This patch emits DW_TAG_namelist and DW_TAG_namelist_item for fortran
namelist variables. DICompositeType is extended to support this fortran
feature.
Reviewed By: aprantl
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108553
Without this change only the preferred fusion opcode is tested
when attempting to combine FMA operations.
If both FMA and FMAD are available then FMA ops formed prior to
legalization will not be merged post legalization as FMAD becomes
the preferred fusion opcode.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108619
We can halve the number of mask constants by masking before shl
and after srl.
This can reduce the number of mov immediate or constant
materializations. Or reduce the number of constant pool loads
for X86 vectors.
I think we might be able to do something similar for bswap. I'll
look at it next.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108738
In the combination of addressing modes, when replacing the matched phi nodes,
sometimes the phi node to be replaced has been modified. For example,
there’s matcher set [A, B] and [C, A], which will have cyclic dependency:
A is replaced by B and C will be replaced by A. Because we tried to match new phi node
to another new phi node, we should ignore new phi nodes when mapping new phi node to old one.
Reviewed By: skatkov
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108635
Emscripten SjLj and (soon-to-be-added) Wasm SjLj transformation share
many steps:
1. Initialize `setjmpTable` and `setjmpTableSize` in the entry BB
2. Handle `setjmp` callsites
3. Handle `longjmp` callsites
4. Cleanup and update SSA
1, 3, and 4 are identical for Emscripten SjLj and Wasm SjLj. Only the
step 2 is different. This CL extracts the current Emscripten SjLj's
longjmp callsites handling into a function. The reason to make this a
separate CL is, without this, the diff tool cannot compare things well
in the presence of moved code and added code in the followup Wasm SjLj
CL, and it ends up mixing them together, making the diff unreadable.
Also fixes some typos and variable names. So far we've been calling the
buffer argument to `setjmp` and `longjmp` `jmpbuf`, but the name used in
the man page for those functions is `env`, so updated them to be
consistent.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108728
The plan was to use `wasm.catch.exn` intrinsic to catch exceptions and
add `wasm.catch.longjmp` intrinsic, that returns two values (setjmp
buffer and return value), later to catch longjmps. But because we
decided not to use multivalue support at the moment, we are going to use
one intrinsic that returns a single value for both exceptions and
longjmps. And even if it's not for that, I now think the naming of
`wasm.catch.exn` is a little weird, because the intrinsic can still take
a tag immediate, which means it can be used for anything, not only
exceptions, as long as that returns a single value.
This partially reverts D107405.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108683
This is another bug exposed by https://llvm.org/PR51612
(and the one that triggered the initial assertion) in the report.
That example was suppressed with:
985b48f183
...but these would still crash because we created nodes
like UADDO without the expected 2 output values.
There are 2 bugs here:
1. We were not checking uses of operand 2 (the false value of the select).
2. We were not checking for multiple uses of nodes that produce >1 result.
Correcting those is enough to avoid the crash in the reduced test based on:
https://llvm.org/PR51612
The additional use check on operand 0 (the condition value of the select)
should not strictly be necessary because we are only replacing one use
with another (whether it makes performance sense to do the transform with
that pattern is not clear). But as noted in the TODO, changing that
uncovers another bug.
Note: there's at least one more bug here - we aren't propagating EVTs
correctly, but I plan to fix that in another patch.
Add support for the GNU C style __attribute__((error(""))) and
__attribute__((warning(""))). These attributes are meant to be put on
declarations of functions whom should not be called.
They are frequently used to provide compile time diagnostics similar to
_Static_assert, but which may rely on non-ICE conditions (ie. relying on
compiler optimizations). This is also similar to diagnose_if function
attribute, but can diagnose after optimizations have been run.
While users may instead simply call undefined functions in such cases to
get a linkage failure from the linker, these provide a much more
ergonomic and actionable diagnostic to users and do so at compile time
rather than at link time. Users instead may be able use inline asm .err
directives.
These are used throughout the Linux kernel in its implementation of
BUILD_BUG and BUILD_BUG_ON macros. These macros generally cannot be
converted to use _Static_assert because many of the parameters are not
ICEs. The Linux kernel still needs to be modified to make use of these
when building with Clang; I have a patch that does so I will send once
this feature is landed.
To do so, we create a new IR level Function attribute, "dontcall" (both
error and warning boil down to one IR Fn Attr). Then, similar to calls
to inline asm, we attach a !srcloc Metadata node to call sites of such
attributed callees.
The backend diagnoses these during instruction selection, while we still
know that a call is a call (vs say a JMP that's a tail call) in an arch
agnostic manner.
The frontend then reconstructs the SourceLocation from that Metadata,
and determines whether to emit an error or warning based on the callee's
attribute.
Link: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16428
Link: https://github.com/ClangBuiltLinux/linux/issues/1173
Reviewed By: aaron.ballman
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106030
InstrRefBasedLDV is marginally slower than VarlocBasedLDV when analysing
optimised code -- however, it's much slower when analysing code compiled
-O0.
To avoid this: don't use instruction referencing for -O0 functions. In the
"pure" case of unoptimised code, this won't really harm the debugging
experience because most variables won't have been promoted off the stack,
so can't go missing. It becomes more complicated when optimised code is
inlined into functions marked optnone; however these are rare, and as -O0
doesn't run many optimisations there should be little damage to the debug
experience as a result.
I've taken the opportunity to refactor testing for instruction-referencing
into a MachineFunction method, which seems the most appropriate place to
put it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108585
For ISD::EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR, its second operand must be a constant
multiple of the known-minimum vector length of the result type.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107795
Stack slot colouring adds "weight" to slots if a non-dbg-value instruction
refers to it. This, unfortunately, means that DBG_PHI instructions can have
an effect on codegen. The fix is very simple, replace isDebugValue with
isDebugInstr.
The regression test contains a scenario that reproduces this problem; I've
represented both normal-debug mode and instr-ref debug mode instructions
in comment lines prefixed with AAAAAA and BBBBBB, and un-comment them with
sed to test that the two different modes produce the same behaviour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108627
The sext_inreg_of_load combine did not have the isLegalOrBeforeLegalizer check,
leading to the generation of potentially illegal G_SEXTLOADs when run after legalization.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108626
On some AMDGPU subtargets, copying to and from AGPR registers using another
AGPR register is not possible. A intermediate VGPR register is needed for AGPR
to AGPR copy. This is an issue when machine copy propagation forwards a
COPY $agpr, replacing a COPY $vgpr which results in $agpr = COPY $agpr. It is
removing a cross class copy that may have been optimized by previous passes and
potentially creating an unoptimized cross class copy later on.
To avoid this issue, check CrossCopyRegClass if a different register class will
be needed for the copy. If so then avoid forwarding the copy when the
destination does not match the desired register class and if the original copy
already matches the desired register class.
Issue seen while attempting to optimize another AGPR to AGPR issue:
Live-ins: $agpr0
$vgpr0 = COPY $agpr0
$agpr1 = V_ACCVGPR_WRITE_B32 $vgpr0
$agpr2 = COPY $vgpr0
$agpr3 = COPY $vgpr0
$agpr4 = COPY $vgpr0
After machine-cp:
$vgpr0 = COPY $agpr0
$agpr1 = V_ACCVGPR_WRITE_B32 $vgpr0
$agpr2 = COPY $agpr0
$agpr3 = COPY $agpr0
$agpr4 = COPY $agpr0
Machine-cp propagated COPY $agpr0 to replace $vgpr0 creating 3 AGPR to AGPR
copys. Later this creates a cross-register copy from AGPR->VGPR->AGPR for each
copy when the prior VGPR->AGPR copy was already optimal.
Reviewed By: lkail, rampitec
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108011
Currently isReallyTriviallyReMaterializableGeneric() implementation
prevents rematerialization on any virtual register use on the grounds
that is not a trivial rematerialization and that we do not want to
extend liveranges.
It appears that LRE logic does not attempt to extend a liverange of
a source register for rematerialization so that is not an issue.
That is checked in the LiveRangeEdit::allUsesAvailableAt().
The only non-trivial aspect of it is accounting for tied-defs which
normally represent a read-modify-write operation and not rematerializable.
The test for a tied-def situation already exists in the
/CodeGen/AMDGPU/remat-vop.mir,
test_no_remat_v_cvt_f32_i32_sdwa_dst_unused_preserve.
The change has affected ARM/Thumb, Mips, RISCV, and x86. For the targets
where I more or less understand the asm it seems to reduce spilling
(as expected) or be neutral. However, it needs a review by all targets'
specialists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106408
One of the cases identified in PR45116 - we don't need to limit load combines to ABI alignment, we can use allowsMemoryAccess - which tests using getABITypeAlign, but also checks if a target permits (fast) misaligned memory loads by checking allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses as a fallback.
One of the cases identified in PR45116 - we don't need to limit load combines (in this case for fp->int load/store copies) to ABI alignment, we can use allowsMemoryAccess - which tests using getABITypeAlign, but also checks if a target permits (fast) misaligned memory loads by checking allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses as a fallback.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108318
One of the cases identified in PR45116 - we don't need to limit load combines (in this case for ISD::BUILD_PAIR) to ABI alignment, we can use allowsMemoryAccess - which tests using getABITypeAlign, but also checks if a target permits (fast) misaligned memory loads by checking allowsMisalignedMemoryAccesses as a fallback.
This helps in particular for 32-bit X86 cases loading 64-bit size data, reducing codegen diffs vs x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108307
D106408 enables rematerialization of instructions with virtual
register uses. That has uncovered the bug in the allUsesAvailableAt
implementation: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51516.
In the majority of cases canRematerializeAt() called to check if
an instruction can be rematerialized before the given UseIdx.
However, SplitEditor::enterIntvAtEnd() calls it to rematerialize
an instruction at the end of a block passing LIS.getMBBEndIdx()
into the check. In the testcase from the bug it has attempted to
rematerialize ADDXri after STRXui in bb.17. The use operand %55
of the ADD is killed by the STRX but that is undetected by the check
because it adjusts passed UseIdx to the reg slot, before the kill.
The value is dead at the index passed to the check however.
This change uses a later of passed UseIdx and its reg slot. This
shall be correct because if are checking an availability of operands
before an instruction that instruction cannot be the one defining
these operands. If we are checking for late rematerialization we
are really interested if operands live past the instruction.
The bug is not exploitable without D106408 but needed to reland
reverted D106408.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108475
Basically the same as G_LROUND. Handles the llvm.llround family of intrinsics.
Also add a helper function to the MachineVerifier for checking if all of the
(virtual register) operands of an instruction are scalars. Seems like a useful
thing to have.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108429
Issue Details:
The addresses for SEH tables for Windows are incorrect as 1 was unconditionally being added to all addresses. +1 is required for the SEH end address (as it is exclusive), but the SEH start addresses is inclusive and so should be used as-is.
In the IP2State tables, the addresses are +1 for AMD64 to handle the return address for a call being after the actual call instruction but are as-is for ARM and ARM64 as the `StateFromIp` function in the VC runtime automatically takes this into account and adjusts the address that is it looking up.
Fix Details:
* Split the `getLabel` function into two: `getLabel` (used for the SEH start address and ARM+ARM64 IP2State addresses) and `getLabelPlusOne` (for the SEH end address, and AMD64 IP2State addresses).
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107784
This patch makes InstrRefBasedLDV "safe" to work with DBG_VALUE_LISTs. It
doesn't actually interpret them, but it recognises that they specify
variable locations and avoids propagating false locations, which is better
than the current state. Observe the attached tes
* We avoid propagating DBG_VALUE_LISTs into successor blocks, as they're
not "currently" supported,
* We don't propagate other variable locations across DBG_VALUE_LISTs,
because we know that the variable location is terminated by the
DBG_VALUE_LIST.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108143
This patch removes an assertion, and adds a regression test showing why the
assertion is broken.
For context, LocIdx is a key/index number for machine locations, so that we
can describe locations as a single integer and ignore whether they're on
the stack, in registers or otherwise. Back when InstrRefBasedLDV was added,
I happened to bake in a "special" zero number for various reasons, which
Vedant identified as undesirable in this review comment:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D83047#inline-765495 . I subsequently removed that
special zero number, but it looks like I didn't delete this assertion at
the time, which assumes that a zero LocIdx is invalid.
The attached test shows that this assertion is reachable on valid code --
on x86 $rsp always gets the LocIdx number zero, and if you transfer a
variable value into it, InstrRefBasedLDV crashes on that assertion. The
code might be a bit wild to be storing variables to $rsp like that, however
we shouldn't crash on it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108134
Produce remarks when atomic instructions are expanded into hardware instructions
in SIISelLowering.cpp. Currently, these remarks are only emitted for atomic fadd
instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108150
Translate the `@llvm.lround.*` family to G_LROUND via
`IRTranslator::translateSimpleIntrinsic`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108418
For some reductions like G_VECREDUCE_OR on AArch64, we need to scalarize
completely if the source is <= 64b. This change adds support for that in
the legalizer. If the source has a pow-2 num elements, then we can do
a tree reduction using the scalar operation in the individual elements.
Otherwise, we just create a sequential chain of operations.
For AArch64, we only need to scalarize if the input is <64b. If it's great than
64b then we can first do a fewElements step to 64b, taking advantage of vector
instructions until we reach the point of scalarization.
