Summary:
For unnamed_addr functions we RAUW instead of only replacing direct callers. However, functions in which replacements were performed currently are not added back to the worklist, resulting in missed merging opportunities.
Fix this by calling removeUsers() prior to RAUW.
Reviewers: jfb, whitequark
Reviewed By: whitequark
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53262
llvm-svn: 346385
If all the edge counts for a function are zero, skip count population and
annotation, as nothing will happen. This can save some compile time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54212
llvm-svn: 346370
When partial unswitch operates on multiple conditions at once, .e.g:
if (Cond1 || Cond2 || NonInv) ...
it should infer (and replace) values for individual conditions only on one
side of unswitch and not another.
More precisely only these derivations hold true:
(Cond1 || Cond2) == false => Cond1 == Cond2 == false
(Cond1 && Cond2) == true => Cond1 == Cond2 == true
By the way we organize unswitching it means only replacing on "continue" blocks
and never on "unswitched" ones. Since trivial unswitch does not have "unswitched"
blocks it does not have this problem.
Fixes PR 39568.
Reviewers: chandlerc, asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54211
llvm-svn: 346350
If we simplify an instruction to itself, we do not need to add a user to
itself. For congruence classes with a defining expression, we already
use a similar logic.
Fixes PR38259.
Reviewers: davide, efriedma, mcrosier
Reviewed By: davide
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51168
llvm-svn: 346335
By morphing the instruction rather than deleting and creating a new one,
we retain fast-math-flags and potentially other metadata (profile info?).
llvm-svn: 346331
This adds the llvm-side support for post-inlining evaluation of the
__builtin_constant_p GCC intrinsic.
Also fixed SCCPSolver::visitCallSite to not blow up when seeing a call
to a function where canConstantFoldTo returns true, and one of the
arguments is a struct.
Updated from patch initially by Janusz Sobczak.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D4276
llvm-svn: 346322
The sibling fold for 'oge' --> 'ord' was already here,
but this half was missing.
The result of fabs() must be positive or nan, so asking
if the result is negative or nan is the same as asking
if the result is nan.
This is another step towards fixing:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
llvm-svn: 346321
The lowering for a call to eh_typeid_for changes when it's moved from
one function to another.
There are several proposals for fixing this issue in llvm.org/PR39545.
Until some solution is in place, do not allow CodeExtractor to extract
calls to eh_typeid_for, as that results in serious miscompilations.
llvm-svn: 346256
When CodeExtractor moves instructions to a new function, debug
intrinsics referring to those instructions within the parent function
become invalid.
This results in the same verifier failure which motivated r344545, about
function-local metadata being used in the wrong function.
llvm-svn: 346255
This is another part of solving PR39475:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
This might be enough to fix that particular issue, but as noted
with the FIXME, we're still dropping FMF on other folds around here.
llvm-svn: 346234
This patch makes LICM use `ICFLoopSafetyInfo` that is a smarter version
of LoopSafetyInfo that leverages power of Implicit Control Flow Tracking
to keep track of throwing instructions and give less pessimistic answers
to queries related to throws.
The ICFLoopSafetyInfo itself has been introduced in rL344601. This patch
enables it in LICM only.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50377
Reviewed By: apilipenko
llvm-svn: 346201
This reverts commit 2f425e9c7946b9d74e64ebbfa33c1caa36914402.
It seems that the check that we still should do the transform if we
know the result is constant is missing in this code. So the logic that
has been deleted by this change is still sometimes accidentally useful.
I revert the change to see what can be done about it. The motivating
case is the following:
@Y = global [400 x i16] zeroinitializer, align 1
define i16 @foo() {
entry:
br label %for.body
for.body: ; preds = %entry, %for.body
%i = phi i16 [ 0, %entry ], [ %inc, %for.body ]
%arrayidx = getelementptr inbounds [400 x i16], [400 x i16]* @Y, i16 0, i16 %i
store i16 0, i16* %arrayidx, align 1
%inc = add nuw nsw i16 %i, 1
%cmp = icmp ult i16 %inc, 400
br i1 %cmp, label %for.body, label %for.end
for.end: ; preds = %for.body
%inc.lcssa = phi i16 [ %inc, %for.body ]
ret i16 %inc.lcssa
}
We should be able to figure out that the result is constant, but the patch
breaks it.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51584
llvm-svn: 346198
This is NFCI for InstCombine because it calls InstSimplify,
so I left the tests for this transform there. As noted in
the code comment, we can allow this fold more often by using
FMF and/or value tracking.
llvm-svn: 346169
Summary:
This patch prevents MergeICmps to performn the transformation if the address operand GEP of the load instruction has a use outside of the load's parent block. Without this patch, compiler crashes with the given test case because the use of `%first.i` is still around when the basic block is erased from https://github.com/llvm-mirror/llvm/blob/master/lib/Transforms/Scalar/MergeICmps.cpp#L620. I think checking `isUsedOutsideOfBlock` with `GEP` is the original intention of the code, as the checking for `LoadI` is already performed in the same function.
This patch is incomplete though, as this makes the pass overly conservative and fails the test `tuple-four-int8.ll`. I believe what needs to be done is checking if GEP has a use outside of block that is not the part of "Comparisons" chain. Submit the patch as of now to prevent compiler crash.
Reviewers: courbet, trentxintong
Reviewed By: courbet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54089
llvm-svn: 346151
There was no coverage for at least 2 out of the 4 patterns because
of fcmp canonicalization. The tests and code should be moved to
InstSimplify in a follow-up because this doesn't create any new values.
llvm-svn: 346150
As stated in IEEE-754 and discussed in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38086
...the sign of zero does not affect any FP compare predicate.
Known regressions were fixed with:
rL346097 (D54001)
rL346143
The transform will help reduce pattern-matching complexity to solve:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
...as well as improve CSE and codegen (a zero constant is almost always
easier to produce than 0x80..00).
llvm-svn: 346147
It looks like we correctly removed edge cases with 0.0 from D50714,
but we were a bit conservative because getBinOpIdentity() doesn't
distinguish between +0.0 and -0.0 and 'nsz' is effectively always
true for fcmp (see discussion in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38086
Without this change, we would get regressions by canonicalizing
to +0.0 in all fcmp, and that's a step towards solving:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
llvm-svn: 346143
We currently seem to underestimate the size of functions with loops in them,
both in terms of absolute code size and in the difficulties of dealing with
such code. (Calls, for example, can be tail merged to further reduce
codesize). At -Oz, we can then increase code size by inlining small loops
multiple times.
This attempts to penalise functions with loops at -Oz by adding a CallPenalty
for each top level loop in the function. It uses LI (and hence DT) to calculate
the number of loops. As we are dealing with minsize, the inline threshold is
small and functions at this point should be relatively small, making the
construction of these cheap.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52716
llvm-svn: 346134
Using TargetTransformInfo allows the splitting pass to factor in the
code size cost of instructions as it decides whether or not outlining is
profitable.
This did not regress the overall amount of outlining seen on the handful
of internal frameworks I tested.
Thanks to Jun Bum Lim for suggesting this!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53835
llvm-svn: 346108
In PR39475:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39475
..we may fail to recognize/simplify fabs() in some cases because we do not
canonicalize fcmp with a -0.0 operand.
Adding that canonicalization can cause regressions on min/max FP tests, so
that's this patch: for the purpose of determining whether something is min/max,
let the value returned by the select determine how we treat a 0.0 operand in the fcmp.
This patch doesn't actually change the -0.0 to +0.0. It just changes the analysis, so
we don't fail to recognize equivalent min/max patterns that only differ in the
signbit of 0.0.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54001
llvm-svn: 346097
This patch gives the IR ComputeNumSignBits the same functionality as the
DAG version (the code is derived from the existing code).
This an extension of the single input shuffle analysis added with D53659.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53987
llvm-svn: 346071
Summary:
-mldst-motion creates a new phi node without any debug info. Use the merged debug location from the incoming stores to fix this.
Fixes PR38177. The test case here is (somewhat) simplified from:
```
struct S {
int foo;
void fn(int bar);
};
void S::fn(int bar) {
if (bar)
foo = 1;
else
foo = 0;
}
```
Reviewers: dblaikie, gbedwell, aprantl, vsk
Reviewed By: vsk
Subscribers: vsk, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D54019
llvm-svn: 346027
Model this function more closely after the BasicTTIImpl version, with
separate handling of loads and stores. For loads, the set of actually loaded
vectors is checked.
This makes it more readable and just slightly more accurate generally.
Review: Ulrich Weigand
https://reviews.llvm.org/D53071
llvm-svn: 345998
Fix PR39417, PR39497
The loop vectorizer may generate runtime SCEV checks for overflow and stride==1
cases, leading to execution of original scalar loop. The latter is forbidden
when optimizing for size. An assert introduced in r344743 triggered the above
PR's showing it does happen. This patch fixes this behavior by preventing
vectorization in such cases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53612
llvm-svn: 345959
Inner-loop only reductions require additional checks to make sure they
form a load-phi-store cycle across inner and outer loop. Otherwise the
reduction value is not properly preserved. This patch disables
interchanging such loops for now, as it causes miscompiles in some
cases and it seems to apply only for a tiny amount of loops. Across the
test-suite, SPEC2000 and SPEC2006, 61 instead of 62 loops are
interchange with inner loop reduction support disabled. With
-loop-interchange-threshold=-1000, 3256 instead of 3267.
See the discussion and history of D53027 for an outline of how such legality
checks could look like.
Reviewers: efriedma, mcrosier, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53027
llvm-svn: 345877
When rewriting loop exit values, IndVars considers this transform not profitable if
the loop instruction has a loop user which it believes cannot be optimized away.
In current implementation only calls that immediately use the instruction are considered
as such.
This patch extends the definition of "hard" users to any side-effecting instructions
(which usually cannot be optimized away from the loop) and also allows handling
of not just immediate users, but use chains.
Differentlai Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51584
Reviewed By: etherzhhb
llvm-svn: 345814
Unlike its legacy counterpart new pass manager's LoopUnrollPass does
not provide any means to select which flavors of unroll to run
(runtime, peeling, partial), relying on global defaults.
In some cases having ability to run a restricted LoopUnroll that
does more than LoopFullUnroll is needed.
Introduced LoopUnrollOptions to select optional unroll behaviors.
Added 'unroll<peeling>' to PassRegistry mainly for the sake of testing.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tejohnson
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53440
llvm-svn: 345723
For some unclear reason rewriteLoopExitValues considers recalculation
after the loop profitable if it has some "soft uses" outside the loop (i.e. any
use other than call and return), even if we have proved that it has a user inside
the loop which we think will not be optimized away.
There is no existing unit test that would explain this. This patch provides an
example when rematerialisation of exit value is not profitable but it passes
this check due to presence of a "soft use" outside the loop.
