The "dead" markings allow existing target-independent optimizations,
like MachineSink, to trigger more frequently. The CPSR defs would have
eventually been marked dead by LiveVariables, so this only affects
optimizations before regalloc.
The ARMBaseInstrInfo.cpp change is fixing a bug which is only visible
with this change: the transform adds a use to an otherwise dead def
of CPSR. This is covered by existing regression tests.
thumb2-tbh.ll breaks for Thumb1 due to MachineLICM changing the
generated code; I'll fix it in D53452.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53453
llvm-svn: 345420
Currently, for this node:
vector int test(int a, int b, int c, int d) {
return (vector int) { a, b, c, d };
}
we get this on Power9:
mtvsrdd 34, 5, 3
mtvsrdd 35, 6, 4
vmrgow 2, 3, 2
and this on Power8:
mtvsrwz 0, 3
mtvsrwz 1, 5
mtvsrwz 2, 4
mtvsrwz 3, 6
xxmrghd 34, 1, 0
xxmrghd 35, 3, 2
vmrgow 2, 3, 2
This can be improved to this on LE Power9:
rldimi 3, 4, 32, 0
rldimi 5, 6, 32, 0
mtvsrdd 34, 5, 3
and this on LE Power8
rldimi 3, 4, 32, 0
rldimi 5, 6, 32, 0
mtvsrd 34, 3
mtvsrd 35, 5
xxpermdi 34, 35, 34, 0
This patch updates the TD pattern to generate the optimized sequence for both
Power8 and Power9 on LE and BE.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53494
llvm-svn: 345414
These promotions add additional bitcasts to the SelectionDAG that can pessimize computeKnownBits/computeNumSignBits. It also seems to interfere with broadcast formation.
This patch removes the promotion and adds isel patterns instead.
The increased table size is more than I would like, but hopefully we can find some canonicalizations or other tricks to start pruning out patterns going forward.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53268
llvm-svn: 345408
This is a narrow fix for 1 of the problems mentioned in PR27780:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=27780
I looked at more general solutions, but it's a mess. We canonicalize shuffle masks
based on the number of elements accessed from each operand, and that's not optional.
If you remove that, we'll crash because we fail to match isel patterns. So I'm
waiting until we're sure that we have blendvb with constant condition and then
commuting based on the load potential. Other cases like blend-with-immediate are
already handled elsewhere, so this is probably not a common problem anyway.
I didn't use "MayFoldLoad" because that checks for one-use and in these cases, we've
screwed that up by creating a temporary PSHUFB using these operands that we're counting
on to be killed later. Undoing that didn't look like a simple task because it's
intertwined with determining if we actually use both operands of the shuffle or not.a
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53737
llvm-svn: 345390
AMDGPU currently only supports direct calls, but at lower optimisation levels it
fails to lower statically direct calls which appear indirect due to a bitcast.
Add a pass to visit all CallSites and use CallPromotionUtils to "devirtualize"
calls.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52741
llvm-svn: 345382
For both operands are bool, short, int, long, long long, add the following optimization.
1. 0-x == y --> x+y ==0
2. 0-x != y --> x+y != 0
Review: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53360
llvm-svn: 345366
At present a v2i16 -> v2f64 convert is implemented by extracts to scalar,
scalar converts, and merge back into a vector. Use vector converts instead,
with the int data permuted into the proper position and extended if necessary.
Patch by RolandF.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53346
llvm-svn: 345361
SystemZAsmParser can now handle -debug by printing the operands neatly to the
output stream. Before this patch this lead to an llvm_unreachable().
It seems that now '-mllvm -debug' does not cause any crashes anywhere (at
least not on SPEC).
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53328
llvm-svn: 345349
In order to print the IR slot number for the memory operand, the DAG pointer
must be passed to SDNode::dump().
The isel-debug.ll test updated to also check for the IR Value reference being
printed correctly.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53333
llvm-svn: 345347
Summary:
This adds support for LSDA (exception table) generation for wasm EH.
Wasm EH mostly follows the structure of Itanium-style exception tables,
with one exception: a call site table entry in wasm EH corresponds to
not a call site but a landing pad.
In wasm EH, the VM is responsible for stack unwinding. After an
exception occurs and the stack is unwound, the control flow is
transferred to wasm 'catch' instruction by the VM, after which the
personality function is called from the compiler-generated code. (Refer
to WasmEHPrepare pass for more information on this part.)
This patch:
- Changes wasm.landingpad.index intrinsic to take a token argument, to
make this 1:1 match with a catchpad instruction
- Stores landingpad index info and catch type info MachineFunction in
before instruction selection
- Lowers wasm.lsda intrinsic to an MCSymbol pointing to the start of an
exception table
- Adds WasmException class with overridden methods for table generation
- Adds support for LSDA section in Wasm object writer
Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, rnk
Subscribers: mgorny, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52748
llvm-svn: 345345
Add LLVM intrinsics for the ARMv8.2-A FP16FML vector-form instructions. Add a
DAG pattern to define the indexed-form intrinsics in terms of the vector-form
ones, similarly to how the Dot Product intrinsics were implemented.
Based on a patch by Gao Yiling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53632
llvm-svn: 345337
Summary:
Currently InstPrinter ignores if there are mismatches between block/loop
and end markers by skipping the case if ControlFlowStack is empty. I
guess it is better to explicitly error out in this case, because this
signals invalid input.
Reviewers: aardappel
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53620
llvm-svn: 345333
The SystemZ backend can do arithmetic of memory by loading and then extending
one of the operands. Similarly, a load + truncate can be folded into an
operand.
This patch improves the SystemZ TTI cost function to recognize this.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52692
llvm-svn: 345327
Enable the DAG optimization that converts vector div/rem with constants into
multiply+shifts sequences by expanding them early. This is needed since
ISD::SMUL_LOHI is 'Custom' lowered on SystemZ, and will therefore not be
available to BuildSDIV after legalization.
Better cost values for these instructions based on how they will be
implemented (a constant divisor is cheaper).
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53196
llvm-svn: 345321
The required-vector-width attribute was only used for backend testing and has never been generated by clang.
I believe clang is now generating min-legal-vector-width for vector uses in user code.
With this I believe passing -mprefer-vector-width=256 to clang should prevent use of zmm registers in the generated assembly unless the user used a 512-bit intrinsic in their source code.
llvm-svn: 345317
Include all of the store's source vector operands when creating the
MachineMemOperand. Previously, we were missing the first operand,
making the store size seem smaller than it really is.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52816
llvm-svn: 345315
KNL is based on a modified Silvermont core so I don't think these features apply. I think the LEA flag is probably also wrong, but I'm less sure as I barely understand the 3 LEA flags we have currently.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53671
llvm-svn: 345285
Summary:
Currently, Legalizer is trying to lower G_LOAD with a vector type
that has more than two elements due to the incorrect LegalityPredicate.
This patch fixes the issue by removing the multiplication by 8
as `MemDesc.Size` already contains the size in bits.
Reviewers: dsanders, aemerson
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rovka, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53679
llvm-svn: 345282
If we have a 64-bit EXT where one of the operands is a subvector of a 128-bit
vector then in some cases we can eliminate an extract_subvector by converting
to a 128-bit EXT of the 128-bit vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53582
llvm-svn: 345275
This mirrors what we already do for AArch64 as the cores are similar.
As discussed in the review, enabling the machine scheduler causes
more variations in performance changes so it is not enabled for now.
This patch improves LNT scores by a geomean of 1.57% at -O3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53562
llvm-svn: 345272
Using a multiclass reduces duplication, and makes it easier to add new patterns
later. This refactoring does add some new patterns, but as far as I can tell
there's no IR that will end up triggering them so this is effectively NFC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53580
llvm-svn: 345271
Currently a vector move of 0 or -1 will use different instructions depending on
the size of the vector. Using a single instruction (the 128-bit one) for both
gives more opportunity for Machine CSE to eliminate instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53579
llvm-svn: 345270
Summary:
If the instruction in the eliminateFrameIndex function is a DBG_VALUE
instruction, it requires special processing. The frame register is set
to VRFrame and the offset is based on the object offset.
The code is similar to the code used in
lib/CodeGen/PrologEpilogInserter.cpp.
Reviewers: tra
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53657
llvm-svn: 345269
I noticed while fixing PR39368 that we don't have generic shuffle costs for broadcast style shuffles.
This patch adds SK_BROADCAST handling, but exposes ARM/AARCH64 lack of handling of this type, which I've added a fix for at the same time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53570
llvm-svn: 345253
Summary:
The pfm counters are now in the ExegesisTarget rather than the
MCSchedModel (PR39165).
This also compresses the pfm counter tables (PR37068).
Reviewers: RKSimon, gchatelet
Subscribers: mgrang, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52932
llvm-svn: 345243
Multiply a is complex operation so just because some bit of the output isn't used doesn't mean that bit of the input isn't used.
We might able to bound it, but it will require some more thought.
llvm-svn: 345241
Summary: Fixes part of the problem reported in bug 39275.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits, alexcrichton
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53542
llvm-svn: 345230
Summary:
Currently when assigning depths 'rethrow' does not take the whole
control flow stack into accounts but only considers EH pad stacks. When
assigning depth immmediates to rethrows, in normal cases it is done
correctly but when a rethrow instruction throws up to a caller, i.e., we
convert a pseudo RETHROW_TO_CALLER instruction to a rethrow, it
mistakenly compute the whole stack depth.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53619
llvm-svn: 345223
Summary:
Changing the node type in lowering was violating assumptions made in
the DAG combiner, so don't change the node type any more. This fixes
one of the issues reported in bug 39275.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits, alexcrichton
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53537
llvm-svn: 345221
Instead of using the MOVGOT64r pseudo, use the existing
MO_PIC_BASE_OFFSET support on symbol operands. Now I don't have to
create a "scratch register operand" for the pseudo to use, and the
register allocator can make better decisions.
Fixes some X86 verifier errors tracked in PR27481.
llvm-svn: 345219
Summary:
Changes all uses of minnan/maxnan to minimum/maximum
globally. These names emphasize that the semantic difference between
these operations is more than just NaN-propagation.
Reviewers: arsenm, aheejin, dschuff, javed.absar
Subscribers: jholewinski, sdardis, wdng, sbc100, jgravelle-google, jrtc27, atanasyan, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53112
llvm-svn: 345218
It's possible to do a tail call to a stack argument. LLVM already
calculates the right stack offset to call through.
Fixes the sibcall* and musttail* verifier failures tracked at PR27481.
llvm-svn: 345197
Summary:
This renames the IsParsingMSInlineAsm member variable of AsmLexer to
LexMasmIntegers and moves it up to MCAsmLexer. This is the only behavior
controlled by that variable. I added a public setter, so that it can be
set from outside or from the llvm-mc command line. We may need to
arrange things so that users can get this behavior from clang, but
that's future work.
I also put additional hex literal lexing functionality under this flag
to fix PR32973. It appears that this hex literal parsing wasn't intended
to be enabled in non-masm-style blocks.
Now, masm integers (0b1101 and 0ABCh) work in __asm blocks from clang,
but 0b label references work when using .intel_syntax in standalone .s
files.
However, 0b label references will *not* work from __asm blocks in clang.
They will work from GCC inline asm blocks, which it sounds like is
important for Crypto++ as mentioned in PR36144.
Essentially, we only lex masm literals for inline asm blobs that use
intel syntax. If the .intel_syntax directive is used inside a gnu-style
inline asm statement, masm literals will not be lexed, which is
compatible with gas and llvm-mc standalone .s assembly.
This fixes PR36144 and PR32973.
Reviewers: Gerolf, avt77
Subscribers: eraman, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53535
llvm-svn: 345189
I'm not sure all the microarchitectural tuning flags that have been added to IVBFeatures are relevant for KNL. Separating will allow us to see and audit them. There might even be some simplification opportunities in the Sandy Bridge through Icelake inheritance line without KNL using the same chain.
llvm-svn: 345183
Add X86 SimplifyDemandedBitsForTargetNode and use it to simplify PMULDQ/PMULUDQ target nodes.
This enables us to repeatedly simplify the node's arguments after the previous approach had to be reverted due to PR39398.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53643
llvm-svn: 345182
The BKPT instruction is specified to cause a software breakpoint,
and at least on Linux results in a SIGTRAP. This makes it more
suitable for implementing debugtrap than TRAP (aka UDF #254), which
is specified to cause an undefined instruction exception and results
in a SIGILL on Linux.
Moreover, BKPT is not marked as a terminator, which is not only
consistent with the IR instruction but allows the analyzeBlock
function to correctly analyze a basic block containing the instruction,
which fixes an assertion failure in the machine block placement pass
previously triggered by the included test case.
Because BKPT is only supported starting with ARMv5T, we continue to
use UDF #254 when targeting v4T.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53614
llvm-svn: 345171
This will allow other generators of LLVM IR to use the auto-vectorizer
without having to change that flag.
Note: on its own, this patch will enable auto-vectorization on Hexagon
in all cases, regardless of the -fvectorize flag. There is a companion
clang patch that together with this one forms an NFC for clang users.
llvm-svn: 345169
This patch brings back the MOV64r0 pseudo instruction for zeroing a 64-bit register. This replaces the SUBREG_TO_REG MOV32r0 sequence we use today. Post register allocation we will rewrite the MOV64r0 to a 32-bit xor with an implicit def of the 64-bit register similar to what we do for the various XMM/YMM/ZMM zeroing pseudos.
My main motivation is to enable the spill optimization in foldMemoryOperandImpl. As we were seeing some code that repeatedly did "xor eax, eax; store eax;" to spill several registers with a new xor for each store. With this optimization enabled we get a store of a 0 immediate instead of an xor. Though I admit the ideal solution would be one xor where there are multiple spills. I don't believe we have a test case that shows this optimization in here. I'll see if I can try to reduce one from the code were looking at.
There's definitely some other machine CSE(and maybe other passes) behavior changes exposed by this patch. So it seems like there might be some other deficiencies in SUBREG_TO_REG handling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52757
llvm-svn: 345165
Non-uniform division/remainder handling was added back at D49248/D50765 - so share the 'mul+sub' costs that already exist for uniform cases.
llvm-svn: 345164
Summary:
If the target does not support `.asciz` and `.ascii` directives, the
strings are represented as bytes and each byte is placed on the new line
as a separate byte directive `.b8 <data>`. NVPTX target allows to
represent the vector of the data of the same type as a vector, where
values are separated using `,` symbol: `.b8 <data1>,<data2>,...`. This
allows to reduce the size of the final PTX file. Ptxas tool includes ptx
files into the resulting binary object, so reducing the size of the PTX
file is important.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar, echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45822
llvm-svn: 345142
This B/W VPTEST instructions are only available with AVX512BW. But lowering should prevent any byte or word elements from getting to isel so this can't be exposed.
llvm-svn: 345112
A global alias may use indices which are not considered in bounds. In
such a case, accessing the base object will fail as it only peers
through inbounds accesses. This pattern is used by the swift compiler
to create references to preceeding members in the type metadata. This
would cause the code generation to fail when targeting a platform that
used ELF as the object file format. Be conservative and fail the
read-only check if we run into an alias that we cannot peer through.
llvm-svn: 345107
When implementing memset's today we often see this pattern:
$x0 = MOV 0xXYXYXYXYXYXYXYXY
store $x0, ...
$w1 = MOV 0xXYXYXYXY
store $w1, ...
We first create a 64bit constant in a 64bit register with all bytes the
same and then create a 32bit constant with all bytes the same in a 32bit
register. In many targets we could just access the lower byte of the
64bit register instead.
- Ideally this would be handled by the ConstantHoist pass but it runs
too early when memset isn't expanded yet.
- The memset expansion code already had this optimization implemented,
however SelectionDAG constantfolding would constantfold the
"trunc(bigconstnat)" pattern to "smallconstant".
- This patch makes the memset expansion mark the constant as Opaque and
stop DAGCombiner from constant folding in this situation. (Similar to
how ConstantHoisting marks things as Opaque to avoid folding
ADD/SUB/etc.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53181
llvm-svn: 345102
We can't add the MULDQ node back to the worklist after the demanded bits change has been committed in case the node has been removed entirely. This will have to wait until we have SimplifyDemandedBitsForTargetNode.
llvm-svn: 345070
Add support to allow bit-casting from f128 to i128 and then
extracting 64 bits from the result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49507
llvm-svn: 345053
Vector types are not possible here because this code explicitly
checks for a scalar type, but this is another step towards
completely removing the fake binop queries for not/neg/fneg.
llvm-svn: 345043
This initially landed in rL345014, but was reverted in rL345017
due to sanitizer-x86_64-linux-fast buildbot failure in
check-lld (ELF/relocatable-versioned.s) test.
While i'm not yet quite sure what is the problem, one obvious
thing here is that extra truncation roundtrip.
Maybe that's it? If not, will re-revert.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53521
llvm-svn: 345027
Matches the approach taken in the constant pool shuffle decoders, and uses an UndefElts mask instead of uint64_t(-1) raw mask values, which doesn't work safely for i32/i64 shuffle mask sizes (as the -1 value is legal).
This allows us to remove the constant pool shuffle decoders from most of the getTargetShuffleMask variable shuffle cases (X86ISD::VPERMV3 will be handled in a future commit).
llvm-svn: 345018
Summary:
Continuation of D52348.
We also get the `c) x & (-1 >> (32 - y))` pattern here, because of the D48768.
I will add extra-uses into those tests and follow-up with a patch to handle those patterns too.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53521
llvm-svn: 345014
analyzeBranch()/insertBranch() etc. do not properly deal with an undef
flag on the eflags input and used to produce invalid MIR. I don't see
this ever affecting real world inputs (I don't think it is possible to
produce undef flags with llvm IR), so I simply changed the code to bail
out in this case.
rdar://42122367
llvm-svn: 344970
I've included a fix to DAGCombiner::ForwardStoreValueToDirectLoad that I believe will prevent the previous miscompile.
Original commit message:
Theoretically this was done to simplify the amount of isel patterns that were needed. But it also meant a substantial number of our isel patterns have to match an explicit bitcast. By making the vXi32/vXi16/vXi8 types legal for loads, DAG combiner should be able to change the load type to rem
I had to add some additional plain load instruction patterns and a few other special cases, but overall the isel table has reduced in size by ~12000 bytes. So it looks like this promotion was hurting us more than helping.
I still have one crash in vector-trunc.ll that I'm hoping @RKSimon can help with. It seems to relate to using getTargetConstantFromNode on a load that was shrunk due to an extract_subvector combine after the constant pool entry was created. So we end up decoding more mask elements than the lo
I'm hoping this patch will simplify the number of patterns needed to remove the and/or/xor promotion.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53306
llvm-svn: 344965
Summary:
Replace its functionality with a TableGen InstrInfo relational
instruction mapping. Although arguably more complex than the TableGen
backend, the relational mapping is a smaller maintenance burden than a
TableGen backend.
Reviewers: aardappel, aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: mgorny, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53307
llvm-svn: 344962
A while ago we changed pushf and popf in Intel mode to generate pushfq
and popfq. Unfortunately that left us with no way to get the 16-bit
encoding in Intel mode so this patch adds pushfw and popfw as aliases
there.
llvm-svn: 344949
We can't safely assume that certain RawMask entries are UNDEF as most variable shuffles ignore non-index bits - PSHUFB only works on i8 elts so it'd be safe to use but I'm intending to come up with an alternative approach that works for all.
........
Enable this for PSHUFB constant mask decoding and remove the ConstantPool DecodePSHUFBMask
llvm-svn: 344937
We can't safely assume that certain RawMask entries are UNDEF as most variable shuffles ignore non-index bits.
........
Add support for UNDEF raw mask elements and remove the ConstantPool DecodeVPERMILPMask usage in X86ISelLowering.cpp
llvm-svn: 344936
Introduce new versions that follow the IEEE semantics
to help with legalization that may need quieted inputs.
There are some regressions from inserting unnecessary
canonicalizes when these are matched from fast math
fcmp + select which should be fixed in a future commit.
llvm-svn: 344914
Summary:
As discussed in D52304 / IRC, we now have pattern matching for
'bit extract' in two places - tablegen and `X86DAGToDAGISel`.
There are 4 patterns.
And we will have a problem with `x & (-1 >> (32 - y))` pattern.
* If the mask is one-use, then it is always unfolded into `x << (32 - y) >> (32 - y)` first.
Thus, the existing test coverage is already broken.
* If it is not one-use, then it is not unfolded, and is matched as BZHI.
* If it is not one-use, we will not match it as BEXTR. And if it is one-use, it will have been unfolded already.
So we will either not handle that pattern for BEXTR, or not have test coverage for it.
This is bad.
As discussed with @craig.topper, let's unify this matching, and do everything in `X86DAGToDAGISel`.
Then we will not have code duplication, and will have proper test coverage.
This indeed does not affect any tests, and this is great.
It means that for these two patterns, the `X86DAGToDAGISel` is identical to the tablegen version.
Please review carefully, i'm not fully sure about that intrinsic change, and introduction of the new `X86ISD` opcode.
Reviewers: craig.topper, RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53164
llvm-svn: 344904
Summary:
Trivial continuation of D52304.
While this pattern is not canonical, we do select it in the BZHI case,
so this should not be any different.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52348
llvm-svn: 344902
The D-Form VSX loads introduced in ISA 3.0 are not direct D-Form equivalent of
the corresponding X-Forms since they only target the Altivec registers.
Namely LXSSPX can load into any of the 64 VSX registers whereas LXSSP can only
load into the upper 32 VSX registers. Similarly with the remaining affected
instructions.
There is currently no way that I can see to trigger the bug, but as we add other
ways of exploiting these instructions, there may very well be instances that do.
This is an NFC patch in practical terms since the changes it introduces can not
be triggered without an MIR test.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53323
llvm-svn: 344894
This makes fast isel treat all legal vector types the same way. Previously only vXi64 was in the fast-isel tables.
This unfortunately prevents matching of andn by fast-isel for these types since the requires SelectionDAG. But we already had this issue for vXi64. So at least we're consistent now.
Interestinly it looks like fast-isel can't handle instructions with constant vector arguments so the the not part of the andn patterns is selected with SelectionDAG. This explains why VPTERNLOG shows up in some of the tests.
This is a subset of D53268. As I make progress on that, I will try to reduce the number of lines in the tablegen files.
llvm-svn: 344884
Summary:
Theoretically this was done to simplify the amount of isel patterns that were needed. But it also meant a substantial number of our isel patterns have to match an explicit bitcast. By making the vXi32/vXi16/vXi8 types legal for loads, DAG combiner should be able to change the load type to remove the bitcast.
I had to add some additional plain load instruction patterns and a few other special cases, but overall the isel table has reduced in size by ~12000 bytes. So it looks like this promotion was hurting us more than helping.
I still have one crash in vector-trunc.ll that I'm hoping @RKSimon can help with. It seems to relate to using getTargetConstantFromNode on a load that was shrunk due to an extract_subvector combine after the constant pool entry was created. So we end up decoding more mask elements than the load size.
I'm hoping this patch will simplify the number of patterns needed to remove the and/or/xor promotion.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53306
llvm-svn: 344877
Summary:
These nodes exist to overcome an isel problem where we can generate a zero extend of an AH register followed by an extract subreg, and another zero extend. The first zero extend exists to avoid a partial register update copying the AH register into the low 8-bits. The second zero extend exists if the user wanted the remainder zero extended.
To make this work we had a DAG combine to morph the DIVREM opcode to a special opcode that included the extend. But then we had to add the new node to computeKnownBits and computeNumSignBits to process the extension portion.
This patch instead removes all of that and adds a late peephole to detect the two extends.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53449
llvm-svn: 344874
D53306 exposes an issue where we sometimes use constant pool data from bigger vectors than the target shuffle mask. This should be safe to do, but we have to be certain that we're using the bottom most part of the vector as the shuffle mask decoders have no way to peek into subvectors with non-zero offsets.
llvm-svn: 344867
Summary:
Add selection patterns to support one bit Sub.
Reviewers:
rampitec, arsenm
Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52946
llvm-svn: 344815
There is no guarantee the root is at the end if isel created any nodes without morphing them. This includes the nodes created by manual isel from C++ code in X86ISelDAGToDAG.
This is similar to r333415 from PowerPC which is where I originally stole the peephole loop from.
I don't have a test case, but without this a future patch doesn't work which is how I found it.
llvm-svn: 344808
Summary:
Undefined indices in shuffles can be used when not all lanes of the
output vector will be used. This happens for example in the expansion
of vector reduce operations. Regardless, undefs are legal as lane
indices in IR and should be supported.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53057
llvm-svn: 344803
Allows to disable direct TLS segment access (%fs or %gs). GCC supports
a similar flag, it can be useful in some circumstances, e.g. when a thread
context block needs to be updated directly from user space. More info
and specific use cases: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16145
There is another revision for clang as well.
Related: D53102
All X86 CodeGen tests appear to pass:
```
[46/47] Running lit suite /SourceCache/llvm-trunk-8.0/test/CodeGen
Testing Time: 23.17s
Expected Passes : 3801
Expected Failures : 15
Unsupported Tests : 8021
```
Reviewed by: Craig Topper.
Patch by nruslan (Ruslan Nikolaev).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53103
llvm-svn: 344723
Summary:
To workaround a hardware issue in the (base + offset) calculation
when base is negative. The impact on code quality should be limited
since SILoadStoreOptimizer still runs afterwards and is able to
combine loads/stores based on known sign information.
This fixes visible corruption in Hitman on SI (easily reproducible
by running benchmark mode).
Change-Id: Ia178d207a5e2ac38ae7cd98b532ea2ae74704e5f
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=99923
Reviewers: arsenm, mareko
Subscribers: jholewinski, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53160
llvm-svn: 344698
Summary:
Moving SMRD to VMEM in SIFixSGPRCopies is rather bad for performance if
the load is really uniform. So select the scalar load intrinsics directly
to either VMEM or SMRD buffer loads based on divergence analysis.
If an offset happens to end up in a VGPR -- either because a floating
point calculation was involved, or due to other remaining deficiencies
in SIFixSGPRCopies -- we use v_readfirstlane.
There is some unrelated churn in tests since we now select MUBUF offsets
in a unified way with non-scalar buffer loads.
Change-Id: I170e6816323beb1348677b358c9d380865cd1a19
Reviewers: arsenm, alex-t, rampitec, tpr
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53283
llvm-svn: 344696
Previously reverted in rL343082.
Original commit message:
On failing to find sequences that can be converted into dual macs,
try to find sequential 16-bit loads that are used by muls which we
can then use smultb, smulbt, smultt with a wide load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51983
llvm-svn: 344693
This is patch 2/2, following up on D53314, and is the functional change
to prevent fusing mul + add sequences into VFMAs.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53315
llvm-svn: 344683
This is a follow up of rL342874, which stopped fusing muls and adds into VMLAs
for performance reasons on the Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M33. This is a serie of 2
patches, that is trying to achieve the same for VFMA. The second column in the
table below shows what we were generating before rL342874, the third column
what changed with rL342874, and the last column what we want to achieve with
these 2 patches:
--------------------------------------------------------
| Opt | < rL342874 | >= rL342874 | |
|------------------------------------------------------|
|-O3 | vmla | vmul | vmul |
| | | vadd | vadd |
|------------------------------------------------------|
|-Ofast | vfma | vfma | vmul |
| | | | vadd |
|------------------------------------------------------|
|-Oz | vmla | vmla | vmla |
--------------------------------------------------------
This patch 1/2, is a cleanup of the spaghetti predicate logic on the different
VMLA and VFMA codegen rules, so that we can make the final functional change in
patch 2/2. This also fixes a typo in the regression test added in rL342874.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53314
llvm-svn: 344671
Without this we match the CMP+AND to a TEST and then match the SHR separately. I'm trusting analyzeCompare to remove the TEST during the peephole pass. Otherwise we need to check the flag users to see if they only use the Z flag.
This recovers a case lost by r344270.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53310
llvm-svn: 344649
When a landing pad is calculated in a program that is compiled
for micromips, it will point to an even address. Such an error will
cause a segmentation fault, as the instructions in micromips are
aligned on odd addresses. This patch sets the last bit of the offset
where a landing pad is, to 1, which will effectively be
an odd address and point to the instruction exactly.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52985
llvm-svn: 344591
Summary:
This adds support for LSDA (exception table) generation for wasm EH.
Wasm EH mostly follows the structure of Itanium-style exception tables,
with one exception: a call site table entry in wasm EH corresponds to
not a call site but a landing pad.
In wasm EH, the VM is responsible for stack unwinding. After an
exception occurs and the stack is unwound, the control flow is
transferred to wasm 'catch' instruction by the VM, after which the
personality function is called from the compiler-generated code. (Refer
to WasmEHPrepare pass for more information on this part.)
This patch:
- Changes wasm.landingpad.index intrinsic to take a token argument, to
make this 1:1 match with a catchpad instruction
- Stores landingpad index info and catch type info MachineFunction in
before instruction selection
- Lowers wasm.lsda intrinsic to an MCSymbol pointing to the start of an
exception table
- Adds WasmException class with overridden methods for table generation
- Adds support for LSDA section in Wasm object writer
Reviewers: dschuff, sbc100, rnk
Subscribers: mgorny, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52748
llvm-svn: 344575
These included a bitcast of a load from v4f32 to v2f64, but DAG combine should have already changed the type of the load to remove the cast.
llvm-svn: 344573
AARCH64 equivalent to D53257 - uses widening pairwise adds on vXi8 CTPOP to support i16/i32/i64 vectors.
This is a blocker for generic vector CTPOP expansion (P32655) - this will remove the aarch64 diff from D53258.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53259
llvm-svn: 344554
When compiling static executable for micromips, CFI symbols
are incorrectly labeled as MICROMIPS, which cause
".eh_frame_hdr refers to overlapping FDEs." error.
This patch does not label CFI symbols as MICROMIPS, and FDEs do not
overlap anymore. This patch also exposes another bug, which is fixed
here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52985
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52987
llvm-svn: 344516
As I suggested on PR39281, this patch uses PADDL pairwise addition to widen from the vXi8 CTPOP result to the target vector type.
This is a blocker for moving more x86 code to generic vector CTPOP expansion (P32655 + D53258) - ARM's vXi64 CTPOP currently expands, which would generate a vXi64 MUL but ARM's custom lowering expands the general MUL case and vectors aren't well handled in LegalizeDAG - improving the CTPOP lowering was a lot easier than fixing the MUL lowering for this one case......
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53257
llvm-svn: 344512
When compiling static executable for micromips, CFI symbols
are incorrectly labeled as MICROMIPS, which cause
".eh_frame_hdr refers to overlapping FDEs." error.
This patch does not label CFI symbols as MICROMIPS, and FDEs do not
overlap anymore. This patch also exposes another bug, which is fixed
here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52985
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52987
llvm-svn: 344511
by `getTerminator()` calls instead be declared as `Instruction`.
This is the biggest remaining chunk of the usage of `getTerminator()`
that insists on the narrow type and so is an easy batch of updates.
Several files saw more extensive updates where this would cascade to
requiring API updates within the file to use `Instruction` instead of
`TerminatorInst`. All of these were trivial in nature (pervasively using
`Instruction` instead just worked).
llvm-svn: 344502
Summary:
I've noticed that the bitcasts we introduce for these make computeKnownBits and computeNumSignBits not work well in LegalizeVectorOps. LegalizeVectorOps legalizes bottom up while LegalizeDAG legalizes top down. The bottom up strategy for LegalizeVectorOps means operands are legalized before their uses. So we promote and/or/xor before we legalize the operands that use them making computeKnownBits/computeNumSignBits in places like LowerTruncate suboptimal. I looked at changing LegalizeVectorOps to be top down as well, but that was more disruptive and caused some regressions. I also looked at just moving promotion of binops to LegalizeDAG, but that had a few issues one around matching AND,ANDN,OR into VSELECT because I had to create ANDN as vXi64, but the other nodes hadn't legalized yet, I didn't look too hard at fixing that.
