Commit Graph

253 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Eric Christopher eb6e3bbf47 Now that the optimization level is adjusting the feature string
before we hit the subtarget, remove the constructor parameter.

llvm-svn: 218817
2014-10-01 21:05:35 +00:00
Eric Christopher 36448af7f5 Rework the PPC TargetMachine so that the non-function specific
overrides happen at TargetMachine creation and not on every
subtarget creation.

llvm-svn: 218805
2014-10-01 20:38:26 +00:00
Robin Morisset 2212996936 [Power] Use AtomicExpandPass for fence insertion, and use lwsync where appropriate
Summary:
This patch makes use of AtomicExpandPass in Power for inserting fences around
atomic as part of an effort to remove fence insertion from SelectionDAGBuilder.
As a big bonus, it lets us use sync 1 (lightweight sync, often used by the mnemonic
lwsync) instead of sync 0 (heavyweight sync) in many cases.

I also added a test, as there was no test for the barriers emitted by the Power
backend for atomic loads and stores.

Test Plan: new test + make check-all

Reviewers: jfb

Subscribers: llvm-commits

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5180

llvm-svn: 218331
2014-09-23 20:46:49 +00:00
Eric Christopher 79cc1e3ae7 Reinstate "Nuke the old JIT."
Approved by Jim Grosbach, Lang Hames, Rafael Espindola.

This reinstates commits r215111, 215115, 215116, 215117, 215136.

llvm-svn: 216982
2014-09-02 22:28:02 +00:00
Eric Christopher 3770cf5961 Remove extraneous 64-bit argument to the PPC TargetMachine constructor
and update initialization.

llvm-svn: 215280
2014-08-09 04:38:56 +00:00
Eric Christopher b9fd9ed37e Temporarily Revert "Nuke the old JIT." as it's not quite ready to
be deleted. This will be reapplied as soon as possible and before
the 3.6 branch date at any rate.

Approved by Jim Grosbach, Lang Hames, Rafael Espindola.

This reverts commits r215111, 215115, 215116, 215117, 215136.

llvm-svn: 215154
2014-08-07 22:02:54 +00:00
Rafael Espindola f8b27c41e8 Nuke the old JIT.
I am sure we will be finding bits and pieces of dead code for years to
come, but this is a good start.

Thanks to Lang Hames for making MCJIT a good replacement!

llvm-svn: 215111
2014-08-07 14:21:18 +00:00
Eric Christopher 02ae6902fa Move the PPCSelectionDAGInfo off the TargetMachine and onto the
subtarget.

llvm-svn: 210854
2014-06-12 23:02:32 +00:00
Eric Christopher e47dcd411a Make PPCSelectionDAGInfo take a DataLayout instead of a TargetMachine
since that's all it needs.

llvm-svn: 210853
2014-06-12 22:56:48 +00:00
Eric Christopher f8c031fccf Move PPCTargetLowering off of the TargetMachine and onto the subtarget.
llvm-svn: 210852
2014-06-12 22:50:10 +00:00
Eric Christopher f55a224920 Move PPCJITInfo off of the TargetMachine and onto the subtarget.
Needed to migrate a few functions around to avoid circular header
dependencies.

llvm-svn: 210845
2014-06-12 22:28:06 +00:00
Eric Christopher 54367e01cc Remove the use of TargetMachine from PPCJITInfo and replace with
the subtarget. Also remove unnecessary argument to the constructor
at the same time, we already have access via the subtarget.

llvm-svn: 210844
2014-06-12 22:19:51 +00:00
Eric Christopher bd14dc519c Move PPCInstrInfo off of the target machine and onto the subtarget.
llvm-svn: 210839
2014-06-12 22:05:46 +00:00
Eric Christopher 1dcea73540 Remove TargetMachine from PPCInstrInfo and all dependencies and
replace with the current subtarget.

llvm-svn: 210836
2014-06-12 21:48:52 +00:00
Eric Christopher 49628bc4ff Move DataLayout from the PPCTargetMachine to the subtarget.
llvm-svn: 210824
2014-06-12 21:08:06 +00:00
Eric Christopher d104c31fc0 Move PPCFrameLowering into PPCSubtarget from PPCTargetMachine. Use
the initializeSubtargetDependencies code to obtain an initialized
subtarget and migrate a couple of subtarget using functions to the
.cpp file to avoid circular includes.

llvm-svn: 210822
2014-06-12 20:54:11 +00:00
Eric Christopher a475d5c54a Remove duplicate copy of InstrItineraryData from the TargetMachine,
it's already on the subtarget.

llvm-svn: 210619
2014-06-11 00:53:17 +00:00
Eric Christopher d71e4441c9 Avoid using subtarget features when initializing the pass pipeline
on PPC.

llvm-svn: 209376
2014-05-22 01:21:35 +00:00
Eric Christopher 6b0fcfee36 Make early if conversion dependent upon the subtarget and add
a subtarget hook to enable. Unconditionally add to the pass pipeline
for targets that might want to use it. No functional change.