I also had to relax the verifier checks for reductions because the intrinsics
support <1 x EltTy> types, which we lower to scalars for GlobalISel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108276
This changes the lowering of saddsat and ssubsat so that instead of
using:
r,o = saddo x, y
c = setcc r < 0
s = c ? INTMAX : INTMIN
ret o ? s : r
into using asr and xor to materialize the INTMAX/INTMIN constants:
r,o = saddo x, y
s = ashr r, BW-1
x = xor s, INTMIN
ret o ? x : r
https://alive2.llvm.org/ce/z/TYufgD
This seems to reduce the instruction count in most testcases across most
architectures. X86 has some custom lowering added to compensate for
cases where it can increase instruction count.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105853
Previously we pre-calculated this and cached it for every
instruction in the function. Most of the calculated results will
never be used. So instead calculate it only on the first use, and
then cache it.
The cache was originally added to fix a compile time issue which
caused r216066 to be reverted.
This change exposed that we weren't pre-computing the Value for
Arguments. I've explicitly disabled that for now as it seemed to
regress some tests on AArch64 which has sext built into its compare
instructions.
Spotted while investigating how to improve heuristics to work better
with RISCV preferring sign extend for unsigned compares for i32 on RV64.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107976
This patch adds the beginnings of more thorough support in the
legalizers for vector-predicated (VP) operations.
The first step is the ability to widen illegal vectors. The more
complicated scenario in which the result/operands need widening but the
mask doesn't has not been handled here. That would require a lot of code
without an in-tree target on which to test it.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107904
This patch implements Flow Sensitive Sample FDO (FSAFDO) profile
loader. We have two profile loaders for FS profile,
one before RegAlloc and one before BlockPlacement.
To enable it, when -fprofile-sample-use=<profile> is specified,
add "-enable-fs-discriminator=true \
-disable-ra-fsprofile-loader=false \
-disable-layout-fsprofile-loader=false"
to turn on the FS profile loaders.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107878
Translate the `@llvm.isnan` intrinsic to G_ISNAN when we see it.
This is pretty much the same as the associated SelectionDAGBuilder code. Main
difference is that we don't expand it here. It makes more sense to do that
during legalization in GlobalISel. GlobalISel will just legalize the generated
illegal types.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108226
Add a generic opcode equivalent to the `llvm.isnan` intrinsic +
MachineVerifier support for it.
We need an opcode here because we may want target-specific lowering later on.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108222
It was introduced in 1a6dc92 and only enabled on PowerPC/AMDGPU. That
should be enabled for all targets.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108010
This patch adds vector-predicated ("VP") reduction intrinsics corresponding to
each of the existing unpredicated `llvm.vector.reduce.*` versions. Unlike the
unpredicated reductions, all VP reductions have a start value. This start value
is returned when the no vector element is active.
Support for expansion on targets without native vector-predication support is
included.
This patch is based on the ["reduction
slice"](https://reviews.llvm.org/D57504#1732277) of the LLVM-VP reference patch
(https://reviews.llvm.org/D57504).
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104308
Combine two G_PTR_ADDs, but keep the register bank of the constant.
That way, the combine can be used in post-regbank-select combines.
Introduce two helper methods in CombinerHelper, getRegBank and
setRegBank that get and set an optional register bank to a register.
That way, they can be used before and after register bank selection.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103326
In current implementation, the instruction to be sunk will be inserted before the target instruction without considering the def-use tree,
which may case Instruction does not dominate all uses error. We need to choose a suitable location to insert according to the use chain
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107262
This reapplies 54a61c94f9, its follow up in 547b712500, which were
reverted 95fe61e639. Original commit message:
VarLoc based LiveDebugValues will abandon variable location propagation if
there are too many blocks and variable assignments in the function. If it
didn't, and we had (say) 1000 blocks and 1000 variables in scope, we'd end
up with 1 million DBG_VALUEs just at the start of blocks.
Instruction-referencing LiveDebugValues should honour this limitation too
(because the same limitation applies to it). Hoist the relevant command
line options into LiveDebugValues.cpp and pass it down into the
implementation classes as an argument to ExtendRanges. I've duplicated all
the run-lines in live-debug-values-cutoffs.mir to have an
instruction-referencing flavour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107823
Basic block pointer is dereferenced unconditionally for MBBs with
hasAddressTaken property.
MBBs might have hasAddressTaken property without reference to BB.
Backend developers must assign fake BB to MBB to workaround this issue
and it should be fixed.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108092
Currently isReallyTriviallyReMaterializableGeneric() implementation
prevents rematerialization on any virtual register use on the grounds
that is not a trivial rematerialization and that we do not want to
extend liveranges.
It appears that LRE logic does not attempt to extend a liverange of
a source register for rematerialization so that is not an issue.
That is checked in the LiveRangeEdit::allUsesAvailableAt().
The only non-trivial aspect of it is accounting for tied-defs which
normally represent a read-modify-write operation and not rematerializable.
The test for a tied-def situation already exists in the
/CodeGen/AMDGPU/remat-vop.mir,
test_no_remat_v_cvt_f32_i32_sdwa_dst_unused_preserve.
The change has affected ARM/Thumb, Mips, RISCV, and x86. For the targets
where I more or less understand the asm it seems to reduce spilling
(as expected) or be neutral. However, it needs a review by all targets'
specialists.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106408
Check if a remateralizable nstruction does not have any virtual
register uses. Even though rematerializable RA might not actually
rematerialize it in this scenario. In that case we do not want to
hoist such instruction out of the loop in a believe RA will sink
it back if needed.
This already has impact on AMDGPU target which does not check for
this condition in its isTriviallyReMaterializable implementation
and have instructions with virtual register uses enabled. The
other targets are not impacted at this point although will be when
D106408 lands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107677
SwitchInst should have a void result type.
Add a check to the verifier to catch this error.
Reviewed By: samparker
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108084
Follow-up to D107068, attempt to fold nested concat_vectors/undefs, as long as both the vector and inner subvector types are legal.
This exposed the same issue in ARM's MVE LowerCONCAT_VECTORS_i1 (raised as PR51365) and AArch64's performConcatVectorsCombine which both assumed concat_vectors only took 2 subvector operands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107597
VarLoc based LiveDebugValues will abandon variable location propagation if
there are too many blocks and variable assignments in the function. If it
didn't, and we had (say) 1000 blocks and 1000 variables in scope, we'd end
up with 1 million DBG_VALUEs just at the start of blocks.
Instruction-referencing LiveDebugValues should honour this limitation too
(because the same limitation applies to it). Hoist the relevant command
line options into LiveDebugValues.cpp and pass it down into the
implementation classes as an argument to ExtendRanges. I've duplicated all
the run-lines in live-debug-values-cutoffs.mir to have an
instruction-referencing flavour.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107823
visitEXTRACT_SUBVECTOR can sometimes create illegal BITCASTs when
removing "redundant" INSERT_SUBVECTOR operations. This patch adds
an extra check to ensure such combines only occur after operation
legalisation if any resulting BITBAST is itself legal.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108086
This is a fairly common pattern:
```
%mask = G_CONSTANT iN <mask val>
%add = G_ADD %lhs, %rhs
%and = G_AND %add, %mask
```
We have combines to eliminate G_AND with a mask that does nothing.
If we combined the above to this:
```
%mask = G_CONSTANT iN <mask val>
%narrow_lhs = G_TRUNC %lhs
%narrow_rhs = G_TRUNC %rhs
%narrow_add = G_ADD %narrow_lhs, %narrow_rhs
%ext = G_ZEXT %narrow_add
%and = G_AND %ext, %mask
```
We'd be able to take advantage of those combines using the trunc + zext.
For this to work (or be beneficial in the best case)
- The operation we want to narrow then widen must only be used by the G_AND
- The G_TRUNC + G_ZEXT must be free
- Performing the operation at a narrower width must not produce a different
value than performing it at the original width *after masking.*
Example comparison between SDAG + GISel: https://godbolt.org/z/63jzb1Yvj
At -Os for AArch64, this is a 0.2% code size improvement on CTMark/pairlocalign.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107929
AttributeList::hasAttribute() is confusing, use clearer methods like
hasParamAttr()/hasRetAttr().
Add hasRetAttr() since it was missing from AttributeList.
We may use several COPY instructions to copy the needed sub-registers
during split. But the way we split the lanes during the COPYs may be
different from the subranges of the old register. This would fail when we
extend the subranges of the new register because the LaneMasks do not
match exactly between subranges of new register and old register.
Since we are bundling the COPYs, I think there is no need to further refine the
subranges of the new register based on the set of LaneMasks of the inserted COPYs.
I am not sure if there will be further breaking cases. But as the subranges of
new register are created based on the LaneMasks of the subranges of old register,
it will be highly possible we will always find an exact LaneMask match.
We can think about how to make the extendPHIKillRanges() work for
subrange mask mismatch case if we meet more such cases in the future.
The test case was from D105065 by @arsenm.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107829
This patch adds Pass1 of MIRADDFSDiscriminatorsPass before register
allocation, and Pass2 of MIRAddFSDiscriminatorsPass before
Block-Placement. This is still under --enable-fs-discrmininator
option (default false).
This would reduce the turn-around time for FSAFDO transition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104579
The introduction of `SHF_GNU_RETAIN` has caused massive problems on Solaris.
Initially, as reported in Bug 49437, it caused dozens of testsuite failures
on both sparc and x86. The objects were marked as `ELFOSABI_NONE`, but
`SHF_GNU_RETAIN` is a GNU extension. In the native Solaris ABI, that flag
(in the range for OS-specific values) is `SHF_SUNW_ABSENT` with a
completely different semantics, which confuses Solaris `ld` very much.
Later, the objects became (correctly) marked `ELFOSABI_GNU`, which Solaris
`ld` doesn't support, causing it to SEGV and break the build. The linker
is currently being hardened to not accept non-native OS ABIs to avoid this.
The need for linker support is already documented in
`clang/include/clang/Basic/AttrDocs.td`, but not currently checked.
This patch avoids all this by not emitting `SHF_GNU_RETAIN` on Solaris at all.
Tested on `amd64-pc-solaris2.11`, `sparcv9-sun-solaris2.11`, and
`x86_64-pc-linux-gnu`.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107747
We were calling find and then using operator[]. Instead keep the
iterator from find and use it to get the value.
Just happened to notice while investigating how we decide what extends
to use between basic blocks.
Some files still contained the old University of Illinois Open Source
Licence header. This patch replaces that with the Apache 2 with LLVM
Exception licence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107528
This patch refactors / simplifies salvageDebugInfoImpl(). The goal
here is to simplify the implementation of coro::salvageDebugInfo() in
a followup patch.
1. Change the return value to I.getOperand(0). Currently users of
salvageDebugInfoImpl() assume that the first operand is
I.getOperand(0). This patch makes this information explicit. A
nice side-effect of this change is that it allows us to salvage
expressions such as add i8 1, %a in the future.
2. Factor out the creation of a DIExpression and return an array of
DIExpression operations instead. This change allows users that
call salvageDebugInfoImpl() in a loop to avoid the costly
creation of temporary DIExpressions and to defer the creation of
a DIExpression until the end.
This patch does not change any functionality.
rdar://80227769
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107383
We may call lowerRelativeReference in MC to determine whether target
supports this lowering. We should return nullptr instead of crashing
when we haven't implemented the real lowering.
Reviewed By: hubert.reinterpretcast
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107830
If a G_SHL is fed by a G_CONSTANT, the lower and upper bits of the source can be
shifted individually by the constant shift amount.
However in case the shift amount came from a G_TRUNC(G_CONSTANT), the generic shift legalization
code was used, producing intermediate shifts that are potentially illegal on some targets.
This change teaches narrowScalarShift to look through G_TRUNCs and G_*EXTs.
Reviewed By: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89100
This patch is a revert of e08f205f5c. In that patch, DW_TAG_subprograms
were permitted to be referenced across CU boundaries, to improve stack
trace construction using call site information. Unfortunately, as
documented in PR48790, the way that subprograms are "owned" by dwarf units
is sufficiently complicated that subprograms end up in unexpected units,
invalidating cross-unit references.
There's no obvious way to easily fix this, and several attempts have
failed. Revert this to ensure correct DWARF is always emitted.
Three tests change in addition to the reversion, but they're all very
light alterations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107076
We should use MachineInstr::eraseFromParentAndMarkDBGValuesForRemoval()
instead of eraseFromParent().
We should probably use that in other places too but fix this issue which
affects clang bootstrap builds for now.
This commit adds the isnan intrinsic and provides a default expansion
for it in the SDAG. However, it makes the assumption that types
it operates on are IEEE-compliant types. This is not always the case.
An example of that is PPC "double double" which has a representation
that
- Does not need to conform to IEEE requirements for isnan as it is
not an IEEE-compliant type
- Does not have a representation that allows for straightforward
reinterpreting as an integer and use of integer operations
The result was that this commit broke __builtin_isnan for ppc_fp128
making many valid numeric values report a NaN.
This patch simply changes the expansion to always expand to unordered
comparison (regardless of whether FP exceptions are tracked). This
is inline with previous semantics.
This isn't optimal, but prevents crashing when the libcall isn't
available. It just calculates the full product and makes sure the high bits
match the sign of the low half. Each of the pieces should go through their own
type legalization.
This can make D107420 unnecessary.
Needs tests, but I wanted to start discussion about D107420.
Reviewed By: FreddyYe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107581
This is recommit of the patch 16ff91ebcc,
reverted in 0c28a7c990 because it had
an error in call of getFastMathFlags (base type should be FPMathOperator
but not Instruction). The original commit message is duplicated below:
Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.
