Currently computeKnownBits returns the common known zero/one bits for all elements of vector data, when we may only be interested in one/some of the elements.
This patch adds a DemandedElts argument that allows us to specify the elements we actually care about. The original computeKnownBits implementation calls with a DemandedElts demanding all elements to match current behaviour. Scalar types set this to 1.
The approach was found to be easier than trying to add a per-element known bits solution, for a similar usefulness given the combines where computeKnownBits is typically used.
I've only added support for a few opcodes so far (the ones that have proven straightforward to test), all others will default to demanding all elements but can be updated in due course.
DemandedElts support could similarly be added to computeKnownBitsForTargetNode in a future commit.
This looked like this had caused compile time regressions on some buildbots (and was reverted in rL285381), but appears to have just been a harmless bystander!
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25691
llvm-svn: 285494
Currently computeKnownBits returns the common known zero/one bits for all elements of vector data, when we may only be interested in one/some of the elements.
This patch adds a DemandedElts argument that allows us to specify the elements we actually care about. The original computeKnownBits implementation calls with a DemandedElts demanding all elements to match current behaviour. Scalar types set this to 1.
The approach was found to be easier than trying to add a per-element known bits solution, for a similar usefulness given the combines where computeKnownBits is typically used.
I've only added support for a few opcodes so far (the ones that have proven straightforward to test), all others will default to demanding all elements but can be updated in due course.
DemandedElts support could similarly be added to computeKnownBitsForTargetNode in a future commit.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25691
llvm-svn: 285296
As noted in:
https://reviews.llvm.org/D25685
This is the next-to-smallest step needed to enable the ComputeNumSignBits fix in that patch.
In a minor attempt to keep some structure, we're pulling the FP helper over along with its
integer sibling, but clearly we can and should do more refactoring of the similar helper
functions in DAGCombiner and SelectionDAG to simplify and not duplicate functionality.
llvm-svn: 284421
SelectionDAG::getConstantPool will automatically determine an appropriate alignment if one is not specified. It does this by querying the type's preferred alignment. This can end up creating quite a lot of padding when the preferred alignment for vectors is 128.
In optimize-for-size mode, it makes sense to instead query the ABI type alignment which is often smaller and causes less padding.
llvm-svn: 284381
Masked-expand-load node represents load operation that loads a variable amount of elements from memory according to amount of "true" bits in the mask and expands the loaded elements according to their position in the mask vector.
Right now, the node is used in intrinsics for VEXPAND* instructions.
The work is done towards implementation of masked.expandload and masked.compressstore intrinsics.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25322
llvm-svn: 283694
Summary: Both computeKnownBits and ComputeNumSignBits can now do a simple
look-through of EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT. It will compute the result based
on the known bits (or known sign bits) for the vector that the element
is extracted from.
Reviewers: bogner, tstellarAMD, mkuper
Subscribers: wdng, RKSimon, jyknight, llvm-commits, nhaehnle
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D25007
llvm-svn: 283347
With D24253 we can now use SelectionDAG::SignBitIsZero with vector operations.
This patch uses SelectionDAG::SignBitIsZero to recognise that a zero sign bit means that we can use a sitofp instead of a uitofp (which is not directly support on pre-AVX512 hardware).
While AVX512 does provide support for uitofp, the conversion to sitofp should not cause any regressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24343
llvm-svn: 281852
Summary:
An IR load can be invariant, dereferenceable, neither, or both. But
currently, MI's notion of invariance is IR-invariant &&
IR-dereferenceable.
This patch splits up the notions of invariance and dereferenceability at
the MI level. It's NFC, so adds some probably-unnecessary
"is-dereferenceable" checks, which we can remove later if desired.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23371
llvm-svn: 281151
Add the ability to computeKnownBits and SimplifyDemandedBits to extract the known zero/one bits from BUILD_VECTOR, returning the known bits that are shared by every vector element.
This is an initial step towards determining the sign bits of a vector (PR29079).
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24253
llvm-svn: 280927
If we are extracting a subvector that has just been inserted then we should just use the original inserted subvector.
This has come up in certain several x86 shuffle lowering cases where we are crossing 128-bit lanes.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D24254
llvm-svn: 280715
Summary:
This greatly simplifies our handling of SDNode::SubclassData.
NFC, hopefully. :)
See discussion in D23035 for discussion about the design API of these
bitfields.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: llvm-commits, rnk
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D23036
llvm-svn: 279537
This is a mechanical change of comments in switches like fallthrough,
fall-through, or fall-thru to use the LLVM_FALLTHROUGH macro instead.
llvm-svn: 278902
[DAG] Check debug values for invalidation before transferring and mark
old debug values invalid when transferring to another SDValue.
This fixes PR28613.
Reviewers: jyknight, hans, dblaikie, echristo
Subscribers: yaron.keren, ismail, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D22858
llvm-svn: 277135
Summary:
Instead, we take a single flags arg (a bitset).
Also add a default 0 alignment, and change the order of arguments so the
alignment comes before the flags.
This greatly simplifies many callsites, and fixes a bug in
AMDGPUISelLowering, wherein the order of the args to getLoad was
inverted. It also greatly simplifies the process of adding another flag
to getLoad.
