Patch to allow (v)pclmulqdq to be commuted - swaps the src registers and inverts the immediate (low/high) src mask.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7180
llvm-svn: 227141
Minor tweak now that D7042 is complete, we can enable stack folding for (V)MOVDDUP and do proper testing.
Added missing AVX ymm folding patterns and fixed alignment for AVX VMOVSLDUP / VMOVSHDUP.
llvm-svn: 226873
Added most of the missing integer vector folding patterns for SSE (to SSE42) and AVX1.
The most useful of these are probably the i32/i64 extraction, i8/i16/i32/i64 insertions, zero/sign extension, unsigned saturation subtractions, i64 subtractions and the variable mask blends (pblendvb) - others include CLMUL, SSE42 string comparisons and bit tests.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7094
llvm-svn: 226745
Now that we can create much more exhaustive X86 memory folding tests, this patch adds the missing AVX1/F16C floating point instruction stack foldings we can easily test for including the scalar intrinsics (add, div, max, min, mul, sub), conversions float/int to double, half precision conversions, rounding, dot product and bit test. The patch also adds a couple of obviously missing SSE instructions (more to follow once we have full SSE testing).
Now that scalar folding is working it broke a very old test (2006-10-07-ScalarSSEMiscompile.ll) - this test appears to make no sense as its trying to ensure that a scalar subtraction isn't folded as it 'would zero the top elts of the loaded vector' - this test just appears to be wrong to me.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7055
llvm-svn: 226513
A pass that adds random noops to X86 binaries to introduce diversity with the goal of increasing security against most return-oriented programming attacks.
Command line options:
-noop-insertion // Enable noop insertion.
-noop-insertion-percentage=X // X% of assembly instructions will have a noop prepended (default: 50%, requires -noop-insertion)
-max-noops-per-instruction=X // Randomly generate X noops per instruction. ie. roll the dice X times with probability set above (default: 1). This doesn't guarantee X noop instructions.
In addition, the following 'quick switch' in clang enables basic diversity using default settings (currently: noop insertion and schedule randomization; it is intended to be extended in the future).
-fdiversify
This is the llvm part of the patch.
clang part: D3393
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3392
Patch by Stephen Crane (@rinon)
llvm-svn: 225908
Overall this seems simpler. It reduces duplication of patterns between both modes and it simplifies the memory folding/unfolding tables as they don't need to create fake instructions just to keep track of 64-bitness.
llvm-svn: 225252
The assembler backend will relax to the long form if necessary. This removes a swap from long form to short form in the MCInstLowering code. Selecting the long form used to be required by the old JIT.
llvm-svn: 225242
Added RegOp2MemOpTable4 to transform 4th operand from register to memory in merge-masked versions of instructions.
Added lowering tests.
llvm-svn: 224516
Added a missing memory folding relationship for the (V)CVTPD2PS instruction - we can safely fold these for stack reloads.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6663
llvm-svn: 224383
Adds the various "rm" instruction variants into the list of instructions that have a partial register update. Also adds all variants of SQRTSD that were missing in the original list.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6620
llvm-svn: 224246
Lowering patterns were written through avx512_broadcast_pat multiclass as pattern generates VBROADCAST and COPY_TO_REGCLASS nodes.
Added lowering tests.
llvm-svn: 223804
Under many circumstances the stack is not 32-byte aligned, resulting in the use of the vmovups/vmovupd/vmovdqu instructions when inserting ymm reloads/spills.
This minor patch adds these instructions to the isFrameLoadOpcode/isFrameStoreOpcode helpers so that they can be correctly identified and not be treated as folded reloads/spills.
This has also been noticed by http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=18846 where it was causing redundant spills - I've added a reduced test case at test/CodeGen/X86/pr18846.ll
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6252
llvm-svn: 222281
This commit adds a new pass that can inject checks before indirect calls to
make sure that these calls target known locations. It supports three types of
checks and, at compile time, it can take the name of a custom function to call
when an indirect call check fails. The default failure function ignores the
error and continues.
This pass incidentally moves the function JumpInstrTables::transformType from
private to public and makes it static (with a new argument that specifies the
table type to use); this is so that the CFI code can transform function types
at call sites to determine which jump-instruction table to use for the check at
that site.
Also, this removes support for jumptables in ARM, pending further performance
analysis and discussion.
Review: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4167
llvm-svn: 221708
Fixed an issue with the (v)cvttps2dq and (v)cvttpd2dq instructions being incorrectly put in the 2 source operand folding tables instead of the 1 source operand and added the missing SSE/AVX versions.
