This was an experimental option, but needs to be defined
per-target. e.g. PPC A2 needs to aggressively hide latency.
I converted some in-order scheduling tests to A2. Hal is working on
more test cases.
llvm-svn: 171946
This avoids FileCheck failing over different comment characters in
assembly (notably powerpc64 on Linux vs Darwin) and should fix David's
build-bot.
llvm-svn: 171886
((x & 0xff00) >> 8) << 2
to
(x >> 6) & 0x3fc
This is general goodness since it folds a left shift into the mask. However,
the trailing zeros in the mask prevents the ARM backend from using the bit
extraction instructions. And worse since the mask materialization may require
an addition instruction. This comes up fairly frequently when the result of
the bit twiddling is used as memory address. e.g.
= ptr[(x & 0xFF0000) >> 16]
We want to generate:
ubfx r3, r1, #16, #8
ldr.w r3, [r0, r3, lsl #2]
vs.
mov.w r9, #1020
and.w r2, r9, r1, lsr #14
ldr r2, [r0, r2]
Add a late ARM specific isel optimization to
ARMDAGToDAGISel::PreprocessISelDAG(). It folds the left shift to the
'base + offset' address computation; change the mask to one which doesn't have
trailing zeros and enable the use of ubfx.
Note the optimization has to be done late since it's target specific and we
don't want to change the DAG normalization. It's also fairly restrictive
as shifter operands are not always free. It's only done for lsh 1 / 2. It's
known to be free on some cpus and they are most common for address
computation.
This is a slight win for blowfish, rijndael, etc.
rdar://12870177
llvm-svn: 170581
To not over constrain the scheduler for ARM in thumb mode, some optimizations for code size reduction, specific to ARM thumb, are blocked when they add a dependency (like write after read dependency).
Disables this check when code size is the priority, i.e., code is compiled with -Oz.
llvm-svn: 170462
1. Teach it to use overlapping unaligned load / store to copy / set the trailing
bytes. e.g. On 86, use two pairs of movups / movaps for 17 - 31 byte copies.
2. Use f64 for memcpy / memset on targets where i64 is not legal but f64 is. e.g.
x86 and ARM.
3. When memcpy from a constant string, do *not* replace the load with a constant
if it's not possible to materialize an integer immediate with a single
instruction (required a new target hook: TLI.isIntImmLegal()).
4. Use unaligned load / stores more aggressively if target hooks indicates they
are "fast".
5. Update ARM target hooks to use unaligned load / stores. e.g. vld1.8 / vst1.8.
Also increase the threshold to something reasonable (8 for memset, 4 pairs
for memcpy).
This significantly improves Dhrystone, up to 50% on ARM iOS devices.
rdar://12760078
llvm-svn: 169791
Before this patch, when you objdump an LLVM-compiled file, objdump tried to
decode data-in-code sections as if they were code. This patch adds the missing
Mapping Symbols, as defined by "ELF for the ARM Architecture" (ARM IHI 0044D).
Patch based on work by Greg Fitzgerald.
llvm-svn: 169609
The count attribute is more accurate with regards to the size of an array. It
also obviates the upper bound attribute in the subrange. We can also better
handle an unbound array by setting the count to -1 instead of the lower bound to
1 and upper bound to 0.
llvm-svn: 169312
The count field is necessary because there isn't a difference between the 'lo'
and 'hi' attributes for a one-element array and a zero-element array. When the
count is '0', we know that this is a zero-element array. When it's >=1, then
it's a normal constant sized array. When it's -1, then the array is unbounded.
llvm-svn: 169218
the alignment is clamped to TargetFrameLowering.getStackAlignment if the target
does not support stack realignment or the option "realign-stack" is off.
This will cause miscompile if the address is treated as aligned and add is
replaced with or in DAGCombine.
Added a bool StackRealignable to TargetFrameLowering to check whether stack
realignment is implemented for the target. Also added a bool RealignOption
to MachineFrameInfo to check whether the option "realign-stack" is on.
rdar://12713765
llvm-svn: 169197
The TwoAddressInstructionPass takes the machine code out of SSA form by
expanding REG_SEQUENCE instructions into copies. It is no longer
necessary to rewrite the registers used by a REG_SEQUENCE instruction
because the new coalescer algorithm can do it now.
REG_SEQUENCE is just converted to a sequence of sub-register copies now.
llvm-svn: 169067
Codegen was failing with an assertion because of unexpected vector
operands when legalizing the selection DAG for a MUL instruction.
The asserting code was legalizing multiplies for vectors of size 128
bits. It uses a custom lowering to try and detect cases where it can
use a VMULL instruction instead of a VMOVL + VMUL. The code was
looking for input operands to the MUL that had been sign or zero
extended. If it found the extended operands it would drop the
sign/zero extension and use the original vector size as input to a
VMULL instruction.
The code assumed that the original input vector was 64 bits so that
after dropping the extension it would fit directly into a D register
and could be used as an operand of a VMULL instruction. The input
code that trigger the failure used a vector of <4 x i8> that was
sign extended to <4 x i32>. It was not safe to drop the sign
extension in this case because the original vector is only 32 bits
wide. The fix is to insert a sign extension for the vector to reach
the required 64 bit size. In this particular example, the vector would
need to be sign extented to a <4 x i16>.
llvm-svn: 169024
the last invoke instruction in the function. This also removes the last landing
pad in an function. This is fine, but with SjLj EH code, we've already placed a
bunch of code in the 'entry' block, which expects the landing pad to stick
around.
When we get to the situation where CGP has removed the last landing pad, go
ahead and nuke the SjLj instructions from the 'entry' block.
<rdar://problem/12721258>
llvm-svn: 168930
boundaries.
Given the following case:
BB0
%vreg1<def> = SUBrr %vreg0, %vreg7
%vreg2<def> = COPY %vreg7
BB1
%vreg10<def> = SUBrr %vreg0, %vreg2
We should be able to CSE between SUBrr in BB0 and SUBrr in BB1.
rdar://12462006
llvm-svn: 168717
argument. Instead, use a pair of .local and .comm directives.
This avoids spurious differences between binaries built by the
integrated assembler vs. those built by the external assembler,
since the external assembler may impose alignment requirements
on .lcomm symbols where the integrated assembler does not.
llvm-svn: 168704
This patch replaces the hard coded GPR pair [R0, R1] of
Intrinsic:arm_ldrexd and [R2, R3] of Intrinsic:arm_strexd with
even/odd GPRPair reg class.
Similar to the lowering of atomic_64 operation.
llvm-svn: 168207
This patch changes the definition of negative from -0..-255 to -1..-255. I am changing this because of
a bug that we had in some of the patterns that assumed that "subs" of zero does not set the carry flag.
rdar://12028498
llvm-svn: 167963
This adds support for weak DAG edges to the general scheduling
infrastructure in preparation for MachineScheduler support for
heuristics based on weak edges.
llvm-svn: 167738
mov lr, pc
b.w _foo
The "mov" instruction doesn't set bit zero to one, it's putting incorrect
value in lr. It messes up backtraces.
rdar://12663632
llvm-svn: 167657
Improve ARM build attribute emission for architectures types.
This also changes the default architecture emitted for a generic CPU to "v7".
llvm-svn: 167574
Partial copies can show up even when CoalescerPair.isPartial() returns
false. For example:
%vreg24:dsub_0<def> = COPY %vreg31:dsub_0; QPR:%vreg24,%vreg31
Such a partial-partial copy is not good enough for the transformation
adjustCopiesBackFrom() needs to do.
llvm-svn: 166944
Keep the integer_insertelement test case, the new coalescer can handle
this kind of lane insertion without help from pseudo-instructions.
llvm-svn: 166835
into a sbc with a positive number, the immediate should be complemented, not
negated. Also added a missing pattern for ARM codegen.
rdar://12559385
llvm-svn: 166613
The CFG of the machine function needs to know that the targets of the indirect
branch are successors to the indirect branch.
<rdar://problem/12529625>
llvm-svn: 166448
which is supposed to consistently raise SIGTRAP across all systems. In contrast,
__builtin_trap() behave differently on different systems. e.g. it raises SIGTRAP on ARM, and
SIGILL on X86. The purpose of __builtin_debugtrap() is to consistently provide "trap"
functionality, in the mean time preserve the compatibility with on gcc on __builtin_trap().
The X86 backend is already able to handle debugtrap(). This patch is to:
1) make front-end recognize "__builtin_debugtrap()" (emboddied in the one-line change to Clang).
2) In DAG legalization phase, by default, "debugtrap" will be replaced with "trap", which
make the __builtin_debugtrap() "available" to all existing ports without the hassle of
changing their code.
3) If trap-function is specified (via -trap-func=xyz to llc), both __builtin_debugtrap() and
__builtin_trap() will be expanded into the function call of the specified trap function.
This behavior may need change in the future.
The provided testing-case is to make sure 2) and 3) are working for ARM port, and we
already have a testing case for x86.
llvm-svn: 166300
Removed extra stack frame object for fixed byval arguments,
VarArgsStyleRegisters invocation was reworked due to some improper usage in
past. PR14099 also demonstrates it.
llvm-svn: 166273
Stack is formed improperly for long structures passed as byval arguments for
EABI mode.
If we took AAPCS reference, we can found the next statements:
A: "If the argument requires double-word alignment (8-byte), the NCRN (Next
Core Register Number) is rounded up to the next even register number." (5.5
Parameter Passing, Stage C, C.3).
B: "The alignment of an aggregate shall be the alignment of its most-aligned
component." (4.3 Composite Types, 4.3.1 Aggregates).
So if we have structure with doubles (9 double fields) and 3 Core unused
registers (r1, r2, r3): caller should use r2 and r3 registers only.
Currently r1,r2,r3 set is used, but it is invalid.
Callee VA routine should also use r2 and r3 regs only. All is ok here. This
behaviour is guessed by rounding up SP address with ADD+BFC operations.
Fix:
Main fix is in ARMTargetLowering::HandleByVal. If we detected AAPCS mode and
8 byte alignment, we waste odd registers then.
P.S.:
I also improved LDRB_POST_IMM regression test. Since ldrb instruction will
not generated by current regression test after this patch.
llvm-svn: 166018
The new coalescer can merge a dead def into an unused lane of an
otherwise live vector register.
Clear the <dead> flag when that happens since the flag refers to the
full virtual register which is still live after the partial dead def.
This fixes PR14079.
llvm-svn: 165877
It is possible that the live range of the value being pruned loops back
into the kill MBB where the search started. When that happens, make sure
that the beginning of KillMBB is also pruned.
Instead of starting a DFS at KillMBB and skipping the root of the
search, start a DFS at each KillMBB successor, and allow the search to
loop back to KillMBB.
This fixes PR14078.
llvm-svn: 165872
local frame causes problem.
For example:
void f(StructToPass s) {
g(&s, sizeof(s));
}
will cause problem with tail-call since part of s is passed via registers and
saved in f's local frame. When g tries to access s, part of s may be corrupted
since f's local frame is popped out before the tail-call.
The current fix is to disable tail-call if getVarArgsRegSaveSize is not 0 for
the caller. This is a conservative approach, if we can prove the address of
s or part of s is not taken and passed to g, it should be okay to perform
tail-call.
rdar://12442472
llvm-svn: 165853
The backend already pattern matches to form VBSL when it can. We may want to
teach it to use the vbsl intrinsics at some point to prevent machine licm from
mucking with this, but using the Expand is completely correct.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=13831http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=13961
Patch by Peter Couperus <peter.couperus@st.com>.
llvm-svn: 165845
not legal. However, it should use a div instruction + mul + sub if divide is
legal. The rem legalization code was missing a check and incorrectly uses a
divrem libcall even when div is legal.
rdar://12481395
llvm-svn: 165778
SDNode for LDRB_POST_IMM is invalid: number of registers added to SDNode fewer
that described in .td.
7 ops is needed, but SDNode with only 6 is created.
In more details:
In ARMInstrInfo.td, in multiclass AI2_ldridx, in definition _POST_IMM, offset
operand is defined as am2offset_imm. am2offset_imm is complex parameter type,
and actually it consists from dummy register and imm itself. As I understood
trick with dummy reg was made for AsmParser. In ARMISelLowering.cpp, this dummy
register was not added to SDNode, and it cause crash in Peephole Optimizer pass.
The problem fixed by setting up additional dummy reg when emitting
LDRB_POST_IMM instruction.
llvm-svn: 165617
SchedulerDAGInstrs::buildSchedGraph ignores dependencies between FixedStack
objects and byval parameters. So loading byval parameters from stack may be
inserted *before* it will be stored, since these operations are treated as
independent.
Fix:
Currently ARMTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments saves byval registers with
FixedStack MachinePointerInfo. To fix the problem we need to store byval
registers with MachinePointerInfo referenced to first the "byval" parameter.
Also commit adds two new fields to the InputArg structure: Function's argument
index and InputArg's part offset in bytes relative to the start position of
Function's argument. E.g.: If function's argument is 128 bit width and it was
splitted onto 32 bit regs, then we got 4 InputArg structs with same arg index,
but different offset values.
llvm-svn: 165616
Make sure functions located in user specified text sections (via the
section attribute) are located together with the default text sections.
Otherwise, for large object files, the relocations for call instructions
are more likely to be out of range. This becomes even more likely in the
presence of LTO.
rdar://12402636
llvm-svn: 165254
JoinVals::pruneValues() calls LIS->pruneValue() to avoid conflicts when
overlapping two different values. This produces a set of live range end
points that are used to reconstruct the live range (with SSA update)
after joining the two registers.
When a value is pruned twice, the set of end points was insufficient:
v1 = DEF
v1 = REPLACE1
v1 = REPLACE2
KILL v1
The end point at KILL would only reconstruct the live range from
REPLACE2 to KILL, leaving the range REPLACE1-REPLACE2 dead.
Add REPLACE2 as an end point in this case so the full live range is
reconstructed.
This fixes PR13999.
llvm-svn: 165056
scalar-to-vector conversion that we cannot handle. For instance, when an invalid
constraint is used in an inline asm statement.
<rdar://problem/12284092>
llvm-svn: 164662
scalar-to-vector conversion that we cannot handle. For instance, when an invalid
constraint is used in an inline asm statement.
