna
llvm-svn: 329150
Summary:
If the load/extractelement/extractvalue instructions are not originally
consecutive, the SLP vectorizer is unable to vectorize them. Patch
allows reordering of such instructions.
Patch does not support reordering of the repeated instruction, this must
be handled in the separate patch.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, hfinkel, mkuper, Ayal, ashahid
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43776
llvm-svn: 329085
The patch changes the usage of dominate to properlyDominate
to satisfy the condition !(a < a) while using std::max.
It is actually NFC due to set data structure is used to keep
the Loops and no two identical loops can be in collection.
So in reality there is no difference between usage of
dominate and properlyDominate in this particular case.
However it might be changed so it is better to fix it.
llvm-svn: 329051
Current implementation of `computeExitLimit` has a big piece of code
the only purpose of which is to prove that after the execution of this
block the latch will be executed. What it currently checks is actually a
subset of situations where the exiting block dominates latch.
This patch replaces all these checks for simple particular cases with
domination check over loop's latch which is the only necessary condition
of taking the exiting block into consideration. This change allows to
calculate exact loop taken count for simple loops like
for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
if (cond) {...} else {...}
if (i > 50) break;
. . .
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44677
Reviewed By: efriedma
llvm-svn: 329047
Summary:
If the load/extractelement/extractvalue instructions are not originally
consecutive, the SLP vectorizer is unable to vectorize them. Patch
allows reordering of such instructions.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, hfinkel, mkuper, Ayal, ashahid
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43776
llvm-svn: 328980
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
Reviewers: sanjoy, dexonsmith, hfinkel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Subscribers: david2050, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44944
llvm-svn: 328925
Summary:
Useful to selectively disable importing into specific modules for
debugging/triaging/workarounds.
Reviewers: eraman
Subscribers: inglorion, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45062
llvm-svn: 328909
Eli pointed out that variadic functions are totally a thing, so this
assert is incorrect.
No test-case is provided, since the only way this assert fires is if a
specific DenseMap falls back to doing `isEqual` checks, and that seems
fairly brittle (and requires a pyramid of growing
`call void (i8, ...) @varargs(i8 0)`).
llvm-svn: 328755
We use a `DenseMap<MemoryLocOrCall, MemlocStackInfo>` to keep track of
prior work when optimizing uses in MemorySSA. Because we weren't
accounting for callsite arguments in either the hash code or equality
tests for `MemoryLocOrCall`s, we optimized uses too aggressively in
some rare cases.
Fix by Daniel Berlin.
Should fix PR36883.
llvm-svn: 328748
Summary:
This is an NFC refactoring of the OptBisect class to split it into an optional pass gate interface used by LLVMContext and the Optional Pass Bisector (OptBisect) used for debugging of optional passes.
This refactoring is needed for D44464, which introduces setOptPassGate() method to allow implementations other than OptBisect.
Patch by Yevgeny Rouban.
Reviewers: andrew.w.kaylor, fedor.sergeev, vsk, dberlin, Eugene.Zelenko, reames, skatkov
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44821
llvm-svn: 328637
Currently, `getExact` fails if it sees two exit counts in different blocks. There is
no solid reason to do so, given that we only calculate exact non-taken count
for exiting blocks that dominate latch. Using this fact, we can simply take min
out of all exits of all blocks to get the exact taken count.
This patch makes the calculation more optimistic with enforcing our assumption
with asserts. It allows us to calculate exact backedge taken count in trivial loops
like
for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
if (i > 50) break;
. . .
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44676
Reviewed By: fhahn
llvm-svn: 328611
This patch teaches `computeConstantDifference` handle calculation of constant
difference between `(X + C1)` and `(X + C2)` which is `(C2 - C1)`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43759
Reviewed By: anna
llvm-svn: 328609
MemorySSAUpdater::getPreviousDefRecursive is a recursive algorithm, for
each block, it computes the previous definition for each predecessor,
then takes those definitions and combines them. But currently it doesn't
remember results which it already computed; this means it can visit the
same block multiple times, which adds up to exponential time overall.
To fix this, this patch adds a cache. If we computed the result for a
block already, we don't need to visit it again because we'll come up
with the same result. Well, unless we RAUW a MemoryPHI; in that case,
the TrackingVH will be updated automatically.
This matches the original source paper for this algorithm.
The testcase isn't really a test for the bug, but it adds coverage for
the case where tryRemoveTrivialPhi erases an existing PHI node. (It's
hard to write a good regression test for a performance issue.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44715
llvm-svn: 328577
Implement TTI interface for targets to indicate that the LSR should give
priority to post-incrementing addressing modes.
Combination of patches by Sebastian Pop and Brendon Cahoon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44758
llvm-svn: 328490
Summary:
Revert r325687 workaround for PR36032 since
a fix was committed in r326154.
Reviewers: sbaranga
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D44768
From: Evgeny Stupachenko <evstupac@gmail.com>
<evgeny.v.stupachenko@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 328257
Remove #include of Transforms/Scalar.h from Transform/Utils to fix layering.
Transforms depends on Transforms/Utils, not the other way around. So
remove the header and the "createStripGCRelocatesPass" function
declaration (& definition) that is unused and motivated this dependency.
Move Transforms/Utils/Local.h into Analysis because it's used by
Analysis/MemoryBuiltins.cpp.
llvm-svn: 328165
Most basic possible test for the logic used by LICM.
Also contains a speculative build fix for compiles which complain about a definition of a stuct K; followed by a declaration as class K;
llvm-svn: 328058
As suggested in the original review (https://reviews.llvm.org/D44524), use an annotation style printer instead.
Note: The switch from -analyze to -disable-output in tests was driven by the fact that seems to be the idiomatic style used in annoation passes. I tried to keep both working, but the old style pass API for printers really doesn't make this easy. It invokes (runOnFunction, print(Module)) repeatedly. I decided the extra state wasn't worth it given the old pass manager is going away soonish anyway.
llvm-svn: 328015
Many of our loop passes make use of so called "must execute" or "guaranteed to execute" facts to prove the legality of code motion. The basic notion is that we know (by assumption) an instruction didn't fault at it's original location, so if the location we move it to is strictly post dominated by the original, then we can't have introduced a new fault.
At the moment, the testing for this logic is somewhat adhoc and done mostly through LICM. Since I'm working on that code, I want to improve the testing. This patch is the first step in that direction. It doesn't actually test the variant used by the loop passes - I need to move that to the Analysis library first - but instead exercises an alternate implementation used by SCEV. (I plan on merging both implementations.)
Note: I'll be replacing the printing logic within this with an annotation based version in the near future. Anna suggested this in review, and it seems like a strictly better format.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44524
llvm-svn: 328004
This is re-land of https://reviews.llvm.org/rL327362 with a fix
and regression test.