Also added missing (v)cvtps2dq and (v)cvtpd2dq instructions to the folding tables.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6001
llvm-svn: 221489
Example:
define <4 x i32> @test(<4 x i32> %a, <4 x i32> %b) {
%shuffle = shufflevector <4 x i32> %a, <4 x i32> %b, <4 x i32> <i32 4, i32 5, i32 6, i32 3>
ret <4 x i32> %shuffle
}
Before llc (-mattr=+sse4.1), produced the following assembly instruction:
pblendw $4294967103, %xmm1, %xmm0
After
pblendw $63, %xmm1, %xmm0
llvm-svn: 221455
Added missing memory folding for the (V)CVTDQ2PS instructions - we can safely fold these (but not the (V)CVTDQ2PD versions which have a register/memory size discrepancy in the source operand). I've added a test case demonstrating that stack folding now works.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5981
llvm-svn: 221407
Patch to allow (v)blendps, (v)blendpd, (v)pblendw and vpblendd instructions to be commuted - swaps the src registers and inverts the blend mask.
This is primarily to improve memory folding (see new tests), but it also improves the quality of shuffles (see modified tests).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6015
llvm-svn: 221313
It appears to ignore or find ambiguous MachineInstrBuilder's conversion
operators that allow conversion to MachineInstr* and
MachineBasicBlock::bundle_iterator.
As a workaround, add an explicit way to get the MachineInstr.
llvm-svn: 221017
Tidied up some entries in the folding tables so that they are under the correct comment section (they were categorised as AVX2 instructions when they're AVX1).
Minor patch agreed with qcolombet.
llvm-svn: 220613
This patch improves support for commutative instructions in the x86 memory folding implementation by attempting to fold a commuted version of the instruction if the original folding fails - if that folding fails as well the instruction is 're-commuted' back to its original order before returning.
Updated version of r219584 (reverted in r219595) - the commutation attempt now explicitly ensures that neither of the commuted source operands are tied to the destination operand / register, which was the source of all the regressions that occurred with the original patch attempt.
Added additional regression test case provided by Joerg Sonnenberger.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5818
llvm-svn: 220239
This patch improves support for commutative instructions in the x86 memory folding implementation by attempting to fold a commuted version of the instruction if the original folding fails - if that folding fails as well the instruction is 're-commuted' back to its original order before returning.
This mainly helps the stack inliner better fold reloads of 3 (or more) operand instructions (VEX encoded SSE etc.) but by performing this in the lowest foldMemoryOperandImpl implementation it also replaces the X86InstrInfo::optimizeLoadInstr version and is now used by FastISel too.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5701
llvm-svn: 219584
This trades a (register-renamer-friendly) movaps for a floating point
/ integer domain cross. That is a very bad trade, even on architectures
where domain crossing is relatively fast. On any chip where there is
even a cycle stall, this is a Very Bad Idea. It doesn't even seem likely
to cause a spill to be introduced because the reason for the copy is to
destructively shuffle in place.
Thanks to Ben Kramer for fixing a bug in this code that my new shuffle
lowering exposed and highlighting that perhaps it should just go away.
=]
llvm-svn: 219090
Summary:
Update segmented-stacks*.ll tests with x32 target case and make
corresponding changes to make them pass.
Test Plan: tests updated with x32 target
Reviewers: nadav, rafael, dschuff
Subscribers: llvm-commits, zinovy.nis
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5245
llvm-svn: 218247
Peephole optimization was folding MOVSDrm, which is a zero-extending double
precision floating point load, into ADDPDrr, which is a SIMD add of two packed
double precision floating point values.
(before)
%vreg21<def> = MOVSDrm <fi#0>, 1, %noreg, 0, %noreg; mem:LD8[%7](align=16)(tbaa=<badref>) VR128:%vreg21
%vreg23<def,tied1> = ADDPDrr %vreg20<tied0>, %vreg21; VR128:%vreg23,%vreg20,%vreg21
(after)
%vreg23<def,tied1> = ADDPDrm %vreg20<tied0>, <fi#0>, 1, %noreg, 0, %noreg; mem:LD8[%7](align=16)(tbaa=<badref>) VR128:%vreg23,%vreg20
X86InstrInfo::foldMemoryOperandImpl already had the logic that prevented this
from happening. However the check wasn't being conducted for loads from stack
objects. This commit factors out the logic into a new function and uses it for
checking loads from stack slots are not zero-extending loads.
rdar://problem/18236850
llvm-svn: 217799
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
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
address of the stack guard was being spilled to the stack.
Previously the address of the stack guard would get spilled to the stack if it
was impossible to keep it in a register. This patch introduces a new target
independent node and pseudo instruction which gets expanded post-RA to a
sequence of instructions that load the stack guard value. Register allocator
can now just remat the value when it can't keep it in a register.