This patch seems to produce better results overall than my other attempts. We now form broadcasts of constants better in some cases. For at least some of them the AND was being introduced in LegalizeDAG, promoted to vXi64, and the BUILD_VECTOR was also legalized there. I think we got bad ordering of that. Now the promotion is out of the legalizer so we handle this better.
In the longer term I think we really should evaluate whether we should be doing this promotion at all. It's really there to reduce isel pattern count, but I'm wondering if we'd be better served just eating the pattern cost or doing C++ based isel for vector and/or/xor in X86ISelDAGToDAG. The masked and/or/xor will definitely be difficult in patterns if a bitcast gets between the vselect and the and/or/xor node. That becomes a lot of permutations to cover.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53107
llvm-svn: 344487
interleave-group
The vectorizer currently does not attempt to create interleave-groups that
contain predicated loads/stores; predicated strided accesses can currently be
vectorized only using masked gather/scatter or scalarization. This patch makes
predicated loads/stores candidates for forming interleave-groups during the
Loop-Vectorizer's analysis, and adds the proper support for masked-interleave-
groups to the Loop-Vectorizer's planning and transformation stages. The patch
also extends the TTI API to allow querying the cost of masked interleave groups
(which each target can control); Targets that support masked vector loads/
stores may choose to enable this feature and allow vectorizing predicated
strided loads/stores using masked wide loads/stores and shuffles.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53011
llvm-svn: 344472
Summary: This is similar to what D52528 did for loads. It should match what generic type legalization does in 64-bit mode where it uses a v2i64 cast and an i64 store.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53173
llvm-svn: 344470
There is one remnant - AVX1 custom splitting of 256-bit vectors - which is due to a regression where the X86ISD::ANDNP is still performed as a YMM.
I've also tightened the CTLZ or CTPOP lowering in SelectionDAGLegalize::ExpandBitCount to require a legal CTLZ - it doesn't affect existing users and fixes an issue with AVX512 codegen.
llvm-svn: 344457
Use isConstantSplat instead of ISD::isConstantSplatVector to let us us peek through to illegal types (in this case for i686 targets to recognise i64 constants)
llvm-svn: 344452
If we have better CTLZ support than CTPOP, then use cttz(x) = width - ctlz(~x & (x - 1)) - and remove the CTTZ_ZERO_UNDEF handling as it no longer gives better codegen.
Similar to rL344447, this is also closer to LegalizeDAG's approach
llvm-svn: 344448
This patch changes the vector CTTZ lowering from:
cttz(x) = ctpop((x & -x) - 1)
to:
cttz(x) = ctpop(~x & (x - 1))
Not only does this make better use of the PANDN instruction, but it also matches the LegalizeDAG method which should allow us to remove the x86 specific code at some point in the future (we need to fix some issues with the bitcasted logic ops and CTPOP lowering first).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53214
llvm-svn: 344447
Add shuffle lowering for the case where we can shuffle the lanes into place followed by an in-lane permute.
This is mainly for cases where we can have non-repeating permutes in each lane, but for now I've just enabled it for v4f64 unary shuffles to fix PR39161 - there is no test coverage for other shuffles that might benefit yet.
We now have several cross-lane shuffle lowering methods that all do something similar - I've looked at merging some of these (notably by making the repeated mask mechanism in lowerVectorShuffleByMerging128BitLanes optional), but there is a lot of assertions/assumptions in the way that makes this tricky - I ended up going for adding yet another relatively simple method instead.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53148
llvm-svn: 344446
Summary:
AArch64 can fold some shift+extend operations on the RHS operand of
comparisons, so swap the operands if that makes sense.
This provides a fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38751
Reviewers: efriedma, t.p.northover, javed.absar
Subscribers: mcrosier, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53067
llvm-svn: 344439
SelectionDAGBuilder::visitShift will always zero-extend a shift amount when it
is promoted to the ShiftAmountTy. This results in zero-extension (masking)
which is unnecessary for RISC-V as the shift operations only read the lower 5
or 6 bits (RV32 or RV64).
I initially proposed adding a getExtendForShiftAmount hook so the shift amount
can be any-extended (D52975). @efriedma explained this was unsafe, so I have
instead eliminate the unnecessary and operations at instruction selection time
in a manner similar to X86InstrCompiler.td.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53224
llvm-svn: 344432
Generic legalization should be able to finish legalizing the EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR probably by turning it into a BUILD_VECTOR. But we should emit the simplest sequence.
llvm-svn: 344424
The algorithm we would do previously was identical to generic legalization. If we ever switch to legalizing integer vectors via widening we'll be able to kill off the code since it now only runs for promotion.
llvm-svn: 344423
This is the planned follow-up to D52997. Here we are reducing horizontal vector math codegen
by default. AMD Jaguar (btver2) should have no difference with this patch because it has
fast-hops. (If we want to set that bit for other CPUs, let me know.)
The code changes are small, but there are many test diffs. For files that are specifically
testing for hops, I added RUNs to distinguish fast/slow, so we can see the consequences
side-by-side. For files that are primarily concerned with codegen other than hops, I just
updated the CHECK lines to reflect the new default codegen.
To recap the recent horizontal op story:
1. Before rL343727, we were producing hops for all subtargets for a variety of patterns.
Hops were likely not optimal for all targets though.
2. The IR improvement in r343727 exposed a hole in the backend hop pattern matching, so
we reduced hop codegen for all subtargets. That was bad for Jaguar (PR39195).
3. We restored the hop codegen for all targets with rL344141. Good for Jaguar, but
probably bad for other CPUs.
4. This patch allows us to distinguish when we want to produce hops, so everyone can be
happy. I'm not sure if we have the best predicate here, but the intent is to undo the
extra hop-iness that was enabled by r344141.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53095
llvm-svn: 344361
Pull out repeated byte sum stage for popcount of vector elements > 8bits.
This allows us to simplify the LUT/BITMATH popcnt code to always assume vXi8 vectors, and also improves avx512bitalg codegen which only has access to vpopcntb/vpopcntw.
llvm-svn: 344348
The current BitPermutationSelector generates a code to build a value by tracking two types of bits: ConstZero and Variable.
ConstZero means a bit we need to mask off and Variable is a bit we copy from an input value.
This patch add third type of bits VariableKnownToBeZero caused by AssertZext node or zero-extending load node.
VariableKnownToBeZero means a bit comes from an input value, but it is known to be already zero. So we do not need to mask them.
VariableKnownToBeZero enhances flexibility to group bits, since we can avoid redundant masking for these bits.
This patch also renames "HasZero" to "NeedMask" since now we may skip masking even when we have zeros (of type VariableKnownToBeZero).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48025
llvm-svn: 344347
Fixes PR32160 by reducing the size of PSHUFB if we only use one of the lanes.
This approach can probably be generalized to handle any target shuffle (and any subvector index) but we have no test coverage at the moment.
llvm-svn: 344336
This patch adds the ability to identify instructions that are "move elimination
candidates". It also allows scheduling models to describe processor register
files that allow move elimination.
A move elimination candidate is an instruction that can be eliminated at
register renaming stage.
Each subtarget can specify which instructions are move elimination candidates
with the help of tablegen class "IsOptimizableRegisterMove" (see
llvm/Target/TargetInstrPredicate.td).
For example, on X86, BtVer2 allows both GPR and MMX/SSE moves to be eliminated.
The definition of 'IsOptimizableRegisterMove' for BtVer2 looks like this:
```
def : IsOptimizableRegisterMove<[
InstructionEquivalenceClass<[
// GPR variants.
MOV32rr, MOV64rr,
// MMX variants.
MMX_MOVQ64rr,
// SSE variants.
MOVAPSrr, MOVUPSrr,
MOVAPDrr, MOVUPDrr,
MOVDQArr, MOVDQUrr,
// AVX variants.
VMOVAPSrr, VMOVUPSrr,
VMOVAPDrr, VMOVUPDrr,
VMOVDQArr, VMOVDQUrr
], CheckNot<CheckSameRegOperand<0, 1>> >
]>;
```
Definitions of IsOptimizableRegisterMove from processor models of a same
Target are processed by the SubtargetEmitter to auto-generate a target-specific
override for each of the following predicate methods:
```
bool TargetSubtargetInfo::isOptimizableRegisterMove(const MachineInstr *MI)
const;
bool MCInstrAnalysis::isOptimizableRegisterMove(const MCInst &MI, unsigned
CPUID) const;
```
By default, those methods return false (i.e. conservatively assume that there
are no move elimination candidates).
Tablegen class RegisterFile has been extended with the following information:
- The set of register classes that allow move elimination.
- Maxium number of moves that can be eliminated every cycle.
- Whether move elimination is restricted to moves from registers that are
known to be zero.
This patch is structured in three part:
A first part (which is mostly boilerplate) adds the new
'isOptimizableRegisterMove' target hooks, and extends existing register file
descriptors in MC by introducing new fields to describe properties related to
move elimination.
A second part, uses the new tablegen constructs to describe move elimination in
the BtVer2 scheduling model.
A third part, teaches llm-mca how to query the new 'isOptimizableRegisterMove'
hook to mark instructions that are candidates for move elimination. It also
teaches class RegisterFile how to describe constraints on move elimination at
PRF granularity.
llvm-mca tests for btver2 show differences before/after this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53134
llvm-svn: 344334
Failure was discovered upon running
projects/compiler-rt/test/builtins/Unit/divtc3_test.c
in a stage2 compiler build.
When compiling projects/compiler-rt/lib/builtins/divtc3.c,
a call to fmaxl within the divtc3 implementation had its
return values read from registers $2 and $3 instead of $f0 and $f2.
Include fmaxl in the list of long double emulation routines
to have its return value correctly interpreted as f128.
Almost exact issue here: https://reviews.llvm.org/D17760
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52649
llvm-svn: 344326
DIV/REM by constants should always be expanded into mul/shift/etc.
patterns. Unfortunately the ConstantHoisting pass runs too early at a
point where the pattern isn't expanded yet. However after
ConstantHoisting hoisted some immediate the result may not expand
anymore. Also the hoisting typically doesn't make sense because it
operates on immediates that will change completely during the expansion.
Report DIV/REM as TCC_Free so ConstantHoisting will not touch them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53174
llvm-svn: 344315
Summary:
Instruction with 0 in fence field being disassembled as fence , iorw.
Printing "unknown" to match GAS behavior.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Disassembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer
for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, jfb, PkmX, jocewei, asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51828
llvm-svn: 344309
On 64-bit targets the generic legalize will use an i64 load and a scalar_to_vector for us. But on 32-bit targets i64 isn't legal and the generic legalizer will end up emitting two 32-bit loads. We have DAG combines that try to put those two loads back together with pretty good success.
This patch instead uses f64 to avoid the splitting entirely. I've made it do the same for 64-bit mode for consistency and to keep the load in the fp domain.
There are a few things in here that look like regressions in 32-bit mode, but I believe they bring us closer to the 64-bit mode codegen. And that the 64-bit mode code could be better. I think those issues should be looked at separately.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52528
llvm-svn: 344291
Having a constant value operand in the compound instruction
is not always profitable. This patch improves coremark by ~4% on
Hexagon.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53152
llvm-svn: 344284
Also, avoid comparing GUIDs when ordering global addresses, because
source file location can cause different GUID to be calculated. As a
result, a pair of symbols can compare "less" in one directory, but
"greater" in another.
llvm-svn: 344271
This is an alternative to D53080 since I think using a BEXTR for a shifted mask is definitely an improvement when the shl can be absorbed into addressing mode. The other cases I'm less sure about.
We already have several tricks for handling an and of a shift in address matching. This adds a new case for BEXTR.
I've moved the BEXTR matching code back to X86ISelDAGToDAG to allow it to match. I suppose alternatively we could directly emit a X86ISD::BEXTR node that isel could pattern match. But I'm trying to view BEXTR matching as an isel concern so DAG combine can see 'and' and 'shift' operations that are well understood. We did lose a couple cases from tbm_patterns.ll, but I think there are ways to recover that.
I've also put back the manual load folding code in matchBEXTRFromAnd that I removed a few months ago in r324939. This gives us some more freedom to make decisions based on the ability to fold a load. I haven't done anything with that yet.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53126
llvm-svn: 344270
The ARM64 elf emitter would omit printing data
symbol for zero filled constant data. This patch
overrides the emitFill method as to enforce that
the symbol is correctly printed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53132
llvm-svn: 344248
Summary:
As discussed in D48491, we can't really do this in the TableGen,
since we need to produce *two* instructions. This only implements
one single pattern. The other 3 patterns will be in follow-ups.
I'm not sure yet if we want to also fuse shift into here
(i.e `(x >> start) & ...`)
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper, spatel
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52304
llvm-svn: 344224
Summary:
Although the saturating float to int instructions are already
emitted from normal IR, the fpto{s,u}i instructions produce poison
values if the argument cannot fit in the result type. These intrinsics
are therefore necessary to get guaranteed defined saturating behavior.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53004
llvm-svn: 344204
Remove tryFoldVecLoad since tryFoldLoad would call IsProfitableToFold and pick up the new check.
This saves about 5K out of ~600K on the generated isel table.
llvm-svn: 344189
Moving away from UnknownSize is part of the effort to migrate us to
LocationSizes (e.g. the cleanup promised in D44748).
This doesn't entirely remove all of the uses of UnknownSize; some uses
require tweaks to assume that UnknownSize isn't just some kind of int.
This patch is intended to just be a trivial replacement for all places
where LocationSize::unknown() will Just Work.
llvm-svn: 344186
Summary:
By moving that line into the `I` multiclass.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53093
llvm-svn: 344180
Summary:
As discussed in [[ https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38938 | PR38938 ]],
we fail to emit `BEXTR` if the mask is shifted.
We can't deal with that in `X86DAGToDAGISel` `before the address mode for the inc is selected`,
and we can't really do it in the normal DAGCombine, because we don't have generic `ISD::BitFieldExtract` node,
and if we simply turn the shifted mask into a normal mask + shift-left, it will be folded back.
So it would seem X86ISelLowering is the place to handle this.
This patch only moves the matchBEXTRFromAnd()
from X86DAGToDAGISel to X86ISelLowering.
It does not add support for the 'shifted mask' pattern.
Reviewers: RKSimon, craig.topper, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52426
llvm-svn: 344179
This is intended to restore horizontal codegen to what it looked like before IR demanded elements improved in:
rL343727
As noted in PR39195:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39195
...horizontal ops can be worse for performance than a shuffle+regular binop, so I've added a TODO. Ideally, we'd
solve that in a machine instruction pass, but a quicker solution will be adding a 'HasFastHorizontalOp' feature
bit to deal with it here in the DAG.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52997
llvm-svn: 344141
Similar to what already happens in the DAGCombiner wrappers, this patch adds the root nodes back onto the worklist if the DCI wrappers' SimplifyDemandedBits/SimplifyDemandedVectorElts were successful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53026
llvm-svn: 344132
Until mischeduler is clever enough to avoid spilling in a vectorized loop
with many (scalar) DLRs it is better to avoid high vectorization factors (8
and above).
llvm-svn: 344129
A new function getNumVectorRegs() is better to use for the number of needed
vector registers instead of getNumberOfParts(). This is to make sure that the
number of vector registers (and typically operations) required for a vector
type is accurate.
getNumberOfParts() which was previously used works by splitting the vector
type until it is legal gives incorrect results for types with a non
power of two number of elements (rare).
A new static function getScalarSizeInBits() that also checks for a pointer
type and returns 64U for it since otherwise it gets a value of 0). Used in a
few places where Ty may be pointer.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 344115
For ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG operation of v2i16 and v2i8 types will cause assert because they are registered as custom operation.
So that the type legalization phase will enter the custom hook, which do not handle ISD::SIGN_EXTEND_INREG operation and fall throw into unreachable assert.
Patch By: wuzish (Zixuan Wu)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52449
llvm-svn: 344109
Summary:
Subtraction from zero and floating point negation do not have the same
semantics, so fix lowering.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52948
llvm-svn: 344107
Summary:
Also add tests to catch crashes in passes that are not normally run in
tests.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52959
llvm-svn: 344094
Summary:
- Categorize instructions into the categories as in the SIMD spec
- Move SIMD-related definition to WebAssemblyInstrSIMD.td
- Put definition and use of patterns together
- Add newlines here and there
Reviewers: tlively
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53045
llvm-svn: 344086
This is the PPC-specific non-controversial part of
https://reviews.llvm.org/D44548 that simply enables this combine for PPC
since PPC has these instructions.
This commit will allow the target-independent portion to be truly target
independent.
llvm-svn: 344077
This may give slightly better opportunities for DAG combine to simplify with the operations before the setcc. It also matches the type the xors will eventually be promoted to anyway so it saves a legalization step.
Almost all of the test changes are because our constant pool entry is now v2i64 instead of v4i32 on 64-bit targets. On 32-bit targets getConstant should be emitting a v4i32 build_vector and a v4i32->v2i64 bitcast.
There are a couple test cases where it appears we now combine a bitwise not with one of these xors which caused a new constant vector to be generated. This prevented a constant pool entry from being shared. But if that's an issue we're concerned about, it seems we need to address it another way that just relying a bitcast to hide it.
This came about from experiments I've been trying with pushing the promotion of and/or/xor to vXi64 later than LegalizeVectorOps where it is today. We run LegalizeVectorOps in a bottom up order. So the and/or/xor are promoted before their users are legalized. The bitcasts added for the promotion act as a barrier to computeKnownBits if we try to use it during vector legalization of a later operation. So by moving the promotion out we can hopefully get better results from computeKnownBits/computeNumSignBits like in LowerTruncate on AVX512. I've also looked at running LegalizeVectorOps in a top down order like LegalizeDAG, but thats showing some other issues.
llvm-svn: 344071
As noted in D52747, if we prefer IR to use trunc for bool vectors rather
than and+icmp, we can expose codegen shortcomings as seen here with masked store.
Replace a hard-coded PCMPGT simplification with the more general demanded bits call
to improve things.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52964
llvm-svn: 344048
CodePointerSize and CalleeSaveStackSlotSize values are used in DWARF
generation. In case of MIPS it's incorrect to check for Triple::isMIPS64()
only this function returns true for N32 ABI too.
Now we do not have a method to recognize N32 if it's specified by a command
line option and is not a part of a target triple. So we check for
Triple::GNUABIN32 only. It's better than nothing.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52874
llvm-svn: 344039
There are occasionally instances where AADB rewrites registers in such a way
that a reg-reg copy becomes a self-copy. Such an instruction is obviously
redundant and can be removed. This patch does precisely that.
Note that this will not remove various nop's that we insert (which are
themselves just self-copies). The reason those are left alone is that all of
them have their own opcodes (that just encode to a self-copy).
What prompted this patch is the fact that these self-copies sometimes end up
using registers that make the instruction a priority-setting nop, thereby
having a significant effect on performance.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52432
llvm-svn: 344036
As discussed on D52964, this adds 256-bit *_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG lowering support for AVX1 targets to help improve SimplifyDemandedBits handling.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52980
llvm-svn: 344019
Simple types are a superset of what all in tree targets in LLVM could possibly have a legal type. This means the behavior of using isSimple to check for a supported type for X86 could change over time. For example, this could would change if a v256i1 type was added to MVT in the future.
llvm-svn: 343995
This patch implements a pass that optimizes condition branches on x86 by
taking advantage of the three-way conditional code generated by compare
instructions.
Currently, it tries to hoisting EQ and NE conditional branch to a dominant
conditional branch condition where the same EQ/NE conditional code is
computed. An example:
bb_0:
cmp %0, 19
jg bb_1
jmp bb_2
bb_1:
cmp %0, 40
jg bb_3
jmp bb_4
bb_4:
cmp %0, 20
je bb_5
jmp bb_6
Here we could combine the two compares in bb_0 and bb_4 and have the
following code:
bb_0:
cmp %0, 20
jg bb_1
jl bb_2
jmp bb_5
bb_1:
cmp %0, 40
jg bb_3
jmp bb_6
For the case of %0 == 20 (bb_5), we eliminate two jumps, and the control height
for bb_6 is also reduced. bb_4 is gone after the optimization.
This optimization is motivated by the branch pattern generated by the switch
lowering: we always have pivot-1 compare for the inner nodes and we do a pivot
compare again the leaf (like above pattern).
This pass currently is enabled on Intel's Sandybridge and later arches. Some
reviewers pointed out that on some arches (like AMD Jaguar), this pass may
increase branch density to the point where it hurts the performance of the
branch predictor.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46662
llvm-svn: 343993
Emit a waterfall loop in the general case for a potentially-divergent Rsrc
operand. When practical, avoid this by using Addr64 instructions.
Recommits r341413 with changes to update the MachineDominatorTree when present.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51742
llvm-svn: 343992
Some necessary yak shaving before lowering *_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG 256-bit vectors on AVX1 targets as suggested by D52964.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52970
llvm-svn: 343991
The instructions are complicated, so this code will
probably never be very obvious, but hopefully this
makes it better.
As shown in PR39195:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39195
...we need to improve the matching to not miss cases
where we're h-opping on 1 source vector, and that
should be a small patch after this rearranging.
llvm-svn: 343989
This commit adds a new IR level pass to the AMDGPU backend to perform
atomic optimizations. It works by:
- Running through a function and finding atomicrmw add/sub or uses of
the atomic buffer intrinsics for add/sub.
- If all arguments except the value to be added/subtracted are uniform,
record the value to be optimized.
- Run through the atomic operations we can optimize and, depending on
whether the value is uniform/divergent use wavefront wide operations
(DPP in the divergent case) to calculate the total amount to be
atomically added/subtracted.
- Then let only a single lane of each wavefront perform the atomic
operation, reducing the total number of atomic operations in flight.
- Lastly we recombine the result from the single lane to each lane of
the wavefront, and calculate our individual lanes offset into the
final result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51969
llvm-svn: 343973
When branch target identification is enabled, we can only do indirect
tail-calls through x16 or x17. This means that the outliner can't
transform a BLR instruction at the end of an outlined region into a BR.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52869
llvm-svn: 343969
When branch target identification is enabled, all indirectly-callable
functions start with a BTI C instruction. this instruction can only be
the target of certain indirect branches (direct branches and
fall-through are not affected):
- A BLR instruction, in either a protected or unprotected page.
- A BR instruction in a protected page, using x16 or x17.
- A BR instruction in an unprotected page, using any register.
Without BTI, we can use any non call-preserved register to hold the
address for an indirect tail call. However, when BTI is enabled, then
the code being compiled might be loaded into a BTI-protected page, where
only x16 and x17 can be used for indirect tail calls.
Legacy code withiout this restriction can still indirectly tail-call
BTI-protected functions, because they will be loaded into an unprotected
page, so any register is allowed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52868
llvm-svn: 343968
The Branch Target Identification extension, introduced to AArch64 in
Armv8.5-A, adds the BTI instruction, which is used to mark valid targets
of indirect branches. When enabled, the processor will trap if an
instruction in a protected page tries to perform an indirect branch to
any instruction other than a BTI. The BTI instruction uses encodings
which were NOPs in earlier versions of the architecture, so BTI-enabled
code will still run on earlier hardware, just without the extra
protection.
There are 3 variants of the BTI instruction, which are valid targets for
different kinds or branches:
- BTI C can be targeted by call instructions, and is inteneded to be
used at function entry points. These are the BLR instruction, as well
as BR with x16 or x17. These BR instructions are allowed for use in
PLT entries, and we can also use them to allow indirect tail-calls.
- BTI J can be targeted by BR only, and is intended to be used by jump
tables.
- BTI JC acts ab both a BTI C and a BTI J instruction, and can be
targeted by any BLR or BR instruction.
Note that RET instructions are not restricted by branch target
identification, the reason for this is that return addresses can be
protected more effectively using return address signing. Direct branches
and calls are also unaffected, as it is assumed that an attacker cannot
modify executable pages (if they could, they wouldn't need to do a
ROP/JOP attack).
This patch adds a MachineFunctionPass which:
- Adds a BTI C at the start of every function which could be indirectly
called (either because it is address-taken, or externally visible so
could be address-taken in another translation unit).
- Adds a BTI J at the start of every basic block which could be
indirectly branched to. This could be either done by a jump table, or
by taking the address of the block (e.g. the using GCC label values
extension).
We only need to use BTI JC when a function is indirectly-callable, and
takes the address of the entry block. I've not been able to trigger this
from C or IR, but I've included a MIR test just in case.
Using BTI C at function entries relies on the fact that no other code in
BTI-protected pages uses indirect tail-calls, unless they use x16 or x17
to hold the address. I'll add that code-generation restriction as a
separate patch.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52867
llvm-svn: 343967
Support G_UDIV/G_UREM/G_SREM. The instruction selection
code is taken from FastISel with only minor tweaks to adapt
for GlobalISel.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49781
llvm-svn: 343966
The IRBuilder CreateIntrinsic method wouldn't allow you to specify the
types that you wanted the intrinsic to be mangled with. To fix this
I've:
- Added an ArrayRef<Type *> member to both CreateIntrinsic overloads.
- Used that array to pass into the Intrinsic::getDeclaration call.
- Added a CreateUnaryIntrinsic to replace the most common use of
CreateIntrinsic where the type was auto-deduced from operand 0.
- Added a bunch more unit tests to test Create*Intrinsic calls that
weren't being tested (including the FMF flag that wasn't checked).
This was suggested as part of the AMDGPU specific atomic optimizer
review (https://reviews.llvm.org/D51969).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52087
llvm-svn: 343962
When deciding if it is safe to optimize a conditional branch to a CBZ or
CBNZ the offsets of the BasicBlocks from the start of the function are
estimated. For inline assembly the generic getInlineAsmLength() function is
used to get a worst case estimate of the inline assembly by multiplying the
number of instructions by the max instruction size of 4 bytes. This
unfortunately doesn't take into account the generation of Thumb implicit IT
instructions. In edge cases such as when all the instructions in the block
are 4-bytes in size and there is an implicit IT then the size is
underestimated. This can cause an out of range CBZ or CBNZ to be generated.
The patch takes a conservative approach and assumes that every instruction
in the inline assembly block may have an implicit IT.
Fixes pr31805
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52834
llvm-svn: 343960
The MachineOutliner for AArch64 transforms indirect calls into indirect
tail calls, replacing the call with the TCRETURNri pseudo-instruction.
This pseudo lowers to a BR, but has the isCall and isReturn flags set.
The problem is that TCRETURNri takes a tcGPR64 as the register argument,
to prevent indiret tail-calls from using caller-saved registers. The
indirect calls transformed by the outliner could use caller-saved
registers. This is fine, because the outliner ensures that the register
is available at all call sites. However, this causes a verifier failure
when the register is not in tcGPR64. The fix is to add a new
pseudo-instruction like TCRETURNri, but which accepts any GPR.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52829
llvm-svn: 343959
Prevents missing other simplifications that may occur deep in the operand chain where CommitTargetLoweringOpt won't add the PMULDQ back to the worklist itself
llvm-svn: 343922
Attempt to simplify PSHUFB masks (even non-constant ones) - we should probably be able to simplify other variable shuffles as well as the need arises.
llvm-svn: 343919
A pattern was present for addi rd, x0, simm6 but not addiw which is
semantically identical when the source register is x0. This patch addresses
that, and the benefit can be seen in rv64c-aliases-valid.s.
llvm-svn: 343911
Summary:
Merge the SMRD patterns for CI into the same multiclass as the
patterns for other sub-targets.
This removes some duplicate code and will make it easier for some
future GlobalISel changes I would like to do.
Reviewers: arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52557
llvm-svn: 343909
This rebases and recommits r343520. hwasan should be fixed now and this
shouldn't break the tests anymore.
Spill/reload instructions are artificially generated by the compiler and
have no relation to the original source code. So the best thing to do is
not attach any debug location to them (instead of just taking the next
debug location we find on following instructions).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52125
llvm-svn: 343895
rL343853 didn't limit the number of subinputs, but we don't currently support faux shuffles with more than 2 total inputs, so put a limiter in place until this is fixed.
Found by Artem Dergachev.
llvm-svn: 343891
The comments in this code say we were trying to avoid 16-bit immediates, but if the immediate fits in 8-bits this isn't an issue. This avoids creating a zero extend that probably won't go away.
The movmskb related changes are interesting. The movmskb instruction writes a 32-bit result, but fills the upper bits with 0. So the zero_extend we were previously emitting was free, but we turned a -1 immediate that would fit in 8-bits into a 32-bit immediate so it was still bad.
llvm-svn: 343871
Currently we hardcode instructions with ReadAfterLd if the register operands don't need to be available until the folded load has completed. This doesn't take into account the different load latencies of different memory operands (PR36957).
This patch adds a ReadAfterFold def into X86FoldableSchedWrite to replace ReadAfterLd, allowing us to specify the load latency at a scheduler class level.
I've added ReadAfterVec*Ld classes that match the XMM/Scl, XMM and YMM/ZMM WriteVecLoad classes that we currently use, we can tweak these values in future patches once this infrastructure is in place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52886
llvm-svn: 343868
Decode subvector shuffles from INSERT_SUBVECTOR(SRC0, SHUFFLE(EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR(SRC1))
This was found necessary while investigating PR39161
llvm-svn: 343853
Finally all targets are enabling multiple regalloc hints, so the hook to
disable this can now be removed.
NFC.
Review: Simon Pilgrim
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52316
llvm-svn: 343851
Summary:
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39158 and regression caused by
D49034. Though it is possible the problem was existed before and was exposed by
additional DBG_VALUEs.
Reviewers: sunfish, dschuff, aheejin
Reviewed By: aheejin
Subscribers: sbc100, aheejin, llvm-commits, alexcrichton, jgravelle-google
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52837
llvm-svn: 343827
Previously we replaced the chain use ourself and return the data result. LegalizeVectorOps then detected that we'd done this and assumed the chain had already been handled.
This commit instead returns a MERGE_VALUES node with two results joined from nodes. This allows LegalizeVectorOps to do all the replacements for us without any special casing. The MERGE_VALUES will be removed by DAG combine.
llvm-svn: 343817
The isAmdCodeObjectV2 is a misleading name which actually checks whether the os
is amdhsa or mesa.
Also add a test to make sure we do not generate old kernel header for code
object v3.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52897
llvm-svn: 343813
This can happen if assembling a reference to _GLOBAL_OFFSET_TABLE_.
While it doesn't make sense to try to assemble that for COFF,
the fact that we previously used llvm_unreachable meant that the code
had undefined behaviour if something tried to assemble that.
The configure script of libgmp would try to assemble such a snippet
(which should signal a failure). If llvm is built without assertions,
the undefined behaviour meant a (near) infinite loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52903
llvm-svn: 343811
- Fix spill/reloads of XSeqPairs failing with vregs (only physregs
worked correctly)
- Add missing spill/reload code for WSeqPairs class
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52761
llvm-svn: 343799
lowerGlobalAddress, lowerBlockAddress, and insertIndirectBranch contain
overzealous checks for is64Bit. These functions are all safe as-implemented
for RV64.
llvm-svn: 343781
f32 values passed on the stack would previously cause an assertion in
unpackFromMemLoc.. This would only trigger in the presence of the F extension
making f32 a legal type. Otherwise the f32 would be legalized.
This patch fixes that by keeping LocVT=f32 when a float is passed on the
stack. It also adds test coverage for this case, and tests that also
demonstrate lw/sw/flw/fsw will be selected when most profitable. i.e. there is
no unnecessary i32<->f32 conversion in registers.
llvm-svn: 343756
r343712 performed this optimisation during instruction selection. As Eli
Friedman pointed out in post-commit review, implementing this as a DAGCombine
might allow opportunities for further optimisations.
llvm-svn: 343741
There was some duplicated logic for using the LocInfo of a CCValAssign in
order to convert from the ValVT to LocVT or vice versa. Resolve this by
factoring out convertLocVTFromValVT from unpackFromRegLoc. Also rename
packIntoRegLoc to the more appropriate convertValVTToLocVT and call these
helper functions consistently.
llvm-svn: 343737
MCContext does not destroy MCSymbols on shutdown. So, rather than putting
SmallVectors (which may heap-allocate) inside MCSymbolWasm, use unowned pointer
to a WasmSignature instead. The signatures are now owned by the AsmPrinter.