The crash was due to it is possible that for found MDL loop,
LHS or RHS may contain an invariant unknown SCEV which
does not dominate the MDL. Please see regression
test for an example.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44553
llvm-svn: 327822
As shown in the code comment, we don't need all of 'fast',
but we do need reassoc + nsz + nnan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43765
llvm-svn: 327796
a long time.
The key thing is that we need to create value handles for every function
that we create a `FunctionInfo` object around. Without this, when that
function is deleted we can end up creating a new function that collides
with its address and look up a stale AA result. With that AA result we
can in turn miscompile code in ways that break.
This is seriously one of the most absurd miscompiles I've seen. It only
reproduced for us recently and only when building a very large server
with both ThinLTO and PGO.
A *HUGE* shout out to Wei Mi who tracked all of this down and came up
with this patch. I'm just landing it because I happened to still by at
a computer.
He or I can work on crafting a test case to hit this (now that we know
what to target) but it'll take a while, and we've been chasing this for
a long time and need it fix Right Now.
llvm-svn: 327761
This matcher implementation appears to be slightly more efficient than
the generic constant check that it is replacing because every use was
for matching FP patterns, but the previous code would check int and
pointer type nulls too.
llvm-svn: 327627
From the LangRef definition for frem:
"The value produced is the floating-point remainder of the two operands.
This is the same output as a libm ‘fmod‘ function, but without any
possibility of setting errno. The remainder has the same sign as the
dividend. This instruction is assumed to execute in the default
floating-point environment."
llvm-svn: 327626
Methods `computeExitLimitFromCondCached` and `computeExitLimitFromCondImpl` take
true and false branches as parameters and only use them for asserts and for identifying
whether true/false branch belongs to the loop (which can be done once earlier). This fact
complicates generalization of exit limit computation logic on guards because the guards
don't have blocks to which they go in case of failure explicitly.
The motivation of this patch is that currently this part of SCEV knows nothing about guards
and only works with explicit branches. As result, it fails to prove that a loop
for (i = 0; i < 100; i++)
guard(i < 10);
exits after 10th iteration, while in the equivalent example
for (i = 0; i < 100; i++)
if (i >= 10) break;
SCEV easily proves this fact. We are going to change it in near future, and this is why
we need to make these methods operate on more abstract level.
This patch refactors this code to get rid of these parameters as meaningless and prepare
ground for teaching these methods to work with guards as well as they work with explicit
branching instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44419
llvm-svn: 327615
As shown in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27151
...the existing fold could miscompile when X is NaN.
The fold was also dependent on 'ninf' but that's not necessary.
From IEEE-754 (with default rounding which we can assume for these opcodes):
"When the sum of two operands with opposite signs (or the difference of two
operands with like signs) is exactly zero, the sign of that sum (or difference)
shall be +0...However, x + x = x − (−x) retains the same sign as x even when
x is zero."
llvm-svn: 327575
Summary:
It is possible for LVI to encounter instructions that are not in valid
SSA form and reference themselves. One example is the following:
%tmp4 = and i1 %tmp4, undef
Before this patch LVI would recurse until running out of stack memory
and crashed. This patch marks these self-referential instructions as
Overdefined and aborts analysis on the instruction.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33357
Reviewers: craig.topper, anna, efriedma, dberlin, sebpop, kuhar
Reviewed by: dberlin
Subscribers: uabelho, spatel, a.elovikov, fhahn, eli.friedman, mzolotukhin, spop, evandro, davide, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34135
llvm-svn: 327432
isAvailableAtLoopEntry duplicates logic of `properlyDominates` after checking invariance.
This patch replaces this logic with invocation of this method which is more profitable
because it supports caching.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43997
llvm-svn: 327373
It is a revert of rL327362 which causes build bot failures with assert like
Assertion `isAvailableAtLoopEntry(RHS, L) && "RHS is not available at Loop Entry"' failed.
llvm-svn: 327363
IsKnownPredicate is updated to implement the following algorithm
proposed by @sanjoy and @mkazantsev :
isKnownPredicate(Pred, LHS, RHS) {
Collect set S all loops on which either LHS or RHS depend.
If S is non-empty
a. Let PD be the element of S which is dominated by all other elements of S
b. Let E(LHS) be value of LHS on entry of PD.
To get E(LHS), we should just take LHS and replace all AddRecs that
are attached to PD on with their entry values.
Define E(RHS) in the same way.
c. Let B(LHS) be value of L on backedge of PD.
To get B(LHS), we should just take LHS and replace all AddRecs that
are attached to PD on with their backedge values.
Define B(RHS) in the same way.
d. Note that E(LHS) and E(RHS) are automatically available on entry of PD,
so we can assert on that.
e. Return true if isLoopEntryGuardedByCond(Pred, E(LHS), E(RHS)) &&
isLoopBackedgeGuardedByCond(Pred, B(LHS), B(RHS))
Return true if Pred, L, R is known from ranges, splitting etc.
}
This is follow-up for https://reviews.llvm.org/D42417.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy, mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43507
llvm-svn: 327362
Summary:
If there's a callees metadata attached to the indirect call instruction, add CallGraphEdges to the callees mentioned in the metadata when computing FunctionSummary.
* Why this is necessary:
Consider following code example:
```
(foo.c)
static int f1(int x) {...}
static int f2(int x);
static int (*fptr)(int) = f2;
static int f2(int x) {
if (x) fptr=f1; return f1(x);
}
int foo(int x) {
(*fptr)(x); // !callees metadata of !{i32 (i32)* @f1, i32 (i32)* @f2} would be attached to this call.
}
(bar.c)
int bar(int x) {
return foo(x);
}
```
At LTO time when `foo.o` is imported into `bar.o`, function `foo` might be inlined into `bar` and PGO-guided indirect call promotion will run after that. If the profile data tells that the promotion of `@f1` or `@f2` is beneficial, the optimizer will check if the "promoted" `@f1` or `@f2` (such as `@f1.llvm.0` or `@f2.llvm.0`) is available. Without this patch, importing `!callees` metadata would only add promoted declarations of `@f1` and `@f2` to the `bar.o`, but still the optimizer will assume that the function is available and perform the promotion. The result of that is link failure with `undefined reference to @f1.llvm.0`.
This patch fixes this problem by adding callees in the `!callees` metadata to CallGraphEdges so that their definition would be properly imported into.
One may ask that there already is a logic to add indirect call promotion targets to be added to CallGraphEdges. However, if profile data says "indirect call promotion is only beneficial under a certain inline context", the logic wouldn't work. In the code example above, if profile data is like
```
bar:1000000:100000
1:100000
1: foo:100000
1: 100000 f1:100000
```
, Computing FunctionSummary for `foo.o` wouldn't add `foo->f1` to CallGraphEdges. (Also, it is at least "possible" that one can provide profile data to only link step but not to compilation step).
