Created to fix: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53537
Some intrinsics functions are considered commutative since they are performing operations like addition or multiplication. Some of these have extra parameters to provide extra information that are not part of the operation itself and are not commutative. This makes sure that if an instruction that is an intrinsic takes the non commutative path to handle this case.
Reviewer: paquette
Closes Issue #53537
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118807
Now that VS2017 support has been dropped (D114639), the LLVM_HAS_RVALUE_REFERENCE_THIS define is always true and the LLVM_LVALUE_FUNCTION define is always enabled for ref-qualifiers.
This patch proposes we remove the defines and use the qualifiers directly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118609
Was reverted in 1c1b670a73 as it broke all non-x86 bots. Original commit
message:
[DebugInfo][InstrRef] Add a max-stack-slots-to-track cut-out
In certain circumstances with things like autogenerated code and asan, you
can end up with thousands of Values live at the same time, causing a large
working set and a lot of information spilled to the stack. Unfortunately
InstrRefBasedLDV doesn't cope well with this and consumes a lot of memory
when there are many many stack slots. See the reproducer in D116821.
It seems very unlikely that a developer would be able to reason about
hundreds of live named local variables at the same time, so a huge working
set and many stack slots is an indicator that we're likely analysing
autogenerated or instrumented code. In those cases: gracefully degrade by
setting an upper bound on the amount of stack slots to track. This limits
peak memory consumption, at the cost of dropping some variable locations,
but in a rare scenario where it's unlikely someone is actually going to
use them.
In terms of the patch, this adds a cl::opt for max number of stack slots to
track, and has the stack-slot-numbering code optionally return None. That
then filters through a number of code paths, which can then chose to not
track a spill / restore if it touches an untracked spill slot. The added
test checks that we drop variable locations that are on the stack, if we
set the limit to zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118601
Based on the output of include-what-you-use.
This is a big chunk of changes. It is very likely to break downstream code
unless they took a lot of care in avoiding hidden ehader dependencies, something
the LLVM codebase doesn't do that well :-/
I've tried to summarize the biggest change below:
- llvm/include/llvm-c/Core.h: no longer includes llvm-c/ErrorHandling.h
- llvm/IR/DIBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/DebugInfo.h
- llvm/IR/IRBuilder.h no longer includes llvm/IR/IntrinsicInst.h
- llvm/IR/LLVMRemarkStreamer.h no longer includes llvm/Support/ToolOutputFile.h
- llvm/IR/LegacyPassManager.h no longer include llvm/Pass.h
- llvm/IR/Type.h no longer includes llvm/ADT/SmallPtrSet.h
- llvm/IR/PassManager.h no longer includes llvm/Pass.h nor llvm/Support/Debug.h
And the usual count of preprocessed lines:
$ clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/IR/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 6400831
after: 6189948
200k lines less to process is no that bad ;-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118652
The commit adds a unit test that uses the facilities of libLLVMCore
without adding it to link components. This causes failures with
the shared libraries builds.
This patch just adds the missing library to the link step.
In certain circumstances with things like autogenerated code and asan, you
can end up with thousands of Values live at the same time, causing a large
working set and a lot of information spilled to the stack. Unfortunately
InstrRefBasedLDV doesn't cope well with this and consumes a lot of memory
when there are many many stack slots. See the reproducer in D116821.
It seems very unlikely that a developer would be able to reason about
hundreds of live named local variables at the same time, so a huge working
set and many stack slots is an indicator that we're likely analysing
autogenerated or instrumented code. In those cases: gracefully degrade by
setting an upper bound on the amount of stack slots to track. This limits
peak memory consumption, at the cost of dropping some variable locations,
but in a rare scenario where it's unlikely someone is actually going to
use them.
