In this code we keep track of pointers that we are allowed to read from, if they are accessed by non-predicated blocks.
We use this list to allow vectorization of conditional loads in predicated blocks because we know that these addresses don't segfault.
llvm-svn: 185214
- Build debug metadata for 'bare' Modules using DIBuilder
- DebugIR can be constructed to generate an IR file (to be seen by a debugger)
or not in cases where the user already has an IR file on disk.
llvm-svn: 185193
I used the class to safely reset the state of the builder's debug location. I
think I have caught all places where we need to set the debug location to a new
one. Therefore, we can replace the class by a function that just sets the debug
location.
llvm-svn: 185165
No functionality change.
It should suffice to check the type of a debug info metadata, instead of
calling Verify. For cases where we know the type of a DI metadata, use
assert.
Also update testing cases to make them conform to the format of DI classes.
llvm-svn: 185135
This reverts commit r185099.
Looks like both the ppc-64 and mips bots are still failing after I reverted this
change.
Since:
1. The mips bot always performs a clean build,
2. The ppc64-bot failed again after a clean build (I asked the ppc-64
maintainers to clean the bot which they did... Thanks Will!),
I think it is safe to assume that this change was not the cause of the failures
that said builders were seeing. Thus I am recomitting.
llvm-svn: 185111
This reverts commit r185095. This is causing a FileCheck failure on
the 3dnow intrinsics on at least the mips/ppc bots but not on the x86
bots.
Reverting while I figure out what is going on.
llvm-svn: 185099
The category which an APFloat belongs to should be dependent on the
actual value that the APFloat has, not be arbitrarily passed in by the
user. This will prevent inconsistency bugs where the category and the
actual value in APFloat differ.
I also fixed up all of the references to this constructor (which were
only in LLVM).
llvm-svn: 185095
When we store values for reversed induction stores we must not store the
reversed value in the vectorized value map. Another instruction might use this
value.
This fixes 3 test cases of PR16455.
llvm-svn: 185051
The Builtin attribute is an attribute that can be placed on function call site that signal that even though a function is declared as being a builtin,
rdar://problem/13727199
llvm-svn: 185049
debug statements to add a missing newline. Also canonicalize to '\n' instead of
"\n"; the latter calls a function with a loop the former does not.
llvm-svn: 184897
When a 1-element vector alloca is promoted, a store instruction can often be
rewritten without converting the value to a scalar and using an insertelement
instruction to stuff it into the new alloca. This patch just adds a check
to skip that conversion when it is unnecessary. This turns out to be really
important for some ARM Neon operations where <1 x i64> is used to get around
the fact that i64 is not a legal type.
llvm-svn: 184870
This should hopefully have fixed the stage2/stage3 miscompare on the dragonegg
testers.
"LoopVectorize: Use the dependence test utility class
We now no longer need alias analysis - the cases that alias analysis would
handle are now handled as accesses with a large dependence distance.
We can now vectorize loops with simple constant dependence distances.
for (i = 8; i < 256; ++i) {
a[i] = a[i+4] * a[i+8];
}
for (i = 8; i < 256; ++i) {
a[i] = a[i-4] * a[i-8];
}
We would be able to vectorize about 200 more loops (in many cases the cost model
instructs us no to) in the test suite now. Results on x86-64 are a wash.
I have seen one degradation in ammp. Interestingly, the function in which we
now vectorize a loop is never executed so we probably see some instruction
cache effects. There is a 2% improvement in h264ref. There is one or the other
TSCV loop kernel that speeds up.
radar://13681598"
llvm-svn: 184724
CGSCC pass manager. This should insulate the inlining decisions from the
vectorization decisions, however it may have both compile time and code
size problems so it is just an experimental option right now.
Adding this based on a discussion with Arnold and it seems at least
worth having this flag for us to both run some experiments to see if
this strategy is workable. It may solve some of the regressions seen
with the loop vectorizer.
llvm-svn: 184698
We now no longer need alias analysis - the cases that alias analysis would
handle are now handled as accesses with a large dependence distance.
We can now vectorize loops with simple constant dependence distances.
for (i = 8; i < 256; ++i) {
a[i] = a[i+4] * a[i+8];
}
for (i = 8; i < 256; ++i) {
a[i] = a[i-4] * a[i-8];
}
We would be able to vectorize about 200 more loops (in many cases the cost model
instructs us no to) in the test suite now. Results on x86-64 are a wash.
I have seen one degradation in ammp. Interestingly, the function in which we
now vectorize a loop is never executed so we probably see some instruction
cache effects. There is a 2% improvement in h264ref. There is one or the other
TSCV loop kernel that speeds up.
radar://13681598
llvm-svn: 184685
This class checks dependences by subtracting two Scalar Evolution access
functions allowing us to catch very simple linear dependences.
The checker assumes source order in determining whether vectorization is safe.
We currently don't reorder accesses.
Positive true dependencies need to be a multiple of VF otherwise we impede
store-load forwarding.
llvm-svn: 184684
Sets of dependent accesses are built by unioning sets based on underlying
objects. This class will be used by the upcoming dependence checker.
llvm-svn: 184683
Untill now we detected the vectorizable tree and evaluated the cost of the
entire tree. With this patch we can decide to trim-out branches of the tree
that are not profitable to vectorizer.