It makes no sense to recalculate value on exit if we are going to compute it
due to some irremovable within the loop. This patch disallows applying this
transform in the described situation.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51581
Reviewed By: etherzhhb
llvm-svn: 345708
optsize using masked wide loads
Under Opt for Size, the vectorizer does not vectorize interleave-groups that
have gaps at the end of the group (such as a loop that reads only the even
elements: a[2*i]) because that implies that we'll require a scalar epilogue
(which is not allowed under Opt for Size). This patch extends the support for
masked-interleave-groups (introduced by D53011 for conditional accesses) to
also cover the case of gaps in a group of loads; Targets that enable the
masked-interleave-group feature don't have to invalidate interleave-groups of
loads with gaps; they could now use masked wide-loads and shuffles (if that's
what the cost model selects).
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53668
llvm-svn: 345705
InstCombine features an optimization that essentially replaces:
if (a)
free(a)
into:
free(a)
Right now, this optimization is gated by the minsize attribute and therefore
we only perform it if we can prove that we are going to be able to eliminate
the branch and the destination block.
However when casts are involved the optimization would fail to apply, because
the optimization was not smart enough to realize that it is possible to also
move the casts away from the destination block and that is harmless to the
performance since they are just noops.
E.g.,
foo(int *a)
if (a)
free((char*)a)
Wouldn't be optimized by instcombine, because
- We would refuse to hoist the `bitcast i32* %a to i8` in the source block
- We would fail to see that `bitcast i32* %a to i8` and %a are the same value.
This patch fixes both these problems:
- It teaches the pattern matching of the comparison how to look
through casts.
- It checks that whether the additional instruction in the destination block
can be hoisted and are harmless performance-wise.
- It hoists all the code of the destination block in the source block.
Differential Revision: D53356
llvm-svn: 345644
shuffle (insert ?, Scalar, IndexC), V1, Mask --> insert V1, Scalar, IndexC'
The motivating case is at least a couple of steps away: I noticed that
SLPVectorizer does not analyze shuffles as well as sequences of
insert/extract in PR34724:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=34724
...so SLP may fail to vectorize when source code has shuffles to start
with or instcombine has converted insert/extract to shuffles.
Independent of that, an insertelement is always a simpler op for IR
analysis vs. a shuffle, so we should transform to insert when possible.
I don't think there's any codegen concern here - if a target can't insert
a scalar directly to some fixed element in a vector (x86?), then this
should get expanded to the insert+shuffle that we started with.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53507
llvm-svn: 345607
This commit is a combination of two patches:
* "Fix in getScalarizationOverhead()"
If target returns false in TTI.prefersVectorizedAddressing(), it means the
address registers will not need to be extracted. Therefore, there should
be no operands scalarization overhead for a load instruction.
* "Don't pass the instruction pointer from getMemInstScalarizationCost."
Since VF is always > 1, this is a cost query for an instruction in the
vectorized loop and it should not be evaluated within the scalar
context of the instruction.
Review: Ulrich Weigand, Hal Finkel
https://reviews.llvm.org/D52351https://reviews.llvm.org/D52417
llvm-svn: 345603
This fixes an assertion when constant folding a GEP when the part of the offset
was in i32 (IndexSize, as per DataLayout) and part in the i64 (PointerSize) in
the newly created test case.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52609
llvm-svn: 345585
It can be profitable to outline single-block cold regions because they
may be large.
Allow outlining single-block regions if they have over some threshold of
non-debug, non-terminator instructions. I chose 3 as the threshold after
experimenting with several internal frameworks.
In practice, reducing the threshold further did not give much
improvement, whereas increasing it resulted in substantial regressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53824
llvm-svn: 345524
As K has to dominate I, IIUC I's range metadata must be a subset of
K's. After Eli's recent clarification to the LangRef, loading a value
outside of the range is undefined behavior.
Therefore if I's range contains elements outside of K's range and we would load
one such value, K would cause undefined behavior.
In cases like hoisting/sinking, we still want the most generic range
over all code paths to/from the hoist/sink point. As suggested in the
patches related to D47339, I will refactor the handling of those
scenarios and try to decouple it from this function as follow up, once
we switched to a similar handling of metadata in most of
combineMetadata.
I updated some tests checking mostly the merging of metadata to keep the
metadata of to dominating load. The most interesting one is probably test8 in
test/Transforms/JumpThreading/thread-loads.ll. It contained a comment
about the alias metadata preventing us to eliminate the branch, but it
seem like the actual problem currently is that we merge the ranges of
both loads and cannot eliminate the icmp afterwards. With this patch, we
manage to eliminate the icmp, as the range of the first load excludes 8.
Reviewers: efriedma, nlopes, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51629
llvm-svn: 345456
The motivating case is from PR37549:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37549
The analysis improvement allows us to form a vector 'select' out of
bitwise logic (the use of ComputeNumSignBits was added at rL345149).
The smaller test shows another InstCombine improvement - we use
ComputeNumSignBits to add 'nsw' to shift-left. But the negative
test shows an example where we must not add 'nsw' - when the shuffle
mask contains undef elements.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53659
llvm-svn: 345429
Summary:
The visitICmp analysis function would record compares of pointer types, as size 0. This causes the resulting memcmp() call to have the wrong total size.
Found with "self-build" of clang/LLVM on Windows.
Reviewers: christylee, trentxintong, courbet
Reviewed By: courbet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53536
llvm-svn: 345413
This patch adds support of `llvm.experimental.guard` intrinsics to non-trivial
simple loop unswitching. These intrinsics represent implicit control flow which
has pretty much the same semantics as usual conditional branches. The
algorithm of dealing with them is following:
- Consider guards as unswitching candidates;
- If a guard is considered the best candidate, turn it into a branch;
- Apply normal unswitching algorithm on this branch.
The patch has no compile time effect on code that does not contain any guards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53744
Reviewed By: chandlerc
llvm-svn: 345387
Replacing BinaryOperator::isFNeg(...) to avoid regressions when we
separate FNeg from the FSub IR instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53650
llvm-svn: 345295
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
The current splitting algorithm works in three stages:
1) Identify cold blocks, then
2) Use forward/backward propagation to mark hot blocks, then
3) Grow a SESE region of blocks *outside* of the set of hot blocks and
start outlining.
While testing this pass on Apple internal frameworks I noticed that some
kinds of control flow (e.g. loops) are never outlined, even though they
unconditionally lead to / follow cold blocks. I noticed two other issues
related to how cold regions are identified:
- An inconsistency can arise in the internal state of the hotness
propagation stage, as a block may end up in both the ColdBlocks set
and the HotBlocks set. Further inconsistencies can arise as these sets
do not match what's in ProfileSummaryInfo.
- It isn't necessary to limit outlining to single-exit regions.
This patch teaches the splitting algorithm to identify maximal cold
regions and outline them. A maximal cold region is defined as the set of
blocks post-dominated by a cold sink block, or dominated by that sink
block. This approach can successfully outline loops in the cold path. As
a side benefit, it maintains less internal state than the current
approach.
Due to a limitation in CodeExtractor, blocks within the maximal cold
region which aren't dominated by a single entry point (a so-called "max
ancestor") are filtered out.
Results:
- X86 (LNT + -Os + externals): 134KB of TEXT were outlined compared to
47KB pre-patch, or a ~3x improvement. Did not see a performance impact
across two runs.
- AArch64 (LNT + -Os + externals + Apple-internal benchmarks): 149KB
of TEXT were outlined. Ditto re: performance impact.
- Outlining results improve marginally in the internal frameworks I
tested.
Follow-ups:
- Outline more than once per function, outline large single basic
blocks, & try to remove unconditional branches in outlined functions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53627
llvm-svn: 345209
Summary:
The current default of appending "_"+entry block label to the new
extracted cold function breaks demangling. Change the deliminator from
"_" to "." to enable demangling. Because the header block label will
be empty for release compile code, use "extracted" after the "." when
the label is empty.
Additionally, add a mechanism for the client to pass in an alternate
suffix applied after the ".", and have the hot cold split pass use
"cold."+Count, where the Count is currently 1 but can be used to
uniquely number multiple cold functions split out from the same function
with D53588.
Reviewers: sebpop, hiraditya
Subscribers: llvm-commits, erik.pilkington
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53534
llvm-svn: 345178
The original patch was committed here:
rL344609
...and reverted:
rL344612
...because it did not properly check/test data types before calling
ComputeNumSignBits().
The tests that caused bot failures for the previous commit are
over-reaching front-end tests that run the entire -O optimizer
pipeline:
Clang :: CodeGen/builtins-systemz-zvector.c
Clang :: CodeGen/builtins-systemz-zvector2.c
I've added a negative test here to ensure coverage for that case.
The new early exit check also tests the type of the 'B' parameter,
so we don't waste time on matching if either value is unsuitable.
Original commit message:
This is part of solving PR37549:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37549
The patterns shown here are a special case of something
that we already convert to select. Using ComputeNumSignBits()
catches that case (but not the more complicated motivating
patterns yet).
The backend has hooks/logic to convert back to logic ops
if that's better for the target.
llvm-svn: 345149
This work is to avoid regressions when we seperate FNeg from the FSub IR instruction.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53205
llvm-svn: 345146
masked-interleaving is enabled
Enable interleave-groups under fold-tail scenario for Opt for size compilation;
D50480 added support for vectorizing loops of arbitrary trip-count without a
remiander, which in turn makes everything in the loop conditional, including
interleave-groups if any. It therefore invalidated all interleave-groups
because we didn't have support for vectorizing predicated interleaved-groups
at the time. In the meantime, D53011 introduced this support, so we don't
have to invalidate interleave-groups when masked-interleaved support is enabled.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: hsaito
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53559
llvm-svn: 345115
LSR reassociates constants as unfolded offsets when the constants fit as
immediate add operands, which currently prevents such constants from being
combined later with loop invariant registers.
This patch modifies GenerateCombinations() to generate a second formula which
includes the unfolded offset in the combined loop-invariant register.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51861
llvm-svn: 345114
in the same round of SCC update.
In https://reviews.llvm.org/rL309784, inline history is added to prevent
infinite inlining across multiple run of inliner and SCC update, but the
history will only be kept when new SCC is actually generated during SCC update.
We found a case that SCC can be split and then merge into itself in the same
round of SCC update, so the same SCC will be pop out from UR.CWorklist and
then added back immediately, without any new SCC generated, that is why the
existing patch cannot catch the infinite inline case.
What the patch does is even if no new SCC is generated, if only the current
SCC appears in UR.CWorklist again, then keep the inline history.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52915
llvm-svn: 345103
Outlined code is cold by assumption, so it makes sense to optimize it
for minimal code size rather than performance.
After r344869 moved the splitting pass to the end of the IR pipeline,
this does not result in much of a code size reduction. This is probably
because a comparatively small number backend transforms make use of the
MinSize hint.
Running LNT on x86_64, I see that 33/1020 binaries shrink for a total of
919 bytes of TEXT reduction. I didn't measure a significant performance
impact.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53518
llvm-svn: 345072
Summary:
TryToShrinkGlobalToBoolean, when possible, will split store <value> + load <value> into store <bool> + select <bool ? value : 0>. This preserves DebugLoc during that pass.