Reviewers: tejohnson, mehdi_amini, pcc
Reviewed By: tejohnson
Subscribers: inglorion, eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44399
llvm-svn: 327358
There are six separate instances of getPointerOperand() utility.
LoopVectorize.cpp has one of them,
and I don't want to create a 7th one while I'm trying to move
LoopVectorizationLegality into a separate file
(eventual objective is to move it to Analysis tree).
See http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-February/120999.html
for llvm-dev discussions
Closes D43323.
Patch by Hideki Saito <hideki.saito@intel.com>.
llvm-svn: 327173
Summary:
Building MemorySSA gathers alias information for Defs/Uses.
Store and expose this information when optimizing uses (when building MemorySSA),
and when optimizing defs or updating uses (getClobberingMemoryAccess).
Current patch does not propagate alias information through MemoryPhis.
Reviewers: gbiv, dberlin
Subscribers: Prazek, sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38569
llvm-svn: 327035
It's been quite some time the Dependence Analysis (DA) is broken,
as it uses the GEP representation to "identify" multi-dimensional arrays.
It even wrongly detects multi-dimensional arrays in single nested loops:
from test/Analysis/DependenceAnalysis/Coupled.ll, example @couple6
;; for (long int i = 0; i < 50; i++) {
;; A[i][3*i - 6] = i;
;; *B++ = A[i][i];
DA used to detect two subscripts, which makes no sense in the LLVM IR
or in C/C++ semantics, as there are no guarantees as in Fortran of
subscripts not overlapping into a next array dimension:
maximum nesting levels = 1
SrcPtrSCEV = %A
DstPtrSCEV = %A
using GEPs
subscript 0
src = {0,+,1}<nuw><nsw><%for.body>
dst = {0,+,1}<nuw><nsw><%for.body>
class = 1
loops = {1}
subscript 1
src = {-6,+,3}<nsw><%for.body>
dst = {0,+,1}<nuw><nsw><%for.body>
class = 1
loops = {1}
Separable = {}
Coupled = {1}
With the current patch, DA will correctly work on only one dimension:
maximum nesting levels = 1
SrcSCEV = {(-2424 + %A)<nsw>,+,1212}<%for.body>
DstSCEV = {%A,+,404}<%for.body>
subscript 0
src = {(-2424 + %A)<nsw>,+,1212}<%for.body>
dst = {%A,+,404}<%for.body>
class = 1
loops = {1}
Separable = {0}
Coupled = {}
This change removes all uses of GEP from DA, and we now only rely
on the SCEV representation.
The patch does not turn on -da-delinearize by default, and so the DA analysis
will be more conservative in the case of multi-dimensional memory accesses in
nested loops.
I disabled some interchange tests, as the DA is not able to disambiguate
the dependence anymore. To make DA stronger, we may need to
compute a bound on the number of iterations based on the access functions
and array dimensions.
The patch cleans up all the CHECKs in test/Transforms/LoopInterchange/*.ll to
avoid checking for snippets of LLVM IR: this form of checking is very hard to
maintain. Instead, we now check for output of the pass that are more meaningful
than dozens of lines of LLVM IR. Some tests now require -debug messages and thus
only enabled with asserts.
Patch written by Sebastian Pop and Aditya Kumar.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35430
llvm-svn: 326837
Most of the folds based on SelectPatternResult belong in InstSimplify rather than
InstCombine, so the helper code should be available to other passes/analysis.
llvm-svn: 326812
The 'hasOneUse' check is a giveaway that something's not right.
We never need to check that in InstSimplify because we don't
create new instructions here.
These are all handled as icmp simplifies which then trigger
existing select simplifies, so there's no need to duplicate
a composite fold of the two.
llvm-svn: 326750
This is NFC for the moment (and independent of any potential NaN semantic
controversy). Besides making the code in InstSimplify easier to read, the
motivation is to eventually allow undef elements in vector constants to
match too. A proposal to add the base logic for that is in D43792.
llvm-svn: 326600
The range of SCEVUnknown Phi which merges values `X1, X2, ..., XN`
can be evaluated as `U(Range(X1), Range(X2), ..., Range(XN))`.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43810
llvm-svn: 326418
Removes verifyDomTree, using assert(verify()) everywhere instead, and
changes verify a little to always run IsSameAsFreshTree first in order
to print good output when we find errors. Also adds verifyAnalysis for
PostDomTrees, which will allow checking of PostDomTrees it the same way
we check DomTrees and MachineDomTrees.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41298
llvm-svn: 326315
This is similar to what's done in computeKnownBits and computeSignBits. Don't do anything fancy just collect information valid for any element.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43789
llvm-svn: 326237
It appears that there were many cases where we were directly (through
templates) calling the dtor of MemoryAccess, which is conceptually an
abstract class.
This hasn't been a problem, since the data members of all of the
subclasses of MemoryAccess have been POD. I'm planning on changing that.
:)
llvm-svn: 326175
Set default value for IgnoreOtherLoops of SCEVInitRewriter::rewrite to true
to be consistent with SCEVPostIncRewriter which does not have this parameter
but behaves as it would be true.
This is follow up for rL326067.
llvm-svn: 326174
The patch introduces the new function in ScalarEvolution to get
all loops used in specified SCEV.
This is a preparation for re-writing isKnownPredicate utility as
described in https://reviews.llvm.org/D42417.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43504
llvm-svn: 326072
The patch introduces the SCEVPostIncRewriter rewriter which
is similar to SCEVInitRewriter but rewrites AddRec with post increment
value of this AddRec.
This is a preparation for re-writing isKnownPredicate utility as
described in https://reviews.llvm.org/D42417.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43499
llvm-svn: 326071
The patch introduces an additional parameter IgnoreOtherLoops to SCEVInitRewriter.
if it is equal to true then rewriter will not invalidate result in case
SCEV depends on other loops then specified during creation.
The patch does not change the default behavior.
This is a preparation for re-writing isKnownPredicate utility as
described in https://reviews.llvm.org/D42417.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, reames
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43498
llvm-svn: 326067
If we have a loop like this:
int n = 0;
while (...) {
if (++n >= MAX) {
n = 0;
}
}
then the body of the 'if' statement will only be executed once every MAX
iterations. Detect this by looking for branches in loops where taking the branch
makes the branch condition evaluate to 'not taken' in the next iteration of the
loop, and reduce the probability of such branches.
This slightly improves EEMBC benchmarks on cortex-m4/cortex-m33 due to making
better choices in if-conversion, but has no effect on any other cpu/benchmark
that I could detect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35804
llvm-svn: 325925
Summary:
The current integer representation of relative block frequency prevents
representing relative block frequencies below 1. This change uses a 8 of
the 29 bits to represent the decimal part by using a fixed scale of -8.