<rdar://problem/12284092>
llvm-svn: 164657
The expression based expansion too often results in IR level optimizations
splitting the intermediate values into separate basic blocks, preventing
the formation of the VBSL instruction as the code author intended. In
particular, LICM would often hoist part of the computation out of a loop.
rdar://11011471
llvm-svn: 164340
A PHI can't create interference on its own. If two live ranges interfere
at a PHI, they must also interfere when leaving one of the PHI
predecessors.
llvm-svn: 164330
A common coalescing conflict in vector code is lane insertion:
%dst = FOO
%src = BAR
%dst:ssub0 = COPY %src
The live range of %src interferes with the ssub0 lane of %dst, but that
lane is never read after %src would have clobbered it. That makes it
safe to merge the live ranges and eliminate the COPY:
%dst = FOO
%dst:ssub0 = BAR
This patch teaches the new coalescer to resolve conflicts where dead
vector lanes would be clobbered, at least as long as the clobbered
vector lanes don't escape the basic block.
llvm-svn: 164250
aligned address. Based on patch by David Peixotto.
Also use vld1.64 / vst1.64 with 128-bit alignment to take advantage of alignment
hints. rdar://12090772, rdar://12238782
llvm-svn: 164089
Add LIS::pruneValue() and extendToIndices(). These two functions are
used by the register coalescer when merging two live ranges requires
more than a trivial value mapping as supported by LiveInterval::join().
The pruneValue() function can remove the part of a value number that is
going to conflict in join(). Afterwards, extendToIndices can restore the
live range, using any new dominating value numbers and updating the SSA
form.
Use this complex value mapping to support merging a register into a
vector lane that has a conflicting value, but the clobbered lane is
undef.
llvm-svn: 164074
SelectionDAG::getConstantFP(double Val, EVT VT, bool isTarget);
should not be used when Val is not a simple constant (as the comment in
SelectionDAG.h indicates). This patch avoids using this function
when folding an unknown constant through a bitcast, where it cannot be
guaranteed that Val will be a simple constant.
llvm-svn: 163703
The ARM backend can eliminate cmp instructions by reusing flags from a
nearby sub instruction with similar arguments.
Don't do that if the sub is predicated - the flags are not written
unconditionally.
<rdar://problem/12263428>
llvm-svn: 163535
If we have a BUILD_VECTOR that is mostly a constant splat, it is often better to splat that constant then insertelement the non-constant lanes instead of insertelementing every lane from an undef base.
llvm-svn: 163304
Now that it is possible to dynamically tie MachineInstr operands,
predicated instructions are possible in SSA form:
%vreg3<def> = SUBri %vreg1, -2147483647, pred:14, pred:%noreg, %opt:%noreg
%vreg4<def,tied1> = MOVCCr %vreg3<tied0>, %vreg1, %pred:12, pred:%CPSR
Becomes a predicated SUBri with a tied imp-use:
SUBri %vreg1, -2147483647, pred:13, pred:%CPSR, opt:%noreg, %vreg1<imp-use,tied0>
This means that any instruction that is safe to move can be folded into
a MOVCC, and the *CC pseudo-instructions are no longer needed.
The test case changes reflect that Thumb2SizeReduce recognizes the
predicated instructions. It didn't understand the pseudos.
llvm-svn: 163274
Previous patch accidentally decided it couldn't convert a VFP to a
NEON instruction after it had already destroyed the old one. Not a
good move.
llvm-svn: 163230
This patch corrects the definition of umlal/smlal instructions and adds support
for matching them to the ARM dag combiner.
Bug 12213
Patch by Yin Ma!
llvm-svn: 163136
For example, the ARM target does not have efficient ISel handling for vector
selects with scalar conditions. This patch adds a TLI hook which allows the
different targets to report which selects are supported well and which selects
should be converted to CF duting codegen prepare.
llvm-svn: 163093
because it does not support CMOV of vectors. To implement this efficientlyi, we broadcast the condition bit and use a sequence of NAND-OR
to select between the two operands. This is the same sequence we use for targets that don't have vector BLENDs (like SSE2).
rdar://12201387
llvm-svn: 162926
IR that hasn't been through SimplifyCFG can look like this:
br i1 %b, label %r, label %r
Make sure we don't create duplicate Machine CFG edges in this case.
Fix the machine code verifier to accept conditional branches with a
single CFG edge.
llvm-svn: 162230
Add these transformations to the existing add/sub ones:
(and (select cc, -1, c), x) -> (select cc, x, (and, x, c))
(or (select cc, 0, c), x) -> (select cc, x, (or, x, c))
(xor (select cc, 0, c), x) -> (select cc, x, (xor, x, c))
The selects can then be transformed to a single predicated instruction
by peephole.
This transformation will make it possible to eliminate the ISD::CAND,
COR, and CXOR custom DAG nodes.
llvm-svn: 162176
PEI can't handle the pseudo-instructions. This can be removed when the
pseudo-instructions are replaced by normal predicated instructions.
Fixes PR13628.
llvm-svn: 162130
It is not my plan to duplicate the entire ARM instruction set with
predicated versions. We need a way of representing predicated
instructions in SSA form without requiring a separate opcode.
Then the pseudo-instructions can go away.
llvm-svn: 162061
Without fastcc support, the caller just falls through to CallingConv::C
for fastcc, but callee still uses fastcc, this inconsistency of calling
convention is a problem, and fastcc support can fix it.
llvm-svn: 162013
The ARM select instructions are just predicated moves. If the select is
the only use of an operand, the instruction defining the operand can be
predicated instead, saving one instruction and decreasing register
pressure.
This implementation can turn AND/ORR/EOR instructions into their
corresponding ANDCC/ORRCC/EORCC variants. Ideally, we should be able to
predicate any instruction, but we don't yet support predicated
instructions in SSA form.
llvm-svn: 161994
reversed. This leads to wrong codegen for float-to-half conversion
intrinsics which are used to support storage-only fp16 type.
NEON variants of same instructions are fine.
llvm-svn: 161907
and allow some optimizations to turn conditional branches into unconditional.
This commit adds a simple control-flow optimization which merges two consecutive
basic blocks which are connected by a single edge. This allows the codegen to
operate on larger basic blocks.
rdar://11973998
llvm-svn: 161852
This patch corrects the definition of umlal/smlal instructions and adds support
for matching them to the ARM dag combiner.
Bug 12213
Patch by Yin Ma!
llvm-svn: 161581
This patch is mostly just refactoring a bunch of copy-and-pasted code, but
it also adds a check that the call instructions are readnone or readonly.
That check was already present for sin, cos, sqrt, log2, and exp2 calls, but
it was missing for the rest of the builtins being handled in this code.
llvm-svn: 161282
We are extending live ranges, so kill flags are not accurate. They
aren't needed until they are recomputed after RA anyway.
<rdar://problem/11950722>
llvm-svn: 161023
LiveIntervals due to the two-addr pass generating bogus MI code.
The crux of the issue was a loop nesting problem. The intent of the code
which attempts to transform instructions before converting them to
two-addr form is to defer and reprocess any transformed instructions as
the second processing is likely to have more opportunities to coalesce
copies, etc. Unfortunately, there was one section of processing that was
not deferred -- the INSERT_SUBREG rewriting. Due to quirks of how this
rewriting proceeded, not only did it occur early, it removed the bits of
information needed for the deferred processing to correctly generate the
necessary two address form (specifically inserting a copy), but didn't
trigger any immediate assertions and produced what appeared to be
already valid two-address from code. Thus, the assertion only fired much
later in the pipeline.
The fix is to hoist the transformation logic up layer to where it can
more firmly defer all further processing, and to teach the normal
processing to handle an edge case previously handled as part of the
transformation logic. This edge case (already matched tied register
operands) needs to *not* defer any steps.
As has been brought up repeatedly in the process: wow does this code
need refactoring. I *may* squeeze in some time to at least bring sanity
to this loop... but wow... =]
Thanks to Jakob for helpful hints on the way here, and the review.
llvm-svn: 160443
intrinsics. The second instruction(s) to be handled are the vector versions
of count set bits (ctpop).
The changes here are to clang so that it generates a target independent
vector ctpop when it sees an ARM dependent vector bits set count. The changes
in llvm are to match the target independent vector ctpop and in
VMCore/AutoUpgrade.cpp to update any existing bc files containing ARM
dependent vector pop counts with target-independent ctpops. There are also
changes to an existing test case in llvm for ARM vector count instructions and
to a test for the bitcode upgrade.
<rdar://problem/11892519>
There is deliberately no test for the change to clang, as so far as I know, no
consensus has been reached regarding how to test neon instructions in clang;
q.v. <rdar://problem/8762292>
llvm-svn: 160410
intrinsics with target-indepdent intrinsics. The first instruction(s) to be
handled are the vector versions of count leading zeros (ctlz).
The changes here are to clang so that it generates a target independent
vector ctlz when it sees an ARM dependent vector ctlz. The changes in llvm
are to match the target independent vector ctlz and in VMCore/AutoUpgrade.cpp
to update any existing bc files containing ARM dependent vector ctlzs with
target-independent ctlzs. There are also changes to an existing test case in
llvm for ARM vector count instructions and a new test for the bitcode upgrade.
<rdar://problem/11831778>
There is deliberately no test for the change to clang, as so far as I know, no
consensus has been reached regarding how to test neon instructions in clang;
q.v. <rdar://problem/8762292>
llvm-svn: 160200
It is safe if CPSR is killed or re-defined.
When we are done with the basic block, check whether CPSR is live-out.
Do not optimize away cmp if CPSR is live-out.
llvm-svn: 160090
another mechanical change accomplished though the power of terrible Perl
scripts.
I have manually switched some "s to 's to make escaping simpler.
While I started this to fix tests that aren't run in all configurations,
the massive number of tests is due to a really frustrating fragility of
our testing infrastructure: things like 'grep -v', 'not grep', and
'expected failures' can mask broken tests all too easily.
Essentially, I'm deeply disturbed that I can change the testsuite so
radically without causing any change in results for most platforms. =/
llvm-svn: 159547
versions of Bash. In addition, I can back out the change to the lit
built-in shell test runner to support this.
This should fix the majority of fallout on Darwin, but I suspect there
will be a few straggling issues.
llvm-svn: 159544
This was done through the aid of a terrible Perl creation. I will not
paste any of the horrors here. Suffice to say, it require multiple
staged rounds of replacements, state carried between, and a few
nested-construct-parsing hacks that I'm not proud of. It happens, by
luck, to be able to deal with all the TCL-quoting patterns in evidence
in the LLVM test suite.
If anyone is maintaining large out-of-tree test trees, feel free to poke
me and I'll send you the steps I used to convert things, as well as
answer any painful questions etc. IRC works best for this type of thing
I find.
Once converted, switch the LLVM lit config to use ShTests the same as
Clang. In addition to being able to delete large amounts of Python code
from 'lit', this will also simplify the entire test suite and some of
lit's architecture.
Finally, the test suite runs 33% faster on Linux now. ;]
For my 16-hardware-thread (2x 4-core xeon e5520): 36s -> 24s
llvm-svn: 159525
implicit_def, the other instruction can be anything, including instructions
that define multiple values. Be careful about that and don't assume what operand
0 is.
Fixes pr13249.
llvm-svn: 159509
More condition codes are included when deciding whether to remove cmp after
a sub instruction. Specifically, we extend from GE|LT|GT|LE to
GE|LT|GT|LE|HS|LS|HI|LO|EQ|NE. If we have "sub a, b; cmp b, a; movhs", we
should be able to replace with "sub a, b; movls".
rdar: 11725965
llvm-svn: 159166
This allows the user/front-end to specify a model that is better
than what LLVM would choose by default. For example, a variable
might be declared as
@x = thread_local(initialexec) global i32 42
if it will not be used in a shared library that is dlopen'ed.
If the specified model isn't supported by the target, or if LLVM can
make a better choice, a different model may be used.
llvm-svn: 159077
There are patterns to handle immediates when they fit in the immediate field.
e.g. %sub = add i32 %x, -123
=> sub r0, r0, #123
Add patterns to catch immediates that do not fit but should be materialized
with a single movw instruction rather than movw + movt pair.
e.g. %sub = add i32 %x, -65535
=> movw r1, #65535
sub r0, r0, r1
rdar://11726136
llvm-svn: 159057
Minor drive by fix to cleanup latency computation. Calling
getOperandLatency with a deliberately incorrect operand index does not
give you the latency you want.
llvm-svn: 158959
boolean flag to an enum: { Fast, Standard, Strict } (default = Standard).
This option controls the creation by optimizations of fused FP ops that store
intermediate results in higher precision than IEEE allows (E.g. FMAs). The
behavior of this option is intended to match the behaviour specified by a
soon-to-be-introduced frontend flag: '-ffuse-fp-ops'.
Fast mode - allows formation of fused FP ops whenever they're profitable.
Standard mode - allow fusion only for 'blessed' FP ops. At present the only
blessed op is the fmuladd intrinsic. In the future more blessed ops may be
added.
Strict mode - allow fusion only if/when it can be proven that the excess
precision won't effect the result.
Note: This option only controls formation of fused ops by the optimizers. Fused
operations that are explicitly requested (e.g. FMA via the llvm.fma.* intrinsic)
will always be honored, regardless of the value of this option.
Internally TargetOptions::AllowExcessFPPrecision has been replaced by
TargetOptions::AllowFPOpFusion.
llvm-svn: 158956
_umodsi3 libcalls if they have the same arguments. This optimization
was apparently broken if one of the node was replaced in place.
rdar://11714607
llvm-svn: 158900
This patch adds DAG combines to form FMAs from pairs of FADD + FMUL or
FSUB + FMUL. The combines are performed when:
(a) Either
AllowExcessFPPrecision option (-enable-excess-fp-precision for llc)
OR
UnsafeFPMath option (-enable-unsafe-fp-math)
are set, and
(b) TargetLoweringInfo::isFMAFasterThanMulAndAdd(VT) is true for the type of
the FADD/FSUB, and
(c) The FMUL only has one user (the FADD/FSUB).
If your target has fast FMA instructions you can make use of these combines by
overriding TargetLoweringInfo::isFMAFasterThanMulAndAdd(VT) to return true for
types supported by your FMA instruction, and adding patterns to match ISD::FMA
to your FMA instructions.
llvm-svn: 158757
when a compile time constant is known. This occurs when implicitly zero
extending function arguments from 16 bits to 32 bits. The 8 bit case doesn't
need to be handled, as the 8 bit constants are encoded directly, thereby
not needing a separate load instruction to form the constant into a register.
