We were reporting "Unsupported" tests in xunit as passes, however since
they are not run, it make more sense to mark them as skipped. The Junit
xml standard has support for that, so lets use it.
llvm-svn: 332065
String concatenation in python is slow. Refactor to not concatenate the
possibly large strings of test output and instead write them directly
to the output file.
llvm-svn: 332064
This implements a new table-gen emitter to create tables for
a wasm disassembler, and a dissassembler to use them.
Comes with 2 tests, that tests a few instructions manually. Is also able to
disassemble large .wasm files with objdump reasonably.
Not working so well, to be addressed in followups:
- objdump appears to be passing an incorrect starting point.
- since the disassembler works an instruction at a time, and it is
disassembling stack instruction, it has no idea of pseudo register assignments.
These registers are required for the instruction printing code that follows.
For now, all such registers appear in the output as $0.
Patch by Wouter van Oortmerssen
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45848
llvm-svn: 332052
Lit creates malformed xml when the test case has an & in the name.
Escape those correctly.
This also adds a test case which I will add other nasty encoding issues to in some followup commits.
llvm-svn: 331942
Its only two uses were removed in r311730.
Effectively reverts r304851 (but that code has removed around a bit since then).
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46619
clang side done in r331871.
llvm-svn: 331872
Summary:
Previously, a extending load was represented at (G_*EXT (G_LOAD x)).
This had a few drawbacks:
* G_LOAD had to be legal for all sizes you could extend from, even if
registers didn't naturally hold those sizes.
* All sizes you could extend from had to be allocatable just in case the
extend went missing (e.g. by optimization).
* At minimum, G_*EXT and G_TRUNC had to be legal for these sizes. As we
improve optimization of extends and truncates, this legality requirement
would spread without considerable care w.r.t when certain combines were
permitted.
* The SelectionDAG importer required some ugly and fragile pattern
rewriting to translate patterns into this style.
This patch changes the representation to:
* (G_[SZ]EXTLOAD x)
* (G_LOAD x) any-extends when MMO.getSize() * 8 < ResultTy.getSizeInBits()
which resolves these issues by allowing targets to work entirely in their
native register sizes, and by having a more direct translation from
SelectionDAG patterns.
Each extending load can be lowered by the legalizer into separate extends
and loads, however a target that supports s1 will need the any-extending
load to extend to at least s8 since LLVM does not represent memory accesses
smaller than 8 bit. The legalizer can widenScalar G_LOAD into an
any-extending load but sign/zero-extending loads need help from something
else like a combiner pass. A follow-up patch that adds combiner helpers for
for this will follow.
The new representation requires that the MMO correctly reflect the memory
access so this has been corrected in a couple tests. I've also moved the
extending loads to their own tests since they are (mostly) separate opcodes
now. Additionally, the re-write appears to have invalidated two tests from
select-with-no-legality-check.mir since the matcher table no longer contains
loads that result in s1's and they aren't legal in AArch64 anymore.
Depends on D45540
Reviewers: ab, aditya_nandakumar, bogner, rtereshin, volkan, rovka, javed.absar
Reviewed By: rtereshin
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45541
llvm-svn: 331601
Add overloads for `__len__` and `__getitem__` to allow use of this class
on Linux as well as Windows. With these overloads, lit can be used on
both hosts for the swift testsuite.
llvm-svn: 331431
to make sure that Testgen always has access to coverage info even if
the match table used by the selector itself is stripped off that
information for performance reasons.
Reviewers: dsanders, aemerson
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, dsanders
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46098
llvm-svn: 331398
to share it between the Instruction Selector in optimized and
non-optimized modes both and the Testgen.
Reviewers: dsanders, aemerson
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, dsanders
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46097
llvm-svn: 331396
The main goal is to share getMatchTable between the Instruction
Selector and the Testgen.
The commit also contains some NFC only loosely related to refactoring
out the getMatchTable, but strongly related to the initial Testgen
patch (see https://reviews.llvm.org/D43962)
Reviewers: dsanders, aemerson
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: rovka, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, dsanders
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46096
llvm-svn: 331395
This is a follow-up to r331272.
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\@brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\@brief //g' $i & done
https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331275
We've been running doxygen with the autobrief option for a couple of
years now. This makes the \brief markers into our comments
redundant. Since they are a visual distraction and we don't want to
encourage more \brief markers in new code either, this patch removes
them all.
Patch produced by
for i in $(git grep -l '\\brief'); do perl -pi -e 's/\\brief //g' $i & done
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D46290
llvm-svn: 331272
Previously for instructions like fxsave we would print "opaque ptr" as part of the memory operand. Now we print nothing.
We also no longer accept "opaque ptr" in the parser. We still accept any size to be specified for these instructions, but we may want to consider only parsing when no explicit size is specified. This what gas does.
llvm-svn: 331243
See r331124 for how I made a list of files missing the include.
I then ran this Python script:
for f in open('filelist.txt'):
f = f.strip()
fl = open(f).readlines()
found = False
for i in xrange(len(fl)):
p = '#include "llvm/'
if not fl[i].startswith(p):
continue
if fl[i][len(p):] > 'Config':
fl.insert(i, '#include "llvm/Config/llvm-config.h"\n')
found = True
break
if not found:
print 'not found', f
else:
open(f, 'w').write(''.join(fl))
and then looked through everything with `svn diff | diffstat -l | xargs -n 1000 gvim -p`
and tried to fix include ordering and whatnot.
No intended behavior change.
llvm-svn: 331184
An optional, light-weight and backward-compatible mechanism to allow
specifying that a diagnostic _only_ applies to a partial mismatch (NearMiss),
rather than a full mismatch.
Patch [1/2] in a series to improve assembler diagnostics for SVE.
- Patch [1/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45879
- Patch [2/2]: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45880
Reviewers: olista01, stoklund, craig.topper, mcrosier, rengolin, echristo, fhahn, SjoerdMeijer, evandro, javed.absar
Reviewed By: olista01
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45879
llvm-svn: 330930
When debugging test failures with -vv (or -v in the case of the
internal shell), this makes it easier to locate the RUN line that
failed. For example, clang's test/Driver/linux-ld.c has 892 total RUN
lines, and clang's test/Driver/arm-cortex-cpus.c has 424 RUN lines
after concatenation for line continuations.
When reading the generated shell script, this also makes it easier to
locate the RUN line that produced each command.
To support reporting RUN line numbers in the case of the internal
shell, this patch extends the internal shell to support the null
command, ":", except pipelines are not supported.
Reviewed By: asmith, delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44598
llvm-svn: 330755
`shtest-xunit-output.py` test.
Although there is no `-` file Jeremy Morse has reported to me that it
causes problems in their setup because lit tries to find it and ends up
loading an out of tree lit configuration file.
llvm-svn: 330728
The test is apparently needed e.g. for check-cfi on Windows where we get
'C:/b/slave/sanitizer-windows/build/./bin/clang.exe': command not found
without it. Try to fix the problem that was fixed by r330672 by also checking
for isabs() instead.
llvm-svn: 330673
lit's util.which() would check if the passed-in path existed directly,
and if so return it as-is. This is never the case when running llvm's, clang's,
or lld's tests normally. But when running `./llvm-lit path/to/clang/test`
with a cwd of llvm-build/bin, this if would detect that clang exists at path
'clang' and return 'clang' as the discovered clang binary -- and then lit would
use the " clang " -> "*** Do not use 'clang' in tests, use '%clang'. ***"
substitution to replace that with a broken test. By removing this early
return, lit ends up with the usual absolute path and everything works even
in this uncommon case.
llvm-svn: 330672
It was added 6.5 years ago in r144345, but was never hooked up and has been
unused since. If _you_ do use this, feel free to revert, but add a comment
on where it's used.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D45262
llvm-svn: 330455
If we don't mark the cfi line as optional, the script won't
work with 'nounwind' code. Without that attr, there may be
extra noise in the asm body that we don't want to see.
llvm-svn: 330453
The script was using Python's difflib module to calculate the number of
lines changed so that it could report it in its status output. It turns
out this can be very very slow on large sets of lines (Python bug 6931).
It's not worth the cost, so just remove the usage of difflib entirely.
llvm-svn: 330419
Summary:
This is a small refactoring to extract the svn checkout code from the
build script used inside the docker image.
This would give more flexibility if more than a single invocation of
cmake is needed inside the docker image.
User-facing interface (build_docker_image.sh) hasn't changed, only the
internal scripts running inside the build container are affected.
Reviewers: ioeric
Reviewed By: ioeric
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45868
llvm-svn: 330412
XML printer.
A test has been added that tries to comprehensively test emitting
XUnit XML output for shell tests.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45567
llvm-svn: 330409
This patch ensures that the pfm issue counter tables are the correct size, accounting for the invalid resource entry at the beginning of the resource tables.
It also fixes an issue with pfm failing to match event counters due to a trailing comma added to all the event names.
I've also added a counter comment to each entry as it helps locate problems with the tables.
Note: I don't have access to a SandyBridge test machine, which is the only model to make use of multiple event counters being mapped to a single resource. I don't know if pfm accepts a comma-seperated list or not, but that is what it was doing.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45787
llvm-svn: 330317
This script can be used to regenerate tests in the
test/tools/llvm-mca directory (PR36904).
Regenerated a number of tests using the pattern: test/tools/llvm-mca/*/*/*.s
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45369
llvm-svn: 330246
We have a few functions that virtually all command wants to run on
process startup/shutdown. This patch adds InitLLVM class to do that
all at once, so that we don't need to copy-n-paste boilerplate code
to each llvm command's main() function.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45602
llvm-svn: 330046
There are two versions of to_string used by TestRunner.py. The one defined
in TestRunner.py and the one defined in utils/lit/lit/util.py. The util.py
version is superior to the TestRunner.py version.
This change removes the duplicate to_string in TestRunner.py in favor of
always using the version from util.py. Beside removing duplicate code, this
makes it easier to debug TestRunner.py since only one version of to_string
is used.
Patch by Stella Stamenova!
llvm-svn: 329972
Summary:
Subtargets can define the libpfm counter names that can be used to
measure cycles and uops issued on ProcResUnits.
This allows making llvm-exegesis available on more targets.
Fixes PR36984.
Reviewers: gchatelet, RKSimon, andreadb, craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45360
llvm-svn: 329675
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before
sorting. This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined
sorting order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of
std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to
llvm::sort. Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the
required patches.
llvm-svn: 329475
- In Python 2.x, basestring is the base string type, but in
Python 3.x basestring is not defined and instead str includes
unicode strings.
- When Python is in a path that includes spaces, it needs to
be specified with quotes in the test files for it to run.
- The cache.ll test relies on files of a specific size being
created by Python, but on some versions of Windows the
files that are created by the current code are one byte
larger than expected. To fix the test, update file creation
to always make files of the expected size.
Patch by Stella Stamenova!
llvm-svn: 329466
Summary:
This patch implements a tablegen-driven Instruction Compression
mechanism for generating RISCV compressed instructions
(C Extension) from the expanded instruction form.
This tablegen backend processes CompressPat declarations in a
td file and generates all the compile-time and runtime checks
required to validate the declarations, validate the input
operands and generate correct instructions.
The checks include validating register operands, immediate
operands, fixed register operands and fixed immediate operands.
Example:
class CompressPat<dag input, dag output> {
dag Input = input;
dag Output = output;
list<Predicate> Predicates = [];
}
let Predicates = [HasStdExtC] in {
def : CompressPat<(ADD GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs2),
(C_ADD GPRNoX0:$rs1, GPRNoX0:$rs2)>;
}
The result is an auto-generated header file
'RISCVGenCompressEmitter.inc' which exports two functions for
compressing/uncompressing MCInst instructions, plus
some helper functions:
bool compressInst(MCInst& OutInst, const MCInst &MI,
const MCSubtargetInfo &STI,
MCContext &Context);
bool uncompressInst(MCInst& OutInst, const MCInst &MI,
const MCRegisterInfo &MRI,
const MCSubtargetInfo &STI);
The clients that include this auto-generated header file and
invoke these functions can compress an instruction before emitting
it, in the target-specific ASM or ELF streamer, or can uncompress
an instruction before printing it, when the expanded instruction
format aliases is favored.
The following clients were added to implement compression\uncompression
for RISCV:
1) RISCVAsmParser::MatchAndEmitInstruction:
Inserted a call to compressInst() to compresses instructions
parsed by llvm-mc coming from an ASM input.
2) RISCVAsmPrinter::EmitInstruction:
Inserted a call to compressInst() to compress instructions that
were lowered from Machine Instructions (MachineInstr).