Also uses WasmSignature instead of param and result vectors in TargetStreamer,
and leaves some TODOs for further simplification.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52580
llvm-svn: 343733
The additional patterns needed for this aren't overwhelming and introducing extra bitcasts during lowering limits our ability to do computeNumSignBits. Not that I have a good example of that for select. I'm just becoming increasingly grumpy about promotion of AND/OR/XOR. SELECT was just a lot easier to fix.
llvm-svn: 343723
Although we can't write a tablegen pattern to remove redundant
splitf64+buildf64 pairs due to the multiple return values, we can handle it
with some C++ selection code. This is simpler than removing them after
instruction selection through RISCVDAGToDAGISel::PostprocessISelDAG, as was
done previously.
llvm-svn: 343712
This patch adds a 'WriteCopy' [WriteLoad, WriteStore] schedule sequence instead to better model the behaviour
Found by @andreadb during llvm-mca testing on btver2 which was crashing on "zero uop" WriteRMW only instructions
llvm-svn: 343708
Fix use of SSE1 registers for f32 ops in no-x87 mode.
Notably, allow use of SSE instructions for f32 operations in 64-bit
mode (but not 32-bit which is disallowed by callign convention).
Also avoid translating memset/memcopy/memmove into SSE registers
without X87 for 32-bit mode.
This fixes PR38738.
Reviewers: nickdesaulniers, craig.topper
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52555
llvm-svn: 343689
The patterns as defined are correct only when XLen==32.
This is another preparatory patch for a set of patches that flesh out RV64
codegen.
llvm-svn: 343679
1. brcond operates on an condition.
2. atomic_fence and the pseudo AMO instructions should all take xlen immediates
This allows the same definitions and patterns to work for RV64 (XLenVT==i64).
llvm-svn: 343678
Summary:
The new buffer/tbuffer intrinsics handle an out-of-range immediate
offset by moving/adding offset&-4096 to a vgpr, leaving an in-range
immediate offset, with a chance of the move/add being CSEd for similar
loads/stores.
However it turns out that a negative offset in a vgpr is illegal, even
if adding the immediate offset makes it legal again.
Therefore, this commit disables the offset&-4096 thing if the offset is
negative.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52683
Change-Id: Ie02f0a74f240a138dc2a29d17cfbd9e350e4ed13
llvm-svn: 343672
I was expecting this to be a nfc but Silvermont seems to be setup a little differently:
// A folded store needs a cycle on MEC_RSV for the store data, but it does not need an extra port cycle to recompute the address.
def : WriteRes<WriteRMW, [SLM_MEC_RSV]>;
So moving from WriteStore to WriteRMW reduces predicted port pressure, confirmed by @craig.topper that this is correct.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52740
llvm-svn: 343670
Summary: Depends on D45541
Reviewers: ab, aditya_nandakumar, bogner, rtereshin, volkan, rovka, javed.absar, aemerson
Subscribers: aemerson, rengolin, mgorny, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45543
The previous commit failed portions of the test-suite on GreenDragon due to
duplicate COPY instructions and iterator invalidation. Both issues have now
been fixed. To assist with this, a helper (cloneVirtualRegister) has been added
to MachineRegisterInfo that can be used to get another register that has the same
type and class/bank as an existing one.
llvm-svn: 343654
Previously we were creating weakly defined helper function in
each translation unit:
- setThrew
- setTempRet0
Instead we now assume these will be provided at link time. In
emscripten they are provided in compiler-rt:
https://github.com/kripken/emscripten/pull/7203
Additionally we previously created three global variable which are
also now required to exist at link time instead.
- __THREW__
- _threwValue
- __tempRet0
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49208
llvm-svn: 343640
The 0x63 opcodes in 64-bit mode have a fixed source size of 32-bits, but the destination size is controlled by REX.W and the 0x66 opsize prefix. This instruction is normally used with a REX.W prefix which provides desired behavior. The other encodings are interpretted as valid by the processor, but aren't useful.
This patch makes us recognize them for the disassembler to match objdump.
llvm-svn: 343614
Add the .cv_fpo_stackalign directive so that we can define $T0, or the
VFRAME virtual register, with it. This was overlooked in the initial
implementation because unlike MSVC, we push CSRs before allocating stack
space, so this value is only needed to describe local variable
locations. Variables that the compiler now addresses via ESP are instead
described as being stored at offsets from VFRAME, which for us is ESP
after alignment in the prologue.
This adds tests that show that we use the VFRAME register properly in
our S_DEFRANGE records, and that we emit the correct FPO data to define
it.
Fixes PR38857
llvm-svn: 343603
The ARM elf emitter would omit printing data
symbol when constant data. This patch
overrides the emitFill method as to enforce that
the symbol is correctly printed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52737
llvm-svn: 343594
This adds new instructions to manipluate tagged pointers, and to load
and store the tags associated with memory.
Patch by Pablo Barrio, David Spickett and Oliver Stannard!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52490
llvm-svn: 343572
This adds new system registers introduced by the Memory Tagging
extension.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52488
llvm-svn: 343571
The Memory Tagging Extension adds system instructions for data cache
maintenance, implemented as new operands to the DC instruction.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52487
llvm-svn: 343570
This adds the memory tagging extension, which is an optional extension
introduced in v8.5A. The new instructions and registers will be added by
subsequent patches.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52486
llvm-svn: 343563
Consistently try to use APFloat::toString for floating point constant comments to get rid of differences between Constant / ConstantDataSequential values - it should help stop some of the linux-windows buildbot failures matching NaN/INF etc. as well.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52702
llvm-svn: 343562
There's a strange assertion on two of the Green Dragon bots that goes away when
this is reverted. The assertion is in RegBankAlloc and if it is this commit then
-verify-machine-instrs should have caught it earlier in the pipeline.
llvm-svn: 343546
Summary:
Before this change, LLVM would always describe locals on the stack as
being relative to some specific register, RSP, ESP, EBP, ESI, etc.
Variables in stack memory are pretty common, so there is a special
S_DEFRANGE_FRAMEPOINTER_REL symbol for them. This change uses it to
reduce the size of our debug info.
On top of the size savings, there are cases on 32-bit x86 where local
variables are addressed from ESP, but ESP changes across the function.
Unlike in DWARF, there is no FPO data to describe the stack adjustments
made to push arguments onto the stack and pop them off after the call,
which makes it hard for the debugger to find the local variables in
frames further up the stack.
To handle this, CodeView has a special VFRAME register, which
corresponds to the $T0 variable set by our FPO data in 32-bit. Offsets
to local variables are instead relative to this value.
This is part of PR38857.
Reviewers: hans, zturner, javed.absar
Subscribers: aprantl, hiraditya, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52217
llvm-svn: 343543
This includes a fix to prevent i16 compares with i32/i64 ands from being shrunk if bit 15 of the and is set and the sign bit is used.
Original commit message:
Currently we skip looking through truncates if the sign flag is used. But that's overly restrictive.
It's safe to look through the truncate as long as we ensure one of the 3 things when we shrink. Either the MSB of the mask at the shrunken size isn't set. If the mask bit is set then either the shrunk size needs to be equal to the compare size or the sign
There are still missed opportunities to shrink a load and fold it in here. This will be fixed in a future patch.
llvm-svn: 343539
Going from XForm Load to DSForm Load requires that the immediate be 4 byte
aligned.
If we are not aligned we must leave the load as LDX (XForm).
This bug is causing a compile-time failure in the benchmark h264ref.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51988
llvm-svn: 343525
Spill/reload instructions are artificially generated by the compiler and
have no relation to the original source code. So the best thing to do is
not attach any debug location to them (instead of just taking the next
debug location we find on following instructions).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52125
llvm-svn: 343520
There's a subtle bug in the handling of truncate from i32/i64 to i32 without minsize.
I'll be adding more test cases and trying to find a fix.
llvm-svn: 343516
The pattern had a couple of problems:
- It was checking for loads of bytes in the reverse order to what it
should have been looking for.
- It would replace loads of bytes with a load of a word without making
sure that the alignment was correct.
Thanks to Eli Friedman for pointing it out.
llvm-svn: 343514
Currently it returns incorrect operand size for a target independet
node such as COPY if operand is a register with subreg. Instead of
correct subreg size it returns a size of the whole superreg.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52736
llvm-svn: 343508
Summary:
The AsmParser Lexer regards these as a seperate token.
Here we expand the instruction name with them if they are
adjacent (no whitespace).
Tested: the basic-assembly.s test case has one case with a / in it.
The currently are also instructions with : in them, which we intend
to rename rather than fix them here.
Reviewers: tlively, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52442
llvm-svn: 343501
This patch adds load folding support to the test shrinking code. This was noticed missing in the review for D52669
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52699
llvm-svn: 343499
Currently we skip looking through truncates if the sign flag is used. But that's overly restrictive.
It's safe to look through the truncate as long as we ensure one of the 3 things when we shrink. Either the MSB of the mask at the shrunken size isn't set. If the mask bit is set then either the shrunk size needs to be equal to the compare size or the sign flag needs to be unused.
There are still missed opportunities to shrink a load and fold it in here. This will be fixed in a future patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52669
llvm-svn: 343498
Summary: This change enables VOP3 shifts to be explicitly selected
dependent on the divergence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52559
Reviewers: rampitec
llvm-svn: 343455
This patch adds another variant class to identify zero-idiom VPERM2F128rr
instructions.
On Jaguar, a VPERM wih bit 3 and 7 of the mask set, is a zero-idiom.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52663
llvm-svn: 343452
Summary:
While looking at PR35606, I found out that the scheduling info is incorrect.
One can check that it's really a P5+P6 and not a 2*P56 with:
echo -e 'vzeroall\nvandps %xmm1, %xmm2, %xmm3' | ./bin/llvm-exegesis -mode=uops -snippets-file=-
(vandps executes on P5 only)
Reviewers: craig.topper, RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52541
llvm-svn: 343447
We can only copy between a k-register and a GR32/GR64 register.
This patch detects that the copy will be illegal and prevents the domain reassignment from happening for that closure.
This probably isn't the best fix, and we should probably figure out how to handle this correctly.
Fixes PR38803.
llvm-svn: 343443
There's a conditional report_fatal_error just above this llvm_unreachable. The optimizer when seeing the unreachable removes the conditional and just makes any other error trigger the existing report_fatal_error.
llvm-svn: 343428
Summary:
This function turns (X >> C1) & C2 into a BMI BEXTR or TBM BEXTRI instruction. For BMI BEXTR we have to materialize an immediate into a register to feed to the BEXTR instruction.
The BMI BEXTR instruction is 2 uops on Intel CPUs. It looks like on SKL its one port 0/6 uop and one port 1/5 uop. Despite what Agner's tables say. I know one of the uops is a regular shift uop so it would have to go through the port 0/6 shifter unit. So that's the same or worse execution wise than the shift+and which is one 0/6 uop and one 0/1/5/6 uop. The move immediate into register is an additional 0/1/5/6 uop.
For now I've limited this transform to AMD CPUs which have a single uop BEXTR. If may also might make sense if we can fold a load or if the and immediate is larger than 32-bits and can't be encoded as a sign extended 32-bit value or if LICM or CSE can hoist the move immediate and share it. But we'd need to look more carefully at that. In the regression I looked at it doesn't look load folding or large immediates were occurring so the regression isn't caused by the loss of those. So we could try to be smarter here if we find a compelling case.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, lebedev.ri, andreadb
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, andreadb, RKSimon
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52570
llvm-svn: 343399
By removing demanded target shuffles that simplify to zero/undef/identity before simplifying its inputs we improve chances of further simplification, as only the immediate parent user of the combined is added back to the work list - this still doesn't help us if its passed through other ops though (bitcasts....).
llvm-svn: 343390
The shift amount might have peeked through a extract_subvector, altering the number of vector elements in the 'Amt' variable - so we were incorrectly calculating the ratio when peeking through bitcasts, resulting in incorrectly detecting splats.
llvm-svn: 343373
Correctly check for relocations in the constant to promote. And don't
allow promoting a constant multiple times.
This partially fixes https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32780 ;
it's not a complete fix because we also need to prevent
ARMConstantIslands from cloning the constant.
(-arm-promote-constant is currently off by default, and it stays off
with this patch. I'll look into turning it on again when all the known
issues are fixed.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51472
llvm-svn: 343361
This mostly affects IR generated by non-clang frontends because clang
generally sets the alignment of globals explicitly.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org//show_bug.cgi?id=32394 .
(-arm-promote-constant is currently off by default, and it stays off
with this patch. I'll look into turning it on again when all the known
issues are fixed.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51469
llvm-svn: 343359
Split the `zcz` feature into specific ones got GP and FP registers, `zcz-gp`
and `zcz-fp`, respectively, while retaining the original feature option to
mean both.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52621
llvm-svn: 343354
- Add fix so that all code paths that create DWARFContext
with an ObjectFile initialise the target architecture in the context
- Add an assert that the Arch is known in the Dwarf CallFrameString method
llvm-svn: 343317
Lower integer arguments larger then 32 bits for MIPS32.
setMostSignificantFirst is used in order for G_UNMERGE_VALUES and
G_MERGE_VALUES to always hold registers in same order, regardless of
endianness.
Patch by Petar Avramovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52409
llvm-svn: 343315
The NoMovt feature prevents the use of MOVW/MOVT
instructions on Cortex-M23 for performance reasons.
These instructions are required for execute only code
so NoMovt should be disabled when that option is enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52551
llvm-svn: 343302
This adds two new barrier instructions which can be used to restrict
speculative execution of load instructions.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52484
llvm-svn: 343300
Now that D51487 has landed, the last machine verifier tests that failed EXPENSIVE_CHECKS builds have now been fixed/removed, so we can remove @MatzeB 's isMachineVerifierClean() hack for sparc targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52612
llvm-svn: 343232
Bits [23-22] are used in Add and Sub to specify the shift. The value of the
shift field must be 0x; values of 1x are unallocated. MTE adds some instructions
that use such encodings, and this patch refactors the Add/Sub class so that
another class could derive from this one to implement other encodings and other
formats of bitfields.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52489
llvm-svn: 343231
This adds two new barrier instructions which can be used to restrict
speculative execution of load instructions.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52483
llvm-svn: 343229
This adds new instructions used by the Branch Target Identification
feature. When this is enabled, these are the only instructions which can
be targeted by indirect branch instructions.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52485
llvm-svn: 343225
This adds some new system registers which can be used to restrict
certain types of speculative execution.
Patch by Pablo Barrio and David Spickett!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52482
llvm-svn: 343218
This adds two new system registers, used to generate random numbers.
This is an optional extension to v8.5-A, and will be controlled by the
"+rng" modifier of the -march= and -mcpu= options.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52481
llvm-svn: 343217
This adds a new variant of the DC system instruction for persistent
memory.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52480
llvm-svn: 343216
This adds new system instructions which act as barriers to speculative
execution based on earlier execution within a particular execution
context.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52479
llvm-svn: 343214
This is a new barrier which limits speculative execution of the
instructions following it.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52477
llvm-svn: 343213
This is a new barrier which limits speculative execution of the
instructions following it.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52476
llvm-svn: 343211
Summary: It is currently broken and for Sparc there is not much benefit
in using a builtin version compared to a library version. Both versions
needs to store the same four values in setjmp and flush the register
windows in longjmp. If the need for a builtin setjmp/longjmp arises there
is an improved implementation available at https://reviews.llvm.org/D50969.
Reviewers: jyknight, joerg, venkatra
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51487
llvm-svn: 343210
These are some new variants of the "Floating-point Round to Integral"
family of instructions, which round to the nearest floating-point value
which fits in a 32- or 64-bit integer.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52475
llvm-svn: 343209
Summary: Use 0 as the default immediate for the UNIMP instruction.
This matches the behavior in gas.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51526
llvm-svn: 343203
Summary:
Partial write %PSR (WRPSR) is a SPARC V8e option that allows WRPSR
instructions to only affect the %PSR.ET field. It is supported by
the GR740 and GR716.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48644
llvm-svn: 343202
We have an unfortunate situation in our back end where we have to keep pairs of
functions synchronized. Needless to say that this is not an ideal situation as
it is very difficult to enforce. Even without bugs, it's annoying to have to do
the same thing in two places.
This patch just refactors the code so that the two pairs of those functions that
pertain to printing register operands are unified:
- stripRegisterPrefix() - this just removes the letter prefixes from registers
for the InstrPrinter and AsmPrinter. This patch provides this as a static
member of PPCRegisterInfo
- Handling of PPCII::UseVSXReg - there are 3 places where we do something
special for instructions with that flag set. Each of those places does its
own checking of this flag and implements code customization. Any changes to
how we print/encode VSX/VMX registers require modifying all 3 places. This
patch unifies this into a static function in PPCInstrInfo that returns the
register number adjusted as needed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52467
llvm-svn: 343195
These new instructions manipluate the NZCV bits, to convert between the
regular Arm floating-point comare format and an alternative format.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52473
llvm-svn: 343187
Debian uses different triples for MIPS r6 and paths. Here we use SubArch
to determine whether it is r6, if we found `r6' in CPU section of triple.
These new triples include:
mipsisa32r6-linux-gnu
mipsisa32r6el-linux-gnu
mipsisa64r6-linux-gnuabi64
mipsisa64r6el-linux-gnuabi64
mipsisa64r6-linux-gnuabin32
mipsisa64r6el-linux-gnuabin32
Patch by YunQiang Su.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50857
llvm-svn: 343185
Summary:
The OneUseDominatesOtherUses in the WebAssemblyRegStackify not properly validates register use using hasOneUse. Since we added/modified DBG_VALUE the assert started catching valid cases.
See also https://reviews.llvm.org/D49034#1247200
Fix verified by running the wasm waterfall.
Reviewed By: dschuff
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49034
llvm-svn: 343154
Summary:
This is essentially NFC, because the complex pattern used for these patterns
will fail on non-CI, but this makes the pattern consistent with other CI
smrd patterns. It is also a performance improvement, because the pattern
will now fail earlier on non-CI.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52469
llvm-svn: 343125
The Armv8.3-A reference manual defines floating-point data-processing
instructions with one source operand to have an opcode of 6 bits
[20:15]. The current class in tablegen, BaseSingleOperandFPData, only
allows [18:15]. This was ok because [20:19] could only be '00', with
other encodings unallocated. Armv8.5-A brings in the FRINT group of
instructions which use other values for these bits.
This patch refactors the existing class a bit to allow using the full 6
bits of the opcode, as defined in the Arm ARM.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52474
llvm-svn: 343120
Reuse some code in preparation for the v8.5A XAFlag/AXFlag instructions,
which shares part of the encoding of the MSR-immediate.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52472
llvm-svn: 343113
Parsing of the system instructions (IC, DC, AT and TLBI) uses this
function to show the required architecture when the operand is valid,
but the architecture is not enabled. Armv8.5A adds a few different
system instructions as part of optional features, so we need to extend
it to show individual features, not just base architectures.
This is NFC for now, but will be used by three different features added
in v8.5A, and will be tested by them.
Patch by David Spickett!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52478
llvm-svn: 343109
This caused the DebugInfo/Sparc/gnu-window-save.ll test to fail.
> Functions that have signed return addresses need additional dwarf support:
> - After signing the LR, and before authenticating it, the LR register is in a
> state the is unusable by a debugger or unwinder
> - To account for this a new directive, .cfi_negate_ra_state, is added
> - This directive says the signed state of the LR register has now changed,
> i.e. unsigned -> signed or signed -> unsigned
> - This directive has the same CFA code as the SPARC directive GNU_window_save
> (0x2d), adding a macro to account for multiply defined codes
> - This patch matches the gcc implementation of this support:
> https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/800271/
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50136
llvm-svn: 343103
This patch allows targeting Armv8.5-A, adding the architecture to
tablegen and setting the options to be identical to Armv8.4-A for the
time being. Subsequent patches will add support for the different
features included in the Armv8.5-A Reference Manual.
Patch by Pablo Barrio!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52470
llvm-svn: 343102
This patch adds a check to optimize conditional branch (BC and BCn) based on a constant set by CRSET or CRUNSET.
Other optimizers, such as block placement, may generate such code and hence
I do this at the very end of the optimization in pre-emit peephole pass.
A conditional branch based on a constant is eliminated or converted into unconditional branch.
Also CRSET/CRUNSET is eliminated if the condition code register is not used
by instruction other than the branch to be optimized.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52345
llvm-svn: 343100
Similar to the existing ISD::SRL constant vector shifts from D49562, this patch adds ISD::SRA support with ISD::MULHS.
As we're dealing with signed values, we have to handle shift by zero and shift by one special cases, so XOP+AVX2/AVX512 splitting/extension is still a better solution - really we should still use ISD::MULHS if one of the special cases are used but for now I've just left a TODO and filtered by isKnownNeverZero.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52171
llvm-svn: 343093
When calculating whether a value can safely overflow for use by an
icmp, we weren't checking that the value couldn't wrap around. To do
this we need the icmp to be using a constant, as well as the incoming
add or sub.
bugzilla report: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39060
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52463
llvm-svn: 343092
Functions that have signed return addresses need additional dwarf support:
- After signing the LR, and before authenticating it, the LR register is in a
state the is unusable by a debugger or unwinder
- To account for this a new directive, .cfi_negate_ra_state, is added
- This directive says the signed state of the LR register has now changed,
i.e. unsigned -> signed or signed -> unsigned
- This directive has the same CFA code as the SPARC directive GNU_window_save
(0x2d), adding a macro to account for multiply defined codes
- This patch matches the gcc implementation of this support:
https://patchwork.ozlabs.org/patch/800271/
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50136
llvm-svn: 343089
This broke Chromium's Android build (https://crbug.com/889390) and the
polly-aosp buildbot
(http://lab.llvm.org:8011/builders/aosp-O3-polly-before-vectorizer-unprofitable).
> Originally committed in rL342210 but was reverted in rL342260 because
> it was causing issues in vectorized code, because I had forgotten to
> ensure that we're operating on scalar values.
>
> Original commit message:
>
> On failing to find sequences that can be converted into dual macs,
> try to find sequential 16-bit loads that are used by muls which we
> can then use smultb, smulbt, smultt with a wide load.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51983
llvm-svn: 343082
Summary:
Lowers (s|u)itofp and fpto(s|u)i instructions for vectors. The fp to
int conversions produce poison values if their arguments are out of
the convertible range, so a future CL will have to add an LLVM
intrinsic to make the saturating behavior of this conversion usable.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52372
llvm-svn: 343052
This removes an int->fp bitcast between the surrounding code and the movmsk. I had already added a hack to combineMOVMSK to try to look through this bitcast to improve the SimplifyDemandedBits there.
But I found an additional issue where the bitcast was preventing combineMOVMSK from being called again after earlier nodes in the DAG are optimized. The bitcast gets revisted, but not the user of the bitcast. By using integer types throughout, the bitcast doesn't get in the way.
llvm-svn: 343046
Summary:
We generate s_xor to lower add of i1s in general cases, and s_not to
lower add with a one-bit imm of -1 (true).
Reviewers:
rampitec
Differential Revision:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52518
llvm-svn: 343030
This is the final (I hope!) problem pattern mentioned in PR37749:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37749
We are trying to avoid an AVX1 sinkhole caused by having 256-bit bitwise logic ops but no other 256-bit integer ops.
We've already solved the simple logic ops, but 'andn' is an x86 special. I looked at alternative solutions like
extending the generic DAG combine or trying to wait until the ANDNP node is created, but those are bigger patches
that can over-reach. Ie, splitting to 128-bit does not look like a win in most cases with >1 256-bit op.
The pattern matching is cluttered with bitcasts because of our i64 element canonicalization. For the affected test,
we have this vector-type-legalized sequence:
t29: v8i32 = concat_vectors t27, t28
t30: v4i64 = bitcast t29
t18: v8i32 = BUILD_VECTOR Constant:i32<-1>, Constant:i32<-1>, ...
t31: v4i64 = bitcast t18
t32: v4i64 = xor t30, t31
t9: v8i32 = BUILD_VECTOR Constant:i32<255>, Constant:i32<255>, ...
t34: v4i64 = bitcast t9
t35: v4i64 = and t32, t34
t36: v8i32 = bitcast t35
t37: v4i32 = extract_subvector t36, Constant:i64<0>
t38: v4i32 = extract_subvector t36, Constant:i64<4>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52318
llvm-svn: 343008
Share predecessor search bookkeeping in both perform PostLD1Combine
and performNEONPostLDSTCombine. This should be approximately a 4x and
2x performance improvement.
llvm-svn: 342986
As suggested by Craig Topper - I'm going to look at cleaning up the RMW sequences instead.
The uops are slightly different to the register variant, so requires a +1uop tweak
llvm-svn: 342969
[AMDGPU] lower-switch in preISel as a workaround for legacy DA
Summary:
The default target of the switch instruction may sometimes be an
"unreachable" block, when it is guaranteed that one of the cases is
always taken. The dominator tree concludes that such a switch
instruction does not have an immediate post dominator. This confuses
divergence analysis, which is unable to propagate sync dependence to
the targets of the switch instruction.
As a workaround, the AMDGPU target now invokes lower-switch as a
preISel pass. LowerSwitch is designed to handle the unreachable
default target correctly, allowing the divergence analysis to locate
the correct immediate dominator of the now-lowered switch.
llvm-svn: 342956
Added
__builtin_vsx_scalar_extract_expq
__builtin_vsx_scalar_insert_exp_qp
Builtins should behave the same way as in GCC.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48185
llvm-svn: 342910
We're missing quite a bit of data for these instruction, removing the overrides makes this obvious - inconsistent reg/mem variants is a concern as well.
Also, we have Divider resources (HWDivider etc.) but they aren't actually used consistently.
llvm-svn: 342904
A simple MOVS rd, imm8 can materialize [-128, 127] in signed i8 type or
[0, 255] in unsigned i8 type on Thumb1.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52257
llvm-svn: 342898
Split WriteIMul by size and also by IMUL multiply-by-imm and multiply-by-reg cases.
This removes all the scheduler overrides for gpr multiplies and stops WriteMULH being ignored for BMI2 MULX instructions.
llvm-svn: 342892
- The assembler accepts VSTM/VLDM with register lists (specifically double registers lists) with more than 16 registers specified
- The Arm architecture reference manual says this instruction must not contain more than 16 registers when the registers are doubleword registers
- This addresses one of the concerns in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38389
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52082
llvm-svn: 342891
The r337288 tried to fix result of icmp i1 when its input is not sanitized
by falling back to DagISel. While it now produces the correct result for
bit 0, the other bits can still hold arbitrary value which is not supported
by MipsFastISel branch lowering. This patch fixes the issue by falling back
to DagISel in this case.
Patch by Dragan Mladjenovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52045
llvm-svn: 342884
gcc uses operand modifier 'x' in inline asm for VSX registers.
Without this modifier, instructions which use VSX numbering for their
operands are printed as VMX registers. This patch adds support for the
operand modifier 'x'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52244
llvm-svn: 342882
If the alignment is at least 4, this should report true.
Something still seems off with how < 4-byte types are
handled here though.
Fixing this seems to change how some combines get
to where they get, but somehow isn't changing the net
result.
llvm-svn: 342879
A sequence of VMUL and VADD instructions always give the same or better
performance than a fused VMLA instruction on the Cortex-M4 and Cortex-M33.
Executing the VMUL and VADD back-to-back requires the same cycles, but
having separate instructions allows scheduling to avoid the hazard between
these 2 instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52289
llvm-svn: 342874
This caused miscompilation of WebRTC for Android: PR39060.
> We've had the pass enabled downstream for a couple of weeks and it
> seems to be okay, so enable it by default.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51920
llvm-svn: 342873
- The load store optimizer is currently merging multiple loads/stores into VLDM/VSTM with more than 16 doubleword registers
- This is an UNPREDICTABLE instruction and shouldn't be done
- It looks like the Limit for how many registers included in a merge got dropped at some point so I am reintroducing it in this patch
- This fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38389
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52085
llvm-svn: 342872
Originally committed in rL342210 but was reverted in rL342260 because
it was causing issues in vectorized code, because I had forgotten to
ensure that we're operating on scalar values.
Original commit message:
On failing to find sequences that can be converted into dual macs,
try to find sequential 16-bit loads that are used by muls which we
can then use smultb, smulbt, smultt with a wide load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51983
llvm-svn: 342870
Variable Shifts/Rotates using the CL register have different behaviours to the immediate instructions - split accordingly to help remove yet more repeated overrides from the schedule models.
llvm-svn: 342852
Confirmed with Craig Topper - fix a typo that was missing a Port4 uop for ROR*mCL instructions on some Intel models.
Yet another step on the scheduler model cleanup marathon......
llvm-svn: 342846
This is an alternative to https://reviews.llvm.org/D37896. We can't decompose
multiplies generically without a target hook to tell us when it's profitable.
ARM and AArch64 may be able to remove some existing code that overlaps with
this transform.
This extends D52195 and may resolve PR34474:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34474
(still an open question about transforming legal vector multiplies, but we
could open another bug report for those)
llvm-svn: 342844
The SandyBridge model was missing schedule values for the RCL/RCR values - instead using the (incredibly optimistic) WriteShift (now WriteRotate) defaults.
I've added overrides with more realistic (slow) values, based on a mixture of Agner/instlatx64 numbers and what later Intel models do as well.
This is necessary to allow WriteRotate to be updated to remove other rotate overrides.
It'd probably be a good idea to investigate a WriteRotateCarry class at some point but its not high priority given the unusualness of these instructions.
llvm-svn: 342842
Despite being rotates, these more modern instructions avoid many of the quirks of the regular x86 rotate instructions and consistently have a schedule closer to shifts.
llvm-svn: 342839
NFCI for now, but it should make it easier to remove a lot of unnecessary overrides in a future commit.
Now that funnel shift intrinsics are coming online we need to get this cleaned up to make vectorization costs from scalar rotate patterns more straightforward.
llvm-svn: 342837
Our lowering that tries to avoid this sign extend can be defeated by the DAG combine folding it with a truncate.
The pattern needs to extend to an v8i32 then truncate back down to v8i16.
llvm-svn: 342830
Summary:
Specifying X[8-15,18] registers as callee-saved is used to support
CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel. As part of this patch we:
- use custom CSR list/mask when user specifies custom CSRs
- update Machine Register Info's list of CSRs with additional custom CSRs in
LowerCall and LowerFormalArguments.
Reviewers: srhines, nickdesaulniers, efriedma, javed.absar
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52216
llvm-svn: 342824
Summary: Similar to D51893 which was for memcpy
Reviewers: efriedma
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52063
llvm-svn: 342796
We don't have a vXi8 shift left so we need to bitcast to a vXi16 vector to perform the shift. If we let lowering legalize the vXi8 shift we get an extra and that we don't need and fail to remove.
llvm-svn: 342795
Previously we used SUBREG_TO_REG+MOV32ri. But regular isel was changed recently to use the MOV32ri64 pseudo. Fast isel now does the same.
llvm-svn: 342788
Summary:
By using the existing isCodeGenOnly bit in the tablegen defs, as
suggested by tlively in https://reviews.llvm.org/D51662
Tested: llvm-lit -v `find test -name WebAssembly`
Reviewers: tlively
Subscribers: dschuff, sbc100, jgravelle-google, aheejin, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52373
llvm-svn: 342772
This patch introduces a SchedWriteVariant to describe zero-idiom VXORP(S|D)Yrr
and VANDNP(S|D)Yrr.
This is a follow-up of r342555.
On Jaguar, a VXORPSYrr is 2 macro opcodes. Only one opcode is eliminated at
register-renaming stage. The other opcode has to be executed to set the upper
half of the destination YMM.