Reviewers: tejohnson, davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43520
llvm-svn: 325823
SCEV has multiple occurences of code when we need to prove some predicate on
every iteration of a loop and do it with invocations of couple `isLoopEntryGuardedByCond`,
`isLoopBackedgeGuardedByCond`. This patch factors out these two calls into a separate
method. It is a preparation step to extend this logic: it is not the only way how we can prove
such conditions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43373
llvm-svn: 325745
of turning SCEVUnknowns of PHIs into AddRecExprs.
This feature is now hidden behind the -scev-version-unknown flag.
Fixes PR36032 and PR35432.
llvm-svn: 325687
This is usually not a problem because this code's main purpose is
eliminating unused new/delete pairs. We got deletes of nullptr or
nobuiltin deletes of builtin new wrong though.
llvm-svn: 325630
Loosening the matcher definition reveals a subtle bug in InstSimplify (we should not
assume that because an operand constant matches that it's safe to return it as a result).
So I'm making that change here too (that diff could be independent, but I'm not sure how
to reveal it before the matcher change).
This also seems like a good reason to *not* include matchers that capture the value.
We don't want to encourage the potential misstep of propagating undef values when it's
not allowed/intended.
I didn't include the capture variant option here or in the related rL325437 (m_One),
but it already exists for other constant matchers.
llvm-svn: 325466
Summary:
The LazyValueInfo pass caches a copy of the DominatorTree when available.
Whenever there are pending DominatorTree updates within JumpThreading's
DeferredDominance object we cannot use the cached DT for LVI analysis.
This commit adds the new methods enableDT() and disableDT() to LVI.
JumpThreading also sets the appropriate usage model before calling LVI
analysis methods.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36133
Reviewers: sebpop, dberlin, kuhar
Reviewed by: sebpop, kuhar
Subscribers: uabelho, llvm-commits, aprantl, hiraditya, a.elovikov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42717
llvm-svn: 325356
There is a more powerful but still simple function `isKnownViaSimpleReasoning ` that
does constant range check and few more additional checks. We use it some places (e.g.
when proving implications) and in some other places we only check constant ranges.
Currently, indvar simplifier fails to remove the check in following loop:
int inc = ...;
for (int i = inc, j = inc - 1; i < 200; ++i, ++j)
if (i > j) { ... }
This patch replaces all usages of `isKnownPredicateViaConstantRanges` with
`isKnownViaSimpleReasoning` to have smarter proofs. In particular, it fixes the
case above.
Reviewed-By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43175
llvm-svn: 325214
Making a width of GEP Index, which is used for address calculation, to be one of the pointer properties in the Data Layout.
p[address space]:size:memory_size:alignment:pref_alignment:index_size_in_bits.
The index size parameter is optional, if not specified, it is equal to the pointer size.
Till now, the InstCombiner normalized GEPs and extended the Index operand to the pointer width.
It works fine if you can convert pointer to integer for address calculation and all registered targets do this.
But some ISAs have very restricted instruction set for the pointer calculation. During discussions were desided to retrieve information for GEP index from the Data Layout.
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-January/120416.html
I added an interface to the Data Layout and I changed the InstCombiner and some other passes to take the Index width into account.
This change does not affect any in-tree target. I added tests to cover data layouts with explicitly specified index size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42123
llvm-svn: 325102
These intrinsic folds were added with D41381, but only allowed with isFast().
That's more than necessary because FMF has 'reassoc' to apply to these
kinds of folds after D39304, and that's all we need in these cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43160
llvm-svn: 324967
The current implementation of `getPostIncExpr` invokes `getAddExpr` for two recurrencies
and expects that it always returns it a recurrency. But this is not guaranteed to happen if we
have reached max recursion depth or refused to make SCEV simplification for other reasons.
This patch changes its implementation so that now it always returns SCEVAddRec without
relying on `getAddExpr`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42953
llvm-svn: 324866
The last assume in the test says that %B12 is 0.
The first assume says that %and1 is less than %B12.
Therefore, %and1 is unsigned less than 0...does not compute.
That means this line:
Known.Zero.setHighBits(RHSKnown.countMinLeadingZeros() + 1);
...tries to set more bits than exist.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43052
llvm-svn: 324610
The failures happened because of assert which was overconfident about
SCEV's proving capabilities and is generally not valid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42835
llvm-svn: 324473
Sometimes `isLoopEntryGuardedByCond` cannot prove predicate `a > b` directly.
But it is a common situation when `a >= b` is known from ranges and `a != b` is
known from a dominating condition. Thia patch teaches SCEV to sum these facts
together and prove strict comparison via non-strict one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42835
llvm-svn: 324453
Before r324429 we essentially didn't have a verification of LCSSA, so
no wonder that it has been broken: currently loop-sink breaks it (the
attached test illustrates the failure).
It was detected during a stage2 RA build, so to unbreak it I'm disabling
the check for now.
llvm-svn: 324445
Generalize existing constant matching to work with non-uniform constant vectors as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42818
llvm-svn: 324369
In the motivating case from PR35681 and represented by the macro-fuse-cmp test:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35681
...there's a 37 -> 31 byte size win for the loop because we eliminate the big base
address offsets.
SPEC2017 on Ryzen shows no significant perf difference.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42607
llvm-svn: 324289
ScalarEvolution::isKnownPredicate invokes isLoopEntryGuardedByCond without check
that SCEV is available at entry point of the loop. It is incorrect and fixed by patch.
To bugs additionally fixed:
assert is moved after the check whether loop is not a nullptr.
Usage of isLoopEntryGuardedByCond in ScalarEvolution::isImpliedCondOperandsViaNoOverflow
is guarded by isAvailableAtLoopEntry.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, anna, dorit, reames
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42417
llvm-svn: 324204
This patch implements analysis for new-format TBAA access tags
with aggregate types as their final access types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41501
llvm-svn: 324092
Summary:
D42698 adds child_edge_{begin|end} and children_edges to GraphTraits
which are used here. The reason for this change is to make it easy to
use count propagation on ModulesummaryIndex. As it stands,
CallGraphTraits is in Analysis while ModuleSummaryIndex is in IR.
Reviewers: davidxl, dberlin
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42703
llvm-svn: 323994
Since r322087, glibc's finite lib calls are generated when possible.
However, they are not supported on Android. This change also
disables other functions not available on Android.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D42668
llvm-svn: 323898
Summary:
This change is part of step five in the series of changes to remove alignment argument from
memcpy/memmove/memset in favour of alignment attributes. In particular, this changes the Lint
analysis to cease using the old getAlignment() API of MemoryIntrinsic in favour of getting
source & dest specific alignments through the new API.
Steps:
Step 1) Remove alignment parameter and create alignment parameter attributes for
memcpy/memmove/memset. ( rL322965, rC322964, rL322963 )
Step 2) Expand the IRBuilder API to allow creation of memcpy/memmove with differing
source and dest alignments. ( rL323597 )
Step 3) Update Clang to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rC323617 )
Step 4) Update Polly to use the new IRBuilder API. ( rL323618 )
Step 5) Update LLVM passes that create memcpy/memmove calls to use the new IRBuilder API,
and those that use use MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() to use [get|set]DestAlignment()
and [get|set]SourceAlignment() instead.