Reviewers: chandlerc, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: jholewinski, arsenm, jyknight, dsanders, nemanjai, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22249
llvm-svn: 275592
Summary:
Previously we took an unsigned.
Hooray for type-safety.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: dsanders, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D22282
llvm-svn: 275591
For the most part this simplifies all callers. There were two places in X86 that needed an explicit makeArrayRef to shorten a statically sized array.
llvm-svn: 274337
Recommiting after correcting over-eager Debug Value transfer fixing PR28270.
[DAG] Previously debug values would transfer debuginfo for the selected
start node for a replacement which allows for debug to be dropped.
Push debug value transfer to occur with node/value replacement in
SelectionDAG, remove now extraneous transfers of debug values.
This refixes PR9817 which was being incompletely checked in the
testsuite.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21037
llvm-svn: 273585
Recommiting after fixing over-aggressive assertion
[DAG] Previously debug values would transfer debuginfo for the selected
start node for a replacement which allows for debug to be dropped.
Push debug value transfer to occur with node/value replacement in
SelectionDAG, remove now extraneous transfers of debug values.
This refixes PR9817 which was being incompletely checked in the
testsuite.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21037
llvm-svn: 273456
The setCallee function will set the number of fixed arguments based
on the size of the argument list. The FixedArgs parameter was often
explicitly set to 0, leading to a lack of consistent value for non-
vararg functions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20376
llvm-svn: 273403
[DAG] Previously debug values would transfer debuginfo for the selected
start node for a replacement which allows for debug to be dropped.
Push debug value transfer to occur with node/value replacement in
SelectionDAG, remove now extraneous transfers of debug values.
This refixes PR9817 which was being incompletely checked in the
testsuite.
Reviewers: jyknight
Subscribers: dblaikie, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D21037
llvm-svn: 272792
This used to be free, copying and moving DebugLocs became expensive
after the metadata rewrite. Passing by reference eliminates a ton of
track/untrack operations. No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 272512
As suggested by clang-tidy's performance-unnecessary-copy-initialization.
This can easily hit lifetime issues, so I audited every change and ran the
tests under asan, which came back clean.
llvm-svn: 272126
There are at least 2 places (DAGCombiner, X86ISelLowering) where this could be used instead
of ad-hoc and watered down code that is trying to match a power-of-2 pattern.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D20439
llvm-svn: 270073
It's awkward to force callers of SelectNodeTo to figure out whether
the node was morphed or CSE'd. Update uses here instead of requiring
callers to (sometimes) do it.
llvm-svn: 269235
Summary:
When SelectionDAG performs CSE it is possible that the context's source
location is different from that of the selected node. This can lead to
incorrect line number records. We update the debug location to the
one that occurs earlier in the instruction sequence.
This fixes PR21006.
Reviewers: echristo, sdmitrouk
Subscribers: jevinskie, asl, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12094
llvm-svn: 268323
Summary:
Historically, we had a switch in the Makefiles for turning on "expensive
checks". This has never been ported to the cmake build, but the
(dead-ish) code is still around.
This will also make it easier to turn it on in buildbots.
Reviewers: chandlerc
Subscribers: jyknight, mzolotukhin, RKSimon, gberry, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19723
llvm-svn: 268050
visitAND, when folding and (load) forgets to check which output of
an indexed load is involved, happily folding the updated address
output on the following testcase:
target datalayout = "e-m:e-i64:64-n32:64"
target triple = "powerpc64le-unknown-linux-gnu"
%typ = type { i32, i32 }
define signext i32 @_Z8access_pP1Tc(%typ* %p, i8 zeroext %type) {
%b = getelementptr inbounds %typ, %typ* %p, i64 0, i32 1
%1 = load i32, i32* %b, align 4
%2 = ptrtoint i32* %b to i64
%3 = and i64 %2, -35184372088833
%4 = inttoptr i64 %3 to i32*
%_msld = load i32, i32* %4, align 4
%zzz = add i32 %1, %_msld
ret i32 %zzz
}
Fix this by checking ResNo.
I've found a few more places that currently neglect to check for
indexed load, and tightened them up as well, but I don't have test
cases for them. In fact, they might not be triggerable at all,
at least with current targets. Still, better safe than sorry.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19202
llvm-svn: 267420
Removed some unused headers, replaced some headers with forward class declarations.
Found using simple scripts like this one:
clear && ack --cpp -l '#include "llvm/ADT/IndexedMap.h"' | xargs grep -L 'IndexedMap[<]' | xargs grep -n --color=auto 'IndexedMap'
Patch by Eugene Kosov <claprix@yandex.ru>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D19219
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 266595
This code was specific to vector operations with scalar operands:
all the opcodes in FoldValue (via FoldConstantArithmetic) can't
match those criteria.
Replace it with an assert if that ever changes: at that point,
we might need to add back a splat BUILD_VECTOR.
llvm-svn: 266100
In Memcpy lowering we had missed a dependence from the load of the
operation to successor operations. This causes us to potentially
construct an in initial DAG with a memory dependence not fully
represented in the chain sub-DAG but rather require looking at the
entire DAG breaking alias analysis by allowing incorrect repositioning
of memory operations.