<rdar://problem/12475629>
llvm-svn: 213967
Make use of helper functions to simplify the branch and compare instruction
selection in FastISel. Also add test cases for compare and conditonal branch.
llvm-svn: 211077
It includes a pass that rewrites all indirect calls to jumptable functions to pass through these tables.
This also adds backend support for generating the jump-instruction tables on ARM and X86.
Note that since the jumptable attribute creates a second function pointer for a
function, any function marked with jumptable must also be marked with unnamed_addr.
llvm-svn: 210280
According to Intel Software Optimization Manual on Silvermont in some cases LEA
is better to be replaced with ADD instructions:
"The rule of thumb for ADDs and LEAs is that it is justified to use LEA
with a valid index and/or displacement for non-destructive destination purposes
(especially useful for stack offset cases), or to use a SCALE.
Otherwise, ADD(s) are preferable."
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3826
llvm-svn: 209198
For example
tzcntl %edi, %ebx
testl %edi, %edi
je .label
can be rewritten into
tzcntl %edi, %ebx
jb .label
A minor complication is that tzcnt sets CF instead of ZF when the input
is zero, we have to rewrite users of the flags from ZF to CF. Currently
we recognize patterns using lzcnt, tzcnt and popcnt.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D3454
llvm-svn: 208788
system headers above the includes of generated '.inc' files that
actually contain code. In a few targets this was already done pretty
consistently, but it wasn't done *really* consistently anywhere. It is
strictly cleaner IMO and necessary in a bunch of places where the
DEBUG_TYPE is referenced from the generated code. Consistency with the
necessary places trumps. Hopefully the build bots are OK with the
movement of intrin.h...
llvm-svn: 206838
behavior based on other files defining DEBUG_TYPE, which means it cannot
define DEBUG_TYPE at all. This is actually better IMO as it forces folks
to define relevant DEBUG_TYPEs for their files. However, it requires all
files that currently use DEBUG(...) to define a DEBUG_TYPE if they don't
already. I've updated all such files in LLVM and will do the same for
other upstream projects.
This still leaves one important change in how LLVM uses the DEBUG_TYPE
macro going forward: we need to only define the macro *after* header
files have been #include-ed. Previously, this wasn't possible because
Debug.h required the macro to be pre-defined. This commit removes that.
By defining DEBUG_TYPE after the includes two things are fixed:
- Header files that need to provide a DEBUG_TYPE for some inline code
can do so by defining the macro before their inline code and undef-ing
it afterward so the macro does not escape.
- We no longer have rampant ODR violations due to including headers with
different DEBUG_TYPE definitions. This may be mostly an academic
violation today, but with modules these types of violations are easy
to check for and potentially very relevant.
Where necessary to suppor headers with DEBUG_TYPE, I have moved the
definitions below the includes in this commit. I plan to move the rest
of the DEBUG_TYPE macros in LLVM in subsequent commits; this one is big
enough.
The comments in Debug.h, which were hilariously out of date already,
have been updated to reflect the recommended practice going forward.
llvm-svn: 206822
TargetInstrInfo::findCommutedOpIndices to enable VFMA*231 commutation, rather
than abusing commuteInstruction.
Thanks very much for the suggestion guys!
llvm-svn: 205489
on FMA3 memory operands. FMA3 instructions are VEX encoded, so they can load
from unaligned memory.
Testcase to follow, along with related patch.
<rdar://problem/16478629>
llvm-svn: 205472
Adds the different broadcast instructions to the ReplaceableInstrsAVX2 table.
That way the ExeDepsFix pass can take better decisions when AVX2 broadcasts are
across domain (int <-> float).
In particular, prior to this patch we were generating:
vpbroadcastd LCPI1_0(%rip), %ymm2
vpand %ymm2, %ymm0, %ymm0
vmaxps %ymm1, %ymm0, %ymm0 ## <- domain change penalty
Now, we generate the following nice sequence where everything is in the float
domain:
vbroadcastss LCPI1_0(%rip), %ymm2
vandps %ymm2, %ymm0, %ymm0
vmaxps %ymm1, %ymm0, %ymm0
<rdar://problem/16354675>
llvm-svn: 204770
operator* on the by-operand iterators to return a MachineOperand& rather than
a MachineInstr&. At this point they almost behave like normal iterators!
Again, this requires making some existing loops more verbose, but should pave
the way for the big range-based for-loop cleanups in the future.
llvm-svn: 203865
It looks like these pseudos were only used for pattern matching. Def pats are
the appropriate way to do that. As a bonus, these intrinsics will now have
memory operands folded properly, and better FMA3 variants selected where
appropriate (see r199933).