<rdar://problem/11481151>
llvm-svn: 158659
This patch will optimize abs(x-y)
FROM
sub, movs, rsbmi
TO
subs, rsbmi
For abs, we will use cmp instead of movs. This is necessary because we already
have an existing peephole pass which optimizes away cmp following sub.
rdar: 11633193
llvm-svn: 158551
For store->load dependencies that may alias, we should always use
TrueMemOrderLatency, which may eventually become a subtarget hook. In
effect, we should guarantee at least TrueMemOrderLatency on at least
one DAG path from a store to a may-alias load.
This should fix the standard mode as well as -enable-aa-sched-mi".
llvm-svn: 158380
We turned off the CMN instruction because it had semantics which we weren't
getting correct. If we are comparing with an immediate, then it's okay to use
the CMN instruction.
<rdar://problem/7569620>
llvm-svn: 158302
The fast register allocator is not supposed to work in the optimizing
pipeline. It doesn't make sense to compute live intervals, run full copy
coalescing, and then run RAFast.
Fast register allocation in the optimizing pipeline is better done by
RABasic.
llvm-svn: 158242
when a compile time constant is known. This occurs when implicitly zero
extending function arguments from 16 bits to 32 bits.
<rdar://problem/11481151>
llvm-svn: 157966
Use a dedicated MachO load command to annotate data-in-code regions.
This is the same format the linker produces for final executable images,
allowing consistency of representation and use of introspection tools
for both object and executable files.
Data-in-code regions are annotated via ".data_region"/".end_data_region"
directive pairs, with an optional region type.
data_region_directive := ".data_region" { region_type }
region_type := "jt8" | "jt16" | "jt32" | "jta32"
end_data_region_directive := ".end_data_region"
The previous handling of ARM-style "$d.*" labels was broken and has
been removed. Specifically, it didn't handle ARM vs. Thumb mode when
marking the end of the section.
rdar://11459456
llvm-svn: 157062
It is now possible to coalesce weird skewed sub-register copies by
picking a super-register class larger than both original registers. The
included test case produces code like this:
vld2.32 {d16, d17, d18, d19}, [r0]!
vst2.32 {d18, d19, d20, d21}, [r0]
We still perform interference checking as if it were a normal full copy
join, so this is still quite conservative. In particular, the f1 and f2
functions in the included test case still have remaining copies because
of false interference.
llvm-svn: 156878
This patch will optimize the following cases:
sub r1, r3 | sub r1, imm
cmp r3, r1 or cmp r1, r3 | cmp r1, imm
bge L1
TO
subs r1, r3
bge L1 or ble L1
If the branch instruction can use flag from "sub", then we can replace
"sub" with "subs" and eliminate the "cmp" instruction.
rdar: 10734411
llvm-svn: 156599
This patch will optimize the following cases:
sub r1, r3 | sub r1, imm
cmp r3, r1 or cmp r1, r3 | cmp r1, imm
bge L1
TO
subs r1, r3
bge L1 or ble L1
If the branch instruction can use flag from "sub", then we can replace
"sub" with "subs" and eliminate the "cmp" instruction.
rdar: 10734411
llvm-svn: 156550
ARM BUILD_VECTORs created after type legalization cannot use i8 or i16
operands, since those types are not legal. Instead use i32 operands, which
will be implicitly truncated by the BUILD_VECTOR to match the element type.
llvm-svn: 155824
On some cores it's a bad idea for performance to mix VFP and NEON instructions
and since these patterns are NEON anyway, the NEON load should be used.
llvm-svn: 155630
This is mostly to test the waters. I'd like to get results from FNT
build bots and other bots running on non-x86 platforms.
This feature has been pretty heavily tested over the last few months by
me, and it fixes several of the execution time regressions caused by the
inlining work by preventing inlining decisions from radically impacting
block layout.
I've seen very large improvements in yacr2 and ackermann benchmarks,
along with the expected noise across all of the benchmark suite whenever
code layout changes. I've analyzed all of the regressions and fixed
them, or found them to be impossible to fix. See my email to llvmdev for
more details.
I'd like for this to be in 3.1 as it complements the inliner changes,
but if any failures are showing up or anyone has concerns, it is just
a flag flip and so can be easily turned off.
I'm switching it on tonight to try and get at least one run through
various folks' performance suites in case SPEC or something else has
serious issues with it. I'll watch bots and revert if anything shows up.
llvm-svn: 154816
legalizer always use the DAG entry node. This is wrong when the libcall is
emitted as a tail call since it effectively folds the return node. If
the return node's input chain is not the entry (i.e. call, load, or store)
use that as the tail call input chain.
PR12419
rdar://9770785
rdar://11195178
llvm-svn: 154370
in-register, such that we can use a single vector store rather then a
series of scalar stores.
For func_4_8 the generated code
vldr d16, LCPI0_0
vmov d17, r0, r1
vadd.i16 d16, d17, d16
vmov.u16 r0, d16[3]
strb r0, [r2, #3]
vmov.u16 r0, d16[2]
strb r0, [r2, #2]
vmov.u16 r0, d16[1]
strb r0, [r2, #1]
vmov.u16 r0, d16[0]
strb r0, [r2]
bx lr
becomes
vldr d16, LCPI0_0
vmov d17, r0, r1
vadd.i16 d16, d17, d16
vuzp.8 d16, d17
vst1.32 {d16[0]}, [r2, :32]
bx lr
I'm not fond of how this combine pessimizes 2012-03-13-DAGCombineBug.ll,
but I couldn't think of a way to judiciously apply this combine.
This
ldrh r0, [r0, #4]
strh r0, [r1]
becomes
vldr d16, [r0]
vmov.u16 r0, d16[2]
vmov.32 d16[0], r0
vuzp.16 d16, d17
vst1.32 {d16[0]}, [r1, :32]
PR11158
rdar://10703339
llvm-svn: 154340
reciprocal if converting to the reciprocal is exact. Do it even if inexact
if -ffast-math. This substantially speeds up ac.f90 from the polyhedron
benchmarks.
llvm-svn: 154265
LSR can fold three addressing modes into its ICmpZero node:
ICmpZero BaseReg + Offset => ICmp BaseReg, -Offset
ICmpZero -1*ScaleReg + Offset => ICmp ScaleReg, Offset
ICmpZero BaseReg + -1*ScaleReg => ICmp BaseReg, ScaleReg
The first two cases are only used if TLI->isLegalICmpImmediate() likes
the offset.
Make sure the right Offset sign is passed to this method in the second
case. The ARM version is not symmetric.
<rdar://problem/11184260>
llvm-svn: 154079
A MOVCCr instruction can be commuted by inverting the condition. This
can help reduce register pressure and remove unnecessary copies in some
cases.
<rdar://problem/11182914>
llvm-svn: 154033
produces a 32-bit immediate which is consumed by the use. It tries to
fold the immediate by breaking it into two parts and fold them into the
immmediate fields of two uses. e.g
movw r2, #40885
movt r3, #46540
add r0, r0, r3
=>
add.w r0, r0, #3019898880
add.w r0, r0, #30146560
;
However, this transformation is incorrect if the user produces a flag. e.g.
movw r2, #40885
movt r3, #46540
adds r0, r0, r3
=>
add.w r0, r0, #3019898880
adds.w r0, r0, #30146560
Note the adds.w may not set the carry flag even if the original sequence
would.
rdar://11116189
llvm-svn: 153484
* Removed test/lib/llvm.exp - it is no longer needed
* Deleted the dg.exp reading code from test/lit.cfg. There are no dg.exp files
left in the test suite so this code is no longer required. test/lit.cfg is
now much shorter and clearer
* Removed a lot of duplicate code in lit.local.cfg files that need access to
the root configuration, by adding a "root" attribute to the TestingConfig
object. This attribute is dynamically computed to provide the same
information as was previously provided by the custom getRoot functions.
* Documented the config.root attribute in docs/CommandGuide/lit.pod
llvm-svn: 153408
execution-time regression for nsieve-bits on the ARMv7 -O0 -g nightly tester.
This may also improve compile-time on architectures that would otherwise
generate a libcall for urem (e.g., ARM) or fall back to the DAG selector.
rdar://10810716
llvm-svn: 153230
(i16 load $addr+c*sizeof(i16)) and replace uses of (i32 vextract) with the
i16 load. It should issue an extload instead: (i32 extload $addr+c*sizeof(i16)).
rdar://11035895
llvm-svn: 152675
When an instruction only writes sub-registers, it is still necessary to
add an <imp-def> operand for the super-register. When reloading into a
virtual register, rewriting will add the operand, but when loading
directly into a virtual register, the <imp-def> operand is still
necessary.
llvm-svn: 152095
The fpscr register contains both flags (set by FP operations/comparisons) and
control bits. The control bits (FPSCR) should be reserved, since they're always
available and needn't be defined before use. The flag bits (FPSCR_NZCV) should
like to be unreserved so they can be hoisted by MachineCSE. This fixes PR12165.
llvm-svn: 152076
In this update:
- I assumed neon2 does not imply vfpv4, but neon and vfpv4 imply neon2.
- I kept setting .fpu=neon-vfpv4 code attribute because that is what the
assembler understands.
Patch by Ana Pazos <apazos@codeaurora.org>
llvm-svn: 152036
MachineOperands that define part of a virtual register must have an
<undef> flag if they are not intended as read-modify-write operands.
The old trick of adding an <imp-def> operand doesn't work any longer.
Fixes PR12177.
llvm-svn: 152008
Some BBs can become dead after codegen preparation. If we delete them here, it
could help enable tail-call optimizations later on.
<rdar://problem/10256573>
llvm-svn: 152002
floating point equality comparisons into integer ones with -ffast-math. The
issue is the optimization causes +0.0 != -0.0.
Now the optimization is only done when one side is known to be 0.0. The other
side's sign bit is masked off for the comparison.
rdar://10964603
llvm-svn: 151861
the processor keeps a return addresses stack (RAS) which stores the address
and the instruction execution state of the instruction after a function-call
type branch instruction.
Calling a "noreturn" function with normal call instructions (e.g. bl) can
corrupt RAS and causes 100% return misprediction so LLVM should use a
unconditional branch instead. i.e.
mov lr, pc
b _foo
The "mov lr, pc" is issued in order to get proper backtrace.
rdar://8979299
llvm-svn: 151623
The tied source operand of tMUL is the second source operand, not the
first like every other two-address thumb instruction. Special case it
in the size reduction pass to make sure we create the tMUL instruction
properly.
llvm-svn: 151315
value is zero. Instead of a cmov + op, issue an conditional op instead. e.g.
cmp r9, r4
mov r4, #0
moveq r4, #1
orr lr, lr, r4
should be:
cmp r9, r4
orreq lr, lr, #1
That is, optimize (or x, (cmov 0, y, cond)) to (or.cond x, y). Similarly extend
this to xor as well as (and x, (cmov -1, y, cond)) => (and.cond x, y).
It's possible to extend this to ADD and SUB but I don't think they are common.
rdar://8659097
llvm-svn: 151224
Creates a configurable regalloc pipeline.
Ensure specific llc options do what they say and nothing more: -reglloc=... has no effect other than selecting the allocator pass itself. This patch introduces a new umbrella flag, "-optimize-regalloc", to enable/disable the optimizing regalloc "superpass". This allows for example testing coalscing and scheduling under -O0 or vice-versa.
When a CodeGen pass requires the MachineFunction to have a particular property, we need to explicitly define that property so it can be directly queried rather than naming a specific Pass. For example, to check for SSA, use MRI->isSSA, not addRequired<PHIElimination>.
CodeGen transformation passes are never "required" as an analysis
ProcessImplicitDefs does not require LiveVariables.
We have a plan to massively simplify some of the early passes within the regalloc superpass.
llvm-svn: 150226
MachineBasicBlock::canFallThrough(). We're interested in the state of the
instruction (i.e., is this a barrier or not?), not if the instruction is
predicable or not.
rdar://10501092
llvm-svn: 149070
The live range of the source register may be extended when a redundant
copy is eliminated. Make sure any kill flags between the two copies are
cleared.
This fixes PR11765.
llvm-svn: 149069
This boils down to using MachineOperand::readsReg() more.
This fixes PR11829 where a use ended up after the first def when
lowering REG_SEQUENCE instructions involving IMPLICIT_DEFs.
llvm-svn: 148996
A REG_SEQUENCE instruction is lowered into a sequence of partial defs:
%vreg7:ssub_0<def,undef> = COPY %vreg20:ssub_0
%vreg7:ssub_1<def> = COPY %vreg2
%vreg7:ssub_2<def> = COPY %vreg2
%vreg7:ssub_3<def> = COPY %vreg2
The first def needs an <undef> flag to indicate it is the beginning of
the live range, while the other defs are read-modify-write. Previously,
we depended on LiveIntervalAnalysis to notice and fix the missing
<def,undef>, but that solution was never robust, it was causing problems
with ProcessImplicitDefs and the lowering of chained REG_SEQUENCE
instructions.
This fixes PR11841.
llvm-svn: 148879
This change adds an new option --arm-enable-ehabi-descriptors that
enables emitting unwinding descriptors. This provides a mode with a
working backtrace() without the (currently broken) exception support.
llvm-svn: 148800
violation -- MC cannot depend on CodeGen.
Specifically, the MCTargetDesc component of each target is actually
a subcomponent of the MC library. As such, it cannot depend on the
target-independent code generator, because MC itself cannot depend on
the target-independent code generator. This change moved a flag from the
ARM MCTargetDesc file ARMMCAsmInfo.cpp to the CodeGen layer in
ARMException.cpp, leaving behind an 'extern' to refer back to it. That
layering order isn't viable givin the constraints outlined above.
Commandline flags are designed to be static specifically to avoid these
types of bugs.
Fixing this is likely going to require some non-trivial refactoring.
llvm-svn: 148759
This change adds an new value to the --arm-enable-ehabi option that
disables emitting unwinding descriptors. This mode gives a working
backtrace() without the (currently broken) exception support.
llvm-svn: 148686
We have patterns for vector sext and zext operations but were missing
anyext. Without those patterns, codegen will fail when the selection DAG
has any_extend nodes.
llvm-svn: 148568
overly conservative. It was concerned about cases where it would prohibit
folding simple [r, c] addressing modes. e.g.
ldr r0, [r2]
ldr r1, [r2, #4]
=>
ldr r0, [r2], #4
ldr r1, [r2]
Change the logic to look for such cases which allows it to form indexed memory
ops more aggressively.
rdar://10674430
llvm-svn: 148086
Allow LDRD to be formed from pairs with different LDR encodings. This was the original intention of the pass. Somewhere along the way, the LDR opcodes were refined which broke the optimization. We really don't care what the original opcodes are as long as they both map to the same LDRD and the immediate still fits.