To work around this, r200033 changed DAGCombiner::GatherAllAliases to be
conservative if any possible issues to happen. Unfortunately this check
forbade many non-problematic situations as well. For example, it's
common for incoming argument lowering to add a non-aliasing load hanging
off of EntryNode. Then, if GatherAllAliases visited EntryNode, it would
find that other (unvisited) use of the EntryNode chain, and just give up
entirely. Furthermore, the check was incomplete: it would not actually
detect all such potentially problematic DAG constructions, because
GatherAllAliases did not guarantee to visit all chain nodes going up to
the root EntryNode. This is in general fine -- giving up early will just
miss a potential optimization, not generate incorrect results. But, for
this non-chain dependency detection code, it's possible that you could
have a load attached to a higher-up chain node than any which were
visited. If that load aliases your store, but the only dependency is
through the value operand of a non-aliasing store, it would've been
missed by this code, and potentially reordered.
With the dependence added, this check can be removed and Alias Analysis
can be much more aggressive. This fixes code quality regression in the
Consecutive Store Merge cleanup (D14834).
Test Change:
ppc64-align-long-double.ll now may see multiple serializations
of its stores
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18062
llvm-svn: 265836
Change isConsecutiveLoads to check that loads are non-volatile as this
is a requirement for any load merges. Propagate change to two callers.
Reviewers: RKSimon
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18546
llvm-svn: 265013
When merging stores in DAGCombiner, add check to ensure that no
dependenices exist that would cause the construction of a cycle in our
DAG. This may happen if one store has a data dependence on another
instruction (e.g. a load) which itself has a (chain) dependence on
another store being merged. These stores cannot be merged safely and
doing so results in a cycle that is discovered in LegalizeDAG.
This test is only done in cases where Antialias analysis is used (UseAA)
as non-AA store merge candidates will be merged logically after all
loads which have been checked to not alias.
Reviewers: ahatanak, spatel, niravd, arsenm, hfinkel, tstellarAMD, jyknight
Subscribers: llvm-commits, tberghammer, danalbert, srhines
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D18336
llvm-svn: 264461
This re-applies r262886 with a fix for 32 bit platforms that have 8 byte
pointer alignment, effectively reverting r262892.
Original Message:
Currently some SDNode operands are malloc'd, some are stored inline in
subclasses of SDNode, and some are thrown into a BumpPtrAllocator.
This scheme is complex, inconsistent, and makes refactoring SDNodes
fairly difficult.
Instead, we can allocate all of the operands using an ArrayRecycler
that wraps a BumpPtrAllocator. This keeps the cache locality when
iterating operands, improves locality when iterating SDNodes without
looking at operands, and vastly simplifies the ownership semantics.
It also means we stop overallocating SDNodes by 2-3x and will make it
simpler to fix the rampant undefined behaviour we have in how we
mutate SDNodes from one kind to another (See llvm.org/pr26808).
This is NFC other than the changes in memory behaviour, and I ran some
LNT tests to make sure this didn't hurt compile time. Not many tests
changed: there were a couple of 1-2% regressions reported, but there
were more improvements (of up to 4%) than regressions.
llvm-svn: 262902
Looks like the largest SDNode is different between 32 and 64 bit now,
so this is breaking 32 bit bots. Reverting while I figure out a fix.
This reverts r262886.
llvm-svn: 262892
Currently some SDNode operands are malloc'd, some are stored inline in
subclasses of SDNode, and some are thrown into a BumpPtrAllocator.
This scheme is complex, inconsistent, and makes refactoring SDNodes
fairly difficult.
Instead, we can allocate all of the operands using an ArrayRecycler
that wraps a BumpPtrAllocator. This keeps the cache locality when
iterating operands, improves locality when iterating SDNodes without
looking at operands, and vastly simplifies the ownership semantics.
It also means we stop overallocating SDNodes by 2-3x and will make it
simpler to fix the rampant undefined behaviour we have in how we
mutate SDNodes from one kind to another (See llvm.org/pr26808).
This is NFC other than the changes in memory behaviour, and I ran some
LNT tests to make sure this didn't hurt compile time. Not many tests
changed: there were a couple of 1-2% regressions reported, but there
were more improvements (of up to 4%) than regressions.
llvm-svn: 262886
The placement new calls here were all calling the allocation function
in RecyclingAllocator/Recycler for SDNode, instead of the function for
the specific subclass we were constructing.
Since this particular allocator always overallocates it more or less
worked, but would hide what we're actually doing from any memory
tools. Also, if you tried to change this allocator so something like a
BumpPtrAllocator or MallocAllocator, the compiler would crash horribly
all the time.
Part of llvm.org/PR26808.
llvm-svn: 262500
This was causing assertions later from using the wrong pointer
size with LDS operations. getOptimalMemOpType should also have
address space arguments later.
This avoids assertions in existing tests exposed by
a future commit.
llvm-svn: 261580
I missed == and != when I removed implicit conversions between iterators
and pointers in r252380 since they were defined outside ilist_iterator.
Since they depend on getNodePtrUnchecked(), they indirectly rely on UB.
This commit removes all uses of these operators. (I'll delete the
operators themselves in a separate commit so that it can be easily
reverted if necessary.)
There should be NFC here.
llvm-svn: 261498
The code change is simple enough: instead of attaching an anonymous SDLoc to splatted
vector constants, use the scalar constant's existing SDLoc since that is what is passed
into getConstant() as a param. But this changes instruction scheduling, so I'll explain
why that happens.