Fixes PR37959. The test case here is the simplified .ll for:
```
static int foo;
int bar() {
foo = 5;
return foo;
}
```
Reviewers: dblaikie, gbedwell, aprantl
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, JDevlieghere, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53531
llvm-svn: 345046
We need to update this code before introducing an 'fneg' instruction in IR,
so we might as well kill off the integer neg/not queries too.
This is no-functional-change-intended for scalar code and most vector code.
For vectors, we can see that the 'match' API allows for undef elements in
constants, so we optimize those cases better.
Ideally, there would be a test for each code diff, but I don't see evidence
of that for the existing code, so I didn't try very hard to come up with new
vector tests for each code change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53533
llvm-svn: 345042
Expand arithmetic reduction to include mul/and/or/xor instructions.
This patch just fixes the SLPVectorizer - the effective reduction costs for AVX1+ are still poor (see rL344846) and will need to be improved before SLP sees this as a valid transform - but we can already see the effect on SSE2 tests.
This partially helps PR37731, but doesn't fix it all as it still falls over on the extraction/reduction order for some reason.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53473
llvm-svn: 345037
The transform is broken in 2 ways - it doesn't correct metadata (or even drop it),
and it doesn't work with vectors with undef elements.
llvm-svn: 345033
This pass could probably be modified slightly to allow
vector splat transforms for practically no cost, but
it only works on scalars for now. So the use of the
newer 'match' API should make no functional difference.
llvm-svn: 345030
I was trying to provide test coverage for D53533
with rL344964, but these don't do it...and I don't
think they add any value, so deleting.
llvm-svn: 344969
Also, regenerate checks for these files. We should do better
on the vector tests by using the PatternMatch API instead of
BinaryOperator::isNot/isNeg.
llvm-svn: 344964
Summary:
r344558 added some CHECK statements to split-cold-2.ll, but didn't add
any invocations of FileCheck. Add those here.
Reviewers: sebpop
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53505
llvm-svn: 344928
optimizing for size
LV is careful to respect -Os and not to create a scalar epilog in all cases
(runtime tests, trip-counts that require a remainder loop) except for peeling
due to gaps in interleave-groups. This patch fixes that; -Os will now have us
invalidate such interleave-groups and vectorize without an epilog.
The patch also removes a related FIXME comment that is now obsolete, and was
also inaccurate:
"FIXME: return None if loop requiresScalarEpilog(<MaxVF>), or look for a smaller
MaxVF that does not require a scalar epilog."
(requiresScalarEpilog() has nothing to do with VF).
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53420
llvm-svn: 344883
We miss arithmetic reduction for everything but Add/FAdd (I assume because that's the only cases which x86 has horizontal ops for.....)
llvm-svn: 344849
Summary:
Large GEP splitting, introduced in rL332015, uses a `DenseMap<AssertingVH<Value>, ...>`. This causes an assertion to fail (in debug builds) or undefined behaviour to occur (in release builds) when a value is RAUWed.
This manifested itself in the 7zip benchmark from the llvm test suite built on ARM with `-fstrict-vtable-pointers` enabled while RAUWing invariant group launders and splits in CodeGenPrepare.
This patch merges the large offsets of the argument and the result of an invariant.group strip/launder intrinsic before RAUWing.
Reviewers: Prazek, javed.absar, haicheng, efriedma
Reviewed By: Prazek, efriedma
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, hiraditya, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51936
llvm-svn: 344802
When optimizing for size, a loop is vectorized only if the resulting vector loop
completely replaces the original scalar loop. This holds if no runtime guards
are needed, if the original trip-count TC does not overflow, and if TC is a
known constant that is a multiple of the VF. The last two TC-related conditions
can be overcome by
1. rounding the trip-count of the vector loop up from TC to a multiple of VF;
2. masking the vector body under a newly introduced "if (i <= TC-1)" condition.
The patch allows loops with arbitrary trip counts to be vectorized under -Os,
subject to the existing cost model considerations. It also applies to loops with
small trip counts (under -O2) which are currently handled as if under -Os.
The patch does not handle loops with reductions, live-outs, or w/o a primary
induction variable, and disallows interleave groups.
(Third, final and main part of -)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50480
llvm-svn: 344743
New test added in r344658 requires asserts due to -stats.
While here, augment it to test new global variable importing
message as well.
llvm-svn: 344660
Summary:
Previously we could only get the number of imported functions and
variables from the backend. This adds stats to the thin link where the
importing is decided.
Reviewers: wmi
Subscribers: inglorion, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53337
llvm-svn: 344658
Summary:
Teach vectorizer about vectorizing variant value stores to uniform
address. Similar to rL343028, we do not allow vectorization if we have
multiple stores to the same uniform address.
Cost model already has the change for considering the extract
instruction cost for a variant value store. See added test cases for how
vectorization is done.
The patch also contains changes to the ORE messages.
Reviewers: Ayal, mkuper, anemet, hsaito
Subscribers: rkruppe, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52656
llvm-svn: 344613
I noticed a missing check and added it at rL344610, but there actually
are codegen tests that will fail without that, so I'll edit those and
submit a fixed patch with more tests.
llvm-svn: 344612
This is part of solving PR37549:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37549
The patterns shown here are a special case of something
that we already convert to select. Using ComputeNumSignBits()
catches that case (but not the more complicated motivating
patterns yet).
The backend has hooks/logic to convert back to logic ops
if that's better for the target.
llvm-svn: 344609
Landing this as a separate part of https://reviews.llvm.org/D50480, recording
current behavior more accurately, to clarify subsequent diff ([LV] Vectorizing
loops of arbitrary trip count without remainder under opt for size).
llvm-svn: 344606
Summary:
Extend LCSSA so that debug values outside loops are rewritten to
use the PHI nodes that the pass creates.
This fixes PR39019. In that case, we ran LCSSA on a loop that
was later on vectorized, which left us with something like this:
for.cond.cleanup:
%add.lcssa = phi i32 [ %add, %for.body ], [ %34, %middle.block ]
call void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata i32 %add,
ret i32 %add.lcssa
for.body:
%add =
[...]
br i1 %exitcond, label %for.cond.cleanup, label %for.body
which later resulted in the debug.value becoming undef when
removing the scalar loop (and the location would have probably
been wrong for the vectorized case otherwise).
As we now may need to query the AvailableVals cache more than
once for a basic block, FindAvailableVals() in SSAUpdaterImpl is
changed so that it updates the cache for blocks that we do not
create a PHI node for, regardless of the block's number of
predecessors. The debug value in the attached IR reproducer
would not be properly rewritten without this.
Debug values residing in blocks where we have not inserted any
PHI nodes are currently left as-is by this patch. I'm not sure
what should be done with those uses.
Reviewers: mattd, aprantl, vsk, probinson
Reviewed By: mattd, aprantl
Subscribers: jmorse, gbedwell, JDevlieghere, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53130
llvm-svn: 344589
Make the code of blockEndsInUnreachable to match the function
blockEndsInUnreachable in CodeGen/BranchFolding.cpp. I also have
added a note to make sure the code of this function will not be
modified unless the back-end version is also modified.
An early return before outlining has been added to avoid
outlining the full function body when the first block in the
function is marked cold.
The static analysis of cold code has been amended to avoid
marking the whole function as cold by back-propagation
because the back-propagation would mark blocks with return
statements as cold.
The patch adds debug statements to help discover these problems.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52904
llvm-svn: 344558
Variable updates within the outlined function are invisible to
debuggers. This could be improved by defining a DISubprogram for the
new function. For the moment, simply erase the debug intrinsics instead.
This fixes verifier failures about function-local metadata being used in
the wrong function, seen while testing the hot/cold splitting pass.
rdar://45142482
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53267
llvm-svn: 344545
This is part of the missing IR-level folding noted in D52912.
This should be ok as a canonicalization because the new shuffle mask can't
be any more complicated than the existing shuffle mask. If there's some
target where the shorter vector shuffle is not legal, it should just end up
expanding to something like the pair of shuffles that we're starting with here.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53037
llvm-svn: 344476
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
If you have the string /usr/bin, prior to this patch it would not
be quoted by our YAML serializer. But a string like C:\src would
be, due to the presence of a backslash. This makes the quoting
rules of basically every single file path different depending on
the path syntax (posix vs. Windows).
While technically not required by the YAML specification to quote
forward slashes, when the behavior of paths is inconsistent it
makes it difficult to portably write FileCheck lines that will
work with either kind of path.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53169
llvm-svn: 344359
This reverts commit b86c16ad8c97dadc1f529da72a5bb74e9eaed344.
This is being reverted because I forgot to write a useful
commit message, so I'm going to resubmit it with an actual
commit message.
llvm-svn: 344358
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
InstCombine keeps a worklist and assumes that optimizations don't
eraseFromParent() the instruction, which SimplifyLibCalls violates. This change
adds a new callback to SimplifyLibCalls to let clients specify their own hander
for erasing actions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52729
llvm-svn: 344251
This is the umin alternative to the umax code from rL344237. We use
DeMorgans law on the umax case to bring us to the same thing on umin,
but using countLeadingOnes, not countLeadingZeros.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53036
llvm-svn: 344239
Use the demanded bits of umax(A,C) to prove we can just use A so long as the
lowest non-zero bit of DemandMask is higher than the highest non-zero bit of C
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53033
llvm-svn: 344237
There is a transform that may replace `lshr (x+1), 1` with `lshr x, 1` in case
if it can prove that the result will be the same. However the initial instruction
might have an `exact` flag set, and it now should be dropped unless we prove
that it may hold. Incorrectly set `exact` attribute may then produce poison.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D53061
Reviewed By: sanjoy
llvm-svn: 344223
This can be used to preserve profiling information across codebase
changes that have widespread impact on mangled names, but across which
most profiling data should still be usable. For example, when switching
from libstdc++ to libc++, or from the old libstdc++ ABI to the new ABI,
or even from a 32-bit to a 64-bit build.
The user can provide a remapping file specifying parts of mangled names
that should be treated as equivalent (eg, std::__1 should be treated as
equivalent to std::__cxx11), and profile data will be treated as
applying to a particular function if its name is equivalent to the name
of a function in the profile data under the provided equivalences. See
the documentation change for a description of how this is configured.
Remapping is supported for both sample-based profiling and instruction
profiling. We do not support remapping indirect branch target
information, but all other profile data should be remapped
appropriately.
Support is only added for the new pass manager. If someone wants to also
add support for this for the old pass manager, doing so should be
straightforward.
This is the LLVM side of Clang r344199.
Reviewers: davidxl, tejohnson, dlj, erik.pilkington
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51249
llvm-svn: 344200
Adding a new reduction pattern match for vectorizing code similar to TSVC s3111:
for (int i = 0; i < N; i++)
if (a[i] > b)
sum += a[i];
This patch adds support for fadd, fsub and fmull, as well as multiple
branches and different (but compatible) instructions (ex. add+sub) in
different branches.