Step 6) Remove the single-alignment IRBuilder API for memcpy/memmove, and the
MemIntrinsicInst::[get|set]Alignment() methods.
Reference
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2015-August/089384.htmlhttp://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20151109/312083.html
llvm-svn: 323886
candidates with coldcc attribute.
This recommits r322721 reverted due to sanitizer memory leak build bot failures.
Original commit message:
This patch adds support for the coldcc calling convention for Power.
This changes the set of non-volatile registers. It includes a pass to stress
test the implementation by marking all static directly called functions with
the coldcc attribute through the option -enable-coldcc-stress-test. It also
includes an option, -ppc-enable-coldcc, to add the coldcc attribute to
functions which are cold at all call sites based on BlockFrequencyInfo when
the containing function does not call any non cold functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38413
llvm-svn: 323778
This prevents functions accessing varargs from being inlined if they
have the alwaysinline attribute.
Reviewers: efriedma, rnk, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42556
llvm-svn: 323619
Summary:
The intent of this is to allow the code to be used with ThinLTO. In
Thinlink phase, a traditional Callgraph can not be computed even though
all the necessary information (nodes and edges of a call graph) is
available. This is due to the fact that CallGraph class is closely tied
to the IR. This patch first extends GraphTraits to add a CallGraphTraits
graph. This is then used to implement a version of counts propagation
on a generic callgraph.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, tejohnson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42311
llvm-svn: 323475
It was reverted after buildbot regressions.
Original commit message:
This allows relative block frequency of call edges to be passed
to the thinlink stage where it will be used to compute synthetic
entry counts of functions.
llvm-svn: 323460
Summary:
This allows relative block frequency of call edges to be passed to the
thinlink stage where it will be used to compute synthetic entry counts
of functions.
Reviewers: tejohnson, pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, inglorion
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42212
llvm-svn: 323349
Summary:
If any vector divisor element is undef, we can arbitrarily choose it be
zero which would make the div/rem an undef value by definition.
Reviewers: spatel, reames
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: magabari, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42485
llvm-svn: 323343
We're getting bug reports:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35807https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35840https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=36045
...where we blow up the stack in value tracking because other passes are sending
in selects that have an operand that is itself the select.
We don't currently have a reliable way to avoid analyzing dead code that may take
non-standard forms, so bail out when things go too far.
This mimics the recursion depth limitations in other parts of value tracking.
Unfortunately, this pushes the underlying problems for other passes (jump-threading,
simplifycfg, correlated-propagation) into hiding. If someone wants to uncover those
again, the first draft of this patch on Phab would do that (it would assert rather
than bail out).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42442
llvm-svn: 323331
Summary:
Since r322087, glibc's finite lib calls are generated when possible.
However, glibc is not supported on Android. Therefore this change
enables llvm to finely distinguish between linux and Android for
unsupported library calls. The change also include some regression
tests.
Reviewers: srhines, pirama
Reviewed By: srhines
Subscribers: kongyi, chh, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42288
llvm-svn: 323187
ScalarEvolution::isKnownPredicate invokes isLoopEntryGuardedByCond without check
that SCEV is available at entry point of the loop. It is incorrect and fixed by patch.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, anna, dorit
Reviewed By: mkazantsev
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42165
llvm-svn: 323077
Summary:
In ModRefInfo "Must" was introduced to track presence of MustAlias, but we still want to return NoModRef when there is neither Mod or Ref, even when MustAlias is found. Patch has small fixes to ensure this happens.
Minor cleanup to remove nesting for 2 if statements when calling getModRefInfo for 2 ImmutableCallSites.
Reviewers: sanjoy
Subscribers: jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42209
llvm-svn: 322932
Summary:
The class wraps a uint64_t and an enum to represent the type of profile
count (real and synthetic) with some helper methods.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41883
llvm-svn: 322771
candidates with coldcc attribute.
This patch adds support for the coldcc calling convention for Power.
This changes the set of non-volatile registers. It includes a pass to stress
test the implementation by marking all static directly called functions with
the coldcc attribute through the option -enable-coldcc-stress-test. It also
includes an option, -ppc-enable-coldcc, to add the coldcc attribute to
functions which are cold at all call sites based on BlockFrequencyInfo when
the containing function does not call any non cold functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38413
llvm-svn: 322721
An alternative (and probably better) fix would be that of
making `Scale` an APInt, and there's a patch floating around
to do this. As we're still discussing it, at least stop crashing
in the meanwhile (added bonus, we now have a regression test for
this situation).
Fixes PR35843.
Thanks to Eli for suggesting the fix and Simon for reporting and
reducing the bug.
llvm-svn: 322467
This doesn't handle the more complicated case in the bug report yet:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35790
For that, we have to match / look through a cast.
llvm-svn: 322327
This was originally planned as the fix for:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35834
...but simpler transforms handled that case, so I implemented a
lesser solution. It turns out we need to handle the case with 'not'
ops too because the real code example that we are trying to solve:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35875
...has extra uses of the intermediate values, so we can't rely on
smaller canonicalizations to get us to the goal.
As with rL321672, I've tried to show every possibility in the
codegen tests because that's the simplest way to prove we're doing
the right thing in the wide variety of permutations of this pattern.
We can also show an InstCombine win because we added a fold for
this case in:
rL321998 / D41603
An Alive proof for one variant of the pattern to show that the
InstCombine and codegen results are correct:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/vd1
Name: min3_nots
%nx = xor i8 %x, -1
%ny = xor i8 %y, -1
%nz = xor i8 %z, -1
%cmpxz = icmp slt i8 %nx, %nz
%minxz = select i1 %cmpxz, i8 %nx, i8 %nz
%cmpyz = icmp slt i8 %ny, %nz
%minyz = select i1 %cmpyz, i8 %ny, i8 %nz
%cmpyx = icmp slt i8 %y, %x
%r = select i1 %cmpyx, i8 %minxz, i8 %minyz
=>
%cmpxyz = icmp slt i8 %minxz, %ny
%r = select i1 %cmpxyz, i8 %minxz, i8 %ny
Name: min3_nots_alt
%nx = xor i8 %x, -1
%ny = xor i8 %y, -1
%nz = xor i8 %z, -1
%cmpxz = icmp slt i8 %nx, %nz
%minxz = select i1 %cmpxz, i8 %nx, i8 %nz
%cmpyz = icmp slt i8 %ny, %nz
%minyz = select i1 %cmpyz, i8 %ny, i8 %nz
%cmpyx = icmp slt i8 %y, %x
%r = select i1 %cmpyx, i8 %minxz, i8 %minyz
=>
%xz = icmp sgt i8 %x, %z
%maxxz = select i1 %xz, i8 %x, i8 %z
%xyz = icmp sgt i8 %maxxz, %y
%maxxyz = select i1 %xyz, i8 %maxxz, i8 %y
%r = xor i8 %maxxyz, -1
llvm-svn: 322283
Summary:
After teaching InlineCost more about address spaces ()
another fault was detected in the inliner. If an argument has
the byval attribute the parameter might be copied to an alloca.