The motivation for this patch starts near:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL258833
...x86's getZeroVector() could be similarly cleaned up and I thought it would be 'NFC'.
But when I made that change locally, several x86 codegen tests wiggled.
It turns out that the lack of SDLoc consistency in getConstant() changes the way
ScheduleDAGRRList behaves. This is because the SDLoc contains 'IROrder' and some DAG
scheduler algorithms use IROrder for tie-breaking.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16972
llvm-svn: 260582
I reinvented this functionality in http://reviews.llvm.org/D16828 because it was
hidden away as a static function. The changes in x86 are not based on a complete
audit. I suspect there are other possible uses there, and there are almost certainly
more potential users in other targets.
llvm-svn: 260295
This patch consists of two parts: a performance fix in DAGCombiner.cpp
and a correctness fix in SelectionDAG.cpp.
The test case tests the bug that's uncovered by the performance fix, and
fixed by the correctness fix.
The performance fix keeps the containers required by the
hasPredecessorHelper (which is a lazy DFS) and reuse them. Since
hasPredecessorHelper is called in a loop, the overall efficiency reduced
from O(n^2) to O(n), where n is the number of SDNodes.
The correctness fix keeps iterating the neighbor list even if it's time
to early return. It will return after finishing adding all neighbors to
Worklist, so that no neighbors are discarded due to the original early
return.
llvm-svn: 259691
When generating calls to memcpy, memmove, and memset, use void* as the return
type rather than void, to match the standard signatures for these functions.
This has no practical effect for most targets, since the return values of
these calls aren't being used anyway, and most calling conventions tolerate
this kind of mismatch. However, this change will help support future
optimizations to utilize the return value to avoid holding the argument
value live across a call.
llvm-svn: 258691
This reapplies r258296 and r258366, and also fixes an existing bug in
SelectionDAG.cpp's isMemSrcFromString, neglecting to account for the
offset in a GlobalAddressSDNode, which is uncovered by those patches.
llvm-svn: 258482
This reverts r258296 and the follow up r258366. With this change, we
miscompiled the following program on Windows:
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
static const char kData[] = "asdf jkl;";
int main() {
std::string s(kData + 3, sizeof(kData) - 3);
std::cout << s << '\n';
}
llvm-svn: 258465
SelectionDAG previously missed opportunities to fold constants into
GlobalAddresses in several areas. For example, given `(add (add GA, c1), y)`, it
would often reassociate to `(add (add GA, y), c1)`, missing the opportunity to
create `(add GA+c, y)`. This isn't often visible on targets such as X86 which
effectively reassociate adds in their complex address-mode folding logic,
however it is currently visible on WebAssembly since it currently has very
simple address mode folding code that doesn't reassociate anything.
This patch fixes this by making SelectionDAG fold offsets into GlobalAddresses
at the same times that it folds constants together, so that it doesn't miss any
opportunities to perform such folding.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D16090
llvm-svn: 258296
In the optimizer (GVN etc.) when eliminating redundant nodes with different
flags, the flags are ignored for the purposes of testing for congruence, and
then intersected for the purposes of producing a result that supports the union
of all the uses. This commit makes SelectionDAG's CSE do the same thing,
allowing it to CSE nodes in more cases. This fixes PR26063.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15957
llvm-svn: 257940
Pulled out the similar CONCAT_VECTORS creation code from the 2/3 operand getNode() calls (to handle all UNDEF and all BUILD_VECTOR cases). Added a similar handler to the general getNode() call as well.
llvm-svn: 256709
Summary:
Previously SelectionDAGBuilder asserted that the pointer operands of
memcpy / memset / memmove intrinsics are in address space < 256. This assert
implicitly assumed the X86 backend, where all address spaces < 256 are
equivalent to address space 0 from the code generator's point of view. On some
targets (R600 and NVPTX) several address spaces < 256 have a target-defined
meaning, so this assert made little sense for these targets.
This patch removes this wrong assertion and adds extra checks before lowering
these intrinsics to library calls. If a pointer operand can't be casted to
address space 0 without changing semantics, a fatal error is reported to the
user.
The new behavior should be valid for all targets that give address spaces != 0
a target-specified meaning (NVPTX, R600, X86). NVPTX lowers big or
variable-sized memory intrinsics before SelectionDAG construction. All other
memory intrinsics are inlined (the threshold is set very high for this target).
R600 doesn't support memcpy / memset / memmove library calls (previously the
illegal emission of a call to such library function triggered an error
somewhere in the code generator). X86 now emits inline loads and stores for
address spaces 256 and 257 up to the same threshold that is used for address
space 0 and reports a fatal error otherwise.
I call this a "partial fix" because there are still cases that can't be
lowered. A fatal error is reported in these cases.
Reviewers: arsenm, theraven, compnerd, hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits, alex
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7241
llvm-svn: 255441
PR25763 demonstrated an issue with D14683 - vector comparison constant folding only works for i1 results, so we need to split off the sign-extension of the result to the required type. Luckily this can be done with the existing type legalization code.
llvm-svn: 255289
Almost all these changes are conditioned and only apply to the new
x86-64 f128 type configuration, which will be enabled in a follow up
patch. They are required together to make new f128 work. If there is
any error, we should fix or revert them as a whole.