3) RVInstPrinter::printInst:
Inserted a call to uncompressInst() to print the expanded
version of the instruction instead of the compressed one (e.g,
add s0, s0, a5 instead of c.add s0, a5) when -riscv-no-aliases
is not passed.
This patch squashes D45119, D42780 and D41932. It was reviewed in smaller patches by
asb, efriedma, apazos and mgrang.
Reviewers: asb, efriedma, apazos, llvm-commits, sabuasal
Reviewed By: sabuasal
Subscribers: mgorny, eraman, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, niosHD, kito-cheng, shiva0217, zzheng
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45385
llvm-svn: 329455
Summary:
r327219 added wrappers to std::sort which randomly shuffle the container before sorting.
This will help in uncovering non-determinism caused due to undefined sorting
order of objects having the same key.
To make use of that infrastructure we need to invoke llvm::sort instead of std::sort.
Note: This patch is one of a series of patches to replace *all* std::sort to llvm::sort.
Refer the comments section in D44363 for a list of all the required patches.
Reviewers: stoklund, kparzysz, dsanders
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45144
llvm-svn: 329451
The script allows the auto-generation of checks for cost model tests to speed up their creation and help improve coverage, which will help a lot with PR36550.
If the need arises we can add support for other analyze passes as well, but the cost models was the one I needed to get done - at the moment it just warns that any other analysis mode is unsupported.
I've regenerated a couple of x86 test files to show the effect.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45272
llvm-svn: 329390
This patch adds the ability to describe properties of the hardware retire
control unit.
Tablegen class RetireControlUnit has been added for this purpose (see
TargetSchedule.td).
A RetireControlUnit specifies the size of the reorder buffer, as well as the
maximum number of opcodes that can be retired every cycle.
A zero (or negative) value for the reorder buffer size means: "the size is
unknown". If the size is unknown, then llvm-mca defaults it to the value of
field SchedMachineModel::MicroOpBufferSize. A zero or negative number of
opcodes retired per cycle means: "there is no restriction on the number of
instructions that can be retired every cycle".
Models can optionally specify an instance of RetireControlUnit. There can only
be up-to one RetireControlUnit definition per scheduling model.
Information related to the RCU (RetireControlUnit) is stored in (two new fields
of) MCExtraProcessorInfo. llvm-mca loads that information when it initializes
the DispatchUnit / RetireControlUnit (see Dispatch.h/Dispatch.cpp).
This patch fixes PR36661.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45259
llvm-svn: 329304
For schedule models that don't use itineraries, checkCompleteness still checks that an instruction has a matching itinerary instead of skipping and going straight to matching the InstRWs. That doesn't seem to match what happens in TargetSchedule.cpp
This patch causes problems for a number of models that had been incorrectly flagged as complete.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43235
llvm-svn: 329280
LLVM Bug Id : 36449
Revision 328563 caused tests to fail under python 3.
This patch modified cat.py file to support both python 2 and 3.
This patch also fixes CRLF issues on Windows.
Patch by Chamal de Silva
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D45077
llvm-svn: 329123
This patch allows the description of register files in processor scheduling
models. This addresses PR36662.
A new tablegen class named 'RegisterFile' has been added to TargetSchedule.td.
Targets can optionally describe register files for their processors using that
class. In particular, class RegisterFile allows to specify:
- The total number of physical registers.
- Which target registers are accessible through the register file.
- The cost of allocating a register at register renaming stage.
Example (from this patch - see file X86/X86ScheduleBtVer2.td)
def FpuPRF : RegisterFile<72, [VR64, VR128, VR256], [1, 1, 2]>
Here, FpuPRF describes a register file for MMX/XMM/YMM registers. On Jaguar
(btver2), a YMM register definition consumes 2 physical registers, while MMX/XMM
register definitions only cost 1 physical register.
The syntax allows to specify an empty set of register classes. An empty set of
register classes means: this register file models all the registers specified by
the Target. For each register class, users can specify an optional register
cost. By default, register costs default to 1. A value of 0 for the number of
physical registers means: "this register file has an unbounded number of
physical registers".
This patch is structured in two parts.
* Part 1 - MC/Tablegen *
A first part adds the tablegen definition of RegisterFile, and teaches the
SubtargetEmitter how to emit information related to register files.
Information about register files is accessible through an instance of
MCExtraProcessorInfo.
The idea behind this design is to logically partition the processor description
which is only used by external tools (like llvm-mca) from the processor
information used by the llvm machine schedulers.
I think that this design would make easier for targets to get rid of the extra
processor information if they don't want it.
* Part 2 - llvm-mca related *
The second part of this patch is related to changes to llvm-mca.
The main differences are:
1) class RegisterFile now needs to take into account the "cost of a register"
when allocating physical registers at register renaming stage.
2) Point 1. triggered a minor refactoring which lef to the removal of the
"maximum 32 register files" restriction.
3) The BackendStatistics view has been updated so that we can print out extra
details related to each register file implemented by the processor.
The effect of point 3. is also visible in tests register-files-[1..5].s.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44980
llvm-svn: 329067
fact use regular expression syntax to use regular expressions.
Should restore the bots. Sorry for the noise on this test.
Thanks to Philip for spotting the bug!
llvm-svn: 329057
do explicit scrubbing of the offsets of stack spills and reloads.
You can always turn this off in order to test specific stack slot usage.
We were already hiding most of this, but the new logic hides it more
generically. Notably, we should effectively hide stack slot churn in
functions that have a frame pointer now, and should also hide it when
changing a function from stack pointer to frame pointer. That transition
already changes enough to be clearly noticed in the test case diff,
showing *every* spill and reload is really noisy without benefit. See
the test case I ran this on as a classic example.
llvm-svn: 329055
Useful when looking for indirect calls/jmps the need mitigation
via retpoline or other mitigations for Spectre v2.
Feedback, extension, additional patches welcome.
llvm-svn: 329050
Only rely on Python 3 (io.open) when necessary. This puts TestRunnyer.py closer to how it behaved
before the changes introduced in D43165 and silences a few Windows build bot failures.
Thanks to Stella Stamenova for the patch!
llvm-svn: 329037
Reapply D43165 which was reverted because of different versions of python failing.
The one line fix for the different python versions was commited at the same time
that D43165 was reverted. If this change is giving you issues then get in touch
with your python version and we will fix it.
llvm-svn: 329022
Summary:
This issue was found when running the clang unit test on Windows. Python 3.x cannot open some of the files that the tests are using with a simple open because of their encoding. Python 2.7+ and Python 3.x both support io.open which allows for an encoding to be specified.
This change will determine whether two files being compared should be opened (and then compared) as text or binary and whether to use utf-8 or the default encoding before proceeding with a line-by-line comparison.
Patch by Stella Stamenova!
Reviewers: zturner, llvm-commits, rnk, MaggieYi
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: asmith, MatzeB, stella.stamenova, delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43165
llvm-svn: 329012
Summary:
We will use this in the AMDGPU backend in a subsequent patch
in the stack to lookup target-specific per-intrinsic information.
The generic CodeGenIntrinsic machinery is used to ensure that,
even though we don't calculate actual enum values here, we do
get the intrinsics in the right order for the binary search
index.
Change-Id: If61cd5587963a4c5a1cc53df1e59c5e4dec1f9dc
Reviewers: arsenm, rampitec, b-sumner
Subscribers: wdng, tpr, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44935
llvm-svn: 328937
This reverts commit 771829b640a5494ab65c810dd6b4330522bf3a33 (rr328598)
Hopefully the test will now pass on the bots.
rdar://problem/38774530
llvm-svn: 328703
The `shtest-timeout.py` test was failing intermittently. It looks like
the issue is that on a resource constrained system lit is unable to run
`quick_then_slow.py` twice and print out the messages the tests expects
within the one second timeout.
The underlying issue is that the test is dependent on the performance of
the host machine is a rather fragile way. This is due to hardcoding
timeout values and having assumptions that the host machine is able to
perform a certain amount of work within the hardcoded timeout values.
We could increase the timeout values but that doesn't really fix the
underlying issue. Instead this patch removes one of fragile assumptions
in the hope that this will be enough to fix the bots.
There are other fragile assumptions in this test (e.g. `quick.py` can be
executed in less than 1 second). If the bots continue to fail we'll have
to revisit this.
rdar://problem/38774530
llvm-svn: 328702
Summary:
This patch adds itinerary support to the schedcover.py script. I've been trying to use this script to figure out why SSE and AVX instructions are ending up in separate tablegen scheduler classes and sometimes its because we are using different itineraries.
Rather than using None to indicate the default scheduler model, I now use the string "default". I had to hack around the sorting a little to keep "default" at the beginning. But this also makes it so you can specify "default" on the command line to just get the defaults
I also fixed the regular expression code so that the no_default wasn't evaluated twice.
Reviewers: RKSimon, atrick, jmolloy, javed.absar
Reviewed By: javed.absar
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44834
llvm-svn: 328608
Summary:
This reverts commit r328596.
Checking if the arguments are strings before testing if they contain "/dev/null".
Reviewers: rnk
Reviewed By: rnk
Subscribers: delcypher, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44914
llvm-svn: 328603
Summary:
We previously emulated multi-staged builds using two dockerfiles,
native support from Docker allows us to merge them into one,
simplifying our scripts.
For more details about multi-stage builds, see:
https://docs.docker.com/develop/develop-images/multistage-build/
Reviewers: mehdi_amini, klimek, sammccall
Reviewed By: sammccall
Subscribers: llvm-commits, ioeric, cfe-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44787
llvm-svn: 328503
This patch throws a fatal error if an instregex entry doesn't actually match any instructions. This is part of the work to reduce the compile time impact of increased instregex usage (PR35955), although the x86 models seem to be relatively clean.
All the cases I encountered have now been fixed in trunk and this will ensure they don't get reintroduced.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44687
llvm-svn: 328459
This is used by llvm tblgen as well as by LLVM Targets, so the only
common place is Support for now. (maybe we need another target for these
sorts of things - but for now I'm at least making them correct & we can
make them better if/when people have strong feelings)
llvm-svn: 328395
This is used from llvm tblgen and the X86Disassembler - the only common
library (apart from TableGen, which probably doesn't make sense to have
as a dependency from a release tool (rather than a use-while-building-llvm
tool) of LLVM)
llvm-svn: 328393
This makes the Y position consistent with other instructions.
This should have been NFC, but while refactoring the multiclass I noticed that VROUNDPD memory forms were using the register itinerary.
llvm-svn: 328254
We already know all the of instructions we're processing in the instruction loop belong to no class or all to the same class. So we only have to worry about remapping one class. So hoist it all out and remove the SmallPtrSet that tracked which class we'd already remapped.
I had to introduce new instruction loop inside this code to print an error message, but that only occurs on the error path.
llvm-svn: 328142
We already have an OldSCIdx variable in the outer loop here. And we already did the map lookup in the loop that populated ClassInstrs. And the outer OldSCIdx got it from ClassInstrs.
llvm-svn: 328139
Summary:
This code previously had a SmallVector of std::pairs containing an unsigned and another SmallVector. The outer vector was using the unsigned effectively as a key to decide which SmallVector to add into. So each time something new needed to be added the out vector needed to be scanned. If it wasn't found a new entry needed to be added to be added. This sounds very much like a map, but the next loop iterates over the outer vector to get a deterministic order.
We can simplify this code greatly if use SmallMapVector instead. This uses more stack space since we now have a vector and a map, but the searching and creating new entries all happens behind the scenes. It should also make the search more efficient though usually there are only a few entries so that doesn't matter much.
We could probably get determinism by just using std::map which would iterate over the unsigned key, but that would generate different output from what we get with the current implementation.
Reviewers: RKSimon, dblaikie
Reviewed By: dblaikie
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44711
llvm-svn: 328070
Both vectors contain unsigned so we can just use append to do the copying. Not only is this shorter, but it should be able to predict the final size and only grow the vector once if needed.
llvm-svn: 328033
Registers E[A-D]X, E[SD]I, E[BS]P, and EIP have 16-bit subregisters
that cover the low halves of these registers. This change adds artificial
subregisters for the high halves in order to differentiate (in terms of
register units) between the 32- and the low 16-bit registers.
This patch contains parts that aim to preserve the calculated register
pressure. This is in order to preserve the current codegen (minimize the
impact of this patch). The approach of having artificial subregisters
could be used to fix PR23423, but the pressure calculation would need
to be changed.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43353
llvm-svn: 328016
I don't think anyone ever got this to work, what with getting exactly
the right Python dependency and so on. Removing it simplifies the
script, removes a number of hairy dependencies, and cuts ~30 MB off the
installer size.
llvm-svn: 327835
This is similar to the check later when we remap some of the instructions from one class to a new one. But if we reuse the class we don't get to do that check.