llvm-svn: 209340
2014-05-21 23:40:26 +00:00
Craig Topper 0d3fa92514 [C++11] Add 'override' keywords and remove 'virtual'. Additionally add 'final' and leave 'virtual' on some methods that are marked virtual without overriding anything and have no obvious overrides themselves. PowerPC edition
llvm-svn: 207504
2014-04-29 07:57:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel c6fc9b8960 [PowerPC] Use a small cleanup pass to remove VSX self copies
As explained in r204976, because of how the allocation of VSX registers
interacts with the call-lowering code, we sometimes end up generating self VSX
copies. Specifically, things like this:
  %VSL2<def> = COPY %F2, %VSL2<imp-use,kill>
(where %F2 is really a sub-register of %VSL2, and so this copy is a nop)

This adds a small cleanup pass to remove these prior to post-RA scheduling.

llvm-svn: 204980
2014-03-27 23:12:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel 174e590966 [PowerPC] Select between VSX A-type and M-type FMA instructions just before RA
The VSX instruction set has two types of FMA instructions: A-type (where the
addend is taken from the output register) and M-type (where one of the product
operands is taken from the output register). This adds a small pass that runs
just after MI scheduling (and, thus, just before register allocation) that
mutates A-type instructions (that are created during isel) into M-type
instructions when:

 1. This will eliminate an otherwise-necessary copy of the addend

 2. One of the product operands is killed by the instruction

The "right" moment to make this decision is in between scheduling and register
allocation, because only there do we know whether or not one of the product
operands is killed by any particular instruction. Unfortunately, this also
makes the implementation somewhat complicated, because the MIs are not in SSA
form and we need to preserve the LiveIntervals analysis.

As a simple example, if we have:

%vreg5<def> = COPY %vreg9; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg9
%vreg5<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg5<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg16,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg17,%vreg16
  ...
  %vreg9<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg9<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg19,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg9,%vreg17,%vreg19
  ...

We can eliminate the copy by changing from the A-type to the
M-type instruction. This means:

  %vreg5<def,tied1> = XSMADDADP %vreg5<tied0>, %vreg17, %vreg16,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg17,%vreg16

is replaced by:

  %vreg16<def,tied1> = XSMADDMDP %vreg16<tied0>, %vreg18, %vreg9,
                        %RM<imp-use>; VSLRC:%vreg16,%vreg18,%vreg9

and we remove: %vreg5<def> = COPY %vreg9; VSLRC:%vreg5,%vreg9

llvm-svn: 204768
2014-03-25 23:29:21 +00:00
Hal Finkel 32854b0439 [PowerPC] Don't schedule VSX copy legalization unless VSX is enabled
There is no need to schedule this extra pass if it will have nothing to do.

llvm-svn: 204594
2014-03-24 09:51:41 +00:00
Hal Finkel 27774d9274 [PowerPC] Initial support for the VSX instruction set
VSX is an ISA extension supported on the POWER7 and later cores that enhances
floating-point vector and scalar capabilities. Among other things, this adds
<2 x double> support and generally helps to reduce register pressure.

The interesting part of this ISA feature is the register configuration: there
are 64 new 128-bit vector registers, the 32 of which are super-registers of the
existing 32 scalar floating-point registers, and the second 32 of which overlap
with the 32 Altivec vector registers. This makes things like vector insertion
and extraction tricky: this can be free but only if we force a restriction to
the right register subclass when needed. A new "minipass" PPCVSXCopy takes care
of this (although it could do a more-optimal job of it; see the comment about
unnecessary copies below).

Please note that, currently, VSX is not enabled by default when targeting
anything because it is not yet ready for that.  The assembler and disassembler
are fully implemented and tested. However:

 - CodeGen support causes miscompiles; test-suite runtime failures:
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/FreeBench/distray/distray
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/McCat/08-main/main
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/Olden/voronoi/voronoi
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/mafft/pairlocalalign
      MultiSource/Benchmarks/tramp3d-v4/tramp3d-v4
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/almabench
      SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/matmul_f64_4x4

 - The lowering currently falls back to using Altivec instructions far more
   than it should. Worse, there are some things that are scalarized through the
   stack that shouldn't be.

 - A lot of unnecessary copies make it past the optimizers, and this needs to
   be fixed.

 - Many more regression tests are needed.

Normally, I'd fix these things prior to committing, but there are some
students and other contributors who would like to work this, and so it makes
sense to move this development process upstream where it can be subject to the
regular code-review procedures.

llvm-svn: 203768
2014-03-13 07:58:58 +00:00
Will Schmidt acae468c8e Update the datalayout string for ppc64LE.
Update the datalayout string for ppc64LE.

llvm-svn: 203664
2014-03-12 14:59:17 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 24a542fd5c Don't avoid cfi instructions on the bg/p.
The integrated assembler now works for ppc. Since this was the last use of the
bg/p predicate and Hal says that it is now dead, drop the predicate too.

llvm-svn: 203269
2014-03-07 19:04:12 +00:00
Hal Finkel 940ab934d4 Add CR-bit tracking to the PowerPC backend for i1 values
This change enables tracking i1 values in the PowerPC backend using the
condition register bits. These bits can be treated on PowerPC as separate
registers; individual bit operations (and, or, xor, etc.) are supported.
Tracking booleans in CR bits has several advantages:

 - Reduction in register pressure (because we no longer need GPRs to store
   boolean values).