I have forwarded to trunk, added fsub and fmul functionality and
additional tests, but the credit goes to Takahiro, who did most of the
actual work.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49168
Patch by Takahiro Miyoshi <takahiro.miyoshi@linaro.org>.
llvm-svn: 344172
I've added a new test case that causes the scalarizer to try and use
dead-and-erased values - caused by the basic blocks not being in
domination order within the function. To fix this, instead of iterating
through the blocks in function order, I walk them in reverse post order.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52540
llvm-svn: 344128
There are places where we need to merge multiple LocationSizes of
different sizes into one, and get a sensible result.
There are other places where we want to optimize aggressively based on
the value of a LocationSizes (e.g. how can a store of four bytes be to
an area of storage that's only two bytes large?)
This patch makes LocationSize hold an 'imprecise' bit to note whether
the LocationSize can be treated as an upper-bound and lower-bound for
the size of a location, or just an upper-bound.
This concludes the series of patches leading up to this. The most recent
of which is r344108.
Fixes PR36228.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44748
llvm-svn: 344114
In the case of soft-fp (e.g. fp128 under wasm) the result of
getTypeLegalizationCost() can be an integer type even if the input is
floating point (See LegalizeTypeAction::TypeSoftenFloat).
Before calling isFabsFree() (which asserts if given a non-fp
type) we need to check that that result is fp. This is safe since in
fabs is certainly not free in the soft-fp case.
Fixes PR39168
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52899
llvm-svn: 344069
In r339636 the alias analysis rules were changed with regards to tail calls
and byval arguments. Previously, tail calls were assumed not to alias
allocas from the current frame. This has been updated, to not assume this
for arguments with the byval attribute.
This patch aligns TailCallElim with the new rule. Tail marking can now be
more aggressive and mark more calls as tails, e.g.:
define void @test() {
%f = alloca %struct.foo
call void @bar(%struct.foo* byval %f)
ret void
}
define void @test2(%struct.foo* byval %f) {
call void @bar(%struct.foo* byval %f)
ret void
}
define void @test3(%struct.foo* byval %f) {
%agg.tmp = alloca %struct.foo
%0 = bitcast %struct.foo* %agg.tmp to i8*
%1 = bitcast %struct.foo* %f to i8*
call void @llvm.memcpy.p0i8.p0i8.i64(i8* %0, i8* %1, i64 40, i1 false)
call void @bar(%struct.foo* byval %agg.tmp)
ret void
}
The problematic case where a byval parameter is captured by a call is still
handled correctly, and will not be marked as a tail (see PR7272).
llvm-svn: 343986
Summary:
If we have a symbol with (linkonce|weak)_odr linkage, we do not want
to dead strip it even it is not prevailing.
IR level (linkonce|weak)_odr symbol can become non-prevailing when we mix
ELF objects and IR objects where the (linkonce|weak)_odr symbol in the ELF
object is prevailing and the ones in the IR objects are not. Stripping
them will prevent us from doing optimizations with them.
By not dead stripping them, We will convert these symbols to
available_externally linkage as a result of non-prevailing and eventually
dropping them after inlining.
I modified cache-prevailing.ll to use linkonce linkage as it is
testing whether cache prevailing bit is effective or not, not
we should treat linkonce_odr alive or not
Reviewers: tejohnson, pcc
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, eraman, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52893
llvm-svn: 343970
Currently running the @insertelem_after_gep function below through the InstCombine pass with opt produces invalid IR.
Input:
```
define void @insertelem_after_gep(<16 x i32>* %t0) {
%t1 = bitcast <16 x i32>* %t0 to [16 x i32]*
%t2 = addrspacecast [16 x i32]* %t1 to [16 x i32] addrspace(3)*
%t3 = getelementptr inbounds [16 x i32], [16 x i32] addrspace(3)* %t2, i64 0, i64 0
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
call void @extern_vec_pointers_func(<16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> %t4)
ret void
}
```
Output:
```
define void @insertelem_after_gep(<16 x i32>* %t0) {
%t3 = getelementptr inbounds <16 x i32>, <16 x i32>* %t0, i64 0, i64 0
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
call void @my_extern_func(<16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> %t4)
ret void
}
```
Which although causes no complaints when produced, isn't valid IR as the insertelement use of the %t3 GEP expects an address space.
```
opt: /tmp/bad.ll:52:73: error: '%t3' defined with type 'i32*' but expected 'i32 addrspace(3)*'
%t4 = insertelement <16 x i32 addrspace(3)*> undef, i32 addrspace(3)* %t3, i32 0
```
I've fixed this by adding an addrspacecast after the GEP in the InstCombine pass, and including a check for this type mismatch to the verifier.
Reviewers: spatel, lebedev.ri
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52294
llvm-svn: 343956
At the point when we perform `emitTransformedIndex`, we have a broken IR (in
particular, we have Phis for which not every incoming value is properly set). On
such IR, it is illegal to create SCEV expressions, because their internal
simplification process may try to prove some predicates and break when it
stumbles across some broken IR.
The only purpose of using SCEV in this particular place is attempt to simplify
the generated code slightly. It seems that the result isn't worth it, because
some trivial cases (like addition of zero and multiplication by 1) can be
handled separately if needed, but more generally InstCombine is able to achieve
the goals we want to achieve by using SCEV.
This patch fixes a functional crash described in PR39160, and as side-effect it
also generates a bit smarter code in some simple cases. It also may cause some
optimality loss (i.e. we will now generate `mul` by power of `2` instead of
shift etc), but there is nothing what InstCombine could not handle later. In
case of dire need, we can support more trivial cases just in place.
Note that this patch only fixes one particular case of the general problem that
LV misuses SCEV, attempting to create SCEVs or prove predicates on invalid IR.
The general solution, however, seems complex enough.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52881
Reviewed By: fhahn, hsaito
llvm-svn: 343954
This patch fixes PR39099.
When strided loads are predicated, each of them will form an interleaved-group
(with gaps). However, subsequent stages of vectorization (planning and
transformation) assume that if a load is part of an Interleave-Group it is not
predicated, resulting in wrong code - unmasked wide loads are created.
The Interleaving Analysis does take care not to have conditional interleave
groups of size > 1, but until we extend the planning and transformation stages
to support masked-interleave-groups we should also avoid having them for
size == 1.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, dcaballe, fhahn
Reviewed By: Ayal
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52682
llvm-svn: 343931
We established the (unfortunately complicated) rules for UB/poison
propagation with vector ops in:
D48893
D48987
D49047
It's clear from the affected tests that we are potentially creating
poison where none existed before the transforms. For add/sub/mul,
the answer is simple: just drop the flags because the extra undef
vector lanes are generally more valuable for analysis and codegen.
llvm-svn: 343819
This is a follow-up to rL343482 / D52439.
This was a pattern that initially caused the commit to be reverted because
the transform requires a bitcast as shown here.
llvm-svn: 343794
We're a long way from D50992 and D51553, but this is where we have to start.
We weren't back-propagating undefs into binop constant values for anything but
add/sub/mul/and/or/xor.
This is likely because we have to be careful about not introducing UB/poison
with div/rem/shift. But I suspect we already are getting the poison part wrong
for add/sub/mul (although it may not be possible to expose the bug currently
because we use SimplifyDemandedVectorElts from a limited set of opcodes).
See the discussion/implementation from D48987 and D49047.
This patch just enables functionality for FP ops because those do not have
UB/poison potential.
llvm-svn: 343727
Modified the testcases to use both pass managers
Use single commandline flag for both pass managers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52708
Reviewers: sebpop, tejohnson, brzycki, SirishP
Reviewed By: tejohnson, brzycki
llvm-svn: 343662
These are candidates for the same fold that was implemented in
D52439, but FP types require bitcasting (and that changes the
extra uses profitability calculation).
llvm-svn: 343587
This is an attempt to get out of a local-minimum that instcombine currently
gets stuck in. We essentially combine two optimisations at once, ~a - ~b = b-a
and min(~a, ~b) = ~max(a, b), only doing the transform if the result is at
least neutral. This involves using IsFreeToInvert, which has been expanded a
little to include selects that can be easily inverted.
This is trying to fix PR35875, using the ideas from Sanjay. It is a large
improvement to one of our rgb to cmy kernels.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52177
llvm-svn: 343569
Summary:
This is a continuation of the fix for PR34627 "InstCombine assertion at vector gep/icmp folding". (I just realized bugpoint had fuzzed the original test for me, so I had fixed another trigger of the same assert in adjacent code in InstCombine.)
This patch avoids optimizing an icmp (to look only at the base pointers) when the resulting icmp would have a different type.
The patch adds a testcase and also cleans up and shrinks the pre-existing test for the adjacent assert trigger.
Reviewers: lebedev.ri, majnemer, spatel
Reviewed By: lebedev.ri
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52494
llvm-svn: 343486
This was originally committed at rL343407, but reverted at
rL343458 because it crashed trying to handle a case where
the destination type is FP. This version of the patch adds
a check for that possibility. Tests added at rL343480.
Original commit message:
This transform is requested for the backend in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39016
...but I figured it was worth doing in IR too, and it's probably
easier to implement here, so that's this patch.
In the simplest case, we are just truncating a scalar value. If the
extract index doesn't correspond to the LSBs of the scalar, then we
have to shift-right before the truncate. Endian-ness makes this tricky,
but hopefully the ASCII-art helps visualize the transform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52439
llvm-svn: 343482
The first attempt at this transform:
rL343407
...was reverted:
rL343458
...because it did not handle the case where we bitcast to FP.
The patch was already limited to avoid the case where we
bitcast from FP, but we might want to transform that too.
llvm-svn: 343480
This caused Chromium builds to fail with "Illegal Trunc" assertion.
See https://crbug.com/890723 for repro.
> This transform is requested for the backend in:
> https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39016
> ...but I figured it was worth doing in IR too, and it's probably
> easier to implement here, so that's this patch.
>
> In the simplest case, we are just truncating a scalar value. If the
> extract index doesn't correspond to the LSBs of the scalar, then we
> have to shift-right before the truncate. Endian-ness makes this tricky,
> but hopefully the ASCII-art helps visualize the transform.
>
> Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52439
llvm-svn: 343458
This transform is requested for the backend in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=39016
...but I figured it was worth doing in IR too, and it's probably
easier to implement here, so that's this patch.
In the simplest case, we are just truncating a scalar value. If the
extract index doesn't correspond to the LSBs of the scalar, then we
have to shift-right before the truncate. Endian-ness makes this tricky,
but hopefully the ASCII-art helps visualize the transform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52439
llvm-svn: 343407
As noted in post-commit comments for D52548, the limitation on
increasing vector length can be applied by opcode.
As a first step, this patch only allows insertelement to be
widened because that has no logical downsides for IR and has
little risk of pessimizing codegen.
This may cause PR39132 to go into hiding during a full compile,
but that bug is not fixed.
llvm-svn: 343406
InstCombine would propagate shufflevector insts that had wider output vectors onto
predecessors, which would sometimes push undef's onto the divisor of a div/rem and
result in bad codegen.
I've fixed this by just banning propagating shufflevector back if the result of
the shufflevector is wider than the input vectors.