So many CPUs have violations of this check that I had to add a flag to the SchedMachineModel to allow it to be disabled. Hopefully we can get those cleaned up quickly and remove this flag.
A lot of the violations are due to overlapping regular expressions, but that's not the only kind of issue it found.
llvm-svn: 327808
X86 Supports Indirect Branch Tracking (IBT) as part of Control-Flow Enforcement Technology (CET).
IBT instruments ENDBR instructions used to specify valid targets of indirect call / jmp.
The `nocf_check` attribute has two roles in the context of X86 IBT technology:
1. Appertains to a function - do not add ENDBR instruction at the beginning of the function.
2. Appertains to a function pointer - do not track the target function of this pointer by adding nocf_check prefix to the indirect-call instruction.
This patch implements `nocf_check` context for Indirect Branch Tracking.
It also auto generates `nocf_check` prefixes before indirect branchs to jump tables that are guarded by range checks.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41879
llvm-svn: 327767
Summary:
I noticed that clang will emit variables such as %indirect-arg-temp when
running update_cc1_test_checks.py and therefore update_cc1_test_checks.py
wasn't adding FileCheck captures for those variables.
Reviewers: MaskRay
Reviewed By: MaskRay
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D44459
llvm-svn: 327564
Summary:
These changes are to allow to a Result object to have nested Result objects in
order to support microbenchmarks. Currently lit is restricted to reporting one
result object for one test, this change provides support tests that want to
report individual timings for individual kernels.
This revision is the result of the discussions in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D32272#794759,
https://reviews.llvm.org/D37421#f8003b27 and https://reviews.llvm.org/D38496.
It is a separation of the changes purposed in https://reviews.llvm.org/D40077.
This change will enable adding LCALS (Livermore Compiler Analysis Loop Suite)
collection of loop kernels to the llvm test suite using the google benchmark
library (https://reviews.llvm.org/D43319) with tracking of individual kernel
timings.
Previously microbenchmarks had been handled by using macros to section groups
of microbenchmarks together and build many executables while still getting a
grouped timing (MultiSource/TSVC). Recently the google benchmark library was
added to the test suite and utilized with a litsupport plugin. However the
limitation of 1 test 1 result limited its use to passing a runtime option to
run only 1 microbenchmark with several hand written tests
(MicroBenchmarks/XRay). This runs the same executable many times with different
hand-written tests. I will update the litsupport plugin to utilize the new
functionality (https://reviews.llvm.org/D43316).
These changes allow lit to report micro test results if desired in order to get
many precise timing results from 1 run of 1 test executable.
Reviewers: MatzeB, hfinkel, rengolin, delcypher
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43314
llvm-svn: 327422
Remove the special casing for MRM_F8 by using HANDLE_OPTIONAL.
This should be NFC as the forms that were missing aren't used by any instructions today. They exist in the enum so that we didn't have to put them in one at a time when instructions are added. But looks like we failed here.
llvm-svn: 327298
On Windows, if the substitution contains a back reference, it would
removed due to the replacement of the escape character in lit. Create a
helper class to avoid this which will simply ignore the replacement and
mark the substitution as having capture groups being referenced.
llvm-svn: 327082
With this patch, the tablegen 'SubtargetEmitter' always generates processor
resource names.
The impact of this patch on the code size of other llvm tools is small. I have
observed an average increase of 0.03% in code size when doing a release build of
LLVM (on windows, using MSVC) with all the default backends.
This change is done in preparation for the upcoming llvm-mca patch.
llvm-svn: 326993
The former simply makes more sense: we want to access the data here in
the backend, not information about the type.
More importantly, removing users of RecordRecTy::getRecord() allows us
more freedom to refactor the frontend.
Change-Id: Iee8905fd22cdb9b11c42ca03246c03d8fe4dd77f
llvm-svn: 326699
Some of the update_*_test_checks regexes have been moved into a
library, so we might as well use them in update_mir_test_checks.
Also includes minor bugfixes to the regexes that are there so we
don't regress update_mir_test_checks
llvm-svn: 326288
Since vregs are printed in the instruction stream now, checking the
vreg block is always redundant. Remove the temporary feature that
allowed us to do that.
This reverts r316134
llvm-svn: 326284
Summary:
Add a target option AllowRegisterRenaming that is used to opt in to
post-register-allocation renaming of registers. This is set to 0 by
default, which causes the hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq/hasExtraDstRegAllocReq
fields of all opcodes to be set to 1, causing
MachineOperand::isRenamable to always return false.
Set the AllowRegisterRenaming flag to 1 for all in-tree targets that
have lit tests that were effected by enabling COPY forwarding in
MachineCopyPropagation (AArch64, AMDGPU, ARM, Hexagon, Mips, PowerPC,
RISCV, Sparc, SystemZ and X86).
Add some more comments describing the semantics of the
MachineOperand::isRenamable function and how it is set and maintained.
Change isRenamable to check the operand's opcode
hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq/hasExtraDstRegAllocReq bit directly instead of
relying on it being consistently reflected in the IsRenamable bit
setting.
Clear the IsRenamable bit when changing an operand's register value.
Remove target code that was clearing the IsRenamable bit when changing
registers/opcodes now that this is done conservatively by default.
Change setting of hasExtraSrcRegAllocReq in AMDGPU target to be done in
one place covering all opcodes that have constant pipe read limit
restrictions.
Reviewers: qcolombet, MatzeB
Subscribers: aemerson, arsenm, jyknight, mcrosier, sdardis, nhaehnle, javed.absar, tpr, arichardson, kristof.beyls, kbarton, fedor.sergeev, asb, rbar, johnrusso, simoncook, jordy.potman.lists, apazos, sabuasal, niosHD, escha, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43042
llvm-svn: 325931
The issue was that the has function was generating different results depending
on the signedness of char on the host platform. This commit fixes the issue by
explicitly using an unsigned char type to prevent sign extension and
adds some extra tests.
The original commit message was:
This patch implements a variant of the DJB hash function which folds the
input according to the algorithm in the Dwarf 5 specification (Section
6.1.1.4.5), which in turn references the Unicode Standard (Section 5.18,
"Case Mappings").
To achieve this, I have added a llvm::sys::unicode::foldCharSimple
function, which performs this mapping. The implementation of this
function was generated from the CaseMatching.txt file from the Unicode
spec using a python script (which is also included in this patch). The
script tries to optimize the function by coalescing adjecant mappings
with the same shift and stride (terms I made up). Theoretically, it
could be made a bit smarter and merge adjecant blocks that were
interrupted by only one or two characters with exceptional mapping, but
this would save only a couple of branches, while it would greatly
complicate the implementation, so I deemed it was not worth it.
Since we assume that the vast majority of the input characters will be
US-ASCII, the folding hash function has a fast-path for handling these,
and only whips out the full decode+fold+encode logic if we encounter a
character outside of this range. It might be possible to implement the
folding directly on utf8 sequences, but this would also bring a lot of
complexity for the few cases where we will actually need to process
non-ascii characters.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: mgorny, hintonda, echristo, clayborg, vleschuk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42740
llvm-svn: 325732
Summary:
Currently vim syntax highlighting recognizes 'CHECK:' as a special
comment, but not CHECK-DAG, CHECK-NOT and other CHECKs. This patch
adds rules for these comments.
Reviewers: chandlerc, compnerd, rogfer01
Reviewed By: rogfer01
Subscribers: rogfer01, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43289
llvm-svn: 325599
We are running lld tests with "--full-shutdown" option because we don't
want to call _exit() in lld if it is running tests. Regular shutdown
is needed for leak sanitizer.
This patch changes the way how we tell lld that it is running tests.
Now "--full-shutdown" is removed, and LLD_IN_TEST environment variable
is used instead.
This patch enables full shutdown on all ports, e.g. ELF, COFF and wasm.
Previously, we enabled it only for ELF.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43410
llvm-svn: 325413
This patch changes GlobalISelEmitter to rank patterns similar to how the
DAG does it (ie it computes a score for a pattern and adds the added
complexity to it).
This is so that the decision tree for GISelSelector remains compatible
with that of SelectionDAG.
https://reviews.llvm.org/D43270
llvm-svn: 325401
Summary:
This patch makes the decoder understand old AMD 3DNow!
instructions that have never been properly supported in the X86
disassembler, despite being supported in other subsystems. Hopefully
this should make the X86 decoder more complete with respect to binaries
containing legacy code.
Reviewers: craig.topper
Reviewed By: craig.topper
Subscribers: llvm-commits, maksfb, bruno
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43311
llvm-svn: 325295
Summary:
This patch implements a variant of the DJB hash function which folds the
input according to the algorithm in the Dwarf 5 specification (Section
6.1.1.4.5), which in turn references the Unicode Standard (Section 5.18,
"Case Mappings").
To achieve this, I have added a llvm::sys::unicode::foldCharSimple
function, which performs this mapping. The implementation of this
function was generated from the CaseMatching.txt file from the Unicode
spec using a python script (which is also included in this patch). The
script tries to optimize the function by coalescing adjecant mappings
with the same shift and stride (terms I made up). Theoretically, it
could be made a bit smarter and merge adjecant blocks that were
interrupted by only one or two characters with exceptional mapping, but
this would save only a couple of branches, while it would greatly
complicate the implementation, so I deemed it was not worth it.
Since we assume that the vast majority of the input characters will be
US-ASCII, the folding hash function has a fast-path for handling these,
and only whips out the full decode+fold+encode logic if we encounter a
character outside of this range. It might be possible to implement the
folding directly on utf8 sequences, but this would also bring a lot of
complexity for the few cases where we will actually need to process
non-ascii characters.
Reviewers: JDevlieghere, aprantl, probinson, dblaikie
Subscribers: mgorny, hintonda, echristo, clayborg, vleschuk, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42740
llvm-svn: 325107
Summary:
These are functions like operator<<(raw_ostream&, Foo).
Previously these were only supported for messages. In the assertion
EXPECT_EQ(A, B) << C;
the local modifications would explicitly try to use raw_ostream printing for C.
However A and B would look for a std::ostream printing function, and often fall
back to gtest's default "168 byte object <00 01 FE 42 ...>".
This patch pulls out the raw_ostream support into a new header under `custom/`.
I changed the mechanism: instead of a convertible stream, we wrap the printed
value in a proxy object to allow it to be sent to a std::ostream.
I think the new way is clearer.
I also changed the policy: we prefer raw_ostream printers over std::ostream
ones. This is because the fallback printers are defined using std::ostream,
while all the raw_ostream printers should be "good".
Reviewers: ilya-biryukov, chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43091
llvm-svn: 324876
Summary:
This revision refactors 1. parser 2. CHECK line adder of utils/update_{,llc_}test_checks.py
so that thir functionality can be re-used by other utility scripts (e.g. D42712)
Reviewers: asb, craig.topper, RKSimon, echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits, spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42805
llvm-svn: 324803
Allow CLANG environment variable be copied into the testing configuration
and proper support testing with a custom path to the clang executable.
Signed-off-by: Vladimir Vereschaka <vvereschaka@accesssoftek.com>
llvm-svn: 324706
Summary:
Right now using a ProcResource automatically counts as usage of all
super ProcResGroups. All this is done during codegen, so there is no
way for schedulers to get this information at runtime.
This adds the information of which individual ProcRes units are
contained in a ProcResGroup in MCProcResourceDesc.
Reviewers: gchatelet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D43023
llvm-svn: 324582
Summary:
Right now only the ProcResourceUnits that are directly referenced by
instructions are emitted. This change emits all of them, so that
analysis passes can use the information.
This has no functional impact. It typically adds a few entries (e.g. 4
for X86/haswell) to the generated ProcRes table.
Reviewers: gchatelet
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42903
llvm-svn: 324228
Summary:
This is a bit of a reimplementation the work done in
https://reviews.llvm.org/D41446, since that patch only really works for
tied operands of instructions, not aliases.
Instead of checking the constraints based on the matched instruction's opcode,
this patch uses the match-info's convert function to check the operand
constraints for that specific instruction/alias.
This is based on the matched operands for the instruction, not the
resulting opcode of the MCInst.
This patch adds the following enum/table to the *GenAsmMatcher.inc file:
enum {
Tie0_1_1,
Tie0_1_2,
Tie0_1_5,
...
};
const char TiedAsmOperandTable[][3] = {
/* Tie0_1_1 */ { 0, 1, 1 },
/* Tie0_1_2 */ { 0, 1, 2 },
/* Tie0_1_5 */ { 0, 1, 5 },
...