Fixes rdar://10435045 ARMLoadStoreOptimization cannot handle mixed LDRi8/LDRi12
llvm-svn: 147922
define physical registers. It's currently very restrictive, only catching
cases where the CE is in an immediate (and only) predecessor. But it catches
a surprising large number of cases.
rdar://10660865
llvm-svn: 147827
opportunities that only present themselves after late optimizations
such as tail duplication .e.g.
## BB#1:
movl %eax, %ecx
movl %ecx, %eax
ret
The register allocator also leaves some of them around (due to false
dep between copies from phi-elimination, etc.)
This required some changes in codegen passes. Post-ra scheduler and the
pseudo-instruction expansion passes have been moved after branch folding
and tail merging. They were before branch folding before because it did
not always update block livein's. That's fixed now. The pass change makes
independently since we want to properly schedule instructions after
branch folding / tail duplication.
rdar://10428165
rdar://10640363
llvm-svn: 147716
This eliminates a lot of constant pool entries for -O0 builds of code
with many global variable accesses.
This speeds up -O0 codegen of consumer-typeset by 2x because the
constant island pass no longer has to look at thousands of constant pool
entries.
<rdar://problem/10629774>
llvm-svn: 147712
Now that canRealignStack() understands frozen reserved registers, it is
safe to use it for aligned spill instructions.
It will only return true if the registers reserved at the beginning of
register allocation allow for dynamic stack realignment.
<rdar://problem/10625436>
llvm-svn: 147579
This patch caused a miscompilation of oggenc because a frame pointer was
suddenly needed halfway through register allocation.
<rdar://problem/10625436>
llvm-svn: 147487
Use the spill slot alignment as well as the local variable alignment to
determine when the stack needs to be realigned. This works now that the
ARM target can always realign the stack by using a base pointer.
Still respect the ARMBaseRegisterInfo::canRealignStack() function
vetoing a realigned stack. Don't use aligned spill code in that case.
llvm-svn: 146997
We used to rely on the *eh_sjlj_setjmp instructions to mark that a function
with setjmp/longjmp exception handling clobbers all the registers. But with
the recent reorganization of ARM EH, those eh_sjlj_setjmp instructions are
expanded away earlier, before PEI can see them to determine what registers to
save and restore. Mark the dispatchsetup instruction in the same way, since
that instruction cannot be expanded early. This also more accurately reflects
when the registers are clobbered.
llvm-svn: 146949
On ARM, peephole optimization for ABS creates a trivial cfg triangle which tempts machine sink to sink instructions in code which is really straight line code. Sometimes this sinking may alter register allocator input such that use and def of a reg is divided by a branch in between, which may result in extra spills. Now mahine sink avoids sinking if final sink destination is post dominator.
Radar 10266272.
llvm-svn: 146604
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
These modifiers simply select either the low or high D subregister of a Neon
Q register. I've also removed the unimplemented 'p' modifier, which turns out
to be a bit different than the comment here suggests and as far as I can tell
was only intended for internal use in Apple's version of gcc.
llvm-svn: 146417
I followed three heuristics for deciding whether to set 'true' or
'false':
- Everything target independent got 'true' as that is the expected
common output of the GCC builtins.
- If the target arch only has one way of implementing this operation,
set the flag in the way that exercises the most of codegen. For most
architectures this is also the likely path from a GCC builtin, with
'true' being set. It will (eventually) require lowering away that
difference, and then lowering to the architecture's operation.
- Otherwise, set the flag differently dependending on which target
operation should be tested.
Let me know if anyone has any issue with this pattern or would like
specific tests of another form. This should allow the x86 codegen to
just iteratively improve as I teach the backend how to differentiate
between the two forms, and everything else should remain exactly the
same.
llvm-svn: 146370
Previously, all ARM::CONSTPOOL_ENTRY instructions had a hardwired
alignment of 4 bytes emitted by ARMAsmPrinter. Now the same alignment
is set on the basic block.
This is in preparation of supporting ARM constant pool islands with
different alignments.
llvm-svn: 145890
argument value type. Otherwise, the sign/zero-extend has no effect on arguments
passed via the stack (i.e., undefined high-order bits).
rdar://10515467
llvm-svn: 145701
than ABI alignment. These are loads / stores from / to "packed" data structures.
Their alignments are intentionally under-specified.
rdar://10301431
llvm-svn: 145273
ADDs. MaxOffs is used as a threshold to limit the size of the offset. Tradeoffs
being: (1) If we can't materialize the large constant then we'll cause fast-isel
to bail. (2) Too large of an offset can't be directly encoded in the ADD
resulting in a MOV+ADD. Generally not a bad thing because otherwise we would
have had ADD+ADD, but on Thumb this turns into a MOVS+MOVT+ADD. Working on a fix
for that. (3) Conversely, too low of a threshold we'll miss opportunities to
coalesce ADDs.
rdar://10412592
llvm-svn: 144886
SimplifyAddress to handle either a 12-bit unsigned offset or the ARM +/-imm8
offsets (addressing mode 3). This enables a load followed by an integer
extend to be folded into a single load.
For example:
ldrb r1, [r0] ldrb r1, [r0]
uxtb r2, r1 =>
mov r3, r2 mov r3, r1
llvm-svn: 144488
Add support for trimming constants to GetDemandedBits. This fixes some funky
constant generation that occurs when stores are expanded for targets that don't
support unaligned stores natively.
llvm-svn: 144102
callee's responsibility to sign or zero-extend the return value. The additional
test case just checks to make sure the calls are selected (i.e., -fast-isel-abort
doesn't assert).
llvm-svn: 144047
zero-extend the constant integer encoding. Test case provides testing for
both call parameters and materialization of i1, i8, and i16 types.
llvm-svn: 143821
On spec/gcc, this caused a codesize improvement of ~1.9% for ARM mode and ~4.9% for Thumb(2) mode. This is
codesize including literal pools.
The pools themselves doubled in size for ARM mode and quintupled for Thumb mode, leaving suggestion that there
is still perhaps redundancy in LLVM's use of constant pools that could be decreased by sharing entries.
Fixes PR11087.
llvm-svn: 142530
svn r139159 caused SelectionDAG::getConstant() to promote BUILD_VECTOR operands
with illegal types, even before type legalization. For this testcase, that led
to one BUILD_VECTOR with i16 operands and another with promoted i32 operands,
which triggered the assertion.
llvm-svn: 142370
When widening a copy, we are reading a larger register that may not be
live. Use an <undef> flag to tell the register scavenger and machine
code verifier that we know the value isn't defined.
We now widen:
%S6<def> = COPY %S4<kill>, %D3<imp-def>
into:
%D3<def> = VMOVD %D2<undef>, pred:14, pred:%noreg, %S4<imp-use,kill>
This also keeps the <kill> flag on %S4 so we don't inadvertently kill a
live value in %S5.
Finally, ensure that ARMBaseInstrInfo::setExecutionDomain() preserves
the <undef> flag when converting VMOVD to VORR.
llvm-svn: 141746
file. Since it should only be used when necessary propagate it through
the backend code generation and tweak testcases accordingly.
This helps with code like in clang's test/CodeGen/debug-info-line.c where
we have multiple #line directives within a single lexical block and want
to generate only a single block that contains each file change.
Part of rdar://10246360
llvm-svn: 141729
merging an lsl #2 that has multiple uses on A9. This shift is free, so there is
no problem merging it in multiple places. Other unprofitable shifts will not be
merged.
llvm-svn: 141247
Rewriting the entire loop nest now requires -enable-lsr-nested.
See PR11035 for some performance data.
A few unit tests specifically test nested LSR, and are now under a flag.
llvm-svn: 140762
Math is hard, and isScaledConstantInRange() always returned false for
negative constants. It was doing unsigned division of negative numbers
before casting back to signed.
llvm-svn: 140425
Modified ARMISelLowering::AdjustInstrPostInstrSelection to handle the
full gamut of CPSR defs/uses including instructins whose "optional"
cc_out operand is not really optional. This allowed removal of the
hasPostISelHook to simplify the .td files and make the implementation
more robust.
Fixes rdar://10137436: sqlite3 miscompile
llvm-svn: 140134
(The fix for the related failures on x86 is going to be nastier because we actually need Acquire memoperands attached to the atomic load instrs, etc.)
llvm-svn: 139221
Now the 'S' instructions, e.g. ADDS, treat S bit as optional operand as well.
Also fix isel hook to correctly set the optional operand.
rdar://10073745
llvm-svn: 139157
to be unreliable on platforms which require memcpy calls, and it is
complicating broader legalize cleanups. It is hoped that these cleanups
will make memcpy byval easier to implement in the future.
llvm-svn: 138977
- On COFF the .lcomm directive has an alignment argument.
- On ELF we fall back to .local + .comm
Based on a patch by NAKAMURA Takumi.
Fixes PR9337, PR9483 and PR10128.
llvm-svn: 138976
An instruction may define part of a register where the other bits are
undefined. In that case, it is safe to rematerialize the instruction.
For example:
%vreg2:ssub_0<def> = VLDRS <cp#0>, 0, pred:14, pred:%noreg, %vreg2<imp-def>
The extra <imp-def> operand indicates that the instruction does not read
the other parts of the virtual register, so a remat is safe.
This patch simply allows multiple def operands for the virtual register.
It is MI->readsVirtualRegister() that determines if we depend on a
previous value so remat is impossible.
llvm-svn: 138953
An instruction that redefines only part of a larger register can never
be rematerialized since the virtual register value depends on the old
value in other parts of the register.
This was fixed for the inline spiller in r138794. This patch fixes the
problem for all register allocators, and includes a small test case.
<rdar://problem/10032939>
llvm-svn: 138944
register dependency (rather than glue them together). This is general
goodness as it gives scheduler more freedom. However it is motivated by
a nasty bug in isel.
When a i64 sub is expanded to subc + sube.
libcall #1
\
\ subc
\ / \
\ / \
\ / libcall #2
sube
If the libcalls are not serialized (i.e. both have chains which are dag
entry), legalizer can serialize them in arbitrary orders. If it's
unlucky, it can force libcall #2 before libcall #1 in the above case.
subc
|
libcall #2
|
libcall #1
|
sube
However since subc and sube are "glued" together, this ends up being a
cycle when the scheduler combine subc and sube as a single scheduling
unit.
The right solution is to fix LegalizeType too chains the libcalls together.
However, LegalizeType is not processing nodes in order so that's harder than
it should be. For now, the move to physical register dependency will do.
rdar://10019576
llvm-svn: 138791
I don't really like the patterns, but I'm having trouble coming up with a
better way to handle them.
I plan on making other targets use the same legalization
ARM-without-memory-barriers is using... it's not especially efficient, but
if anyone cares, it's not that hard to fix for a given target if there's
some better lowering.
llvm-svn: 138621
Apparently we never added code to expand these pseudo instructions, and in
over a year, no one has noticed. Our register allocator must be awesome!
llvm-svn: 137551
Coalescing can remove copy-like instructions with sub-register operands
that constrained the register class. Examples are:
x86: GR32_ABCD:sub_8bit_hi -> GR32
arm: DPR_VFP2:ssub0 -> DPR
Recompute the register class of any virtual registers that are used by
less instructions after coalescing.
This affects code generation for the Cortex-A8 where we use NEON
instructions for f32 operations, c.f. fp_convert.ll:
vadd.f32 d16, d1, d0
vcvt.s32.f32 d0, d16
The register allocator is now free to use d16 for the temporary, and
that comes first in the allocation order because it doesn't interfere
with any s-registers.
llvm-svn: 137133
This hidden llc option runs the machine code verifier after expanding
ARM pseudo-instructions, but before if-conversion.
The machine code verifier is much better at pointing out liveness errors
that can trip up the register scavenger.
llvm-svn: 136439
Code like that would only be produced by bugpoint, but we should still
handle it correctly.
When a register is defined by a REG_SEQUENCE of undefs, the register
itself is undef. Previously, we would create a register with uses but no
defs.
Fixes part of PR10520.
llvm-svn: 136401
When splitting a live range immediately before an LDR_POST instruction
that redefines the address register, make sure to use the correct value
number in leaveIntvBefore.
We need the value number entering the instruction.
<rdar://problem/9793765>
llvm-svn: 135413
if (x != 0) x = 1
if (x == 1) x = 1
Previous codegen looks like this:
mov r1, r0
cmp r1, #1
mov r0, #0
moveq r0, #1
The naive lowering select between two different values. It should recognize the
test is equality test so it's more a conditional move rather than a select:
cmp r0, #1
movne r0, #0
rdar://9758317
llvm-svn: 135017
Print shifted immediate values directly rather than as a payload+shifter
value pair. This makes for more readable output assembly code, simplifies
the instruction printer, and is consistent with how Thumb immediates are
displayed.
llvm-svn: 134902
RAGreedy::tryAssign will now evict interference from the preferred
register even when another register is free.
To support this, add the EvictionCost struct that counts how many hints
are broken by an eviction. We don't want to break one hint just to
satisfy another.
Rename canEvict to shouldEvict, and add the first bit of eviction policy
that doesn't depend on spill weights: Always make room in the preferred
register as long as the evictees can be split and aren't already
assigned to their preferred register.
Also make the CSR avoidance more accurate. When looking for a cheaper
register it is OK to use a new volatile register. Only CSR aliases that
have never been used before should be avoided.
llvm-svn: 134735
already makes the assumption, which is correct on ARM, that a type's alignment is
less than its alloc size. This improves codegen with Clang (which inserts a lot of
extraneous alignment specifiers) and fixes <rdar://problem/9695089>.
llvm-svn: 134106
instructions can be used to match combinations of multiply/divide and VCVT
(between floating-point and integer, Advanced SIMD). Basically the VCVT
immediate operand that specifies the number of fraction bits corresponds to a
floating-point multiply or divide by the corresponding power of 2.