Patch by: @sheredom (Neil Henning)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52548
llvm-svn: 343329
These are the updated baseline tests for D52548 -
I'm putting the tests next to the tests where the transform
functions as expected, so we can see the intended/unintended
consequences.
Patch by: @sheredom (Neil Henning)
llvm-svn: 343328
This shouldn't really happen in practice I hope, but we tried to handle other constant cases. We missed this one because we checked for ConstantVector without realizing that zero becomes ConstantAggregateZero instead.
So instead just check for Constant and use getAggregateElement which will do the dirty work for us.
llvm-svn: 343270
When C is not zero and infinites are not allowed (C / X) > 0 is a sign
test. Depending on the sign of C, the predicate must be swapped.
E.g.:
foo(double X) {
if ((-2.0 / X) <= 0) ...
}
=>
foo(double X) {
if (X >= 0) ...
}
Patch by: @marels (Martin Elshuber)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51942
llvm-svn: 343228
This patch extends LoopInterchange to move LCSSA to the right place
after interchanging. This is required for LoopInterchange to become a
function pass.
An alternative to the manual moving of the PHIs, we could also re-form
the LCSSA phis for a set of interchanged loops, but that's more
expensive.
Reviewers: efriedma, mcrosier, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52154
llvm-svn: 343132
Adding NonNull as attributes to returned pointers has the unfortunate side
effect of disabling tail calls. This patch ignores the NonNull attribute when
we decide whether to tail merge, in the same way that we ignore the NoAlias
attribute, as it has no affect on the call sequence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52238
llvm-svn: 343091
If the fsub in this pattern was replaced by an actual fneg
instruction, we would need to add a fold to recognize that
because fneg would not be a binop.
llvm-svn: 343041
Summary:
We are overly conservative in loop vectorizer with respect to stores to loop
invariant addresses.
More details in https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38546
This is the first part of the fix where we start with vectorizing loop invariant
values to loop invariant addresses.
This also includes changes to ORE for stores to invariant address.
Reviewers: anemet, Ayal, mkuper, mssimpso
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50665
llvm-svn: 343028
Summary:
In D49565/r337503, the type id record writing was fixed so that only
referenced type ids were emitted into each per-module index for ThinLTO
distributed builds. However, this still left an efficiency issue: each
per-module index checked all type ids for membership in the referenced
set, yielding O(M*N) performance (M indexes and N type ids).
Change the TypeIdMap in the summary to be indexed by GUID, to facilitate
correlating with type identifier GUIDs referenced in the function
summary TypeIdInfo structures. This allowed simplifying other
places where a map from type id GUID to type id map entry was previously
being used to aid this correlation.
Also fix AsmWriter code to handle the rare case of type id GUID
collision.
For a large internal application, this reduced the thin link time by
almost 15%.
Reviewers: pcc, vitalybuka
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, inglorion, steven_wu, dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51330
llvm-svn: 343021
The motivating case from:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=33026
...has no shuffles now. This kind of pattern may occur during
vectorization when targets have lumpy ISAs like SSE/AVX.
llvm-svn: 342988
In this patch, I'm adding an extra check to the Latch's terminator in llvm::UnrollRuntimeLoopRemainder,
similar to how it is already done in the llvm::UnrollLoop.
The compiler would crash if this function is called with a malformed loop.
Patch by Rodrigo Caetano Rocha!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51486
llvm-svn: 342958
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
DeadArgElim pass marks unused function arguments as ‘undef’ without updating
existing dbg.values referring to it. As a consequence the debug info
metadata in the final executable was wrong.
Patch by Djordje Todorovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51968
llvm-svn: 342871
Follow-up to rL342324 (D52059):
Missing optimizations with blendv are shown in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38814
This is an easier and more powerful solution than adding pattern matching for a few
special cases in the backend. The potential danger with this transform in IR is that
the condition value can get separated from the select, and the backend might not be
able to make a blendv out of it again.
llvm-svn: 342806
Summary: This restores the combine that was reverted in r341883. The infinite loop from the failing test no longer occurs due to changes from r342163.
Reviewers: spatel, dmgreen
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52070
llvm-svn: 342797
Support for vectorizing loops with secondary floating-point induction
variables was added in r276554. A primary integer IV is still required
for vectorization to be done. If an FP IV was found, but no integer IV
was found at all (primary or secondary), the attempt to vectorize still
went forward, causing a compiler-crash. This change abandons that
attempt when no integer IV is found. (Vectorizing FP-only cases like
this, rather than bailing out, is discussed as possible future work
in D52327.)
See PR38800 for more information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52327
llvm-svn: 342786
Summary:
his code was in CGDecl.cpp and really belongs in LLVM's isBytewiseValue. Teach isBytewiseValue the tricks clang's isRepeatedBytePattern had, including merging undef properly, and recursing on more types.
clang part of this patch: D51752
Subscribers: dexonsmith, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51751
llvm-svn: 342709
Summary:
rL323619 marks functions that are calling va_end as not viable for
inlining. This patch reverses that since this va_end doesn't need
access to the vriadic arguments list that are saved on the stack, only
va_start does.
Reviewers: efriedma, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: eraman, haicheng, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52067
llvm-svn: 342675
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Made getName helper to return std::string (instead of StringRef initially) to fix
asan builtbot failures on CGSCC tests.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342664
Summary:
Before removing basic blocks that ipsccp has considered as dead
all uses of the basic block label must be removed. That is done
by calling ConstantFoldTerminator on the users. An exception
is when the branch condition is an undef value. In such
scenarios ipsccp is using some internal assumptions regarding
which edge in the control flow that should remain, while
ConstantFoldTerminator don't know how to fold the terminator.
The problem addressed here is related to ConstantFoldTerminator's
ability to rewrite a 'switch' into a conditional 'br'. In such
situations ConstantFoldTerminator returns true indicating that
the terminator has been rewritten. However, ipsccp treated the
true value as if the edge to the dead basic block had been
removed. So the code for resolving an undef branch condition
did not trigger, and we ended up with assertion that there were
uses remaining when deleting the basic block.
The solution is to resolve indeterminate branches before the
call to ConstantFoldTerminator.
Reviewers: efriedma, fhahn, davide
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52232
llvm-svn: 342632
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342597
Summary:
Same as to D52146.
`((1 << y)+(-1))` is simply non-canoniacal version of `~(-1 << y)`: https://rise4fun.com/Alive/0vl
We can not canonicalize it due to the extra uses. But we can handle it here.
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52147
llvm-svn: 342547
Summary:
Two folds are happening here:
1. https://rise4fun.com/Alive/oaFX
2. And then `foldICmpWithHighBitMask()` (D52001): https://rise4fun.com/Alive/wsP4
This change doesn't just add the handling for eq/ne predicates,
it actually builds upon the previous `foldICmpWithLowBitMaskedVal()` work,
so **all** the 16 fold variants* are immediately supported.
I'm indeed only testing these two predicates.
I do not feel like re-proving all 16 folds*, because they were already proven
for the general case of constant with all-ones in low bits. So as long as
the mask produces all-ones in low bits, i'm pretty sure the fold is valid.
But required, i can re-prove, let me know.
* eq/ne are commutative - 4 folds; ult/ule/ugt/uge - are not commutative (the commuted variant is InstSimplified), 4 folds; slt/sle/sgt/sge are not commutative - 4 folds. 12 folds in total.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38123https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38708
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52146
llvm-svn: 342546
Summary:
Pass Execution Instrumentation interface enables customizable instrumentation
of pass execution, as per "RFC: Pass Execution Instrumentation interface"
posted 06/07/2018 on llvm-dev@
The intent is to provide a common machinery to implement all
the pass-execution-debugging features like print-before/after,
opt-bisect, time-passes etc.
Here we get a basic implementation consisting of:
* PassInstrumentationCallbacks class that handles registration of callbacks
and access to them.
* PassInstrumentation class that handles instrumentation-point interfaces
that call into PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* Callbacks accept StringRef which is just a name of the Pass right now.
There were some ideas to pass an opaque wrapper for the pointer to pass instance,
however it appears that pointer does not actually identify the instance
(adaptors and managers might have the same address with the pass they govern).
Hence it was decided to go simple for now and then later decide on what the proper
mental model of identifying a "pass in a phase of pipeline" is.
* Callbacks accept llvm::Any serving as a wrapper for const IRUnit*, to remove direct dependencies
on different IRUnits (e.g. Analyses).
* PassInstrumentationAnalysis analysis is explicitly requested from PassManager through
usual AnalysisManager::getResult. All pass managers were updated to run that
to get PassInstrumentation object for instrumentation calls.
* Using tuples/index_sequence getAnalysisResult helper to extract generic AnalysisManager's extra
args out of a generic PassManager's extra args. This is the only way I was able to explicitly
run getResult for PassInstrumentationAnalysis out of a generic code like PassManager::run or
RepeatedPass::run.
TODO: Upon lengthy discussions we agreed to accept this as an initial implementation
and then get rid of getAnalysisResult by improving RepeatedPass implementation.
* PassBuilder takes PassInstrumentationCallbacks object to pass it further into
PassInstrumentationAnalysis. Callbacks registration should be performed directly
through PassInstrumentationCallbacks.
* new-pm tests updated to account for PassInstrumentationAnalysis being run
* Added PassInstrumentation tests to PassBuilderCallbacks unit tests.
Other unit tests updated with registration of the now-required PassInstrumentationAnalysis.
Reviewers: chandlerc, philip.pfaffe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47858
llvm-svn: 342544
This is still unsafe for long double, we will transform things into tanl
even if tanl is for another type. But that's for someone else to fix.
llvm-svn: 342542
A piece of logic in rewriteLoopExitValues has a weird check on number of
users which allowed an unprofitable transform in case if an instruction has
more than 6 users.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51404
Reviewed By: etherzhhb
llvm-svn: 342444
This was checking the hardcoded address space 0 for the stack.
Additionally, this should be checking for legality with
the adjusted alignment, so defer the alignment check.
Also try to split if the unaligned access isn't allowed.
llvm-svn: 342442
Summary:
EarlyCSE can make IR changes that will leave MemorySSA with accesses claiming to be optimized, but for which a subsequent MemorySSA run will yield a different optimized result.
Due to relying on AA queries, we can't fix this in general, unless we recompute MemorySSA.
Adding some tests to track this and a basic verify for future potential failures.
Reviewers: george.burgess.iv, gberry
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51960
llvm-svn: 342422
Summary:
If the sub doesn't overflow in the original type we can move it above the sext/zext.
This is similar to what we do for add. The overflow checking for sub is currently weaker than add, so the test cases are constructed for what is supported.
Reviewers: spatel
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52075
llvm-svn: 342335
Missing optimizations with blendv are shown in:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38814
If this works, it's an easier and more powerful solution than adding pattern matching
for a few special cases in the backend. The potential danger with this transform in IR
is that the condition value can get separated from the select, and the backend might
not be able to make a blendv out of it again. I don't think that's too likely, but
I've kept this patch minimal with a 'TODO', so we can test that theory in the wild
before expanding the transform.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52059
llvm-svn: 342324
CodeGenPrepare has a transform that sinks {lshr, trunc} pairs to make it
easier for the backend to emit fancy extract-bits instructions (e.g UBFX).