};
And it is referenced directly in the ConversionTable, like this:
static const uint8_t ConversionTable[CVT_NUM_SIGNATURES][13] = {
...
{ CVT_95_addRegOperands, 1,
CVT_95_addRegOperands, 2,
CVT_Tied, Tie0_1_5,
CVT_95_addRegOperands, 6, CVT_Done },
...
The Tie0_1_5 (and corresponding table) encodes that:
* Result operand 0 is the operand to copy (which is e.g. done when
building up the operands to the MCInst in convertToMCInst())
* Asm operands 1 and 5 should be the same operands (which is checked
in checkAsmTiedOperandConstraints()).
Reviewers: olista01, rengolin, fhahn, craig.topper, echristo, apazos, dsanders
Reviewed By: olista01
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42293
llvm-svn: 324196
In some cases it was using "\" unnecessarily. In another case it
needed an additional "\" to properly indicate a numbered sub-match.
Make comment-start buffer-local in llvm-mode.el
llvm-mode was setting comment-start globally. However, it is better
to only set it locally in the current buffer.
Don't use purecopy in llvm-mode.el
There's no reason to use purecopy in llvm-mode.el.
purecopy is only needed for files that are dumped in emacs.
Add a version header to llvm-mode.el
Adding a version header to llvm-mode.el allows it to be installed by
the Emacs package manager. There are not many requirements on the
version number; however it is useful to users to bump it when
something significant changes. Here I've chosen just to start at 1.0.
Patch by Tom Tromey!
llvm-svn: 323705
Summary:
Apparently, we missed on constraining register classes of VReg-operands of all the instructions
built from a destination pattern but the root (top-level) one. The issue exposed itself
while selecting G_FPTOSI for armv7: the corresponding pattern generates VTOSIZS wrapped
into COPY_TO_REGCLASS, so top-level COPY_TO_REGCLASS gets properly constrained,
while nested VTOSIZS (or rather its destination virtual register to be exact) does not.
Fixing this by issuing GIR_ConstrainSelectedInstOperands for every nested GIR_BuildMI.
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=35965
rdar://problem/36886530
Patch by Roman Tereshin
Reviewers: dsanders, qcolombet, rovka, bogner, aditya_nandakumar, volkan
Reviewed By: dsanders, qcolombet, rovka
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42565
llvm-svn: 323692
Collected statistics for the number of patterns emitted can be
incorrect because rules can be grouped if OptimizeMatchTable
is enabled. Increase the counter in RuleMatcher::emit(...)
to avoid that.
llvm-svn: 323391
This is a bit of a hack, but removes a cycle that broke modular builds
of LLVM. Of course the cycle is still there in form of a dependency
on the .def file.
llvm-svn: 323383
llvm::Regex is still the slowest regex engine on earth, running it over
all instructions on X86 takes a while. Extract a prefix and use a binary
search to reduce the search space before we resort to regex matching.
There are a couple of caveats here:
- The generic opcodes are outside of the sorted enum. They're handled in an extra loop.
- If there's a top-level bar we can't use the prefix trick.
- We bail on top-level ?. This could be handled, but it's rare.
This brings the time to generate X86GenInstrInfo.inc from 21s to 4.7s on
my machine.
llvm-svn: 323277
The LLVM IR section of a MIR document can start with "--- |" rather
than just "---", because "|" is a sigil for a freeform document in
YAML. We need to handle this so that we don't try to add check lines
to the LLVM IR functions in a MIR file.
llvm-svn: 323178
Summary:
The debian8 repos have an old version of ninja that seems to sometimes crash
when building llvm.
Reviewers: ioeric, mehdi_amini
Reviewed By: ioeric
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42304
llvm-svn: 323134
On FreeBSD, it is currently not possible to build libcxxabi and link
against it, so we have been building releases with -no-libs for quite
some time.
However, libcxx and libunwind should build without problems, so provide
an option to skip just libcxxabi.
llvm-svn: 322875
It appears that we haven't been prioritizing rules that contain nested
instructions properly. InstructionOperandMatcher didn't override
isHigherPriorityThan so it never compared the instructions/operands/predicates
inside nested instructions.
Fixes PR35926. Thanks to Diana Picus for the bug report.
llvm-svn: 322754
Summary: llc sometimes may not emit .cfi_startproc which makes func_dict to have less entries.
Subscribers: nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42144
llvm-svn: 322725
Summary:
This patch adds CustomRenderer which renders the matched
operands to the specified instruction.
Targets can enable the matching of SDNodeXForm by adding
a definition that inherits from GICustomOperandRenderer and
GISDNodeXFormEquiv as follows.
def gi_imm8 : GICustomOperandRenderer<"renderImm8”>,
GISDNodeXFormEquiv<imm8_xform>;
Custom renderer functions should be of the form:
void render(MachineInstrBuilder &MIB, const MachineInstr &I);
Reviewers: dsanders, ab, rovka
Reviewed By: dsanders
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, mgrang, qcolombet
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42012
llvm-svn: 322582
FileCheck tool crashes when trying to parse --check-prefix argument if there is no any
data after it.
For example test like following would crash if there are no symbols and no EOL mark after `boom`:
# REQUIRES: x86
# RUN: <skipped few lines>
# RUN: llvm-readobj -t %t | FileCheck %s --check-prefix=boom
Patch fixes the issue.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D42057
llvm-svn: 322536
Prior to this we had a separate instruction and register class that excluded eax to prevent matching the instruction that would encode with 0x90.
This patch changes this to just use an InstAlias to force xchgl %eax, %eax to use XCHG32rr instruction in 64-bit mode. This gets rid of the separate instruction and register class.
llvm-svn: 322532
Summary:
This extends TableGen's AsmMatcherEmitter with code that generates
a table with tied-operand constraints. The constraints are checked
when parsing the instruction. If an operand is not equal to its tied operand,
the assembler will give an error.
Patch [2/3] in a series to add operand constraint checks for SVE's predicated ADD/SUB.
Reviewers: olista01, rengolin, mcrosier, fhahn, craig.topper, evandro, echristo
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41446
llvm-svn: 322166
Summary:
That would allow to recursively compare directories in tests using
"diff -r" on Windows in a similar way as it can be done on Linux or Mac.
Reviewers: zturner, morehouse, vsk
Reviewed By: zturner
Subscribers: kcc, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41776
llvm-svn: 322102
This patch improves diagnostic for case when mapped instruction
does not contain a field listed under RowFields.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41778
llvm-svn: 322004
This change deals with intrinsics with multiple outputs, for example load
instrinsic with address updated.
DAG selection for Instrinsics could be done either through source code or
tablegen. Handling all intrinsics in source code would introduce a huge chunk
of repetitive code if we have a large number of intrinsic that return multiple
values (see NVPTX as an example). While intrinsic class in tablegen supports
multiple outputs, tablegen only supports Intrinsics with zero or one output on
TreePattern. This appears to be a simple bug in tablegen that is fixed by this
change.
For Intrinsics defined as:
def int_xxx_load_addr_updated: Intrinsic<[llvm_i32_ty, llvm_ptr_ty], [llvm_ptr_ty, llvm_i32_ty], []>;
Instruction will be defined as:
def L32_X: Inst<(outs reg:$d1, reg:$d2), (ins reg:$s1, reg:$s2), "ld32_x $d1, $d2, $s2", [(set i32:$d1, i32:$d2, (int_xxx_load_addr_updated i32:$s1, i32:$s2))]>;
Patch by Wenbo Sun, thanks!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D32888
llvm-svn: 321704
Summary: Correctly handle files ignored by svn (such as .o files,
which are ignored by default) by adding "--no-ignore" flag to "svn
status" and "svn add".
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41404
llvm-svn: 321388
Allows preserving MachineMemOperands on intrinsics
through selection. For reasons I don't understand, this
is a static property of the pattern and the selector
deliberately goes out of its way to drop if not present.
Intrinsics already inherit from SDPatternOperator allowing
them to be used directly in instruction patterns. SDPatternOperator
has a list of SDNodeProperty, but you currently can't set them on
the intrinsic. Without SDNPMemOperand, when the node is selected
any memory operands are always dropped. Allowing setting this
on the intrinsics avoids needing to introduce another equivalent
target node just to have SDNPMemOperand set.
llvm-svn: 321212
NFC for currently supported targets. This resolves a problem encountered by
targets such as RISCV that reference `Subtarget` in ImmLeaf predicates.
llvm-svn: 321176
This patch resubmits the SVE ZIP1/ZIP2 patch series consisting of
of r320992, r320986, r320973, and r320970 by reverting
https://reviews.llvm.org/rL321024.
The issue that caused r321024 has been addressed in https://reviews.llvm.org/rL321158,
so this patch-series should be safe to resubmit.
llvm-svn: 321163
Between the creation of the last InstructionMatcher and the first
emission of the related Rule, we need to clear the internal map of IDs.
We used to do that right after the creation of the main
InstructionMatcher when building the rule and although that worked, this
is fragile because if for some reason some later code decides to create
more InstructionMatcher before the final call to emit, then the IDs
would be completely messed up.
Move that to the beginning of "emit" so that the IDs are guarantee to be
consistent.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 321053
We need to handle IR for tests that want to do lowering (or just
-stop-after with IR as input). I've run this on one AArch64 test to
demonstrate what it looks like.
llvm-svn: 321048
Move InsnVarID and OpIdx at the beginning of the list of arguments
for all the constructors of the OperandMatcher subclasses.
This matches what we do for the InstructionMatcher.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 321031
In theory, reapplying optimizeRules on each group matchers should give
us a second nesting level on the matching table. In practice, we need
more work to make that happen because all the predicates are actually
not directly available through the predicate matchers list.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 321025
This reverts changes r320992, r320986, r320973, and r320970.
r320970 by itself breaks the test case, and the rest depend on it.
Test case will land soon.
llvm-svn: 321024
*** Context ***
Prior to this patchw, the table generated for matching instruction was
straight forward but highly inefficient.
Basically, each pattern generates its own set of self contained checks
and actions.
E.g., TableGen generated:
// First pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
CheckOpcode G_ADD
...
Build ADDrr
// Second pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
CheckOpcode G_ADD
...
Build ADDri
// Third pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
CheckOpcode G_SUB
...
Build SUBrr
*** Problem ***
Because of that generation, a *lot* of check were redundant between each
pattern and were checked every single time until we reach the pattern
that matches.
E.g., Taking the previous table, let say we are matching a G_SUB, that
means we were going to check all the rules for G_ADD before looking at
the G_SUB rule. In particular we are going to do:
check 3 operands; PASS
check G_ADD; FAIL
; Next rule
check 3 operands; PASS (but we already knew that!)
check G_ADD; FAIL (well it is still not true)
; Next rule
check 3 operands; PASS (really!!)
check G_SUB; PASS (at last :P)
*** Proposed Solution ***
This patch introduces a concept of group of rules (GroupMatcher) that
share some predicates and only get checked once for the whole group.
This patch only creates groups with one nesting level. Conceptually
there is nothing preventing us for having deeper nest level. However,
the current implementation is not smart enough to share the recording
(aka capturing) of values. That limits its ability to do more sharing.
For the given example the current patch will generate:
// First group
CheckOpcode G_ADD
// First pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
...
Build ADDrr
// Second pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
...
Build ADDri
// Second group
CheckOpcode G_SUB
// Third pattern
CheckNumOperand 3
...
Build SUBrr
But if we allowed several nesting level, it could create a sub group
for the checknumoperand 3.
(We would need to call optimizeRules on the rules within a group.)
*** Result ***
With only one level of nesting, the instruction selection pass is up
to 4x faster. For instance, one instruction now takes 500 checks,
instead of 24k! With more nesting we could get in the tens I believe.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39034
rdar://problem/34670699
llvm-svn: 321017
Summary: Patch [4/4] in a series to add parsing of predicates and properly parse SVE ZIP1/ZIP2 instructions. This patch further improves diagnostic messages for when the SVE feature is not specified.
Reviewers: rengolin, fhahn, olista01, echristo, efriedma
Reviewed By: fhahn
Subscribers: sdardis, aemerson, javed.absar, tschuett, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40363
llvm-svn: 320992
Summary:
When emitting a diagnostic for an invalid operand, a specific diagnostic
should only be reported when the instruction being matched is actually
enabled by the feature flags.
Patch [3/4] in a series to add parsing of predicates and properly parse SVE
ZIP1/ZIP2 instructions. This patch fixes bogus diagnostic messages for when
the SVE feature is not specified.