<rdar://problem/15611947>
llvm-svn: 200577
Added scalar compare VCMPSS, VCMPSD.
Implemented LowerSELECT for scalar FP operations.
I replaced FSETCCss, FSETCCsd with one node type FSETCCs.
Node extract_vector_elt(v16i1/v8i1, idx) returns an element of type i1.
llvm-svn: 197384
target independent.
Most of the x86 specific stackmap/patchpoint handling was necessitated by the
use of the native address-mode format for frame index operands. PEI has now
been modified to treat stackmap/patchpoint similarly to DEBUG_INFO, allowing
us to use a simple, platform independent register/offset pair for frame
indexes on stackmap/patchpoints.
Notes:
- Folding is now platform independent and automatically supported.
- Emiting patchpoints with direct memory references now just involves calling
the TargetLoweringBase::emitPatchPoint utility method from the target's
XXXTargetLowering::EmitInstrWithCustomInserter method. (See
X86TargetLowering for an example).
- No more ugly platform-specific operand parsers.
This patch shouldn't change the generated output for X86.
llvm-svn: 195944
A Direct stack map location records the address of frame index. This
address is itself the value that the runtime requested. This differs
from IndirectMemRefOp locations, which refer to a stack locations from
which the requested values must be loaded. Direct locations can
directly communicate the address if an alloca, while IndirectMemRefOp
handle register spills.
For example:
entry:
%a = alloca i64...
llvm.experimental.stackmap(i32 <ID>, i32 <shadowBytes>, i64* %a)
Since both the alloca and stackmap intrinsic are in the entry block,
and the intrinsic takes the address of the alloca, the runtime can
assume that LLVM will not substitute alloca with any intervening
value. This must be verified by the runtime by checking that the stack
map's location is a Direct location type. The runtime can then
determine the alloca's relative location on the stack immediately after
compilation, or at any time thereafter. This differs from Register and
Indirect locations, because the runtime can only read the values in
those locations when execution reaches the instruction address of the
stack map.
llvm-svn: 195712
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file. The memory leaks in this version have been fixed. Thanks
Alexey for pointing them out.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 195064
This change is incorrect. If you delete virtual destructor of both a base class
and a subclass, then the following code:
Base *foo = new Child();
delete foo;
will not cause the destructor for members of Child class. As a result, I observe
plently of memory leaks. Notable examples I investigated are:
ObjectBuffer and ObjectBufferStream, AttributeImpl and StringSAttributeImpl.
llvm-svn: 194997
Implementing this on bigendian platforms could get strange. I added a
target hook, getStackSlotRange, per Jakob's recommendation to make
this as explicit as possible.
llvm-svn: 194942
This patch removes most of the trivial cases of weak vtables by pinning them to
a single object file.
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2068
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194865
We already know how to fold a reload from a frameindex without
analyzing the load instruction. Generalize this to handle any
frameindex load. This streamlines the logic for rematerializing loads
from stack arguments. As a side effect, it allows stackmaps to record
a stack argument location without spilling it.
Verified no effect on codegen for llvm test-suite.
llvm-svn: 194497
Fixes <rdar://15432754> [JS] Assertion: "Folded a def to a non-store!"
The primary purpose of anyregcc is to prevent a patchpoint's call
arguments and return value from being spilled. They must be available
in a register, although the calling convention does not pin the
register. It's up to the front end to avoid using this convention for
calls with more arguments than allocatable registers.
llvm-svn: 194428
The idea of the AnyReg Calling Convention is to provide the call arguments in
registers, but not to force them to be placed in a paticular order into a
specified set of registers. Instead it is up tp the register allocator to assign
any register as it sees fit. The same applies to the return value (if
applicable).
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D2009
Reviewed by Andy
llvm-svn: 194293
This pass is needed to break false dependencies. Without it, unlucky
register assignment can result in wild (5x) swings in
performance. This pass was trying to handle AVX but not getting it
right. AVX doesn't have partial register defs, it has unused register
reads in which the high bits of a source operand are copied into the
unused bits of the dest.
Fixing this requires conservative liveness analysis. This is awkard
because the pass already has its own pseudo-liveness. However, proper
liveness is expensive, and we would like to use a generic utility to
compute it. The fix only invokes liveness on-demand. It is rare to
detect a case that needs undef-read dependence breaking, but when it
happens, it can be needed many times within a very large block.