In terms of the patch, this adds a cl::opt for max number of stack slots to
track, and has the stack-slot-numbering code optionally return None. That
then filters through a number of code paths, which can then chose to not
track a spill / restore if it touches an untracked spill slot. The added
test checks that we drop variable locations that are on the stack, if we
set the limit to zero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118601
Currently, ARMBaseInstrInfo::getInstSizeInBytes() uses hard-coded
instruction size for some pseudo-instructions, while this
information should ideally be found in ARMInstrInfo.td,
ARMInstrThumb(2).td files (which can be accessed via MCInstrDesc). Hence,
the .td files should be updated and no hard-coded instruction sizes
should be used by getInstSizeInBytes() anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118009
Currently, AArch64InstrInfo::getInstSizeInBytes() uses hard-coded
instruction size for some pseudo-instructions, while this
information should ideally be found in AArch64InstrInfo.td file (which
can be accessed via MCInstrDesc). Hence, the .td file should be updated
and no hard-coded instruction sizes should be used by
getInstSizeInBytes() anymore.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117970
This patch implement instruction reachability for AAFunctionReachability
attribute. It is used to tell if a certain instruction can reach a function
transitively.
NOTE: I created a new commit based of D106720 and set the author back to
Kuter. Other metadata, etc. is wrong. I also addressed the
remaining review comments and fixed the unit test.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106720
This fixes the unit tests so that it is skipped if there is no default
target triple set. Unset default target triple is a supported build
configuration for LLVM.
This implements codegen for Armv8.8/9.3 Memory Operations extension (MOPS).
Any memcpy/memset/memmov intrinsics will always be emitted as a series
of three consecutive instructions P, M and E which perform the
operation. The SelectionDAG implementation is split into a separate
patch.
AArch64LegalizerInfo will now consider the following generic opcodes
if +mops is available, instead of legalising by expanding them to
libcalls: G_BZERO, G_MEMCPY_INLINE, G_MEMCPY, G_MEMMOVE, G_MEMSET
The s8 value of memset is legalised to s64 to match the pseudos.
AArch64O0PreLegalizerCombinerInfo will still be able to combine
G_MEMCPY_INLINE even if +mops is present, as it is unclear whether it is
better to generate fixed length copies or MOPS instructions for the
inline code of small or zero-sized memory operations, so we choose to be
conservative for now.
AArch64InstructionSelector will select the above as new pseudo
instructions: AArch64::MOPSMemory{Copy/Move/Set/SetTagging} These are
each expanded to a series of three instructions (e.g. SETP/SETM/SETE)
which must be emitted together during code emission to avoid scheduler
reordering.
This is part 3/4 of a series of patches split from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D117405 to facilitate reviewing.
Patch by Tomas Matheson and Son Tuan Vu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117763
We do support building with a default target unspecified. This fixes
two small build issues that prevented LLVM's unit tests from building
and libSupport from building on Windows.
Due to some complications with lifetime, and assume-like intrinsics, intrinsics were not included as outlinable instructions. This patch opens up most intrinsics, excluding lifetime and assume-like intrinsics, to be outlined. For similarity, it is required that the intrinsic IDs, and the intrinsics names match exactly, as well as the function type. This puts intrinsics in a different class than normal call instructions (https://reviews.llvm.org/D109448), where the name will no longer have to match.
This also adds an additional command line flag debug option to disable outlining intrinsics.
Recommit of: 8de76bd569
Adds extra checking of intrinsic function calls names to avoid taking the address of intrinsic calls when extracting function calls.
Reviewers: paquette, jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109450
This file was added in https://reviews.llvm.org/D74415. There was no
justification as to why it was added, and after about a year of being
in-tree, it's still unused, so this removes it.
Branch protection in M-class is supported by
- Armv8.1-M.Main
- Armv8-M.Main
- Armv7-M
Attempting to enable this for other architectures, either by
command-line (e.g -mbranch-protection=bti) or by target attribute
in source code (e.g. __attribute__((target("branch-protection=..."))) )
will generate a warning.
In both cases function attributes related to branch protection will not
be emitted. Regardless of the warning, module level attributes related to
branch protection will be emitted when it is enabled via the command-line.
The following people also contributed to this patch:
- Victor Campos
Reviewed By: chill
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115501
With opaque pointers, we can no longer derive this from the pointer
type, so we need to explicitly provide the element type the atomic
operation should work with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118359
This reverts commit ef82063207.
- It conflicts with the existing llvm::size in STLExtras, which will now
never be called.