For example, VCVT (floating-point to fixed-point, Advanced SIMD) can replace a
combination of VMUL and VCVT (floating-point to integer) as follows:
Example (assume d17 = <float 8.000000e+00, float 8.000000e+00>):
vmul.f32 d16, d17, d16
vcvt.s32.f32 d16, d16
becomes:
vcvt.s32.f32 d16, d16, #3
Similarly, VCVT (fixed-point to floating-point, Advanced SIMD) can replace a
combinations of VCVT (integer to floating-point) and VDIV as follows:
Example (assume d17 = <float 8.000000e+00, float 8.000000e+00>):
vcvt.f32.s32 d16, d16
vdiv.f32 d16, d17, d16
becomes:
vcvt.f32.s32 d16, d16, #3
llvm-svn: 133813
1. (((x) & 0xFF00) >> 8) | (((x) & 0x00FF) << 8)
=> (bswap x) >> 16
2. ((x&0xff)<<8)|((x&0xff00)>>8)|((x&0xff000000)>>8)|((x&0x00ff0000)<<8))
=> (rotl (bswap x) 16)
This allows us to eliminate most of the def : Pat patterns for ARM rev16
revsh instructions. It catches many more cases for ARM and x86.
rdar://9609108
llvm-svn: 133503
for pre-2.9 bitcode files. We keep x86 unaligned loads, movnt, crc32, and the
target indep prefetch change.
As usual, updating the testsuite is a PITA.
llvm-svn: 133337
accumulator forwarding. Specifically (from SVN log entry):
Distribute (A + B) * C to (A * C) + (B * C) to make use of NEON multiplier
accumulator forwarding:
vadd d3, d0, d1
vmul d3, d3, d2
=>
vmul d3, d0, d2
vmla d3, d1, d2
Make sure it catches cases where operand 1 is add/fadd/sub/fsub, which was
intended in the original revision.
llvm-svn: 133127
the bits being cleared by the AND are not demanded by the BFI.
The previous BFI dag combine rule was actually incorrect (or used to be
correct until BFI representation changed).
rdar://9609030
llvm-svn: 133034
In particular, don't spill dirty registers only to satisfy a hint. It is
not worth it.
The attached test case provides an example where the fast allocator
would spill a register when other registers are available.
llvm-svn: 132900
causing an assertion failure downstream. This fixes <rdar://problem/9562908>.
This really seems like it should always be set at CCState creation time, so mistakes like
this can never happen. I'll take a look at doing that.
llvm-svn: 132811
Instead, use simpler approach and let DBG_VALUE follow its predecessor instruction. After live debug value analysis pass, all DBG_VALUE instruction are placed at the right place. Thanks Jakob for the hint!
llvm-svn: 132483
This is important for the correct lowering of unwind instructions
(which doesn't matter at all) and llvm.eh.resume calls (which does).
Take 2, now with more basic competence.
llvm-svn: 132295
This is important for the correct lowering of unwind instructions
(which doesn't matter at all) and llvm.eh.resume calls (which does).
llvm-svn: 132291
to load/store i64 values. Since there's no current support to explicitly
declare such restrictions, implement it by using specific hardcoded register
pairs during isel.
llvm-svn: 132248
register allocation dependent and will occasionally break. WIP in the
register allocator to model paired/etc registers.
rdar://9119939
llvm-svn: 132242
The practical effects here are that x86-64 fast-isel can now handle trunc from i8 to i1, and ARM fast-isel can handle many more constructs involving integers narrower than 32 bits (including loads, stores, and many integer casts).
rdar://9437928 .
llvm-svn: 132099
When instructions are deleted, they leave tombstone SlotIndex entries.
The isZeroLength method should ignore these null indexes.
This causes RABasic to sometimes spill a callee-saved register in the
abi-isel.ll test, so don't run that test with -regalloc=basic. Prioritizing
register allocation according to spill weight can cause more registers to be
used.
llvm-svn: 131436
If there is a store after the load node, then there is a chain, which means
that there is another user. Thus, asking hasOneUser would fail. Instead we
ask hasNUsesOfValue on the 'data' value.
llvm-svn: 131183
landing pad as its successor.
SjLj exception handling jumps to the correct landing pad via a switch statement
that's generated right before code-gen. Loosen the constraint in the machine
instruction verifier to allow for this. Note, this isn't the most rigorous check
since we cannot determine where that switch statement came from. But it's
marginally better than turning this check off when SjLj exceptions are used.
<rdar://problem/9187612>
llvm-svn: 130881
model constants which can be added to base registers via add-immediate
instructions which don't require an additional register to materialize
the immediate.
llvm-svn: 130743
successors) and use inverse depth first search to traverse the BBs. However
that doesn't work when the CFG has infinite loops. Simply do a linear
traversal of all BBs work just fine.
rdar://9344645
llvm-svn: 130324
more callee-saved registers and introduce copies. Only allows it if scheduling
a node above calls would end up lessen register pressure.
Call operands also has added ABI restrictions for register allocation, so be
extra careful with hoisting them above calls.
rdar://9329627
llvm-svn: 130245
Fixes Thumb2 ADCS and SBCS lowering: <rdar://problem/9275821>.
t2ADCS/t2SBCS are now pseudo instructions, consistent with ARM, so the
assembly printer correctly prints the 's' suffix.
Fixes Thumb2 adde -> SBC matching to check for live/dead carry flags.
Fixes the internal ARM machine opcode mnemonic for ADCS/SBCS.
Fixes ARM SBC lowering to check for live carry (potential bug).
llvm-svn: 130048
manually and pass all (now) 4 arguments to the mul libcall. Add a new
ExpandLibCall for just this (copied gratuitously from type legalization).
Fixes rdar://9292577
llvm-svn: 129842
- There is a minor semantic change here (evidenced by the test change) for
Darwin triples that have no version component. I debated changing the default
behavior of isOSVersionLT, but decided it made more sense for triples to be
explicit.
llvm-svn: 129802
Making use of VFP / NEON floating point multiply-accumulate / subtraction is
difficult on current ARM implementations for a few reasons.
1. Even though a single vmla has latency that is one cycle shorter than a pair
of vmul + vadd, a RAW hazard during the first (4? on Cortex-a8) can cause
additional pipeline stall. So it's frequently better to single codegen
vmul + vadd.
2. A vmla folowed by a vmul, vmadd, or vsub causes the second fp instruction to
stall for 4 cycles. We need to schedule them apart.
3. A vmla followed vmla is a special case. Obvious issuing back to back RAW
vmla + vmla is very bad. But this isn't ideal either:
vmul
vadd
vmla
Instead, we want to expand the second vmla:
vmla
vmul
vadd
Even with the 4 cycle vmul stall, the second sequence is still 2 cycles
faster.
Up to now, isel simply avoid codegen'ing fp vmla / vmls. This works well enough
but it isn't the optimial solution. This patch attempts to make it possible to
use vmla / vmls in cases where it is profitable.
A. Add missing isel predicates which cause vmla to be codegen'ed.
B. Make sure the fmul in (fadd (fmul)) has a single use. We don't want to
compute a fmul and a fmla.
C. Add additional isel checks for vmla, avoid cases where vmla is feeding into
fp instructions (except for the #3 exceptional case).
D. Add ARM hazard recognizer to model the vmla / vmls hazards.
E. Add a special pre-regalloc case to expand vmla / vmls when it's likely the
vmla / vmls will trigger one of the special hazards.
Enable these fp vmlx codegen changes for Cortex-A9.
llvm-svn: 129775
Add a avoidWriteAfterWrite() target hook to identify register classes that
suffer from write-after-write hazards. For those register classes, try to avoid
writing the same register in two consecutive instructions.
This is currently disabled by default. We should not spill to avoid hazards!
The command line flag -avoid-waw-hazard can be used to enable waw avoidance.
llvm-svn: 129772
registers for fast allocation a different way. This has us updating
used registers only when we're using that exact register.
Fixes rdar://9207598
llvm-svn: 129711
the max itself, so it is not easy to write a test case for this, but I added a
test case that would fail if the code in AsmPrinter were removed.
llvm-svn: 129432
Additional fixes:
Do something reasonable for subtargets with generic
itineraries by handle node latency the same as for an empty
itinerary. Now nodes default to unit latency unless an itinerary
explicitly specifies a zero cycle stage or it is a TokenFactor chain.
Original fixes:
UnitsSharePred was a source of randomness in the scheduler: node
priority depended on the queue data structure. I rewrote the recent
VRegCycle heuristics to completely replace the old heuristic without
any randomness. To make the ndoe latency adjustments work, I also
needed to do something a little more reasonable with TokenFactor. I
gave it zero latency to its consumers and always schedule it as low as
possible.
llvm-svn: 129421
UnitsSharePred was a source of randomness in the scheduler: node
priority depended on the queue data structure. I rewrote the recent
VRegCycle heuristics to completely replace the old heuristic without
any randomness. To make these heuristic adjustments to node latency work,
I also needed to do something a little more reasonable with TokenFactor. I
gave it zero latency to its consumers and always schedule it as low as
possible.
llvm-svn: 129383
induction variable. The preRA scheduler is unaware of induction vars,
so we look for potential "virtual register cycles" instead.
Fixes <rdar://problem/8946719> Bad scheduling prevents coalescing
llvm-svn: 129100
registers that arise from argument shuffling with the soft float ABI. These
instructions are particularly slow on Cortex A8. This fixes one half of
<rdar://problem/8674845>.
llvm-svn: 128759
The rematerialized instruction may require a more constrained register class
than the register being spilled. In the test case, the spilled register has been
inflated to the DPR register class, but we are rematerializing a load of the
ssub_0 sub-register which only exists for DPR_VFP2 registers.
The register class is reinflated after spilling, so the conservative choice is
only temporary.
llvm-svn: 128610
was lowering them to sext / uxt + mul instructions. Unfortunately the
optimization passes may hoist the extensions out of the loop and separate them.
When that happens, the long multiplication instructions can be broken into
several scalar instructions, causing significant performance issue.
Note the vmla and vmls intrinsics are not added back. Frontend will codegen them
as intrinsics vmull* + add / sub. Also note the isel optimizations for catching
mul + sext / zext are not changed either.
First part of rdar://8832507, rdar://9203134
llvm-svn: 128502
isel lowering to fold the zero-extend's and take advantage of no-stall
back to back vmul + vmla:
vmull q0, d4, d6
vmlal q0, d5, d6
is faster than
vaddl q0, d4, d5
vmovl q1, d6
vmul q0, q0, q1
This allows us to vmull + vmlal for:
f = vmull_u8( vget_high_u8(s), c);
f = vmlal_u8(f, vget_low_u8(s), c);
rdar://9197392
llvm-svn: 128444
int tries = INT_MAX;
while (tries > 0) {
tries--;
}
The check should be:
subs r4, #1
cmp r4, #0
bgt LBB0_1
The subs can set the overflow V bit when r4 is INT_MAX+1 (which loop
canonicalization apparently does in this case). cmp #0 would have cleared
it while not changing the N and Z bits. Since BGT is dependent on the V
bit, i.e. (N == V) && !Z, it is not safe to eliminate the cmp #0.
rdar://9172742
llvm-svn: 128179
v2 = bitcast v1
...
v3 = bitcast v2
...
= v3
=>
v2 = bitcast v1
...
= v1
if v1 and v3 are of in the same register class.
bitcast between i32 and fp (and others) are often not nops since they
are in different register classes. These bitcast instructions are often
left because they are in different basic blocks and cannot be
eliminated by dag combine.
rdar://9104514
llvm-svn: 127668
Also more cleanly separate the ARM vs. Thumb functionality. Previously, the
encoding would be incorrect for some Thumb instructions (the indirect calls).
llvm-svn: 127637
Optimize trivial branches in CodeGenPrepare, which often get created from the
lowering of objectsize intrinsics. Unfortunately, a number of tests were relying
on llc not optimizing trivial branches, so I had to add an option to allow them
to continue to test what they originally tested.
This fixes <rdar://problem/8785296> and <rdar://problem/9112893>.
llvm-svn: 127498
lowering of objectsize intrinsics. Unfortunately, a number of tests were relying
on llc not optimizing trivial branches, so I had to add an option to allow them
to continue to test what they originally tested.
This fixes <rdar://problem/8785296> and <rdar://problem/9112893>.
llvm-svn: 127459
The previous codegen for the slow path (when values are in VFP / NEON
registers) was incorrect if the source is NaN.
The new codegen uses NEON vbsl instruction to copy the sign bit. e.g.
vmov.i32 d1, #0x80000000
vbsl d1, d2, d0
If NEON is not available, it uses integer instructions to copy the sign bit.
rdar://9034702
llvm-svn: 126295
The i64_buildvector test in this file relies on the alignment of i64 and
f64 types being the same, which is true for Darwin but not AAPCS.
llvm-svn: 125525
This
define float @foo(float %x, float %y) nounwind readnone {
entry:
%0 = tail call float @copysignf(float %x, float %y) nounwind readnone
ret float %0
}
Was compiled to:
vmov s0, r1
bic r0, r0, #-2147483648
vmov s1, r0
vcmpe.f32 s0, #0
vmrs apsr_nzcv, fpscr
it lt
vneglt.f32 s1, s1
vmov r0, s1
bx lr
This fails to copy the sign of -0.0f because it's lost during the float to int
conversion. Also, it's sub-optimal when the inputs are in GPR registers.
Now it uses integer and + or operations when it's profitable. And it's correct!
lsrs r1, r1, #31
bfi r0, r1, #31, #1
bx lr
rdar://8984306
llvm-svn: 125357
The vld1-lane, vld1-dup and vst1-lane instructions do not yet support using
post-increment versions, but all the rest of the NEON load/store instructions
should be handled now.
llvm-svn: 125014
the load, then it may be legal to transform the load and store to integer
load and store of the same width.
This is done if the target specified the transformation as profitable. e.g.
On arm, this can transform:
vldr.32 s0, []
vstr.32 s0, []
to
ldr r12, []
str r12, []
rdar://8944252
llvm-svn: 124708
1. Fixed ARM pc adjustment.
2. Fixed dynamic-no-pic codegen
3. CSE of pc-relative load of global addresses.
It's now enabled by default for Darwin.
llvm-svn: 123991
DAG. Disable using "-disable-sched-cycles".
For ARM, this enables a framework for modeling the cpu pipeline and
counting stalls. It also activates several heuristics to drive
scheduling based on the model. Scheduling is inherently imprecise at
this stage, and until spilling is improved it may defeat attempts to
schedule. However, this framework provides greater control over
tuning codegen.
Although the flag is not target-specific, it should have very little
affect on the default scheduler used by x86. The only two changes that
affect x86 are:
- scheduling a high-latency operation bumps the current cycle so independent
operations can have their latency covered. i.e. two independent 4
cycle operations can produce results in 4 cycles, not 8 cycles.
- Two operations with equal register pressure impact and no
latency-based stalls on their uses will be prioritized by depth before height
(height is irrelevant if no stalls occur in the schedule below this point).
llvm-svn: 123971
flags. They are still not enable in this revision.