Same for VANDNP(S|D)Yrr.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52347
llvm-svn: 342728
Summary:
The default target of the switch instruction may sometimes be an
"unreachable" block, when it is guaranteed that one of the cases is
always taken. The dominator tree concludes that such a switch
instruction does not have an immediate post dominator. This confuses
divergence analysis, which is unable to propagate sync dependence to
the targets of the switch instruction.
As a workaround, the AMDGPU target now invokes lower-switch as a
preISel pass. LowerSwitch is designed to handle the unreachable
default target correctly, allowing the divergence analysis to locate
the correct immediate dominator of the now-lowered switch.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits, simoll
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52221
llvm-svn: 342722
Summary: This change is the first part of the AMDGPU target description
change. The aim of it is the effective splitting the vector and scalar
flows at the selection stage. Selection uses predicate functions based
on the framework implemented earlier - https://reviews.llvm.org/D35267
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52019
Reviewers: rampitec
llvm-svn: 342719
Currently, BPF has XADD (locked add) insn support and the
asm looks like:
lock *(u32 *)(r1 + 0) += r2
lock *(u64 *)(r1 + 0) += r2
The instruction itself does not have a return value.
At the source code level, users often use
__sync_fetch_and_add()
which eventually translates to XADD. The return value of
__sync_fetch_and_add() is supposed to be the old value
in the xadd memory location. Since BPF::XADD insn does not
support such a return value, this patch added a PreEmit
phase to check such a usage. If such an illegal usage
pattern is detected, a fatal error will be reported like
line 4: Invalid usage of the XADD return value
if compiled with -g, or
Invalid usage of the XADD return value
if compiled without -g.
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
Acked-by: Alexei Starovoitov <ast@kernel.org>
llvm-svn: 342692
Summary: Adds the necessary support to lib/ObjectYAML and fixes SIMD
calls to allow the tests to work. Also removes some dead code that
would otherwise have to have been updated.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff, sbc100
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52105
llvm-svn: 342689
x86 had 2 versions of peekThroughBitcast. DAGCombiner had 1. Plus, it had a 1-off implementation for the one-use variant.
Move the x86 versions of the code to SelectionDAG, so we don't have different copies of the code.
No functional change intended.
I'm putting this next to isBitwiseNot() because I am planning to use it in there. Another option is next to the
helpers in the ISD namespace (eg, ISD::isConstantSplatVector()). But if there's no good reason for those to be
there, I'd prefer to pull other helpers over to SelectionDAG in follow-up steps.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52285
llvm-svn: 342669
This is a trivial refactoring that I'm committing now as it makes a patch I'm
about to post for review easier to follow. There is some overlap between
evaluateConstantImm and addExpr in RISCVAsmParser. This patch allows
evaluateConstantImm to be reused from addExpr to remove this overlap. The
benefit will be greater when a future patch adds extra code to allows
immediates to be evaluated from constant symbols (e.g. `.equ CONST, 0x1234`).
No functional change intended.
llvm-svn: 342641
Examples such as `jal a3`, `j a3` and `jal a3, a3` are accepted by gas
but rejected by LLVM MC. This patch rectifies this. I introduce
RISCVAsmParser::parseJALOffset to ensure that symbol names that coincide with
register names can safely be parsed. This is made a somewhat fiddly due to the
single-operand alias form (see the comment in parseJALOffset for more info).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52029
llvm-svn: 342629
Building a vector out of multiple loads can be converted to a load of the vector type if the loads are consecutive.
But the special condition is that the element number is 1, such as <1 x i128>. So just early exit to fix the assert.
Patch By: wuzish (Zixuan Wu)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52072
llvm-svn: 342611
Summary:
This change leaves holes in the opcode space where missing
instructions could logically be added later if they were found to be
useful.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52282
llvm-svn: 342610
Enable enableMultipleCopyHints() on X86.
Original Patch by @jonpa:
While enabling the mischeduler for SystemZ, it was discovered that for some reason a test needed one extra seemingly needless COPY (test/CodeGen/SystemZ/call-03.ll). The handling for that is resulted in this patch, which improves the register coalescing by providing not just one copy hint, but a sorted list of copy hints. On SystemZ, this gives ~12500 less register moves on SPEC, as well as marginally less spilling.
Instead of improving just the SystemZ backend, the improvement has been implemented in common-code (calculateSpillWeightAndHint(). This gives a lot of test failures, but since this should be a general improvement I hope that the involved targets will help and review the test updates.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38128
llvm-svn: 342578
As the code comments suggest, these are about splitting, and they
are not necessarily limited to lowering, so that misled me.
There's nothing that's actually x86-specific in these either, so
they might be better placed in a common header so any target can
use them.
llvm-svn: 342575
The patch extends size reduction pass for MicroMIPS. Two MOVE
instructions are transformed into one MOVEP instrucition.
Patch by Milena Vujosevic Janicic.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52037
llvm-svn: 342572
The patch fixes definition of MOVEP instruction. Two registers are used
instead of register pairs. This is necessary as machine verifier cannot
handle register pairs.
Patch by Milena Vujosevic Janicic.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52035
llvm-svn: 342571
This patch adds an initial x86 SimplifyDemandedVectorEltsForTargetNode implementation to handle target shuffles.
Currently the patch only decodes a target shuffle, calls SimplifyDemandedVectorElts on its input operands and removes any shuffle that reduces to undef/zero/identity.
Future work will need to integrate this with combineX86ShufflesRecursively, add support for other x86 ops, etc.
NOTE: There is a minor regression that appears to be affecting further (extractelement?) combines which I haven't been able to solve yet - possibly something to do with how nodes are added to the worklist after simplification.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52140
llvm-svn: 342564
Summary:
This is required for GPUs with 16 bit instructions where f16 is a
legal register type and hence int_to_fp i1 to f16 is not lowered
by legalizing.
Reviewers: arsenm, nhaehnle
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52018
Change-Id: Ie4c0fd6ced7cf10ad612023c6879724d9ded5851
llvm-svn: 342558
Clang-compiled object files currently don't include the symbol sizes and
types. Some tools however need that information. For example, ctfconvert
uses that information to generate FreeBSD's CTF representation from ELF
files.
With this patch, symbol sizes and types are included in object files.
Signed-off-by: Paul Chaignon <paul.chaignon@orange.com>
Reported-by: Yutaro Hayakawa <yhayakawa3720@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 342556
This patch adds the ability for processor models to describe dependency breaking
instructions.
Different processors may specify a different set of dependency-breaking
instructions.
That means, we cannot assume that all processors of the same target would use
the same rules to classify dependency breaking instructions.
The main goal of this patch is to provide the means to describe dependency
breaking instructions directly via tablegen, and have the following
TargetSubtargetInfo hooks redefined in overrides by tabegen'd
XXXGenSubtargetInfo classes (here, XXX is a Target name).
```
virtual bool isZeroIdiom(const MachineInstr *MI, APInt &Mask) const {
return false;
}
virtual bool isDependencyBreaking(const MachineInstr *MI, APInt &Mask) const {
return isZeroIdiom(MI);
}
```
An instruction MI is a dependency-breaking instruction if a call to method
isDependencyBreaking(MI) on the STI (TargetSubtargetInfo object) evaluates to
true. Similarly, an instruction MI is a special case of zero-idiom dependency
breaking instruction if a call to STI.isZeroIdiom(MI) returns true.
The extra APInt is used for those targets that may want to select which machine
operands have their dependency broken (see comments in code).
Note that by default, subtargets don't know about the existence of
dependency-breaking. In the absence of external information, those method calls
would always return false.
A new tablegen class named STIPredicate has been added by this patch to let
processor models classify instructions that have properties in common. The idea
is that, a MCInstrPredicate definition can be used to "generate" an instruction
equivalence class, with the idea that instructions of a same class all have a
property in common.
STIPredicate definitions are essentially a collection of instruction equivalence
classes.
Also, different processor models can specify a different variant of the same
STIPredicate with different rules (i.e. predicates) to classify instructions.
Tablegen backends (in this particular case, the SubtargetEmitter) will be able
to process STIPredicate definitions, and automatically generate functions in
XXXGenSubtargetInfo.
This patch introduces two special kind of STIPredicate classes named
IsZeroIdiomFunction and IsDepBreakingFunction in tablegen. It also adds a
definition for those in the BtVer2 scheduling model only.
This patch supersedes the one committed at r338372 (phabricator review: D49310).
The main advantages are:
- We can describe subtarget predicates via tablegen using STIPredicates.
- We can describe zero-idioms / dep-breaking instructions directly via
tablegen in the scheduling models.
In future, the STIPredicates framework can be used for solving other problems.
Examples of future developments are:
- Teach how to identify optimizable register-register moves
- Teach how to identify slow LEA instructions (each subtarget defining its own
concept of "slow" LEA).
- Teach how to identify instructions that have undocumented false dependencies
on the output registers on some processors only.
It is also (in my opinion) an elegant way to expose knowledge to both external
tools like llvm-mca, and codegen passes.
For example, machine schedulers in LLVM could reuse that information when
internally constructing the data dependency graph for a code region.
This new design feature is also an "opt-in" feature. Processor models don't have
to use the new STIPredicates. It has all been designed to be as unintrusive as
possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52174
llvm-svn: 342555
This is an alternative to D37896. I don't see a way to decompose multiplies
generically without a target hook to tell us when it's profitable.
ARM and AArch64 may be able to remove some duplicate code that overlaps with
this transform.
As a first step, we're only getting the most clear wins on the vector examples
requested in PR34474:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34474
As noted in the code comment, it's likely that the x86 constraints are tighter
than necessary, but it may not always be a win to replace a pmullw/pmulld.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52195
llvm-svn: 342554
This involves changing the shouldExpandAtomicCmpXchgInIR interface, but I have
updated the in-tree backends using this hook (ARM, AArch64, Hexagon) so they
will see no functional change. Previously this hook returned bool, but it now
returns AtomicExpansionKind.
This hook allows targets to select how a given cmpxchg is to be expanded.
D48131 uses this to expand part-word cmpxchg to a target-specific intrinsic.
See my associated RFC for more info on the motivation for this change
<http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123993.html>.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48130
llvm-svn: 342550
Fixes the unwind information generated for floating-point registers.
Previously, all padding registers were assumed to be four bytes wide. Now, the
width of the register is used to specify the amount of padding.
Patch by Jackson Woodruff!
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51494
llvm-svn: 342545
Introduce a new RISCVExpandPseudoInsts pass to expand atomic
pseudo-instructions after register allocation. This is necessary in order to
ensure that register spills aren't introduced between LL and SC, thus breaking
the forward progress guarantee for the operation. AArch64 does something
similar for CmpXchg (though only at O0), and Mips is moving towards this
approach (see D31287). See also [this mailing list
post](http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2016-May/099490.html) from
James Knight, which summarises the issues with lowering to ll/sc in IR or
pre-RA.
See the [accompanying RFC
thread](http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-June/123993.html) for an
overview of the lowering strategy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47882
llvm-svn: 342534
The 0x800 bit in @feat.00 needs to be set in order to make LLD pick up
the .gfid$y table. I believe this is fine to set even if we don't emit
the instrumentation.
We haven't emitted @feat.00 on 64-bit before. I see that MSVC does emit
it, but I'm not entirely sure what the default value should be. I went
with zero since that seems as safe as not emitting the symbol in the
first place.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52235
llvm-svn: 342532
- Instead of having both `SUnit::dump(ScheduleDAG*)` and
`ScheduleDAG::dumpNode(ScheduleDAG*)`, just keep the latter around.
- Add `ScheduleDAG::dump()` and avoid code duplication in several
places. Implement it for different ScheduleDAG variants.
- Add `ScheduleDAG::dumpNodeName()` in favor of the `SUnit::print()`
functions. They were only ever used for debug dumping and putting the
function into ScheduleDAG is consistent with the `dumpNode()` change.
llvm-svn: 342520
This allows the hard-coded shouldForceImmediate logic to be removed because
the generated MatchOperandParserImpl makes use of the current context (i.e.
the current mnemonic) to determine parsing behaviour, and so won't first try
to parse a register before parsing a symbol name.
No functional change is intended. gas accepts immediate arguments for call,
tail and lla. This patch doesn't address this discrepancy.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51733
llvm-svn: 342488
addi a0, a0, foo and lw a0, foo(a0) and similar are now rejected. An explicit
%lo and %pcrel_lo modifier is required. This matches gas behaviour.
llvm-svn: 342487
Reject bare symbols and accept only %pcrel_hi(sym) for auipc and %hi(sym) for
lui. Also test valid operand modifiers in rv32i-valid.s.
Note this is slightly stricter than gas, which will accept either %pcrel_hi or
%hi for both lui and auipc.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51731
llvm-svn: 342486
This is a follow-up to the previous patch that eliminated some of the rotates.
With this addition, we will also emit the record-form andis.
This patch increases the number of record-form rotates we eliminate by
more than 70%.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44897
llvm-svn: 342478
Both ANDIo and ANDISo (and the 64-bit versions) are record-form instructions.
When optimizing compares, we handle the former in order to eliminate the compare
instruction but not the latter. This patch just adds the latter to the set of
instructions we optimize.
The reason these instructions need to be handled separately is that they are not
part of the RecFormRel map (since they don't have a non-record-form). The
missing "and-immediate-shifted" is just an oversight in the initial
implementation.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51353
llvm-svn: 342472
This tries to make use of evaluateAsRelocatable in AArch64AsmParser::classifySymbolRef
to parse more complex expressions as relocatable operands. It is hopefully better than
the existing code which only handles Symbol +- Constant.
This allows us to parse more complex adr/adrp, mov, ldr/str and add operands. It also
loosens the requirements on parsing addends in ld/st and mov's and adds a number of
tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51792
llvm-svn: 342455
When doing some instruction scheduling work, we noticed some missing itineraries.
Before we switch to machine scheduler, those missing itineraries might not have impact to actually scheduling,
because we can still get same latency due to default values.
With machine scheduler, however, itineraries will have impact to scheduling.
eg: NumMicroOps will default to be 0 if there is NO itineraries for specific instruction class.
And most of the instruction class with itineraries will have NumMicroOps default to 1.
This will has impact on the count of RetiredMOps, affects the Pending/Available Queue,
then causing different scheduling or suboptimal scheduling further.
Patch By: jsji (Jinsong Ji)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52040
llvm-svn: 342441
This reverts r342395 as it caused error
> Argument value type does not match pointer operand type!
> %0 = atomicrmw volatile xchg i8* %_Value1, i32 1 monotonic, !dbg !25
> i8in function atomic_flag_test_and_set
> fatal error: error in backend: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
on bot http://green.lab.llvm.org/green/job/clang-stage1-configure-RA/
More details are available at https://reviews.llvm.org/D52080
llvm-svn: 342431
Add support mips64(el)-linux-gnuabin32 triples, and set them to N32.
Debian architecture name mipsn32/mipsn32el are also added. Set
UseIntegratedAssembler for N32 if we can detect it.
Patch by YunQiang Su.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51408
llvm-svn: 342416
Summary:
The IR reference for the `byval` attribute states:
```
This indicates that the pointer parameter should really be passed by value
to the function. The attribute implies that a hidden copy of the pointee is
made between the caller and the callee, so the callee is unable to modify
the value in the caller. This attribute is only valid on LLVM pointer arguments.
```
However, on Win64, this attribute is unimplemented and the raw pointer is
passed to the callee instead. This is problematic, because frontend authors
relying on the implicit hidden copy (as happens for every other calling
convention) will see the passed value silently (if mutable memory) or
loudly (by means of a crash) modified because the callee treats the
location as scratch memory space it is allowed to mutate.
At this point, it's worth taking a step back to understand the context.
In most calling conventions, aggregates that are too large to be passed
in registers, instead get *copied* to the stack at a fixed (computable
from the signature) offset of the stack pointer. At the LLVM, we hide
this hidden copy behind the byval attribute. The caller passes a pointer
to the desired data and the callee receives a pointer, but these pointers
are not the same. In particular, the pointer that the callee receives
points to temporary stack memory allocated as part of the call lowering.
In most calling conventions, this pointer is never realized in registers
or memory. The temporary memory is simply defined by an implicit
offset from the stack pointer at function entry.
Win64, uniquely, works differently. The structure is still passed in
memory, but instead of being stored at an implicit memory offset, the
caller computes a pointer to the temporary memory and passes it to
the callee as a regular pointer (taking up a register, or if all
registers are taken up, an additional stack slot). Presumably, this
was done to allow eliding the copy when passing aggregates through
several functions on the stack.
This explains why ignoring the `byval` attribute mostly works on Win64.
The argument simply gets passed as a pointer and as long as we're ok
with the callee trampling all over that memory, there are no ill effects.
However, it does contradict the documentation of the `byval` attribute
which specifies that there is to be an implicit copy.
Frontends can of course work around this by never emitting the `byval`
attribute for Win64 and creating `alloca`s for the requisite temporary
stack slots (and that does appear to be what frontends are doing).
However, the presence of the `byval` attribute is not a trap for
frontend authors, since it seems to work, but silently modifies the
passed memory contrary to documentation.
I see two solutions:
- Disallow the `byval` attribute in the verifier if using the Win64
calling convention.
- Make it work by simply emitting a temporary stack copy as we would
with any other calling convention (frontends can of course always
not use the attribute if they want to elide the copy).
This patch implements the second option (make it work), though I would
be fine with the first also.
Ref: https://github.com/JuliaLang/julia/issues/28338
Reviewers: rnk
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51842
llvm-svn: 342402
isSupportedValue explicitly checked and accepted many types of value,
primarily for debugging reasons. Remove most of these checks and do a
bit of refactoring now that the pass is more stable. This also enables
ZExts to be sources, but this has very little practical benefit at the
moment extend instructions will still be introduced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52080
llvm-svn: 342395
We allow overflowing instructions if they're decreasing and only used
by an unsigned compare. Add the extra condition that the icmp cannot
be using a negative immediate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52102
llvm-svn: 342392
For constant non-uniform cases we'll never introduce more and/andn/or selects than already occur in generic pre-SSE41 ISD::SRL lowering.
llvm-svn: 342352
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38949
It's not clear to me that we even need a one-use check in this fold.
Ie, 2 independent loads might be better than a load+dependent shuffle.
Note that the existing re-use tests are not affected. We actually do form a
broadcast node in those tests now because there's no extra use of the
insert_subvector node in those cases. But something later in isel pattern
matching decides that it is not worth using a broadcast for the full load in
those tests:
Legalized selection DAG: %bb.0 'test_broadcast_2f64_4f64_reuse:'
t7: v2f64,ch = load<(load 16 from %ir.p0)> t0, t2, undef:i64
t4: i64,ch = CopyFromReg t0, Register:i64 %1
t10: ch = store<(store 16 into %ir.p1)> t7:1, t7, t4, undef:i64
t18: v4f64 = insert_subvector undef:v4f64, t7, Constant:i64<0>
t20: v4f64 = insert_subvector t18, t7, Constant:i64<2>
Becomes:
t7: v2f64,ch = load<(load 16 from %ir.p0)> t0, t2, undef:i64
t4: i64,ch = CopyFromReg t0, Register:i64 %1
t10: ch = store<(store 16 into %ir.p1)> t7:1, t7, t4, undef:i64
t21: v4f64 = X86ISD::SUBV_BROADCAST t7
ISEL: Starting selection on root node: t21: v4f64 = X86ISD::SUBV_BROADCAST t7
...
Created node: t27: v4f64 = INSERT_SUBREG IMPLICIT_DEF:v4f64, t7, TargetConstant:i32<7>
Morphed node: t21: v4f64 = VINSERTF128rr t27, t7, TargetConstant:i8<1>
llvm-svn: 342347
Summary: This unfortunately adds a move, but isn't that better than going to the int domain and back?
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52134
llvm-svn: 342327
Summary:
MOVMSK only care about the sign bit so we don't need the setcc to fill the whole element with 0s/1s. We can just shift the bit we're looking for into the sign bit. This saves a constant pool load.
Inspired by PR38840.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: lebedev.ri, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52121
llvm-svn: 342326
Summary:
Implement shifts of vectors by i32. Since LLVM defines shifts as
binary operations between two vectors, this involves pattern matching
on splatted shift operands. For v2i64 shifts any i32 shift operands
have to be zero extended in the input and any i64 shift operands have
to be wrapped in the output. Depends on D52007.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51906
llvm-svn: 342302
Summary:
Integer types smaller than i32 must be extended to i32 by default.
The feature "crbits" introduced at r202451 handles i1 as a special case,
but it did not extend properly.
The caller was, therefore, passing i1 stack arguments by writing 0/1 to
the first byte of the 4-byte stack object and callee was
reading the first byte for the value.
"crbits" is enabled if the optimization level is greater than 1,
which is very common in "release builds".
Such discrepancies with ABI specification also introduces
potential incompatibility with programs or libraries
built with other compilers e.g. GCC.
Fixes PR38661
Reviewers: hfinkel, cuviper
Subscribers: sylvestre.ledru, glaubitz, nagisa, nemanjai, kbarton, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51108
llvm-svn: 342288
Attempt to lower a shuffle as an unpack of elements from two inputs followed by a single-input (wider) permutation.
As long as the permutation is wider this is a win - there may be some circumstances where same size permutations would also be useful but I've left that for future work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52043
llvm-svn: 342257
Summary:
GFX9 and above support sin/cos instructions with a greater range and thus don't
require a fract instruction prior to invocation.
Added a subtarget feature to reflect this and added code to take advantage of
expanded range on GFX9+
Also updated the tests to check correct behaviour
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51933
Change-Id: I1c1f1d3726a5ae32116646ca5cfa1ab4ef69e5b0
llvm-svn: 342222
On failing to find sequences that can be converted into dual macs,
try to find sequential 16-bit loads that are used by muls which we
can then use smultb, smulbt, smultt with a wide load.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51983
llvm-svn: 342210
After recent improvements which makes better use of LOC instead of IPM, the
TTI cost functions also needs to be updated to reflect this.
This involves sext, zext and xor of i1.
The tests were updated so that for z13 the new costs are expected, while the
old costs are still checked for on zEC12.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51339
llvm-svn: 342207
Summary:
I accidentally left this behind in D50306, and it causes a build warning
when I build with gcc7.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52022
Change-Id: I30f7a47047e9d9d841f652da66d2fea19e74842c
llvm-svn: 342189
When replacing a named register input to the appropriately sized
sub/super-register. In the case of a 64-bit value being assigned to a
register in 32-bit mode, match GCC's assignment.
Reviewers: eli.friedman, craig.topper
Subscribers: nickdesaulniers, llvm-commits, hiraditya
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51502
llvm-svn: 342175
Summary:
Fixed assertions due to invalid fixup when encoding compressed instructions
(c.addi, c.addiw, c.li, c.andi) with bare symbols with/without modifiers.
This matches GAS behavior as well.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Disassembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer
for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52005
llvm-svn: 342160
Summary:
The illegal instruction 0x00 0x00 is being wrongly decoded as
c.addi4spn with 0 immediate.
The invalid instruction 0x01 0x61 is being wrongly decoded as
c.addi16sp with 0 immediate.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Disassembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer
for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51815
llvm-svn: 342159
Also, add a check to ensure that when main has the expected signature
we do not create a wrapper.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51562
llvm-svn: 342157
We previously only allowed truncs as sinks, but now allow them as
sources too. We do this by checking that the result type is the
narrow type that we're trying to optimise for.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51978
llvm-svn: 342141
Part of FixConsts wrongly assumes either a 8- or 16-bit constant
which can result in the wrong constants being generated during
promotion.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52032
llvm-svn: 342140
If an argument was passed on the stack, this
was using the default alignment.
I'm not sure there's an observable change from this. This
was observable due to bugs in expansion of unaligned
loads and stores, but since that is fixed I don't think
this matters much.
llvm-svn: 342133
The Technical Reference Manuals for these two CPUs state that branching
to an unaligned 32-bit instruction incurs an extra pipeline reload
penalty. That's bad.
This also enables the optimization at -Os since it costs on average one
byte per loop in return for 1 cycle per iteration, which is pretty good
going.
llvm-svn: 342127
This implements suggesting alternative mnemonics when an invalid one is
specified. For example `addru $9, $6, 17767` leads to the following
error message:
error: unknown instruction, did you mean: add, addiu, addu, maddu?
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40646
llvm-svn: 342119
Summary:
Previously we type legalized v2i32 div/rem by promoting to v2i64. But we don't support div/rem of vectors so op legalization would then scalarize it using i64 scalar ops since it doesn't know about the original promotion. 64-bit scalar divides on Intel hardware are known to be slow and in 32-bit mode they require a libcall.
This patch switches type legalization to do the scalarizing itself using i32.
It looks like the division by power of 2 optimization is still kicking in and leaving the code as a vector. The division by other constant optimization doesn't kick in pre type legalization since it ignores illegal types. And previously, after type legalization we scalarized the v2i64 since we don't have v2i64 MULHS/MULHU support.
Another option might be to widen v2i32 to v4i32 so we could do division by constant optimizations, but we'd have to be careful to only do that for constant divisors or we risk scalaring to 4 scalar divides.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51325
llvm-svn: 342114
The `IMAGE_REL_ARM_BRANCH20T` applies only to a `b.w` instruction. A
thumb-2 `bl` should be relocated using a `IMAGE_REL_ARM_BRANCH24T`.
Correct the relocation that we emit in such a case.
Resolves PR38620! Based on the patch by Jordan Rhee!
llvm-svn: 342109
Shufflevector instructions in LLVM IR that extract a subset of elements
of a longer input into a shorter vector can be done using VECTOR_SHUFFLEs.
This will avoid expanding them into constly extracts and inserts.
llvm-svn: 342091
Summary:
rL341389 broke code with tied register operands in inline assembly. For
example, `asm("" : "=r"(var) : "0"(var));`
The code above specifies the input operand to be in the same register
with the output operand, tying the two register. This patch makes this
kind of code work again.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51991
llvm-svn: 342084
Scalarization of a shuffle will break up the source vectors into individual
elements, and use them to assemble the resulting vector. An element type of
a legal vector type may not necessarily be a legal scalar type, so make
sure that the extracted values are extended to a legal scalar type.
llvm-svn: 342079
Move isa version determination into TargetParser.
Also switch away from target features to CPU string when
determining isa version. This fixes an issue when we
output wrong isa version in the object code when features
of a particular CPU are altered (i.e. gfx902 w/o xnack
used to result in gfx900).
llvm-svn: 342069
Summary:
Match the ordering semantics of non-vector comparisons. For
floating point comparisons that do not correspond to instructions, the
tests check that some vector comparison instruction was emitted but do
not care about the full implementation.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51765
llvm-svn: 342064
There's no advantage to this instruction unless you need to avoid touching other flag bits. It's encoding is longer, it can't fold an immediate, it doesn't write all the flags.
I don't think gcc will generate this instruction either.
Fixes PR38852.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51754
llvm-svn: 342059
This patch adds codegen support for the saving/restoring
V8-V23 for functions specified with the aarch64_vector_pcs
calling convention attribute, as added in patch D51477.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar, MatzeB
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51479
llvm-svn: 342049
This patch refactors several parts of AArch64FrameLowering
so that it can be easily extended to support saving/restoring
of FPR128 (Q) registers.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51478
llvm-svn: 342038
SMLAD and SMLALD instructions also come in the form of SMLADX and
SMLALDX which perform an exchange on their second operand. To support
this, more of the loads in the MAC candidates are compared for
sequential access and a boolean value has been added to BinOpChain.
AddMACCandiate has been refactored into a small pattern matching
state machine to reduce the amount of duplicated code, but also to
enable the matching to be more flexible. CreateParallelMACPairs now
iterates through all the candidates to find parallel ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51424
llvm-svn: 342033
This patch adds parsing support for the 'aarch64_vector_pcs'
calling convention attribute to calls and function declarations.
More information describing the vector ABI and procedure call standard
can be found here:
https://developer.arm.com/products/software-development-tools/\
hpc/arm-compiler-for-hpc/vector-function-abi
Reviewers: t.p.northover, rnk, rengolin, javed.absar, thegameg, SjoerdMeijer
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51477
llvm-svn: 342030
Summary:
In GNUX23, is64BitMode returns true, but pointers are 32-bits. So we shouldn't copy pointer values into RSI/RDI since the widths don't match.
Fixes PR38865 despite what the title says. I think the llvm_unreachable in the copyPhysReg code tricked the optimizer and made the fatal error trigger.
Reviewers: rnk, efriedma, MatzeB, echristo
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51893
llvm-svn: 342015
into TargetParser.
Also switch away from target features to CPU string when
determining isa version. This fixes an issue when we
output wrong isa version in the object code when features
of a particular CPU are altered (i.e. gfx902 w/o xnack
used to result in gfx900).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51890
llvm-svn: 341982
In r337348, I changed lowering to prefer X86ISD::UNPCKL/UNPCKH opcodes over MOVLHPS/MOVHLPS for v2f64 {0,0} and {1,1} shuffles when we have SSE2. This enabled the removal of a bunch of weirdly bitcasted isel patterns in r337349. To avoid changing the tests I placed a gross hack in isel to still emit movhlps instructions for fake unary unpckh nodes. A similar hack was not needed for unpckl and movlhps because we do execution domain switching for those. But unpckh and movhlps have swapped operand order.
This patch removes the hack.
This is a code size increase since unpckhpd requires a 0x66 prefix and movhlps does not. But if that's a big concern we should be using movhlps for all unpckhpd opcodes and let commuteInstruction turnit into unpckhpd when its an advantage.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49499
llvm-svn: 341973
GNUX32 uses 32-bit pointers despite is64BitMode being true. So we should use EAX to return the value.
Fixes ones of the failures from PR38865.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51940
llvm-svn: 341972
An fp_to_sint node would be incorrectly lowered to a TruncIntFP node in
single-float mode. This would trigger an "Unexpected illegal type!"
assert.
Patch by Dan Ravensloft.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51810
llvm-svn: 341952
Search from i64 reducing phis, as well as i32, to allow the
generation of smlald instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51101
llvm-svn: 341941
We've had the pass enabled downstream for a couple of weeks and it
seems to be okay, so enable it by default.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51920
llvm-svn: 341932
MIPS ISAs start to support third operand for the `rdhwr` instruction
starting from Revision 6. But LLVM generates assembler code with
three-operands version of this instruction on any MIPS64 ISA. The third
operand is always zero, so in case of direct code generation we get
correct code.
This patch fixes the bug by adding an instruction alias. The same alias
already exists for 32-bit ISA.
Ideally, we also need to reject three-operands version of the `rdhwr`
instruction in an assembler code if ISA revision is less than 6. That is
a task for a separate patch.
This fixes PR38861 (https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38861)
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51773
llvm-svn: 341919
MOVMSKPS and MOVMSKPD both take FP types, but likely the operations before it are on integer types with just a int->fp bitcast between them. If the bitcast isn't used by anything else and doesn't change the element width we can look through it to simplify the integer ops.
llvm-svn: 341915
The was previously committed as r341749 then reverted as r341750 because
bit_cast needed to do its own thing to check is_trivially_copyable on GCC 4.x.
This is now done and std;:array should now get accepted.
llvm-svn: 341897
I'm having a hard time finding a test case for this, but we should be consistent here. The fact that we canonicalize all zeros and all ones constants to vXi32 and all other constants to loads makes this hard to hit the easy DAG combine infinite loop we get for some of the other types.
llvm-svn: 341859
Disassemblers cannot depend on main target headers. The same is true for
MCTargetDesc, but there's a lot more cleanup needed for that.
llvm-svn: 341822
This already worked if only one register piece was used,
but didn't if a type was split into multiple, unequal
sized pieces.
Fixes not splitting 3i16/v3f16 into two registers for
AMDGPU.
This will also allow fixing the ABI for 16-bit vectors
in a future commit so that it's the same for all subtargets.
llvm-svn: 341801
Summary:
This fixes a bug where a large number of implicit def instructions can fill the GCNHazardRecognizer lookahead buffer causing required NOPs to not be inserted.
Reviewers: nhaehnle, arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: sheredom, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51726
Change-Id: Ie75338f94de704ee5816b05afd0c922c6748a95b
llvm-svn: 341798
We have isel patterns for v4i32/v4f64 that artificially widen to v8i32/v8f64 so just use that.