That part seems to work fine even if the argument has a different
address space than the alloca address space. However, if the
address spaces differ, then the inlined function still might
refer to the parameter using the original address space (the
inliner does not handle that situation very well).
This patch avoids the problem by simply disallowing inlining
when there are byval arguments with address space that differs
from the alloca address space.
I'm not really sure how to transform the code if we want to
get inlining for this situation. I assume that it never has
been working, and that the fixes in r321809 just exposed an
old problem.
Fault found by skatkov (Serguei Katkov). It is mentioned in
follow up comments to https://reviews.llvm.org/D40455.
Reviewers: skatkov
Reviewed By: skatkov
Subscribers: uabelho, eraman, llvm-commits, haicheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41898
llvm-svn: 322181
Summary:
This pass synthesizes function entry counts by traversing the callgraph
and using the relative block frequencies of the callsites. The intended
use of these counts is in inlining to determine hot/cold callsites in
the absence of profile information.
The pass is split into two files with the code that propagates the
counts in a callgraph in a Utils file. I plan to add support for
propagation in the thinlto link phase and the propagation code will be
shared and hence this split. I did not add support to the old PM since
hot callsite determination in inlining is not possible in old PM
(although we could use hot callee heuristic with synthetic counts in the
old PM it is not worth the effort tuning it)
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Subscribers: mgorny, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41604
llvm-svn: 322110
SCEV tracks the correspondence of created SCEV to original instruction.
However during creation of SCEV it is possible that nuw/nsw/exact flags are
lost.
As a result during expansion of the SCEV the instruction with nuw/nsw/exact
will be used where it was expected and we produce poison incorreclty.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, sebpop, jbhateja
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41578
llvm-svn: 322058
This patch was part of:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41338
...but we can expose the bug in IR via constant propagation
as shown in the test. Unless the triple includes 'linux', we
should not fold these because the functions don't exist on
other platforms (yet?).
llvm-svn: 322010
If the varargs are not accessed by a function, we can inline the
function.
Reviewers: dblaikie, chandlerc, davide, efriedma, rnk, hfinkel
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41335
llvm-svn: 321940
Summary:
I basically copied this patch from here:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D1251
But I skipped some of the refactoring to make the patch more clean.
The new outer3/inner3 test case in ptr-diff.ll triggers the
following assert without this patch:
lib/IR/Constants.cpp:1834: static llvm::Constant *llvm::ConstantExpr::getCompare(unsigned short, llvm::Constant *, llvm::Constant *, bool): Assertion `C1->getType() == C2->getType() && "Op types should be identical!"' failed.
The other new test cases makes sure that there is code coverage
for all modifications in InlineCost.cpp (getting different values
due to not fetching sizes for address space zero). I only guarantee
code coverage for those tests. The tests are not written in a way
that they would break if not having the corrections in
InlineCost.cpp. I found it quite hard to fine tune the tests into
getting different results based on the pointer sizes (except for
the test case where we hit an assert if not teaching InlineCost
about address spaces).
Reviewers: chandlerc, arsenm, haicheng
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: wdng, eraman, llvm-commits, haicheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40455
llvm-svn: 321809
In one case, we were handling out of bounds, but not undef indices. In the other, we were handling undef (with the comment making the analogy to out of bounds), but not out of bounds. Be consistent and treat both undef and constant out of bounds indices as producing undefined results.
As a side effect, this also protects instcombine from having to handle large constant indices as we always simplify first.
llvm-svn: 321575
This reverts r321138. It seems there are still underlying issues with
memdep. PR35519 seems to still be present if debug info is enabled. We
end up losing a memcpy. Somehow during store to memset merging, we
insert the memset after the memcpy or fail to update the memdep analysis
to account for the newly inserted memset of a pair.
Reduced test case:
#include <assert.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string>
#include <utility>
#include <vector>
void do_push_back(
std::vector<std::pair<std::string, std::vector<std::string>>>* crls) {
crls->push_back(std::make_pair(std::string(), std::vector<std::string>()));
}
int __attribute__((optnone)) main() {
// Put some data in the vector and then remove it so we take the push_back
// fast path.
std::vector<std::pair<std::string, std::vector<std::string>>> crl_set;
crl_set.push_back({"asdf", {}});
crl_set.pop_back();
printf("first word in vector storage: %p\n", *(void**)crl_set.data());
// Do the push_back which may fail to initialize the data.
do_push_back(&crl_set);
auto* first = &crl_set.back().first;
printf("first word in vector storage (should be zero): %p\n",
*(void**)crl_set.data());
assert(first->empty());
puts("ok");
}
Compile with libc++, enable optimizations, and enable debug info:
$ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ -g -O2 t.cpp -o t.exe -Wl,-rpath=llvm/build/lib
This program will assert with this change.
llvm-svn: 321510
Summary:
When using byval, the data is effectively copied as part of the call
anyway, so we aren't actually passing the pointer and thus there is no
reason to issue a warning.
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40118
llvm-svn: 321478
InsertBinop tries to find an appropriate instruction instead of
creating a new instruction. When it checks whether instruction is
the same as we need to create it ignores nuw/nsw/exact flags.
It leads to invalid behavior when poison instruction can be used
when it was not expected. Specifically, for example Expander
expands the SCEV built for instruction
%a = add i32 %v, 1
It is possible that InsertBinop can find an instruction
% b = add nuw nsw i32 %v, 1
and will use it instead of version w/o nuw nsw.
It is incorrect.
The patch conservatively ignores all instructions with any of
poison flags installed.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, sebpop, jbhateja
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41576
llvm-svn: 321475
This is fix for the crash caused by ScalarEvolution::getTruncateExpr.
It expects that if it checked the condition that SCEV is not in UniqueSCEVs cache in
the beginning that it will not be there inside this method.
However during recursion and transformation/simplification for sub expression,
it is possible that these modifications will end up with the same SCEV as we started from.
So we must always check whether SCEV is in cache and do not insert item if it is already there.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, craig.topper
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41380
llvm-svn: 321472
This is a preliminary step for the patch discussed in D41136 (and denoted here with the FIXME comment).
When we match an FP min/max that is cast to integer, any intermediate difference between +0.0 or -0.0
should be muted in the result by the conversion (either fptosi or fptoui) of the result. Thus, we can
enable 'nsz' for the purpose of matching fmin/fmax.
Note that there's probably room to generalize this more, possibly by fixing the current calls to the
weak version of isKnownNonZero() in matchSelectPattern() to the more powerful recursive version.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41333
llvm-svn: 321456
Summary:
Make MemorySSA allow reordering of two loads that may alias, when one is volatile.