 - Logical operations on booleans can be handled more efficiently; we used to
   have to move all results from comparisons into GPRs, perform promoted
   logical operations in GPRs, and then move the result back into condition
   register bits to be used by conditional branches. This can be very
   inefficient, because the throughput of these CR <-> GPR moves have high
   latency and low throughput (especially when other associated instructions
   are accounted for).

 - On the POWER7 and similar cores, we can increase total throughput by using
   the CR bits. CR bit operations have a dedicated functional unit.

Most of this is more-or-less mechanical: Adjustments were needed in the
calling-convention code, support was added for spilling/restoring individual
condition-register bits, and conditional branch instruction definitions taking
specific CR bits were added (plus patterns and code for generating bit-level
operations).

This is enabled by default when running at -O2 and higher. For -O0 and -O1,
where the ability to debug is more important, this feature is disabled by
default. Individual CR bits do not have assigned DWARF register numbers,
and storing values in CR bits makes them invisible to the debugger.

It is critical, however, that we don't move i1 values that have been promoted
to larger values (such as those passed as function arguments) into bit
registers only to quickly turn around and move the values back into GPRs (such
as happens when values are returned by functions). A pair of target-specific
DAG combines are added to remove the trunc/extends in:
  trunc(binary-ops(binary-ops(zext(x), zext(y)), ...)
and:
  zext(binary-ops(binary-ops(trunc(x), trunc(y)), ...)
In short, we only want to use CR bits where some of the i1 values come from
comparisons or are used by conditional branches or selects. To put it another
way, if we can do the entire i1 computation in GPRs, then we probably should
(on the POWER7, the GPR-operation throughput is higher, and for all cores, the
CR <-> GPR moves are expensive).

POWER7 test-suite performance results (from 10 runs in each configuration):

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/mandel-2: 35% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Prolangs-C++/city/city: 21% speedup
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/automotive-susan: 23% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/huffbench: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/Large/sphereflake: 13% speedup
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++/mandel-text: 10% speedup

SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc-C++-EH/spirit: 10% slowdown
MultiSource/Applications/lemon/lemon: 8% slowdown

llvm-svn: 202451
2014-02-28 00:27:01 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 58873566b3 Make the llvm mangler depend only on DataLayout.
Before this patch any program that wanted to know the final symbol name of a
GlobalValue had to link with Target.

This patch implements a compromise solution where the mangler uses DataLayout.
This way, any tool that already links with Target (llc, clang) gets the exact
behavior as before and new IR files can be mangled without linking with Target.

With this patch the mangler is constructed with just a DataLayout and DataLayout
is extended to include the information the Mangler needs.

llvm-svn: 198438
2014-01-03 19:21:54 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 9ec26f395b Long doubles are required to be aligned to 128 bits and svr4 32 bits.
Clang was already getting this right.

llvm-svn: 197694
2013-12-19 16:23:59 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 988f35e999 Fix f64 and f128 for ppc-darwin.
This patch adds -f64:32:64 to 32 bit ppc darwin since a f64 inside a
structure are only 32 bit aligned.

The patch also drop -f128:64:128 from all ppc darwin, since f128 is
128 bit aligned.

llvm-svn: 197574
2013-12-18 15:06:25 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 382ee385fd One ppc32-darwin, a i64 inside a structure can have 32 bit alignment.
Thanks for Iain Sandoe for testing this with the original gcc.

Clang was already getting this right.

llvm-svn: 197572
2013-12-18 14:35:37 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 345d718d16 Fix the pointer size for the PS3 datalayout.
This will be tested from clang.

llvm-svn: 197501
2013-12-17 15:29:48 +00:00
Rafael Espindola bccb9d45ad The preferred alignment defaults to the abi alignment. Omit if it is the same.
llvm-svn: 197400
2013-12-16 18:01:51 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 8afbb28cea On DataLayout, omit the default of p:64:64:64.
llvm-svn: 197397
2013-12-16 17:15:29 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 1caa693a7b Assume defaults to produce smaller datalayout strings.
llvm-svn: 197249
2013-12-13 17:56:11 +00:00
Gabor Greif 5fde43bf2e typo in comment
llvm-svn: 197136
2013-12-12 08:00:34 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 5b3585871b Move PPC's getDataLayoutString out of line and document it better.
llvm-svn: 196987
2013-12-11 00:09:06 +00:00
Bill Schmidt 0a9170d931 [PowerPC] Support powerpc64le as a syntax-checking target.
This patch provides basic support for powerpc64le as an LLVM target.
However, use of this target will not actually generate little-endian
code.  Instead, use of the target will cause the correct little-endian
built-in defines to be generated, so that code that tests for
__LITTLE_ENDIAN__, for example, will be correctly parsed for
syntax-only testing.  Code generation will otherwise be the same as
powerpc64 (big-endian), for now.

The patch leaves open the possibility of creating a little-endian
PowerPC64 back end, but there is no immediate intent to create such a
thing.