* The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.
* Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.
* Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.
Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:
* The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
some optimizations.
* IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.
Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
returns 'false':
std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())
The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
such function returns expected result instead of actually making
checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
'-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
'tests'.
To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
resulting code satisfies requested semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
Fixes issue where late materialized constants can be more strictly
aligned then their containing csect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103103
We don't have real demanded bits support for MULHU, but we can
still use the known bits based constant folding support at the end
of SimplifyDemandedBits to simplify a MULHU. This helps with cases
where we know the LHS and RHS have enough leading zeros so that
the high multiply result is always 0.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106471
IR typically creates INSERT_SUBVECTOR patterns as a widening of the subvector with undefs to pad to the destination size, followed by a shuffle for the actual insertion - SelectionDAGBuilder has to do something similar for shuffles when source/destination vectors are different sizes.
This combine attempts to recognize these patterns by looking for a shuffle of a subvector (from a CONCAT_VECTORS) that starts at a modulo of its size into an otherwise identity shuffle of the base vector.
This uncovered a couple of target-specific issues as we haven't often created INSERT_SUBVECTOR nodes in generic code - aarch64 could only handle insertions into the bottom of undefs (i.e. a vector widening), and x86-avx512 vXi1 insertion wasn't keeping track of undef elements in the base vector.
Fixes PR50053
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107068
It's entirely possible (because it actually happened) for a bool
variable to end up with a 256-bit DW_AT_const_value. This came about
when a local bool variable was initialized from a bitfield in a
32-byte struct of bitfields, and after inlining and constant
propagation, the variable did have a constant value. The sequence of
optimizations had it carrying "i256" values around, but once the
constant made it into the llvm.dbg.value, no further IR changes could
affect it.
Technically the llvm.dbg.value did have a DIExpression to reduce it
back down to 8 bits, but the compiler is in no way ready to emit an
oversized constant *and* a DWARF expression to manipulate it.
Depending on the circumstances, we had either just the very fat bool
value, or an expression with no starting value.
The sequence of optimizations that led to this state did seem pretty
reasonable, so the solution I came up with was to invent a DWARF
constant expression folder. Currently it only does convert ops, but
there's no reason it couldn't do other ops if that became useful.
This broke three tests that depended on having convert ops survive
into the DWARF, so I added an operator that would abort the folder to
each of those tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106915
Instructions that produceSameValue produce same values for operands with
same index. matchEqualDefs used to return true for any two values from
different instructions that produce same values. Fix this by checking if
values are defined by operands with the same index.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107362
The LegalizeAction for this node should follow the logic for
`VECREDUCE_SEQ_FADD` and be determined using the vector operand's type.
here isn't an in-tree target that makes use of this, but I think it's safe to
say this is how it should behave, should a target want to customize the action
for this node.
Reviewed By: dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107478
to `lib/CodeGen/CommandFlags.cpp`. It can replace
-x86-experimental-pref-loop-alignment=.
The loop alignment is only used by MachineBlockPlacement.
The implementation uses a new `llvm::TargetOptions` for now, as
an IR function attribute/module flags metadata may be overkill.
This is the llvm part of D106701.
This allows special constants like to 0 to be recognized. It's also
expected by isel patterns if a target had a mulh with immediate instructions.
The commuting done by tablegen won't commute patterns with immediates since it
expects DAGCombine to have done it.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107486
This attempts to make more of RDA aware of potentially overlapping
subregisters. Some of this was already in place, with it iterating
through MCRegUnitIterators. This also replaces calls to
LiveRegs.contains(..) with !LiveRegs.available(..), and updates the
isValidRegUseOf and isValidRegDefOf to search subregs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107351
Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.
* The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.
* Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.
* Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.
Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:
* The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
some optimizations.
* IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.
Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
returns 'false':
std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())
The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
such function returns expected result instead of actually making
checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
'-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
'tests'.
To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
resulting code satisfies requested semantics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
- Rename `wasm.catch` intrinsic to `wasm.catch.exn`, because we are
planning to add a separate `wasm.catch.longjmp` intrinsic which
returns two values.
- Rename several variables
- Remove an unnecessary parameter from `canLongjmp` and `isEmAsmCall`
from LowerEmscriptenEHSjLj pass
- Add `-verify-machineinstrs` in a test for a safety measure
- Add more comments + fix some errors in comments
- Replace `std::vector` with `SmallVector` for cases likely with small
number of elements
- Renamed `EnableEH`/`EnableSjLj` to `EnableEmEH`/`EnableEmSjLj`: We are
soon going to add `EnableWasmSjLj`, so this makes the distincion
clearer
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107405
Previously we would emit constant pool entries for ldr inline asm at the
very end of AsmPrinter::doFinalization(). However, if we're emitting
dwarf aranges, that would end all sections with aranges. Then if we have
constant pool entries to be emitted in those same sections, we'd hit an
assert that the section has already been ended.
We want to emit constant pool entries before emitting dwarf aranges.
This patch splits out arm32/64's constant pool entry emission into its
own MCTargetStreamer virtual method.
Fixes PR51208
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107314
We had some similar hasOneUse/isNON_EXTLoad early-outs spread out over different parts of the method - we should pull them all together.
Noticed while triaging PR45116
This adds handling for two cases:
1. A scalable vector where the element type is promoted.
2. A scalable vector where the element count is odd (or more generally,
not divisble by the element count of the part type).
(Some element types still don't work; for example, <vscale x 2 x i128>,
or <vscale x 2 x fp128>.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105591
We might want to use info from GC strategy in middle end analysis.
The motivation for this is provided in D99135: we may want to ask
a GC if it's going to work with a given pointer (currently this code
makes naive check by the method name).
Differetial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100559
Reviewed By: reames
If all demanded elements of the BUILD_VECTOR pass a isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison check, then we can treat this specific demanded use of the BUILD_VECTOR as guaranteed not to be undef or poison either.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107174
This patch legalizes the Machine Value Type introduced in D94096 for loads
and stores. A new target hook named getAsmOperandValueType() is added which
maps i512 to MVT::i64x8. GlobalISel falls back to DAG for legalization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94097
Adds MVT::i64x8, a Machine Value Type needed for lowering inline assembly
operands which materialize a sequence of eight general purpose registers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D94096
This could be smarter by picking an ideal type, or at least splitting
the vector in half first. Also handles lower for non-power-of-2,
non-extending vector loads.
Currently this just avoids failing to legalize some odd vector AMDGPU
tests, but is a step towards removing the split logic from the
NarrowScalar logic.
The code for splitting an unaligned access into 2 pieces is
essentially the same as for splitting a non-power-of-2 load for
scalars. It would be better to pick an optimal memory access size and
directly use it, but splitting in half is what the DAG does.
As-is this fixes handling of some unaligned sextload/zextloads for
AMDGPU. In the future this will help drop the ugly abuse of
narrowScalar to handle splitting unaligned accesses.
This patch prevents GlobalISel from optimizing out redundant branch
instructions when compiling without optimizations.
The motivating example is code like the following common pattern in
Swift, where users expect to be able to set a breakpoint on the early
exit:
public func f(b: Bool) {
guard b else {
return // I would like to set a breakpoint here.
}
...
}
The patch modifies two places in GlobalISEL: The first one is in
IRTranslator.cpp where the removal of redundant branches is made
conditional on the optimization level. The second one is in
AArch64InstructionSelector.cpp where an -O0 *only* optimization is
being removed.
Disabling these optimizations increases code size at -O0 by
~8%. However, doing so improves debuggability, and debug builds are
the primary reason why developers compile without optimizations. We
thus concluded that this is the right trade-off.
rdar://79515454
This tenatively reapplies the patch without modifications, the LLDB
test that has blocked this from landing previously has since been
modified to hopefully no longer be sensitive to this change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105238
If a target lists both a subreg and a superreg in a callee-saved
register mask, the prolog will spill both aliasing registers. Instead,
don't spill the subreg if a superreg is being spilled. This case is hit by the
PowerPC SPE code, as well as a modified RISC-V backend for CHERI I maintain out
of tree.
Reviewed By: jhibbits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D73170
This transform was added with D58874, but there were no tests for overflow ops.
We need to change this one way or another because it can crash as shown in:
https://llvm.org/PR51238
Note that if there are no uses of an overflow op's bool overflow result, we
reduce it to a regular math op, so we continue to fold that case either way.
If we have uses of both the math and the overflow bool, then we are likely
not saving anything by creating an independent sub instruction as seen in
the test diffs here.
This patch makes the behavior in SDAG consistent with what we do in
instcombine AFAICT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106983
Function findBestLoopTopHelper tries to find a new loop top block which can also
fall through to OldTop, but it's impossible if OldTop is not a chain header, so
it should exit immediately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106329
When we have a terminator sequence (i.e. a tailcall or return),
MIIsInTerminatorSequence is used to work out where the preceding ABI-setup
instructions end, i.e. the parts that were glued to the terminator
instruction. This allows LLVM to split blocks safely without having to
worry about ABI stuff.
The function only ignores DBG_VALUE instructions, meaning that the two
debug instructions I recently added can end terminator sequences early,
causing various MachineVerifier errors. This patch promotes the test for
debug instructions from "isDebugValue" to "isDebugInstr", thus avoiding any
debug-info interfering with this function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106660
This patch adds a peephole optimization `SETCC(FREEZE(x),const)` => `FREEZE(SETCC(x,const))`
if the SETCC is only used by BRCOND.
Combined with `BRCOND(FREEZE(X)) => BRCOND(X)`, this leads to a nice improvement in the generated assembly when x is a masked loaded value.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105344
- This patch consists of the bare basic code needed in order to generate some assembly for the z/OS target.
- Only the .text and the .bss sections are added for now.
- The relevant MCSectionGOFF/Symbol interfaces have been added. This enables us to print out the GOFF machine code sections.
- This patch enables us to add simple lit tests wherever possible, and contribute to the testing coverage for the z/OS target
- Further improvements and additions will be made in future patches.
Reviewed By: tmatheson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106380
Avoid several crashes when DBG_INSTR_REF and DBG_PHI instructions are fed
to the instruction scheduler. DBG_INSTR_REFs should be treated like
DBG_LABELs, and just ignored for the purpose of scheduling [0].
DBG_PHIs however behave much more like DBG_VALUEs: they refer to register
operands, and if some register defs get shuffled around during instruction
scheduling, there's a risk that the debug instr will refer to the wrong
value. There's already a facility for updating DBG_VALUEs to reflect this;
add DBG_PHI to the list of instructions that it will update.
[0] Suboptimal, but it's what instr scheduling does right now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106663
When working out which instruction defines a value, the
instruction-referencing variable location code has a few special cases for
physical registers:
* Arguments are never defined by instructions,
* Constant physical registers always read the same value, are never def'd
This patch adds a third case for the llvm.frameaddress intrinsics: you can
read the framepointer in any block if you so choose, and use it as a
variable location, as shown in the added test.
This rather violates one of the assumptions behind instruction referencing,
that LLVM-ir shouldn't be able to read from an arbitrary register at some
arbitrary point in the program. The solution for now is to just emit a
DBG_PHI that reads the register value: this works, but if we wanted to do
something clever with DBG_PHIs in the future then this would probably get
in the way. As it stands, this patch avoids a crash.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106659
This patch builds on top of D106575 in which scalable-vector splats were
supported in `ISD::matchBinaryPredicate`. It teaches the DAGCombiner how
to perform a variety of the pre-existing saturating add/sub combines on
scalable-vector types.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106652
This adds support for the case where
WideSize = DstSize + K * SrcSize
In this case, we can pad the G_MERGE_VALUES instruction with K extra undef
values with width SrcSize. Then the destination can be handled via
widenScalarDst.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106814
Use it AArch64 post-legal combiner. These don't always get folded because when
the instructions are created the constants are obscured by artifacts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106776
Dominator trees were previously used for an optimization related to
`wasm.lsda` but the optimization was removed in D97309. Currently
dominators are not doing anything in this pass. Also removes some
`include` lines without which it compiles.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106811
This fixes an assert firing when compiling code which involves 128 bit
integrals.
This would trigger runtime checks similar to this:
```
Assertion failed: getMinSignedBits() <= 64 && "Too many bits for int64_t", file llvm/include/llvm/ADT/APInt.h, line 1646
```
To get around this, we just saturate those big values.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105320
During tail duplication, SSA values may be updated and have their uses
replaced with a virtual register, and any debug instructions that use
that value are deleted. This patch fixes the implementation of the debug
instruction deletion to work correctly for debug instructions that use
the SSA value multiple times, by batching deletions so that we don't
attempt to delete the same instruction twice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106557
Late in SelectionDAG we join up instruction numbers with their defining
instructions, if it couldn't be done during the main part of SelectionDAG.
One exception is function arguments, where we have to point a DBG_PHI
instruction at the incoming live register, as they don't have a defining
instruction. This patch adds another exception, for constant physregs, like
aarch64 has.
It may seem wasteful to use two instructions where we could use a single
DBG_VALUE, however the whole point of instruction referencing is to
decouple the identification of values from the specification of where
variable location ranges start.
(Part of my aarch64 work to ease adoption of instruction referencing, as
in the meta comment on D104520)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104520
This patch extends support for (scalable-vector) splats in the
DAGCombiner via the `ISD::matchBinaryPredicate` function, which enable a
variety of simple combines of constants.
Users of this function may now have to distinguish between
`BUILD_VECTOR` and `SPLAT_VECTOR` vector operands. The way of dealing
with this in-tree follows the approach added for
`ISD::matchUnaryPredicate` implemented in D94501.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106575
to encode the constants for DW_AT_data_member_location.