This makes MemorySSA less conservative and behaving the same as the AliasSetTracker.
For more context, see D16875.
LLVM language reference: "The optimizers must not change the number of volatile operations or change their order of execution relative to other volatile operations. The optimizers may change the order of volatile operations relative to non-volatile operations. This is not Java’s “volatile” and has no cross-thread synchronization behavior."
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, dberlin
Subscribers: sanjoy, reames, hfinkel, llvm-commits, Prazek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41525
llvm-svn: 321382
If after if-conversion, most of the instructions in this new BB construct a long and slow dependence chain, it may be slower than cmp/branch, even if the branch has a high miss rate, because the control dependence is transformed into data dependence, and control dependence can be speculated, and thus, the second part can execute in parallel with the first part on modern OOO processor.
This patch checks for the long dependence chain, and give up if-conversion if find one.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39352
llvm-svn: 321377
Currently, inline cost model considers a binary operator as free only if both
its operands are constants. Some simple cases are missing such as a + 0, a - a,
etc. This patch modifies visitBinaryOperator() to call SimplifyBinOp() without
going through simplifyInstruction() to get rid of the constant restriction.
Thus, visitAnd() and visitOr() are not needed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41494
llvm-svn: 321366
The penalty is currently getting applied in a bunch of places where it
doesn't make sense, like bitcasts (which are free) and calls (which
were getting the call penalty applied twice). Instead, just apply the
penalty to binary operators and floating-point casts.
While I'm here, also fix getFPOpCost() to do the right thing in more
cases, so we don't have to dig into function attributes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41522
llvm-svn: 321332
Summary:
This replaces calls to getEntryCount().hasValue() with hasProfileData
that does the same thing. This refactoring is useful to do before adding
synthetic function entry counts but also a useful cleanup IMO even
otherwise. I have used hasProfileData instead of hasRealProfileData as
David had earlier suggested since I think profile implies "real" and I
use the phrase "synthetic entry count" and not "synthetic profile count"
but I am fine calling it hasRealProfileData if you prefer.
Reviewers: davidxl, silvas
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41461
llvm-svn: 321331
Summary:
Add an additional bit to ModRefInfo, ModRefInfo::Must, to be cleared for known must aliases.
Shift existing Mod/Ref/ModRef values to include an additional most
significant bit. Update wrappers that modify ModRefInfo values to
reflect the change.
Notes:
* ModRefInfo::Must is almost entirely cleared in the AAResults methods, the remaining changes are trying to preserve it.
* Only some small changes to make custom AA passes set ModRefInfo::Must (BasicAA).
* GlobalsModRef already declares a bit, who's meaning overlaps with the most significant bit in ModRefInfo (MayReadAnyGlobal). No changes to shift the value of MayReadAnyGlobal (see AlignedMap). FunctionInfo.getModRef() ajusts most significant bit so correctness is preserved, but the Must info is lost.
* There are cases where the ModRefInfo::Must is not set, e.g. 2 calls that only read will return ModRefInfo::NoModRef, though they may read from exactly the same location.
Reviewers: dberlin, hfinkel, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: llvm-commits, sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38862
llvm-svn: 321309
Summary:
The function section prefix for PGO based layout (e.g. hot/unlikely)
should look at the hotness of all blocks not just the entry BB.
A function with a cold entry but a very hot loop should be placed in the
hot section, for example, so that it is located close to other hot
functions it may call. For SamplePGO it was already looking at the
branch weights on calls, and I made that code conditional on whether
this is SamplePGO since it was essentially a noop for instrumentation
PGO anyway.
Reviewers: davidxl
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41395
llvm-svn: 321197
This teaches memcpyopt to make a non-local memdep query when a local query
indicates that the dependency is non-local. This notably allows it to
eliminate many more llvm.memcpy calls in common Rust code, often by 20-30%.
This is r319482 and r319483, along with fixes for PR35519: fix the
optimization that merges stores into memsets to preserve cached memdep
info, and fix memdep's non-local caching strategy to not assume that larger
queries are always more conservative than smaller ones.
Fixes PR28958 and PR35519.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40802
llvm-svn: 321138
There are cases when two tags with different base types denote
accesses to the same direct or indirect member of a structure
type. Currently, merging of such tags results in a tag that
represents an access to an object that has the type of that
member. This patch changes this so that if one of the accesses
encloses the other, then the generic tag is the one of the
enclosed access.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39557
llvm-svn: 321019
Enhance LVI to analyze the ‘ashr’ binary operation. This leverages the infrastructure in ConstantRange for the ashr operation.
Patch by Surya Kumari Jangala!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40886
llvm-svn: 320983
When unsafe algerbra is allowed calls to cabs(r) can be replaced by:
sqrt(creal(r)*creal(r) + cimag(r)*cimag(r))
Patch by Paul Walker, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40069
llvm-svn: 320901
SROA analysis of InlineCost can figure out that some stores can be removed
after inlining and then the repeated loads clobbered by these stores are also
free. This patch finds these clobbered loads and adjust the inline cost
accordingly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33946
llvm-svn: 320814
We cannot move the insertion point to header if SCEV contains div/rem
operations due to they may go over check for zero denominator.
Reviewers: sanjoy, mkazantsev, sebpop
Reviewed By: sebpop
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41229
llvm-svn: 320789
Most of the -Wsign-compare warnings are due to the fact that
enums are signed by default in the MS ABI, while the
tautological comparison warnings trigger on x86 builds where
sizeof(size_t) is 4 bytes, so N > numeric_limits<unsigned>::max()
is always false.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41256
llvm-svn: 320750
Summary:
The function is meant to recurse until it comes upon the
phi it's looking for. However, with the current condition,
it will recurse until it finds anything _but_ the phi.
The function will even fail for simple cases like:
%i = phi i32 [ %inc, %loop ], ...
...
%inc = add i32 %i, 1
because the base condition will not happen when the phi
is recursed to, and the recursion will end with a 'false'
result since the previous instruction is a phi.
Reviewers: sanjoy, atrick
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Subscribers: Ka-Ka, bjope, llvm-commits
Committing on behalf of: Bevin Hansson (bevinh)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40946
llvm-svn: 320700
This patch fix this FIXME in visitPHI()
FIXME: We should potentially be tracking values through phi nodes,
especially when they collapse to a single value due to deleted CFG edges
during inlining.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38594
llvm-svn: 320699
D30041 extended SCEVPredicateRewriter to improve handling of Phi nodes whose
update chain involves casts; PSCEV can now build an AddRecurrence for some
forms of such phi nodes, under the proper runtime overflow test. This means
that we can identify such phi nodes as an induction, and the loop-vectorizer
can now vectorize such inductions, however inefficiently. The vectorizer
doesn't know that it can ignore the casts, and so it vectorizes them.