Reviewers: rengolin, craig.topper, olista01, sdardis, stoklund
Reviewed By: olista01, sdardis
Subscribers: fhahn, javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40362
llvm-svn: 320986
Prior to this patch, a predicate wouldn't make sense outside of its
rule. Indeed, it was only during emitting a rule that a predicate would
be made aware of the IDs of the data it is checking. Because of that,
predicates could not be moved around or compared between each other.
NFC.
llvm-svn: 320887
Summary:
Now that r320495, "[debuginfo-tests] Support moving
debuginfo-tests to llvm/projects," has landed, which includes a local
copy of test_debuginfo.pl, remove the obsolete copy.
Reviewers: zturner, aprantl
Reviewed By: aprantl
Subscribers: llvm-commits, JDevlieghere
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D41260
llvm-svn: 320771
Summary:
The generated diagnostic by the AsmMatcher isn't always applicable to the AsmOperand.
This is because the code will only update the diagnostic if it is more
specific than the previous diagnostic. However, when having validated
operands and 'moved on' to a next operand (for some instruction/alias for
which all previous operands are valid), if the diagnostic is InvalidOperand,
than that should be set as the diagnostic, not the more specific message
about a previous operand for some other instruction/alias candidate.
(Re-committed with an extra whitespace in SVEInstrFormats.td to trigger rebuild
of AArch64GenAsmMatcher.inc, since the llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win
builder does not seem to rebuild AArch64GenAsmMatcher.inc with the
newly built TableGen due to a missing dependency somewhere (see:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/2017-December/119555.html))
Reviewers: craig.topper, olista01, rengolin, stoklund
Reviewed By: olista01
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40011
llvm-svn: 320711
Most of the targets don't need the scheduler class enum.
I have an X86 scheduler model change that causes some names in the enum to become about 18000 characters long. This is because using instregex in scheduler models causes the scheduler class to get named with every instruction that matches the regex concatenated together. MSVC has a limit of 4096 characters for an identifier name. Rather than trying to come up with way to reduce the name length, I'm just going to sidestep the problem by not including the enum in X86.
llvm-svn: 320552
A number of architectures re-use the same register names (e.g. for both 32-bit
FPRs and 64-bit FPRs). They are currently unable to use the tablegen'erated
MatchRegisterName and MatchRegisterAltName, as tablegen (when built with
asserts enabled) will fail.
When the AllowDuplicateRegisterNames in AsmParser is set, duplicated register
names will be tolerated. A backend can then coerce registers to the desired
register class by (for instance) implementing validateTargetOperandClass.
At least the in-tree Sparc backend could benefit from this, as does RISC-V
(single and double precision floating point registers).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39845
llvm-svn: 320018
We currently use target_link_libraries without an explicit scope
specifier (INTERFACE, PRIVATE or PUBLIC) when linking executables.
Dependencies added in this way apply to both the target and its
dependencies, i.e. they become part of the executable's link interface
and are transitive.
Transitive dependencies generally don't make sense for executables,
since you wouldn't normally be linking against an executable. This also
causes issues for generating install export files when using
LLVM_DISTRIBUTION_COMPONENTS. For example, clang has a lot of LLVM
library dependencies, which are currently added as interface
dependencies. If clang is in the distribution components but the LLVM
libraries it depends on aren't (which is a perfectly legitimate use case
if the LLVM libraries are being built static and there are therefore no
run-time dependencies on them), CMake will complain about the LLVM
libraries not being in export set when attempting to generate the
install export file for clang. This is reasonable behavior on CMake's
part, and the right thing is for LLVM's build system to explicitly use
PRIVATE dependencies for executables.
Unfortunately, CMake doesn't allow you to mix and match the keyword and
non-keyword target_link_libraries signatures for a single target; i.e.,
if a single call to target_link_libraries for a particular target uses
one of the INTERFACE, PRIVATE, or PUBLIC keywords, all other calls must
also be updated to use those keywords. This means we must do this change
in a single shot. I also fully expect to have missed some instances; I
tested by enabling all the projects in the monorepo (except dragonegg),
and configuring both with and without shared libraries, on both Darwin
and Linux, but I'm planning to rely on the buildbots for other
configurations (since it should be pretty easy to fix those).
Even after this change, we still have a lot of target_link_libraries
calls that don't specify a scope keyword, mostly for shared libraries.
I'm thinking about addressing those in a follow-up, but that's a
separate change IMO.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40823
llvm-svn: 319840
This patch splits atomics out of the generic G_LOAD/G_STORE and into their own
G_ATOMIC_LOAD/G_ATOMIC_STORE. This is a pragmatic decision rather than a
necessary one. Atomic load/store has little in implementation in common with
non-atomic load/store. They tend to be handled very differently throughout the
backend. It also has the nice side-effect of slightly improving the common-case
performance at ISel since there's no longer a need for an atomicity check in the
matcher table.
All targets have been updated to remove the atomic load/store check from the
G_LOAD/G_STORE path. AArch64 has also been updated to mark
G_ATOMIC_LOAD/G_ATOMIC_STORE legal.
There is one issue with this patch though which also affects the extending loads
and truncating stores. The rules only match when an appropriate G_ANYEXT is
present in the MIR. For example,
(G_ATOMIC_STORE (G_TRUNC:s16 (G_ANYEXT:s32 (G_ATOMIC_LOAD:s16 X))))
will match but:
(G_ATOMIC_STORE (G_ATOMIC_LOAD:s16 X))
will not. This shouldn't be a problem at the moment, but as we get better at
eliminating extends/truncates we'll likely start failing to match in some
cases. The current plan is to fix this in a patch that changes the
representation of extending-load/truncating-store to allow the MMO to describe
a different type to the operation.
llvm-svn: 319691
The variable named `minor` was actually pointing to the patch part of
the version. While I was changing this I also made the check for Apple
clang more robust by checking both patch and minor rather than just
minor.
llvm-svn: 319656
This is causing a failure in the llvm-clang-x86_64-expensive-checks-win
buildbot, and I can't reproduce it locally, so reverting until I can work out
what is wrong.
llvm-svn: 319654
This adds a "invalid operands for instruction" diagnostic for
instructions where there is an instruction encoding with the correct
mnemonic and which is available for this target, but where multiple
operands do not match those which were provided. This makes it clear
that there is some combination of operands that is valid for the current
target, which the default diagnostic of "invalid instruction" does not.
Since this is a very general error, we only emit it if we don't have a
more specific error.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36747
llvm-svn: 319649
Added some commonly used Arm triples to the script, with and without
the -eabi suffix.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40708
llvm-svn: 319545
The latest clang that ships with Xcode (clang 900 or 9.0.0) does not
support LSan. This fixes the lit configuration to reflect that.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40672
llvm-svn: 319530
GIM_CheckNonAtomic has been replaced by GIM_CheckAtomicOrdering to allow it to support a wider
range of orderings. This has then been used to import patterns using nodes such
as atomic_cmp_swap, atomic_swap, and atomic_load_*.
llvm-svn: 319232
Add support for mips, particularly skipping the matching of .frame, .(f)mask
and LLVM's usage of the .set no(reorder|at|macro) directives.
Reviewers: spatel
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40268
llvm-svn: 319001
RecordKeeper::getDef() is a hot place, it shows up in profiling
and it creates std::string instance for each search in RecordMap
though RecordKeeper::RecordMap can use StringRef as a key
instead to avoid that. Patch do that change.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40170
llvm-svn: 318822
When searching for a resource unit, use the reference location instead of
the definition location in case of an error.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40263
llvm-svn: 318803
- We can still emit this error if the actual instruction has two or more
operands missing compared to the expected one.
- We should only emit this error once per instruction.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36746
llvm-svn: 318770
This is NFC, as the matcher would continue looping up to the maximum
number of operands with no effect, but this should improve performance a
bit, and makes the debug trace clearer.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36744
llvm-svn: 318769
Summary:
The generated diagnostic by the AsmMatcher isn't always applicable to the AsmOperand.
This is because the code will only update the diagnostic if it is more specific than the previous diagnostic. However, when having validated operands and 'moved on' to a next operand (for some instruction/alias for which all previous operands are valid), if the diagnostic is InvalidOperand, than that should be set as the diagnostic, not the more specific message about a previous operand for some other instruction/alias candidate.
Reviewers: craig.topper, olista01, rengolin, stoklund
Reviewed By: olista01
Subscribers: javed.absar, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40011
llvm-svn: 318759
This is still breaking greendragon.
At this point I give up until someone can fix the greendragon
bots, and I will probably abandon this effort in favor of using
a private github repository.
llvm-svn: 318722
This was reverted due to the tests being run twice on some
build bots. Each run had a slightly different configuration
due to the way in which it was being invoked. This fixes
the problem (albeit in a somewhat hacky way). Hopefully in
the future we can get rid of the workflow of running
debuginfo-tests as part of clang, and then this hack can
go away.
llvm-svn: 318697
Summary:
This patch fixes an issue so that the right alias is printed when the instruction has tied operands. It checks the number of operands in the resulting instruction as opposed to the alias, and then skips over tied operands that should not be printed in the alias.
This allows to generate the preferred assembly syntax for the AArch64 'ins' instruction, which should always be displayed as 'mov' according to the ARM Architecture Reference Manual. Several unit tests have changed as a result, but only to reflect the preferred disassembly. Some other InstAlias patterns (movk/bic/orr) needed a slight adjustment to stop them becoming the default and breaking other unit tests.
Please note that the patch is mostly the same as https://reviews.llvm.org/D29219 which was reverted because of an issue found when running TableGen with the Address Sanitizer. That issue has been addressed in this iteration of the patch.
Reviewers: rengolin, stoklund, huntergr, SjoerdMeijer, rovka
Reviewed By: rengolin, SjoerdMeijer
Subscribers: fhahn, aemerson, javed.absar, kristof.beyls, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40030
llvm-svn: 318650
Summary:
Currently, LIT configures the LLVM binary path before the Clang binary path. However this breaks testing out-of-tree Clang builds (where the LLVM binary path includes a copy of Clang).
This patch reverses the order of the paths when looking for Clang, putting the Clang binary directory first.
Reviewers: zturner, beanz, chapuni, modocache, EricWF
Reviewed By: EricWF
Subscribers: mgorny, cfe-commits, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D40217
llvm-svn: 318607
ptypeN is functionally the same as typeN except that it informs the
SelectionDAG importer that an operand should be treated as a pointer even
if it was written as iN. This is important for patterns that use iN instead
of iPTR to represent pointers. E.g.:
(set GPR64:$dst, (load GPR64:$addr))
Previously, this was handled as a hardcoded special case for the appropriate
operands to G_LOAD and G_STORE.
llvm-svn: 318574
All these headers already depend on CodeGen headers so moving them into
CodeGen fixes the layering (since CodeGen depends on Target, not the
other way around).
llvm-svn: 318490
This is still broken because it causes certain tests to be
run twice with slightly different configurations, which is
wrong in some cases.
You can observe this by running:
ninja -nv check-all | grep debuginfo-tests
And seeing that it passes clang/test and clang/test/debuginfo-tests
to lit, which causes it to run debuginfo-tests twice. The fix is
going to involve either:
a) figuring out that we're running in this "deprecated" configuration,
and then deleting the clang/test/debuginfo-tests path, which should
cause it to behave identically to before, or:
b) make lit smart enough that it doesn't descend into a sub-suite if
that sub-suite already has a lit.cfg file.
llvm-svn: 318486
This was reverted due to some failures on specific darwin buildbots,
the issue being that the new lit configuration was not setting the
SDKROOT environment variable. We've tested a fix locally and confirmed
that it works, so this patch resubmits everything with the fix
applied.
llvm-svn: 318435
Summary:
This patch adds a LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV which, like LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV,
causes TableGen to instrument the generated table to collect rule coverage
information. However, LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV goes a bit further than
LLVM_ENABLE_DAGISEL_COV. The information is written to files
(${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/gisel-coverage-* by default). These files can then be
concatenated into ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all after which TableGen will
read this information and use it to emit warnings about untested rules.
This technique could also be used by SelectionDAG and can be further
extended to detect hot rules and give them priority over colder rules.
Usage:
* Enable LLVM_ENABLE_GISEL_COV in CMake
* Build the compiler and run some tests
* cat gisel-coverage-[0-9]* > gisel-coverage-all
* Delete lib/Target/*/*GenGlobalISel.inc*
* Build the compiler
Known issues:
* ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-all must be generated as a manual
step due to a lack of a portable 'cat' command. It should be the
concatenation of all ${LLVM_GISEL_COV_PREFIX}-[0-9]* files.