Teach it to preserve debug locations and salvage debug values.
llvm-svn: 342319
Similar to rL342278:
The test diffs are all cosmetic due to the change in
value naming, but I'm including that to show that the
new code does perform these folds rather than something
else in instcombine.
D52075 should be able to use this code too rather than
duplicating all of the logic.
llvm-svn: 342292
The patch saves a function offset table which maps function name index to the
offset of its function profile to the start of the binary profile. By using
the function offset table, for those function profiles which will not be used
when compiling a module, the profile reader does't have to read them. For
profile size around 10~20M, it saves ~10% compile time.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51863
llvm-svn: 342283
The test diffs are all cosmetic due to the change in
value naming, but I'm including that to show that the
new code does perform these folds rather than something
else in instcombine.
llvm-svn: 342278
The test used to fail with an invalid phi node: the two predecessors were outlined
and the SSA representation was left invalid. The patch adds the exit block to the
cold region.
llvm-svn: 342277
The folds are not limited to zext, and the real goal is width
reduction of a math op. D52075 is proposing to extend this to
subtracts.
llvm-svn: 342254
There was a bug in a check line regex that could cause the test to fail
with a naming difference. The auto-gen script seems to work as expected now.
llvm-svn: 342249
As preparation for LoopInterchange becoming a loop pass, it needs to
preserve ScalarEvolution. Even though interchanging should not change
the trip count of the loop, it modifies loop entry, latch and exit
blocks.
I added -verify-scev to some loop interchange tests, but the verification does
not catch problems caused by missing invalidation of SE in loop interchange, as
the trip counts themselves do not change. So there might be potential to
make the SE verification covering more stuff in the future.
Reviewers: mkazantsev, efriedma, karthikthecool
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52026
llvm-svn: 342209
Summary:
[VPlan] Implement vector code generation support for simple outer loops.
Context: Patch Series #1 for outer loop vectorization support in LV using VPlan. (RFC: http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119523.html).
This patch introduces vector code generation support for simple outer loops that are currently supported in the VPlanNativePath. Changes here essentially do the following:
- force vector code generation using explicit vectorize_width
- add conservative early returns in cost model and other places for VPlanNativePath
- add code for setting up outer loop inductions
- support for widening non-induction PHIs that can result from inner loops and uniform conditional branches
- support for generating uniform inner branches
We plan to add a handful C outer loop executable tests once the initial code generation support is committed. This patch is expected to be NFC for the inner loop vectorizer path. Since we are moving in the direction of supporting outer loop vectorization in LV, it may also be time to rename classes such as InnerLoopVectorizer.
Reviewers: fhahn, rengolin, hsaito, dcaballe, mkuper, hfinkel, Ayal
Reviewed By: fhahn, hsaito
Subscribers: dmgreen, bollu, tschuett, rkruppe, rogfer01, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50820
llvm-svn: 342197
Summary:
It is sometimes important to check that some newly-computed value
is non-negative and only n bits wide (where n is a variable.)
There are many ways to check that:
https://godbolt.org/z/o4RB8D
The last variant seems best?
(I'm sure there are some other variations i haven't thought of..)
More complicated, canonical pattern:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/uhA
We do need to have two `switch()`'es like this,
to not mismatch the swappable predicates.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38708
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D52001
llvm-svn: 342173
Came up in https://reviews.llvm.org/D52001#1233827
While we don't do a good job here, we at least want to make
sure that we don't have any inf-loops.
llvm-svn: 342171
This allows the xor to be removed completely.
This might help with recomitting r341674, but seems good regardless.
Coincidentally fixes PR38915.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51964
llvm-svn: 342163
Summary:
It is sometimes important to check that some newly-computed value
is non-negative and only `n` bits wide (where `n` is a variable.)
There are **many** ways to check that:
https://godbolt.org/z/o4RB8D
The last variant seems best?
(I'm sure there are some other variations i haven't thought of..)
Let's handle the second variant first, since it is much simpler.
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/LYjYhttps://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38708
Reviewers: spatel, craig.topper, RKSimon
Reviewed By: spatel
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51985
llvm-svn: 342067
The output of splitLargeGEPOffsets does not appear to be deterministic because
of the way that we iterate over a DenseMap. I've changed it to a MapVector for
consistent output.
The test here isn't particularly great, only showing a consmetic difference in
output. The original reproducer is much larger but show a diffierence in
instruction ordering, leading to different codegen.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51851
llvm-svn: 342043
Previously the alignment on the newly created switch table data was not set,
meaning that DataLayout::getPreferredAlignment was free to overalign it to 16
bytes. This causes unnecessary code bloat.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51800
llvm-svn: 342039
Move the 2 classes out of LoopVectorize.cpp to make it easier to re-use
them for VPlan outside LoopVectorize.cpp
Reviewers: Ayal, mssimpso, rengolin, dcaballe, mkuper, hsaito, hfinkel, xbolva00
Reviewed By: rengolin, xbolva00
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49488
llvm-svn: 342027
Name: op_ugt_sum
%a = add i8 %x, %y
%r = icmp ugt i8 %x, %a
=>
%notx = xor i8 %x, -1
%r = icmp ugt i8 %y, %notx
Name: sum_ult_op
%a = add i8 %x, %y
%r = icmp ult i8 %a, %x
=>
%notx = xor i8 %x, -1
%r = icmp ugt i8 %y, %notx
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/ZRxI
AFAICT, this doesn't interfere with any add-saturation patterns
because those have >1 use for the 'add'. But this should be
better for IR analysis and codegen in the basic cases.
This is another fold inspired by PR14613:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14613
llvm-svn: 342004
These are the folds in Alive;
Name: xor_ult
Pre: isPowerOf2(-C1)
%xor = xor i8 %x, C1
%r = icmp ult i8 %xor, C1
=>
%r = icmp ugt i8 %x, ~C1
Name: xor_ugt
Pre: isPowerOf2(C1+1)
%xor = xor i8 %x, C1
%r = icmp ugt i8 %xor, C1
=>
%r = icmp ugt i8 %x, C1
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/Vty
The ugt case in its simplest form was already handled by DemandedBits,
but that's not ideal as shown in the multi-use test.
I'm not sure if these are all of the symmetrical folds, but I adjusted
the existing code for one of the folds to try to show the similarities.
There's no obvious connection, but this is another preliminary step
for PR14613...
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14613
llvm-svn: 341997
Summary:
Update MemorySSA in old LoopUnswitch pass.
Actual dependency and update is disabled by default.
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45301
llvm-svn: 341984
I noticed that we were not back-propagating undef lanes to shuffle masks when we have a
shuffle that reduces the vector width. This is part of investigating/solving PR38691:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38691
The DAG equivalent was proposed with:
D51696
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51433
llvm-svn: 341981
For vectors, getPrimitiveSizeInBits returns the full vector width. This code should using the element size for vectors. This could be fixed by calling getScalarSizeInBits, but its even easier to just get it from the APInt we're checking.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51938
llvm-svn: 341971
There are 2 cases when we create PHI nodes:
* For the result of the call that was duplicated in the split blocks.
Those PHI nodes should have the debug location of the call.
* For values produced before the call. Those instructions need to be
duplicated in the split blocks and the PHI nodes should have the
debug locations of those instructions.
Fixes PR37962.
Reviewers: junbuml, gbedwell, vsk
Reviewed By: junbuml
Tags: #debug-info
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51919
llvm-svn: 341970
Fix for https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38807, which occurred
while compiling SemaTemplateInstantiate.cpp with clang and GVNHoist
enabled. In the following example:
1=def(entry)
/ \
2=def(1) 4=def(1)
3=def(2) 5=def(4)
When removing the MemoryDef 2=def(1) from its basic block, and just
before adding it to the end of the parent basic block, we first
replace all its uses with the defining memory access:
3=def(2) -> 3=def(1)
Then we call insertDef for adding 2=def(1) to the parent basic block,
where we replace the uses of 1=def(entry) with 2=def(1). Doing so we
create a self reference:
2=def(1) -> 2=def(2) (bad)
3=def(1) -> 3=def(2) (ok)
4=def(1) -> 4=def(2) (ok)
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51801
llvm-svn: 341947
The presence of readnone and an access range attribute (argmemonly,
inaccessiblememonly, inaccessiblemem_or_argmemonly) is considered an
error by the verifier. This seems strict but also not wrong. This
patch makes sure function attribute detection will remove all access
range attributes for readnone functions.
llvm-svn: 341927
If the multiply won't overflow in the original type we can use a smaller mul and sign extend afterwards. We don't currently support this for vector constants.
llvm-svn: 341884
Summary:
Revert min/max changes in rL341674 dues to high compile times causing timeouts (PR38897).
Checking in to unblock failing builds. Patch available for post-commit review and re-revert once resolved.
Working on a smaller reproducer for PR38897.
Reviewers: craig.topper, spatel
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51897
llvm-svn: 341883
LSR reassociates small constants that fit into add immediate operands as
unfolded offset. Since unfolded offset is not combined with loop-invariant
registers, LSR does not consider solutions that bump invariant registers by
these constants outside the loop.
llvm-svn: 341835
There were two combines not covered by the check before now, neither of which
actually differed from normal in the benefit analysis.
The most recent seems to be because it was just added at the top of the
function (naturally). The older is from way back in 2008 (r46687) when we just
didn't put those checks in so routinely, and has been diligently maintained
since.
llvm-svn: 341831
When GVN propagates an equality by replacing one value with another it also
needs to invalidate the cached information for the value being replaced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51218
llvm-svn: 341820
Currently, `sinkUnusedInvariants` does not set Changed flag even if it makes
changes in the IR. There is no clear evidence that it can cause a crash, but it
looks highly suspicious and likely invalid.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51777
Reviewed By: skatkov
llvm-svn: 341777
Summary:
Like with other similar intrinsics, presense of strip or
launder.invariant.group should not change the result of inlining cost.
This is because they are just markers and do not perform any computation.
Reviewers: amharc, rsmith, reames, kuhar
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51814
llvm-svn: 341725
AliasSetTracker has special case handling for memset, memcpy and memmove which pre-existed argmemonly on functions and readonly and writeonly on arguments. This patch generalizes it using the AA infrastructure to any call correctly annotated.
The motivation here is to cut down on confusion, not performance per se. For most instructions, there is a direct mapping to alias set. However, this is not guaranteed by the interface and was not in fact true for these three intrinsics *and only these three intrinsics*. I kept getting myself confused about this invariant, so I figured it would be good to clearly distinguish between a instructions and alias sets. Calls happened to be an easy target.
The nice side effect is that custom implementations of memset/memcpy/memmove - including wrappers discovered by IPO - can now be optimized the same as builts by LICM.