The LLVM portions of this patch simply add ppc64le coverage everywhere
that ppc64 coverage currently exists.  There is nothing of any import
worth testing until such time as little-endian code generation is
implemented.  In the corresponding Clang patch, there is a new test
case variant to ensure that correct built-in defines for little-endian
code are generated.

llvm-svn: 187179
2013-07-26 01:35:43 +00:00
Bill Wendling afc1036f3e Access the TargetLoweringInfo from the TargetMachine object instead of caching it. The TLI may change between functions. No functionality change.
llvm-svn: 184349
2013-06-19 20:51:24 +00:00
Hal Finkel 8ca3884147 Add a PPCCTRLoops verification pass
When asserts are enabled, this adds a verification pass for PPC counter-loop
formation. Unfortunately, without sacrificing code quality, there is no better
way of forming counter-based loops except at the (late) IR level. This means
that we need to recognize, at the IR level, anything which might turn into a
function call (or indirect branch). Because this is currently a finite set of
things, and because SelectionDAG lowering is basic-block local, this can be
done. Nevertheless, it is fragile, and failure results in a miscompile. This
verification pass checks that all (reachable) counter-based branches are
dominated by a loop mtctr instruction, and that no instructions in between
clobber the counter register. If these conditions are not satisfied, then an
ICE will be triggered.

In short, this is to help us sleep better at night.

llvm-svn: 182295
2013-05-20 16:08:17 +00:00
Hal Finkel 25c1992bc7 Implement PPC counter loops as a late IR-level pass
The old PPCCTRLoops pass, like the Hexagon pass version from which it was
derived, could only handle some simple loops in canonical form. We cannot
directly adapt the new Hexagon hardware loops pass, however, because the
Hexagon pass contains a fundamental assumption that non-constant-trip-count
loops will contain a guard, and this is not always true (the result being that
incorrect negative counts can be generated). With this commit, we replace the
pass with a late IR-level pass which makes use of SE to calculate the
backedge-taken counts and safely generate the loop-count expressions (including
any necessary max() parts). This IR level pass inserts custom intrinsics that
are lowered into the desired decrement-and-branch instructions.

The most fragile part of this new implementation is that interfering uses of
the counter register must be detected on the IR level (and, on PPC, this also
includes any indirect branches in addition to function calls). Also, to make
all of this work, we need a variant of the mtctr instruction that is marked
as having side effects. Without this, machine-code level CSE, DCE, etc.
illegally transform the resulting code. Hopefully, this can be improved
in the future.

This new pass is smaller than the original (and much smaller than the new
Hexagon hardware loops pass), and can handle many additional cases correctly.
In addition, the preheader-creation code has been copied from LoopSimplify, and
after we decide on where it belongs, this code will be refactored so that it
can be explicitly shared (making this implementation even smaller).

The new test-case files ctrloop-{le,lt,ne}.ll have been adapted from tests for
the new Hexagon pass. There are a few classes of loops that this pass does not
transform (noted by FIXMEs in the files), but these deficiencies can be
addressed within the SE infrastructure (thus helping many other passes as well).

llvm-svn: 181927
2013-05-15 21:37:41 +00:00
Rafael Espindola 227144c23c Remove the MachineMove class.
It was just a less powerful and more confusing version of
MCCFIInstruction. A side effect is that, since MCCFIInstruction uses
dwarf register numbers, calls to getDwarfRegNum are pushed out, which
should allow further simplifications.

I left the MachineModuleInfo::addFrameMove interface unchanged since
this patch was already fairly big.

llvm-svn: 181680
2013-05-13 01:16:13 +00:00
Hal Finkel 5711eca19c Allow PPC B and BLR to be if-converted into some predicated forms
This enables us to form predicated branches (which are the same conditional
branches we had before) and also a larger set of predicated returns (including
instructions like bdnzlr which is a conditional return and loop-counter
decrement all in one).

At the moment, if conversion does not capture all possible opportunities. A
simple example is provided in early-ret2.ll, where if conversion forms one
predicated return, and then the PPCEarlyReturn pass picks up the other one. So,
at least for now, we'll keep both mechanisms.

llvm-svn: 179134
2013-04-09 22:58:37 +00:00
Hal Finkel b5aa7e54d9 Generate PPC early conditional returns
PowerPC has a conditional branch to the link register (return) instruction: BCLR.
This should be used any time when we'd otherwise have a conditional branch to a
return. This adds a small pass, PPCEarlyReturn, which runs just prior to the
branch selection pass (and, importantly, after block placement) to generate
these conditional returns when possible. It will also eliminate unconditional
branches to returns (these happen rarely; most of the time these have already
been tail duplicated by the time PPCEarlyReturn is invoked). This is a nice
optimization for small functions that do not maintain a stack frame.

llvm-svn: 179026
2013-04-08 16:24:03 +00:00
Hal Finkel ed6a28597b Enable early if conversion on PPC
On cores for which we know the misprediction penalty, and we have
the isel instruction, we can profitably perform early if conversion.
This enables us to replace some small branch sequences with selects
and avoid the potential stalls from mispredicting the branches.

Enabling this feature required implementing canInsertSelect and
insertSelect in PPCInstrInfo; isel code in PPCISelLowering was
refactored to use these functions as well.

llvm-svn: 178926
2013-04-05 23:29:01 +00:00
Hal Finkel 4e5ca9e578 Initial implementation of PPCTargetTransformInfo
This provides a place to add customized operation cost information and
control some other target-specific IR-level transformations.