* There's no mechanism to discard coverage information when the ruleset
changes
Depends on D39742
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, aditya_nandakumar, rovka
Reviewed By: rovka
Subscribers: vsk, arsenm, nhaehnle, mgorny, kristof.beyls, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39747
llvm-svn: 318356
This is a tablegen backend to generate documentation for the opcodes that exist
for each target. For each opcode, it lists the assembly string, the names and
types of all operands, and the flags and predicates that apply to the opcode.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31025
llvm-svn: 318155
This reverts the aforementioned patch and 2 subsequent follow-ups,
as some buildbots are still failing 2 tests because of it.
Investigation is ongoing into the cause of the failures.
llvm-svn: 318112
Similar to r315841, GlobalISel and SelectionDAG require different code for the
common atomic predicates due to differences in the representation.
Even without that, differences in the IR (SDNode vs MachineInstr) require
differences in the C++ predicate.
This patch moves the implementation of the common atomic predicates related to
ordering into tablegen so that it can handle these differences.
It's NFC for SelectionDAG since it emits equivalent code and it's NFC for
GlobalISel since the rules involving the relevant predicates are still
rejected by the importer.
llvm-svn: 318102
Similar to r315841, GlobalISel and SelectionDAG require different code for the
common atomic predicates due to differences in the representation.
Even without that, differences in the IR (SDNode vs MachineInstr) require
differences in the C++ predicate.
This patch moves the implementation of the common atomic predicates related to
memory type into tablegen so that it can handle these differences.
It's NFC for SelectionDAG since it emits equivalent code and it's NFC for
GlobalISel since the rules involving the relevant predicates are still
rejected by the importer.
llvm-svn: 318095
Some alias instructions are printed with an extra space after the tab
character. Fix this by skipping that space when the tab character is printed
so that the instructions are aligned with the rest of the code.
Patch by Milos Stojanovic.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D35946
llvm-svn: 318059
Allow a pattern rewriter to be installed in CodeGenDAGPatterns and use it to
correct situations where SelectionDAG and GlobalISel disagree on
representation. For example, it would rewrite:
(sextload:i32 $ptr)<<unindexedload>><<sextload>><<sextloadi16>
to:
(sext:i32 (load:i16 $ptr)<<unindexedload>>)
I'd have preferred to replace the fragments and have the expansion happen
naturally as part of PatFrag expansion but the type inferencing system can't
cope with loads of types narrower than those mentioned in register classes.
This is because the SDTCisInt's on the sext constrain both the result and
operand to the 'legal' integer types (where legal is defined as 'a register
class can contain the type') which immediately rules the narrower types out.
Several targets (those with only one legal integer type) would then go on to
crash on the SDTCisOpSmallerThanOp<> when it removes all the possible types
for the result of the extend.
Also, improve isObviouslySafeToFold() slightly to automatically return true for
neighbouring instructions. There can't be any re-ordering problems if
re-ordering isn't happenning. We'll need to improve it further to handle
sign/zero-extending loads when the extend and load aren't immediate neighbours
though.
llvm-svn: 317971
Previously, debuginfo-tests was expected to be checked out into
clang/test and then the tests would automatically run as part of
check-clang. This is not a standard workflow for handling
external projects, and it brings with it some serious drawbacks
such as the inability to depend on things other than clang, which
we will need going forward.
The goal of this patch is to migrate towards a more standard
workflow. To ease the transition for build bot maintainers,
this patch tries not to break the existing workflow, but instead
simply deprecate it to give maintainers a chance to update
the build infrastructure.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39605
llvm-svn: 317925
This patch adds the ability to include the member function declarations
in the instruction selector class separately from the member bodies.
Defining GET_DAGISEL_DECL macro to any value will only include the member
declarations. To include bodies, define GET_DAGISEL_BODY macro to be the
selector class name. Example:
class FooDAGToDAGISel : public SelectionDAGISel {
// Pull in declarations only.
#define GET_DAGISEL_DECL
#include "FooISelDAGToDAG.inc"
};
// Include the function bodies (with names qualified with the provided
// class name).
#define GET_DAGISEL_BODY FooDAGToDAGISel
#include "FooISelDAGToDAG.inc"
When neither of the two macros are defined, the function bodies are emitted
inline (in the same way as before this patch).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39596
llvm-svn: 317903
This should be a trivial change, and I've started using it for generating all
tests at https://github.com/lowrisc/riscv-llvm (i.e. it's been tested in
action quite a lot). Note that the regex does not attempt to match
.cfi_startproc, as I want to ensure compatibility with functions that have the
nounwind attribute.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39789
llvm-svn: 317693
Summary:
This makes it very easy to test files that only differ in a constant
value somewhere in the test case.
Reviewers: jlebar, hfinkel, chandlerc, probinson
Reviewed By: probinson
Subscribers: probinson, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39629
llvm-svn: 317572
Patch [1/5] in a series to add assembler/disassembler support for AArch64 SVE
unpredicated ADD/SUB instructions.
Patch by Sander De Smalen.
Reviewed by: rengolin
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39087
llvm-svn: 317564
Previously, this could end up replacing a vreg like %14 with
[[VREG1]]4, where VREG1 was the match for %1. That's obviously not
correct, though it hasn't actually come up in any tests I've converted
so far.
llvm-svn: 317509
The GlobalISel TableGen backend didn't check for predicates on the
source children. This caused it to generate code for ARM patterns such
as SMLABB or similar, but without properly checking for the sext_16_node
part of the operands. This in turn meant that we would select SMLABB
instead of MLA for simple sequences such as s32 + s32 * s32, which is
wrong (we want a MLA on the full operands, not just their bottom 16
bits).
This patch forces TableGen to skip patterns with predicates on the src
children, so it doesn't generate code for SMLABB and other similar ARM
instructions at all anymore. AArch64 and X86 are not affected.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39554
llvm-svn: 317313
This will enable us to prefer VALIGND/Q during shuffle lowering in order to get the extended register encoding space when BWI isn't available. But if we end up not using the extended registers we can switch VPALIGNR for the shorter VEX encoding.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39401
llvm-svn: 317122
The importer will now accept nested instructions in the result pattern such as
(ADDWrr $a, (SUBWrr $b, $c)). This is only valid when the nested instruction
def's a single vreg and the parent instruction consumes a single vreg where a
nested instruction is specified. The importer will automatically create a vreg
to connect the two using the type information from the pattern. This vreg will
be constrained to the register classes given in the instruction definitions*.
* REG_SEQUENCE is explicitly rejected because of this. The definition doesn't
constrain to a register class and it therefore needs special handling.
llvm-svn: 317117
The next commit will add support for multi-instruction emission so we need to
start allocating instruction ID's instead of hard-coding them to 0.
llvm-svn: 317057
I need a test that only runs in a reasonable amount of time on systems
that have sparse files. The broadest class of systems that support
sparse files are linux systems. So restricting my test to linux systems
should suffice. This change adds the system-linux feature to llvm-lit so
that it can be required.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39482
llvm-svn: 317055
Multi-instruction emission needs to ensure the the instructions are generated
a depth-first fashion. For example:
(ADDWrr (SUBWrr a, b), c)
needs to emit the SUBWrr before the ADDWrr. However, our walk over
TreePatternNode's is highly context sensitive which makes it difficult to append
BuildMIActions in the order we want. To fix this, we now keep track of the
insertion point as we add actions. This will allow multi-insn emission to insert
BuildMI's in the correct place.
The previous commit failed on the Ubuntu bots using GCC 4.8. These bots lack the
const_iterator forms of insert() and emplace() that were added in C++11. As a
result I've switched the const_iterators to iterators.
llvm-svn: 317049
The same bots fail but I believe I know what the issue is now. These bots are
missing the const_iterator versions of insert/emplace/etc. that were introduced
in C++11.
llvm-svn: 317042
Multi-instruction emission needs to ensure the the instructions are generated
a depth-first fashion. For example:
(ADDWrr (SUBWrr a, b), c)
needs to emit the SUBWrr before the ADDWrr. However, our walk over
TreePatternNode's is highly context sensitive which makes it difficult to append
BuildMIActions in the order we want. To fix this, we now keep track of the
insertion point as we add actions. This will allow multi-insn emission to insert
BuildMI's in the correct place.
The previous commit failed on the Ubuntu bots using GCC 4.8. These bots didn't
like a call to emplace(). I've replaced it with insert() to see if it's a quirk
of the C++11 support.
llvm-svn: 317040
Multi-instruction emission needs to ensure the the instructions are generated
a depth-first fashion. For example:
(ADDWrr (SUBWrr a, b), c)
needs to emit the SUBWrr before the ADDWrr. However, our walk over
TreePatternNode's is highly context sensitive which makes it difficult to append
BuildMIActions in the order we want. To fix this, we now keep track of the
insertion point as we add actions. This will allow multi-insn emission to insert
BuildMI's in the correct place.
llvm-svn: 317029
Multi-instruction emission will require that we have separate handling for
the defs between the implicitly created temporaries and the rule outputs.
The former require new temporary vregs while the latter should copy existing
operands. Factor out the implicit def/use renderers to minimize the code
duplication when we implement that.
llvm-svn: 317025
Prepare for multiple instruction emission by allowing BuildMIAction to
search for a suitable matcher that will support mutation.
This patch deliberately neglects to add matchers aside from the root to
preserve NFC. That said, it should be noted that until we support mutations
other than just the opcode the chances of finding a non-root instruction
for which canMutate() is true, is essentially zero. Furthermore in the
presence of multi-instruction emission the chances of finding any
instruction for which canMutate() is true is also zero. Nevertheless, we
can't continue to require that all BuildMIAction's consider the root of the match
to be recyclable due to the risk of recycling it twice in the same rule.
llvm-svn: 317022
Based on similar python tool - utils/shuffle-fuzz.py - this tool extends the ability of it's previous by optionally attaching select instruction to the generated shufflevector instructions.
This was mainly developed to perform exhaustive testing of the X86 AVX512 masked shuffle instructions. But yet it can be used for various other targets.
The general design of the implementation is much modular than the original shuffle_fuzz.py tool, which makes it easier for anyone to extend it further.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38031
Change-Id: I0efc2aaa091b61a8a9552311c21cc77916a97111
llvm-svn: 316989
gtest depends on this #define to determine whether it can
use various classes like std::tuple, or whether it has to fall
back to experimental classes in the std::tr1 namespace. The
check in the current version of gtest relies on the value of
the `__cplusplus` macro, but MSVC provides a non-conformant
value of this macro, making it effectively impossible to detect
C++11. In short, LLVM compiled with MSVC has been silently
using the tr1 versions of several classes since the beginning of
time.
This would normally be pretty benign, except that in the latest
preview of MSVC they have marked all of the tr1 classes
deprecated, so it spews thousands of warnings.
llvm-svn: 316798
When multi-instruction emission is supported, it will no longer be guaranteed
that every BuildMIAction has a corresponding matched instruction. BuildMIAction
should support not having one to cover the case where a rule produces more
instructions than it matched.
llvm-svn: 316463
Ideally, we should compare 32- and 64-bit versions to see if the
ret line is the only difference and then insert the regex only
in that case. But this is a quick hack to avoid a bunch of noise
as existing tests are updated.
llvm-svn: 316443
This patch enables the import of stores. Unfortunately, doing so by itself,
loses an optimization where storing 0 to memory makes use of WZR/XZR.
To mitigate this, this patch also introduces a new feature that allows register
operands to nominate a zero register. When this is done, GlobalISel will
substitute (G_CONSTANT 0) with the nominated register automatically. This
is currently configured to only apply to the stores.
Applying it to GPR32/GPR64 register classes in general will be done after
review see (https://reviews.llvm.org/D39150).
llvm-svn: 316360
Summary: test/CodeGen/PowerPC/pr33093.ll uses both powerpc64 (big-endian) and powerpc64le while the former was unsupported.
Subscribers: nemanjai
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39164
llvm-svn: 316297
This is similar to how we generate the VEX tables.
More fixes are still needed for the instructions that use EVEX.b (broadcast and embedded rounding).
llvm-svn: 316294
This introduces a new operand type to encode the whether the index register should be XMM/YMM/ZMM. And new code to fixup the results created by readSIB.
This has the nice effect of removing a bunch of code that hard coded the name of every GATHER and SCATTER instruction to map the index type.