Added TargetInstrInfo::isZeroCost() to fix a fundamental problem with
the scheduler's model of operand latency in the selection DAG.
Generalized unit tests to work with sched-cycles.
llvm-svn: 123969
value, the "add pc" must be CSE'ed at the same time. We could follow the same
approach as T2 by adding pseudo instructions that combine the ldr + "add pc".
But the better approach is to use movw + movt (which I will enable soon), so
I'll leave this as a TODO.
llvm-svn: 123949
TargetInstrInfo:
Change produceSameValue() to take MachineRegisterInfo as an optional argument.
When in SSA form, targets can use it to make more aggressive equality analysis.
Machine LICM:
1. Eliminate isLoadFromConstantMemory, use MI.isInvariantLoad instead.
2. Fix a bug which prevent CSE of instructions which are not re-materializable.
3. Use improved form of produceSameValue.
ARM:
1. Teach ARM produceSameValue to look pass some PIC labels.
2. Look for operands from different loads of different constant pool entries
which have same values.
3. Re-implement PIC GA materialization using movw + movt. Combine the pair with
a "add pc" or "ldr [pc]" to form pseudo instructions. This makes it possible
to re-materialize the instruction, allow machine LICM to hoist the set of
instructions out of the loop and make it possible to CSE them. It's a bit
hacky, but it significantly improve code quality.
4. Some minor bug fixes as well.
With the fixes, using movw + movt to materialize GAs significantly outperform the
load from constantpool method. 186.crafty and 255.vortex improved > 20%, 254.gap
and 176.gcc ~10%.
llvm-svn: 123905
with an invalid type then split the result and perform the overflow check
normally.
Fixes the 32-bit parts of rdar://8622122 and rdar://8774702.
llvm-svn: 123864
movw r0, :lower16:(L_foo$non_lazy_ptr-(LPC0_0+4))
movt r0, :upper16:(L_foo$non_lazy_ptr-(LPC0_0+4))
LPC0_0:
add r0, pc, r0
It's not yet enabled by default as some tests are failing. I suspect bugs in
down stream tools.
llvm-svn: 123619
Also fix an off-by-one in SelectionDAGBuilder that was preventing shuffle
vectors from being translated to EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR.
Patch by Tim Northover.
The test changes are needed to keep those spill-q tests from testing aligned
spills and restores. If the only aligned stack objects are spill slots, we
no longer realign the stack frame. Prior to this patch, an EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR
was legalized by loading from the stack, which created an aligned frame index.
Now, however, there is nothing except the spill slot in the stack frame, so
I added an aligned alloca.
llvm-svn: 122995
If the basic block containing the BCCi64 (or BCCZi64) instruction ends with
an unconditional branch, that branch needs to be deleted before appending
the expansion of the BCCi64 to the end of the block.
llvm-svn: 122521
Type legalization splits up i64 values into pairs of i32 values, which leads
to poor quality code when inserting or extracting i64 vector elements.
If the vector element is loaded or stored, it can be treated as an f64 value
and loaded or stored directly from a VPR register. Use the pre-legalization
DAG combiner to cast those vector elements to f64 types so that the type
legalizer won't mess them up. Radar 8755338.
llvm-svn: 122319
may be called. If the entry block is empty, the insertion point iterator will be
the "end()" value. Calling ->getParent() on it (among others) causes problems.
Modify materializeFrameBaseRegister to take the machine basic block and insert
the frame base register at the beginning of that block. (It's very similar to
what the code does all ready. The only difference is that it will always insert
at the beginning of the entry block instead of after a previous materialization
of the frame base register. I doubt that that matters here.)
<rdar://problem/8782198>
llvm-svn: 122104
BUILD_VECTOR operands where the element type is not legal. I had previously
changed this code to insert TRUNCATE operations, but that was just wrong.
llvm-svn: 122102
Alignments smaller than the total size of the memory being loaded or stored,
unless the alignment is 8 bytes, are not allowed. Add tests for this, too.
llvm-svn: 121506
Added test to check bl __aeabi_read_tp gets emitted properly for ELF/ASM
as well as ELF/OBJ (including fixup)
Also added support for ELF::R_ARM_TLS_IE32
llvm-svn: 121312
vpush instructions to save / restore VFP / NEON registers like this:
vpush {d8,d10,d11}
vpop {d8,d10,d11}
vpush and vpop do not allow gaps in the register list.
rdar://8728956
llvm-svn: 121197
difficult on current ARM implementations for a few reasons.
1. Even though a single vmla has latency that is one cycle shorter than a pair
of vmul + vadd, a RAW hazard during the first (4? on Cortex-a8) can cause
additional pipeline stall. So it's frequently better to single codegen
vmul + vadd.
2. A vmla folowed by a vmul, vmadd, or vsub causes the second fp instruction to
stall for 4 cycles. We need to schedule them apart.
3. A vmla followed vmla is a special case. Obvious issuing back to back RAW
vmla + vmla is very bad. But this isn't ideal either:
vmul
vadd
vmla
Instead, we want to expand the second vmla:
vmla
vmul
vadd
Even with the 4 cycle vmul stall, the second sequence is still 2 cycles
faster.
Up to now, isel simply avoid codegen'ing fp vmla / vmls. This works well enough
but it isn't the optimial solution. This patch attempts to make it possible to
use vmla / vmls in cases where it is profitable.
A. Add missing isel predicates which cause vmla to be codegen'ed.
B. Make sure the fmul in (fadd (fmul)) has a single use. We don't want to
compute a fmul and a fmla.
C. Add additional isel checks for vmla, avoid cases where vmla is feeding into
fp instructions (except for the #3 exceptional case).
D. Add ARM hazard recognizer to model the vmla / vmls hazards.
E. Add a special pre-regalloc case to expand vmla / vmls when it's likely the
vmla / vmls will trigger one of the special hazards.
Work in progress, only A+B are enabled.
llvm-svn: 120960
Lifted adjustFixupValue() from Darwin for sharing w ELF.
Test added
TODO:
refactor ELFObjectWriter::RecordRelocation more.
Possibly share more code with Darwin?
Lots more relocations...
llvm-svn: 120534
legalization time. Since at legalization time there is no mapping from
SDNode back to the corresponding LLVM instruction and the return
SDNode is target specific, this requires a target hook to check for
eligibility. Only x86 and ARM support this form of sibcall optimization
right now.
rdar://8707777
llvm-svn: 120501
We need to check if the individual vector elements are sign/zero-extended
values. For now this only handles constants values. Radar 8687140.
llvm-svn: 120034
state. Previously Thumb2 would restore sp from fp like this:
mov sp, r7
sub, sp, #4
If an interrupt is taken after the 'mov' but before the 'sub', callee-saved
registers might be clobbered by the interrupt handler. Instead, try
restoring directly from sp:
add sp, #4
Or, if necessary (with VLA, etc.) use a scratch register to compute sp and
then restore it:
sub.w r4, r7, #8
mov sp, r7
rdar://8465407
llvm-svn: 119977
Remove movePastCSLoadStoreOps and associated code for simple pointer
increments. Update routines that depended upon other opcodes for save/restore.
Adjust all testcases accordingly.
llvm-svn: 119725
It is generally not sufficient to check if the starting offset is in range
of the maximum offset that can be efficiently used for the target.
llvm-svn: 119565
This makes it more clear that the symbol is an internal, compiler-generated
name and gives a little more description about its contents.
llvm-svn: 119564
It was mistakenly looking at the pointer type when checking for the size of
global variables. This is a partial fix for Radar 8673120.
llvm-svn: 119563
and xor. The 32-bit move immediates can be hoisted out of loops by machine
LICM but the isel hacks were preventing them.
Instead, let peephole optimization pass recognize registers that are defined by
immediates and the ARM target hook will fold the immediates in.
Other changes include 1) do not fold and / xor into cmp to isel TST / TEQ
instructions if there are multiple uses. This happens when the 'and' is live
out, machine sink would have sinked the computation and that ends up pessimizing
code. The peephole pass would recognize situations where the 'and' can be
toggled to define CPSR and eliminate the comparison anyway.
2) Move peephole pass to after machine LICM, sink, and CSE to avoid blocking
important optimizations.
rdar://8663787, rdar://8241368
llvm-svn: 119548
The live range of a register defined by an early clobber starts at the use slot,
not the def slot.
Except when it is an early clobber tied to a use operand. Then it starts at the
def slot like a standard def.
llvm-svn: 119305
live ranges for the spill register are also defined at the use slot instead of
the normal def slot.
This fixes PR8612 for the inline spiller. A use was being allocated to the same
register as a spilled early clobber def.
This problem exists in all the spillers. A fix for the standard spiller is
forthcoming.
llvm-svn: 119182
1. Fix pre-ra scheduler so it doesn't try to push instructions above calls to
"optimize for latency". Call instructions don't have the right latency and
this is more likely to use introduce spills.
2. Fix if-converter cost function. For ARM, it should use instruction latencies,
not # of micro-ops since multi-latency instructions is completely executed
even when the predicate is false. Also, some instruction will be "slower"
when they are predicated due to the register def becoming implicit input.
rdar://8598427
llvm-svn: 118135
at more than those which define CPSR. You can have this situation:
(1) subs ...
(2) sub r6, r5, r4
(3) movge ...
(4) cmp r6, 0
(5) movge ...
We cannot convert (2) to "subs" because (3) is using the CPSR set by
(1). There's an analogous situation here:
(1) sub r1, r2, r3
(2) sub r4, r5, r6
(3) cmp r4, ...
(5) movge ...
(6) cmp r1, ...
(7) movge ...
We cannot convert (1) to "subs" because of the intervening use of CPSR.
llvm-svn: 117950
- For now, loads of [r, r] addressing mode is the same as the
[r, r lsl/lsr/asr #] variants. ARMBaseInstrInfo::getOperandLatency() should
identify the former case and reduce the output latency by 1.
- Also identify [r, r << 2] case. This special form of shifter addressing mode
is "free".
llvm-svn: 117519
elements than the result vector type. So, when an instruction like:
%8 = shufflevector <2 x float> %4, <2 x float> %7, <4 x i32> <i32 1, i32 0, i32 3, i32 2>
is translated to a DAG, each operand is changed to a concat_vectors node that appends 2 undef elements. That is:
shuffle [a,b], [c,d] is changed to:
shuffle [a,b,u,u], [c,d,u,u]
That's probably the right thing for x86 but for NEON, we'd much rather have:
shuffle [a,b,c,d], undef
Teach the DAG combiner how to do that transformation for ARM. Radar 8597007.
llvm-svn: 117482
do not double-count the duplicate instructions by counting once from the
beginning and again from the end. Keep track of where the duplicates from
the beginning ended and don't go past that point when counting duplicates
at the end. Radar 8589805.
This change causes one of the MC/ARM/simple-fp-encoding tests to produce
different (better!) code without the vmovne instruction being tested.
I changed the test to produce vmovne and vmoveq instructions but moving
between register files in the opposite direction. That's not quite the same
but predicated versions of those instructions weren't being tested before,
so at least the test coverage is not any worse, just different.
llvm-svn: 117333
"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
have been printed with the "S" modifier after the predicate. With ARM's
unified syntax, they are supposed to go in the other order. We fixed this
for Thumb when we switched to unified syntax but missed changing it for
ARM. Apparently we don't generate these instructions often because no one
noticed until now. Thanks to Bill Wendling for the testcase!
llvm-svn: 116563
1. Cortex-A8 load / store multiplies can only issue on ALU0.
2. Eliminate A8_Issue, A8_LSPipe will correctly limit the load / store issues.
3. Correctly model all vld1 and vld2 variants.
llvm-svn: 116134
callee-saved registers at the end of the lists. Also prefer to avoid using
the low registers that are in register subclasses required by certain
instructions, so that those registers will more likely be available when needed.
This change makes a huge improvement in spilling in some cases. Thanks to
Jakob for helping me realize the problem.
Most of this patch is fixing the testsuite. There are quite a few places
where we're checking for specific registers. I changed those to wildcards
in places where that doesn't weaken the tests. The spill-q.ll and
thumb2-spill-q.ll tests stopped spilling with this change, so I added a bunch
of live values to force spills on those tests.
llvm-svn: 116055
allow target to correctly compute latency for cases where static scheduling
itineraries isn't sufficient. e.g. variable_ops instructions such as
ARM::ldm.
This also allows target without scheduling itineraries to compute operand
latencies. e.g. X86 can return (approximated) latencies for high latency
instructions such as division.
- Compute operand latencies for those defined by load multiple instructions,
e.g. ldm and those used by store multiple instructions, e.g. stm.
llvm-svn: 115755
cost modeling for if-conversion. Now if only we had a way to estimate the misprediction probability.
Adjsut CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt10.ll. The pipeline on Cortex-A8 is long enough that it is still profitable
to predicate an ldm, but the shorter pipeline on Cortex-A9 makes it unprofitable.
llvm-svn: 114995
Rather than having arbitrary cutoffs, actually try to cost model the conversion.
For now, the constants are tuned to more or less match our existing behavior, but these will be
changed to reflect realistic values as this work proceeds.
llvm-svn: 114973
This reverts revision 114633. It was breaking llvm-gcc-i386-linux-selfhost.
It seems there is a downstream bug that is exposed by
-cgp-critical-edge-splitting=0. When that bug is fixed, this patch can go back
in.
Note that the changes to tailcallfp2.ll are not reverted. They were good are
required.
llvm-svn: 114859
between the high and low registers for prologue/epilogue code. This was
a Darwin-only thing that wasn't providing a realistic benefit anymore.
Combining the save areas simplifies the compiler code and results in better
ARM/Thumb2 codegen.