This patch records the casts in the InductionDescriptor, so that they could
be marked to be ignored for cost calculation (we use VecValuesToIgnore for
that) and ignored for vectorization/widening/scalarization (i.e. treated as
TriviallyDead).
In addition to marking all these casts to be ignored, we also need to make
sure that each cast is mapped to the right vector value in the vector loop body
(be it a widened, vectorized, or scalarized induction). So whenever an
induction phi is mapped to a vector value (during vectorization/widening/
scalarization), we also map the respective cast instruction (if exists) to that
vector value. (If the phi-update sequence of an induction involves more than one
cast, then the above mapping to vector value is relevant only for the last cast
of the sequence as we allow only the "last cast" to be used outside the
induction update chain itself).
This is the last step in addressing PR30654.
llvm-svn: 320672
Summary:
This patch tries to vectorize loads of consecutive memory accesses, accessed
in non-consecutive or jumbled way. An earlier attempt was made with patch D26905
which was reverted back due to some basic issue with representing the 'use mask' of
jumbled accesses.
This patch fixes the mask representation by recording the 'use mask' in the usertree entry.
Change-Id: I9fe7f5045f065d84c126fa307ef6ebe0787296df
Reviewers: mkuper, loladiro, Ayal, zvi, danielcdh
Reviewed By: Ayal
Subscribers: mgrang, dcaballe, hans, mzolotukhin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36130
llvm-svn: 320548
CreateAddRecFromPHIWithCastsImpl() adds an IncrementNUSW overflow predicate
which allows the PSCEV rewriter to rewrite this scev expression:
(zext i8 {0, + , (trunc i32 step to i8)} to i32)
into
{0, +, (sext i8 (trunc i32 step to i8) to i32)}
But then it adds the wrong Equal predicate:
%step == (zext i8 (trunc i32 %step to i8) to i32).
instead of:
%step == (sext i8 (trunc i32 %step to i8) to i32)
This is fixed here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40641
llvm-svn: 320298
When the lowest bits of the operands to an integer multiply are known, the low bits of the result are deducible.
Code to deduce known-zero bottom bits already existed, but this change improves on that by deducing known-ones.
Patch by: Pedro Ferreira
Reviewers: craig.topper, sanjoy, efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D34029
llvm-svn: 320269
Summary:
This is LLVM instrumentation for the new HWASan tool. It is basically
a stripped down copy of ASan at this point, w/o stack or global
support. Instrumenation adds a global constructor + runtime callbacks
for every load and store.
HWASan comes with its own IR attribute.
A brief design document can be found in
clang/docs/HardwareAssistedAddressSanitizerDesign.rst (submitted earlier).
Reviewers: kcc, pcc, alekseyshl
Subscribers: srhines, mehdi_amini, mgorny, javed.absar, eraman, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40932
llvm-svn: 320217
Causes unexpected memory issue with New PM this time.
The new PM invalidates BPI but not BFI, leaving the
reference to BPI from BFI invalid.
Abandon this patch. There is a more general solution
which also handles runtime infinite loop (but not statically).
llvm-svn: 320180
In this method, we invoke `SimplifyICmpOperands` which takes the `Cond` predicate
by reference and may change it along with `LHS` and `RHS` SCEVs. But then we invoke
`computeShiftCompareExitLimit` with Values from which the SCEVs have been derived,
these Values have not been modified while `Cond` could be.
One of possible outcomes of this is that we may falsely prove that an infinite loop ends
within some finite number of iterations.
In this patch, we save the original `Cond` and pass it along with original operands.
This logic may be removed in future once `computeShiftCompareExitLimit` works
with SCEVs instead of value operands.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40953
llvm-svn: 320142
Summary:
Make enum ModRefInfo an enum class. Changes to ModRefInfo values should
be done using inline wrappers.
This should prevent future bit-wise opearations from being added, which can be more error-prone.
Reviewers: sanjoy, dberlin, hfinkel, george.burgess.iv
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40933
llvm-svn: 320107
Summary:
An undef extract index can be arbitrarily chosen to be an
out-of-range index value, which would result in the instruction being undef.
This change closes a gap identified while working on lowering vector permute intrinsics
with variable index vectors to pure LLVM IR.
Reviewers: arsenm, spatel, majnemer
Reviewed By: arsenm, spatel
Subscribers: fhahn, nhaehnle, wdng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40231
llvm-svn: 319910
Lexicographical comparison of SCEV trees is potentially expensive for big
expression trees. We can define ordering between them for AddRecs and
N-ary operations by SCEV NoWrap flags to make non-equality check
cheaper.
This change does not prevent grouping eqivalent SCEVs together and is
not supposed to have any meaningful impact on behavior of any transforms.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40645
llvm-svn: 319889
Current implementation of `compareSCEVComplexity` is being unreasonable with `SCEVUnknown`s:
every time it sees one, it creates a new value cache and tries to prove equality of two values using it.
This cache reallocates and gets lost from SCEV to SCEV.
This patch changes this behavior: now we create one cache for all values and share it between SCEVs.
Reviewed By: sanjoy
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40597
llvm-svn: 319880
This caused PR35519.
> [memcpyopt] Teach memcpyopt to optimize across basic blocks
>
> This teaches memcpyopt to make a non-local memdep query when a local query
> indicates that the dependency is non-local. This notably allows it to
> eliminate many more llvm.memcpy calls in common Rust code, often by 20-30%.
>
> Fixes PR28958.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38374
>
> [memcpyopt] Commit file missed in r319482.
>
> This change was meant to be included with r319482 but was accidentally
> omitted.
llvm-svn: 319873
Summary:
The aim is to make ModRefInfo checks and changes more intuitive
and less error prone using inline methods that abstract the bit operations.
Ideally ModRefInfo would become an enum class, but that change will require
a wider set of changes into FunctionModRefBehavior.
Reviewers: sanjoy, george.burgess.iv, dberlin, hfinkel
Subscribers: nlopes, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40749
llvm-svn: 319821
Summary:
I don't think rL309080 is the right fix for PR33494 -- caching ExitLimit only
hides the problem[0]. The real issue is that because of how we forget SCEV
expressions ScalarEvolution::getBackedgeTakenInfo, in the test case for PR33494
computing the backedge for any loop invalidates the trip count for every other
loop. This effectively makes the SCEV cache useless.
I've instead made the SCEV expression invalidation in
ScalarEvolution::getBackedgeTakenInfo less aggressive to fix this issue.
[0]: One way to think about this is that rL309080 essentially augmented the
backedge-taken-count cache with another equivalent exit-limit cache. The bug
went away because we were explicitly not clearing the exit-limit cache in
getBackedgeTakenInfo. But instead of doing all of that, we can just avoid
clearing the backedge-taken-count cache.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, mzolotukhin
Subscribers: mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39361
llvm-svn: 319678