I think the existing heuristic which uses a register window of 16 is
too conservative for loop-carried false dependencies. If the loop is a
reduction. The out-of-order engine may be able to execute several loop
iterations in parallel. However, I'll leave this tuning exercise for
next time.
llvm-svn: 192635
This is an awful implementation of the target hook. But we don't have
abstractions yet for common machine ops, and I don't see any quick way
to make it table-driven.
llvm-svn: 184664
Frame index handling is now target-agnostic, so delete the target hooks
for creation & asm printing of target-specific addressing in DBG_VALUEs
and any related functions.
llvm-svn: 184067
Previously LEA64_32r went through virtually the entire backend thinking it was
using 32-bit registers until its blissful illusions were cruelly snatched away
by MCInstLower and 64-bit equivalents were substituted at the last minute.
This patch makes it behave normally, and take 64-bit registers as sources all
the way through. Previous uses (for 32-bit arithmetic) are accommodated via
SUBREG_TO_REG instructions which make the types and classes agree properly.
llvm-svn: 183693
Instead of having a bunch of separate MOV8r0, MOV16r0, ... pseudo-instructions,
it's better to use a single MOV32r0 (which will expand to "xorl %reg, %reg")
and obtain other sizes with EXTRACT_SUBREG and SUBREG_TO_REG. The encoding is
smaller and partial register updates can sometimes be avoided.
Until recently, this sequence was a barrier to rematerialization though. That
should now be fixed so it's an appropriate time to make the change.
llvm-svn: 182928
32-bit writes on amd64 zero out the high bits of the corresponding 64-bit
register. LLVM makes use of this for zero-extension, but until now relied on
custom MCLowering and other code to fixup instructions. Now we have proper
handling of sub-registers, this can be done by creating SUBREG_TO_REG
instructions at selection-time.
Should be no change in functionality.
llvm-svn: 182921
The peephole tries to reorder MOV32r0 instructions such that they are
before the instruction that modifies EFLAGS.
The problem is that the peephole does not consider the case where the
instruction that modifies EFLAGS also depends on the previous state of
EFLAGS.
Instead, walk backwards until we find an instruction that has a def for
EFLAGS but does not have a use.
If we find such an instruction, insert the MOV32r0 before it.
If it cannot find such an instruction, skip the optimization.
llvm-svn: 182184
Increase the number of instructions LLVM recognizes as setting the ZF
flag. This allows us to remove test instructions that redundantly
recalculate the flag.
llvm-svn: 181937
form of call in preference to memory indirect on Atom.
In this case, the patch applies the optimization to the code for reloading
spilled registers.
The patch also includes changes to sibcall.ll and movgs.ll, which were
failing on the Atom buildbot after the first patch was applied.
This patch by Sriram Murali.
llvm-svn: 178193
into their new header subdirectory: include/llvm/IR. This matches the
directory structure of lib, and begins to correct a long standing point
of file layout clutter in LLVM.
There are still more header files to move here, but I wanted to handle
them in separate commits to make tracking what files make sense at each
layer easier.
The only really questionable files here are the target intrinsic
tablegen files. But that's a battle I'd rather not fight today.
I've updated both CMake and Makefile build systems (I think, and my
tests think, but I may have missed something).
I've also re-sorted the includes throughout the project. I'll be
committing updates to Clang, DragonEgg, and Polly momentarily.
llvm-svn: 171366
directly.
This is in preparation for removing the use of the 'Attribute' class as a
collection of attributes. That will shift to the AttributeSet class instead.
llvm-svn: 171253
When these instructions are encoded in VEX (on AVX) there is no such requirement. This changes the folding
tables and removes the alignment restrictions from VEX-encoded instructions.
llvm-svn: 171024
The only way to read the eflags is using push and pop. If we don't
adjust the stack then we run over the first frame index. This is
not something that we want to do, so we have to make sure that
our machine function does not copy the flags. If it does then
we have to emit the prolog that adjusts the stack.
rdar://12896831
llvm-svn: 170961
Use the version that also takes an MF reference instead.
It would technically be possible to extract an MF reference from the MI
as MI->getParent()->getParent(), but that would not work for MIs that
are not inserted into any basic block.
Given the reasonably small number of places this constructor was used at
all, I preferred the compile time check to a run time assertion.
llvm-svn: 170588
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
when the destination register is wider than the memory load.