These changes should have no impact to current configurations.
* Relax type legalization checks to accept new f128 type configuration,
whose TypeAction is TypeSoftenFloat, not TypeLegal, but also has
TLI.isTypeLegal true.
* Relax GetSoftenedFloat to return in some cases f128 type SDValue,
which is TLI.isTypeLegal but not "softened" to i128 node.
* Allow customized FABS, FNEG, FCOPYSIGN on new f128 type configuration,
to generate optimized bitwise operators for libm functions.
* Enhance related Lower* functions to handle f128 type.
* Enhance DAGTypeLegalizer::run, SoftenFloatResult, and related functions
to keep new f128 type in register, and convert f128 operators to library calls.
* Fix Combiner, Emitter, Legalizer routines that did not handle f128 type.
* Add ExpandConstant to handle i128 constants, ExpandNode
to handle ISD::Constant node.
* Add one more parameter to getCommonSubClass and firstCommonClass,
to guarantee that returned common sub class will contain the specified
simple value type.
This extra parameter is used by EmitCopyFromReg in InstrEmitter.cpp.
* Fix infinite loop in getTypeLegalizationCost when f128 is the value type.
* Fix printOperand to handle null operand.
* Enhance ISD::BITCAST node to handle f128 constant.
* Expand new f128 type for BR_CC, SELECT_CC, SELECT, SETCC nodes.
* Enhance X86AsmPrinter to emit f128 values in comments.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D15134
llvm-svn: 254653
Summary:
Many target lowerings copy-paste the code to test SDValues for known constants.
This code can instead be shared in SelectionDAG.cpp, and reused in the targets.
Reviewers: MatzeB, andreadb, tstellarAMD
Subscribers: arsenm, jyknight, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14945
llvm-svn: 254085
This patch adds support for vector constant folding of integer/float comparisons.
This requires FoldConstantVectorArithmetic to support scalar constant operands (in this case ISD::CONDCASE). In future we should be able to support other scalar constant types as necessary (and possibly start calling FoldConstantVectorArithmetic for all node creations)
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14683
llvm-svn: 253504
Summary:
Don't call `computeKnownBitsFromRangeMetadata` for extended loads --
this can cause a mismatch between the width of the !range metadata and
the width of the APInt's accumulating `KnownZero` (and `KnownOne` in the
future). This isn't a problem now, but will be after a future change.
Note: this can be made more aggressive in the future.
Reviewers: nlewycky
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14107
llvm-svn: 251486
We have a number of functions that implement constant folding of vectors (unary and binary ops) in near identical manners (and the differences don't appear to be critical).
This patch introduces a common implementation (SelectionDAG::FoldConstantVectorArithmetic) and calls this in both the unary and binary op cases.
After this initial patch I intend to begin enabling vector constant folding for a wider number of opcodes in SelectionDAG::getNode().
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D13665
llvm-svn: 250118
I'll be using the function in a similar combine for AArch64. The helper was
also improved to handle undef values.
Part of http://reviews.llvm.org/D13442
llvm-svn: 249572
visitSIGN_EXTEND_INREG calls SelectionDAG::getNode to constant fold scalar constants but handles vector constants itself, despite getNode being capable of dealing with them.
This required a minor change to the getNode implementation to actually deal with cases where the scalars of a BUILD_VECTOR were wider integers than the vector type - which was the only extra ability of the visitSIGN_EXTEND_INREG implementation.
No codegen intended and all existing tests remain the same.
llvm-svn: 249236
Because mod is always exact, this function should have never taken a rounding mode argument. The actual implementation still has issues, which I'll look at resolving in a subsequent patch.
llvm-svn: 248195
After D10403, we had FMF in the DAG but disabled by default. Nick reported no crashing errors after some stress testing,
so I enabled them at r243687. However, Escha soon notified us of a bug not covered by any in-tree regression tests:
if we don't propagate the flags, we may fail to CSE DAG nodes because differing FMF causes them to not match. There is
one test case in this patch to prove that point.
This patch hopes to fix or leave a 'TODO' for all of the in-tree places where we create nodes that are FMF-capable. I
did this by putting an assert in SelectionDAG.getNode() to find any FMF-capable node that was being created without FMF
( D11807 ). I then ran all regression tests and test-suite and confirmed that everything passes.
This patch exposes remaining work to get DAG FMF to be fully functional: (1) add the flags to non-binary nodes such as
FCMP, FMA and FNEG; (2) add the flags to intrinsics; (3) use the flags as conditions for transforms rather than the
current global settings.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12095
llvm-svn: 247815
In searching for a fix for the underlying code-quality bug highlighted by
r246937 (that SDAG simplification can lead to us generating an ISD::OR node
with a constant zero LHS), I ran across this:
We generically canonicalize commutative binary-operation nodes in SDAG getNode
so that, if only one operand is a constant, it will be on the RHS. However, we
were doing this only after a bunch of constant-based simplification checks that
all assume this canonical form (that any constant will be on the RHS). Moving
the operand-swapping canonicalization prior to these checks seems like the
right thing to do (and, as it turns out, causes SDAG to completely fold away the
computation in test/CodeGen/ARM/2012-11-14-subs_carry.ll, just like InstCombine
would do).
llvm-svn: 246938
Summary:
This change makes the variable argument intrinsics, `llvm.va_start` and
`llvm.va_copy`, and the `va_arg` instruction behave as they do on Windows
inside a `CallingConv::X86_64_Win64` function. It's needed for a Clang patch
I have to add support for GCC's `__builtin_ms_va_list` constructs.