The only non-trivial logic in this checkin assigns a higher cost to
unaligned loads and stores (covered by the included test case).

llvm-svn: 173520
2013-01-25 23:05:59 +00:00
Chandler Carruth 664e354de7 Switch TargetTransformInfo from an immutable analysis pass that requires
a TargetMachine to construct (and thus isn't always available), to an
analysis group that supports layered implementations much like
AliasAnalysis does. This is a pretty massive change, with a few parts
that I was unable to easily separate (sorry), so I'll walk through it.

The first step of this conversion was to make TargetTransformInfo an
analysis group, and to sink the nonce implementations in
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTranformInfo into
a NoTargetTransformInfo pass. This allows other passes to add a hard
requirement on TTI, and assume they will always get at least on
implementation.

The TargetTransformInfo analysis group leverages the delegation chaining
trick that AliasAnalysis uses, where the base class for the analysis
group delegates to the previous analysis *pass*, allowing all but tho
NoFoo analysis passes to only implement the parts of the interfaces they
support. It also introduces a new trick where each pass in the group
retains a pointer to the top-most pass that has been initialized. This
allows passes to implement one API in terms of another API and benefit
when some other pass above them in the stack has more precise results
for the second API.

The second step of this conversion is to create a pass that implements
the TargetTransformInfo analysis using the target-independent
abstractions in the code generator. This replaces the
ScalarTargetTransformImpl and VectorTargetTransformImpl classes in
lib/Target with a single pass in lib/CodeGen called
BasicTargetTransformInfo. This class actually provides most of the TTI
functionality, basing it upon the TargetLowering abstraction and other
information in the target independent code generator.

The third step of the conversion adds support to all TargetMachines to
register custom analysis passes. This allows building those passes with
access to TargetLowering or other target-specific classes, and it also
allows each target to customize the set of analysis passes desired in
the pass manager. The baseline LLVMTargetMachine implements this
interface to add the BasicTTI pass to the pass manager, and all of the
tools that want to support target-aware TTI passes call this routine on
whatever target machine they end up with to add the appropriate passes.

The fourth step of the conversion created target-specific TTI analysis
passes for the X86 and ARM backends. These passes contain the custom
logic that was previously in their extensions of the
ScalarTargetTransformInfo and VectorTargetTransformInfo interfaces.
I separated them into their own file, as now all of the interface bits
are private and they just expose a function to create the pass itself.
Then I extended these target machines to set up a custom set of analysis
passes, first adding BasicTTI as a fallback, and then adding their
customized TTI implementations.

The fourth step required logic that was shared between the target
independent layer and the specific targets to move to a different
interface, as they no longer derive from each other. As a consequence,
a helper functions were added to TargetLowering representing the common
logic needed both in the target implementation and the codegen
implementation of the TTI pass. While technically this is the only
change that could have been committed separately, it would have been
a nightmare to extract.

The final step of the conversion was just to delete all the old
boilerplate. This got rid of the ScalarTargetTransformInfo and
VectorTargetTransformInfo classes, all of the support in all of the
targets for producing instances of them, and all of the support in the
tools for manually constructing a pass based around them.

Now that TTI is a relatively normal analysis group, two things become
straightforward. First, we can sink it into lib/Analysis which is a more
natural layer for it to live. Second, clients of this interface can
depend on it *always* being available which will simplify their code and
behavior. These (and other) simplifications will follow in subsequent
commits, this one is clearly big enough.

Finally, I'm very aware that much of the comments and documentation
needs to be updated. As soon as I had this working, and plausibly well
commented, I wanted to get it committed and in front of the build bots.
I'll be doing a few passes over documentation later if it sticks.

Commits to update DragonEgg and Clang will be made presently.

llvm-svn: 171681
2013-01-07 01:37:14 +00:00
Chandler Carruth ed0881b2a6 Use the new script to sort the includes of every file under lib.
Sooooo many of these had incorrect or strange main module includes.
I have manually inspected all of these, and fixed the main module
include to be the nearest plausible thing I could find. If you own or
care about any of these source files, I encourage you to take some time
and check that these edits were sensible. I can't have broken anything
(I strictly added headers, and reordered them, never removed), but they
may not be the headers you'd really like to identify as containing the
API being implemented.

Many forward declarations and missing includes were added to a header
files to allow them to parse cleanly when included first. The main
module rule does in fact have its merits. =]

llvm-svn: 169131
2012-12-03 16:50:05 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 2289f2c932 Implement a basic VectorTargetTransformInfo interface to be used by the loop and bb vectorizers for modeling the cost of instructions.
llvm-svn: 166593
2012-10-24 17:22:41 +00:00
Nadav Rotem 5dc203e8f4 Reapply the TargerTransformInfo changes, minus the changes to LSR and Lowerinvoke.
llvm-svn: 166248
2012-10-18 23:22:48 +00:00
Bob Wilson d6d9ccca38 Temporarily revert the TargetTransform changes.
The TargetTransform changes are breaking LTO bootstraps of clang.  I am
working with Nadav to figure out the problem, but I am reverting it for now
to get our buildbots working.