These load instructions load from m32 or m64 and set the upper bits to zero,
while the folded instructions may accept m128.
rdar://12721174
llvm-svn: 168710
We use the enums to query whether an Attributes object has that attribute. The
opaque layer is responsible for knowing where that specific attribute is stored.
llvm-svn: 165488
- Rewrite/merge pseudo-atomic instruction emitters to address the
following issue:
* Reduce one unnecessary load in spin-loop
previously the spin-loop looks like
thisMBB:
newMBB:
ld t1 = [bitinstr.addr]
op t2 = t1, [bitinstr.val]
not t3 = t2 (if Invert)
mov EAX = t1
lcs dest = [bitinstr.addr], t3 [EAX is implicit]
bz newMBB
fallthrough -->nextMBB
the 'ld' at the beginning of newMBB should be lift out of the loop
as lcs (or CMPXCHG on x86) will load the current memory value into
EAX. This loop is refined as:
thisMBB:
EAX = LOAD [MI.addr]
mainMBB:
t1 = OP [MI.val], EAX
LCMPXCHG [MI.addr], t1, [EAX is implicitly used & defined]
JNE mainMBB
sinkMBB:
* Remove immopc as, so far, all pseudo-atomic instructions has
all-register form only, there is no immedidate operand.
* Remove unnecessary attributes/modifiers in pseudo-atomic instruction
td
* Fix issues in PR13458
- Add comprehensive tests on atomic ops on various data types.
NOTE: Some of them are turned off due to missing functionality.
- Revise tests due to the new spin-loop generated.
llvm-svn: 164281
We perform the following:
1> Use SUB instead of CMP for i8,i16,i32 and i64 in ISel lowering.
2> Modify MachineCSE to correctly handle implicit defs.
3> Convert SUB back to CMP if possible at peephole.
Removed pattern matching of (a>b) ? (a-b):0 and like, since they are handled
by peephole now.
rdar://11873276
llvm-svn: 161462
We can't rematerialize a PIC base after register allocation anyway, and
scanning physreg use-def chains is very expensive in a function with
many calls.
<rdar://problem/12047515>
llvm-svn: 161461
Machine CSE and other optimizations can remove instructions so folding
is possible at peephole while not possible at ISel.
This patch is a rework of r160919 and was tested on clang self-host on my local
machine.
rdar://10554090 and rdar://11873276
llvm-svn: 161152
Machine CSE and other optimizations can remove instructions so folding
is possible at peephole while not possible at ISel.
rdar://10554090 and rdar://11873276
llvm-svn: 160919
It is possible that an instruction can use and update EFLAGS.
When checking the safety, we should check the usage of EFLAGS first before
declaring it is safe to optimize due to the update.
llvm-svn: 160912
Updated OptimizeCompare in peephole to remove redundant cmp against zero.
We only remove Compare if CF and OF are not used.
rdar://11855129
llvm-svn: 160454
undef virtual register. The problem is that ProcessImplicitDefs removes the
definition of the register and marks all uses as undef. If we lose the undef
marker then we get a register which has no def, is not marked as undef. The
live interval analysis does not collect information for these virtual
registers and we crash in later passes.
Together with Michael Kuperstein <michael.m.kuperstein@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 160260
Allow the folding of vbroadcastRR to vbroadcastRM, where the memory operand is a spill slot.
PR12782.
Together with Michael Kuperstein <michael.m.kuperstein@intel.com>
llvm-svn: 160230
getCondFromSETOpc, getCondFromCMovOpc, getSETFromCond, getCMovFromCond
No functional change intended.
If we want to update the condition code of CMOV|SET|Jcc, we first analyze the
opcode to get the condition code, then update the condition code, finally
synthesize the new opcode form the new condition code.
llvm-svn: 159955
It is safe if EFLAGS is killed or re-defined.
When we are done with the basic block, check whether EFLAGS is live-out.
Do not optimize away cmp if EFLAGS is live-out.
llvm-svn: 159888
For each Cmp, we check whether there is an earlier Sub which make Cmp
redundant. We handle the case where SUB operates on the same source operands as
Cmp, including the case where the two source operands are swapped.
llvm-svn: 159838
Implement the TII hooks needed by EarlyIfConversion to create cmov
instructions and estimate their latency.
Early if-conversion is still not enabled by default.
llvm-svn: 159695
The commit is intended to fix rdar://11540023.
It is implemented as part of peephole optimization. We can actually implement
this in the SelectionDAG lowering phase.
llvm-svn: 158122
There are some that I didn't remove this round because they looked like
obvious stubs. There are dead variables in gtest too, they should be
fixed upstream.
llvm-svn: 158090
This patch will optimize the following:
sub r1, r3
cmp r3, r1 or cmp r1, r3
bge L1
TO
sub r1, r3
bge L1 or ble L1
If the branch instruction can use flag from "sub", then we can eliminate
the "cmp" instruction.
llvm-svn: 157831
This implements codegen support for accesses to thread-local variables
using the local-dynamic model, and adds a clean-up pass so that the base
address for the TLS block can be re-used between local-dynamic access on
an execution path.
llvm-svn: 157818
This patch will optimize the following
movq %rdi, %rax
subq %rsi, %rax
cmovsq %rsi, %rdi
movq %rdi, %rax
to
cmpq %rsi, %rdi
cmovsq %rsi, %rdi
movq %rdi, %rax
Perform this optimization if the actual result of SUB is not used.
rdar: 11540023
llvm-svn: 157755
I disabled FMA3 autodetection, since the result may differ from expected for some benchmarks.