Reviewers: nadav, asl, eugenis
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1622
llvm-svn: 245990
such as std::equal on the third argument. This reverts previous workarounds.
Predefining _DEBUG_POINTER_IMPL disables Visual C++ 2013 headers from defining
it to a function performing the null pointer check. In practice, it's not that
bad since any function actually using the nullptr will seg fault. The other
iterator sanity checks remain enabled in the headers.
Reviewed by Aaron Ballmanþ and Duncan P. N. Exon Smith.
llvm-svn: 245711
We still need to add constant folding of vector comparisons to fold the tests for targets that don't support the respective min/max nodes
I needed to update 2011-12-06-AVXVectorExtractCombine to load a vector instead of using a constant vector to prevent it folding
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D12118
llvm-svn: 245503
We already check that vectors have the same number of elements, we
don't need to use the scalar types explicitly: comparing the size of
the whole vector is enough.
llvm-svn: 244857
This commit removes the global manager variable which is responsible for
storing and allocating pseudo source values and instead it introduces a new
manager class named 'PseudoSourceValueManager'. Machine functions now own an
instance of the pseudo source value manager class.
This commit also modifies the 'get...' methods in the 'MachinePointerInfo'
class to construct pseudo source values using the instance of the pseudo
source value manager object from the machine function.
This commit updates calls to the 'get...' methods from the 'MachinePointerInfo'
class in a lot of different files because those calls now need to pass in a
reference to a machine function to those methods.
This change will make it easier to serialize pseudo source values as it will
enable me to transform the mips specific MipsCallEntry PseudoSourceValue
subclass into two target independent subclasses.
Reviewers: Akira Hatanaka
llvm-svn: 244693
Create wrapper methods in the Function class for the OptimizeForSize and MinSize
attributes. We want to hide the logic of "or'ing" them together when optimizing
just for size (-Os).
Currently, we are not consistent about this and rely on a front-end to always set
OptimizeForSize (-Os) if MinSize (-Oz) is on. Thus, there are 18 FIXME changes here
that should be added as follow-on patches with regression tests.
This patch is NFC-intended: it just replaces existing direct accesses of the attributes
by the equivalent wrapper call.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11734
llvm-svn: 243994
Fixing MinSize attribute handling was discussed in D11363.
This is a prerequisite patch to doing that.
The handling of OptSize when lowering mem* functions was broken
on Darwin because it wants to ignore -Os for these cases, but the
existing logic also made it ignore -Oz (MinSize).
The Linux change demonstrates a widespread problem. The backend
doesn't usually recognize the MinSize attribute by itself; it
assumes that if the MinSize attribute exists, then the OptSize
attribute must also exist.
Fixing this more generally will be a follow-on patch or two.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11568
llvm-svn: 243693
The calls here were both to getStoreSizeInBits() which multiplies by 8.
We then immediately divided by 8. Calling getStoreSize() returns the
values we need without the extra arithmetic.
llvm-svn: 242254
The simplify_type specialisation allows us to cast directly from
SDValue to an SDNode* subclass so we don't need to pass a SDNode*
to cast<>.
llvm-svn: 242209
If our two inputs have known top-zero bit counts M and N, we trivially
know that the output cannot have any bits set in the top (min(M, N)-1)
bits, since nothing could carry past that point.
llvm-svn: 241927
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits, jholewinski
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11042
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241779
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, llvm-commits, rafael, yaron.keren
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11037
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241776
Summary:
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: jholewinski, ted, yaron.keren, rafael, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11028
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241775
Summary:
SelectionDAG itself is not invoking directly the DataLayout in the
TargetMachine, but the "TargetLowering" class is still using it. I'll
address it in a following commit.
This change is part of a series of commits dedicated to have a single
DataLayout during compilation by using always the one owned by the
module.
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D11000
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 241618
Before this we were producing a TargetExternalSymbol from a MCSymbol.
That meant extracting the symbol name and fetching the symbol again
down the pipeline.
This patch adds a DAG.getMCSymbol that lets the MCSymbol pass unchanged on the
DAG.
Doing so removes the need for MO_NOPREFIX and fixes the root cause of pr23900,
allowing r240130 to be committed again.
llvm-svn: 240300
The patch is generated using this command:
tools/clang/tools/extra/clang-tidy/tool/run-clang-tidy.py -fix \
-checks=-*,llvm-namespace-comment -header-filter='llvm/.*|clang/.*' \
llvm/lib/
Thanks to Eugene Kosov for the original patch!
llvm-svn: 240137
This is an updated version of the patch that was checked in at:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL237046
but subsequently reverted because it exposed a bug in the DAG Combiner:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D9893
This time, there's an enablement flag ("EnableFMFInDAG") around the code in
SelectionDAGBuilder where we copy the set of FP optimization flags from IR
instructions to DAG nodes. So, in theory, there should be no functional change
from this patch as-is, but it will allow testing with the added functionality
to proceed via "-enable-fmf-dag" passed to llc.