Summary: In DWARF v3, DW_FORM_data4/8 in
DW_AT_data_member_location are interpreted as location
list pointers. Interpreting constants as pointers is
not expected, so we use DW_FORM_udata to encode the
constants.
Reviewed By: probinson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105687
If value tracking can confirm that the cttz/ctlz source is known non-zero then we don't need to create a branch (which DAG will struggle to recover from).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106685
I've setup the basic framework for the isGuaranteedNotToBeUndefOrPoison call and updated DAGCombiner::visitFREEZE to use it, further Opcodes can be handled when we have test coverage.
I'm not aware of any vector test freeze coverage so the DemandedElts (and the Depth) args are not being used yet - but they are in place.
SelectionDAG::isGuaranteedNotToBePoison wrappers have also been added.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106668
This adds custom lowering for truncating stores when operating on
fixed length vectors in SVE. It also includes a DAG combine to
fold extends followed by truncating stores into non-truncating
stores in order to prevent this pattern appearing once truncating
stores are supported.
Currently truncating stores are not used in certain cases where
the size of the vector is larger than the target vector width.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104471
Reland of 31859f896.
This change implements new DAG notes GLOBAL_GET/GLOBAL_SET, and
lowering methods for load and stores of reference types from IR
globals. Once the lowering creates the new nodes, tablegen pattern
matches those and converts them to Wasm global.get/set.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104797
This is part of a patch series working towards the ability to make
SourceLocation into a 64-bit type to handle larger translation units.
!srcloc is generated in clang codegen, and pulled back out by llvm
functions like AsmPrinter::emitInlineAsm that need to report errors in
the inline asm. From there it goes to LLVMContext::emitError, is
stored in DiagnosticInfoInlineAsm, and ends up back in clang, at
BackendConsumer::InlineAsmDiagHandler(), which reconstitutes a true
clang::SourceLocation from the integer cookie.
Throughout this code path, it's now 64-bit rather than 32, which means
that if SourceLocation is expanded to a 64-bit type, this error report
won't lose half of the data.
The compiler will tolerate both of i32 and i64 !srcloc metadata in
input IR without faulting. Test added in llvm/MC. (The semantic
accuracy of the metadata is another matter, but I don't know of any
situation where that matters: if you're reading an IR file written by
a previous run of clang, you don't have the SourceManager that can
relate those source locations back to the original source files.)
Original version of the patch by Mikhail Maltsev.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105491
Prior to this patch, it skipped the instruction defining VNI when checking if the tainted lanes are used.
In the given example, VRGATHER is an illegal instruction because its DstReg overlaps with SrcReg.
Therefore we need to check the defining instruction as well when there is an earlyclobber constraint.
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105684
The coalescer does not check if register uses are available
at the point of rematerialization. If it attempts to rematerialize
an instruction with such uses it can end up with use without a def.
LiveRangeEdit does such check during rematerialization, so just
call LiveRangeEdit::allUsesAvailableAt() to avoid the problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106396
The existing rule about the operand type is strange. Instead, just say
the operand is a TargetConstant with the right width. (Legalization
ignores TargetConstants, so it doesn't matter if that width is legal.)
Highlights:
1. I had to substantially rewrite the AArch64 isel patterns to expect a
TargetConstant. Nothing too exotic, but maybe a little hairy. Maybe
worth considering a target-specific node with some dagcombines instead
of this complicated nest of isel patterns.
2. Our behavior on RV32 for vectors of i64 has changed slightly. In
particular, we correctly preserve the width of the arithmetic through
legalization. This changes the DAG a bit. Maybe room for
improvement here.
3. I explicitly defined the behavior around overflow. This is necessary
to make the DAGCombine transforms legal, and I don't think it causes any
practical issues.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105673
This patch allows iterating typed enum via the ADT/Sequence utility.
It also changes the original design to better separate concerns:
- `StrongInt` only deals with safe `intmax_t` operations,
- `SafeIntIterator` presents the iterator and reverse iterator
interface but only deals with safe `StrongInt` internally.
- `iota_range` only deals with `SafeIntIterator` internally.
This design ensures that operations are always valid. In particular,
"Out of bounds" assertions fire when:
- the `value_type` is not representable as an `intmax_t`
- iterator operations make internal computation underflow/overflow
- the internal representation cannot be converted back to `value_type`
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106279
We have SelectionDAG patterns for 8 & 16-bit atomic operations, but they
assume the value types will have been legalized to 32-bits. So this adds
the ability to widen them to both AArch64 & generic GISel
infrastructure.
In the textual format, `noduplicates` means no COMDAT/section group
deduplication is performed. Therefore, if both sets of sections are retained, and
they happen to define strong external symbols with the same names,
there will be a duplicate definition linker error.
In PE/COFF, the selection kind lowers to `IMAGE_COMDAT_SELECT_NODUPLICATES`.
The name describes the corollary instead of the immediate semantics. The name
can cause confusion to other binary formats (ELF, wasm) which have implemented/
want to implement the "no deduplication" selection kind. Rename it to be clearer.
Reviewed By: rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106319
ACC registers are a combination of four consecutive vector registers.
If the vector registers are assigned first this often forces a number
of copies to appear just before the ACC register is created. If the ACC
register is assigned first then fewer copies are generated when the vector
registers are assigned.
This patch tries to force the register allocator to assign the ACC registers first
and then the UACC registers and then the vector pair registers. It does this
by changing the priority of the register classes.
This patch also adds hints to help the register allocator assign UACC registers from
known ACC registers and vector pair registers from known UACC registers.
Reviewed By: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105854
This patch fixes a clearly-broken function that I absent-mindedly bodged
many months ago.
Over in D85749 I landed the substituteDebugValuesForInst, that creates
substitution records for all the def operands from one debug-labelled
instruction to the new one. Unfortunately it would crash if the two
instructions had different numbers of operands; I tried to fix this in
537f0fbe82 by adding a "max operand" parameter to the method, but then
didn't actually change the loop bound to take account of this. It passed
all the tests because.... well there wasn't any real test coverage of this
method.
This patch fixes up the loop to be bounded by the MaxOperand bound; and
adds test coverage for the x86-fixup-LEAs calls to this method, so that
it's actually tested.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105820
Although this combine checks that there's no load folding barriers between
the loads that it's trying to merge, it was inserting the load at the
MIRBuilder's default insertion point, which is the G_OR use inst.
This was causing a miscompile in the test suite's
SingleSource/Regression/C/gcc-c-torture/execute/GCC-C-execute-bswap-2
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106251
RISCV would prefer a sign extended constant since that works better
with our constant materialization. We have an existing TLI hook we
use to control sign extension of setcc operands in type legalization.
That hook happens to do the right check we need here, but might be
straying from its original purpose. With only RISCV defining this
hook in tree, I wasn't sure if it was worth adding another hook
with identical behavior.
This is an alternative to D105785 where I tried to handle this in
the RISCV backend by not creating ANY_EXTENDs in some places.
Reviewed By: frasercrmck
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105918
This reverts commit 2a419a0b99.
The result of a shufflevector must not propagate poison from any element
other than the one noted in the shuffle mask.
The regressions outside of fptoui-may-overflow.ll can probably be
recovered some other way; for example, using isGuaranteedNotToBePoison.
See discussion on https://reviews.llvm.org/D106053 for more background.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106222
I'm going to extend the functionality started in D106058 so move the folds into their own method to reduce the amount of code in DAGCombiner::visitSELECT
llvm::KnownBits::byteSwap() and reverse() don't modify in-place, so
we weren't actually computing anything. This was causing a miscompile on an
arm64 stage2 bootstrap clang build.
s56 stores are broken down into s32 + s24 stores. During this step
both of those new stores use an anyextended s64 value, resulting in
truncating stores. With s56, the s24 requires another lower step to
make it legal, and we were crashing because we didn't expect non-pow-2
stores to also be truncating as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106183
This patch transforms the sequence
lea (reg1, reg2), reg3
sub reg3, reg4
to two sub instructions
sub reg1, reg4
sub reg2, reg4
Similar optimization can also be applied to LEA/ADD sequence.
The modifications to TwoAddressInstructionPass is to ensure the operands of ADD
instruction has expected order (the dest register of LEA should be src register
of ADD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104684
Add an assertion that we've calling MaskedElementsAreZero with a vector op and that the DemandedElts arg is a matching width.
Makes the error a lot easier to grok when something else accidentally gets used.
If you attach __attribute__((optnone)) to a function when using
optimisations, that function will use fast-isel instead of the usual
SelectionDAG method. This is a problem for instruction referencing,
because it means DBG_VALUEs of virtual registers will be created,
triggering some safety assertions in LiveDebugVariables. Those assertions
exist to detect exactly this scenario, where an unexpected piece of code is
generating virtual register references in instruction referencing mode.
Fix this by transforming the DBG_VALUEs created by fast-isel into
half-formed DBG_INSTR_REFs, after which they get patched up in
finalizeDebugInstrRefs. The test modified adds a fast-isel mode to the
instruction referencing isel test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105694
Since we're still building on top of the MVT based infrastructure, we
need to track the pointer type/address space on the side so we can end
up with the correct pointer LLTs when interpreting CCValAssigns.
This adds some level of type safety, allows helper functions to be added for
specific opcodes for free, and also allows us to succinctly check for class
membership with the usual dyn_cast/isa/cast functions.
To start off with, add variants for the different load/store operations with some
places using it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105751
Similar to the folds performed in InstCombinerImpl::foldSelectOpOp, this attempts to push a select further up to help merge a pair of binops.
I'm primarily interested in select(cond,add(x,y),add(x,z)) folds to help expose pointer math (see https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51069 etc.) but I've tried to use the more generic isBinOp().
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106058
The linker can sometimes drop the do_not_dead_strip if it can't associate the
atom with a symbol (the other place to specify no dead-stripping in MachO
files).
This patch adds the forward scan for finding redundant DBG_VALUEs.
This analysis aims to remove redundant DBG_VALUEs by going forward
in the basic block by considering the first DBG_VALUE as a valid
until its first (location) operand is not clobbered/modified.
For example:
(1) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
(2) <block of code that does affect $edi>
(3) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
...
in this case, we can remove (3).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105280
This patch uses AtomicExpandPass to implement quadword lock free atomic operations. It adopts the method introduced in https://reviews.llvm.org/D47882, which expand atomic operations post RA to avoid spilling that might prevent LL/SC progress.
Reviewed By: jsji
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103614
Any def of EXEC prevents rematerialization of any VOP instruction
because of the physreg use. Create a callback to check if the
physreg use can be ingored to allow rematerialization.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105836
This is mostly a minor convenience, but the pattern seems frequent
enough to be worthwhile (and we'll probably add more uses in the
future).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105850
This new MIR pass removes redundant DBG_VALUEs.
After the register allocator is done, more precisely, after
the Virtual Register Rewriter, we end up having duplicated
DBG_VALUEs, since some virtual registers are being rewritten
into the same physical register as some of existing DBG_VALUEs.
Each DBG_VALUE should indicate (at least before the LiveDebugValues)
variables assignment, but it is being clobbered for function
parameters during the SelectionDAG since it generates new DBG_VALUEs
after COPY instructions, even though the parameter has no assignment.
For example, if we had a DBG_VALUE $regX as an entry debug value
representing the parameter, and a COPY and after the COPY,
DBG_VALUE $virt_reg, and after the virtregrewrite the $virt_reg gets
rewritten into $regX, we'd end up having redundant DBG_VALUE.
This breaks the definition of the DBG_VALUE since some analysis passes
might be built on top of that premise..., and this patch tries to fix
the MIR with the respect to that.
This first patch performs bacward scan, by trying to detect a sequence of
consecutive DBG_VALUEs, and to remove all DBG_VALUEs describing one
variable but the last one:
For example:
(1) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
(2) DBG_VALUE $esi, !"var2", ...
(3) DBG_VALUE $edi, !"var1", ...
...
in this case, we can remove (1).
By combining the forward scan that will be introduced in the next patch
(from this stack), by inspecting the statistics, the RemoveRedundantDebugValues
removes 15032 instructions by using gdb-7.11 as a testbed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105279
Currently we are resolving lane/subregister conflict by visiting
instructions sequentially in current block to see whether there is any
use of the tainted lanes. To save compile time, we are not doing further
check in successor blocks. This sounds reasonable without subgregister liveness.
But since we have added subregister liveness tracking capability to
register coalescer, we can easily determine whether we have subregister
liveness conflict by checking subranges. This would help coalescing more
COPYs for target that enables subregister liveness tracking.
Reviewed by: arsenm, qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104509
Previously we reliedy on pseudo probe descriptors to look up precomputed GUID during probe emission for inlined probes. Since we are moving to always using unique linkage names, GUID for functions can be computed in place from dwarf names. This eliminates the need of importing pseudo probe descs in thinlto, since those descs should be emitted by the original modules.
This significantly reduces thinlto memory footprint in some extreme case where the number of imported modules for a single module is massive.
Test Plan:
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105248
AMDGPU normally spills SGPRs to VGPRs. Previously, since all register
classes are handled at the same time, this was problematic. We don't
know ahead of time how many registers will be needed to be reserved to
handle the spilling. If no VGPRs were left for spilling, we would have
to try to spill to memory. If the spilled SGPRs were required for exec
mask manipulation, it is highly problematic because the lanes active
at the point of spill are not necessarily the same as at the restore
point.