- Calling it without llvm:: breaks C++17 compat
Summary:
This patch modifies code generation in OpenMPIRBuilder to pass arguments
to the parallel region outlined function in an aggregate (struct),
besides the global_tid and bound_tid arguments. It depends on the
updated CodeExtractor (see D96854) for support. It mirrors functionality
of Clang codegen (see D102107).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110114
Summary:
Enable CodeExtractor to construct output functions that partially
aggregate inputs/outputs in their argument list. A use case is the
OMPIRBuilder to create outlined functions for parallel regions that
aggregate in a struct the payload variables for the region while passing
as scalars thread and bound identifiers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D96854
We use the same similarity scheme we used for branch instructions for phi nodes, and allow them to be outlined. There is not a lot of special handling needed for these phi nodes when outlining, as they simply act as outputs. The code extractor does not currently allow for non entry blocks within the extracted region to have predecessors, so there are not conflicts to handle with respect to predecessors no longer contained in the function.
Recommit of 515eec3553
Reviewers: paquette
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106997
Due to some complications with lifetime, and assume-like intrinsics, intrinsics were not included as outlinable instructions. This patch opens up most intrinsics, excluding lifetime and assume-like intrinsics, to be outlined. For similarity, it is required that the intrinsic IDs, and the intrinsics names match exactly, as well as the function type. This puts intrinsics in a different class than normal call instructions (https://reviews.llvm.org/D109448), where the name will no longer have to match.
This also adds an additional command line flag debug option to disable outlining intrinsics.
Reviewers: paquette, jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109450
The outliner currently requires that function calls not be indirect calls, and have that the function name, and function type must match, as well as other attributes such as calling conventions. This patch treats called functions as values, and just another operand, and named function calls as constants. This allows functions to be treated like any other constant, or input and output into the outlined functions.
There are also debugging flags added to enforce the old behaviors where indirect calls not be allowed, and to enforce the old rule that function calls names must also match.
Reviewers: paquette, jroelofs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109448
Only using that change in StringRef already decreases the number of
preoprocessed lines from 7837621 to 7776151 for LLVMSupport
Perhaps more interestingly, it shows that many files were relying on the
inclusion of StringRef.h to have the declaration from STLExtras.h. This
patch tries hard to patch relevant part of llvm-project impacted by this
hidden dependency removal.
Potential impact:
- "llvm/ADT/StringRef.h" no longer includes <memory>,
"llvm/ADT/Optional.h" nor "llvm/ADT/STLExtras.h"
Related Discourse thread:
https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
MSVC currently doesn't support 80 bits long double. ICC supports it when
the option `/Qlong-double` is specified. Changing the alignment of f80
to 16 bytes so that we can be compatible with ICC's option.
Reviewed By: rnk, craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115942
This change moves EOL detection out of the clang::InclusionRewriter into
llvm::StringRef so that it can be easily reused elsewhere. It also adds
additional explicit test cases to verify the correct and expected return
results.
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117626
The tryLockFor method from raw_fd_sotreamis the sole user of that
header, and it's not referenced in the mono repo. I still chose to keep
it (may be useful for downstream user) but added a transient type that's
forward declared to hold the duration parameter.
Notable changes:
- "llvm/Support/Duration.h" must be included in order to use tryLockFor.
- "llvm/Support/raw_ostream.h" no longer includes <chrono>
This sole change has an interesting impact on the number of processed
line, as measured by:
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 7917500
after: 7835142
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
LLVM Programmer’s Manual strongly discourages the use of `std::vector<bool>` and suggests `llvm::BitVector` as a possible replacement.
Currently, some users of `std::vector<bool>` cannot switch to `llvm::BitVector` because it doesn't implement the `pop_back()` and `back()` functions.
To enable easy transition of `std::vector<bool>` users, this patch implements `llvm::BitVector::pop_back()` and `llvm::BitVector::back()`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117115
The error messages in tests are far better when a test fails if the test
is written using ASSERT_/EXPECT_<operator>(A, B) rather than
ASSERT_/EXPECT_TRUE(A <operator> B).