This patch adds the minimum plumbing necessary to use IR-level
fast-math-flags (FMF) in the backend without actually using
them for anything yet. This is a follow-on to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL235997
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D10403
llvm-svn: 239828
Previously `SDDbgValue`s used the general allocator that lives for all
of `SelectionDAG`. Instead, give them their own allocator, and reset it
whenever `SDDbgInfo::clear()` is called, plugging a spiritual leak.
This drops `SelectionDAGBuilder::visitIntrinsicCall()` off of my heap
profile (was at around 2% of `llc` for codegen of `-flto -g`). Thanks
to Pete Cooper for spotting the problem and suggesting the fix.
llvm-svn: 237998
This patch improves support for sign extension of the lower lanes of vectors of integers by making use of the SSE41 pmovsx* sign extension instructions where possible, and optimizing the sign extension by shifts on pre-SSE41 targets (avoiding the use of i64 arithmetic shifts which require scalarization).
It converts SIGN_EXTEND nodes to SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG where necessary, that more closely matches the pmovsx* instruction than the default approach of using SIGN_EXTEND_INREG which splits the operation (into an ANY_EXTEND lowered to a shuffle followed by shifts) making instruction matching difficult during lowering. Necessary support for SIGN_EXTEND_VECTOR_INREG has been added to the DAGCombiner.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9848
llvm-svn: 237885
This cleans up the FoldConstantArithmetic code by factoring out the case
of two ConstantSDNodes into an own function. This avoids unnecessary
complexity for many callers who already have ConstantSDNode arguments.
This also avoids an intermeidate SmallVector datastructure and a loop
over that datastructure.
llvm-svn: 237651
Several updates for [DebugInfo] Add debug locations to constant SD nodes (r235989).
Includes:
* re-enabling the change (disabled recently);
* missing change for FP constants;
* resetting debug location of constant node if it's used more than at one place
to prevent emission of wrong locations in case of coalesced constants;
* a couple of additional tests.
Now all look ups in CSEMap are wrapped by additional method.
Comment in D9084 suggests that debug locations aren't useful for "target constants",
so there might be one more change related to this API (namely, dropping debug
locations for getTarget*Constant methods).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9604
llvm-svn: 237237
This is a less ambitious version of:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL236546
because that was reverted in:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL236600
because it caused memory corruption that wasn't related to FMF
but was actually due to making nodes with 2 operands derive from a
plain SDNode rather than a BinarySDNode.
This patch adds the minimum plumbing necessary to use IR-level
fast-math-flags (FMF) in the backend without actually using
them for anything yet. This is a follow-on to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL235997
...which split the existing nsw / nuw / exact flags and FMF
into their own struct.
llvm-svn: 237046
Summary: This patch correctly handles undef case of EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT node where the element index is constant and not less than vector size.
Test Plan:
CodeGen for X86 test included.
Also one incorrect regression test fixed.
Reviewers: qcolombet, chandlerc, hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9250
llvm-svn: 236584
This patch adds the minimum plumbing necessary to use IR-level
fast-math-flags (FMF) in the backend without actually using
them for anything yet. This is a follow-on to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/rL235997
...which split the existing nsw / nuw / exact flags and FMF
into their own struct.
There are 2 structural changes here:
1. The main diff is that we're preparing to extend the optimization
flags to affect more than just binary SDNodes. Eg, IR intrinsics
( https://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21290 ) or non-binop nodes
that don't even exist in IR such as FMA, FNEG, etc.
2. The other change is that we're actually copying the FP fast-math-flags
from the IR instructions to SDNodes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8900
llvm-svn: 236546
This patch fixes issues with vector constant folding not correctly handling scalar input operands if they require implicit truncation - this was tested with llvm-stress as recommended by Patrik H Hagglund.
The patch ensures that integer input scalars from a build vector are correctly truncated before folding, and that constant integer scalar results are promoted to a legal type before inclusion in the new folded build vector.
I have added another crash test case and also a test for UINT_TO_FP / SINT_TO_FP using an non-truncated scalar input, which was failing before this patch.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9282
llvm-svn: 236308
Finish off PR23080 by renaming the debug info IR constructs from `MD*`
to `DI*`. The last of the `DIDescriptor` classes were deleted in
r235356, and the last of the related typedefs removed in r235413, so
this has all baked for about a week.
Note: If you have out-of-tree code (like a frontend), I recommend that
you get everything compiling and tests passing with the *previous*
commit before updating to this one. It'll be easier to keep track of
what code is using the `DIDescriptor` hierarchy and what you've already
updated, and I think you're extremely unlikely to insert bugs. YMMV of
course.
Back to *this* commit: I did this using the rename-md-di-nodes.sh
upgrade script I've attached to PR23080 (both code and testcases) and
filtered through clang-format-diff.py. I edited the tests for
test/Assembler/invalid-generic-debug-node-*.ll by hand since the columns
were off-by-three. It should work on your out-of-tree testcases (and
code, if you've followed the advice in the previous paragraph).
Some of the tests are in badly named files now (e.g.,
test/Assembler/invalid-mdcompositetype-missing-tag.ll should be
'dicompositetype'); I'll come back and move the files in a follow-up
commit.
llvm-svn: 236120
This is a preliminary step to using the IR-level floating-point fast-math-flags in the SDAG (D8900).