Avoid this problem by fully allocating SGPRs in a separate regalloc
run from VGPRs. This way we know the exact number of VGPRs needed, and
can reserve them for a second run. This fixes the most serious
issues, but it is still possible using inline asm to make all VGPRs
unavailable. Start erroring in the case where we ever would require
memory for an SGPR spill.
This is implemented by giving each regalloc pass a callback which
reports if a register class should be handled or not. A few passes
need some small changes to deal with leftover virtual registers.
In the AMDGPU implementation, a new pass is introduced to take the
place of PrologEpilogInserter for SGPR spills emitted during the first
run.
One disadvantage of this is currently StackSlotColoring is no longer
used for SGPR spills. It would need to be run again, which will
require more work.
Error if the standard -regalloc option is used. Introduce new separate
-sgpr-regalloc and -vgpr-regalloc flags, so the two runs can be
controlled individually. PBQB is not currently supported, so this also
prevents using the unhandled allocator.
This fixes not respecting signext/zeroext in these cases. In the
anyext case, this avoids a larger merge with undef and should be a
better canonical form.
This should also handle this if a merge is needed, but I'm not aware
of a case where that can happen. In a future change this will also
allow AMDGPU to drop some custom code without introducing regressions.
Generalize the existing eq/ne case using `extractParts`. The original code only
handled narrowings for types of width 2n->n. This generalization allows for any
type that can be broken down by `extractParts`.
General overview is:
- Loop over each narrow-sized part and do exactly what the 2-register case did.
- Loop over the leftover-sized parts and do the same thing
- Widen the leftover-sized XOR results to the desired narrow size
- OR that all together and then do the comparison against 0 (just like the old
code)
This shows up a lot when building clang for AArch64 using GlobalISel, so it's
worth fixing. For the sake of simplicity, this doesn't handle the non-eq/ne
case yet.
Also remove the code in this case that notifies the observer; we're just going
to delete MI anyway so talking to the observer shouldn't be necessary.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105161
Let other parts of legalization handle the rest of the node, this allows
re-use of existing optimizations elsewhere.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105624
This adds custom lowering for truncating stores when operating on
fixed length vectors in SVE. It also includes a DAG combine to
fold extends followed by truncating stores into non-truncating
stores in order to prevent this pattern appearing once truncating
stores are supported.
Currently truncating stores are not used in certain cases where
the size of the vector is larger than the target vector width.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104471
The test case here hits machine verifier problems. There are volatile
long loads that the results of do not get used, loading into two dead
registers. IfCvt will predicate them and as it does will add implicit
uses of the predicating registers due to thinking they are live in. As
nothing has used the register, the machine verifier disagrees that they
are really live and we end up with a failure.
The registers come from Pristine regs that LivePhysRegs counts as live.
This patch adds a addLiveInsNoPristines method to be used instead in
IfCvt, so that only really live in regs need to be added as implicit
operands.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D90965
The original motivation for this was to implement moreElementsVector of shuffles
on AArch64, which resulted in complex sequences of artifacts like unmerge(unmerge(concat...))
which the combiner couldn't handle. It seemed here that the better option,
instead of writing ever-more-complex combines, was to have a way to find
the original "non-artifact" source registers for a given definition, walking
through arbitrary expressions of unmerge/concat/insert. As long as the bits
aren't extended or truncated, this is a pretty simple algorithm that avoids
the need for lots of combines and instead jumps straight to the final result
we want.
I've only used this new technique in 2 places within tryCombineUnmerge, using it
in more general situations resulted in infinite loops in AMDGPU. So for now
it's used when we would otherwise fail to combine and that seems to work.
In order to support looking through G_INSERTs, I also had to add it as an
artifact in isArtifact(), which caused a whole lot of issues in tests. AMDGPU
started infinite looping since full legalization of G_INSERT doensn't seem to
be there. To work around this, I've temporarily added a CLI option to use the
old behaviour so that the MIR tests will still run and terminate.
Other minor changes include no longer making >128b G_MERGE/UNMERGE legal.
We never had isel support for that anyway and it was a remnant of the legacy
legalizer rules. However being legal prevented the combiner from checking if it
was dead and deleting them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104355
`LegalizerHelper::insertParts` uses `extractGCDType` on registers split into
a desired type and a smaller leftover type. This is used to populate a list
of registers. Each register in the list will have the same type as returned by
`extractGCDType`.
If we have
- `ResultTy` = s792
- `PartTy` = s64
- `LeftoverTy` = s24
When we call `extractGCDType`, we'll end up with two different types appended
to the list:
Part: gcd(792, 64, 24) => s8
Leftover: gcd(792, 24, 24) => s24
When this happens, we'll hit an assert while trying to build a G_MERGE_VALUES.
This patch changes the code for the leftover type so that we reuse the GCD from
the desired type.
e.g.
Leftover: gcd(792, 8, 24) => s8
https://llvm.godbolt.org/z/137Kqxj6j
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105674
This to protect against non-sensical instruction sequences being assembled,
which would either cause asserts/crashes further down, or a Wasm module being output that doesn't validate.
Unlike a validator, this type checker is able to give type-errors as part of the parsing process, which makes the assembler much friendlier to be used by humans writing manual input.
Because the MC system is single pass (instructions aren't even stored in MC format, they are directly output) the type checker has to be single pass as well, which means that from now on .globaltype and .functype decls must come before their use. An extra pass is added to Codegen to collect information for this purpose, since AsmPrinter is normally single pass / streaming as well, and would otherwise generate this information on the fly.
A `-no-type-check` flag was added to llvm-mc (and any other tools that take asm input) that surpresses type errors, as a quick escape hatch for tests that were not intended to be type correct.
This is a first version of the type checker that ignores control flow, i.e. it checks that types are correct along the linear path, but not the branch path. This will still catch most errors. Branch checking could be added in the future.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104945
LLVM provides target hooks to recognise stack spill and restore
instructions, such as isLoadFromStackSlot, and it also provides post frame
elimination versions such as isLoadFromStackSlotPostFE. These are supposed
to return the store-source and load-destination registers; unfortunately on
X86, the PostFE recognisers just return "1", apparently to signify "yes
it's a spill/load". This patch alters the hooks to correctly return the
store-source and load-destination registers:
This is really useful for debug-info as we it helps follow variable values
as they move on/off the stack. There should be no codegen changes: the only
other users of these PostFE target hooks are MachineInstr::getRestoreSize
and MachineInstr::getSpillSize, which don't attempt to interpret the
returned register location.
While we're here, delete the (InstrRef) LiveDebugValues heuristic that
tries to find the spill source register by looking for a killed reg -- we
should be able to rely on the target hooks for that. This involves
temporarily turning off a n InstrRef LivedDebugValues test on aarch64
(patch to re-enable it is in D104521).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105428
We keep a record of substitutions between debug value numbers post-isel,
however we never actually look them up until the end of compilation. As a
result, there's nothing gained by the collection being a std::map. This
patch downgrades it to being a vector, that's then sorted at the end of
compilation in LiveDebugValues.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105029
C++23 will make these conversions ambiguous - so fix them to make the
codebase forward-compatible with C++23 (& a follow-up change I've made
will make this ambiguous/invalid even in <C++23 so we don't regress
this & it generally improves the code anyway)
SelectionDAG's equivalents in ISD::InputArg/OutputArg track the
original argument index. Mips relies on this, and its currently
reinventing its own parallel CallLowering infrastructure which tracks
these indexes on the side. Add this to help move towards deleting the
custom mips handling.
This is a cleanup patch -- we're now able to support all flavours of
variable location in instruction referencing mode. This patch updates
various tests for debug instructions to be broader: numerous code paths
try to ignore debug isntructions, and they now have to ignore the
additional DBG_PHI and DBG_INSTR_REFs that we can generate.
A small amount of rework happens for LiveDebugVariables: as we don't need
to track live intervals through regalloc any more, we can get away with
unlinking debug instructions before regalloc, then re-inserting them after.
Note that this isn't (yet) true of DBG_VALUE_LISTs, they still have to go
through live interval tracking.
In SelectionDAG, add a helper lambda that emits half-formed DBG_INSTR_REFs
for arguments in instr-ref mode, DBG_VALUE otherwise. This is one of the
final locations where DBG_VALUEs are emitted for vreg arguments.
X86InstrInfo now un-sets the debug instr number on SUB instructions that
get mutated into CMP instructions. As the instruction no longer computes a
subtraction, we can't use it for variable locations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88898
This patch prevents GlobalISel from optimizing out redundant branch
instructions when compiling without optimizations.
The motivating example is code like the following common pattern in
Swift, where users expect to be able to set a breakpoint on the early
exit:
public func f(b: Bool) {
guard b else {
return // I would like to set a breakpoint here.
}
...
}
The patch modifies two places in GlobalISEL: The first one is in
IRTranslator.cpp where the removal of redundant branches is made
conditional on the optimization level. The second one is in
AArch64InstructionSelector.cpp where an -O0 *only* optimization is
being removed.
Disabling these optimizations increases code size at -O0 by
~8%. However, doing so improves debuggability, and debug builds are
the primary reason why developers compile without optimizations. We
thus concluded that this is the right trade-off.
rdar://79515454
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105238
We already have reassociation code for Adds and Ors separately in DAG
combiner, this adds it for the combination of the two where Ors act like
Adds. It reassociates (add (or (x, c), y) -> (add (add (x, y), c)) where
we know that the Ors operands have no common bits set, and the Or has
one use.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104765
This patch emits DBG_INSTR_REFs for two remaining flavours of variable
locations that weren't supported: copies, and inter-block VRegs. There are
still some locations that must be represented by DBG_VALUE such as
constants, but they're mostly independent of optimisations.
For variable locations that refer to values defined in different blocks,
vregs are allocated before isel begins, but the defining instruction
might not exist until late in isel. To get around this, emit
DBG_INSTR_REFs in a "half done" state, where the first operand refers to a
VReg. Then at the end of isel, patch these back up to refer to
instructions, using the finalizeDebugInstrRefs method.
Copies are something that I complained about the original RFC, and I
really don't want to have to put instruction numbers on copies. They don't
define a value: they move them. To address this isel, salvageCopySSA
interprets:
* COPYs,
* SUBREG_TO_REG,
* Anything that isCopyInstr thinks is a copy.
And follows chains of copies back to the defining instruction that they
read from. This relies on any physical registers that COPYs read being
defined in the same block, or being entry-block arguments. For the former
we can put an instruction number on the defining instruction; for the
latter we can drop a DBG_PHI that reads the incoming value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88896
This patch fixes an issue which occurred in CodeGenPrepare and
HWAddressSanitizer, which both at some point create a map of Old->New
instructions and update dbg.value uses of these. They did this by
iterating over the dbg.value's location operands, and if an instance of
the old instruction was found, replaceVariableLocationOp would be
called on that dbg.value. This would cause an error if the same operand
appeared multiple times as a location operand, as the first call to
replaceVariableLocationOp would update all uses of the old instruction,
invalidating the old iterator and eventually hitting an assertion.
This has been fixed by no longer iterating over the dbg.value's location
operands directly, but by first collecting them into a set and then
iterating over that, ensuring that we never attempt to replace a
duplicated operand multiple times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105129
This reverts commit 8cd35ad854.
It breaks `TestMembersAndLocalsWithSameName.py` on GreenDragon and
Mikael Holmén points out in D104827 that bitcode files created with the
patch cannot be parsed with binaries built before it.
We're trying to match a few pointer computation patterns here for
re-association opportunities.
1) Isolating a constant operand to be on the RHS, e.g.:
G_PTR_ADD(BASE, G_ADD(X, C)) -> G_PTR_ADD(G_PTR_ADD(BASE, X), C)
2) Folding two constants in each sub-tree as long as such folding
doesn't break a legal addressing mode.
G_PTR_ADD(G_PTR_ADD(BASE, C1), C2) -> G_PTR_ADD(BASE, C1+C2)
AArch64 code size improvements on CTMark with -Os:
Program before after diff
pairlocalalign 251048 251044 -0.0%
consumer-typeset 421820 421812 -0.0%
kc 431348 431320 -0.0%
SPASS 413404 413300 -0.0%
clamscan 384396 384220 -0.0%
tramp3d-v4 370640 370412 -0.1%
lencod 432096 431772 -0.1%
bullet 479400 478796 -0.1%
sqlite3 288504 288072 -0.1%
7zip-benchmark 573796 570768 -0.5%
Geomean difference -0.1%
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105069
Add a flag so that target can choose to use AsmParser for parsing inline asm.
And set the flag by default for AIX.
-no-intergrated-as will override this default if specified explicitly.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, shchenz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105314
Fixes bugs [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50580 | 50580 ]] and [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=49446 | 49446 ]]
When compiling with -g "DBG_VALUE <reg>" instructions are added in the MIR, if such a instruction is inserted between instructions that use <reg> then MachineCopyPropagation invalidates <reg> , this causes some copies to not be propagated and causes differences in code generation (ex bugs 50580 and 49446 ). DBG_VALUE instructions should be ignored since they don't actually modify the register.
Reviewed By: lkail
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104394
Reland of 31859f896.
This change implements new DAG notes GLOBAL_GET/GLOBAL_SET, and
lowering methods for load and stores of reference types from IR
globals. Once the lowering creates the new nodes, tablegen pattern
matches those and converts them to Wasm global.get/set.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104797
Previously we used the vector type, but we're loading/storing
invididual elements so I think only element alignment should matter.