This fixes PR32807.
llvm-svn: 316273
This is a temporary hack to support adding checks for the "registers:"
block of mir functions. This is necessary to convert a number of tests
so that there's less churn when we change the MIR printer to put the
vreg classes on defs instead of in their own block.
llvm-svn: 316134
An empty livein block doesn't make much sense (why not just omit it?)
but they're legal and some tests have them, so its best to handle it.
llvm-svn: 316089
Matching prefixes isn't good enough, because it leads to things like
calling the first constant C3 just because there were two copies
before it. Tighten up the check to match more precisely, but also be
careful about ambiguity when dealing with target opcodes that end in a
number.
llvm-svn: 316088
This adds update_mir_test_checks, which updates the check lines in mir
tests. This can only update tests that start and end with .mir
currently (ie, -run-pass) but it should be sufficient for updating at
least some of the GlobalISel tests.
llvm-svn: 316057
The new scheme should match the normalization of embedded paths in
linkrepro tar files.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D39023
llvm-svn: 316044
MSVC doesn't seem to like implicitly instantiating addPredicate and then
explicitly specializing it later. It causes an internal compiler error.
llvm-svn: 315930
Summary:
iPTR is a pointer of subtarget-specific size to any address space. Therefore
type checks on this size derive the SizeInBits from a subtarget hook.
At this point, we can import the simplests G_LOAD rules and select load
instructions using them. Further patches will support for the predicates to
enable additional loads as well as the stores.
The previous commit failed on MSVC due to a failure to convert an
initializer_list to a std::vector. Hopefully, MSVC will accept this version.
Depends on D37457
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37458
llvm-svn: 315887
Summary:
iPTR is a pointer of subtarget-specific size to any address space. Therefore
type checks on this size derive the SizeInBits from a subtarget hook.
At this point, we can import the simplests G_LOAD rules and select load
instructions using them. Further patches will support for the predicates to
enable additional loads as well as the stores.
Depends on D37457
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37458
llvm-svn: 315885
Summary:
This includes some context-sensitivity in the MVT to LLT conversion so that
pointer types are tested correctly.
FIXME: I'm not happy with the way this is done since everything is a
special-case. I've yet to find a reasonable way to implement it.
select-load.mir fails because <1 x s64> loads in tablegen get priority over s64
loads. This is fixed in the next patch and as such they should be committed
together, I've posted them separately to help with the review.
Depends on D37456
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, javed.absar, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37457
llvm-svn: 315884
Summary:
It's possible for a ComplexPattern to be used as an operator in a match
pattern. This is used by the load/store patterns in AArch64 to name the
suboperands returned by ComplexPattern predicate so that they can be broken
apart and referenced independently in the result pattern.
This patch adds support for this in order to enable the import of load/store
patterns.
Depends on D37445
Hopefully fixed the ambiguous constructor that a large number of bots reported.
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37456
llvm-svn: 315869
Summary:
It's possible for a ComplexPattern to be used as an operator in a match
pattern. This is used by the load/store patterns in AArch64 to name the
suboperands returned by ComplexPattern predicate so that they can be broken
apart and referenced independently in the result pattern.
This patch adds support for this in order to enable the import of load/store
patterns.
Depends on D37445
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37456
llvm-svn: 315863
In type inference, an empty type set for a specific hw mode is not an
error. In earlier stages of the design it was, but having to use non-
parameterized types with target intrinsics necessarily led to type
contradictions: since the intrinsics used specific types, they were
only valid for a specific hw mode, and the resulting type set for other
modes ended up empty. To accommodate the existence of such intrinsics
individual type sets were allowed to be empty as long as not all sets
were empty.
llvm-svn: 315858
Summary:
There is an important mismatch between ISD::LOAD and G_LOAD (and likewise for
ISD::STORE and G_STORE). In SelectionDAG, ISD::LOAD is a non-atomic load
and atomic loads are handled by a separate node. However, this is not true of
GlobalISel's G_LOAD. For G_LOAD, the MachineMemOperand indicates the atomicity
of the operation. As a result, this mapping must also add a predicate that
checks for non-atomic MachineMemOperands.
This is NFC since these nodes always have predicates in practice and are
therefore always rejected at the moment.
Depends on D37443
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: kristof.beyls, llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37445
llvm-svn: 315843
Summary:
GlobalISel and SelectionDAG require different code for the common
load/store predicates due to differences in the representation.
For example:
SelectionDAG: (load<signext,i8>:i32 GPR32:$addr) // The <> denote properties of the SDNode that are not printed in the DAG
GlobalISel: (G_SEXT:s32 (G_LOAD:s8 GPR32:$addr))
Even without that, differences in the IR (SDNode vs MachineInstr) require
differences in the C++ predicate.
This patch moves the implementation of the common load/store predicates
into tablegen so that it can handle these differences.
It's NFC for SelectionDAG since it emits equivalent code and it's NFC for
GlobalISel since the rules involving the relevant predicates are still
rejected by the importer.
Depends on D36618
Reviewers: ab, qcolombet, t.p.northover, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: llvm-commits, igorb
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37443
Includes a partial revert of r315826 since this patch makes it necessary for
getPredCode() to return a std::string and getImmCode() should have the same
interface as getPredCode().
llvm-svn: 315841
"No such file or directory: C:\\...\\tests\\Output\\shared-output.py.tmp/Output/Shared/SHARED.tmp"
And yet other forward-slashes don't seem to be causing the same
problem. I'll see if I can get ahold of a Windows machine to poke at
this directly later.
llvm-svn: 315792
Summary:
Operand variable lookups are now performed by the RuleMatcher rather than
searching the whole matcher hierarchy for a match. This revealed a wrong-code
bug that currently affects ARM and X86 where patterns that use a variable more
than once in the match pattern will be imported but won't check that the
operands are identical. This can cause the tablegen-erated matcher to
accept matches that should be rejected.
Depends on D36569
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Subscribers: aemerson, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36618
llvm-svn: 315780
Summary:
There's only a tablegen testcase for IntImmLeaf and not a CodeGen one
because the relevant rules are rejected for other reasons at the moment.
On AArch64, it's because there's an SDNodeXForm attached to the operand.
On X86, it's because the rule either emits multiple instructions or has
another predicate using PatFrag which cannot easily be supported at the
same time.
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: aemerson, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36569
llvm-svn: 315761
Summary:
The purpose of this patch is to expose more information about ImmLeaf-like
PatLeaf's so that GlobalISel can learn to import them. Previously, ImmLeaf
could only be used to test int64_t's produced by sign-extending an APInt.
Other tests on immediates had to use the generic PatLeaf and extract the
constant using C++.
With this patch, tablegen will know how to generate predicates for APInt,
and APFloat. This will allow it to 'do the right thing' for both SelectionDAG
and GlobalISel which require different methods of extracting the immediate
from the IR.
This is NFC for SelectionDAG since the new code is equivalent to the
previous code. It's also NFC for FastISel because FastIselShouldIgnore is 1
for the ImmLeaf subclasses. Enabling FastIselShouldIgnore == 0 for these new
subclasses will require a significant re-factor of FastISel.
For GlobalISel, it's currently NFC because the relevant code to import the
affected rules is not yet present. This will be added in a later patch.
Depends on D36086
Reviewers: ab, t.p.northover, qcolombet, rovka, aditya_nandakumar
Reviewed By: qcolombet
Subscribers: bjope, aemerson, rengolin, javed.absar, igorb, llvm-commits, kristof.beyls
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36534
llvm-svn: 315747
I'm about to commit a patch that makes them necessary for getPredCode() and
it would be strange for getPredCode() and getImmCode() to require different
usage.
llvm-svn: 315733
This refers to a temporary path that can be shared across all tests,
identified by a particular label. This can be used for things like
caches.
At the moment, the character set for the LABEL is limited to C
identifier characters, plus '-', '+', '=', and '.'. This is the same
set of characters currently allowed in REQUIRES clause identifiers.
llvm-svn: 315697
This paves the way for other projects which might /use/ clang or
lld but not necessarily need to the full set of functionality
available to clang and lld tests to be able to have a basic set
of substitutions that allow a project to run the clang or lld
executables.
llvm-svn: 315627
Summary:
Add LLVM_FORCE_ENABLE_DUMP cmake option, and use it along with
LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS to set LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP.
Remove NDEBUG and only use LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP to enable dump methods.
Move definition of LLVM_ENABLE_DUMP from config.h to llvm-config.h so
it'll be picked up by public headers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38406
llvm-svn: 315590
This reverts commit 4e4ee1c507e2707bb3c208e1e1b6551c3015cbf5.
This is failing due to some code that isn't built on MSVC
so I didn't catch. Not immediately obvious how to fix this
at first glance, so I'm reverting for now.
llvm-svn: 315536
There's a lot of misuse of Twine scattered around LLVM. This
ranges in severity from benign (returning a Twine from a function
by value that is just a string literal) to pretty sketchy (storing
a Twine by value in a class). While there are some uses for
copying Twines, most of the very compelling ones are confined
to the Twine class implementation itself, and other uses are
either dubious or easily worked around.
This patch makes Twine's copy constructor private, and fixes up
all callsites.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38767
llvm-svn: 315530
This adds debug tracing to the table-generated assembly instruction matcher,
enabled by the -debug-only=asm-matcher option.
The changes in the target AsmParsers are to add an MCInstrInfo reference under
a consistent name, so that we can use it from table-generated code. This was
already being used this way for targets that use deprecation warnings, but 5
targets did not have it, and Hexagon had it under a different name to the other
backends.
llvm-svn: 315445
This allows a DiagnosticType and/or DiagnosticString to be associated
with a RegisterClass in tablegen, so that we can emit diagnostics in the
assembler when a register operand is incorrect.
DiagnosticType creates a predictable enum value, which gets returned as
the error code when an operand does not match, and can be used by the
assembly parser to map to a user-facing diagnostic. DiagnosticString
creates an anonymous enum value (currently based on the tablegen class
name), and a function to map from enum values to strings will be
generated. Both of these work the same was as they do for AsmOperand.
This isn't used by any targets yet, but has one (positive) side-effect.
It improves the diagnostic codes returned by validateOperandClass - we
always want to emit the diagnostic that relates to the expected operand
class, but this wasn't always being done when the expected and actual
classes were completely different (token/register/custom). This causes a
few AArch64 diagnostics to be improved, as Match_InvalidOperand was
being returned instead of a specific diagnostic type.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D36691
llvm-svn: 315295
It's rare but there are a small number of patterns like this:
(set i64:$dst, (add i64:$src1, i64:$src2))
These should be equivalent to register classes except they shouldn't check for
a specific register bank.
This doesn't occur in AArch64/ARM/X86 but does occasionally come up in other
in-tree targets such as BPF.
llvm-svn: 315226
After the original commit ([[ https://reviews.llvm.org/rL304088 | rL304088 ]]) was reverted, a discussion in llvm-dev was opened on 'how to accomplish this task'.
In the discussion we concluded that the best way to achieve our goal (which is to automate the folding tables and remove the manually maintained tables) is:
# Commit the tablegen backend disabled by default.
# Proceed with an incremental updating of the manual tables - while checking the validity of each added entry.
# Repeat previous step until we reach a state where the generated and the manual tables are identical. Then we can safely remove the manual tables and include the generated tables instead.
# Schedule periodical (1 week/2 weeks/1 month) runs of the pass:
- if changes appear (new entries):
- make sure the entries are legal
- If they are not, mark them as illegal to folding
- Commit the changes (if there are any).
CMake flag added for this purpose is "X86_GEN_FOLD_TABLES". Building with this flags will run the pass and emit the X86GenFoldTables.inc file under build/lib/Target/X86/ directory which is a good reference for any developer who wants to take part in the effort of completing the current folding tables.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38028
llvm-svn: 315173
The assertion tests were using count() instead of testing the find result, resulting in double the number of searches in debug/assert builds.
Instead, call find once (like the release builds do) and assert the result against end().
llvm-svn: 315151
Avoid unnecessary std::string creations in the TreePredicateFn getters and in CodeGenDAGPatterns::getSDNodeNamed
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38624
llvm-svn: 315148
This addresses two sources of inconsistency in test configuration
files.
1. Substitution boundaries. Previously you would specify a
substitution, such as 'lli', and then additionally a set
of characters that should fail to match before and after
the tool. This was used, for example, so that matches that
are parts of full paths would not be replaced. But not all
tools did this, and those that did would often re-invent
the set of characters themselves, leading to inconsistency.
Now, every tool substitution defaults to using a sane set
of reasonable defaults and you have to explicitly opt out
of it. This actually fixed a few latent bugs that were
never being surfaced, but only on accident.
