This adds a small fold for extract (ARM_BUILD_VECTOR) to fold to the
original node. This can help simplify the resulting codegen in some
cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104860
This adds a combine for extract(x, n); extract(x, n+1) ->
VMOVRRD(extract x, n/2). This allows two vector lanes to be moved at the
same time in a single instruction, and thanks to the other VMOVRRD folds
we have added recently can help reduce the amount of executed
instructions. Floating point types are very similar, but will include a
bitcast to an integer type.
This also adds a shouldRewriteCopySrc, to prevent copy propagation from
DPR to SPR, which can break as not all DPR regs can be extracted from
directly. Otherwise the machine verifier is unhappy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D100244
This adds an extra pattern for inserting an f16 into a odd vector lane
via an VINS. If the dual-insert-lane pattern does not happen to apply,
this can help with some simple cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95471
This removes the existing patterns for inserting two lanes into an
f16/i16 vector register using VINS, instead using a DAG combine to
pattern match the same code sequences. The tablegen patterns were
already on the large side (foreach LANE = [0, 2, 4, 6]) and were not
handling all the cases they could. Moving that to a DAG combine, whilst
not less code, allows us to better control and expand the selection of
VINSs. Additionally this allows us to remove the AddedComplexity on
VCVTT.
The extra trick that this has learned in the process is to move two
adjacent lanes using a single f32 vmov, allowing some extra
inefficiencies to be removed.
Differenial Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96876
A One-Off Identity mask is a shuffle that is mostly an identity mask
from as single source but contains a single element out-of-place, either
from a different vector or from another position in the same vector. As
opposed to lowering this via a ARMISD::BUILD_VECTOR we can generate an
extract/insert pair directly. Under ARM with individually accessible
lane elements this often becomes a simple lane move.
This also alters the LowerVECTOR_SHUFFLEUsingMovs code to use v4f32 (not
v4i32), a more natural type for lane moves.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95551
This adds another tablegen fold that converts an i16 odd-lane-insert of
an even-lane-extract into a VINS. We extract the existing f32 value from
the destination register and VINS the new value into it. The rest of the
backend then is able to optimize the INSERT_SUBREG / COPY_TO_REGCLASS /
EXTRACT_SUBREG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95456
This allows the peephole optimizer to know that a MVE_VMOV_to_lane_32 is
the same as an insert subreg, allowing it to optimize some redundant
lane moves.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95433
This patch adds tablegen patterns for pairs of i16/f16 insert/extracts.
If we are inserting into two adjacent vector lanes (0 and 1 for
example), we can use either a vmov;vins or vmovx;vins to insert the pair
together, avoiding a round-trip from GRP registers. This is quite a
large patterns with a number of EXTRACT_SUBREG/INSERT_SUBREG/
COPY_TO_REGCLASS nodes, but hopefully as most of those become copies all
that will be cleaned up by further optimizations.
The VINS pattern was also adjusted to allow it to represent that it is
inserting into the top half of an existing register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95381
MVE has a dual lane vector move instruction, capable of moving two
general purpose registers into lanes of a vector register. They look
like one of:
vmov q0[2], q0[0], r2, r0
vmov q0[3], q0[1], r3, r1
They only accept these lane indices though (and only insert into an
i32), either moving lanes 1 and 3, or 0 and 2.
This patch adds some tablegen patterns for them, selecting from vector
inserts elements. Because the insert_elements are know to be
canonicalized to ascending order there are several patterns that we need
to select. These lane indices are:
3 2 1 0 -> vmovqrr 31; vmovqrr 20
3 2 1 -> vmovqrr 31; vmov 2
3 1 -> vmovqrr 31
2 1 0 -> vmovqrr 20; vmov 1
2 0 -> vmovqrr 20
With the top one being the most common. All other potential patterns of
lane indices will be matched by a combination of these and the
individual vmov pattern already present. This does mean that we are
selecting several machine instructions at once due to the need to
re-arrange the inserts, but in this case there is nothing else that will
attempt to match an insert_vector_elt node.
This is a recommit of 6cc3d80a84 after
fixing the backward instruction definitions.
MVE has a dual lane vector move instruction, capable of moving two
general purpose registers into lanes of a vector register. They look
like one of:
vmov q0[2], q0[0], r2, r0
vmov q0[3], q0[1], r3, r1
They only accept these lane indices though (and only insert into an
i32), either moving lanes 1 and 3, or 0 and 2.
This patch adds some tablegen patterns for them, selecting from vector
inserts elements. Because the insert_elements are know to be
canonicalized to ascending order there are several patterns that we need
to select. These lane indices are:
3 2 1 0 -> vmovqrr 31; vmovqrr 20
3 2 1 -> vmovqrr 31; vmov 2
3 1 -> vmovqrr 31
2 1 0 -> vmovqrr 20; vmov 1
2 0 -> vmovqrr 20
With the top one being the most common. All other potential patterns of
lane indices will be matched by a combination of these and the
individual vmov pattern already present. This does mean that we are
selecting several machine instructions at once due to the need to
re-arrange the inserts, but in this case there is nothing else that will
attempt to match an insert_vector_elt node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D92553
- Basically iterate each pair of memory operands from both instructions
and return true if any of them may alias.
- The exception are memory instructions without any memory operand. They
may touch everything and could alias to any memory instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D89447
This extends the distributing postinc code in load/store optimizer to
also handle the case where there is an existing pre/post inc instruction,
where subsequent instructions can be modified to use the adjusted
offset from the increment. This can save us having to keep the old
register live past the increment instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D83377
This temporarily reverts commit 7019cea26d.
It seems that, for some targets, there are instructions with a lot of memory operands (probably more than would be expected). This causes a lot of buildbots to timeout and notify failed builds. While investigations are ongoing to find out why this happens, revert the changes.
Summary:
To support all targets, the mayAlias member function needs to support instructions with multiple operands.
This revision also changes the order of the emitted instructions in some test cases.
Reviewers: efriedma, hfinkel, craig.topper, dmgreen
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: MatzeB, dmgreen, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Tags: #llvm
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D80161
Unlike Neon, MVE does not have a way of duplicating from a vector lane,
so a VDUPLANE currently selects to a VDUP(move_from_lane(..)). This
forces that to be done earlier as a dag combine to allow other folds to
happen.
It converts to a VDUP(EXTRACT). On FP16 this is then folded to a
VGETLANEu to prevent it from creating a vmovx;vmovhr pair, using a
single move_from_reg instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D79606
The unpredictable/hasSideEffects flag is usually inferred by tablegen
from whether the instruction has a tablegen pattern (and that pattern
only has a single output instruction). Now that the MVE intrinsics are
all committed and producing code, the remaining instructions still
marked as unpredictable need to be specially handled. This adds the flag
directly to instructions that need it, notably the V*MLAL instructions
and some of the MOV's.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D76910
MVE doesn't have the range of shuffle instructions available in Neon. We
also cannot use the trick of cutting a difficult vector shuffle in half
to simplify things. Instead we need to be more careful about how we
lower shuffles.
This patch adds an extra combine that attempts to find "whole lane"
vmovs when lowering shuffles of smaller types. This helps us make some
shuffles a lot simpler, generating single lane movs for the parts that
can make use of it, falling back to the original shuffle for the rest.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69509