If x86-experimental-vector-widening-legalization is enabled, we don't need any custom legalization and can just return. I've modified the test RUN lines to cover this case.
llvm-svn: 341765
Summary:
This patch allows vectors with a power of 2 number of elements and i8/i16 element type to select paddus/psubus instructions. ReplaceNodeResults has been updated to custom widen these operations up to 128 bits like we already do for PAVG.
Another step towards fixing PR38691
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon, spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51818
llvm-svn: 341753
Summary: I saw a few places that were punning through a union of FP and integer, and that made me sad. Luckily, C++20 adds bit_cast for exactly that purpose. Implement our own version in ADT (without constexpr, leaving us a bit sad), and use it in the few places my grep-fu found silly union punning.
This was originally committed as r341728 and reverted in r341730.
Reviewers: javed.absar, steven_wu, srhines
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51693
llvm-svn: 341741
Summary: I saw a few places that were punning through a union of FP and integer, and that made me sad. Luckily, C++20 adds bit_cast for exactly that purpose. Implement our own version in ADT (without constexpr, leaving us a bit sad), and use it in the few places my grep-fu found silly union punning.
Reviewers: javed.absar
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51693
llvm-svn: 341728
Summary:
Since the shuffle mask is not exposed as an operand in the native ISel
DAG, create a new WebAssembly ISD node exposing the mask. The mask is
lowered as sixteen immediate byte indices no matter what type the
original vector shuffle was operating on.
This CL depends on D51656
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51659
llvm-svn: 341718
Summary: To explicitly opt out of LEB encoding for these immediates.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51766
llvm-svn: 341707
Summary:
Reserving registers x1-7 is used to support CONFIG_ARM64_LSE_ATOMICS in Linux kernel. This change adds support for reserving registers x1 through x7.
Reviewers: javed.absar, phosek, srhines, nickdesaulniers, efriedma
Reviewed By: nickdesaulniers, efriedma
Subscribers: niravd, jfb, manojgupta, nickdesaulniers, jyknight, efriedma, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48580
llvm-svn: 341706
The generic type legalizer will scalarize vXi1 instructions getting rid of the vector entirely. Creating wider vector instructions is just going to prevent that.
llvm-svn: 341705
The type legalizer will try to scalarize this and fail.
It looks like there's some other v1iX oddities out there too since we still generated some vector instructions.
llvm-svn: 341704
Similar to what was recently done for addcarry/subborrow and has been done for rdrand/rdseed for a while. It's better to use two results and an explicit store in IR when the store isn't part of the semantics of the instruction. This allows store->load forwarding to happen in the middle end. Or the store to be removed if its never loaded.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51803
llvm-svn: 341698
Summary:
RISCVDisassembler should check number of bytes available before reading them.
Crash noticed when enabling -DLLVM_USE_SANITIZER=Address.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Disassembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, rkruppe, PkmX, jocewei, asb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51708
llvm-svn: 341686
We should represent the store directly in IR instead. This gives the middle end a chance to remove it if it can see a load from the same address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51769
llvm-svn: 341677
Previously we only handled loads in operand 0, but nothing guarantees the load will be operand 0 for commutable operations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51768
llvm-svn: 341675
Because t2LDREX (& t2STREX) were marked as AddrModeNone, but did allow a
FrameIndex operand, rewriteT2FrameIndex asserted. This gives them a
proper addressing-mode and tells the rewriter about it so that encodable
offsets are exploited and others are rejected.
Should fix PR38828.
llvm-svn: 341642
ADC is commutable and the load could be in either operand, but we were only checking operand 0.
Ideally we'd mark X86adc_flag as commutable and tablegen would automatically do this, but the EFLAGS register mention is preventing it.
llvm-svn: 341606
The peephole pass likely gets this normally, but we should be doing it during isel.
Ideally we'd just make the X86adc_flag pattern SDNPCommutable, but the tablegen doesn't handle that when one of the operands is a register reference.
llvm-svn: 341596
SHF_ARM_PURECODE flag when being built with the -mexecute-only flag.
All code sections of an ELF must have the flag set for the final .text
section to be execute-only, otherwise the flag gets removed.
A HasData flag is added to MCSection to aid in the determination that
the section is empty. A virtual setTargetSectionFlags is added to
MCELFObjectTargetWriter to allow subclasses to set target specific
section flags to be added to sections which we then use in the ARM
backend to set SHF_ARM_PURECODE.
Patch by Ivan Lozano!
Reviewed By: echristo
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48792
llvm-svn: 341593
Summary:
Instruction printer shouldn't crash with assertions due to incorrect input data. llvm_unreachable is not intended for runtime error handling.
Reviewers: petecoup
Reviewed By: petecoup
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51728
llvm-svn: 341581
Summary:
I added a few ARM64 memset codegen tests in r341406 and r341493, and annotated
where the generated code was bad. This patch fixes the majority of the issues by
requesting that a 2xi64 vector be used for memset of 32 bytes and above.
The patch leaves the former request for f128 unchanged, despite f128
materialization being suboptimal: doing otherwise runs into other asserts in
isel and makes this patch too broad.
This patch hides the issue that was present in bzero_40_stack and bzero_72_stack
because the code now generates in a better order which doesn't have the store
offset issue. I'm not aware of that issue appearing elsewhere at the moment.
<rdar://problem/44157755>
Reviewers: t.p.northover, MatzeB, javed.absar
Subscribers: eraman, kristof.beyls, chrib, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51706
llvm-svn: 341558
This basically reverts a change made in r336217, but improves the text of the error message for not allowing IP-relative addressing in 32-bit mode.
Fixes PR38826.
Patch by Iain Sandoe.
llvm-svn: 341512
This replaces r337723. The global list in the module can be huge with LTO,
plus the module can change between different invocations of the pass, so
there is no easy way to deterministically cache the ordering (especially
in the presence of multiple threads).
llvm-svn: 341478
This removes the FrameAccess struct that was added to the interface
in D51537, since the PseudoValue from the MachineMemoryOperand
can be safely casted to a FixedStackPseudoSourceValue.
Reviewers: MatzeB, thegameg, javed.absar
Reviewed By: thegameg
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51617
llvm-svn: 341454
Emit a waterfall loop in the general case for a potentially-divergent Rsrc
operand. When practical, avoid this by using Addr64 instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50982
llvm-svn: 341413
On Windows, if shouldAssumeDSOLocal returns false, it's either a
dllimport reference, or a reference that we should treat as non-local
and create a stub for.
Clean up AArch64Subtarget::ClassifyGlobalReference a little while
touching the flag handling relating to dllimport.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51590
llvm-svn: 341402
The runtime pseudo relocations can't handle the AArch64 format PC
relative addressing in adrp+add/ldr pairs. By using stubs, the potentially
dllimported addresses can be touched up by the runtime pseudo relocation
framework.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51452
llvm-svn: 341401
Use MachineOperand::ChangeToImmediate rather than reassigning
MachineOperands to new values created from MachineOperand::CreateImm,
so that their parent pointers are preserved.
This fixes "Instruction has operand with wrong parent set" errors
reported by the MachineVerifier.
llvm-svn: 341389
Load Hardening.
Wires up the existing pass to work with a proper IR attribute rather
than just a hidden/internal flag. The internal flag continues to work
for now, but I'll likely remove it soon.
Most of the churn here is adding the IR attribute. I talked about this
Kristof Beyls and he seemed at least initially OK with this direction.
The idea of using a full attribute here is that we *do* expect at least
some forms of this for other architectures. There isn't anything
*inherently* x86-specific about this technique, just that we only have
an implementation for x86 at the moment.
While we could potentially expose this as a Clang-level attribute as
well, that seems like a good question to defer for the moment as it
isn't 100% clear whether that or some other programmer interface (or
both?) would be best. We'll defer the programmer interface side of this
for now, but at least get to the point where the feature can be enabled
without relying on implementation details.
This also allows us to do something that was really hard before: we can
enable *just* the indirect call retpolines when using SLH. For x86, we
don't have any other way to mitigate indirect calls. Other architectures
may take a different approach of course, and none of this is surfaced to
user-level flags.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51157
llvm-svn: 341363
implementing the proposed mitigation technique described in the original
design document.
The idea is to check after calls that the return address used to arrive
at that location is in fact the correct address. In the event of
a mis-predicted return which reaches a *valid* return but not the
*correct* return, this will detect the mismatch much like it would
a mispredicted conditional branch.
This is the last published attack vector that I am aware of in the
Spectre v1 space which is not mitigated by SLH+retpolines. However,
don't read *too* much into that: this is an area of ongoing research
where we expect more issues to be discovered in the future, and it also
makes no attempt to mitigate Spectre v4. Still, this is an important
completeness bar for SLH.
The change here is of course delightfully simple. It was predicated on
cutting support for post-instruction symbols into LLVM which was not at
all simple. Many thanks to Hal Finkel, Reid Kleckner, and Justin Bogner
who helped me figure out how to do a bunch of the complex changes
involved there.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50837
llvm-svn: 341358
retpolines.
This implements the core design of tracing the intended target into the
target, checking it, and using that to update the predicate state. It
takes advantage of a few interesting aspects of SLH to make it a bit
easier to implement:
- We already split critical edges with conditional branches, so we can
assume those are gone.
- We already unfolded any memory access in the indirect branch
instruction itself.
I've left hard errors in place to catch if any of these somewhat subtle
invariants get violated.
There is some code that I can factor out and share with D50837 when it
lands, but I didn't want to couple landing the two patches, so I'll do
that in a follow-up cleanup commit if alright.
Factoring out the code to handle different scenarios of materializing an
address remains frustratingly hard. In a bunch of cases you want to fold
one of the cases into an immediate operand of some other instruction,
and you also have both symbols and basic blocks being used which require
different methods on the MI builder (and different operand kinds).
Still, I'll take a stab at sharing at least some of this code in
a follow-up if I can figure out how.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51083
llvm-svn: 341356
This patch modifies hasStandardEncoding() / inMicroMipsMode() /
inMips16Mode() methods of the MipsSubtarget class so only one can be
true at any one time. That prevents the selection of microMIPS and MIPS
instructions and patterns that are defined in TableGen files at the same
time. A few new patterns and instruction definitions hae been added to
keep test cases passed.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51483
llvm-svn: 341338
A ReadAdvance was incorrectly added to the SchedReadWrite list associated with
the following SSE instructions:
sqrtss
sqrtsd
rsqrtss
rcpss
As a consequence, a wrong operand latency was computed for the register operand
used as the base address of the folded load operand.
This patch removes the wrong ReadAdvance, and updates the llvm-mca test cases.
There is still a problem with correctly modeling partial register writes on XMM
registers This other problem is currently tracked here:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38813
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51542
llvm-svn: 341326
Also adjust some of dsymutil's headers to put the header guards at the top,
otherwise the compiler will not recognize them as header guards.
llvm-svn: 341323
When initial support for dllimport was added for aarch64 in
SVN r316555, ClassifyGlobalReference didn't set the MO_DLLIMPORT
flag - that was only completed in SVN r323810. Reuse the return
value from ClassifyGlobalReference for this purpose as well.
llvm-svn: 341310
For instructions that spill/fill to and from multiple frame-indices
in a single instruction, hasStoreToStackSlot and hasLoadFromStackSlot
should return an array of accesses, rather than just the first encounter
of such an access.
This better describes FI accesses for AArch64 (paired) LDP/STP
instructions.
Reviewers: t.p.northover, gberry, thegameg, rengolin, javed.absar, MatzeB
Reviewed By: MatzeB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51537
llvm-svn: 341301
When doing some instruction scheduling work, we noticed some missing itineraries.
Before we switch to machine scheduler, those missing itineraries might not have impact to actually scheduling,
because we can still get same latency due to default values.
With machine scheduler, however, itineraries will have impact to scheduling.
eg: NumMicroOps will default to be 0 if there is NO itineraries for specific instruction class.
And most of the instruction class with itineraries will have NumMicroOps default to 1.
This will has impact on the count of RetiredMOps, affects the Pending/Available Queue,
then causing different scheduling or suboptimal scheduling further.
Patch by jsji (Jinsong Ji)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51506
llvm-svn: 341293
The 'rol Rd' instruction is equivalent to 'adc Rd'.
This caused compile warnings from tablegen because of conflicting bits
shared between each instruction.
llvm-svn: 341275
These intrinsics use the same implementation as PTEST intrinsics, but use vXi1 vectors.
New clang builtins will be accompanying them shortly.
llvm-svn: 341259
This patch recognizes shuffles that shift elements and fill with zeros. I've copied and modified the shift matching code we use for normal vector registers to do this. I'm not sure if there's a good way to share more of this code without making the existing function more complex than it already is.
This will be used to enable kshift intrinsics in clang.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51401
llvm-svn: 341227
The presence of a ReadAdvance for input operand #0 is problematic
because it changes the input latency of the register used as the base address
for the folded load.
A broadcast cannot start executing if the load address hasn't been computed yet.
In the llvm-mca example, the VBROADCASTSS is dependent on the address generated
by the LEAQ. That means, it cannot start until LEAQ reaches the write-back
stage. If we apply ReadAdvance, then we wrongly assume that the load can start 3
cycles in advance.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51534
llvm-svn: 341222
The `mtc1` and `mfc1` definitions in the MipsInstrFPU.td have MMRel,
but do not have StdMMR6Rel tags. When these instructions are emitted
for microMIPS R6 targets, `Mips::MipsR62MicroMipsR6` nor
`Mips::Std2MicroMipsR6` cannot find correct op-codes and as a result the
backend uses mips32 variant of the instructions encoding.
The patch fixes this problem by adding the StdMMR6Rel tag and check
instructions encoding in the test case.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51482
llvm-svn: 341221
The intention is to enable the extract_vector_elt load combine,
and doing this for other operations interferes with more
useful optimizations on vectors.
Handle any type of load since in principle we should do the
same combine for the various load intrinsics.
llvm-svn: 341219
This patch fixes the number of micro opcodes, and processor resource cycles for
the following AVX instructions:
vinsertf128rr/rm
vperm2f128rr/rm
vbroadcastf128
Tests have been regenerated using the usual scripts in the llvm/utils directory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51492
llvm-svn: 341185
These stubs should never be emitted for internal symbols, and
nothing in AsmPrinter ever actually use this value when producing
the stubs for COFF anyway.
llvm-svn: 341177
The runtime pseudo relocations can't handle the ARM format embedded
addresses in movw/movt pairs. By using stubs, the potentially
dllimported addresses can be touched up by the runtime pseudo relocation
framework.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51450
llvm-svn: 341176
It has essentially the same benefit it has on 64-bit ARM: it
substantially reduces the number of constants used by large GEP
operations. Seems to be generally helpful across a few different
codebases I've tried.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51462
llvm-svn: 341136
Summary:
RISCVAsmParser needs to handle the case the error message is of specific type, other than the generic Match_InvalidOperand, and the corresponding
operand is missing.
This bug was uncovered by a LLVM MC Assembler Protocol Buffer Fuzzer for the RISC-V assembly language.
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jocewei, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, the_o, PkmX
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50790
llvm-svn: 341104
This assert tried to check that AND constants are only on the RHS. But its possible for both operands to be constants if one is opaque which will prevent the AND from being constant folded.
Fixes PR38771
llvm-svn: 341102
Summary:
Now uses the StackBased bit from the tablegen defs to identify
stack instructions (and ignore register based or non-wasm instructions).
Also changed how we store operands, since we now have up to 16 of them
per instruction. To not cause static data bloat, these are compressed
into a tiny table.
+ a few other cleanups.
Tested:
- MCTest
- llvm-lit -v `find test -name WebAssembly`
Reviewers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, sunfish, tlively
Subscribers: sbc100, aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51320
llvm-svn: 341081
..Move all target-dependent checks into new isCopyInstrImpl method.
This change allows us to treat MoveReg-type instructions and generic
COPY instruction in the same way
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49913
llvm-svn: 341072
Summary:
This is patch 1 of the new DivergenceAnalysis (https://reviews.llvm.org/D50433).
The purpose of this patch is to free up the name DivergenceAnalysis for the new generic
implementation. The generic implementation class will be shared by specialized
divergence analysis classes.
Patch by: Simon Moll
Reviewed By: nhaehnle
Subscribers: jvesely, jholewinski, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50434
Change-Id: Ie8146b11be2c50d5312f30e11c7a3036a15b48cb
llvm-svn: 341071
Summary:
In the case of (and reg, constant) or (or reg, constant), it can be
beneficial to use a ANDNrr/ORNrr instruction instead of ANDrr/ORrr,
if the complement of the constant can be encoded using a single SETHI
instruction instead of a SETHI/ORri pair.
If the constant has more than one use, it is probably better to keep it
in its original form.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50964
llvm-svn: 341069
Summary:
This is a continuation of https://reviews.llvm.org/D49727
Below the original text, current changes in the comments:
Currently, in line with GCC, when specifying reserved registers like sp or pc on an inline asm() clobber list, we don't always preserve the original value across the statement. And in general, overwriting reserved registers can have surprising results.
For example:
extern int bar(int[]);
int foo(int i) {
int a[i]; // VLA
asm volatile(
"mov r7, #1"
:
:
: "r7"
);
return 1 + bar(a);
}
Compiled for thumb, this gives:
$ clang --target=arm-arm-none-eabi -march=armv7a -c test.c -o - -S -O1 -mthumb
...
foo:
.fnstart
@ %bb.0: @ %entry
.save {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
push {r4, r5, r6, r7, lr}
.setfp r7, sp, #12
add r7, sp, #12
.pad #4
sub sp, #4
movs r1, #7
add.w r0, r1, r0, lsl #2
bic r0, r0, #7
sub.w r0, sp, r0
mov sp, r0
@APP
mov.w r7, #1
@NO_APP
bl bar
adds r0, #1
sub.w r4, r7, #12
mov sp, r4
pop {r4, r5, r6, r7, pc}
...
r7 is used as the frame pointer for thumb targets, and this function needs to restore the SP from the FP because of the variable-length stack allocation a. r7 is clobbered by the inline assembly (and r7 is included in the clobber list), but LLVM does not preserve the value of the frame pointer across the assembly block.
This type of behavior is similar to GCC's and has been discussed on the bugtracker: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=11807 . No consensus seemed to have been reached on the way forward. Clang behavior has briefly been discussed on the CFE mailing (starting here: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/cfe-dev/2018-July/058392.html). I've opted for following Eli Friedman's advice to print warnings when there are reserved registers on the clobber list so as not to diverge from GCC behavior for now.
The patch uses MachineRegisterInfo's target-specific knowledge of reserved registers, just before we convert the inline asm string in the AsmPrinter.
If we find a reserved register, we print a warning:
repro.c:6:7: warning: inline asm clobber list contains reserved registers: R7 [-Winline-asm]
"mov r7, #1"
^
Reviewers: efriedma, olista01, javed.absar
Reviewed By: efriedma
Subscribers: eraman, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51165
llvm-svn: 341062
Providing that the load is known to be 4 byte aligned, we can optimise a
ldr(adr address) to just ldr address.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51030
llvm-svn: 341058
We now only add +64bit to the CPU string for "generic" CPU. All other CPU names are assumed to have the feature flag already set if they support 64-bit. I've remove the implies from CMPXCHG8 so that Feature64Bit only comes in via CPUs or user passing -mattr=+64bit.
I've changed the assert to a report_fatal_error so it's not lost in Release builds.
The test updates are to fix things that tripped the new error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51231
llvm-svn: 341022
We don't have enough information to know if struct types being
bitcast will cause validation failures or not, so be conservative
and allow such cases to persist (fot now).
Fixes: https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38711
Subscribers: dschuff, jgravelle-google, aheejin, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51460
llvm-svn: 341010
Variables declared with the dllimport attribute are accessed via a
stub variable named __imp_<var>. In MinGW configurations, variables that
aren't declared with a dllimport attribute might still end up imported
from another DLL with runtime pseudo relocs.
For x86_64, this avoids the risk that the target is out of range
for a 32 bit PC relative reference, in case the target DLL is loaded
further than 4 GB from the reference. It also avoids having to make the
text section writable at runtime when doing the runtime fixups, which
makes it worthwhile to do for i386 as well.
Add stub variables for all dso local data references where a definition
of the variable isn't visible within the module, since the DLL data
autoimporting might make them imported even though they are marked as
dso local within LLVM.
Don't do this for variables that actually are defined within the same
module, since we then know for sure that it actually is dso local.
Don't do this for references to functions, since there's no need for
runtime pseudo relocations for autoimporting them; if a function from
a different DLL is called without the appropriate dllimport attribute,
the call just gets routed via a thunk instead.
GCC does something similar since 4.9 (when compiling with -mcmodel=medium
or large; from that version, medium is the default code model for x86_64
mingw), but only for x86_64.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51288
llvm-svn: 340942
MipsSEInstrInfo class defines for internal purpose unconditional
branches as Mips::B nad Mips:J even in case of microMIPS code
generation. Under some conditions that leads to the bug - for rather long
branch which fits to Mips jump instruction offset size, but does not fit
to microMIPS jump offset size, we generate 'short' branch and later show
an error 'out of range PC16 fixup' after check in the isBranchOffsetInRange
routine.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50615
llvm-svn: 340932
Involves microMIPS's jump in the analyzable branch set to reduce some
code patterns.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50613
llvm-svn: 340931
For a certain combination of options, BuildPairF64_{64}, ExtractElementF64{_64}
may be expanded into instructions using stack.
Add implicit operand $sp for such cases so that ShrinkWrapping doesn't move
prologue setup below them.
Fixes MultiSource/Benchmarks/MallocBench/cfrac for
'--target=mips-img-linux-gnu -mcpu=mips32r6 -mfpxx -mnan=2008'
and
'--target=mips-img-linux-gnu -mcpu=mips32r6 -mfp64 -mnan=2008 -mno-odd-spreg'.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50986
llvm-svn: 340927
Noticed while looking at D49562 codegen - we can avoid a large constant mask load and a slow VPBLENDVB select op by using VPBLENDW+VPBLENDD instead.
TODO: As discussed on the patch, we should investigate adding VPBLENDVB handling to target shuffle combining as well, that will allow us to extend this to VPBLENDW+VPBLENDW+VPBLENDD.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50074
llvm-svn: 340913
Summary:
Add some optional code to validate getInstSizeInBytes for emitted
instructions. This flushed out some issues which are fixed by this
patch:
- Streamline getInstSizeInBytes
- Properly define the VI readlane/writelane instruction as VOP3
- Fix the inline constant determination. Specifically, this change
fixes an issue where a 32-bit value of 0xffffffff was recorded
as unsigned. This is equal to -1 when restricting to a 32-bit
comparison, and an inline constant can be used.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50629
Change-Id: Id87c3b7975839da0de8156a124b0ce98c5fb47f2
llvm-svn: 340903
These are intrinsics for supporting kadd builtins in clang. These builtins are already in gcc to implement intrinsics from icc. Though they are missing from the Intel Intrinsics Guide.
This instruction adds two mask registers together as if they were scalar rather than a vXi1. We might be able to get away with a bitcast to scalar and a normal add instruction, but that would require DAG combine smarts in the backend to recoqnize add+bitcast. For now I'd prefer to go with the easiest implementation so we can get these builtins in to clang with good codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51370
llvm-svn: 340869
This can leave behind the uses with the defs removed.
Since this should only really happen in tests, it's not worth the
effort of trying to handle this.
llvm-svn: 340866
Summary:
Add comments to help readers avoid having to read tablegen backends to
understand the code. Also remove unecessary breaks from the output.
Reviewers: dschuff, aheejin
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51371
llvm-svn: 340864
The original motivating example uses a 64-bit add, so the carry
is used. Insert a copy from VCC. This may allow shrinking of
the used carry instruction. At worst, we are replacing a
mov to materialize the constant with a copy of vcc.
llvm-svn: 340862
This needs to be done in the SSA fold operands
pass to be effective, so there is a bit of overlap
with SIShrinkInstructions but I don't think this
is practically avoidable.
llvm-svn: 340859
These instructions were added on the PentiumPro along with CMOV.
This was already comprehended by the lowering process which should emit an alternate sequence using FCOM and FNSTW. This just makes it an explicit error if that doesn't work for some reason.
llvm-svn: 340844
This patch creates the shift mask and actual shift using the vXi16 vector shift ops.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51263
llvm-svn: 340813
This patch issues an error message if Darwin ABI is attempted with the PPC
backend. It also cleans up existing test cases, either converting the test to
use an alternative triple or removing the test if the coverage is no longer
needed.
Updated Tests
-------------
The majority of test cases were updated to use a different triple that does not
include the Darwin ABI. Many tests were also updated to use FileCheck, in place
of grep.
Deleted Tests
-------------
llvm/test/tools/dsymutil/PowerPC/sibling.test was originally added to test
specific functionality of dsymutil using an object file created with an old
version of llvm-gcc for a Powerbook G4. After a discussion with @JDevlieghere he
suggested removing the test.
llvm/test/CodeGen/PowerPC/combine_loads_from_build_pair.ll was converted from a
PPC test to a SystemZ test, as the behavior is also reproducible there.
All other tests that were deleted were specific to the darwin/ppc ABI and no
longer necessary.
Phabricator Review: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50988
llvm-svn: 340795
Summary:
The new stackification backend generates the giant switch statement
used to translate instructions to their stackified forms. I did this
because it was more interesting than adding all the different vector
versions of the various SIMD instructions to the switch statment
manually.
Reviewers: aardappel, aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: mgorny, sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51318
llvm-svn: 340781
Loosens an assert in getMemRIX16Encoding that restricts DQ-form instructions to
using an immediate, so that we can assemble instructions like lxv/stxv where the
offset is an expression.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51122
llvm-svn: 340761
We're using a 256-bit PACKUS to do the truncation, but that instruction operates on 128-bit lanes. So previously we shuffled first to rearrange the lanes. But that requires 2 shuffles. Instead we can shuffle after the PACKUS using a single VPERMQ. This matches what our normal LowerTRUNCATE code does when it uses PACKUS.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51284
llvm-svn: 340757
InstCombine mucks these up a bit. So we need to do some additional pattern matching to fix it. There are a still a few special cases not handled, but this covers the general case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50952
llvm-svn: 340756
Summary:
Made it convert from register to stack based instructions, and removed the registers.
Fixes to related code that was expecting register based instructions.
Added the correct testing flag to all tests, depending on what the
format they were expecting so far.
Translated one test to stack format as example: reg-stackify-stack.ll
tested:
llvm-lit -v `find test -name WebAssembly`
unittests/MC/*
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, aheejin, llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51241
llvm-svn: 340750
This commit has caused failures in some internal benchmarks. Temporarily
reverting this patch until the issue can be diagnosed and fixed.
llvm-svn: 340740
Summary: If an object file ends with a relocation that is smaller
than 4 bytes we will write outside the Data array and trigger an
"Invalid index" assertion.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50971
llvm-svn: 340736
The internal benchmark failure reported by Google was due to a missing
check for the result type for the sign-extend and shift DAG. This commit
adds the check and re-commits the patch.
llvm-svn: 340734
Summary: The GR740 provides an up cycle counter in the registers ASR22
and ASR23. As these registers can not be read together atomically we only
use the value of ASR23 for llvm.readcyclecounter(). The ASR23 register
holds the 32 LSBs of the up-counter.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: jfb, fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48638
llvm-svn: 340733
Summary:
Currently bitcasting constants from f64 to v2i32 is done by storing the
value to the stack and then loading it again. This is not necessary, but
seems to happen because v2i32 is a valid type for Sparc V8. If it had not
been legal, we would have gotten help from the type legalizer.
This patch tries to do the same work as the legalizer would have done by
bitcasting the floating point constant and splitting the value up into a
vector of two i32 values.
Reviewers: venkatra, jyknight
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: glaubitz, fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49219
llvm-svn: 340723
We cannot directy reuse the patterns of StPat because for some reason the store
DAG node and the atomic_store_nn DAG nodes put the ptr and the value in
different positions. Currently we attempt to store the address to an address
formed by the value.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51217
llvm-svn: 340722
vXi32 support was recently moved from LowerMUL_LOHI to LowerMULH.
This commit shares the getOperand calls, switches both to use common IsSigned flag, and hoists the NumElems/NumElts variable.
llvm-svn: 340720
Summary: This was inheriting the cost from the AVX table, but should be legal under AVX512.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51267
llvm-svn: 340708
Summary:
Previously most CPUs inherited cmov support through Feature64Bit(or FeatureCMPXCHG16HB implying Feature64Bit) or FeatureSSE1.
This has the surprising side effect that -mattr=-cmov causes an assert to fire in 64-bit mode because it clears the Feature64Bit. Or in 32-bit mode, -mattr=-cmov disables any sse/avx features which seems surprising.
This patch removes the implication and instead updates hasCMOV in X86Subtarget to check SSE1 or is64Bit in addition to the regular cmov flag. This should keep most things working the way they did before. I don't believe there is a way to specific "-cmov" directly from clang so this should only effect our lower level tools.
This does stop -mattr=cx16(cmpxchg16b) from implying cmov is enabled via the 64bit flag as you can see from one of the changed tests. But that was a 32-bit test so I don't know why it enabled cx16 anyway.
For the other test I had to add -sse to override the new sse check in hasCMOV.
Reviewers: RKSimon, DavidKreitzer, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits, jfb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51228
llvm-svn: 340707
Summary: This matches gcc and one cpuid dump I found online. Given that these are considered 7th generation x86 CPU it seems likely they support cmov since cmov was added by Intel in their 6th generation.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51264
llvm-svn: 340706
I noticed this along with the patterns in D51125, but when the index is variable,
we don't convert insertelement into a build_vector.
For x86, that means these get expanded at legalization time into the loading/spilling
code that we see in the tests. I think it's always better to avoid going to memory on
these, and we get the optimal 'broadcast' if it's available.
I suspect other targets may want to look at enabling the hook. AArch64 and AMDGPU have
regression tests that would be affected (although I did not check what would happen in
those cases). In the most basic cases shown here, AArch64 would probably do much
better with a splat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51186
llvm-svn: 340705
Legalize G_ADD for types smaller than i32.
LegalizationArtifactCombiner replaces extend instructions with appropriate
bitwise instructions.
Patch by Petar Avramovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51213
llvm-svn: 340697
Summary:
The only time vector SMUL_LOHI/UMUL_LOHI nodes are created is during division/remainder lowering. If its created before op legalization, generic DAGCombine immediately turns that SMUL_LOHI/UMUL_LOHI into a MULHS/MULHU since only the upper half is used. That node will stick around through vector op legalization and will be turned back into UMUL_LOHI/SMUL_LOHI during op legalization. It will then be custom lowered by the X86 backend. Due to this two step lowering the vector shuffles created by the custom lowering get legalized after their inputs rather than before. This prevents the shuffles from being combined with any build_vector of constants.
This patch uses changes vXi32 to use MULHS/MULHU instead. This is what the later DAG combine did anyway. But by skipping the change back to UMUL_LOHI/SMUL_LOHI we lower it before any constant BUILD_VECTORS. This allows the vector_shuffle creation to constant fold with the build_vectors. This accounts for the test changes here.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51254
llvm-svn: 340690
Summary:
Previously the value being stored is the last operand in SDNode. This causes the type legalizer to visit the mask operand before the value operand. The type legalizer was more complicated because of this since we want the type of the value to drive the decisions.
This patch moves the value to be the first operand so we visit it first during type legalization. It also simplifies the type legalization code accordingly.
X86 is currently the only in tree target that uses this SDNode. Not sure if there are any users out of tree.
Reviewers: RKSimon, delena, hfinkel, eli.friedman
Reviewed By: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50402
llvm-svn: 340689
This is a preliminary step for a preliminary step for D50992.
I noticed that x86 often misses chances to load a scalar directly
into a vector register.