I added tests for GodeGen and intrinsics.
I did not change llvm.fma.f32/64 - it may be done later.
llvm-svn: 157737
The getPointerRegClass() hook can return register classes that depend on
the calling convention of the current function (ptr_rc_tailcall).
So far, we have been able to infer the calling convention from the
subtarget alone, but as we add support for multiple calling conventions
per target, that no longer works.
Patch by Yiannis Tsiouris!
llvm-svn: 156328
to finalize MI bundles (i.e. add BUNDLE instruction and computing register def
and use lists of the BUNDLE instruction) and a pass to unpack bundles.
- Teach more of MachineBasic and MachineInstr methods to be bundle aware.
- Switch Thumb2 IT block to MI bundles and delete the hazard recognizer hack to
prevent IT blocks from being broken apart.
llvm-svn: 146542
generator to it. For non-bundle instructions, these behave exactly the same
as the MC layer API.
For properties like mayLoad / mayStore, look into the bundle and if any of the
bundled instructions has the property it would return true.
For properties like isPredicable, only return true if *all* of the bundled
instructions have the property.
For properties like canFoldAsLoad, isCompare, conservatively return false for
bundles.
llvm-svn: 146026
Like V_SET0, these instructions are expanded by ExpandPostRA to xorps /
vxorps so they can participate in execution domain swizzling.
This also makes the AVX variants redundant.
llvm-svn: 145440
This was a bug in keeping track of the available domains when merging
domain values.
The wrong domain mask caused ExecutionDepsFix to try to move VANDPSYrr
to the integer domain which is only available in AVX2.
Also add an assertion to catch future attempts at emitting AVX2
instructions.
llvm-svn: 145096
Two new TargetInstrInfo hooks lets the target tell ExecutionDepsFix
about instructions with partial register updates causing false unwanted
dependencies.
The ExecutionDepsFix pass will break the false dependencies if the
updated register was written in the previoius N instructions.
The small loop added to sse-domains.ll runs twice as fast with
dependency-breaking instructions inserted.
llvm-svn: 144602
The xorps instruction is smaller than pxor, so prefer that encoding.
The ExecutionDepsFix pass will switch the encoding to pxor and xorpd
when appropriate.
llvm-svn: 143996
In 64-bit mode, sub_8bit_hi sub-registers can only be used by NOREX
instructions. The COPY created from the EXTRACT_SUBREG DAG node cannot
target all GR8 registers, only those in GR8_NOREX.
TO enforce this, we ensure that all instructions using the
EXTRACT_SUBREG are GR8_NOREX constrained.
This fixes PR11088.
llvm-svn: 141499
This instruction is explicitly encoded without an REX prefix, so both
operands but be *_NOREX.
Also add an assertion to copyPhysReg() that fires when the MOV8rr_NOREX
constraints are not satisfied.
This fixes a miscompilation in 20040709-2 in the gcc test suite.
llvm-svn: 141410
I am going to unify the SSEDomainFix and NEONMoveFix passes into a
single target independent pass. They are essentially doing the same
thing.
llvm-svn: 140652
We already support GR64 <-> VR128 copies. All of these copies break
partial register dependencies by zeroing the high part of the target
register.
llvm-svn: 140348
alignment check for 256-bit classes more strict. There're no testcases
but we catch more folding cases for AVX while running single and multi
sources in the llvm testsuite.
Since some 128-bit AVX instructions have different number of operands
than their SSE counterparts, they are placed in different tables.
256-bit AVX instructions should also be added in the table soon. And
there a few more 128-bit versions to handled, which should come in
the following commits.
llvm-svn: 139687
single field (Flags), which is a bitwise OR of items from the TB_*
enum. This makes it easier to add new information in the future.
* Gives every static array an equivalent layout: { RegOp, MemOp, Flags }
* Adds a helper function, AddTableEntry, to avoid duplication of the
insertion code.
* Renames TB_NOT_REVERSABLE to TB_NO_REVERSE.
* Adds TB_NO_FORWARD, which is analogous to TB_NO_REVERSE, except that
it prevents addition of the Reg->Mem entry. (This is going to be used
by Native Client, in the next CL).