Note: The actual removal of the memset/memtransfer specific handling will happen in a follow on NFC patch. It was originally part of this one, but separate for ease of review and rebase.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50730
llvm-svn: 341713
shuf (sel (shuf NarrowCond, undef, WideMask), X, Y), undef, NarrowMask) -->
sel NarrowCond, (shuf X, undef, NarrowMask), (shuf Y, undef, NarrowMask)
The motivating case from:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38691
...is the last regression test. In that case, we're just left with the narrow select.
Note that if we do create new shuffles, they use the existing extraction identity mask,
so there's no danger that this transform creates arbitrary shuffles.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51496
llvm-svn: 341708
If the ~X wasn't able to simplify above the max/min, we might be able to simplify it by moving it below the max/min.
I had to modify the ~(min/max ~X, Y) transform to prevent getting stuck in a loop when we saw the new ~(max/min X, ~Y) before the ~Y had been folded away to remove the new not.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51398
llvm-svn: 341674
Fix a latent bug in loop vectorizer which generates incorrect code for
memory accesses that are executed conditionally. As pointed in review,
this bug definitely affects uniform loads and may affect conditional
stores that should have turned into scatters as well).
The code gen for conditionally executed uniform loads on architectures
that support masked gather instructions is broken.
Without this patch, we were unconditionally executing the *conditional*
load in the vectorized version.
This patch does the following:
1. Uniform conditional loads on architectures with gather support will
have correct code generated. In particular, the cost model
(setCostBasedWideningDecision) is fixed.
2. For the recipes which are handled after the widening decision is set,
we use the isScalarWithPredication(I, VF) form which is added in the
patch.
3. Fix the vectorization cost model for scalarization
(getMemInstScalarizationCost): implement and use isPredicatedInst to
identify *all* predicated instructions, not just scalar+predicated. So,
now the cost for scalarization will be increased for maskedloads/stores
and gather/scatter operations. In short, we should be choosing the
gather/scatter in place of scalarization on archs where it is
profitable.
4. We needed to weaken the assert in useEmulatedMaskMemRefHack.
Reviewers: Ayal, hsaito, mkuper
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51313
llvm-svn: 341673
Find cold blocks based on profile information (or optionally with static analysis).
Forward propagate profile information to all cold-blocks.
Outline a cold region.
Set calling conv and prof hint for the callsite of the outlined function.
Worked in collaboration with: Sebastian Pop <s.pop@samsung.com>
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50658
llvm-svn: 341669
If OtherOpT or OtherOpF have scalar types and the condition is a vector,
we would create an invalid select.
Reviewers: spatel, john.brawn, mssimpso, craig.topper
Reviewed By: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51781
llvm-svn: 341666
Currently eliminateInstructions only returns true if any instruction got
replaced. In the test case for this patch, we eliminate the trivially
dead calls, for which eliminateInstructions not do a replacement and the
function is not marked as changed, which is why the inliner crashes
while traversing the call graph.
Alternatively we could also change eliminateInstructions to return true
in case we mark instructions for deletion, but that's slightly more code
and doing it at the place where the replacement happens seems safer.
Fixes PR37517.
Reviewers: davide, mcrosier, efriedma, bjope
Reviewed By: bjope
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51169
llvm-svn: 341651
IndVars does not set `Changed` flag when it eliminates dead instructions. As result,
it may make IR modifications and report that it has done nothing. It leads to inconsistent
preserved analyzes results.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51770
Reviewed By: skatkov
llvm-svn: 341633
The patch tries to make sample profile loader independent of profile format
change. It moves compact format related code into FunctionSamples and
SampleProfileReader classes, and sample profile loader only has to interact
with those two classes and will be unaware of profile format changes.
The cleanup also contain some fixes to further remove the difference between
compactbinary format and binary format. After the cleanup using different
formats originated from the same profile will generate the same binaries,
which we verified by compiling two large server benchmarks w/wo thinlto.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51643
llvm-svn: 341591
This fold is needed to avoid a regression when we try
to recommit rL300977.
We can't see the most basic win currently because
demanded bits changes the patterns:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/plpp
llvm-svn: 341559
Previously the alignment on the newly created global strings was not set,
meaning that DataLayout::getPreferredAlignment was free to overalign it
to 16 bytes. This caused unnecessary code bloat with the padding between
variables.
The main example of this happening was the printf->puts optimisation in
SimplifyLibCalls, but as the change here is made in
IRBuilderBase::CreateGlobalString, other globals using this will now be
aligned too.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51410
llvm-svn: 341527
I'm probably missing some way to use m_Deferred to remove the code
duplication, but that can be a follow-up.
The improvement in demand_shrink_nsw.ll is an example of missing
the fold because the pattern matching was deficient. I didn't try
to follow the bits in that test, but Alive says it's correct:
https://rise4fun.com/Alive/ugc
llvm-svn: 341426
Reland r341269. Use std::stable_sort when sorting constant condidates.
Reverting commit, r341365:
Revert r341269: [Constant Hoisting] Hoisting Constant GEP Expressions
One of the tests is failing 50% of the time when expensive checks are
enabled. Not sure how deep the problem is so just reverting while the
author can investigate so that the bots stop repeatedly failing and
blaming things incorrectly. Will respond with details on the original
commit.
Original commit, r341269:
[Constant Hoisting] Hoisting Constant GEP Expressions
Leverage existing logic in constant hoisting pass to transform constant GEP
expressions sharing the same base global variable. Multi-dimensional GEPs are
rewritten into single-dimensional GEPs.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D51396
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51654
llvm-svn: 341417
This is fix for PR38786.
First order recurrence phis were incorrectly treated as uniform,
which caused them to be vectorized as uniform instructions.
Patch by Ayal Zaks and Orivej Desh!
Reviewed by: Anna
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51639
llvm-svn: 341416
There are 2 bugs shown here that were untested before:
1. We fail to perform the fold in 1/2 the possible commuted variants.
2. When the fold is done, it disregards extra uses.
llvm-svn: 341415
Recent change to deleteDeadBlocksFromLoop was not enough to
fix all the problems related to dead blocks after nontrivial
unswitching of switches.
We need to delete all the dead blocks that were created during
unswitching, otherwise we will keep having problems with phi's
or dead blocks.
This change removes all the dead blocks that are reachable from the loop,
not trying to track whether these blocks are newly created by unswitching
or not. While not completely correct, we are unlikely to get loose but
reachable dead blocks that do not belong to our loop nest.
It does fix all the failures currently known, in particular PR38778.
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51519
llvm-svn: 341398
The tests attempted to check for commuted variants
of these folds, but complexity-based canonicalization
meant we had no coverage for at least 1/2 of the cases.
Also, the folds correctly check hasOneUse(), but there
was no coverage for that.
llvm-svn: 341394
Summary:
Control height reduction merges conditional blocks of code and reduces the
number of conditional branches in the hot path based on profiles.
if (hot_cond1) { // Likely true.
do_stg_hot1();
}
if (hot_cond2) { // Likely true.
do_stg_hot2();
}
->
if (hot_cond1 && hot_cond2) { // Hot path.
do_stg_hot1();
do_stg_hot2();
} else { // Cold path.
if (hot_cond1) {
do_stg_hot1();
}
if (hot_cond2) {
do_stg_hot2();
}
}
This speeds up some internal benchmarks up to ~30%.
Reviewers: davidxl
Reviewed By: davidxl
Subscribers: xbolva00, dmgreen, mehdi_amini, llvm-commits, mgorny
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50591
llvm-svn: 341386
One of the tests is failing 50% of the time when expensive checks are
enabled. Not sure how deep the problem is so just reverting while the
author can investigate so that the bots stop repeatedly failing and
blaming things incorrectly. Will respond with details on the original
commit.
llvm-svn: 341365
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
This patch removes the function `expandSCEVIfNeeded` which behaves not as
it was intended. This function tries to make a lookup for exact existing expansion
and only goes to normal expansion via `expandCodeFor` if this lookup hasn't found
anything. As a result of this, if some instruction above the loop has a `SCEVConstant`
SCEV, this logic will return this instruction when asked for this `SCEVConstant` rather
than return a constant value. This is both non-profitable and in some cases leads to
breach of LCSSA form (as in PR38674).
Whether or not it is possible to break LCSSA with this algorithm and with some
non-constant SCEVs is still in question, this is still being investigated. I wasn't
able to construct such a test so far, so maybe this situation is impossible. If it is,
it will go as a separate fix.
Rather than do it, it is always correct to just invoke `expandCodeFor` unconditionally:
it behaves smarter about insertion points, and as side effect of this it will choose a
constant value for SCEVConstants. For other SCEVs it may end up finding a better insertion
point. So it should not be worse in any case.
NOTE: So far the only known case for which this transform may break LCSSA is mapping
of SCEVConstant to an instruction. However there is a suspicion that the entire algorithm
can compromise LCSSA form for other cases as well (yet not proved).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51286
Reviewed By: etherzhhb
llvm-svn: 341345
The fold was implemented for the general case but use-limitation,
but the later constant version which didn't check uses was only
matching splat constants.
llvm-svn: 341292
If we have a pair of binops feeding another pair of binops, rearrange the operands so
the matching pair are together because that allows easy factorization folds to happen
in instcombine:
((X << S) & Y) & (Z << S) --> ((X << S) & (Z << S)) & Y (reassociation)
--> ((X & Z) << S) & Y (factorize shift from 'and' ops optimization)
This is part of solving PR37098:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=37098
Note that there's an instcombine version of this patch attached there, but we're trying
to make instcombine have less responsibility to improve compile-time efficiency.
For reasons I still don't completely understand, reassociate does this kind of transform
sometimes, but misses everything in my motivating cases.
This patch on its own is gluing an independent cleanup chunk to the end of the existing
RewriteExprTree() loop. We can build on it and do something stronger to better order the
full expression tree like D40049. That might be an alternative to the proposal to add a
separate reassociation pass like D41574.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45842
llvm-svn: 341288
Leverage existing logic in constant hoisting pass to transform constant GEP
expressions sharing the same base global variable. Multi-dimensional GEPs are
rewritten into single-dimensional GEPs.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51396
llvm-svn: 341269
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:
Currently, the SafeStack analysis disallows out-of-bounds writes but not
out-of-bounds reads for mem intrinsics like llvm.memcpy. This could
cause leaks of pointers to the safe stack by leaking spilled registers/
frame pointers. Check for allocas used as source or destination pointers
to mem intrinsics.
Reviewers: eugenis
Reviewed By: eugenis
Subscribers: pcc, llvm-commits, kcc
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51334
llvm-svn: 341116
Generalize the simplification of `pow(2.0, y)` to `pow(2.0 ** n, y)` for all
scalar and vector types.
This improvement helps some benchmarks in SPEC CPU2000 and CPU2006, such as
252.eon, 447.dealII, 453.povray. Otherwise, no significant regressions on
x86-64 or A64.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49273
llvm-svn: 341095
Splitting an alloca can decrease the alignment of GEPs into the
partition. Normally, rewriting accounts for this, but the code was
missing for uses of PHI nodes and select instructions.
Fixes https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38707 .
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51335
llvm-svn: 341094
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
The cost modeling was not accounting for the fact we were duplicating the instruction once per predecessor. With a default threshold of 1, this meant we were actually creating #pred copies.