So this patch is just allowing more of those cases to match a
broadcast op in lowerBuildVectorAsBroadcast(). The old code comment
said it doesn't make sense to use a broadcast when we're loading a
single element and everything else is undef, but I think that's the
best case in the improved tests in insert-loaded-scalar.ll. We avoid
scalar-to-vector-register move and/or less efficient shuffling.
Note that there are some existing types that were already producing
a broadcast, but that happens semi-accidentally. Ie, it's not
happening as part of lowerBuildVectorAsBroadcast(). The build vector
gets expanded into load + shuffle, and then shuffle lowering produces
the broadcast.
Description of the other test diffs:
1. avx-basic.ll - replacing load+shufle is a win.
2. sse3-avx-addsub-2.ll - vmovddup vs. vbroadcastss is neutral
3. sse41.ll - don't care - we convert that intrinsic to generic IR now, so this test is deprecated
4. vector-shuffle-128-v8.ll / vector-shuffle-256-v16.ll - pshufb alternatives with an extra instruction are not obviously bad
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51125
llvm-svn: 340685
Summary:
Patch by Marek Olsak and David Stuttard, both of AMD.
This adds a new amdgcn intrinsic supporting s.buffer.load, in particular
multiple dword variants. These are convenient to use from some front-end
implementations.
Also modified the existing llvm.SI.load.const intrinsic to common up the
underlying implementation.
This modification also requires that we can lower to non-uniform loads correctly
by splitting larger dword variants into sizes supported by the non-uniform
versions of the load.
V2: Addressed minor review comments.
V3: i1 glc is now i32 cachepolicy for consistency with buffer and
tbuffer intrinsics, plus fixed formatting issue.
V4: Added glc test.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, jvesely, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51098
Change-Id: I83a6e00681158bb243591a94a51c7baa445f169b
llvm-svn: 340684
This patch will address using the xscpsgndp instruction to copy floating point
scalar registers instead of the xxlor (specifically XXLORf) instruction that is
currently used. Additionally, this patch of utilizing xscpsgndp will apply to
P9, while pre-P9 will still use xxlor.
Patch by amyk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50004
llvm-svn: 340643
This adds a new method to ELFObjectFileBase that returns the symbols and addresses of PLT entries.
This design was suggested by pcc and eugenis in https://reviews.llvm.org/D49383.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50203
llvm-svn: 340610
Lower integer arguments smaller than i32.
Support both register and stack arguments.
Define setLocInfo function for setting LocInfo field in ArgLocs vector.
Patch by Petar Avramovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51031
llvm-svn: 340572
Summary:
Splats are fewer bytes than v128.consts, so use them when either could
apply.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51179
llvm-svn: 340569
The commit that added this functionality:
rL322957
may be causing/exposing a miscompile in PR38648:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38648
so allow enabling/disabling to make debugging easier.
llvm-svn: 340540
subtarget features for indirect calls and indirect branches.
This is in preparation for enabling *only* the call retpolines when
using speculative load hardening.
I've continued to use subtarget features for now as they continue to
seem the best fit given the lack of other retpoline like constructs so
far.
The LLVM side is pretty simple. I'd like to eventually get rid of the
old feature, but not sure what backwards compatibility issues that will
cause.
This does remove the "implies" from requesting an external thunk. This
always seemed somewhat questionable and is now clearly not desirable --
you specify a thunk the same way no matter which set of things are
getting retpolines.
I really want to keep this nicely isolated from end users and just an
LLVM implementation detail, so I've moved the `-mretpoline` flag in
Clang to no longer rely on a specific subtarget feature by that name and
instead to be directly handled. In some ways this is simpler, but in
order to preserve existing behavior I've had to add some fallback code
so that users who relied on merely passing -mretpoline-external-thunk
continue to get the same behavior. We should eventually remove this
I suspect (we have never tested that it works!) but I've not done that
in this patch.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51150
llvm-svn: 340515
Summary:
Reorganize WebAssemblyInstrSIMD.td to put all of the instruction
definitions together, making it easier to see which instructions have
been implemented already. Depends on D51143.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51113
llvm-svn: 340504
Summary:
WebAssemblyInstrFormats.td retains only multiclasses that are used in
multiple other tablegen files.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51143
llvm-svn: 340503
Previously we asumed a vector reduction add is part of a loop and one of the input is a phi. But the code in SelectionDAGBuilder that sets vector reduction flag handles more cases than that. It just requires that the use chain ends in a horizontal reduction. And there are no other uses. This means it can handle unrolled reduction loops.
If the initial value of the reduction was 0, an unrolled loop would begin with a vector reduction add that has two sad inputs. Previously we would only transform one side of the add, but for this case we need to transform both sides.
I've created a lambda to reuse some of the code for both sides. And fixed the variables names to remove reference to "phi".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50817
llvm-svn: 340478
Summary:
This CL adds support for arbitrary BUILD_VECTORS, i.e. not splats and
not consts. This is the last feature needed to properly lower v2i64
multiplies without a i64x2.mul instruction (which is not in the spec),
so i64x2.mul is removed as well.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51082
Remove unnecessary condition and fix whitespace
llvm-svn: 340472
The inline sequence is very long (about 70 bytes on Thumb1), so it's
not really a good idea to inline it, especially when optimizing for
size.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47917
llvm-svn: 340458
Fix bug https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38643
In BPFAsmBackend applyFixup(), there is an assertion for FixedValue to be 0.
This may not be true, esp. for optimiation level 0.
For example, in the above bug, for the following two
static variables:
@bpf_map_lookup_elem = internal global i8* (i8*, i8*)*
inttoptr (i64 1 to i8* (i8*, i8*)*), align 8
@bpf_map_update_elem = internal global i32 (i8*, i8*, i8*, i64)*
inttoptr (i64 2 to i32 (i8*, i8*, i8*, i64)*), align 8
The static variable @bpf_map_update_elem will have a symbol
offset of 8 and a FK_SecRel_8 with FixupValue 8 will cause
the assertion if llvm is built with -DLLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=ON.
The above relocations will not exist if the program is compiled
with optimization level -O1 and above as the compiler optimizes
those static variables away. In the below error message, -O2
is suggested as this is the common practice.
Note that FixedValue = 0 in applyFixup() does exist and is valid,
e.g., for the global variable my_map in the above bug. The bpf
loader will process them properly for map_id's before loading
the program into the kernel.
The static variables, which are not optimized away by compiler,
may have FK_SecRel_8 relocation with non-zero FixedValue.
The patch removed the offending assertion and will issue
a hard error as below if the FixedValue in applyFixup()
is not 0.
$ llc -march=bpf -filetype=obj fixup.ll
LLVM ERROR: Unsupported relocation: try to compile with -O2 or above,
or check your static variable usage
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 340455
Summary:
When we don't actually have stack-allocated variables but need SP only
to support EH, we don't need to write SP back in the epilog, because we
don't bump down the stack pointer.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: jgravelle-google, sbc100, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51114
llvm-svn: 340454
On Windows, movw+movt pairs with relocations are handled with a single
relocation that covers them both. Therefore we can't inject anything
between these instructions, otherwise the relocation (which in LLVM
only is treated as the movw instruction's relocation, while the movt
instruction's relocation is dropped) will end up bogus.
These instructions are bundled up until right before the constant
islands pass, making this effectively the only place that can split
them apart.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51032
llvm-svn: 340451
This avoids a potential infinite loop setting and unsetting bits in the
mask.
Reduced from a failure on the polly-aosp bot.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51066
llvm-svn: 340446
Inspired by what AArch64 does for shifts, this patch attempts to replace shift amounts with neg if we can.
This is done directly as part of isel so its as late as possible to avoid breaking some BZHI patterns since those patterns need an unmasked (32-n) to be correct.
To avoid manual load folding and custom instruction selection for the negate. I've inserted new nodes in the DAG above the shift node in topological order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48789
llvm-svn: 340441
Summary:
There are several functions in the form of `has***` or `needs***` in
`WebAssemblyFrameLowering` and its `MachineFrameInfo` argument can be
obtained from `MachineFunction` so it is not necessarily has to be
passed from a caller. Also, it is more in line with other overriden
fuctions like `hasBP` or `hasReservedCallFrame`, which also take only
`MachineFunction` argument.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51116
llvm-svn: 340438
When the key is not already in the map, the access operator[] creates an empty value and grows the map.
Resizing a map is very slow, so this needs to be avoided.
Found with csmith + asserts.
May help with
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=25843
Patch by Tom Rix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50780
llvm-svn: 340434
Summary:
`catch` instruction certainly has rather huge side effects and the flag
was missing. At the moment this does not change any unit tests we
currently have.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50919
llvm-svn: 340433
32-bit constant address space is declared as 6, so the
maximum number of address spaces is 6, not 5.
Fixes "LLVM ERROR: Pointer address space out of range".
v5: rename MAX_COMMON_ADDRESS to MAX_AMDGPU_ADDRESS
v4: - fix compilation issues
- fix out of bounds access
v3: use static_assert()
v2: add a very simple test for 32-bit addr space
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=106630
llvm-svn: 340417
Constant and global may alias, also one rules table wasn't
ordered correctly.
Pinpointed by Matt.
v2: add a test with swapped parameters
llvm-svn: 340416
Add intrinsic isel patterns for sxtb16, sxtab16, uxtb16 and uxtab16
so that they can perform a ror.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51034
llvm-svn: 340405
This adds the plumbing for the Tiny code model for the AArch64 backend. This,
instead of loading addresses through the normal ADRP;ADD pair used in the Small
model, uses a single ADR. The 21 bit range of an ADR means that the code and
its statically defined symbols need to be within 1MB of each other.
This makes it mostly interesting for embedded applications where we want to fit
as much as we can in as small a space as possible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49673
llvm-svn: 340397
This was hackily adding in the 4-bytes reserved for the callee's
emergency stack slot. Treat it like a normal stack allocation
so we get the correct alignment padding behavior. This fixes
an inconsistency between the caller and callee.
llvm-svn: 340396
Add patterns for unhandled CondCode enumerables:
SETEQ, SETGE, SETGT, SETLE, SETLT, SETNE.
Stated at the ISD::CondCode enum declaration:
`All of these (except for the 'always folded ops')
should be handled for floating point.`
Add patterns which use these nodes, same as corresponding
'ordered' CondCode nodes.
Referring to 'Ordered means that neither operand is a QNAN'
we assume it is safe to match ex. SETLT node to the same
instruction as SETOLT.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50757
llvm-svn: 340392
Summary: We now write back not to memory but to __stack_pointer global.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51074
llvm-svn: 340372
In general we can't assume flat loads are uniform, and cases where we can prove
they are should be handled through infer-address-spaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50991
llvm-svn: 340343
Summary:
After the stack is unwound due to a thrown exception, the
`__stack_pointer` global can point to an invalid address. This inserts
instructions that restore `__stack_pointer` global.
Reviewers: jgravelle-google, dschuff
Subscribers: mgorny, sbc100, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50980
llvm-svn: 340339
Summary:
This CL implements v128.const for each vector type. New operand types
are added to ensure the vector contents can be serialized without LEB
encoding. Tests are added for instruction selection, encoding,
assembly and disassembly.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff, aardappel
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50873
llvm-svn: 340336
Summary: SP is now a __stack_pointer global and not a memory address anymore.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51046
llvm-svn: 340328
Summary:
So far, `isReturn` property is used to mean both a return instruction
from a functon and the end of an EH scope, a scope that starts with a EH
scope entry BB and ends with a catchret or a cleanupret instruction.
Because WinEH uses funclets, all EH-scope-ending instructions are also
real return instruction from a function. But for wasm, they only serve
as the end marker of an EH scope but not a return instruction that
exits a function. This mismatch caused incorrect prolog and epilog
generation in wasm EH scopes. This patch fixes this.
This patch is in the same vein with rL333045, which splits
`MachineBasicBlock::isEHFuncletEntry` into `isEHFuncletEntry` and
`isEHScopeEntry`.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50653
llvm-svn: 340325
Most of these shifts are extended to vXi16 so we don't gain anything from forcing another round of generic shift lowering - we know these extended cases are legal constant splat shifts.
llvm-svn: 340307
Summary: When run under llvm-mc-disassemble-fuzzer, there is no symbol lookup callback so tryAddingSymbolicOperand() must fail gracefully instead of crashing
Reviewers: aemerson, javed.absar
Reviewed By: aemerson
Subscribers: lhames, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51005
llvm-svn: 340287
Summary:
Previously the new llvm.amdgcn.raw/struct.buffer.load/store intrinsics
only allowed float types for the data to be loaded or stored, which
sometimes meant the frontend needed to generate a bitcast. In this, the
new intrinsics copied the old buffer intrinsics.
This commit extends the new intrinsics to allow int types as well.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50315
Change-Id: I8202af2d036455553681dcbb3d7d32ae273f8f85
llvm-svn: 340270
Summary:
This commit adds new intrinsics
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load.format
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.load.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load.format
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.load.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store.format
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.store.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store.format
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.store.format.d16
llvm.amdgcn.raw.buffer.atomic.*
llvm.amdgcn.struct.buffer.atomic.*
with the following changes from the llvm.amdgcn.buffer.*
intrinsics:
* there are separate raw and struct versions: raw does not have an
index arg and sets idxen=0 in the instruction, and struct always sets
idxen=1 in the instruction even if the index is 0, to allow for the
fact that gfx9 does bounds checking differently depending on whether
idxen is set;
* there is a combined cachepolicy arg (glc+slc)
* there are now only two offset args: one for the offset that is
included in bounds checking and swizzling, to be split between the
instruction's voffset and immoffset fields, and one for the offset
that is excluded from bounds checking and swizzling, to go into the
instruction's soffset field.
The AMDISD::BUFFER_* SD nodes always have an index operand, all three
offset operands, combined cachepolicy operand, and an extra idxen
operand.
The obsolescent llvm.amdgcn.buffer.* intrinsics continue to work.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50306
Change-Id: If897ea7dc34fcbf4d5496e98cc99a934f62fc205
llvm-svn: 340269
Summary:
This commit adds new intrinsics
llvm.amdgcn.raw.tbuffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.struct.tbuffer.load
llvm.amdgcn.raw.tbuffer.store
llvm.amdgcn.struct.tbuffer.store
with the following changes from the llvm.amdgcn.tbuffer.* intrinsics:
* there are separate raw and struct versions: raw does not have an index
arg and sets idxen=0 in the instruction, and struct always sets
idxen=1 in the instruction even if the index is 0, to allow for the
fact that gfx9 does bounds checking differently depending on whether
idxen is set;
* there is a combined format arg (dfmt+nfmt)
* there is a combined cachepolicy arg (glc+slc)
* there are now only two offset args: one for the offset that is
included in bounds checking and swizzling, to be split between the
instruction's voffset and immoffset fields, and one for the offset
that is excluded from bounds checking and swizzling, to go into the
instruction's soffset field.
The AMDISD::TBUFFER_* SD nodes always have an index operand, all three
offset operands, combined format operand, combined cachepolicy operand,
and an extra idxen operand.
The tbuffer pseudo- and real instructions now also have a combined
format operand.
The obsolescent llvm.amdgcn.tbuffer.* and llvm.SI.tbuffer.store
intrinsics continue to work.
V2: Separate raw and struct intrinsics.
V3: Moved extract_glc and extract_slc defs to a more sensible place.
V4: Rebased on D49995.
V5: Only two separate offset args instead of three.
V6: Pseudo- and real instructions have joint format operand.
V7: Restored optionality of dfmt and nfmt in assembler.
V8: Addressed minor review comments.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49026
Change-Id: If22ad77e349fac3a5d2f72dda53c010377d470d4
llvm-svn: 340268
Summary:
We decided to revert this from i64 to i32 in Nov 28 CG meeting. Fixes
PR38632.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, jfb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51010
llvm-svn: 340234
Due to some splat handling code in getVectorShuffle, its possible for NewV1/NewV2 to have their mask modified from what is requested. This can lead to cycles being created in the DAG.
This patch examines the returned mask and makes sure its different. Long term we may need to look closer at that splat code in getVectorShuffle, or add more splat awareness to getVectorShuffle.
Fixes PR38639
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50981
llvm-svn: 340214
We can safely avoid interfering with the subus combine if both inputs are freely truncatable. Either both extends, or an extend and a constant vector.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50878
llvm-svn: 340212
getTargetCustom() requires values for "Kind" in the constructor
that are not in the PSVKind enum. Passing a value that is not inside
an enum as an argument to a constructor of the type of the enum is
UB. Changing to the underlying type of the enum would solve the UB
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50909
llvm-svn: 340200
32-bit constant address space is declared as 6, so the
maximum number of address spaces is 6, not 5.
Fixes "LLVM ERROR: Pointer address space out of range".
v3: use static_assert()
v2: add a very simple test for 32-bit addr space
Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=106630
Signed-off-by: Samuel Pitoiset <samuel.pitoiset@gmail.com>
llvm-svn: 340171
This patch adds system registers for controlling aspects of SVE:
- ZCR_EL1 (r/w) visible at EL1 and EL0.
- ZCR_EL2 (r/w) visible at EL2 and Non-secure EL1 and EL0.
- ZCR_EL3 (r/w) visible at all exception levels.
and a system register identifying SVE:
- ID_AA64ZFR0_EL1 (r) SVE Feature identifier.
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, samparker, pbarrio, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50885
llvm-svn: 340158
If the arch is P8, we will select XFLOAD to load the floating point, and then, expand it to vsx and non-vsx X-form instruction post RA. This patch is trying to convert the X-form to D-form if it meets the requirement that one operand of the x-form inst is the special Zero register, and another operand fed by add inst. i.e.
y = add imm, reg
LFDX. 0, y
-->
LFD imm(reg)
Reviewers: Nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49007
llvm-svn: 340149
We were basically assuming only one operand of the compare could be an ADD node and using that to swap operands. But we can have a normal add followed by a saturing add.
This rewrites the canonicalization to just be based on the condition code.
llvm-svn: 340134
The code already support 128 and 256 and even knows to split 256 for AVX1. So we really just needed to stop looking for specific VTs and subtarget features and just look for legal VTs with i8/i16 elements.
While there, add some curly braces around outer if statement bodies that contain only another if. It makes all the closing curly braces look more regular.
llvm-svn: 340128
Extending the concept introduced in D49562, this patch lowers constant vXi8 ISD::SRL/ISD::SRA by zero/sign extending to vXi16 and using PMULLW and then truncating the high 8 bits of the result.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50781
llvm-svn: 340062
isOnlyUserOf is a little heavier because it allows the node to be used multiple times by the other node. In this case we are looking at a truncate which only has one operand so we know it can only use it once. Thus hasOneUse is better.
llvm-svn: 340059
This patch addresses:
- Implementation within PPCISelLowering.cpp to check if we should use direct
load into vector instructions (such as lxsd/lfd ) when the scalar_to_vector
function is used; which will allow us to catch as many cases of the
scalar_to_vector uses as possible to translate the ld->mtvsrd sequence into
lxsd.
- Test cases to exhibit the behaviour of emitting lxsd/lfd.
Patch by amyk
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49698
llvm-svn: 340037
test/CodeGen/X86/shadow-stack.ll has the following machine verifier
errors:
```
*** Bad machine code: Using a killed virtual register ***
- function: bar
- basic block: %bb.6 entry (0x7fdc81857818)
- instruction: %3:gr64 = MOV64rm killed %2:gr64, 1, $noreg, 8, $noreg
- operand 1: killed %2:gr64
*** Bad machine code: Using a killed virtual register ***
- function: bar
- basic block: %bb.6 entry (0x7fdc81857818)
- instruction: $rsp = MOV64rm killed %2:gr64, 1, $noreg, 16, $noreg
- operand 1: killed %2:gr64
*** Bad machine code: Virtual register killed in block, but needed live out. ***
- function: bar
- basic block: %bb.2 entry (0x7fdc818574f8)
Virtual register %2 is used after the block.
```
The fix here is to only copy the machine operand's register without the
kill flags for all the instructions except the very last one of the
sequence.
I had to insert dummy PHIs in the test case to force the NoPHI function
property to be set to false. More on this here: https://llvm.org/PR38439
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50260
llvm-svn: 340033
This function is not virtual, it is private and it is not called anywhere. No
regression is introduced by removing it.
I think we can safely remove it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50836
llvm-svn: 340024
- Generate pointer authentication instructions
- The functions instrumented depend on function attribtues:
all (all functions instrumentent)
non-leaf (only those that spill LR)
none
- Function epilogues sign the LR before spilling to the stack and authenticate
the LR once restored
- If the target is v8.3a or greater than can use the combined authenticate and
return instruction
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49793
llvm-svn: 340018
Add a DAG combine for the PowerPC code generator to generate the Power9 extswsli
extend sign and shift immediate instruction.
Patch by RolandF.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49879
llvm-svn: 340016
Add +fp16fml feature for new FP16 instructions, which are a
mandatory part of FP16 from v8.4-A and an optional part of FP16
from v8.2-A. It doesn't seem to be possible to model this in
LLVM, but the relationship between the options is handled by
the related clang patch.
In keeping with what I think is the usual practice, the fp16fml
extension is accepted regardless of base architecture version.
Builds on/replaces Sjoerd Meijer's patch to add these instructions at
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49839.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50228
llvm-svn: 340013
Summary:
Looking at the callee argument list, as is done now, might not work if
the function has been typecasted into one that is expected to return
a struct. This change also simplifies the code.
The isFP128ABICall() function can be removed as it is no longer needed.
The test in fp128.ll has been updated to verify this.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48117
llvm-svn: 340008
Summary: When @llvm.returnaddress is called with a value higher than 0
it needs to read from the call stack to get the return address. This
means that the register windows needs to be flushed to the stack to
guarantee that the data read is valid. For values higher than 1 this
is done indirectly by the call to getFRAMEADDR(), but not for the value 1.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48636
llvm-svn: 340003
Summary:
This adds support for exception handling to CFGStackify pass. This only
adds TRY / END_TRY markers and DOES NOT yet fix unwind mismatches that
can be created by the linearization of the CFG into the structural wasm
format. The mismatch fix will be added by following patches.
In detail, this patch
- Added support for TRY / END_TRY markers to support EH
- Changed many static functions into class member functions as they take
too many arguments now
- Added several more bookeeping data structures
- Refactored routines that decide where to insert markers, because
without refactoring this got too complicated as we added support for new
kinds of markers (TRY/END_TRY).
- Rewrote rethrow instructions' BB arguments to relative depths in EH
pad stack.
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48273
llvm-svn: 339967
Normally the peephole pass converts EXTRACT_SUBREG to COPY instructions. But we're after peephole so we can't rely on it to clean these up.
To fix this, the eflags pass now emits a COPY with a subreg input.
I also noticed that in 32-bit mode we need to constrain the input to the copy to ensure the subreg is valid. Otherwise we'll fail verify-machineinstrs
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50656
llvm-svn: 339945
a generically extensible collection of extra info attached to
a `MachineInstr`.
The primary change here is cleaning up the APIs used for setting and
manipulating the `MachineMemOperand` pointer arrays so chat we can
change how they are allocated.
Then we introduce an extra info object that using the trailing object
pattern to attach some number of MMOs but also other extra info. The
design of this is specifically so that this extra info has a fixed
necessary cost (the header tracking what extra info is included) and
everything else can be tail allocated. This pattern works especially
well with a `BumpPtrAllocator` which we use here.
I've also added the basic scaffolding for putting interesting pointers
into this, namely pre- and post-instruction symbols. These aren't used
anywhere yet, they're just there to ensure I've actually gotten the data
structure types correct. I'll flesh out support for these in
a subsequent patch (MIR dumping, parsing, the works).
Finally, I've included an optimization where we store any single pointer
inline in the `MachineInstr` to avoid the allocation overhead. This is
expected to be the overwhelmingly most common case and so should avoid
any memory usage growth due to slightly less clever / dense allocation
when dealing with >1 MMO. This did require several ergonomic
improvements to the `PointerSumType` to reasonably support the various
usage models.
This also has a side effect of freeing up 8 bits within the
`MachineInstr` which could be repurposed for something else.
The suggested direction here came largely from Hal Finkel. I hope it was
worth it. ;] It does hopefully clear a path for subsequent extensions
w/o nearly as much leg work. Lots of thanks to Reid and Justin for
careful reviews and ideas about how to do all of this.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50701
llvm-svn: 339940
Summary:
EM_ASM no longer is lowered as varargs in C, so this workaround is
obsolete.
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: sbc100, aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50859
llvm-svn: 339925
Summary:
This prefix was added in r333421, and it changed our dumper output to
say things like "CVRegEAX" instead of just "EAX". That's a functional
change that I'd rather avoid.
I tested GCC, Clang, and MSVC, and all of them support #pragma
push_macro. They don't issue warnings whem the macro is not defined
either.
I don't have a Mac so I can't test the real termios.h header, but I
looked at the termios.h sources online and looked for other conflicts.
I saw only the CR* macros, so those are the ones we work around.
Reviewers: zturner, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50851
llvm-svn: 339907
This will allow the library to just use __builtin_expf directly
without expanding this itself. Note f64 still won't work because
there is no exp instruction for it.
llvm-svn: 339902
Allow the comparison of x86 registers in the evaluation of assembler
directives. This generalizes and simplifies the extension from r334022
to catch another case found in the Linux kernel.
Reviewers: rnk, void
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: hiraditya, nickdesaulniers, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50795
llvm-svn: 339895
When compiling with /arch:AVX512 and optimizations turned on,
we could crash while emitting debug info because we did not
have CodeView register constants for the AVX 512 register
set defined. This patch defines them.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50819
llvm-svn: 339893
While searching through the use-def tree, ignore GetElementPtrInst
instructions because they don't need promoting and neither do their
indices. Otherwise, the wide indices prevent the transformation from
happening.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50762
llvm-svn: 339871
Originally committed in r339755 which was reverted in r339806 due to
an asan issue. The issue was caused by my assumption that operands to
a CallInst mapped to the FunctionType Params. CallInsts are now
handled by iterating over their ArgOperands instead of Operands.
Original Message:
Treat signed icmps as 'sinks', allowing them to be in the use-def
tree, enabling more promotions to be performed. As a sink, any
promoted incoming values need to be truncated before being used by
the signed icmp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50067
llvm-svn: 339858
a shorter name ('x86-slh') for the internal flags and pass name.
Without this, you can't use the -stop-after or -stop-before
infrastructure. I seem to have just missed this when originally adding
the pass.
The shorter name solves two problems. First, the flag names were ...
really long and hard to type/manage. Second, the pass name can't be the
exact same as the flag name used to enable this, and there are already
some users of that flag name so I'm avoiding changing it unnecessarily.
llvm-svn: 339836
Handle fmul, fsub and preserve flags.
Also really test minnum/maxnum reductions.
The existing tests were only checking from
minnum/maxnum matched from a fast math compare
and select which is not the same.
llvm-svn: 339820
To lower this we now create a new V1 containing the low half of both sources and a new V2 containing the upper half of both sources. Then we created a repeated lane shuffle of those new sources to create the final result.
This fixes PR35833
Differential Revison: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41794
llvm-svn: 339818
Summary:
This CL changes the ExtractLane ISEL multiclass to more closely mirror
the structure of the splat and replace_lane multiclasses.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50794
llvm-svn: 339801
To make ISD::VSELECT available(legal) so long as there are altivec instruction,
otherwise it's default behavior is expanding.
Use xxsel to match vselect if vsx is open, or use vsel.
In order to do not write many patterns in td file, promote (for vector it's
bitcast) all other type into v4i32 and only pattern match vselect of v4i32 into
vsel or xxsel.
Patch by wuzish
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49531
llvm-svn: 339779
Change
subreg_r32 -> subreg_h32
subreg_r64 -> subreg_h64
subreg_hr32 -> subreg_hh32
The subregisters subreg_r32 and subreg_r64 were added to emphasize the
fact that modifying these subregisters may clobber the entire register.
This is not necessarily the case for subreg_h32, et al.
However, the ability to compose subreg_h64 with subreg_r32, and with
subreg_h32 and subreg_l32 at the same time makes the compositions be
treated as non-overlapping (leading to problems when tracking subreg
liveness). See D50468 for more details.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50725
llvm-svn: 339778
This option is needed to enable subreg liveness tracking during register
allocation.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50779
llvm-svn: 339776
We only try to promote types with are smaller than 16-bits, but we
also need to check that the type is not less than 8-bits.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50769
llvm-svn: 339770
When trying to combine a DAG that builds a vector out of sign-extensions of
vector extracts, the code assumes legal input types. Due to that, we have to
disable this combine prior to legalization.
In some cases, the DAG will look slightly different after legalization so
account for that in the matching code.
This is a fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38087
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49080
llvm-svn: 339769
Treat signed icmps as 'sinks', allowing them to be in the use-def
tree, enabling more promotions to be performed. As a sink, any
promoted incoming values need to be truncated before being used by
the signed icmp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50067
llvm-svn: 339755
Add pointers to the list of allowed types, but don't try to promote
them. Also fixed a bug with the promotion of undef values, so a new
value is now created instead of mutating in place. We also now only
promote if there's an instruction in the use-def chains other than
the icmp, sinks and sources.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50054
llvm-svn: 339754
AVX512 added new versions of these intrinsics that take a rounding mode. If the rounding mode is 4 the new intrinsics are equivalent to the old intrinsics.
The AVX512 intrinsics were being lowered to ISD opcodes, but the legacy SSE intrinsics were left as intrinsics. This resulted in the AVX512 instructions needing separate patterns for the ISD opcodes and the legacy SSE intrinsics.
Now we convert SSE intrinsics and AVX512 intrinsics with rounding mode 4 to the same ISD opcode so we can share the isel patterns.
llvm-svn: 339749
`MachineMemOperand` pointers attached to `MachineSDNodes` and instead
have the `SelectionDAG` fully manage the memory for this array.
Prior to this change, the memory management was deeply confusing here --
The way the MI was built relied on the `SelectionDAG` allocating memory
for these arrays of pointers using the `MachineFunction`'s allocator so
that the raw pointer to the array could be blindly copied into an
eventual `MachineInstr`. This creates a hard coupling between how
`MachineInstr`s allocate their array of `MachineMemOperand` pointers and
how the `MachineSDNode` does.
This change is motivated in large part by a change I am making to how
`MachineFunction` allocates these pointers, but it seems like a layering
improvement as well.
This would run the risk of increasing allocations overall, but I've
implemented an optimization that should avoid that by storing a single
`MachineMemOperand` pointer directly instead of allocating anything.
This is expected to be a net win because the vast majority of uses of
these only need a single pointer.
As a side-effect, this makes the API for updating a `MachineSDNode` and
a `MachineInstr` reasonably different which seems nice to avoid
unexpected coupling of these two layers. We can map between them, but we
shouldn't be *surprised* at where that occurs. =]
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50680
llvm-svn: 339740
Intentionally excluding nodes from the DAGCombine worklist is likely to
lead to weird optimizations and infinite loops, so it's generally a bad
idea.
To avoid the infinite loops, fix DAGCombine to use the
isDesirableToCommuteWithShift target hook before performing the
transforms in question, and implement the target hook in the ARM backend
disable the transforms in question.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38530 . (I don't have a
reduced testcase for that bug. But we should have sufficient test
coverage for PerformSHLSimplify given that we're not playing weird
tricks with the worklist. I can try to bugpoint it if necessary,
though.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50667
llvm-svn: 339734
Previously SIMD_I was the same as a normal instruction except for the
addition of a HasSIM128 predicate. However, rL339186 changed the
encoding of SIMD_I instructions to automatically contain the SIMD
prefix byte. This broke the encoding of non-SIMD vector-typed
instructions, which had instantiated SIMD_I. This CL corrects this
error.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: sunfish, jgravelle-google, sbc100, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50682
Patch by Thomas Lively (tlively)
llvm-svn: 339710
Implement instruction selection for all versions of the extract_lane
instruction. Use explicit sext/zext to differentiate between
extract_lane_s and extract_lane_u for applicable types, otherwise
default to extract_lane_u.