Patch by David Meyer
llvm-svn: 139311
sink them into MC layer.
- Added MCInstrInfo, which captures the tablegen generated static data. Chang
TargetInstrInfo so it's based off MCInstrInfo.
llvm-svn: 134021
we try to branch to them.
Before we were creating successor lists with duplicated entries. Fixing that
found a bug in isBlockOnlyReachableByFallthrough that would causes it to
return the wrong answer for
-----------
...
jne foo
jmp bar
foo:
----------
llvm-svn: 132882
Add TargetRegisterInfo::hasSubClassEq and use it to check for compatible
register classes instead of trying to list all register classes in
X86's getLoadStoreRegOpcode.
llvm-svn: 132398
after folding ADD32ri to ADD32mi, so don't do that.
This only happens when the greedy register allocator gets itself in trouble and
spills %vreg9 here:
16L %vreg9<def> = MOVPC32r 0, %ESP<imp-use>; GR32:%vreg9
48L %vreg9<def> = ADD32ri %vreg9, <es:_GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_>[TF=1], %EFLAGS<imp-def,dead>; GR32:%vreg9
That should never happen, the live range should be split instead.
llvm-svn: 130625
Now that we have a first-class way to represent unaligned loads, the unaligned
load intrinsics are superfluous.
First part of <rdar://problem/8460511>.
llvm-svn: 129401
regs. This is the only change in this checkin that may affects the
default scheduler. With better register tracking and heuristics, it
doesn't make sense to artificially lower the register limit so much.
Added -sched-high-latency-cycles and X86InstrInfo::isHighLatencyDef to
give the scheduler a way to account for div and sqrt on targets that
don't have an itinerary. It is currently defaults to 10 (the actual
number doesn't matter much), but only takes effect on non-default
schedulers: list-hybrid and list-ilp.
Added several heuristics that can be individually disabled for the
non-default sched=list-ilp mode. This helps us determine how much
better we can do on a given benchmark than the default
scheduler. Certain compute intensive loops run much faster in this
mode with the right set of heuristics, and it doesn't seem to have
much negative impact elsewhere. Not all of the heuristics are needed,
but we still need to experiment to decide which should be disabled by
default for sched=list-ilp.
llvm-svn: 127067
"long latency" enough to hoist even if it may increase spilling. Reloading
a value from spill slot is often cheaper than performing an expensive
computation in the loop. For X86, that means machine LICM will hoist
SQRT, DIV, etc. ARM will be somewhat aggressive with VFP and NEON
instructions.
- Enable register pressure aware machine LICM by default.
llvm-svn: 116781
The reg-reg copies were no longer being generated since copyPhysReg copies
physical registers only.
The loads and stores are not necessary - The TC constraint is imposed by the
TAILJMP and TCRETURN instructions, there should be no need for constrained loads
and stores.
llvm-svn: 116314
reapply: reimplement the second half of the or/add optimization. We should now
with no changes. Turns out that one missing "Defs = [EFLAGS]" can upset things
a bit.
llvm-svn: 116040
only end up emitting LEA instead of OR. If we aren't able to promote
something into an LEA, we should never be emitting it as an ADD.
Add some testcases that we emit "or" in cases where we used to produce
an "add".
llvm-svn: 116026
is general goodness because it allows ORs to be converted to LEA to avoid
inserting copies. However, this is bad because it makes the generated .s
file less obvious and gives valgrind heartburn (tons of false positives in
bitfield code).
While the general fix should be in valgrind, we can at least try to avoid
emitting ADD instructions that *don't* get promoted to LEA. This is more
work because it requires introducing pseudo instructions to represents
"add that knows the bits are disjoint", but hey, people really love valgrind.
This fixes this testcase:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=242137#c20
the add r/i cases are coming next.
llvm-svn: 116007
operands.
With this done, we can remove the _Int suffixes from the round instructions
without the disassembler blowing up. This allows the assembler to support
them, implementing rdar://8456376 - llvm-mc rejects 'roundss'
llvm-svn: 115019
- Make foldMemoryOperandImpl aware of 256-bit zero vectors folding and support the 128-bit counterparts of AVX too.
- Make sure MOV[AU]PS instructions are only selected when SSE1 is enabled, and duplicate the patterns to match AVX.
- Add a testcase for a simple 128-bit zero vector creation.
llvm-svn: 110946
When a register is defined by a partial load:
%reg1234:sub_32 = MOV32mr <fi#-1>; GR64:%reg1234
That load cannot be folded into an instruction using the full 64-bit register.
It would become a 64-bit load.
This is related to the recent change to have isLoadFromStackSlot return false on
a sub-register load.
llvm-svn: 110874