Noticed while looking at the code for something else so I don't
have a test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105220
In `IRTranslator::translateGetElementPtr`, when we run into a vector gep with
some scalar operands, we try to normalize those operands using
`buildSplatVector`.
This is fine except for when the getelementptr has a <1 x N> type. In that case
it is treated as a scalar. If we run into one of these then every call to
```
// With VectorWidth = 1
LLT::fixed_vector(VectorWidth, PtrTy)
```
will assert.
Here's an example (equivalent to the added testcase):
https://godbolt.org/z/hGsTnMYdW
To get around this, this patch adds a variable, `WantSplatVector`, which
is true when our vector type ought to actually be represented using a vector.
When it's false, we'll translate as a scalar. This checks if `VectorWidth > 1`.
This fixes this bug:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=35496
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105316
Inserting into a smaller-than-legal scalable vector would result in an
internal compiler error. For example, inserting a <vscale x 4 x i8> into
a <vscale x 8 x i8> (both illegal vector types for SVE) would cause a
crash.
This crash was happening because there was no code to promote (legalise)
the result of an INSERT_SUBVECTOR node.
This patch implements PromoteIntRes_INSERT_SUBVECTOR, which legalises
the ISD node. This is currently done by going through memory. This is
necessary because of the requirement that the SubVec parameter of the
INSERT_SUBVECTOR node must be smaller than the Vec parameter, which
means that INSERT_SUBVECTOR cannot always have a legal result/operand
types.
Co-Authored-by: Joe Ellis <joe.ellis@arm.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102766
Added in 47c3fe2a22, we sometimes need to describe a variable value
substitution with a subregister qualifier, to say that "the value is the
lower 32 bits of this 64 bit register def" for example. That then needs
support during LiveDebugValues to interpret the subregister qualifiers,
which is what this patch adds.
Whenever we encounter a DBG_INSTR_REF and find its value by using a
substitution, collect any subregister qualifiers seen. Then, accumulate the
effects of the qualifiers to work out what offset and what size should be
extracted from the defined register. Finally, for the target ValueIDNum,
extract whatever subregister is in the correct position
Currently, describing a subregister field of a larger value that has been
spilt to the stack, is unimplemented.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88894
Since gather lowering can now lower to nodes that may need expansion via
the vector legalizer, do MGATHER lowering via vector legalizer.
Additionally, as part of adding passthru support for fixed typed
gathers, fix passthru support for scalable types.
Depends on D104910
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104217
Very late in compilation, backends like X86 will perform optimisations like
this:
$cx = MOV16rm $rax, ...
->
$rcx = MOV64rm $rax, ...
Widening the load from 16 bits to 64 bits. SEeing how the lower 16 bits
remain the same, this doesn't affect execution. However, any debug
instruction reference to the defined operand now refers to a 64 bit value,
nto a 16 bit one, which might be unexpected. Elsewhere in codegen, there's
often this pattern:
CALL64pcrel32 @foo, implicit-def $rax
%0:gr64 = COPY $rax
%1:gr32 = COPY %0.sub_32bit
Where we want to refer to the definition of $eax by the call, but don't
want to refer the copies (they don't define values in the way
LiveDebugValues sees it). To solve this, add a subregister field to the
existing "substitutions" facility, so that we can describe a field within
a larger value definition. I would imagine that this would be used most
often when a value is widened, and we need to refer to the original,
narrower definition.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88891
This patch changes return type of tryCandidate from void to bool:
1. Methods in some targets already follow this convention.
2. This would help if some target wants to re-use generic code.
3. It looks more intuitive if these try-method returns the same type.
We may need to change return type of them from bool to some enum
further, to make it less confusing.
Reviewed By: foad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103951
This patch adds support to the instruction-referencing LiveDebugValues
implementation for emitting entry values. The instruction referencing
implementations tracking by value rather than location means that we can
get around two of the issues with VarLocs. DBG_VALUE instructions that
re-assign the same value to a variable are no longer a problem, because we
can "see through" to the value being assigned. We also don't need to do
anything special during the dataflow stages: the "variable value problem"
doesn't need to know whether a value is available most of the time, and the
times it deoes need to know are always when entry values need to be
terminated.
The patch modifies the "TransferTracker" class, adding methods to identify
when a variable ias an entry value candidate, and when a machine value is
an entry value. recoverAsEntryValue tests these two things and emits an
entry-value expression if they're true. It's used when we clobber or
otherwise lose a value and can't find a replacement location for the value
it contained.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88406
This enables proper lowering of non-byte sized loads. We still aren't
faithfully preserving memory types everywhere, so the legality checks
still only consider the size.
Previously we didn't preserve the memory type and had to blindly
interpret a number of bytes. Now that non-byte memory accesses are
representable, we can handle these correctly.
Ported from DAG version (minus some weird special case i1 legality
checking which I don't fully understand, and we don't have a way to
query for)
For now, this is NFC and the test changes are placeholders. Since the
legality queries are still relying on byte-flattened memory sizes, the
legalizer can't actually see these non-byte accesses. This keeps this
change self contained without merging it with the larger patch to
switch to LLT memory queries.
This will currently accept the old number of bytes syntax, and convert
it to a scalar. This should be removed in the near future (I think I
converted all of the tests already, but likely missed a few).
Not sure what the exact syntax and policy should be. We can continue
printing the number of bytes for non-generic instructions to avoid
test churn and only allow non-scalar types for generic instructions.
This will currently print the LLT in parentheses, but accept parsing
the existing integers and implicitly converting to scalar. The
parentheses are a bit ugly, but the parser logic seems unable to deal
without either parentheses or some keyword to indicate the start of a
type.
In various circumstances, when we clobber a register there may be
alternative locations that the value is live in. The classic example would
be a value loaded from the stack, and then clobbered: the value is still
available on the stack. InstrRefBasedLDV was coping with this at block
starts where it's forced to pick a location, however it wasn't searching
for alternative locations when values were clobbered.
This patch notifies the "Transfer Tracker" object when clobbers occur, and
it's able to find alternatives and issue DBG_VALUEs for that location. See:
the added test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D88405
When clamping the index for a memory access to a stacked vector we must
take into account the entire type being accessed, not just assume that
we are accessing only a single element.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D105016
GlobalISel is relying on regular MachineMemOperands to track all of
the memory properties of accesses. Just the raw byte size is
insufficent to disambiguate all situations. For example, if we need to
split an unaligned extending load, we need to know the number of bits
in the original source value and can't infer it from the result
type. This is also a problem for extending vector loads.
This does decrease the maximum representable size from the full
uint64_t bytes to a maximum of 16-bits. No in tree testcases hit this,
other than places using UINT64_MAX for unknown sizes. This may be an
issue for G_MEMCPY and co., although they can just use unknown size
for large static sizes. This also has potential for backend abuse by
relying on the type when it really shouldn't be relevant after
selection.
This does not include the necessary MIR printer/parser changes to
represent this.
We were trying to expand these if they were going to be expanded
in op legalization so that we generated the minimum number of
operations. We failed to take into account that NVT could be
promoted to another legal type in op legalization.
Hoping this fixes the issue on the VE target reported as a follow
up to D96681. The check line changes were taken from before
1e46b6f401 so this patch does
appear to improve some cases that had previously regressed.
This patch reads machine value numbers from DBG_PHI instructions (marking
where SSA PHIs used to be), and matches them up with DBG_INSTR_REF
instructions that refer to them. Essentially they are two separate parts of
a DBG_VALUE: the place to read the value (register and program position),
and where the variable is assigned that value.
Sometimes these DBG_PHIs can be duplicated, usually by tail duplication.
This corresponds to the SSA structure of the program being destroyed, and
the original PHI being split. When this happens: run LLVMs standard
SSAUpdater utility, to work out what values should appear in which blocks.
The majority of this patch is boilerplate to make use of SSAUpdater.
If there are any additional PHIs on the path between multiple DBG_PHIs and
their using DBG_INSTR_REF, their existance is validated, just in case a
value gets clobbered along the way (see dbg-phis-with-loops.mir for
several examples).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86814
- Add standalone metadata parsing support so that machine metadata nodes
could be populated before and accessed during MIR is parsed.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103282
Add UNIQUED and DISTINCT properties in Metadata.def and use them to
implement restrictions on the `distinct` property of MDNodes:
* DIExpression can currently be parsed from IR or read from bitcode
as `distinct`, but this property is silently dropped when printing
to IR. This causes accepted IR to fail to round-trip. As DIExpression
appears inline at each use in the canonical form of IR, it cannot
actually be `distinct` anyway, as there is no syntax to describe it.
* Similarly, DIArgList is conceptually always uniqued. It is currently
restricted to only appearing in contexts where there is no syntax for
`distinct`, but for consistency it is treated equivalently to
DIExpression in this patch.
* DICompileUnit is already restricted to always being `distinct`, but
along with adding general support for the inverse restriction I went
ahead and described this in Metadata.def and updated the parser to be
general. Future nodes which have this restriction can share this
support.
The new UNIQUED property applies to DIExpression and DIArgList, and
forbids them to be `distinct`. It also implies they are canonically
printed inline at each use, rather than via MDNode ID.
The new DISTINCT property applies to DICompileUnit, and requires it to
be `distinct`.
A potential alternative change is to forbid the non-inline syntax for
DIExpression entirely, as is done with DIArgList implicitly by requiring
it appear in the context of a function. For example, we would forbid:
!named = !{!0}
!0 = !DIExpression()
Instead we would only accept the equivalent inlined version:
!named = !{!DIExpression()}
This essentially removes the ability to create a `distinct` DIExpression
by construction, as there is no syntax for `distinct` inline. If this
patch is accepted as-is, the result would be that the non-canonical
version is accepted, but the following would be an error and produce a diagnostic:
!named = !{!0}
; error: 'distinct' not allowed for !DIExpression()
!0 = distinct !DIExpression()
Also update some documentation to consistently use the inline syntax for
DIExpression, and to describe the restrictions on `distinct` for nodes
where applicable.
Reviewed By: StephenTozer, t-tye
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104827
This intrinsic blocks floating point transformations by the optimizer.
Author: Pengfei
Reviewed By: LuoYuanke, Andy Kaylor, Craig Topper, kpn
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99675
This patch relands https://reviews.llvm.org/D104454, but fixes some failing
builds on Mac OS which apparently has a different definition for size_t,
that caused 'ambiguous operator overload' for the implicit conversion
of TypeSize to a scalar value.
This reverts commit b732e6c9a8.
Peephole optimizer should not be introducing sub-reg definitions
as they are illegal in machine SSA phase. This patch modifies
the optimizer to not emit sub-register definitions.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103408
Adds legalizer, register bank select, and instruction
select support for G_SBFX and G_UBFX. These opcodes generate
scalar or vector ALU bitfield extract instructions for
AMDGPU. The instructions allow both constant or register
values for the offset and width operands.
The 32-bit scalar version is expanded to a sequence that
combines the offset and width into a single register.
There are no 64-bit vgpr bitfield extract instructions, so the
operations are expanded to a sequence of instructions that
implement the operation. If the width is a constant,
then the 32-bit bitfield extract instructions are used.
Moved the AArch64 specific code for creating G_SBFX to
CombinerHelper.cpp so that it can be used by other targets.
Only bitfield extracts with constant offset and width values
are handled currently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100149
A combination of features ^ that lead to a mismatch of expectations
about how a subprogram definition DIE would be produced with/without a
declaration when taking full -g debug info and inlining it into a -gmlt
CU - specifically when using Split DWARF that doesn't support cross-CU
references, so we have to put the -g debug info into the -gmlt CU, which
gets confusing about which mode is respected.
This patch comes down on respecting the CU the debug info is emitted
into, rather than preserving the full debug info when it's emitted into
the gmlt CU.
This ports the AArch64 SABD and USBD over to DAG Combine, where they can be
used by more backends (notably MVE in a follow-up patch). The matching code
has changed very little, just to handle legal operations and types
differently. It selects from (ABS (SUB (EXTEND a), (EXTEND b))), producing
a ubds/abdu which is zexted to the original type.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91937
This add as a fold of sub(0, splat(sub(0, x))) -> splat(x). This can
come up in the lowering of right shifts under AArch64, where we generate
a shift left of a negated number.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103755
This change is NFC upstream. We pass in the loop's block to the kernel
rewriter explicitly, instead of assuming it's the loop's top block. This
change is made for downstream targets where this assumption doesn't hold.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104811
To reflect that the size may be scalable, a TypeSize is returned
instead of an unsigned. In places where the result is used,
it currently relies on an implicit cast of TypeSize -> uint64_t,
which asserts that the type is not scalable.
This patch is NFC for fixed-width vectors.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104454
This is a mechanical change. This actually also renames the
similarly named methods in the SmallString class, however these
methods don't seem to be used outside of the llvm subproject, so
this doesn't break building of the rest of the monorepo.
We don't constant fold based on demanded bits elsewhere in
SimplifyDemandedBits, so I don't think we should shrink them either.
The affected ARM test changes because a constant become non-opaque
and eventually enabled some constant folding. This no longer happens.
I checked and InstCombine is able to simplify this test. I'm not sure exactly
what it was trying to test.
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri, dmgreen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104832
This also adds new interfaces for the fixed- and scalable case:
* LLT::fixed_vector
* LLT::scalable_vector
The strategy for migrating to the new interfaces was as follows:
* If the new LLT is a (modified) clone of another LLT, taking the
same number of elements, then use LLT::vector(OtherTy.getElementCount())
or if the number of elements is halfed/doubled, it uses .divideCoefficientBy(2)
or operator*. That is because there is no reason to specifically restrict
the types to 'fixed_vector'.