Reviewers: aheejin
Subscribers: sunfish, jgravelle-google, sbc100, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50597
Patch by Thomas Lively (tlively)
llvm-svn: 339707
This patch removes redundant template argument `TargetName` from TIIPredicate.
Tablegen can always infer the target name from the context. So we don't need to
force users of TIIPredicate to always specify it.
This allows us to better modularize the tablegen class hierarchy for the
so-called "function predicates". class FunctionPredicateBase has been added; it
is currently used as a building block for TIIPredicates. However, I plan to
reuse that class to model other function predicate classes too (i.e. not just
TIIPredicates). For example, this can be a first step towards implementing
proper support for dependency breaking instructions in tablegen.
This patch also adds a verification step on TIIPredicates in tablegen.
We cannot have multiple TIIPredicates with the same name. Otherwise, this will
cause build errors later on, when tablegen'd .inc files are included by cpp
files and then compiled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50708
llvm-svn: 339706
rL339686 added the case where a faux shuffle might have repeated shuffle inputs coming from either side of the OR().
This patch improves the insertion of the inputs into the source ops lists to account for this, as well as making it trivial to add support for shuffles with more than 2 inputs in the future.
llvm-svn: 339696
This is a fix for r339314.
MCInstBuilder uses the named parameter idiom and an 'operator MCInst&' to ease
the creation of MCInsts. As the object of MCInstBuilder owns the MCInst is
manipulating, the lifetime of the MCInst is bound to that of MCInstBuilder.
In r339314 I bound a reference to the MCInst in an initializer. The
temporary of MCInstBuilder (and also its MCInst) is destroyed at the end of
the declaration leading to a dangling reference.
Fix this by using MCInstBuilder inside an argument of a function call.
Temporaries in function calls are destroyed in the enclosing full expression,
so the the reference to MCInst is still valid when emitToStreamer executes.
llvm-svn: 339654
Summary: This revision improves previous version (rL330322) which has been reverted due to crashes.
This is the patch that lowers x86 intrinsics to native IR
in order to enable optimizations. The patch also includes folding
of previously missing saturation patterns so that IR emits the same
machine instructions as the intrinsics.
Reviewers: craig.topper, spatel, RKSimon
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: mike.dvoretsky, DavidKreitzer, sroland, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46179
llvm-svn: 339650
The behavior in 64-bit mode is different between Intel and AMD CPUs. Intel ignores the 0x66 prefix. AMD does not. objump doesn't ignore the 0x66 prefix. Since LLVM aims to match objdump behavior, we should do the same.
While I was trying to fix this I had change brtarget16/32 to use ENCODING_IW/ID instead of ENCODING_Iv to get the 0x66+REX.W case to act sort of sanely. It's still wrong, but that's a problem for another day.
The change in encoding exposed the fact that 16-bit mode disassembly of relative jumps was creating JMP_4 with a 2 byte immediate. It should have been JMP_2. From just printing you can't tell the difference, but if you dumped the encoding it wouldn't have matched what we started with.
While fixing that, it exposed that jo/jno opcodes were missing from the switch that this patch deleted and there were no test cases for them.
Fixes PR38537.
llvm-svn: 339622
Summary: The GR740 provides an up cycle counter in the
registers ASR22 and ASR23. As these registers can not be
read together atomically we only use the value of ASR23
for llvm.readcyclecounter(). The ASR23 register holds the
32 LSBs of the up-counter.
Reviewers: jyknight, venkatra
Reviewed By: jyknight
Subscribers: fedor.sergeev, jrtc27, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48638
llvm-svn: 339551
I'm not sure the exact nsz flag combination that
is OK. I think as long as it's on either, this is OK.
For now just check it on the omod multiply.
llvm-svn: 339513
If one of the elements is undef, use the canonicalized constant
from the other element instead of 0.
Splat vectors are more useful for other optimizations, such
as matching vector clamps. This was breaking on clamps
of half3 from the undef 4th component.
llvm-svn: 339512
Unlike the other arithmetic instructions the mem-reg form of compare is just a load and not a RMW operation. According to the Intel optimization manual, this form is also supported by macro fusion.
llvm-svn: 339498
Now we switch to the subregister in expandPostRAPseudos where we already switched the opcode.
This simplifies a few isel patterns that used the pseudo directly. And magically seems to have improved our ability to CSE it in the undef-label.ll test.
llvm-svn: 339496
Treat the stack variants of control instructions the same as regular
instructions. Otherwise, the vector ControlFlowStack will be the wrong
size and have out-of-bounds access. This was detected by MemorySanitizer.
llvm-svn: 339495
Summary:
Moved Explicit Locals pass to last.
Made that pass obligatory.
Made it convert from register to stack based instructions, and removed the registers.
Fixes to related code that was expecting register based instructions.
Added the correct testing flag to all tests, depending on what the
format they were expecting so far.
Translated one test to stack format as example: reg-stackify-stack.ll
tested:
llvm-lit -v `find test -name WebAssembly`
unittests/MC/*
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: jfb, llvm-commits, aheejin, eraman, jgravelle-google, sbc100
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50568
llvm-svn: 339474
LLVM normally prefers to minimize the number of bits set in an AND
immediate, but that doesn't always match the available ARM instructions.
In Thumb1 mode, prefer uxtb or uxth where possible; otherwise, prefer
a two-instruction sequence movs+ands or movs+bics.
Some potential improvements outlined in
ARMTargetLowering::targetShrinkDemandedConstant, but seems to work
pretty well already.
The ARMISelDAGToDAG fix ensures we don't generate an invalid UBFX
instruction due to a larger-than-expected mask. (It's orthogonal, in
some sense, but as far as I can tell it's either impossible or nearly
impossible to reproduce the bug without this change.)
According to my testing, this seems to consistently improve codesize by
a small amount by forming bic more often for ISD::AND with an immediate.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50030
llvm-svn: 339472
Enabling ARMCodeGenPrepare by default caused a whole load of
failures. This is due to zexts and truncs not being handled properly.
ZExts are messy so it's just easier to disable for now and truncs
are allowed only as 'sinks'. I still need to figure out why allowing
them as 'sources' causes so many failures. The other main changes are
that we are explicit in the types that we converting to, it's now
always 'TypeSize'. Type support is also now performed while checking
for valid opcodes as it unnecessarily complicated having the checks
are different stages.
I've moved the tests around too, so we have the zext and truncs in
their own file as well as the overflowing opcode tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50518
llvm-svn: 339432
Summary:
i64x2 and f64x2 operations are not implemented in V8, so we normally
do not want to emit them. However, they are in the SIMD spec proposal,
so we still want to be able to test them in the toolchain. This patch
adds a flag to enable their emission.
Reviewers: aheejin, dschuff
Subscribers: sunfish, jgravelle-google, sbc100, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50423
Patch by Thomas Lively (tlively)
llvm-svn: 339407
Summary:
gcc does not like
const Region *Region;
It wants a different name for the variable.
Is there a better convention for what name to use in such a case?
Reviewers: sbc100, aheejin
Subscribers: aheejin, jgravelle-google, dschuff, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50472
Patch by Alon Zakai (kripken)
llvm-svn: 339398
Summary:
The TType encoding, LSDA encoding, and personality encoding are all
passed explicitly by CodeGen to the assembler through .cfi_* directives,
so only the AsmPrinter needs to know about them.
The FDE CFI encoding however, controls the encoding of the label
implicitly created by the .cfi_startproc directive. That directive seems
to be special in that it doesn't take an encoding, so the assembler just
has to know how to encode one DSO-local label reference from .eh_frame
to .text.
As a result, it looks like MC will continue to have to know when the
large code model is in use. Perhaps we could invent a '.cfi_startproc
[large]' flag so that this knowledge doesn't need to pollute the
assembler.
Reviewers: davide, lliu0, JDevlieghere
Subscribers: hiraditya, fedor.sergeev, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50533
llvm-svn: 339397
This patch introduces tablegen class MCStatement.
Currently, an MCStatement can be either a return statement, or a switch
statement.
```
MCStatement:
MCReturnStatement
MCOpcodeSwitchStatement
```
A MCReturnStatement expands to a return statement, and the boolean expression
associated with the return statement is described by a MCInstPredicate.
An MCOpcodeSwitchStatement is a switch statement where the condition is a check
on the machine opcode. It allows the definition of multiple checks, as well as a
default case. More details on the grammar implemented by these two new
constructs can be found in the diff for TargetInstrPredicates.td.
This patch makes it easier to read the body of auto-generated TargetInstrInfo
predicates.
In future, I plan to reuse/extend the MCStatement grammar to describe more
complex target hooks. For now, this is just a first step (mostly a minor
cosmetic change to polish the new predicates framework).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50457
llvm-svn: 339352
As discussed on D41794, we have many cases where we fail to combine shuffles as the input operands have other uses.
This patch permits these shuffles to be combined as long as they don't introduce additional variable shuffle masks, which should reduce instruction dependencies and allow the total number of shuffles to still drop without increasing the constant pool.
However, this may mean that some memory folds may no longer occur, and on pre-AVX require the occasional extra register move.
This also exposes some poor PMULDQ/PMULUDQ codegen which was doing unnecessary upper/lower calculations which will in fact fold to zero/undef - the fix will be added in a followup commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50328
llvm-svn: 339335
According to PTX ISA .volatile has the same memory synchronization
semantics as .relaxed.sys, so it can be used to implement monotonic
atomic loads and stores. This is important for OpenMP's atomic
construct where
- 'read's and 'write's are lowered to atomic loads and stores, and
- an update of float or double types are lowered into a cmpxchg loop.
(Note that PTX could do better because it has atom.add.f{32,64} but
LLVM's atomicrmw instruction only allows integer types.)
Higher levels of atomicity (like acquire and release) need additional
synchronization properties which were added with PTX ISA 6.0 / sm_70.
So using these instructions still results in an error.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50391
llvm-svn: 339316
This pseudo-instruction is similar to la but uses PC-relative addressing
unconditionally. This is, la is only different to lla when using -fPIC. This
pseudo-instruction seems often forgotten in several specs but it is definitely
mentioned in binutils opcodes/riscv-opc.c. The semantics are defined both in
page 37 of the "RISC-V Reader" book but also in function macro found in
gas/config/tc-riscv.c.
This is a very first step towards adding PIC support for Linux in the RISC-V
backend.
The lla pseudo-instruction expands to a sequence of auipc + addi with a couple
of pc-rel relocations where the second points to the first one. This is
described in
https://github.com/riscv/riscv-elf-psabi-doc/blob/master/riscv-elf.md#pc-relative-symbol-addresses
For now, this patch only introduces support of that pseudo instruction at the
assembler parser.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49661
llvm-svn: 339314
Normally, if any registers are spilled, we prefer to spill lr on Thumb1
so we can fold the "bx lr" into the "pop". However, if there are tail
calls involved, restoring lr is expensive, so skip the optimization in
that case.
The spill of r7 in the new test also isn't necessary, but that's
mostly orthogonal to this patch. (It's the same code in
ARMFrameLowering, but it's not related to tail calls.)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49459
llvm-svn: 339283
This patch aims to improve the codegen for vector loads involving the
scalar_to_vector (load X) sequence. Initially, ld->mv instructions were used
for scalar_to_vector (load X), so this patch allows scalar_to_vector (load X)
to utilize:
LXSD and LXSDX for i64 and f64
LXSIWAX for i32 (sign extension to i64)
LXSIWZX for i32 and f64
Committing on behalf of Amy Kwan.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48950
llvm-svn: 339260
Match the GNU assembler in supporting immediate operands for these
instructions even when the reg-reg mnemonic is used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50046
Patch by Kito Cheng.
llvm-svn: 339252
Fixup test to check for GCN prefix
These patterns always zero extend the result even though it might need sign extension.
This has been broken since the addition of i16 support.
It has popped up in mad_sat(char) test since min(max()) combination is turned into v_med3, resulting in the following (incorrect) sequence:
v_mad_i16 v2, v10, v9, v11
v_med3_i32 v2, v2, v8, v7
Fixes mad_sat(char) piglit on VI.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49836
llvm-svn: 339190
Add missing SIMD types (v2f64) and binary ops. Also adds
tablegen support for automatically prepending prefix byte to SIMD
opcodes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50292
Patch by Thomas Lively
llvm-svn: 339186
Vgather requires must be in a packet with a store, which contradicts
the no-packets feature. As a consequence, gather/scatter could not be
used with no-packets. Relax this, and allow gather packets as exceptions
to the no-packets requirements.
llvm-svn: 339177
Summary:
This patch extends CFGSort pass to support exception handling. Once it
places a loop header, it does not place blocks that are not dominated by
the loop header until all the loop blocks are sorted. This patch extends
the same algorithm to exception 'catch' part, using the information
calculated by WebAssemblyExceptionInfo class.
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46500
llvm-svn: 339172
Remove the redundant check against zero when updating ProcResourceCounters in
nextGroup(), as pointed out in https://reviews.llvm.org/D50187.
Review: Ulrich Weigand.
llvm-svn: 339139
When potential jump instruction and target are in the same segment, use
jump instruction with immediate field.
In cases where offset does not fit immediate value of a bc/j instructions,
offset is stored into register, and then jump register instruction is used.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48019
llvm-svn: 339126
This is necessary to add a VI specific builtin,
__builtin_amdgcn_s_dcache_wb. We already have an
overly specific feature for one of these builtins,
for s_memrealtime. I'm not sure whether it's better
to add more of those, or to get rid of that and merge
it with vi-insts.
Alternatively, maybe this logically goes with scalar-stores?
llvm-svn: 339104
Src0 doesn't really convey any meaning to what the operand is. Passthru matches what's used in the documentation for the intrinsic this comes from.
llvm-svn: 339101
Summary:
Wasm does not have direct counterparts to some of LLVM IR's atomicrmw
instructions (min, max, umin, umax, and nand). This enables atomic
expansion using cmpxchg instruction within a loop for those atomicrmw
instructions.
Reviewers: dschuff
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, sunfish, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49440
llvm-svn: 339084
Summary:
The spec only defines a SIMD expression type of V128 and
leaves interpretation of different vector types to the instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50367
Patch by Thomas Lively
llvm-svn: 339082
Everything should quiet, and I think everything should
flush.
I assume the min3/med3/max3 follow the same rules
as regular min/max for flushing, which should at
least be conservatively correct.
There are still more operations that need to
be handled.
llvm-svn: 339065
Not sure why this was checking for denormals for f16.
My interpretation of the IEEE standard is conversions
should produce a canonical result, and the ISA manual
says denormals are created when appropriate.
llvm-svn: 339064
If denormals are enabled, denormals are canonical.
Also fix a few other issues. minnum/maxnum are supposed
to canonicalize. Temporarily improve workaround for the
instruction behavior change in gfx9.
Handle selects and fcopysign.
The tests were also largely broken, since they were
checking for a flush used on some targets after the
store of the result.
llvm-svn: 339061
Summary:
Expand isFNEG so that we generate the appropriate F(N)M(ADD|SUB)
instructions in more cases. For example, the following sequence
a = _mm256_broadcast_ss(f)
d = _mm256_fnmadd_ps(a, b, c)
generates an fsub and fma without this patch and an fnma with this
change.
Reviewers: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, davidxl, wmi
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48467
llvm-svn: 339043
If the store is volatile this might be a memory mapped IO access. In that case we shouldn't generate a load that didn't exist in the source
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50270
llvm-svn: 339041
Summary:
Ensure that NormalizedBuildVector returns a BUILD_VECTOR with operands of the
same type. This fixes an assertion failure in VerifySDNode.
Reviewers: SjoerdMeijer, t.p.northover, javed.absar
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50202
llvm-svn: 339013
ld64 supplies its own Thumb bit for Thumb functions, and intentionally zeroes
out that part of any addend in an object file. But it only does that for
symbols marked N_EXT -- i.e. external symbols. So LLVM should avoid setting
that extra bit in other cases.
llvm-svn: 339007
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338969
At one point in time acquire implied mayLoad and mayStore as did release. Thus we needed separate pseudos that also carried that property. This appears to no longer be the case. I believe it was changed in 2012 with a comment saying that atomic memory accesses are marked volatile which preserves the ordering.
So from what I can tell we shouldn't need additional pseudos since they aren't carry any flags that are different from the normal instructions. The only thing I can think of is that we may consider them for load folding candidates in the peephole pass now where we didn't before. If that's important hopefully there's something in the memory operand we can check to prevent the folding without relying on pseudo instructions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50212
llvm-svn: 338925
Add a parameter for testing specifically for
sNaNs - at least one instruction pattern on AMDGPU
needs to check specifically for this.
Also handle more cases, and add a target hook
for custom nodes, similar to the hooks for known
bits.
llvm-svn: 338910
Clang uses "ctpop & 1" to implement __builtin_parity. If the popcnt instruction isn't supported this generates a large amount of code to calculate the population count. Instead we can bisect the data down to a single byte using xor and then check the parity flag.
Even when popcnt is supported, its still a good idea to split 64-bit data on 32-bit targets using an xor in front of a single popcnt. Otherwise we get two popcnts and an add before the and.
I've specifically targeted this at the sizes supported by clang builtins, but we could generalize this if we think that's useful.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50165
llvm-svn: 338907
Some instructions expand to more than one decoder group.
This has been hitherto ignored, but is handled with this patch.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D50187
llvm-svn: 338849
There are a lot of permutations of types here generating a lot of patterns in the isel table. It's more efficient to just ReplaceUses and RemoveDeadNode from the Select function.
The test changes are because we have a some shuffle patterns that have a bitcast as their root node. But the behavior is identical to another instruction whose pattern doesn't start with a bitcast. So this isn't a functional change.
llvm-svn: 338824
Move all the patterns to X86InstrVecCompiler.td so we can keep SSE/AVX/AVX512 all in one place.
To save some patterns we'll use an existing DAG combine to convert f128 fand/for/fxor to integer when sse2 is enabled. This allows use to reuse all the existing patterns for v2i64.
I believe this now makes SHA instructions the only case where VEX/EVEX and legacy encoded instructions could be generated simultaneously.
llvm-svn: 338821
If the producing instruction is legacy encoded it doesn't implicitly zero the upper bits. This is important for the SHA instructions which don't have a VEX encoded version. We might also be able to hit this with the incomplete f128 support that hasn't been ported to VEX.
llvm-svn: 338812
I'm assuming the R13 restriction extends to R13D. Guessing this restriction is related to the funny encoding of this register as base always requiring a displacement to be encoded.
llvm-svn: 338806
Summary:
By not reconstructing the operand list of the SDNode, this change makes
it easier to add the forthcoming new tbuffer and buffer intrinsics.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49995
Change-Id: I0cb79ef0801532645d7dd954a6d7355139db7b38
llvm-svn: 338784
Summary:
I encountered some problems with SIFixWWMLiveness when WWM is in a loop:
1. It sometimes gave invalid MIR where there is some control flow path
to the new implicit use of a register on EXIT_WWM that does not pass
through any def.
2. There were lots of false positives of registers that needed to have
an implicit use added to EXIT_WWM.
3. Adding an implicit use to EXIT_WWM (and adding an implicit def just
before the WWM code, which I tried in order to fix (1)) caused lots
of the values to be spilled and reloaded unnecessarily.
This commit is a rework of SIFixWWMLiveness, with the following changes:
1. Instead of considering any register with a def that can reach the WWM
code and a def that can be reached from the WWM code, it now
considers three specific cases that need to be handled.
2. A register that needs liveness over WWM to be synthesized now has it
done by adding itself as an implicit use to defs other than the
dominant one.
Also added the following fixmes:
FIXME: We should detect whether a register in one of the above
categories is already live at the WWM code before deciding to add the
implicit uses to synthesize its liveness.
FIXME: I believe this whole scheme may be flawed due to the possibility
of the register allocator doing live interval splitting.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46756
Change-Id: Ie7fba0ede0378849181df3f1a9a7a39ed1a94a94
llvm-svn: 338783
Summary:
This fixes a problem where a load from global+idx generated incorrect
code on <=gfx7 when the index is divergent.
Subscribers: arsenm, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47383
Change-Id: Ib4d177d6254b1dd3f8ec0203fdddec94bd8bc5ed
llvm-svn: 338779
This will remove suboptimal branching from the generated ll/sc loops.
The extra simplification pass affects a lot of testcases, which have
been modified to accommodate this change: either by modifying the
test to become immune to the CFG simplification, or (less preferablt)
by adding option -hexagon-initial-cfg-clenaup=0.
llvm-svn: 338774
Rather than allowing invalid bitcasts to be lowered to wasm
call instructions that won't validate, generate wrappers that
contain unreachable thereby delaying the error until runtime.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49517
llvm-svn: 338744
These instructions perform the same operation, but the semantic of which operand is destroyed is reversed. If the same register is used as both operands we can change the execution domain without worrying about this difference.
Unfortunately, this really only works in cases where the input register is killed by the instruction. If its not killed, the two address isntruction pass inserts a copy that will become a move instruction. This makes the instruction use different physical registers that contain the same data at the time the unpck/movhlps executes. I've considered using a unary pseudo instruction with tied operand to trick the two address instruction pass. We could then expand the pseudo post regalloc to get the same physical register on both inputs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50157
llvm-svn: 338735
As a part of adding the tiny codemodel, we need to support ldr's with :got:
relocations on them. This seems to be mostly already done, just needs the
relocation type support.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50137
llvm-svn: 338673
Adding the FP_ROUND nodes when combining FP_TO_[SU]INT of elements
feeding a BUILD_VECTOR into an FP_TO_[SU]INT of the built vector
loses precision. This patch removes the code that adds these nodes
to true f64 operands. It also adds patterns required to ensure
the code is still vectorized rather than converting individual
elements and inserting into a vector.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38342
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50121
llvm-svn: 338658
AArch64 ELF ABI does not define a static relocation type for TLS offset within
a module, which makes it impossible for compiler to generate a valid
DW_AT_location content for thread local variables. Currently LLVM generates an
invalid R_AARCH64_ABS64 relocation at the DW_AT_location field for a TLS
variable. That causes trouble for linker because thread local variable does
not have an absolute address at link time. AArch64 GCC solves the problem by
not generating DW_AT_location for thread local variables. We should do the
same in LLVM.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43860
llvm-svn: 338655
Mutate the node type during selection when it
doesn't matter. This avoids an intermediate bitcast
node on targets with legal i16/f16.
Also fixes missing output modifiers on v_cvt_pkrtz_f32_f16,
which I assume are OK.
llvm-svn: 338619
We now emit a move of -1 before the cmov and do the addition after the cmov just like the case with an extra addition.
This may be slightly worse for code size, but is more consistent with other compilers. And we might be able to hoist the mov -1 outside of loops.
llvm-svn: 338613
Summary:
D25878, which added support for !absolute_symbol for normal X86 ISel,
did not add support for materializing references to absolute symbols for
X86 FastISel. This causes build failures because FastISel generates
PC-relative relocations for absolute symbols. Fall back to normal ISel
for references to !absolute_symbol GVs. Fix for PR38200.
Reviewers: pcc, craig.topper
Reviewed By: pcc
Subscribers: hiraditya, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50116
llvm-svn: 338599
There is nothing x86-specific about this code, so it'd be nice to make this available for other targets to use in the future (and get it out of X86ISelLowering!).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50083
llvm-svn: 338586
Summary:
Add _L to _LZ image intrinsic table mapping to table gen.
In ISelLowering check if image intrinsic has lod and if it's equal
to zero, if so remove lod and change opcode to equivalent mapped _LZ.
Change-Id: Ie24cd7e788e2195d846c7bd256151178cbb9ec71
Subscribers: arsenm, mehdi_amini, kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49483
llvm-svn: 338523
The DAG combiner logic to simplify AND masks in shift counts is invalid.
While it is true that the SystemZ shift instructions ignore all but the
low 6 bits of the shift count, it is still invalid to simplify the AND
masks while the DAG still uses the standard shift operators (which are
*not* defined to match the SystemZ instruction behavior).
Instead, this patch performs equivalent operations during instruction
selection. For completely removing the AND, this now happens via
additional DAG match patterns implemented by a multi-alternative
PatFrags. For simplifying a 32-bit AND to a 16-bit AND, the existing DAG
patterns were already mostly OK, they just needed an output XForm to
actually truncate the immediate value.
Unfortunately, the latter change also exposed a bug in TableGen: it
seems XForms are currently only handled correctly for direct operands of
the outermost operation node. This patch also fixes that bug by simply
recurring through the whole pattern. This should be NFC for all other
targets.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50096
llvm-svn: 338521
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338494
It's not strictly required by the transform of the cmov and the add, but it makes sure we restrict it to the cases we know we want to match.
While there canonicalize the operand order of the cmov to simplify the matching and emitting code.
llvm-svn: 338492
EFLAGS copy lowering.
If you have a branch of LLVM, you may want to cherrypick this. It is
extremely unlikely to hit this case empirically, but it will likely
manifest as an "impossible" branch being taken somewhere, and will be
... very hard to debug.
Hitting this requires complex conditions living across complex control
flow combined with some interesting memory (non-stack) initialized with
the results of a comparison. Also, because you have to arrange for an
EFLAGS copy to be in *just* the right place, almost anything you do to
the code will hide the bug. I was unable to reduce anything remotely
resembling a "good" test case from the place where I hit it, and so
instead I have constructed synthetic MIR testing that directly exercises
the bug in question (as well as the good behavior for completeness).
The issue is that we would mistakenly assume any SETcc with a valid
condition and an initial operand that was a register and a virtual
register at that to be a register *defining* SETcc...
It isn't though....
This would in turn cause us to test some other bizarre register,
typically the base pointer of some memory. Now, testing this register
and using that to branch on doesn't make any sense. It even fails the
machine verifier (if you are running it) due to the wrong register
class. But it will make it through LLVM, assemble, and it *looks*
fine... But wow do you get a very unsual and surprising branch taken in
your actual code.
The fix is to actually check what kind of SETcc instruction we're
dealing with. Because there are a bunch of them, I just test the
may-store bit in the instruction. I've also added an assert for sanity
that ensure we are, in fact, *defining* the register operand. =D
llvm-svn: 338481
Disable ARMCodeGenPrepare by default again. It is causing verifier
failues in V8 that look like:
Duplicate integer as switch case
switch i32 %trunc, label %if.end13 [
i32 0, label %cleanup36
i32 0, label %if.then8
], !dbg !4981
i32 0
fatal error: error in backend: Broken function found, compilation aborted!
I will continue reducing the test case and send it along.
llvm-svn: 338452
When lowering calling conventions, prefer to decompose vectors
into the constitute register types. This avoids artifical constraints
to satisfy a wide super-register.
This improves code quality because now optimizations don't need to
deal with the super-register constraint. For example the immediate
folding code doesn't deal with 4 component reg_sequences, so by
breaking the register down earlier the existing immediate folding
code is able to work.
This also avoids the need for the shader input processing code
to manually split vector types.
llvm-svn: 338416
Don't declare them as X86SchedWritePair when the folded class will never be used.
Note: MOVBE (load/store endian conversion) instructions tend to have a very different behaviour to BSWAP.
llvm-svn: 338412
As was done for vector rotations, we can efficiently use ISD::MULHU for vXi8/vXi16 ISD::SRL lowering.
Shift-by-zero cases are still problematic (mainly on v32i8 due to extra AND/ANDN/OR or VPBLENDVB blend masks but v8i16/v16i16 aren't great either if PBLENDW fails) so I've limited this first patch to known non-zero cases if we can't easily use PBLENDW.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49562
llvm-svn: 338407
Summary:
Similar to D49636, but for PMADDUBSW. This instruction has the additional complexity that the addition of the two products saturates to 16-bits rather than wrapping around. And one operand is treated as signed and the other as unsigned.
A C example that triggers this pattern
```
static const int N = 128;
int8_t A[2*N];
uint8_t B[2*N];
int16_t C[N];
void foo() {
for (int i = 0; i != N; ++i)
C[i] = MIN(MAX((int16_t)A[2*i]*(int16_t)B[2*i] + (int16_t)A[2*i+1]*(int16_t)B[2*i+1], -32768), 32767);
}
```
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, zvi
Reviewed By: RKSimon, zvi
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49829
llvm-svn: 338402
This commit fixes two issues with the liveness information after the
call:
1) The code always spills RCX and RDX if InProlog == true, which results
in an use of undefined phys reg.
2) FinalReg, JoinReg, RoundedReg, SizeReg are not added as live-ins to
the basic blocks that use them, therefore they are seen undefined.
https://llvm.org/PR38376
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50020
llvm-svn: 338400
Summary:
This patch improves Inliner to provide causes/reasons for negative inline decisions.
1. It adds one new message field to InlineCost to report causes for Always and Never instances. All Never and Always instantiations must provide a simple message.
2. Several functions that used to return the inlining results as boolean are changed to return InlineResult which carries the cause for negative decision.
3. Changed remark priniting and debug output messages to provide the additional messages and related inline cost.
4. Adjusted tests for changed printing.
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: craig.topper, sammccall, sgraenitz, NutshellySima, shchenz, chandlerc, apilipenko, javed.absar, tejohnson, dblaikie, sanjoy, eraman, xbolva00
Reviewed By: tejohnson, xbolva00
Subscribers: xbolva00, llvm-commits, arsenm, mehdi_amini, eraman, haicheng, steven_wu, dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49412
llvm-svn: 338387
We could choose a free 0 for this, but this
matches the behavior for fmul undef, 1.0. Also,
the NaN use is more useful for folding use operations
although if it's not eliminated it is more expensive
in terms of code size.
llvm-svn: 338376
This patch teaches llvm-mca how to identify dependency breaking instructions on
btver2.
An example of dependency breaking instructions is the zero-idiom XOR (example:
`XOR %eax, %eax`), which always generates zero regardless of the actual value of
the input register operands.
Dependency breaking instructions don't have to wait on their input register
operands before executing. This is because the computation is not dependent on
the inputs.
Not all dependency breaking idioms are also zero-latency instructions. For
example, `CMPEQ %xmm1, %xmm1` is independent on
the value of XMM1, and it generates a vector of all-ones.
That instruction is not eliminated at register renaming stage, and its opcode is
issued to a pipeline for execution. So, the latency is not zero.
This patch adds a new method named isDependencyBreaking() to the MCInstrAnalysis
interface. That method takes as input an instruction (i.e. MCInst) and a
MCSubtargetInfo.
The default implementation of isDependencyBreaking() conservatively returns
false for all instructions. Targets may override the default behavior for
specific CPUs, and return a value which better matches the subtarget behavior.
In future, we should teach to Tablegen how to automatically generate the body of
isDependencyBreaking from scheduling predicate definitions. This would allow us
to expose the knowledge about dependency breaking instructions to the machine
schedulers (and, potentially, other codegen passes).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49310
llvm-svn: 338372
Since z13, the max group size will be 2 if any μop has more than 3 register
sources.
This has been ignored sofar in the SystemZHazardRecognizer, but is now
handled by recognizing those instructions and adjusting the tracking of
decoding and the cost heuristic for grouping.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49847
llvm-svn: 338368
isFNEG was duplicating much of what was done by getTargetConstantBitsFromNode in its own calls to getTargetConstantFromNode.
Noticed while reviewing D48467.
llvm-svn: 338358
Contrary to ELF, we don't add any markers that distinguish data generated
with .short/.long from normal instructions, so the .inst directive only
adds compatibility with assembly that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49936
llvm-svn: 338356
Contrary to ELF, we don't add any markers that distinguish data generated
with .long from normal instructions, so the .inst directive only adds
compatibility with assembly that uses it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49935
llvm-svn: 338355
In one place we checked X86Subtarget.slowLEA() to decide if the pass should run. But to decide what the pass should we only check isSLM. This resulted in Goldmont going down the Bonnell path.
llvm-svn: 338342
Also refactors some existing code to materialize addresses for the large code
model so it can be shared between G_GLOBAL_VALUE and G_BLOCK_ADDR.