Adding to the fun, there is *absolutely no* test coverage for this. Simply bailing for more than one predecessor passes all checked in tests.
llvm-svn: 341001
Teach LICM to hoist stores out of loops when the store writes to a location otherwise unused in the loop, writes a value which is invariant, and is guaranteed to execute if the loop is entered.
Worth noting is that this transformation is partially overlapping with the existing promotion transformation. Reasons this is worthwhile anyway include:
* For multi-exit loops, this doesn't require duplication of the store.
* It kicks in for case where we can't prove we exit through a normal exit (i.e. we may throw), but can prove the store executes before that possible side exit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50925
llvm-svn: 340974
Summary:
Assert from PR38737 happens on the dead block inside the parent loop
after unswitching nontrivial switch in the inner loop.
deleteDeadBlocksFromLoop now takes extra care to detect/remove dead
blocks in all the parent loops in addition to the blocks from original
loop being unswitched.
Reviewers: asbirlea, chandlerc
Reviewed By: asbirlea
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51415
llvm-svn: 340955
This is a follow-up to rL339604 which did the same transform
for a sin libcall. The handling of intrinsics vs. libcalls
is unfortunately scattered, so I'm just adding this next to
the existing transform for llvm.cos for now.
This should resolve PR38458:
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=38458
If the call was already negated, the negates will cancel
each other out.
llvm-svn: 340952
Expand the simplification of `pow(exp{,2}(x), y)` to all FP types.
This improvement helps some benchmarks in SPEC CPU2000 and CPU2006, such as
252.eon, 447.dealII, 453.povray. Otherwise, no significant regressions on
x86-64 or A64.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51195
llvm-svn: 340948
Generalize the simplification of `pow(2.0, y)` to `pow(2.0 ** n, y)` for all
scalar and vector types.
This improvement helps some benchmarks in SPEC CPU2000 and CPU2006, such as
252.eon, 447.dealII, 453.povray. Otherwise, no significant regressions on
x86-64 or A64.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D49273
llvm-svn: 340947
In the PR, LoopSink was trying to sink into a catchswitch block, which
doesn't have a valid insertion point.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51307
llvm-svn: 340900
In Thumb1, legal imm range is [0, 255] for ADD/SUB instructions. However, the
legal imm range for LD/ST in (R+Imm) addressing mode is [0, 127]. Imms in
[128, 255] are materialized by mov R, #imm, and LD/STs use them in (R+R)
addressing mode.
This patch checks if a constant is used as offset in (R+Imm), if so, it checks
isLegalAddressingMode passing the constant value as BaseOffset.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50931
llvm-svn: 340882
Summary:
Sometimes reading an output *.ll file it is not easy to understand why some callsites are not inlined. We can read output of inline remarks (option --pass-remarks-missed=inline) and try correlating its messages with the callsites.
An easier way proposed by this patch is to add to every callsite processed by Inliner an attribute with the latest message that describes the cause of not inlining this callsite. The attribute is called //inline-remark//. By default this feature is off. It can be switched on by the option //-inline-remark-attribute//.
For example in the provided test the result method //@test1// has two callsites //@bar// and inline remarks report different inlining missed reasons:
remark: <unknown>:0:0: bar not inlined into test1 because too costly to inline (cost=-5, threshold=-6)
remark: <unknown>:0:0: bar not inlined into test1 because it should never be inlined (cost=never): recursive
It is not clear which remark correspond to which callsite. With the inline remark attribute enabled we get the reasons attached to their callsites:
define void @test1() {
call void @bar(i1 true) #0
call void @bar(i1 false) #2
ret void
}
attributes #0 = { "inline-remark"="(cost=-5, threshold=-6)" }
..
attributes #2 = { "inline-remark"="(cost=never): recursive" }
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: xbolva00, tejohnson, apilipenko
Reviewed By: xbolva00, tejohnson
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50435
llvm-svn: 340834
Summary:
This fixes PR31105.
There is code trying to delete dead code that does so by e.g. checking if
the single predecessor of a block is the block itself.
That check fails on a block like this
bb:
br i1 undef, label %bb, label %bb
since that has two (identical) predecessors.
However, after the check for dead blocks there is a call to
ConstantFoldTerminator on the basic block, and that call simplifies the
block to
bb:
br label %bb
Therefore we now do the call to ConstantFoldTerminator before the check if
the block is dead, so it can realize that it really is.
The original behavior lead to the block not being removed, but it was
simplified as above, and then we did a call to
Dest->replaceAllUsesWith(&*I);
with old and new being equal, and an assertion triggered.
Reviewers: chandlerc, fhahn
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51280
llvm-svn: 340820
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
This lines up with the behavior of an existing transform where if both
operands of the binop are shuffled, we allow moving the binop before the
shuffle regardless of whether the shuffle changes the size of the vector.
llvm-svn: 340787
Fix the issue of duplicating the call to `exp{,2}()` when it's nested in
`pow()`, as exposed by rL340462.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51194
llvm-svn: 340784
This reverts r319889.
Unfortunately, wrapping flags are not a part of SCEV's identity (they
do not participate in computing a hash value or in equality
comparisons) and in fact they could be assigned after the fact w/o
rebuilding a SCEV.
Grep for const_cast's to see quite a few of examples, apparently all
for AddRec's at the moment.
So, if 2 expressions get built in 2 slightly different ways: one with
flags set in the beginning, the other with the flags attached later
on, we may end up with 2 expressions which are exactly the same but
have their operands swapped in one of the commutative N-ary
expressions, and at least one of them will have "sorted by complexity"
invariant broken.
2 identical SCEV's won't compare equal by pointer comparison as they
are supposed to.
A real-world reproducer is added as a regression test: the issue
described causes 2 identical SCEV expressions to have different order
of operands and therefore compare not equal, which in its turn
prevents LoadStoreVectorizer from vectorizing a pair of consecutive
loads.
On a larger example (the source of the test attached, which is a
bugpoint) I have seen even weirder behavior: adding a constant to an
existing SCEV changes the order of the existing terms, for instance,
getAddExpr(1, ((A * B) + (C * D))) returns (1 + (C * D) + (A * B)).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40645
llvm-svn: 340777
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
Back in https://reviews.llvm.org/D19559, I tried to teach CVP about range facts implied by value/value icmps (i.e. no constants.) In the meantime, we've implemented the optimization, but I couldn't find tests checked in, so adding them.
llvm-svn: 340660
Otherwise, the debug info is incorrect. On its own, this is mostly
harmless, but the safe-stack also later inlines the call to
__safestack_pointer_address, which leads to debug info with the wrong
scope, which eventually causes an assertion failure (and incorrect debug
info in release mode).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51075
llvm-svn: 340651
Summary:
Sometimes reading an output *.ll file it is not easy to understand why some callsites are not inlined. We can read output of inline remarks (option --pass-remarks-missed=inline) and try correlating its messages with the callsites.
An easier way proposed by this patch is to add to every callsite processed by Inliner an attribute with the latest message that describes the cause of not inlining this callsite. The attribute is called //inline-remark//. By default this feature is off. It can be switched on by the option //-inline-remark-attribute//.
For example in the provided test the result method //@test1// has two callsites //@bar// and inline remarks report different inlining missed reasons:
remark: <unknown>:0:0: bar not inlined into test1 because too costly to inline (cost=-5, threshold=-6)
remark: <unknown>:0:0: bar not inlined into test1 because it should never be inlined (cost=never): recursive
It is not clear which remark correspond to which callsite. With the inline remark attribute enabled we get the reasons attached to their callsites:
define void @test1() {
call void @bar(i1 true) #0
call void @bar(i1 false) #2
ret void
}
attributes #0 = { "inline-remark"="(cost=-5, threshold=-6)" }
..
attributes #2 = { "inline-remark"="(cost=never): recursive" }
Patch by: yrouban (Yevgeny Rouban)
Reviewers: xbolva00, tejohnson, apilipenko
Reviewed By: xbolva00, tejohnson
Subscribers: eraman, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50435
llvm-svn: 340618
Once the invariant_start is reached, we know that no instruction *after* it can modify the memory. So, if we can prove the location isn't read *between entry into the loop and the execution of the invariant_start*, we can execute the invariant_start before entering the loop.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51181
llvm-svn: 340617
This patch makes the DoesKMove argument non-optional, to force people
to think about it. Most cases where it is false are either code hoisting
or code sinking, where we pick one instruction from a set of
equal instructions among different code paths.
Reviewers: dberlin, nlopes, efriedma, davide
Reviewed By: efriedma
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D47475
llvm-svn: 340606
When GVN sets the incoming value for a phi to undef because the incoming block
is unreachable it needs to also invalidate the cached info for that phi in
MemoryDependenceAnalysis, otherwise later queries will return stale information.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51099
llvm-svn: 340529
This version of the patch fixes cleaning up ssa_copy intrinsics, so it does not
crash for instructions in blocks that have been marked unreachable.
This patch updates IPSCCP to use PredicateInfo to propagate
facts to true branches predicated by EQ and to false branches
predicated by NE.
As a follow up, we should be able to extend it to also propagate additional
facts about nonnull.
Reviewers: davide, mssimpso, dberlin, efriedma
Reviewed By: davide, dberlin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45330
llvm-svn: 340525
If we have a min/max pair we can do a better job of counting sign bits if we look at them together. This is similar to what is done in the SelectionDAG version of computeNumSignBits for ISD::SMAX/SMIN.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51112
llvm-svn: 340480
Instead of asserting that the function doesn't have any unreachable
code, just ignore it for the purpose of computing liveness.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D51070
llvm-svn: 340456
Summary:
Add MemorySSA as a dependency to LoopSimplifyCFG and preserve it.
Disabled by default until all passes preserve MemorySSA.
Reviewers: bogner, chandlerc
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50911
llvm-svn: 340445
Summary:
Add MemorySSA as a depency to LoopInstInstSimplify and preserve it.
Disabled by default until all passes preserve MemorySSA.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: sanjoy, jlebar, Prazek, george.burgess.iv, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50906
llvm-svn: 340444
Guard widening should not spend efforts on dealing with guards with trivial true/false conditions.
Such guards can easily be eliminated by any further cleanup pass like instcombine. However we
should not unconditionally delete them because it may be profitable to widen other conditions
into such guards.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D50247
Reviewed By: fedor.sergeev
llvm-svn: 340381
CodeGenPrepare has a strategy for moving dbg.values so that a value's
definition always dominates its debug users. This cleanup was happening
too early (before certain CGP transforms were run), resulting in some
dbg.value use-before-def errors.
Perform this cleanup as late as possible to avoid use-before-def.
llvm-svn: 340370
This test shows that optimizeSelectInst splits a select and sinks a
`fdiv` operation to one side of the diamond. However, the dbg.value for
the operation isn't moved.
llvm-svn: 340369
This is preparation for landing a use-before-def verifier for debug
intrinsics (D46100).
As a drive-by, remove `tail` from debug intrinsic calls because it
doesn't mean anything in that context.
llvm-svn: 340366