Also, increase the max depth from 6 to 12. In the worse possible case where all
of the code is made of diamond-shaped graph this can bring the cost to 2**10,
but diamonds are not very common.
llvm-svn: 184681
Rewrote the SLP-vectorization as a whole-function vectorization pass. It is now able to vectorize chains across multiple basic blocks.
It still does not vectorize PHIs, but this should be easy to do now that we scan the entire function.
I removed the support for extracting values from trees.
We are now able to vectorize more programs, but there are some serious regressions in many workloads (such as flops-6 and mandel-2).
llvm-svn: 184647
This is apart of a series of patches to encapsulate PtrState.RRI and
make PtrState.RRI a private field of PtrState.
*NOTE* This is actually the second commit in the patch stream. I should
have put this note on the first such commit r184528.
llvm-svn: 184532
This commit completely removes what is left of the simplify-libcalls
pass. All of the functionality has now been migrated to the instcombine
and functionattrs passes. The following C API functions are now NOPs:
1. LLVMAddSimplifyLibCallsPass
2. LLVMPassManagerBuilderSetDisableSimplifyLibCalls
llvm-svn: 184459
We collect gather sequences when we vectorize basic blocks. Gather sequences are excellent
hints for vectorization of other basic blocks.
llvm-svn: 184444
Prior to this change, the considered addressing modes may be invalid since the
maximum and minimum offsets were not taking into account.
This was causing an assertion failure.
The added test case exercices that behavior.
<rdar://problem/14199725> Assertion failed: (CurScaleCost >= 0 && "Legal
addressing mode has an illegal cost!")
llvm-svn: 184341
The type <3 x i8> is a common in graphics and we want to be able to vectorize it.
This changes accelerates bullet by 12% and 471_omnetpp by 5%.
llvm-svn: 184317
This pass was assuming that if hasAddressTaken() returns false for a
function, the function's only uses are call sites. That's not true
because there can be references by BlockAddresses too.
Fix the pass to handle this case. Fix
BlockAddress::replaceUsesOfWithOnConstant() to allow a function's type
to be changed by RAUW'ing the function with a bitcast of the recreated
function.
Patch by Mark Seaborn.
llvm-svn: 183933
Instead of a custom implementation of replaceAllUsesWith, we just call
replaceAllUsesWith and recreate llvm.used and llvm.compiler-used.
This change is particularity interesting because it makes llvm see
through what clang is doing with static used functions in extern "C"
contexts. With this change, running clang -O2 in
extern "C" {
__attribute__((used)) static void foo() {}
}
produces
@llvm.used = appending global [1 x i8*] [i8* bitcast (void ()* @foo to
i8*)], section "llvm.metadata"
define internal void @foo() #0 {
entry:
ret void
}
llvm-svn: 183756
r183584 tries to derive some info from the code *AFTER* a call and apply
these derived info to the code *BEFORE* the call, which is not always safe
as the call in question may never return, and in this case, the derived
info is invalid.
Thank Duncan for pointing out this potential bug.
rdar://14073661
llvm-svn: 183606
The MemCpyOpt pass is capable of optimizing:
callee(&S); copy N bytes from S to D.
into:
callee(&D);
subject to some legality constraints.
Assertion is triggered when the compiler tries to evalute "sizeof(typeof(D))",
while D is an opaque-typed, 'sret' formal argument of function being compiled.
i.e. the signature of the func being compiled is something like this:
T caller(...,%opaque* noalias nocapture sret %D, ...)
The fix is that when come across such situation, instead of calling some
utility functions to get the size of D's type (which will crash), we simply
assume D has at least N bytes as implified by the copy-instruction.
rdar://14073661
llvm-svn: 183584
IndVarSimplify is willing to move divide instructions outside of their
loop bodies if they are invariant of the loop. However, it may not be
safe to expand them if we do not know if they can trap.
Instead, check to see if it is not safe to expand the instruction and
skip the expansion.
This fixes PR16041.
Testcase by Rafael Ávila de Espíndola.
llvm-svn: 183239
The problem this time seems to be a thinko. We were assuming that in the CFG
A
| \
| B
| /
C
speculating the basic block B would cause only the phi value for the B->C edge
to be speculated. That is not true, the phi's are semantically in the edges, so
if the A->B->C path is taken, any code needed for A->C is not executed and we
have to consider it too when deciding to speculate B.
llvm-svn: 183226
PR16069 is an interesting case where an incoming value to a PHI is a
trap value while also being a 'ConstantExpr'.
We do not consider this case when performing the 'HoistThenElseCodeToIf'
optimization.
Instead, make our modifications more conservative if we detect that we
cannot transform the PHI to a select.
llvm-svn: 183152
index greater than the size of the vector is invalid. The shuffle may be
shrinking the size of the vector. Fixes a crash!
Also drop the maximum recursion depth of the safety check for this
optimization to five.
llvm-svn: 183080