This implements PR36390.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49903
llvm-svn: 338337
The vector contains the SDNodes that these functions create. The number of nodes is always a small number so we should use SmallVector to avoid a heap allocation.
llvm-svn: 338329
This teaches the outliner to save LR to a register rather than the stack when
possible. This allows us to avoid bumping the stack in outlined functions in
some cases. By doing this, in a later patch, we can teach the outliner to do
something like this:
f1:
...
bl OUTLINED_FUNCTION
...
f2:
...
move LR's contents to a register
bl OUTLINED_FUNCTION
move the register's contents back
instead of falling back to saving LR in both cases.
llvm-svn: 338278
This patch enables instructions that are destructive on their
destination- and first source operand, to be prefixed with a
MOVPRFX instruction.
This patch also adds a variety of tests:
- positive tests for all instructions and forms that accept a
movprfx for either or both predicated and unpredicated forms.
- negative tests for all instructions and forms that do not accept
an unpredicated or predicated movprfx.
- negative tests for the diagnostics that get emitted when a MOVPRFX
instruction is used incorrectly.
This is patch [2/2] in a series to add MOVPRFX instructions:
- Patch [1/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49592
- Patch [2/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49593
Reviewers: rengolin, SjoerdMeijer, samparker, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49593
llvm-svn: 338261
This patch adds predicated and unpredicated MOVPRFX instructions, which
can be prepended to SVE instructions that are destructive on their first
source operand, to make them a constructive operation, e.g.
add z1.s, p0/m, z1.s, z2.s <=> z1 = z1 + z2
can be made constructive:
movprfx z0, z1
add z0.s, p0/m, z0.s, z2.s <=> z0 = z1 + z2
The predicated MOVPRFX instruction can additionally be used to zero
inactive elements, e.g.
movprfx z0.s, p0/z, z1.s
add z0.s, p0/m, z0.s, z2.s
Not all instructions can be prefixed with the MOVPRFX instruction
which is why this patch also adds a mechanism to validate prefixed
instructions. The exact rules when a MOVPRFX applies is detailed in
the SVE supplement of the Architectural Reference Manual.
This is patch [1/2] in a series to add MOVPRFX instructions:
- Patch [1/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49592
- Patch [2/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49593
Reviewers: rengolin, SjoerdMeijer, samparker, fhahn, javed.absar
Reviewed By: SjoerdMeijer
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49592
llvm-svn: 338258
The machine verifier asserts with:
Assertion failed: (isMBB() && "Wrong MachineOperand accessor"), function getMBB, file ../include/llvm/CodeGen/MachineOperand.h, line 542.
It calls analyzeBranch which tries to call getMBB if the opcode is
JMP_1, but in this case we do:
JMP_1 @OUTLINED_FUNCTION
I believe we have to use TAILJMPd64 instead of JMP_1 since JMP_1 is used
with brtarget8.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49299
llvm-svn: 338237
Summary:
These instructions interact with hardware blocks outside the shader core,
and they can have "scalar" side effects even when EXEC = 0. We don't
want these scalar side effects to occur when all lanes want to skip
these instructions, so always add the execz skip branch instruction
for basic blocks that contain them.
Also ensure that we skip scalar stores / atomics, though we don't
code-gen those yet.
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, yaxunl, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48431
Change-Id: Ieaeb58352e2789ffd64745603c14970c60819d44
llvm-svn: 338235
Code in `CC_ARM_AAPCS_Custom_Aggregate()` is responsible for handling
homogeneous aggregates for `CC_ARM_AAPCS_VFP`. When an aggregate ends up
fully on stack, the function tries to pack all resulting items of the
aggregate as tightly as possible according to AAPCS.
Once the first item was laid out, the alignment used for consecutive
items was the size of one item. This logic went wrong for 128-bit
vectors because their alignment is normally only 64 bits, and so could
result in inserting unexpected padding between the first and second
element.
The patch fixes the problem by updating the alignment with the item size
only if this results in reducing it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49720
llvm-svn: 338233
The WHILE instructions generate a predicate that is true while the
comparison of the first scalar operand (incremented for each predicate
element) with the second scalar operand is true and false thereafter.
WHILELE While incrementing signed scalar less than or equal to scalar
WHILELO While incrementing unsigned scalar lower than scalar
WHILELS While incrementing unsigned scalar lower than or same as scalar
WHILELT While incrementing signed scalar less than scalar
e.g.
whilele p0.s, x0, x1
generates predicate p0 (for 32bit elements) by incrementing
(signed) x0 and comparing that vector to splat(x1).
llvm-svn: 338211
The instructions added in this patch permit active elements within
a vector to be processed sequentially without unpacking the vector.
PFIRST Set the first active element to true.
PNEXT Find next active element in predicate.
CTERMEQ Compare and terminate loop when equal.
CTERMNE Compare and terminate loop when not equal.
llvm-svn: 338210
X86 normally requires immediates to be a signed 32-bit value which would exclude i64 0x80000000. But for add/sub we can negate the constant and use the opposite instruction.
llvm-svn: 338204
This patch adds PFALSE (unconditionally sets all elements of
the predicate to false) and PTEST (set the status flags for the
predicate).
llvm-svn: 338198
SelectionDAGBuilder widens v3i32/v3f32 arguments to
to v4i32/v4f32 which consume an additional register.
In addition to wasting argument space, this produces extra
instructions since now it appears the 4th vector component has
a meaningful value to most combines.
llvm-svn: 338197
This patch adds support for instructions that partition a predicate
based on data-dependent termination conditions in a loop.
BRKA Break after the first true condition
BRKAS Break after the first true condition, setting condition flags
BRKB Break before the first true condition
BRKBS Break before the first true condition, setting condition flags
BRKPA Break after the first true condition, propagating from the
previous partition
BRKPAS Break after the first true condition, propagating from the
previous partition, setting condition flags
BRKPB Break before the first true condition, propagating from the
previous partition
BRKPBS Break before the first true condition, propagating from the
previous partition, setting condition flags
BRKN Propagate break to next partition
BKRNS Propagate break to next partition, setting condition flags
llvm-svn: 338196
Summary:
Moved Explicit Locals pass to last.
Made that pass obligatory.
Made it convert from register to stack based instructions, and removed the registers.
Fixes to related code that was expecting register based instructions.
Added the correct testing flag to all tests, depending on what the
format they were expecting so far.
Translated one test to stack format as example: reg-stackify-stack.ll
tested:
llvm-lit -v `find test -name WebAssembly`
unittests/MC/*
Reviewers: dschuff, sunfish
Subscribers: sbc100, jgravelle-google, eraman, aheejin, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49160
llvm-svn: 338164
Fixed the ASAN failure from before in r338148, so recommiting.
This patch enables the MachineOutliner by default in AArch64 under -Oz.
The MachineOutliner offers around a 4.5% improvement on the current -Oz code
size improvements.
We have done work into improving the debuggability of outlined code, so that
users of -Oz won't be surprised by the optimization. We have also been executing
the LLVM test suite and common external tests such as the SPEC suites
continuously with no issue. The outliner has a low compile-time overhead of
roughly 1%. At this point, the outliner would be a really good addition to the
-Oz pass pipeline!
llvm-svn: 338160
There was a missing check for if a candidate list was entirely deleted. This
adds that check.
This fixes an asan failure caused by running test/CodeGen/AArch64/addsub_ext.ll
with the MachineOutliner enabled.
llvm-svn: 338148
This feature enables the fusion of such operations on Cortex A57 and Cortex
A72, as recommended in their Software Optimisation Guides, sections 4.14 and
4.11, respectively.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49563
llvm-svn: 338147
Errors like the following are reported by:
https://urldefense.proofpoint.com/v2/url?u=http-3A__lab.llvm.org-3A8011_builders_llvm-2Dclang-2Dx86-5F64-2Dexpensive-2Dchecks-2Dwin_builds_11261&d=DwIBAg&c=5VD0RTtNlTh3ycd41b3MUw&r=DA8e1B5r073vIqRrFz7MRA&m=929oWPCf7Bf2qQnir4GBtowB8ZAlIRWsAdTfRkDaK-g&s=9k-wbEUVpUm474hhzsmAO29VXVvbxJPWD9RTgCD71fQ&e=
*** Bad machine code: Explicit definition marked as use ***
- function: cal_align1
- basic block: %bb.0 entry (0x47edd98)
- instruction: LDB $r3, $r2, 0
- operand 0: $r3
This is because RegState info was missing for ScratchReg inside
expandMEMCPY. This caused incomplete register usage information to
MachineInstr verifier which then would complain as there could be potential
code-gen issue if the complained MachineInstr is used in place where
register usage information matters even though the memcpy expanding is not
in such case as it happens at the last stage of IR optimization pipeline.
We should always specify those register usage information which compiler
couldn't deduct automatically whenever we add a hardware register manually.
Reported-by: Builder llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win Build #11261
Signed-off-by: Jiong Wang <jiong.wang@netronome.com>
Reviewed-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 338134
This patch enables the MachineOutliner by default in AArch64 under -Oz.
The MachineOutliner offers around a 4.5% improvement on the current -Oz code
size improvements.
We have done work into improving the debuggability of outlined code, so that
users of -Oz won't be surprised by the optimization. We have also been executing
the LLVM test suite and common external tests such as the SPEC suites
continuously with no issue. The outliner has a low compile-time overhead of
roughly 1%. At this point, the outliner would be a really good addition to the
-Oz pass pipeline!
llvm-svn: 338133
R600 can't handle immediates for BFE, these will be eliminated later.
Fixes powr/pow regressions n r600 since r334817
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49641
llvm-svn: 338127
This patch adds support for various integer reduction operations:
SADDV signed add reduction to scalar
UADDV unsigned add reduction to scalar
SMAXV signed maximum reduction to scalar
SMINV signed minimum reduction to scalar
UMAXV unsigned maximum reduction to scalar
UMINV unsigned minimum reduction to scalar
ANDV logical AND reduction to scalar
ORV logical OR reduction to scalar
EORV logical EOR reduction to scalar
The reduction is predicated, e.g.
smaxv s0, p0, z1.s
performs a signed maximum reduction on active elements in z1,
and stores the (signed max value) result in s0.
llvm-svn: 338126
This patch adds support for various floating-point
reduction operations:
FADDA strictly-ordered add reduction, accumulating in scalar
FADDV recursive add reduction to scalar
FMAXV recursive max reduction to scalar
FMINV recursive min reduction to scalar
FMAXNMV recursive max number reduction to scalar
FMINNMV recursive min number reduction to scalar
The reduction is predicated, e.g.
fadda d0, p0, d0, z1.d
performs the add-reduction in strict order on active elements
in z1, accumulating into d0.
faddv d0, p0, z1.d
performs the add-reduction (not in strict order)
on active elements in z1, storing the result in d0.
llvm-svn: 338123
This patch adds support for transcendental acceleration
instructions 'FEXPA' (exponential accelerator) and 'FTSSEL'
(trigonometric select coefficient).
llvm-svn: 338121
Not sure why they were being explicitly excluded, but I believe all the math inside the if works. I changed the absolute value to be uint64_t instead of int64_t so INT64_MIN+1 wouldn't be signed wrap.
llvm-svn: 338101
Summary:
This is the pattern you get from the loop vectorizer for something like this
int16_t A[1024];
int16_t B[1024];
int32_t C[512];
void pmaddwd() {
for (int i = 0; i != 512; ++i)
C[i] = (A[2*i]*B[2*i]) + (A[2*i+1]*B[2*i+1]);
}
In this case we will have (add (mul (build_vector), (build_vector)), (mul (build_vector), (build_vector))). This is different than the pattern we currently match which has the build_vectors between an add and a single multiply. I'm not sure what C code would get you that pattern.
Reviewers: RKSimon, spatel, zvi
Reviewed By: zvi
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49636
llvm-svn: 338097
If this happens the operands aren't updated and the existing node is returned. Make sure we pass this existing node up to the DAG combiner so that a proper replacement happens. Otherwise we get stuck in an infinite loop with an unoptimized node.
llvm-svn: 338090
Scale the offset of VGPR spills by the wave size when it cannot fit in the
12-bit offset immediate field and so is added to the soffset SGPR. This
accounts for hardware swizzling of scratch memory.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49448
llvm-svn: 338060
- Save/restore only registers that are used.
This includes Callee saved registers and Caller saved registers
(arguments and temporaries) for integer and FP registers.
- If there is a call in the interrupt handler, save/restore all
Caller saved registers (arguments and temporaries) and all FP registers.
- Emit special return instructions depending on "interrupt"
attribute type.
Based on initial patch by Zhaoshi Zheng.
Reviewers: asb
Reviewed By: asb
Subscribers: rkruppe, the_o, MartinMosbeck, brucehoult, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, sabuasal, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng, edward-jones, mgrang, rogfer01, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48411
llvm-svn: 338047
Summary:
NVPTX target dos not use register-based frame information. Instead it
relies on the artificial local_depot that is used instead of the frame
and the data for variables must be emitted relatively to this
local_depot.
Reviewers: tra, jlebar, echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, aprantl, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45963
llvm-svn: 338039
- Some of the v8.3 pointer authentication instruction inhabit the Hint space
- These instructions can be assembled to hint instructions which act as NOP instructions prior to v8.3
- This patch permits using the hint instructions for all v8a targets
- Also, correct the RETA{A,B} instructions to match the instruction attributes of RET (set isTerminator and isBarrier)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49786
llvm-svn: 338029
Override getTypeForExtReturn so that functions returning
an i32 typed value have it sign extended on MIPS64.
Also provide patterns to get rid of unneeded sign extensions
for arithmetic instructions which implicitly sign extend
their results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48374
llvm-svn: 338019
a helper function with a nice overview comment. NFC.
This is a preperatory refactoring to implementing another component of
mitigation here that was descibed in the design document but hadn't been
implemented yet.
llvm-svn: 338016
This adds MC support for the crypto instructions that were made optional
extensions in Armv8.2-A (AArch64 only).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49370
llvm-svn: 338010
I'm not sure if this was trying to avoid optimizing the new nodes further or what. Or maybe to prevent a cycle if something tried to reform the multiply? But I don't think its a reliable way to do that. If the user of the expanded multiply is visited by the DAGCombiner after this conversion happens, the DAGCombiner will check its operands, see that they haven't been visited by the DAGCombiner before and it will then add the first node to the worklist. This process will repeat until all the new nodes are visited.
So this seems like an unreliable prevention at best. So this patch just returns the new nodes like any other combine. If this starts causing problems we can try to add target specific nodes or something to more directly prevent optimizations.
Now that we handle the combine normally, we can combine any negates the mul expansion creates into their users since those will be visited now.
llvm-svn: 338007
These calls were making sure some newly created nodes were added to worklist, but the DAGCombiner has internal support for ensuring it has visited all nodes. Any time it visits a node it ensures the operands have been queued to be visited as well. This means if we only need to return the last new node. The DAGCombiner will take care of adding its inputs thus walking backwards through all the new nodes.
llvm-svn: 337996
- Avoid duplication of regmask size calculation.
- Simplify allocateRegisterMask() call.
- Rename allocateRegisterMask() to allocateRegMask() to be consistent
with naming in MachineOperand.
llvm-svn: 337986
Some BPF JIT backends would want to optimize memcpy in their own
architecture specific way.
However, at the moment, there is no way for JIT backends to see memcpy
semantics in a reliable way. This is due to LLVM BPF backend is expanding
memcpy into load/store sequences and could possibly schedule them apart from
each other further. So, BPF JIT backends inside kernel can't reliably
recognize memcpy semantics by peephole BPF sequence.
This patch introduce new intrinsic expand infrastructure to memcpy.
To get stable in-order load/store sequence from memcpy, we first lower
memcpy into BPF::MEMCPY node which then expanded into in-order load/store
sequences in expandPostRAPseudo pass which will happen after instruction
scheduling. By this way, kernel JIT backends could reliably recognize
memcpy through scanning BPF sequence.
This new memcpy expand infrastructure is gated by a new option:
-bpf-expand-memcpy-in-order
Acked-by: Jakub Kicinski <jakub.kicinski@netronome.com>
Signed-off-by: Jiong Wang <jiong.wang@netronome.com>
Signed-off-by: Yonghong Song <yhs@fb.com>
llvm-svn: 337977
In SVN r334523, the first half of comdat constant pool handling was
hoisted from X86WindowsTargetObjectFile (which despite the name only
was used for msvc targets) into the arch independent
TargetLoweringObjectFileCOFF, but the other half of the handling was
left behind in X86AsmPrinter::GetCPISymbol.
With only half of the handling in place, inconsistent comdat
sections/symbols are created, causing issues with both GNU binutils
(avoided for X86 in SVN r335918) and with the MS linker, which
would complain like this:
fatal error LNK1143: invalid or corrupt file: no symbol for COMDAT section 0x4
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49644
llvm-svn: 337950
Saves materializing the immediate for the "ands".
Corresponding patterns exist for lsrs+lsls, but that seems less common
in practice.
Now implemented as a DAGCombine.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49585
llvm-svn: 337945
For example v = <2 x i1> is represented as bbbbaaaa in a predicate register,
where b = v[1], a = v[0]. Extracting v[1] is equivalent to extracting bit 4
from the predicate register.
llvm-svn: 337934
Add support for lowering pointer arguments.
Changing type from pointer to integer is already done in
MipsTargetLowering::getRegisterTypeForCallingConv.
Patch by Petar Avramovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49419
llvm-svn: 337912
NFC changes to make scheduler TableGen files more readable, by using loops
instead of a lot of similar defs with just e.g. a latency value that changes.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D49598
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Javed Abshar
llvm-svn: 337909
code.
This consolidates all our hardening calls, and simplifies the code
a bit. It seems much more clear to handle all of these together.
No functionality changed here.
llvm-svn: 337895
This function actually does two things: it traces the predicate state
through each of the basic blocks in the function (as that isn't directly
handled by the SSA updater) *and* it hardens everything necessary in the
block as it goes. These need to be done together so that we have the
currently active predicate state to use at each point of the hardening.
However, this also made obvious that the flag to disable actual
hardening of loads was flawed -- it also disabled tracing the predicate
state across function calls within the body of each block. So this patch
sinks this debugging flag test to correctly guard just the hardening of
loads.
Unless load hardening was disabled, no functionality should change with
tis patch.
llvm-svn: 337894
The target independent AsmParser doesn't recognise .hword, .word, .dword
which are required for Mips. Currently MipsAsmParser recognises these
through dispatch to MipsAsmParser::parseDataDirective. This contains
equivalent logic to AsmParser::parseDirectiveValue. This patch allows
reuse of AsmParser::parseDirectiveValue by making use of
addAliasForDirective to support .hword, .word and .dword.
Original patch provided by Alex Bradbury at D47001 was modified to fix
handling of microMIPS symbols. The `AsmParser::parseDirectiveValue`
calls either `EmitIntValue` or `EmitValue`. In this patch we override
`EmitIntValue` in the `MipsELFStreamer` to clear a pending set of
microMIPS symbols.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49539
llvm-svn: 337893
against v1.2 BCBS attacks directly.
Attacks using spectre v1.2 (a subset of BCBS) are described in the paper
here:
https://people.csail.mit.edu/vlk/spectre11.pdf
The core idea is to speculatively store over the address in a vtable,
jumptable, or other target of indirect control flow that will be
subsequently loaded. Speculative execution after such a store can
forward the stored value to subsequent loads, and if called or jumped
to, the speculative execution will be steered to this potentially
attacker controlled address.
Up until now, this could be mitigated by enableing retpolines. However,
that is a relatively expensive technique to mitigate this particular
flavor. Especially because in most cases SLH will have already mitigated
this. To fully mitigate this with SLH, we need to do two core things:
1) Unfold loads from calls and jumps, allowing the loads to be post-load
hardened.
2) Force hardening of incoming registers even if we didn't end up
needing to harden the load itself.
The reason we need to do these two things is because hardening calls and
jumps from this particular variant is importantly different from
hardening against leak of secret data. Because the "bad" data here isn't
a secret, but in fact speculatively stored by the attacker, it may be
loaded from any address, regardless of whether it is read-only memory,
mapped memory, or a "hardened" address. The only 100% effective way to
harden these instructions is to harden the their operand itself. But to
the extent possible, we'd like to take advantage of all the other
hardening going on, we just need a fallback in case none of that
happened to cover the particular input to the control transfer
instruction.
For users of SLH, currently they are paing 2% to 6% performance overhead
for retpolines, but this mechanism is expected to be substantially
cheaper. However, it is worth reminding folks that this does not
mitigate all of the things retpolines do -- most notably, variant #2 is
not in *any way* mitigated by this technique. So users of SLH may still
want to enable retpolines, and the implementation is carefuly designed to
gracefully leverage retpolines to avoid the need for further hardening
here when they are enabled.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49663
llvm-svn: 337878
We generated a subtract for the power of 2 minus one then negated the result. The negate can be optimized away by swapping the subtract operands, but DAG combine doesn't know how to do that and we don't add any of the new nodes to the worklist anyway.
This patch makes use explicitly emit the swapped subtract.
llvm-svn: 337858
Use a left shift and 2 subtracts like we do for 30. Move this out from behind the slow lea check since it doesn't even use an LEA.
Use this for multiply by 14 as well.
llvm-svn: 337856
Just some gardening here.
Similar to how we moved call information into Candidates, this moves outlined
frame information into OutlinedFunction. This allows us to remove
TargetCostInfo entirely.
Anywhere where we returned a TargetCostInfo struct, we now return an
OutlinedFunction. This establishes OutlinedFunctions as more of a general
repeated sequence, and Candidates as occurrences of those repeated sequences.
llvm-svn: 337848
When building with LTO, builtin functions that are defined but whose calls have not been inserted yet, get internalized. The Global Dead Code Elimination phase in the new LTO implementation then removes these function definitions. Later optimizations add calls to those functions, and the linker then dies complaining that there are no definitions. This CL fixes the new LTO implementation to check if a function is builtin, and if so, to not internalize (and later DCE) the function. As part of this fix I needed to move the RuntimeLibcalls.{def,h} files from the CodeGen subidrectory to the IR subdirectory. I have updated all the files that accessed those two files to access their new location.
Fixes PR34169
Patch by Caroline Tice!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49434
llvm-svn: 337847
Summary:
Enabling this fully exposes a latent bug in the instruction folding: we
never update the register constraints for the register operands when
fusing a load into another operation. The fused form could, in theory,
have different register constraints on its operands. And in fact,
TCRETURNm* needs its memory operands to use tailcall compatible
registers.
I've updated the folding code to re-constrain all the registers after
they are mapped onto their new instruction.
However, we still can't enable folding in the general case from
TCRETURNr* to TCRETURNm* because doing so may require more registers to
be available during the tail call. If the call itself uses all but one
register, and the folded load would require both a base and index
register, there will not be enough registers to allocate the tail call.
It would be better, IMO, to teach the register allocator to *unfold*
TCRETURNm* when it runs out of registers (or specifically check the
number of registers available during the TCRETURNr*) but I'm not going
to try and solve that for now. Instead, I've just blocked the forward
folding from r -> m, leaving LLVM free to unfold from m -> r as that
doesn't introduce new register pressure constraints.
The down side is that I don't have anything that will directly exercise
this. Instead, I will be immediately using this it my SLH patch. =/
Still worse, without allowing the TCRETURNr* -> TCRETURNm* fold, I don't
have any tests that demonstrate the failure to update the memory operand
register constraints. This patch still seems correct, but I'm nervous
about the degree of testing due to this.
Suggestions?
Reviewers: craig.topper
Subscribers: sanjoy, mcrosier, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49717
llvm-svn: 337845
Before this, TCI contained all the call information for each Candidate.
This moves that information onto the Candidates. As a result, each Candidate
can now supply how it ought to be called. Thus, Candidates will be able to,
say, call the same function in cheaper ways when possible. This also removes
that information from TCI, since it's no longer used there.
A follow-up patch for the AArch64 outliner will demonstrate this.
llvm-svn: 337840
For the final DTPREL addition, rather than a lui/daddiu/daddu triple,
LLVM was erronously emitting a daddiu/daddiu pair, treating the %dtprel_hi
as if it were a %dtprel_lo, since Mips::Hi expands unshifted for Sym64.
Instead, use a new TlsHi node and, although unnecessary due to the exact
structure of the nodes emitted, use TlsHi for local exec too to prevent
future bugs. Also garbage-collect the unused TprelLo and TlsGd nodes,
and TprelHi since its functionality is provided by the new common TlsHi node.
Patch by James Clarke.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49259
llvm-svn: 337827
helper and restructure the post-load hardening to use this.
This isn't as trivial as I would have liked because the post-load
hardening used a trick that only works for it where it swapped in
a temporary register to the load rather than replacing anything.
However, there is a simple way to do this without that trick that allows
this to easily reuse a friendly API for hardening a value in a register.
That API will in turn be usable in subsequent patcehs.
This also techincally changes the position at which we insert the subreg
extraction for the predicate state, but that never resulted in an actual
instruction and so tests don't change at all.
llvm-svn: 337825
ARM Stage 2 builders have been suspiciously broken since the pass was
committed. Disabling to hopefully fix the bots and give me time to
debug.
llvm-svn: 337821
Summary:
We were marking G_EXTRACT operations unsupported if the output type
was larger than the input type. I don't see how this could ever actually
happen, so I dropped the constraint. Doing this makes it possible to
reuse the same legality code for G_INSERT.
Reviewers: arsenm
Reviewed By: arsenm
Subscribers: kzhuravl, wdng, nhaehnle, yaxunl, rovka, kristof.beyls, dstuttard, tpr, t-tye, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49600
llvm-svn: 337794
This code was really nasty, had several bugs in it originally, and
wasn't carrying its weight. While on Zen we have all 4 ports available
for SHRX, on all of the Intel parts with Agner's tables, SHRX can only
execute on 2 ports, giving it 1/2 the throughput of OR.
Worse, all too often this pattern required two SHRX instructions in
a chain, hurting the critical path by a lot.
Even if we end up needing to safe/restore EFLAGS, that is no longer so
bad. We pay for a uop to save the flag, but we very likely get fusion
when it is used by forming a test/jCC pair or something similar. In
practice, I don't expect the SHRX to be a significant savings here, so
I'd like to avoid the complex code required. We can always resurrect
this if/when someone has a specific performance issue addressed by it.
llvm-svn: 337781
This matches the structure used on X86 and ARM. This requires
a little bit of duplication of the parts that are equal in both
AArch64 COFF variants though.
Before SVN r335286, these classes didn't add anything that MCAsmInfoCOFF
didn't, but now they do.
This makes AArch64 match X86 in how comdat is used for float constants
for MinGW.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49637
llvm-svn: 337755
Don't try to generate large PIC code for non-ELF targets. Neither COFF
nor MachO have relocations for large position independent code, and
users have been using "large PIC" code models to JIT 64-bit code for a
while now. With this change, if they are generating ELF code, their
JITed code will truly be PIC, but if they target MachO or COFF, it will
contain 64-bit immediates that directly reference external symbols. For
a JIT, that's perfectly fine.
llvm-svn: 337740
Summary:
OpChain has subclasses, so add a virtual destructor.
This fixes an issue when deleting subclasses of OpChain (see MatchSMLAD() specifically) in r337701.
Reviewers: javed.absar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, SjoerdMeijer, samparker
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49681
llvm-svn: 337713
In preparing to allow ARMParallelDSP pass to parallelise more than
smlads, I've restructed some elements:
- The ParallelMAC struct has been renamed to BinOpChain.
- The BinOpChain struct holds two value lists: LHS and RHS, as well
as inheriting from the OpChain base class.
- The OpChain struct holds all the values of the represented chain
and has had the memory locations functionality inserted into it.
- ParallelMACList becomes OpChainList and it now holds pointers
instead of objects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49020
llvm-svn: 337701
Two minor issues: The new MCD SchedWrite name does not contain "Unit" like
all the others, so a check is needed. Also, print "LSU" instead of "LS".
Review: Ulrich Weigand
llvm-svn: 337700
Arm specific codegen prepare is implemented to perform type promotion
on icmp operands, which can enable the removal of uxtb and uxth
(unsigned extend) instructions. This is possible because performing
type promotion before ISel alleviates this duty from the DAG builder
which has to perform legalisation, but has a limited view on data
ranges.
The pass visits any instruction operand of an icmp and creates a
worklist to traverse the use-def tree to determine whether the values
can simply be promoted. Our concern is values in the registers
overflowing the narrow (i8, i16) data range, so instructions marked
with nuw can be promoted easily. For add and sub instructions, we are
able to use the parallel dsp instructions to operate on scalar data
types and avoid overflowing bits. Underflowing adds and subs are also
permitted when the result is only used by an unsigned icmp.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D48832
llvm-svn: 337687
Summary:
Pretty mechanical follow-up for D49196.
As microarchitecture.pdf notes, "20 AMD Ryzen pipeline",
"20.8 Register renaming and out-of-order schedulers":
The integer register file has 168 physical registers of 64 bits each.
The floating point register file has 160 registers of 128 bits each.
"20.14 Partial register access":
The processor always keeps the different parts of an integer register together.
...
An instruction that writes to part of a register will therefore have a false dependence
on any previous write to the same register or any part of it.
Reviewers: andreadb, courbet, RKSimon, craig.topper, GGanesh
Reviewed By: GGanesh
Subscribers: gbedwell, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49393
llvm-svn: 337676
a call, and then again as a return.
Also added a comment to try and explain better why we would be doing
what we're doing when hardening the (non-call) returns.
llvm-svn: 337673
This provides an overview of the algorithm used to harden specific
loads. It also brings this our terminology further in line with
hardening rather than checking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49583
llvm-svn: 337667
This seems to be a net improvement. There's still an issue under avx512f where we have a 512-bit vpaddd, but not vpmaddwd so we end up doing two 256-bit vpmaddwds and inserting the results before a 512-bit vpaddd. It might be better to do two 512-bits paddds with zeros in the upper half. Same number of instructions, but breaks a dependency.
llvm-svn: 337656
This is a follow-up to the rL335185. Those commit adds some WrapperPat
patterns for microMIPS target. But declaration of the WrapperPat class
is under the NotInMicroMips predicate and microMIPS patterns cannot be
selected because predicate (Subtarget->inMicroMipsMode()) &&
(!Subtarget->inMicroMipsMode()) is always false.
This change move out the WrapperPat class declaration from the
NotInMicroMips predicate and enables microMIPS WrapperPat patterns.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49533
llvm-svn: 337646
Ideally our ISD node types going into the isel table would have types consistent with their instruction domain. This prevents us having to duplicate patterns with different types for the same instruction.
Unfortunately, it seems our shuffle combining is currently relying on this a little remove some bitcasts. This seems to enable some switching between shufps and shufd. Hopefully there's some way we can address this in the combining.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49280
llvm-svn: 337590
CombineTo is most useful when you need to replace multiple results, avoid the worklist management, or you need to something else after the combine, etc. Otherwise you should be able to just return the new node and let DAGCombiner go through its usual worklist code.
All of the places changed in this patch look to be standard cases where we should be able to use the more stand behavior of just returning the new node.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49569
llvm-svn: 337589
We can safely use getConstant here as we're still lowering, which allows constant folding to kick in and simplify the vector shift codegen.
Noticed while working on D49562.
llvm-svn: 337578
Enable the optimization of operations on DPR and SPR via a feature instead
of checking the target.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49463
llvm-svn: 337575
This is an early step towards using SimplifyDemandedVectorElts for target shuffle combining - this merely moves the existing X86ISD::VBROADCAST simplification code to use the SimplifyDemandedVectorElts mechanism.
Adds X86TargetLowering::SimplifyDemandedVectorEltsForTargetNode to handle X86ISD::VBROADCAST - in time we can support all target shuffles (and other ops) here.
llvm-svn: 337547
As a consequence of recent discussions
(http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2018-May/123164.html), this patch
changes the SystemZ SchedModels so that the IssueWidth is 6, which is the
decoder capacity, and NumMicroOps become the number of decoder slots needed
per instruction.
In addition, the SchedWrite latencies now match the MachineInstructions
def-operand indexes, and ReadAdvances have been added on instructions with
one register operand and one memory operand.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D47008
llvm-svn: 337538