For example, previously we would generate code like:
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
add r7, sp, #12
stmdb sp!, {r8, r10, r11}
With this change, we combine the register saves and generate:
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, r8, r10, r11, lr}
add r7, sp, #12
rdar://8445635
llvm-svn: 114340
value should be in GPRs when it's going to be used as a scalar, and we use
VMOVRRD to make that happen, but if the value is converted back to a vector
we need to fold to a simple bit_convert. Radar 8407927.
llvm-svn: 114233
legacy asm printer uses instructions of the form, "mov r0, r0, lsl #3", while
the MC-instruction printer uses the form "lsl r0, r0, #3". The latter mnemonic
is correct and preferred according the ARM documentation (A8.6.98). The former
are pseudo-instructions for the latter.
llvm-svn: 114221
encountered while building llvm-gcc for arm. This is probably the same issue
that the ppc buildbot hit. llvm::prior works on a MachineBasicBlock::iterator,
not a plain MachineInstr.
llvm-svn: 113983
backing out following to get it back to green,
so I can investigate in peace:
svn merge -c -113840 llvm/test/CodeGen/ARM/arm-and-tst-peephole.ll
svn merge -c -113876 -c -113839 llvm/lib/Target/ARM/ARMBaseInstrInfo.cpp
llvm-svn: 113980
to expose greater opportunities for store narrowing in codegen. This patch fixes a potential
infinite loop in instcombine caused by one of the introduced transforms being overly aggressive.
llvm-svn: 113763
to use AddrMode4, there was a count of the registers stored in one of the
operands. I changed that to just count the operands but forgot to adjust for
the size of D registers. This was noticed by Evan as a performance problem
but it is a potential correctness bug as well, since it is possible that this
could merge a base update with a non-matching immediate.
llvm-svn: 113576
take multiple cycles to decode.
For the current if-converter clients (actually only ARM), the instructions that
are predicated on false are not nops. They would still take machine cycles to
decode. Micro-coded instructions such as LDM / STM can potentially take multiple
cycles to decode. If-converter should take treat them as non-micro-coded
simple instructions.
llvm-svn: 113570
vabd intrinsic and add and/or zext operations. In the case of vaba, this
also avoids the need for a DAG combine pattern to combine vabd with add.
Update tests. Auto-upgrade the old intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 112941
add, and subtract operations with zero-extended or sign-extended vectors.
Update tests. Add auto-upgrade support for the old intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 112773
int x(int t) {
if (t & 256)
return -26;
return 0;
}
We generate this:
tst.w r0, #256
mvn r0, #25
it eq
moveq r0, #0
while gcc generates this:
ands r0, r0, #256
it ne
mvnne r0, #25
bx lr
Scandalous really!
During ISel time, we can look for this particular pattern. One where we have a
"MOVCC" that uses the flag off of a CMPZ that itself is comparing an AND
instruction to 0. Something like this (greatly simplified):
%r0 = ISD::AND ...
ARMISD::CMPZ %r0, 0 @ sets [CPSR]
%r0 = ARMISD::MOVCC 0, -26 @ reads [CPSR]
All we have to do is convert the "ISD::AND" into an "ARM::ANDS" that sets [CPSR]
when it's zero. The zero value will all ready be in the %r0 register and we only
need to change it if the AND wasn't zero. Easy!
llvm-svn: 112664
all the other LDM/STM instructions. This fixes asm printer crashes when
compiling with -O0. I've changed one of the NEON tests (vst3.ll) to run
with -O0 to check this in the future.
Prior to this change VLDM/VSTM used addressing mode #5, but not really.
The offset field was used to hold a count of the number of registers being
loaded or stored, and the AM5 opcode field was expanded to specify the IA
or DB mode, instead of the standard ADD/SUB specifier. Much of the backend
was not aware of these special cases. The crashes occured when rewriting
a frameindex caused the AM5 offset field to be changed so that it did not
have a valid submode. I don't know exactly what changed to expose this now.
Maybe we've never done much with -O0 and NEON. Regardless, there's no longer
any reason to keep a count of the VLDM/VSTM registers, so we can use
addressing mode #4 and clean things up in a lot of places.
llvm-svn: 112322
float t1(int argc) {
return (argc == 1123) ? 1.234f : 2.38213f;
}
We would generate truly awful code on ARM (those with a weak stomach should look
away):
_t1:
movw r1, #1123
movs r2, #1
movs r3, #0
cmp r0, r1
mov.w r0, #0
it eq
moveq r0, r2
movs r1, #4
cmp r0, #0
it ne
movne r3, r1
adr r0, #LCPI1_0
ldr r0, [r0, r3]
bx lr
The problem was that legalization was creating a cascade of SELECT_CC nodes, for
for the comparison of "argc == 1123" which was fed into a SELECT node for the ?:
statement which was itself converted to a SELECT_CC node. This is because the
ARM back-end doesn't have custom lowering for SELECT nodes, so it used the
default "Expand".
I added a fairly simple "LowerSELECT" to the ARM back-end. It takes care of this
testcase, but can obviously be expanded to include more cases.
Now we generate this, which looks optimal to me:
_t1:
movw r1, #1123
movs r2, #0
cmp r0, r1
adr r0, #LCPI0_0
it eq
moveq r2, #4
ldr r0, [r0, r2]
bx lr
.align 2
LCPI0_0:
.long 1075344593 @ float 2.382130e+00
.long 1067316150 @ float 1.234000e+00
llvm-svn: 110799
Without this what was happening was:
* R3 is not marked as "used"
* ARM backend thinks it has to save it to the stack because of vaarg
* Offset computation correctly ignores it
* Offsets are wrong
llvm-svn: 110446
This assumption is not satisfied due to global mergeing.
Workaround the issue by temporary disablinge mergeing of const globals.
Also, ignore LLVM "special" globals. This fixes PR7716
llvm-svn: 109423
it's too late to start backing off aggressive latency scheduling when most
of the registers are in use so the threshold should be a bit tighter.
- Correctly handle live out's and extract_subreg etc.
- Enable register pressure aware scheduling by default for hybrid scheduler.
For ARM, this is almost always a win on # of instructions. It's runtime
neutral for most of the tests. But for some kernels with high register
pressure it can be a huge win. e.g. 464.h264ref reduced number of spills by
54 and sped up by 20%.
llvm-svn: 109279
-enable-no-nans-fp-math and -enable-no-infs-fp-math. All of the current codegen fp math optimizations only care whether the fp arithmetics arguments and results can never be NaN.
llvm-svn: 108465
correct alignment information, which simplifies ExpandRes_VAARG a bit.
The patch introduces a new alignment information to TargetLoweringInfo. This is
needed since the two natural candidates cannot be used:
* The 's' in target data: If this is set to the minimal alignment of any
argument, getCallFrameTypeAlignment would return 4 for doubles on ARM for
example.
* The getTransientStackAlignment method. It is possible for an architecture to
have argument less aligned than what we maintain the stack pointer.
llvm-svn: 108072
disabled and then never turned back on again. Adjust some tests, one because
this change avoids an unnecessary instruction, and the other to make it
continue testing what it was intended to test.
llvm-svn: 107941
1. The arguments are f32.
2. The arguments are loads and they have no uses other than the comparison.
3. The comparison code is EQ or NE.
e.g.
vldr.32 s0, [r1]
vldr.32 s1, [r0]
vcmpe.f32 s1, s0
vmrs apsr_nzcv, fpscr
beq LBB0_2
=>
ldr r1, [r1]
ldr r0, [r0]
cmp r0, r1
beq LBB0_2
More complicated cases will be implemented in subsequent patches.
llvm-svn: 107852
Add explicit testcases for tail calls within the same module.
Duplicate some code to humor those who think .w doesn't apply on ARM.
Leave this disabled on Thumb1, and add some comments explaining why it's hard
and won't gain much.
llvm-svn: 107851
Objective-C metadata types which should be marked as "weak", but which the
linker will remove upon final linkage. However, this linkage isn't specific to
Objective-C.
For example, the "objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc" symbol is defined like this:
.globl l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc
.weak_definition l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc
.section __DATA, __objc_msgrefs, coalesced
.align 3
l_objc_msgSend_fixup_alloc:
.quad _objc_msgSend_fixup
.quad L_OBJC_METH_VAR_NAME_1
This is different from the "linker_private" linkage type, because it can't have
the metadata defined with ".weak_definition".
Currently only supported on Darwin platforms.
llvm-svn: 107433
A partial redefine needs to be treated like a tied operand, and the register
must be reloaded while processing use operands.
This fixes a bug where partially redefined registers were processed as normal
defs with a reload added. The reload could clobber another use operand if it was
a kill that allowed register reuse.
llvm-svn: 107193
The LowerSubregs pass needs to preserve implicit def operands attached to
EXTRACT_SUBREG instructions when it replaces those instructions with copies.
llvm-svn: 107189
of getPhysicalRegisterRegClass with it.
If we want to make a copy (or estimate its cost), it is better to use the
smallest class as more efficient operations might be possible.
llvm-svn: 107140
introduced in r106343, but only showed up recently (with a particular compiler &
linker combination) because of the particular check, and because we have no
builtin checking for dereferencing the end of an array, which is truly
unfortunate.
llvm-svn: 106908
CoalescerPair can determine if a copy can be coalesced, and which register gets
merged away. The old logic in SimpleRegisterCoalescing had evolved into
something a bit too convoluted.
This second attempt fixes some crashes that only occurred Linux.
llvm-svn: 106769
CoalescerPair can determine if a copy can be coalesced, and which register gets
merged away. The old logic in SimpleRegisterCoalescing had evolved into
something a bit too convoluted.
llvm-svn: 106701
void t(int *cp0, int *cp1, int *dp, int fmd) {
int c0, c1, d0, d1, d2, d3;
c0 = (*cp0++ & 0xffff) | ((*cp1++ << 16) & 0xffff0000);
c1 = (*cp0++ & 0xffff) | ((*cp1++ << 16) & 0xffff0000);
/* ... */
}
It code gens into something pretty bad. But with this change (analogous to the
X86 back-end), it will use ldm and generate few instructions.
llvm-svn: 106693
- This fixed a number of bugs in if-converter, tail merging, and post-allocation
scheduler. If-converter now runs branch folding / tail merging first to
maximize if-conversion opportunities.
- Also changed the t2IT instruction slightly. It now defines the ITSTATE
register which is read by instructions in the IT block.
- Added Thumb2 specific hazard recognizer to ensure the scheduler doesn't
change the instruction ordering in the IT block (since IT mask has been
finalized). It also ensures no other instructions can be scheduled between
instructions in the IT block.
This is not yet enabled.
llvm-svn: 106344
basic tests.
This has been well tested on Darwin but not elsewhere.
It should work provided the linker correctly resolves
B.W <label in other function>
which it has not seen before, at least from llvm-based
compilers. I'm leaving the arm-tail-calls switch in
until I see if there's any problems because of that;
it might need to be disabled for some environments.
llvm-svn: 106299
replacing the overly conservative checks that I had introduced recently to
deal with correctness issues. This makes a pretty noticable difference
in our testcases where reg_sequences are used. I've updated one test to
check that we no longer emit the unnecessary subreg moves.
llvm-svn: 105991
i64 and f64 types, but now it also handle Neon vector types, so the f64 result
of VMOVDRR may need to be converted to a Neon type. Radar 8084742.
llvm-svn: 105845
optimization level.
This only really affects llc for now because both the llvm-gcc and clang front
ends override the default register allocator. I intend to remove that code later.
llvm-svn: 104904
copying VFP subregs. This exposed a bunch of dead code in the *spill-q.ll
tests, so I tweaked those tests to keep that code from being optimized away.
Radar 7872877.
llvm-svn: 104415
so that it will continue to test what it was meant to test when I commit a
separate change for better support of BUILD_VECTOR and VECTOR_SHUFFLE for Neon.
Fix a DAG combiner crash exposed by this test change.
llvm-svn: 104380
definitions of the virtual register.
This happens when spilling the registers produced by REG_SEQUENCE:
%reg1047:5<def>, %reg1047:6<def>, %reg1047:7<def> = VLD3d8 %reg1033, 0, pred:14, pred:%reg0
The rewriter would spill the register multiple times, dead store elimination
tried to keep up, but ended up cutting the branch it was sitting on.
llvm-svn: 104321
operand on the left, the interesting operand is on the right. This
fixes a bug where LSR was failing to recognize ICmpZero uses,
which led it to be unable to reverse the induction variable in the
attached testcase.
Delete test/CodeGen/X86/stack-color-with-reg-2.ll, because its test
is extremely fragile and hard to meaningfully update.
llvm-svn: 104262
The trouble arises when the result of a vector cmp + sext is then and'ed with all ones. Instcombine will turn it into a vector cmp + zext, dag combiner will miss turning it into a vsetcc and hell breaks loose after that.
Teach dag combine to turn a vector cpm + zest into a vsetcc + and 1. This fixes rdar://7923010.
llvm-svn: 104094
While that approach works wonders for register pressure, it tends to break
everything.
This should unbreak the arm-linux builder and fix a number of miscompilations.
llvm-svn: 103946
beneficial cases. See the changes in test/CodeGen/X86/tail-opts.ll and
test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt2.ll for details.
The fix is to change HashEndOfMBB to hash at most one instruction,
instead of trying to apply heuristics about when it will be profitable to
consider more than one instruction. The regular tail-merging heuristics
are already prepared to handle the same cases, and they're more precise.
Also, make test/CodeGen/ARM/ifcvt5.ll and
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-branch.ll slightly more complex so that they
continue to test what they're intended to test.
And, this eliminates the problem in
test/CodeGen/Thumb2/2009-10-15-ITBlockBranch.ll, the testcase from
PR5204. Update it accordingly.
llvm-svn: 102907
the intrinsics. The reason for those i8* types is that the intrinsics are
overloaded on the vector type and we don't have a way to declare an intrinsic
where one argument is an overloaded vector type and another argument is a
pointer to the vector element type. The bitcasts added here will match what
the frontend will typically generate when these intrinsics are used.
llvm-svn: 101840
instructions to help disassembly.
We also changed the output of the addressing modes to omit the '+' from the
assembler syntax #+/-<imm> or +/-<Rm>. See, for example, A8.6.57/58/60.
And modified test cases to not expect '+' in +reg or #+num. For example,
; CHECK: ldr.w r9, [r7, #28]
llvm-svn: 98745
U test/CodeGen/ARM/tls2.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/arm-negative-stride.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/2009-10-30.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/globals.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/str_pre-2.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/ldrd.ll
U test/CodeGen/ARM/2009-10-27-double-align.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-strb.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/ldr-str-imm12.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-strh.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-ldr.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-str_pre.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-str.ll
U test/CodeGen/Thumb2/thumb2-ldrh.ll
U utils/TableGen/TableGen.cpp
U utils/TableGen/DisassemblerEmitter.cpp
D utils/TableGen/RISCDisassemblerEmitter.h
D utils/TableGen/RISCDisassemblerEmitter.cpp
U Makefile.rules
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMInstrNEON.td
U lib/Target/ARM/Makefile
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMInstPrinter.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMAsmPrinter.cpp
U lib/Target/ARM/AsmPrinter/ARMInstPrinter.h
D lib/Target/ARM/Disassembler
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMInstrFormats.td
U lib/Target/ARM/ARMAddressingModes.h
U lib/Target/ARM/Thumb2ITBlockPass.cpp
llvm-svn: 98640
(RISCDisassemblerEmitter) which emits the decoder functions for ARM and Thumb,
and the disassembler core which invokes the decoder function and builds up the
MCInst based on the decoded Opcode.