This reverts svn commits: 165665 165669 165670 165786 165787 165997
and I have also reverted clang svn 165741

llvm-svn: 166168
2012-10-18 05:43:52 +00:00
Nadav Rotem e10328737d Add a new interface to allow IR-level passes to access codegen-specific information.
llvm-svn: 165665
2012-10-10 22:04:55 +00:00
Micah Villmow cdfe20b97f Move TargetData to DataLayout.
llvm-svn: 165402
2012-10-08 16:38:25 +00:00
Evan Cheng 39e90029a2 Target option DisableJumpTables is a gross hack. Move it to TargetLowering instead.
llvm-svn: 159611
2012-07-02 22:39:56 +00:00
Bob Wilson bbd38dd9c0 Add all codegen passes to the PassManager via TargetPassConfig.
This is a preliminary step toward having TargetPassConfig be able to
start and stop the compilation at specified passes for unit testing
and debugging.  No functionality change.

llvm-svn: 159567
2012-07-02 19:48:31 +00:00
Hal Finkel eb50c2d4a4 Enable tail merging on PPC.
Tail merging had been disabled on PPC because it would disturb bundling decisions
made during pre-RA scheduling on the 970 cores. Now, however, all bundling decisions
are made during post-RA scheduling, and tail merging is generally beneficial (the
average test-suite speedup is insignificantly positive).

Largest test-suite speedups:
MultiSource/Benchmarks/mediabench/gsm/toast/toast - 30%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/BitBench/uuencode/uuencode - 23%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/ary - 21%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Stanford/Queens - 17%

Largest slowdowns:
MultiSource/Benchmarks/MiBench/security-sha/security-sha - 24%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/McCat/03-testtrie/testtrie - 22%
MultiSource/Applications/JM/ldecod/ldecod - 14%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/mediabench/g721/g721encode/encode - 9%

This is improved by using full (instead of just critical) anti-dependency breaking,
but doing so still causes miscompiles and so cannot yet be enabled by default.

llvm-svn: 158259
2012-06-09 03:14:50 +00:00
Hal Finkel c6b5debb40 Enable PPC CTR loop formation by default.
Thanks to Jakob's help, this now causes no new test suite failures!

Over the entire test suite, this gives an average 1% speedup. The largest speedups are:
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Misc/pi - 108%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/CoyoteBench/lpbench - 54%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Prolangs-C/unix-smail/unix-smail - 50%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout/ary3 - 32%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/matrix - 30%

The largest slowdowns are:
MultiSource/Benchmarks/mediabench/gsm/toast/toast - -30%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/Prolangs-C/bison/mybison - -25%
MultiSource/Benchmarks/BitBench/uuencode/uuencode - -22%
MultiSource/Applications/d/make_dparser - -14%
SingleSource/Benchmarks/Shootout-C++/ary - -13%

In light of these slowdowns, additional profiling work is obviously needed!

llvm-svn: 158223
2012-06-08 19:19:53 +00:00
Hal Finkel 821e00121c Disable the PPC CTR-Loops pass by default.
The pass itself works well, but the something in the Machine* infrastructure
does not understand terminators which define registers. Without the ability
to use the block-placement pass, etc. this causes performance regressions (and
so is turned off by default). Turning off the analysis turns off the problems
with the Machine* infrastructure.

llvm-svn: 158206
2012-06-08 15:38:25 +00:00
Hal Finkel 96c2d4d945 Add the PPCCTRLoops pass: a PPC machine-code-level optimization pass to form CTR-based loop branching code.
This pass is derived from the Hexagon HardwareLoops pass. The only significant enhancement over the Hexagon
pass is that PPCCTRLoops will also attempt to delete the replaced add and compare operations if they are
no longer otherwise used. Also, invalid preheader DebugLoc is not used.

llvm-svn: 158204
2012-06-08 15:38:21 +00:00
Bill Wendling b12f16e75f Change the PassManager from a reference to a pointer.
The TargetPassManager's default constructor wants to initialize the PassManager
to 'null'. But it's illegal to bind a null reference to a null l-value. Make the
ivar a pointer instead.
PR12468

llvm-svn: 155902
2012-05-01 08:27:43 +00:00
Hal Finkel 7591afa235 The binutils for the IBM BG/P are too old to support CFI.
llvm-svn: 153886
2012-04-02 19:09:04 +00:00
Craig Topper b25fda95f6 Reorder includes in Target backends to following coding standards. Remove some superfluous forward declarations.
llvm-svn: 152997
2012-03-17 18:46:09 +00:00
Andrew Trick 58648e4e98 Move pass configuration out of pass constructors: BranchFolderPass
llvm-svn: 150095
2012-02-08 21:22:48 +00:00
Andrew Trick f8ea108c05 TargetPassConfig: confine the MC configuration to TargetMachine.
Passes prior to instructon selection are now split into separate configurable stages.
Header dependencies are simplified.
The bulk of this diff is simply removal of the silly DisableVerify flags.