2. There was no standard way for the system to decide how to
locate a tool. Sometimes you have an explicit path, sometimes
we would search for it and build up a path ourselves, and
sometimes we would build up a full command line. Furthermore,
there was no standardized way to handle missing tools. Do we
warn, fail, ignore, etc? All of this is now encapsulated in
the ToolSubst class. You either specify an exact command to
run, or an instance of FindTool('<tool-name>') and everything
else just works. Furthermore, you can specify an action to
take if the tool cannot be resolved.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38565
llvm-svn: 315085
Summary:
normpath() was being called on an empty string and appended to
the environment variable in the case where the environment variable
was unset. This led to ":." being appended to the path, since
normpath() of an empty string is '.', presumably to represent cwd.
Reviewers: zturner, sqlbyme, modocache
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38542
llvm-svn: 314915
This adds a DiagnosticString member to the AsmOperand tablegen class, so
that the diagnostic text to be used when an assembly operand is
incorrect can be stored in the tablegen description of the operand,
rather than in a separate switch statement in the AsmParser.
If DiagnosticString is used for any operands, tablegen will emit a
getMatchKindDiag function, to map from diagnostic enums to strings.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D31606
llvm-svn: 314803
The current table-generated assembly instruction matcher returns a
64-bit error code when matching fails. Since multiple instruction
encodings with the same mnemonic can fail for different reasons, it uses
some heuristics to decide which message is important.
This heuristic does not work well for targets that have many encodings
with the same mnemonic but different operands, or which have different
versions of instructions controlled by subtarget features, as it is hard
to know which encoding the user was intending to use.
Instead of trying to improve the heuristic in the table-generated
matcher, this patch changes it to report a list of near-miss encodings.
This list contains an entry for each encoding with the correct mnemonic,
but with exactly one thing preventing it from being valid. This thing
could be a single invalid operand, a missing target feature or a failed
target-specific validation function.
The target-specific assembly parser can then report an error message
giving multiple options for instruction variants that the user may have
been trying to use. For example, I am working on a patch to use this for
ARM, which can give this error for an invalid instruction for ARMv6-M:
<stdin>:8:3: error: invalid instruction, multiple near-miss encodings found
adds r0, r1, #0x8
^
<stdin>:8:3: note: for one encoding: instruction requires: thumb2
adds r0, r1, #0x8
^
<stdin>:8:16: note: for one encoding: expected an integer in range [0, 7]
adds r0, r1, #0x8
^
<stdin>:8:16: note: for one encoding: expected a register in range [r0, r7]
adds r0, r1, #0x8
^
This also allows the target-specific assembly parser to apply its own
heuristics to suppress some errors. For example, the error "instruction
requires: arm-mode" is never going to be useful when targeting an
M-profile architecture (which does not have ARM mode).
This patch just adds the target-independent mechanism for doing this,
all targets still use the old mechanism. I've added a bit in the
AsmParser tablegen class to allow targets to switch to this new
mechanism. To use this, the target-specific assembly parser will have to
be modified for the change in signature of MatchInstructionImpl, and to
report errors based on the list of near-misses.
Differential revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D27620
llvm-svn: 314774
Fix llvm_tools_dir attribute access not to fail when the variable is not
present. This directory is not really necessary to run lit tests,
and the code already accounts for it being None.
The reference was added in r313407, and it breaks the stand-alone lit
package in Gentoo.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38442
llvm-svn: 314620
Summary:
Also disables leak checking on lto tests, due to many leaks reported
in the system's ld64.
Reviewers: kcc, pcc, bogner, kubamracek
Subscribers: mehdi_amini, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37781
llvm-svn: 314535
Also add operator<< for use with raw_ostream to InfoByHwMode and its
derived classes.
Recommitting r313989 with the fix for unresolved references: explicitly
define the operator<< in namespace llvm.
llvm-svn: 314004
Avoid unnecessary std::string creations during TypeSetByHwMode::writeToStream.
Found during investigations into PR28222
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38174
llvm-svn: 313983
There were two issues, one Python 3 specific related to Unicode,
and another which is that the tool substitution for lld no longer
rejected matches where a / preceded the tool name.
llvm-svn: 313928
debuginfo-tests has need to reuse a lot of common configuration
from clang and lld, and in general it seems like all of the
projects which are tightly coupled (e.g. lld, clang, llvm, lldb,
etc) can benefit from knowing about one other. For example,
lldb needs to know various things about how to run clang in its
test suite. Since there's a lot of common substitutions and
operations that need to be shared among projects, sinking this
up into LLVM makes sense.
In addition, this patch introduces a function add_tool_substitution
which handles all the dirty intricacies of matching tool names
which was previously copied around the various config files. This
is now a simple straightforward interface which is hard to mess
up.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37944
llvm-svn: 313919
This has gone back and forth, but it seems this is necessary
after all. realpath is not sufficient because if you have a
file named 'C:\foo.txt', then both realpath('c:\foo.txt') and
realpath(C:\foo.txt') return the string that was passed to them
exactly as is, meaning the case of the drive-letter won't match.
The problem before was not that we were normalizing the case of
items going into the config map, but rather that we were
normalizing the case of something we needed to print. The value
that is used to key on the config map should never be printed.
llvm-svn: 313918
This makes all paths lowercase on Windows, which seemed like a
good idea at the time, but it means that tests can't properly
use FileCheck to match expected path names.
llvm-svn: 313889
Config map is not exposed through the command line, so testing this
is somewhat tricky. But basically we need a test that if a custom
driver builds a config map and passes it to main, it gets respected.
A config map allows config files in the source tree to be mapped
to alternate config files in the build tree. This particular test
works by having two config files in separate directories, and
setting up a config map to have that redirects A/lit.site.cfg
to B/altconfig. Then, we print a message in A/lit.site.cfg
and B/altconfig and check that we do see the output from B
but don't see the output from A. Additionally we test that
the test suite specified by A's config map is properly discovered.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38105
llvm-svn: 313887
Summary:
This appears to break some bots, when getToolsPath fails to find some or
all of the tools (for example, an incomplete GnuWin32 installation).
Reviewers: zturner, modocache
Subscribers: sanjoy, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D38115
llvm-svn: 313854
Many editors and Python-related diagnostics tools such as
debuggers break or fail in mysterious ways when python files
don't end in .py. This is especially true on Windows, but
still exists on other platforms. I don't want to be too heavy
handed in changing everything across the board, but I do want
to at least *allow* lit configs to have .py extensions. This
patch makes the discovery process first look for a config file
with a .py extension, and if one is not found, then looks for
a config file using the old method. So for existing users, there
should be no functional change.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37838
llvm-svn: 313849
This changes some STL data types to corresponding LLVM
data types that have better performance characteristics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37957
llvm-svn: 313783
Bug pointed out by EricWF. This would construct a path where
items would be added in the wrong order, potentially leading
to using the wrong tools for testing.
llvm-svn: 313765
Many svn-based buildbots seem to be getting stuck continually
in tree conflicts due to the output of pyc files. I'm disabling
these as a temporary measure in an attempt to get everything
stable again.
I'll try to remove this code once I understand the problem
better.
llvm-svn: 313698
The generated DAG isel file currently makes use of formatted_raw_ostream primarily for generating a hierarchical representation while also skipping over the initial comment that contains the current index.
It was reported in D37957 that this formatting might be slow due to the need to keep track of column numbers by monitoring all the written data for new lines.
This patch attempts to rewrite the emitter to make use of simpler formatting mechanisms to generate a fairly similar output. The main difference is that the number in the index comment is now right justified and padded with spaces inside the comment. Previously we appended the spaces after the comment.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37966
llvm-svn: 313674
Add some member types to MachineValueTypeSet::const_iterator so that
iterator_traits can work with it.
Improve TableGen performance of -gen-dag-isel (motivated by X86 backend)
The introduction of parameterized register classes in r313271 caused the
matcher generation code in TableGen to run much slower, particularly so
in the unoptimized (debug) build. This patch recovers some of the lost
performance.
Summary of changes:
- Cache the set of legal types in TypeInfer::getLegalTypes. The contents
of this set do not change.
- Add LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE to several small functions. Normally
this would not be necessary, but in the debug build TableGen is not
optimized, so this helps a little bit.
- Add an early exit from TypeSetByHwMode::operator== for the case when
one or both arguments are "simple", i.e. only have one mode. This
saves some time in GenerateVariants.
- Finally, replace the underlying storage type in TypeSetByHwMode::SetType
with MachineValueTypeSet based on std::array instead of std::set.
This significantly reduces the number of memory allocation calls.
I've done a number of experiments with the underlying type of InfoByHwMode.
The type is a map, and for targets that do not use the parameterization,
this map has only one entry. The best (unoptimized) performance, somewhat
surprisingly came from std::map, followed closely by std::unordered_map.
DenseMap was the slowest by a large margin.
Various hand-crafted solutions (emulating enough of the map interface
not to make sweeping changes to the users) did not yield any observable
improvements.
llvm-svn: 313660
The introduction of parameterized register classes in r313271 caused the
matcher generation code in TableGen to run much slower, particularly so
in the unoptimized (debug) build. This patch recovers some of the lost
performance.
Summary of changes:
- Cache the set of legal types in TypeInfer::getLegalTypes. The contents
of this set do not change.
- Add LLVM_ATTRIBUTE_ALWAYS_INLINE to several small functions. Normally
this would not be necessary, but in the debug build TableGen is not
optimized, so this helps a little bit.
- Add an early exit from TypeSetByHwMode::operator== for the case when
one or both arguments are "simple", i.e. only have one mode. This
saves some time in GenerateVariants.
- Finally, replace the underlying storage type in TypeSetByHwMode::SetType
with MachineValueTypeSet based on std::array instead of std::set.
This significantly reduces the number of memory allocation calls.
I've done a number of experiments with the underlying type of InfoByHwMode.
The type is a map, and for targets that do not use the parameterization,
this map has only one entry. The best (unoptimized) performance, somewhat
surprisingly came from std::map, followed closely by std::unordered_map.
DenseMap was the slowest by a large margin.
Various hand-crafted solutions (emulating enough of the map interface
not to make sweeping changes to the users) did not yield any observable
improvements.
llvm-svn: 313647
Since the path a user specifies to the llvm-lit script might be
different than the source tree they built from (since they could
be behind different symlinks), we need to use realpath to make
sure that path comparisons work as expected.
Even better would be to use a custom dictionary comparison with
actual file equivalence comparison semantics, but this is the
least friction to unbreak things for now.
llvm-svn: 313594
It doesn't make sense to me why these bots are failing as the
traceback does not agree with the source code. It's possible
something is stale or there is some other mysterious error,
but in any case hopefully this fixes it.
llvm-svn: 313469
A few tests were manually constructing a LitConfig object, since
I added a new argument to it this was triggering some failures
I didn't detect. `ninja check-lit` passes now.
llvm-svn: 313461
This is helpful for debugging test failures since it removes
the multiprocessing pool from the picture. This will obviously
slow down the test suite by a few orders of magnitude, so it
should only be used for debugging specific failures.
llvm-svn: 313460
It looks like this is going to be non-trivial to get working
in both Py2 and Py3, so for now I'm reverting until I have time
to fully test it under Python 3.
llvm-svn: 313429
This is a resubmission of r313270. It broke standalone builds of
compiler-rt because we were not correctly generating the llvm-lit
script in the standalone build directory.
The fixes incorporated here attempt to find llvm/utils/llvm-lit
from the source tree returned by llvm-config. If present, it
will generate llvm-lit into the output directory. Regardless,
the user can specify -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT to point to a specific
lit.py on their file system. This supports the use case of
someone installing lit via a package manager. If it cannot find
a source tree, and -DLLVM_EXTERNAL_LIT is either unspecified or
invalid, then we print a warning that tests will not be able
to run.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37756
llvm-svn: 313407
This patch is still breaking several multi-stage compiler-rt bots.
I already know what the fix is, but I want to get the bots green
for now and then try re-applying in the morning.
llvm-svn: 313335
Summary:
This will be used instead of the url field to track which commits need
to be merged.
This patch also drops support for version 1.x of the bugzilla CLI tool.
Reviewers: hansw, hans
Reviewed By: hans
Subscribers: hans, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37786
llvm-svn: 313334
To further reduce duplicate code, this patch introduces a module
that configs can simply import and get access to a lot of useful
functionality such as setting up paths, adding features that are
useful across all projects, and other utility-type functions.
For now this only updates llvm's suite to use this new library,
but subsequent patches will update other projects.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D37778
llvm-svn: 313325
These are removed in C++17. We still have some users of
unary_function::argument_type, so just spell that typedef out. No
functionality change intended.
Note that many of the argument types are actually wrong :)
llvm-svn: 313287