Added sub-formats to the NeonI/NeonXI instructions to further refine the NEONFrm
instructions to help disassembly.
We also changed the output of the addressing modes to omit the '+' from the
assembler syntax #+/-<imm> or +/-<Rm>. See, for example, A8.6.57/58/60.
And modified test cases to not expect '+' in +reg or #+num. For example,
; CHECK: ldr.w r9, [r7, #28]
llvm-svn: 98637
an undef value. This is only going to come up for bugpoint-reduced tests --
correct programs will not access memory at undefined addresses -- so it's not
worth the effort of doing anything more aggressive.
llvm-svn: 97745
greater-than-or-equal SELECT_CCs to NEON vmin/vmax instructions. This is
only allowed when UnsafeFPMath is set or when at least one of the operands
is known to be nonzero.
llvm-svn: 97065
branch in ARM v4 code, since it gets clobbered by the return address before
it is used. Instead of adding a new register class containing all the GPRs
except LR, just use the existing tGPR class.
llvm-svn: 96360
bug fixes, and with improved heuristics for analyzing foreign-loop
addrecs.
This change also flattens IVUsers, eliminating the stride-oriented
groupings, which makes it easier to work with.
llvm-svn: 95975
legalization even when the IR-level optimizer has removed dead phis, such
as when the high half of an i64 value is unused on a 32-bit target.
I had to adjust a few test cases that had dead phis.
This is a partial fix for Radar 7627077.
llvm-svn: 95816
only run for x86 with fastisel. I've found it being very effective in
eliminating some obvious dead code as result of formal parameter lowering
especially when tail call optimization eliminated the need for some of the loads
from fixed frame objects. It also shrinks a number of the tests. A couple of
tests no longer make sense and are now eliminated.
llvm-svn: 95493
Even if they are suported by the core, they can be disabled
(this is just a configuration bit inside some register).
Allow unaligned memops on darwin and conservatively disallow them otherwise.
llvm-svn: 94889
This new version is much more aggressive about doing "full" reduction in
cases where it reduces register pressure, and also more aggressive about
rewriting induction variables to count down (or up) to zero when doing so
reduces register pressure.
It currently uses fairly simplistic algorithms for finding reuse
opportunities, but it introduces a new framework allows it to combine
multiple strategies at once to form hybrid solutions, instead of doing
all full-reduction or all base+index.
llvm-svn: 94061
adding an "i" to the suffix, indicating that the elements are integers, is
accepted but not part of the standard syntax. This helps us pass a few more
of the Neon tests from gcc.
llvm-svn: 93677
different BlockAddress labels, but nothing semantically important.
Add a FIXME that BlockAddress codegen is broken if the LLVM BB has
an empty name (e.g. strip was run).
llvm-svn: 93303
The change in SelectionDAGBuilder is needed to allow using bitcasts to convert
between f64 (the default type for ARM "d" registers) and 64-bit Neon vector
types. Radar 7457110.
llvm-svn: 91649
both source operands. In the canonical form, the 2nd operand is changed to an
undef and the shuffle mask is adjusted to only reference elements from the 1st
operand. Radar 7434842.
llvm-svn: 90417
than doing the same via constpool:
1. Load from constpool costs 3 cycles on A9, movt/movw pair - just 2.
2. Load from constpool might stall up to 300 cycles due to cache miss.
3. Movt/movw does not use load/store unit.
4. Less constpool entries => better compiler performance.
This is only enabled on ELF systems, since darwin does not have needed
relocations (yet).
llvm-svn: 89720
D0<def,dead> = ...
...
= S0<use, kill>
S0<def> = ...
...
D0<def> =
The first D0 def is correctly marked dead, however, livevariables should have
added an implicit def of S0 or we end up with a use without a def.
llvm-svn: 88690
will not accept negative values for these. LLVM's default operand printing
sign extends values, so that valid unsigned values appear as negative
immediates. Print all VMOV immediate operands as hex values to resolve this.
Radar 7372576.
llvm-svn: 86301
the loop preheader. Add instructions which are already in the preheader block that
may be common expressions of those that are hoisted out. These does get a few more
instructions CSE'ed.
llvm-svn: 85799
void f (int a1, int a2, int a3, int a4, int a5,...)
In ARMTargetLowering::LowerFormalArguments if the function has 4 or
more regular arguments we used to set VarArgsFrameIndex using an
offset of 0, which is only correct if the function has exactly 4
regular arguments.
llvm-svn: 85590
physical registers. This is especially critical for the later two since they
start the live interval of a super-register. e.g.
%DO<def> = INSERT_SUBREG %D0<undef>, %S0<kill>, 1
If this instruction is eliminated, the register scavenger will not be happy as
D0 is not defined previously.
This fixes PR5055.
llvm-svn: 82968
- Allocate MachineMemOperands and MachineMemOperand lists in MachineFunctions.
This eliminates MachineInstr's std::list member and allows the data to be
created by isel and live for the remainder of codegen, avoiding a lot of
copying and unnecessary translation. This also shrinks MemSDNode.
- Delete MemOperandSDNode. Introduce MachineSDNode which has dedicated
fields for MachineMemOperands.
- Change MemSDNode to have a MachineMemOperand member instead of its own
fields with the same information. This introduces some redundancy, but
it's more consistent with what MachineInstr will eventually want.
- Ignore alignment when searching for redundant loads for CSE, but remember
the greatest alignment.
Target-specific code which previously used MemOperandSDNodes with generic
SDNodes now use MemIntrinsicSDNodes, with opcodes in a designated range
so that the SelectionDAG framework knows that MachineMemOperand information
is available.
llvm-svn: 82794
For the AAPCS ABI, SP must always be 4-byte aligned, and at any "public
interface" it must be 8-byte aligned. For the older ARM APCS ABI, the stack
alignment is just always 4 bytes. For X86, we currently align SP at
entry to a function (e.g., to 16 bytes for Darwin), but no stack alignment
is needed at other times, such as for a leaf function.
After discussing this with Dan, I decided to go with the approach of adding
a new "TransientStackAlignment" field to TargetFrameInfo. This value
specifies the stack alignment that must be maintained even in between calls.
It defaults to 1 except for ARM, where it is 4. (Some other targets may
also want to set this if they have similar stack requirements. It's not
currently required for PPC because it sets targetHandlesStackFrameRounding
and handles the alignment in target-specific code.) The existing StackAlignment
value specifies the alignment upon entry to a function, which is how we've
been using it anyway.
llvm-svn: 82767
LiveVariables add implicit kills to correctly track partial register kills. This works well enough and is fairly accurate. But coalescer can make it impossible to maintain these markers. e.g.
BL <ga:sss1>, %R0<kill,undef>, %S0<kill>, %R0<imp-def>, %R1<imp-def,dead>, %R2<imp-def,dead>, %R3<imp-def,dead>, %R12<imp-def,dead>, %LR<imp-def,dead>, %D0<imp-def>, ...
...
%reg1031<def> = FLDS <cp#1>, 0, 14, %reg0, Mem:LD4[ConstantPool]
...
%S0<def> = FCPYS %reg1031<kill>, 14, %reg0, %D0<imp-use,kill>
When reg1031 and S0 are coalesced, the copy (FCPYS) will be eliminated the the implicit-kill of D0 is lost. In this case it's possible to move the marker to the FLDS. But in many cases, this is not possible. Suppose
%reg1031<def> = FOO <cp#1>, %D0<imp-def>
...
%S0<def> = FCPYS %reg1031<kill>, 14, %reg0, %D0<imp-use,kill>
When FCPYS goes away, the definition of S0 is the "FOO" instruction. However, transferring the D0 implicit-kill to FOO doesn't work since it is the def of D0 itself. We need to fix this in another time by introducing a "kill" pseudo instruction to track liveness.
Disabling the assertion is not ideal, but machine verifier is doing that job now. It's important to know double-def is not a miscomputation since it means a register should be free but it's not tracked as free. It's a performance issue instead.
llvm-svn: 82677
of the defs are processed.
Also fix a implicit_def propagation bug: a implicit_def of a physical register
should be applied to uses of the sub-registers.
llvm-svn: 82616
variable increment / decrement slighter high priority.
This has major impact on some micro-benchmarks. On MultiSource/Applications
and spec tests, it's a minor win. It also reduce 256.bzip instruction count
by 8%, 55 on 164.gzip on i386 / Darwin.
llvm-svn: 82485
tied to different source registers, the TwoAddressInstructionPass needs to
be smarter. Change it to check before replacing a source register whether
that source register is tied to a different destination register, and if so,
defer handling it until a subsequent iteration.
llvm-svn: 80654
makes an eggregious hack somewhat more palatable. Bringing the LSDA forward
and making it a GV available for reference would be even better, but is
beyond the scope of what I'm looking to solve at this point.
Objective C++ code could generate function names that broke the previous
scheme. This fixes that.
llvm-svn: 80649
This is derived from a patch by Anton Korzh. I modified it to recognize
the VEXT shuffles during legalization and lower them to a target-specific
DAG node.
llvm-svn: 79428
support unaligned mem access only for certain types. (Should it be size
instead?)
ARM v7 supports unaligned access for i16 and i32, some v6 variants support it
as well.
llvm-svn: 79127
It is legal for an inline asm operand to use an earlyclobber register if the
use operand is tied to the earlyclobber operand. The issue is discussed here:
http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/1999-04n/msg00431.html
We should perhaps let only the machine code verifier worry about these finer
details. EarlyClobber operands are not really interesting to the scavenger.
This fixes PR4528 for the third time.
llvm-svn: 79122
In a naked function, the flag is never set and getPristineRegs() returns an
empty list. That means naked functions are able to clobber callee saved
registers, but that is the whole point of naked functions.
This fixes PR4716.
llvm-svn: 79096
the overloaded vector types allowed floating-point or integer vector elements.
Most of these operations actually depend on the element type, so bitcasting
was not an option.
If you include the vpadd intrinsics that I updated earlier, this gets rid
of 20 intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 78646
instead of syntactically as a string. This means that it keeps track of the
segment, section, flags, etc directly and asmprints them in the right format.
This also includes parsing and validation support for llvm-mc and
"attribute(section)", so we should now start getting errors about invalid
section attributes from the compiler instead of the assembler on darwin.
Still todo:
1) Uniquing of darwin mcsections
2) Move all the Darwin stuff out to MCSectionMachO.[cpp|h]
3) there are a few FIXMEs, for example what is the syntax to get the
S_GB_ZEROFILL segment type?
llvm-svn: 78547
killed by another operand.
There is probably a better fix. Either 1) scavenger can look at other operands, or
2) livevariables can be smarter about kill markers. Patches welcome.
llvm-svn: 78072
When LowerSubregsInstructionPass::LowerInsert eliminates an INSERT_SUBREG
instriction because it is an identity copy, make sure that the same registers
are alive before and after the elimination.
When the super-register is marked <undef> this requires inserting an
IMPLICIT_DEF instruction to make sure the super register is live.
Fix a related bug where a kill flag on the inserted sub-register was not transferred properly.
Finally, clear the undef flag in MachineInstr::addRegisterKilled. Undef implies dead and kill implies live, so they cant both be valid.
llvm-svn: 77989
wide vectors. Likewise, change VSTn intrinsics to take separate arguments
for each vector in a multi-vector struct. Adjust tests accordingly.
llvm-svn: 77468
as an (index,bool) pair. The bool flag records whether the kill is a
PHI kill or not. This code will be used to enable splitting of live
intervals containing PHI-kills.
A slight change to live interval weights introduced an extra spill
into lsr-code-insertion (outside the critical sections). The test
condition has been updated to reflect this.
llvm-svn: 75097
Note, isUndef marker must be placed even on implicit_def def operand or else the scavenger will not ignore it. This is necessary because -O0 path does not use liveintervalanalysis, it treats implicit_def just like any other def.
llvm-svn: 74601
The register allocator, when it allocates a register to a virtual register defined by an implicit_def, can allocate any physical register without worrying about overlapping live ranges. It should mark all of operands of the said virtual register so later passes will do the right thing.
This is not the best solution. But it should be a lot less fragile to having the scavenger try to track what is defined by implicit_def.
llvm-svn: 74518
After much back and forth, I decided to deviate from ARM design and split LDR into 4 instructions (r + imm12, r + imm8, r + r << imm12, constantpool). The advantage of this is 1) it follows the latest ARM technical manual, and 2) makes it easier to reduce the width of the instruction later. The down side is this creates more inconsistency between the two sub-targets. We should split ARM LDR instruction in a similar fashion later. I've added a README entry for this.
llvm-svn: 74420
while experimenting. I'm reasonably sure this is correct, but please
tell me if these instructions have some strange property which makes this
change unsafe.
llvm-svn: 73746
TurnCopyIntoImpDef turns a copy into implicit_def and remove the val# defined by it. This causes an scavenger assertion later if the def reaches other blocks. Disable the transformation if the value live interval extends beyond its def block.
llvm-svn: 73478
- Change register allocation hint to a pair of unsigned integers. The hint type is zero (which means prefer the register specified as second part of the pair) or entirely target dependent.
- Allow targets to specify alternative register allocation orders based on allocation hint.
Part 2.
- Use the register allocation hint system to implement more aggressive load / store multiple formation.
- Aggressively form LDRD / STRD. These are formed *before* register allocation. It has to be done this way to shorten live interval of base and offset registers. e.g.
v1025 = LDR v1024, 0
v1026 = LDR v1024, 0
=>
v1025,v1026 = LDRD v1024, 0
If this transformation isn't done before allocation, v1024 will overlap v1025 which means it more difficult to allocate a register pair.
- Even with the register allocation hint, it may not be possible to get the desired allocation. In that case, the post-allocation load / store multiple pass must fix the ldrd / strd instructions. They can either become ldm / stm instructions or back to a pair of ldr / str instructions.
This is work in progress, not yet enabled.
llvm-svn: 73381
consecutive addresses togther. This makes it easier for the post-allocation pass
to form ldm / stm.
This is step 1. We are still missing a lot of ldm / stm opportunities because
of register allocation are not done in the desired order. More enhancements
coming.
llvm-svn: 73291