This commit updates all of llvm/unittests/Support to use these macros
where possible.
This change has not been possible in:
- llvm/unittests/Support/FSUniqueIDTest.cpp - due to not overloading
operators beyond ==, != and <.
- llvm/unittests/Support/BranchProbabilityTest.cpp - where the unchanged
tests are of the operator overloads themselves.
There are other possibilities of this conversion not being valid, which
have not applied in these tests, as they do not use NULL (they use
nullptr), and they do not use const char* (they use std::string or
StringRef).
Reviewed By: mubashar_
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117319
The cleanup was manual, but assisted by "include-what-you-use". It consists in
1. Removing unused forward declaration. No impact expected.
2. Removing unused headers in .cpp files. No impact expected.
3. Removing unused headers in .h files. This removes implicit dependencies and
is generally considered a good thing, but this may break downstream builds.
I've updated llvm, clang, lld, lldb and mlir deps, and included a list of the
modification in the second part of the commit.
4. Replacing header inclusion by forward declaration. This has the same impact
as 3.
Notable changes:
- llvm/Support/TargetParser.h no longer includes llvm/Support/AArch64TargetParser.h nor llvm/Support/ARMTargetParser.h
- llvm/Support/TypeSize.h no longer includes llvm/Support/WithColor.h
- llvm/Support/YAMLTraits.h no longer includes llvm/Support/Regex.h
- llvm/ADT/SmallVector.h no longer includes llvm/Support/MemAlloc.h nor llvm/Support/ErrorHandling.h
You may need to add some of these headers in your compilation units, if needs be.
As an hint to the impact of the cleanup, running
clang++ -E -Iinclude -I../llvm/include ../llvm/lib/Support/*.cpp -std=c++14 -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions | wc -l
before: 8000919 lines
after: 7917500 lines
Reduced dependencies also helps incremental rebuilds and is more ccache
friendly, something not shown by the above metric :-)
Discourse thread on the topic: https://llvm.discourse.group/t/include-what-you-use-include-cleanup/5831
This change defers creating Support/Caching.cpp's cache directory until
it actually writes to the cache.
This allows using Caching library in a read-only fashion. If read-only,
the cache is guaranteed not to write to disk. This keeps tools using
DebugInfod (currently llvm-symbolizer) hermetic when not configured to
perform remote lookups.
Reviewed By: phosek
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117589
When a Builder methods accepts multiple InsertPoints, when both point to
the same position, inserting instructions at one position will "move" the
other after the inserted position since the InsertPoint is pegged to the
instruction following the intended InsertPoint. For instance, when
creating a parallel region at Loc and passing the same position as AllocaIP,
creating instructions at Loc will "move" the AllocIP behind the Loc
position.
To avoid this ambiguity, add an assertion checking this condition and
fix the unittests.
In case of AllocaIP, an alternative solution could be to implicitly
split BasicBlock at InsertPoint, using the first as AllocaIP, the second
for inserting the instructions themselves. However, this solution is
specific to AllocaIP since AllocaIP will always have to be first. Hence,
this is an argument to generally handling ambiguous InsertPoints as API
sage error.
Reviewed By: jdoerfert
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117226
Calls to JITDylib's getDFSLinkOrder and getReverseDFSLinkOrder methods (both
static an non-static versions) are now valid to make on defunct JITDylibs, but
will return an error if any JITDylib in the link order is defunct.
This means that platforms can safely lookup link orders by name in response to
jit-dlopen calls from the ORC runtime, even if the call names a defunct
JITDylib -- the call will just fail with an error.
This diff adds support for relative roots to VFS overlays. The directory root
will be made absolute from the current working directory and will be used to
determine the path style to use. This supports the use of VFS overlays with
remote build systems that might use a different working directory for each
compilation.
Reviewed By: benlangmuir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116174
This patch adds OMPIRBuilder support for the simd directive (without any clause). This will be a first step towards lowering simd directive in LLVM_Flang. The patch uses existing CanonicalLoop infrastructure of IRBuilder to add the support. Also adds necessary code to add llvm.access.group and llvm.loop metadata wherever needed.
Reviewed By: Meinersbur
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114379