* If the algorithm works on the number of elements (as unsigned), then
just use fixed_vector. This will need to be fixed up in the future when
modifying the algorithm to also work for scalable vectors, and will need
then need additional tests to confirm the behaviour works the same for
scalable vectors.
* If the test used the '/*Scalable=*/true` flag of LLT::vector, then
this is replaced by LLT::scalable_vector.
Reviewed By: aemerson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104451
This is a partial reapply of the original commit and the followup commit
that were previously reverted; this reapply also includes a small fix
for a potential source of non-determinism, but also has a small change
to turn off variadic debug value salvaging, to ensure that any future
revert/reapply steps to disable and renable this feature do not risk
causing conflicts.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D91722
This reverts commit 386b66b2fc.
Having type symmetry with these is somewhat necessary when implementing support for 192-bit values.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104621
Stats added:
1. NumCleanupLandingPadsUnreachable: how many cleanup landing pads were optimized as unreachable
1. NumCleanupLandingPadsRemaining: how many cleanup landing pads remain
1. NumNoUnwind: Number of functions with nounwind attribute
1. NumUnwind: Number of functions with unwind attribute
DwarfEHPrepare is always run a single time as part of `TargetPassConfig::addISelPasses()` which makes it an ideal place near the end of the pipeline to record this information.
Example output from clang built with exceptions cumulative during thinLTO backend (NumCleanupLandingPadsUnreachable was not incremented):
"dwarfehprepare.NumCleanupLandingPadsRemaining": 123660,
"dwarfehprepare.NumNoUnwind": 323836,
"dwarfehprepare.NumUnwind": 472893,
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104161
This optimization pre-promotes the input and constants for a
switch instruction to a legal type so that all the generated compares
share the same extend. Since RISCV prefers sext for i32 to i64
extends, we should honor that to use sext.w instead of a pair
of shifts.
Reviewed By: jrtc27
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104612
When inserting UnregisterFn, if there is a musttail call, we must insert before the call so that we don't break the musttail call contract.
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104807
When inserting UnregisterFn, if there is a musttail call, we must insert before the call so that we don't break the musttail call contract.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104807
The is from discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D104247#inline-993387
The contract and reassoc flags shouldn't imply each other .
All the aggressive fsub fusion reassociate operations,
we should guard them with reassoc flag check.
Reviewed By: mcberg2017
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104723
Summary:
generate eh_info when vector registers are saved according to the traceback table.
struct eh_info_t {
unsigned version; /* EH info version 0 */
#if defined(64BIT)
char _pad[4]; /* padding */
#endif
unsigned long lsda; /* Pointer to Language Specific Data Area */
unsigned long personality; /* Pointer to the personality routine */
};
the value of lsda and personality is zero when the number of vector registers saved is large zero and there is not personality of the function
Reviewers: Jason Liu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103651
This patch aims to add the scalable property to LLT. The rest of the
patch-series changes the interfaces to take/return ElementCount and
TypeSize, which both have the ability to represent the scalable property.
The changes are mostly mechanical and aim to be non-functional changes
for fixed-width vectors.
For scalable vectors some unit tests have been added, but no effort has
been put into making any of the GlobalISel algorithms work with scalable
vectors yet. That will be left as future work.
The work is split into a series of 5 patches to make reviews easier.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104450
Since this method can apply to cmpxchg operations, make sure it's clear
what value we're actually retrieving. This will help ensure we don't
accidentally ignore the failure ordering of cmpxchg in the future.
We could potentially introduce a getOrdering() method on AtomicSDNode
that asserts the operation isn't cmpxchg, but not sure that's
worthwhile.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103338
According to IR LangRef, the FMF flag:
contract
Allow floating-point contraction (e.g. fusing a multiply followed by an
addition into a fused multiply-and-add).
reassoc
Allow reassociation transformations for floating-point instructions.
This may dramatically change results in floating-point.
My understanding is that these two flags shouldn't imply each other,
as we might have a SDNode that can be reassociated with others, but
not contractble.
eg: We may want following fmul/fad/fsub to freely reassoc, but don't
want fma being generated here.
%F = fmul reassoc double %A, %B ; <double> [#uses=1]
%G = fmul reassoc double %C, %D ; <double> [#uses=1]
%H = fadd reassoc double %F, %G ; <double> [#uses=1]
%I = fsub reassoc double %H, %E ; <double> [#uses=1]
Before https://reviews.llvm.org/D45710, `reassoc` flag actually
did not imply isContratable either.
The current implementation also only check the flag in fadd node,
ignoring fmul node, this patch update that as well.
Reviewed By: spatel, qiucf
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104247
Fixes a minor bug when trying to iterate through use operands when
updating debug use operands.
Extends a test to include above.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104576
TypePromotion is meant to be a generic pass and doesn't reference
any ARM intrinsics so it shouldn't include IntrinsicsARM.h.
The other Intrinsic related headers appear to be unneeded as well.
- Distinct metadata needs generating in the codegen to attach correct
AAInfo on the loads/stores after lowering, merging, and other relevant
transformations.
- This patch adds 'MachhineModuleSlotTracker' to help assign slot
numbers to these newly generated unnamed metadata nodes.
- To help 'MachhineModuleSlotTracker' track machine metadata, the
original 'SlotTracker' is rebased from 'AbstractSlotTrackerStorage',
which provides basic interfaces to create/retrive metadata slots. In
addition, once LLVM IR is processsed, additional hooks are also
introduced to help collect machine metadata and assign them slot
numbers.
- Finally, if there is any such machine metadata, 'MIRPrinter' outputs
an additional 'machineMetadataNodes' field containing all the
definition of those nodes.
Reviewed By: arsenm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103205
As a follow-up to https://reviews.llvm.org/D104129, I'm cleaning up the danling probe related code in both the compiler and llvm-profgen.
I'm seeing a 5% size win for the pseudo_probe section for SPEC2017 and 10% for Ciner. Certain benchmark such as 602.gcc has a 20% size win. No obvious difference seen on build time for SPEC2017 and Cinder.
Reviewed By: wenlei
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104477
The Interleave Access pass will convert shuffle(binop(load, load)) to
binop(shuffle(load), shuffle(load)), in order to create more
interleaving load patterns (VLD2/3/4) that might have been messed up by
instcombine. As shown in D104247 we were missing copying IR flags to the
new instruction though, which should just be kept the same as the
original instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104255
This can be seen as a follow up to commit 0ee439b705,
that changed the second argument of __powidf2, __powisf2 and
__powitf2 in compiler-rt from si_int to int. That was to align with
how those runtimes are defined in libgcc.
One thing that seem to have been missing in that patch was to make
sure that the rest of LLVM also handle that the argument now depends
on the size of int (not using the si_int machine mode for 32-bit).
When using __builtin_powi for a target with 16-bit int clang crashed.
And when emitting libcalls to those rtlib functions, typically when
lowering @llvm.powi), the backend would always prepare the exponent
argument as an i32 which caused miscompiles when the rtlib was
compiled with 16-bit int.
The solution used here is to use an overloaded type for the second
argument in @llvm.powi. This way clang can use the "correct" type
when lowering __builtin_powi, and then later when emitting the libcall
it is assumed that the type used in @llvm.powi matches the rtlib
function.
One thing that needed some extra attention was that when vectorizing
calls several passes did not support that several arguments could
be overloaded in the intrinsics. This patch allows overload of a
scalar operand by adding hasVectorInstrinsicOverloadedScalarOpd, with
an entry for powi.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99439
This only applies to FastIsel. GlobalIsel seems to sidestep
the issue.
This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=46996
One of the things we do in llvm is decide if a type needs
consecutive registers. Previously, we just checked if it
was an array or not.
(plus an SVE specific check that is not changing here)
This causes some confusion when you arbitrary IR like:
```
%T1 = type { double, i1 };
define [ 1 x %T1 ] @foo() {
entry:
ret [ 1 x %T1 ] zeroinitializer
}
```
We see it is an array so we call CC_AArch64_Custom_Block
which bails out when it sees the i1, a type we don't want
to put into a block.
This leaves the location of the double in some kind of
intermediate state and leads to odd codegen. Which then crashes
the backend because it doesn't know how to implement
what it's been asked for.
You get this:
```
renamable $d0 = FMOVD0
$w0 = COPY killed renamable $d0
```
Rather than this:
```
$d0 = FMOVD0
$w0 = COPY $wzr
```
The backend knows how to copy 64 bit to 64 bit registers,
but not 64 to 32. It can certainly be taught how but the real
issue seems to be us even trying to assign a register block
in the first place.
This change makes the logic of
AArch64TargetLowering::functionArgumentNeedsConsecutiveRegisters
a bit more in depth. If we find an array, also check that all the
nested aggregates in that array have a single member type.
Then CC_AArch64_Custom_Block's assumption of a type that looks
like [ N x type ] will be valid and we get the expected codegen.
New tests have been added to exercise these situations. Note that
some of the output is not ABI compliant. The aim of this change is
to simply handle these situations and not to make our processing
of arbitrary IR ABI compliant.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104123
We create flag variable "__llvm_fs_discriminator__" in the binary
to indicate that FSAFDO hierarchical discriminators are used.
This variable might be GC'ed by the linker since it is not explicitly
reference. I initially added the var to the use list in pass
MIRFSDiscriminator but it did not work. It turned out the used global
list is collected in lowering (before MIR pass) and then emitted in
the end of pass pipeline.
Here I add the variable to the use list in IR level's AddDiscriminators
pass. The machine level code is still keep in the case IR's
AddDiscriminators is not invoked. If this is the case, this just use
-Wl,--export-dynamic-symbol=__llvm_fs_discriminator__
to force the emit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103988
We create flag variable "__llvm_fs_discriminator__" in the binary
to indicate that FSAFDO hierarchical discriminators are used.
This variable might be GC'ed by the linker since it is not explicitly
reference. I initially added the var to the use list in pass
MIRFSDiscriminator but it did not work. It turned out the used global
list is collected in lowering (before MIR pass) and then emitted in
the end of pass pipeline.
In this patch, we use a "common" linkage for this variable so that
it will be GC'ed by the linker.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103988
Iff we have `SCALAR_TO_VECTOR` (and we demand it's only defined 0'th element),
and said scalar was produced by `EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT` from the 0'th element
of some vector, then we can just continue traversal into said source vector.
This comes up in X86 vector uniform shift lowering.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104250
6e5628354e regressed the Windows build as
the return type no longer matched in both branches for the return value
type deduction. This uses a bit more compiler magic to deal with that.
The sorting, obviously, must be stable, else we will have random assembly fluctuations.
Apparently there was no test coverage that would benefit from that,
so i've added one test.
The sorting consists of two parts - just sort the input vectors,
and recompute the shuffle mask -> input vector mapping.
I don't believe we need to do anything else.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104187
Ensure that we provide a `Module` when checking if a rename of an intrinsic is necessary.
This fixes the issue that was detected by https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=32288
(as mentioned by @fhahn), after committing D91250.
Note that the `LLVMIntrinsicCopyOverloadedName` is being deprecated in favor of `LLVMIntrinsicCopyOverloadedName2`.
Reviewed By: nikic
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99173
Register allocation may spill virtual registers to the stack, which can
increase alignment requirements of the stack frame. If the the function
did not require stack realignment before register allocation, the
registers required to do so may not be reserved/available. This results
in a stack frame that requires realignment but can not be realigned.
Instead, only increase the alignment of the stack if we are still able
to realign.
The register SpillAlignment will be ignored if we can't realign, and the
backend will be responsible for emitting the correct unaligned loads and
stores. This seems to be the assumed behaviour already, e.g.
ARMBaseInstrInfo::storeRegToStackSlot and X86InstrInfo::storeRegToStackSlot
are both `canRealignStack` aware.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103602
<string> is currently the highest impact header in a clang+llvm build:
https://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/chromium-browser-clang/llvm-include-analysis.html
One of the most common places this is being included is the APInt.h header, which needs it for an old toString() implementation that returns std::string - an inefficient method compared to the SmallString versions that it actually wraps.
This patch replaces these APInt/APSInt methods with a pair of llvm::toString() helpers inside StringExtras.h, adjusts users accordingly and removes the <string> from APInt.h - I was hoping that more of these users could be converted to use the SmallString methods, but it appears that most end up creating a std::string anyhow. I avoided trying to use the raw_ostream << operators as well as I didn't want to lose having the integer radix explicit in the code.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103888
When reducing vector builds to shuffles it possible that
the DAG combiner may try to extract invalid subvectors.
This happens as the existing code assumes vectors will be power
of 2 sizes, which is already untrue, but becomes more noticable
with v6 and v7 types.
Specifically the existing code assumes that half PowerOf2Ceil of
a given vector index will fit twice into a given vector.
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103880
-Wframe-larger-than= is an interesting warning; we can't know the frame
size until PrologueEpilogueInsertion (PEI); very late in the compilation
pipeline.
-Wframe-larger-than= was propagated through CC1 as an -mllvm flag, then
was a cl::opt in LLVM's PEI pass; this meant it was dropped during LTO
and needed to be re-specified via -plugin-opt.
Instead, make it part of the IR proper as a module level attribute,
similar to D103048. Introduce -fwarn-stack-size CC1 option.