Sorry for the target header churn. Attempting to stabilize them.

llvm-svn: 149754
2012-02-04 02:56:59 +00:00
Andrew Trick ccb673659a Added TargetPassConfig. The first little step toward configuring codegen passes.
Allows command line overrides to be centralized in LLVMTargetMachine.cpp.
LLVMTargetMachine can intercept common passes and give precedence to command line overrides.
Allows adding "internal" target configuration options without touching TargetOptions.
Encapsulates the PassManager.
Provides a good point to initialize all CodeGen passes so that Pass ID's can be used in APIs.
Allows modifying the target configuration hooks without rebuilding the world.

llvm-svn: 149672
2012-02-03 05:12:41 +00:00
Andrew Trick 808a7a6ce6 whitespace
llvm-svn: 149671
2012-02-03 05:12:30 +00:00
David Blaikie a379b18173 Unweaken vtables as per http://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#ll_virtual_anch
llvm-svn: 146960
2011-12-20 02:50:00 +00:00
Nick Lewycky 50f02cb21b Move global variables in TargetMachine into new TargetOptions class. As an API
change, now you need a TargetOptions object to create a TargetMachine. Clang
patch to follow.

One small functionality change in PTX. PTX had commented out the machine
verifier parts in their copy of printAndVerify. That now calls the version in
LLVMTargetMachine. Users of PTX who need verification disabled should rely on
not passing the command-line flag to enable it.

llvm-svn: 145714
2011-12-02 22:16:29 +00:00
Evan Cheng ecb2908bf9 Sink codegen optimization level into MCCodeGenInfo along side relocation model
and code model. This eliminates the need to pass OptLevel flag all over the
place and makes it possible for any codegen pass to use this information.

llvm-svn: 144788
2011-11-16 08:38:26 +00:00
Evan Cheng 2bb4035707 Move TargetRegistry and TargetSelect from Target to Support where they belong.
These are strictly utilities for registering targets and components.

llvm-svn: 138450
2011-08-24 18:08:43 +00:00
Evan Cheng 61d4a20f0f Refactor PPC target to separate MC routines from Target routines.
llvm-svn: 135942
2011-07-25 19:53:23 +00:00
Evan Cheng efd9b4240f - Move CodeModel from a TargetMachine global option to MCCodeGenInfo.
- Introduce JITDefault code model. This tells targets to set different default
  code model for JIT. This eliminates the ugly hack in TargetMachine where
  code model is changed after construction.

llvm-svn: 135580
2011-07-20 07:51:56 +00:00
Evan Cheng 2129f59637 Introduce MCCodeGenInfo, which keeps information that can affect codegen
(including compilation, assembly). Move relocation model Reloc::Model from
TargetMachine to MCCodeGenInfo so it's accessible even without TargetMachine.

llvm-svn: 135468
2011-07-19 06:37:02 +00:00
Evan Cheng 1705ab00ab Rename createAsmInfo to createMCAsmInfo and move registration code to MCTargetDesc to prepare for next round of changes.
llvm-svn: 135219
2011-07-14 23:50:31 +00:00
Evan Cheng 4d1ca96bfc Eliminate asm parser's dependency on TargetMachine:
- Each target asm parser now creates its own MCSubtatgetInfo (if needed).
- Changed AssemblerPredicate to take subtarget features which tablegen uses
  to generate asm matcher subtarget feature queries. e.g.
  "ModeThumb,FeatureThumb2" is translated to
  "(Bits & ModeThumb) != 0 && (Bits & FeatureThumb2) != 0".

llvm-svn: 134678
2011-07-08 01:53:10 +00:00
Evan Cheng fe6e405e8c Fix the ridiculous SubtargetFeatures API where it implicitly expects CPU name to
be the first encoded as the first feature. It then uses the CPU name to look up
features / scheduling itineray even though clients know full well the CPU name
being used to query these properties.

The fix is to just have the clients explictly pass the CPU name!

llvm-svn: 134127
2011-06-30 01:53:36 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 2b9b0e3748 ADT/Triple: Move a variety of clients to using isOSDarwin() and isOSWindows()
predicates.

llvm-svn: 129816
2011-04-19 21:14:45 +00:00
Rafael Espindola b3eca9bb71 Add support for the --noexecstack option.
llvm-svn: 124077
2011-01-23 17:55:27 +00:00
Anton Korobeynikov 2f93128109 Rename TargetFrameInfo into TargetFrameLowering. Also, put couple of FIXMEs and fixes here and there.
llvm-svn: 123170
2011-01-10 12:39:04 +00:00
Chris Lattner aac9fa731d Wire up primitive support in the assembler backend for writing .o files
directly on the mac.  This is very early, doesn't support relocations and
has a terrible hack to avoid .machine from being printed, but despite
that it generates an bitwise-identical-to-cctools .o file for stuff like 
this:

  define i32 @test() nounwind { ret i32 42 }

I don't plan to continue pushing this forward, but if anyone else was
interested in doing it, it should be really straight-forward.