Reviewed By: rsmith, qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103928
This change implements new DAG notes GLOBAL_GET/GLOBAL_SET, and
lowering methods for load and stores of reference types from IR
globals. Once the lowering creates the new nodes, tablegen pattern
matches those and converts them to Wasm global.get/set.
Reviewed By: tlively
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95425
We will need to set the ssp canary bit in traceback table to communicate
with unwinder about the canary.
Reviewed By: #powerpc, shchenz
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103202
As shown in:
https://llvm.org/PR50623
...and the similar tests here, we were not accounting for
store merging of different sizes that do not cover the
entire range of the wide value to be stored.
This is the easy fix: just make sure that all of the
original stores are the same size, so when we calculate
the wide width, it's a simple N * M check.
This still allows all of the motivating optimizations from:
D86420 / 54a5dd485c
D87112 / 7a06b166b1
We could enhance this code to track individual bytes and
allow merging multiple sizes.
This patch changes RVV's policy for its supported list of fixed-length
vector types by capping by vector size rather than element count. Now
all 1024-byte vectors (of supported element types) are supported, rather
than all 256-element vectors.
This is a more natural fit for the architecture, and allows us to, for
example, improve the support for vector bitcasts.
This change necessitated the adding of some new simple types to avoid
"regressing" on the number of currently-supported vectors. We round out
the 1024-byte types by adding `v512i8`, `v1024i8`, `v512i16` and
`v512f16`.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103884
G_INSERT legalization is incomplete and doesn't work very
well. Instead try to use sequences of G_MERGE_VALUES/G_UNMERGE_VALUES
padding with undef values (although this can get pretty large).
For the case of load/store narrowing, this is still performing the
load/stores in irregularly sized pieces. It might be cleaner to split
this down into equal sized pieces, and rely on load/store merging to
optimize it.
When narrowing G_ADD and G_SUB, handle types that aren't a multiple of
the type we're narrowing to. This allows us to handle types like s96
on 64 bit targets.
Note that the test here has a couple of dead instructions because of
the way the setup legalizes. I wasn't able to come up with a way to
write this test that avoids that easily.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97811
When narrowing G_INSERT, handle types that aren't a multiple of the
type we're narrowing to. This comes up if we're narrowing something
like an s96 to fit in 64 bit registers and also for non-byte multiple
packed types if they come up.
This implementation handles these cases by extending the extra bits to
the narrow size and truncating the result back to the destination
size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97791
shuffle(concat(x,undef),concat(y,undef)) -> concat(shuffle(x,y),shuffle(x,y))
If the original shuffle references any of the upper (undef) subvector elements, ensure the split shuffle masks uses undef instead of an out-of-bounds value.
Fixes PR50609
> This reapplies c0f3dfb9, which was reverted following the discovery of
> crashes on linux kernel and chromium builds - these issues have since
> been fixed, allowing this patch to re-land.
This reverts commit 36ec97f76a.
The change caused non-determinism in the compiler, see comments on the code
review at https://reviews.llvm.org/D91722.
Reverting to unbreak people's builds until that can be addressed.
This also reverts the follow-up "[DebugInfo] Limit the number of values
that may be referenced by a dbg.value" in
a0bd6105d8.
Fixes getTypeConversion to return `TypeScalarizeScalableVector` when a scalable vector
type cannot be legalized by widening/splitting. When this is the method of legalization
found, getTypeLegalizationCost will return an Invalid cost.
The getMemoryOpCost, getMaskedMemoryOpCost & getGatherScatterOpCost functions already call
getTypeLegalizationCost and will now also return an Invalid cost for unsupported types.
Reviewed By: sdesmalen, david-arm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102515
This sets the AllowTruncation flag on isConstOrConstSplat in
isNullOrNullSplat, allowing it to see truncated constant zeroes on
architectures such as AArch64, where only a i32.i64 are legal. As a
truncation of 0 is always 0, this should always be valid, allowing some
extra folding to happen including some of the cases from D103755.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103756
Needs to be discussed more.
This reverts commit 255a5c1baa6020c009934b4fa342f9f6dbbcc46
This reverts commit df2056ff3730316f376f29d9986c9913b95ceb1
This reverts commit faff79b7ca144e505da6bc74aa2b2f7cffbbf23
This reverts commit d2a9020785c6e02afebc876aa2778fa64c5cafd
Don't require a specific kind of IRBuilder for TargetLowering hooks.
This allows us to drop the IRBuilder.h include from TargetLowering.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103759
Was reverted in 0507fc2ffc, in phi-coalesce-subreg.mir I'd explicitly named
some passes to run instead of specifying a range. As a result some
two-address-instrs weren't correctly rewritten and the verifier got upset.
Original commit message:
[DebugInstrRef][2/3] Track PHI values through register coalescing
In the instruction referencing variable location model, we store variable
locations that point at PHIs in MachineFunction during register allocation.
Unfortunately, register coalescing can substantially change the locations
of registers, and so that PHI-variable-location side table needs
maintenence during the pass.
This patch builds an index from the side table, and whenever a vreg gets
coalesced into another vreg, update the index to record the new vreg that
the PHI happens in. It also accepts a limited range of subregister
coalescing, for example merging a subregister into a larger class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86813
This patch extends the SelectionDAG's ability to constant-fold vector
arithmetic to include support for SPLAT_VECTOR. This is not only for
scalable-vector types but also for fixed-length vector types, which
helps Hexagon in a couple of cases.
The original RISC-V test case was in fact an infinite DAGCombine loop.
The pattern `and (truncate v1), (truncate v2)` can be combined to
`truncate (and v1, v2)` but the truncate can similarly be combined back
to `truncate (and v1, v2)` (but, crucially, only when one of `v1` or
`v2` is a constant vector).
It wasn't exposed in on fixed-length types because a TRUNCATE of a
constant BUILD_VECTOR was folded into the BUILD_VECTOR itself, whereas
this did not happen for the equivalent (scalable-vector) SPLAT_VECTOR.
Reviewed By: RKSimon, craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103246
Summary: When -strict-dwarf=true is specified, the calling convention info
DW_CC_pass_by_value or DW_CC_pass_by_reference can only be generated at DWARF5.
Reviewed By: shchenz, dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103300
If we're not emitting separate fences for the success/failure cases, we
need to pass the merged ordering to the target so it can emit the
correct instructions.
For the PowerPC testcase, we end up with extra fences, but that seems
like an improvement over missing fences. If someone wants to improve
that, the PowerPC backed could be taught to emit the fences after isel,
instead of depending on fences emitted by AtomicExpand.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33332 .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103342
This is a followup to D103422. The DenseMapInfo implementations for
ArrayRef and StringRef are moved into the ArrayRef.h and StringRef.h
headers, which means that these two headers no longer need to be
included by DenseMapInfo.h.
This required adding a few additional includes, as many files were
relying on various things pulled in by ArrayRef.h.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103491
In the instruction referencing variable location model, we store variable
locations that point at PHIs in MachineFunction during register
allocation. Unfortunately, register coalescing can substantially change
the locations of registers, and so that PHI-variable-location side table
needs maintenence during the pass.
This patch builds an index from the side table, and whenever a vreg gets
coalesced into another vreg, update the index to record the new vreg that
the PHI happens in. It also accepts a limited range of subregister
coalescing, for example merging a subregister into a larger class.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D86813
The `DAGTypeLegalizer::WidenVSELECTMask` function is not (yet) ready for
scalable vector types, and has numerous places in which it tries to grab
either the fixed size or number of elements of its types.
I believe that it should be possible to update this method to properly
account for scalable-vector types, but we don't have test cases for
that; RISC-V bails out early on as it has legal i1 vector masks. As
such, this patch just prevents it from crashing.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103536
The attached tests check for the regression in DAGCombiner's
`visitVSELECT`, which may call this method.
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103534
This extends 434c8e013a and ede3982792 to handle signed
predicates by sign-extending the setcc operands.
This is not shown directly in https://llvm.org/PR50055 ,
but the pattern is visible by changing the unsigned convert
to signed in the source code.
This patch was split from https://reviews.llvm.org/D102246
[SampleFDO] New hierarchical discriminator for Flow Sensitive SampleFDO
This is mainly for ProfileData part of change. It will load
FS Profile when such profile is detected. For an extbinary format profile,
create_llvm_prof tool will add a flag to profile summary section.
For other format profiles, the users need to use an internal option
(-profile-isfs) to tell the compiler that the profile uses FS discriminators.
This patch also simplified the bit API used by FS discriminators.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103041
This is a follow-up to D103280 that eases the use restrictions,
so we can handle the motivating case from:
https://llvm.org/PR50055
The loop code is adapted from similar use checks in
ExtendUsesToFormExtLoad() and SliceUpLoad(). I did not see an
easier way to filter out non-chain uses of load values.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103462
Use RuntimeLibcalls to get a common way to pick correct RTLIB::POWI_*
libcall for a given value type.
This includes a small refactoring of ExpandFPLibCall and
ExpandArgFPLibCall in SelectionDAGLegalize to share a bit of code,
plus adding an ExpandFPLibCall version that can be called directly
when expanding FPOWI/STRICT_FPOWI to ensure that we actually use
the same RTLIB::Libcall when expanding the libcall as we used when
checking the legality of such a call by doing a getLibcallName check.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103050
The FPOWI DAG node is normally lowered to a libcall to one of the
RTLIB::POWI* runtime functions and the exponent should normally
have a type matching sizeof(int) when making the call. Thus,
type promotion of the exponent could lead to an FPOWI with a type
for the second operand that would be incorrect when doing the
libcall (a situation which would be hard to detect post-legalization
if we allow such FPOWI nodes).
This patch is changing DAGTypeLegalizer::PromoteIntOp_FPOWI to
do the rewrite into a libcall directly instead of promoting the
operand. This way we can check that the exponent is smaller than
sizeof(int) and we can let TargetLowering handle promotion as
part of making the libcall. It could be noticed here that makeLibCall
has some knowledge about targets such as 64-bit RISCV, for which the
libcall argument should be extended to a type larger than sizeof(int).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102950
D85085 was pushed earlier but broke tests on mac and win:
http://lab.llvm.org:8080/green/job/clang-stage1-RA/21182/consoleFull#-706149783d489585b-5106-414a-ac11-3ff90657619c
Recommitting it after adding mtriple to the llc commands.
Emit correct location lists with basic block sections.
This patch addresses multiple things:
1) It ensures that const_value is emitted when possible with basic block
sections.
2) It emits location lists such that the labels are always within the
section boundary.
3) It fixes a bug when the parameter is first used in a non-entry block
which is in a different section from the entry block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D85085
It's still in use in a few places so we can't delete it yet but there's not
many at this point.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103352
This patch transforms the sequence
lea (reg1, reg2), reg3
sub reg3, reg4
to two sub instructions
sub reg1, reg4
sub reg2, reg4
Similar optimization can also be applied to LEA/ADD sequence.
The modifications to TwoAddressInstructionPass is to ensure the operands of ADD
instruction has expected order (the dest register of LEA should be src register of ADD).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101970
It breaks up the function pass manager in the codegen pipeline.
With empty parameters, it looks at the -mllvm flag -rewrite-map-file.
This is likely not in use.
Add a check that we only have one function pass manager in the codegen
pipeline.
Some tests relied on the fact that we had a module pass somewhere in the
codegen pipeline.
addr-label.ll crashes on ARM due to this change. This is because a
ARMConstantPoolConstant containing a BasicBlock to represent a
blockaddress may hold an invalid pointer to a BasicBlock if the
blockaddress is invalidated by its BasicBlock getting removed. In that
case all referencing blockaddresses are RAUW a constant int. Making
ARMConstantPoolConstant::CVal a WeakVH fixes the crash, but I'm not sure
that's the right fix. As a workaround, create a barrier right before
ISel so that IR optimizations can't happen while a
ARMConstantPoolConstant has been created.
Reviewed By: rnk, MaskRay, compnerd
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99707
I accidentaly pushed a draft of D103280 that was discussed
during the review, but it was not supposed to be the final
version.
Rather than revert and recommit, I'm updating the existing
code. This way we have a record of the codegen diff that
would result if we decide to remove this predicate in the
future.
sext (vsetcc X, Y) --> vsetcc (zext X), (zext Y) --
(when the zexts are free and a bunch of other conditions)
We have a couple of similar folds to this already for vector selects,
but this pattern slips through because it is only a setcc.
The tests are based on the motivating case from:
https://llvm.org/PR50055
...but we need extra logic to get that example, so I've left that as
a TODO for now.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103280
The D35953, D62650 and D73691 introduced trimming of variables locations
in LiveDebugVariables pass, since there are some cases where after
the virtregrewrite we have exploded number of DBG_VALUEs created for some
inlined variables. As it looks, all problematic cases were regarding
inlined variables, so it seems reasonable to stop trimming the location
ranges for non-inlined variables.
It has very good impact on the llvm-locstats report.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102917
extractelement is poison if the index is out-of-bounds, so just
scalarizing the load may introduce an out-of-bounds load, which is UB.
To avoid introducing new UB, we can mask the index so it only contains
valid indices.
Fixes PR50382.
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103077
Using the proper API automatically sets `__stack_chk_guard` to `dso_local` if
`Reloc::Static`. This wasn't strictly necessary until recently when dso_local was
no longer implied by `TargetMachine::shouldAssumeDSOLocal` for
`__stack_chk_guard`. By using the proper API, we can avoid generating unnecessary
GOT relocations.
Reviewed By: vitalybuka
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102646