llvm-svn: 119136
2010-11-15 08:49:58 +00:00
Chris Lattner 9ec375c8ea Implement a basic MCCodeEmitter for PPC. This doesn't handle
fixups yet, and doesn't handle actually encoding operand values,
but this is enough for llc -show-mc-encoding to show the base
instruction encoding information, e.g.:

	mflr r0                         ; encoding: [0x7c,0x08,0x02,0xa6]
	stw r0, 8(r1)                   ; encoding: [0x90,0x00,0x00,0x00]
	stwu r1, -64(r1)                ; encoding: [0x94,0x00,0x00,0x00]
Ltmp0:
	lhz r4, 4(r3)                   ; encoding: [0xa0,0x00,0x00,0x00]
	cmplwi cr0, r4, 8               ; encoding: [0x28,0x00,0x00,0x00]
	beq cr0, LBB0_2                 ; encoding: [0x40,0x00,0x00,0x00]

llvm-svn: 119116
2010-11-15 04:16:32 +00:00
Anton Korobeynikov f7183edb59 First step of huge frame-related refactoring: move emit{Prologue,Epilogue} out of TargetRegisterInfo to TargetFrameInfo, which is definitely much better suitable place
llvm-svn: 119097
2010-11-15 00:06:54 +00:00
Dan Gohman bb919dfb6b Implement a bunch more TargetSelectionDAGInfo infrastructure.
Move EmitTargetCodeForMemcpy, EmitTargetCodeForMemset, and
EmitTargetCodeForMemmove out of TargetLowering and into
SelectionDAGInfo to exercise this.

llvm-svn: 103481
2010-05-11 17:31:57 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar fed917e078 TargetRegistry: Fix create{AsmInfo,MCDisassembler} to return non-const objects.
llvm-svn: 99097
2010-03-20 22:36:22 +00:00
Anton Korobeynikov ae4ccc10da Preliminary patch to improve dwarf EH generation - Hooks to return Personality / FDE / LSDA / TType encoding depending on target / options (e.g. code model / relocation model) - MCIzation of Dwarf EH printer to use encoding information - Stub generation for ELF target (needed for indirect references) - Some other small changes here and there
llvm-svn: 96285
2010-02-15 22:35:59 +00:00
Chris Lattner a3fa43932d remove dead code.
llvm-svn: 95141
2010-02-02 21:52:03 +00:00
Chris Lattner 0cd6c2a047 eliminate all the dead addSimpleCodeEmitter implementations.
eliminate random "code emitter" stuff in Alpha, except for
the JIT path.  Next up, remove the template cruft.

llvm-svn: 95131
2010-02-02 21:31:47 +00:00
Chris Lattner d1e821f7eb remove PPCMachOWriterInfo.
llvm-svn: 95111
2010-02-02 19:23:55 +00:00
Bill Wendling 220c29465e Even more explanation.
llvm-svn: 93841
2010-01-19 02:44:01 +00:00
Bill Wendling c592725fbb - Add getLSDAEncoding to the PowerPC backend.
- Greatly improve the comments to the getLSDAEncoding method.

llvm-svn: 93796
2010-01-18 22:36:35 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar ad36e8aceb Pass StringRef by value.
llvm-svn: 86251
2009-11-06 10:58:06 +00:00
Chris Lattner 054574666a rename COFFMCAsmInfo -> MCAsmInfoCOFF, likewise for darwin.
llvm-svn: 79773
2009-08-22 21:03:30 +00:00
Chris Lattner 7b26fce23e Rename TargetAsmInfo (and its subclasses) to MCAsmInfo.
llvm-svn: 79763
2009-08-22 20:48:53 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 86c065dd68 Revert 78892 and 78895, these break generating working executables on
x86_64-apple-darwin10.

--- Reverse-merging r78895 into '.':
U    test/CodeGen/PowerPC/2008-12-12-EH.ll
U    lib/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.cpp
--- Reverse-merging r78892 into '.':
U    include/llvm/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.h
U    lib/Target/X86/X86TargetAsmInfo.cpp
U    lib/Target/X86/X86TargetAsmInfo.h
U    lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetAsmInfo.h
U    lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetMachine.cpp
U    lib/Target/ARM/ARMTargetAsmInfo.cpp
U    lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetAsmInfo.cpp
U    lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetAsmInfo.h
U    lib/Target/PowerPC/PPCTargetMachine.cpp
G    lib/Target/DarwinTargetAsmInfo.cpp

llvm-svn: 78919
2009-08-13 17:03:38 +00:00
Chris Lattner eb68198145 fix a minor fixme. When building with SL and later tools, the ".eh" symbols
don't need to be exported from the .o files.

llvm-svn: 78892
2009-08-13 05:30:22 +00:00
Chris Lattner 9a6cf91261 Change TargetAsmInfo to be constructed via TargetRegistry from a Target+Triple
pair instead of from a virtual method on TargetMachine.  This cuts the final
ties of TargetAsmInfo to TargetMachine, meaning that MC can now use 
TargetAsmInfo.

llvm-svn: 78802
2009-08-12 07:22:17 +00:00
Chris Lattner 97868fe1b9 second half of commit.
llvm-svn: 78744
2009-08-11 22:52:15 +00:00
Chris Lattner 2c30970b22 pass the TargetTriple down from each target ctor to the
LLVMTargetMachine ctor.  It is currently unused.

llvm-svn: 78711
2009-08-11 20:42:37 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar c3719c36e6 Move most targets TargetMachine constructor to only taking a target triple.
- The C, C++, MSIL, and Mips backends still need the module.

llvm-svn: 77927
2009-08-02 23:37:13 +00:00
Daniel Dunbar 31b44e8f6c Normalize Subtarget constructors to take a target triple string instead of
Module*.

Also, dropped uses of TargetMachine where unnecessary. The only target which
still takes a TargetMachine& is Mips, I would appreciate it if someone would
normalize this to match other targets.

llvm-svn: 77918
2009-08-02 22:11:08 +00:00