In this patch, we introduce the optimization flags as their own struct. As noted in the TODO comment,
we should eventually share this data between the IR passes and the backend.
We also switch the existing nsw / nuw / exact bit functionality of the BinaryWithFlagsSDNode class to
use the new struct.
The tradeoff is that instead of using the free but limited space of SDNode's SubclassData, we add a
data member to the subclass. This means we don't have to repeat all of the get/set methods per flag,
but we're potentially adding size to all nodes of this subclassi type.
In practice on 64-bit systems (measured on Linux and MacOS X), there is no size difference between an
SDNode and BinaryWithFlagsSDNode after this change: they're both 80 bytes. This means that we had at
least one free byte to play with due to struct alignment.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9325
llvm-svn: 235997
[DebugInfo] Add debug locations to constant SD nodes
This adds debug location to constant nodes of Selection DAG and updates
all places that create constants to pass debug locations
(see PR13269).
Can't guarantee that all locations are correct, but in a lot of cases choice
is obvious, so most of them should be. At least all tests pass.
Tests for these changes do not cover everything, instead just check it for
SDNodes, ARM and AArch64 where it's easy to get incorrect locations on
constants.
This is not complete fix as FastISel contains workaround for wrong debug
locations, which drops locations from instructions on processing constants,
but there isn't currently a way to use debug locations from constants there
as llvm::Constant doesn't cache it (yet). Although this is a bit different
issue, not directly related to these changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9084
llvm-svn: 235989
This adds debug location to constant nodes of Selection DAG and updates
all places that create constants to pass debug locations
(see PR13269).
Can't guarantee that all locations are correct, but in a lot of cases choice
is obvious, so most of them should be. At least all tests pass.
Tests for these changes do not cover everything, instead just check it for
SDNodes, ARM and AArch64 where it's easy to get incorrect locations on
constants.
This is not complete fix as FastISel contains workaround for wrong debug
locations, which drops locations from instructions on processing constants,
but there isn't currently a way to use debug locations from constants there
as llvm::Constant doesn't cache it (yet). Although this is a bit different
issue, not directly related to these changes.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D9084
llvm-svn: 235977
Fixed issue with the combine of CONCAT_VECTOR of 2 BUILD_VECTOR nodes - the optimisation wasn't ensuring that the scalar operands of both nodes were the same type/size for implicit truncation.
Test case spotted by Patrik Hagglund
llvm-svn: 235371
Fix for test case found by James Molloy - TRUNCATE of constant build vectors can be more simply achieved by simply replacing with a new build vector node with the truncated value type - no need to touch the scalar operands at all.
llvm-svn: 235079
As a follow-up to r234021, assert that a debug info intrinsic variable's
`MDLocalVariable::getInlinedAt()` always matches the
`MDLocation::getInlinedAt()` of its `!dbg` attachment.
The goal here is to get rid of `MDLocalVariable::getInlinedAt()`
entirely (PR22778), but I'll let these assertions bake for a while
first.
If you have an out-of-tree backend that just broke, you're probably
attaching the wrong `DebugLoc` to a `DBG_VALUE` instruction. The one
you want is the location that was attached to the corresponding
`@llvm.dbg.declare` or `@llvm.dbg.value` call that you started with.
llvm-svn: 234038
The existing code in getMemsetValue only handled integer-preferred types when
the fill value was not a constant. Make this more robust in two ways:
1. If the preferred type is a floating-point value, do the mul-splat trick on
the corresponding integer type and then bitcast.
2. If the preferred type is a vector, do the mul-splat trick on one vector
element, and then build a vector out of them.
Fixes PR22754 (although, we should also turn off use of vector types at -O0).
llvm-svn: 233749
This patch adds supports for the vector constant folding of TRUNCATE and FP_EXTEND instructions and tidies up the SINT_TO_FP and UINT_TO_FP instructions to match.
It also moves the vector constant folding for the FNEG and FABS instructions to use the DAG.getNode() functionality like the other unary instructions.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8593
llvm-svn: 233224
While the uitofp scalar constant folding treats an integer as an unsigned value (from lang ref):
%X = sitofp i8 -1 to double ; yields double:-1.0
%Y = uitofp i8 -1 to double ; yields double:255.0
The vector constant folding was always using sitofp:
%X = sitofp <2 x i8> <i8 -1, i8 -1> to <2 x double> ; yields <double -1.0, double -1.0>
%Y = uitofp <2 x i8> <i8 -1, i8 -1> to <2 x double> ; yields <double -1.0, double -1.0>
This patch fixes this so that the correct opcode is used for sitofp and uitofp.
%X = sitofp <2 x i8> <i8 -1, i8 -1> to <2 x double> ; yields <double -1.0, double -1.0>
%Y = uitofp <2 x i8> <i8 -1, i8 -1> to <2 x double> ; yields <double 255.0, double 255.0>
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8560
llvm-svn: 233033
Summary:
Now that the DataLayout is a mandatory part of the module, let's start
cleaning the codebase. This patch is a first attempt at doing that.
This patch is not exactly NFC as for instance some places were passing
a nullptr instead of the DataLayout, possibly just because there was a
default value on the DataLayout argument to many functions in the API.
Even though it is not purely NFC, there is no change in the
validation.
I turned as many pointer to DataLayout to references, this helped
figuring out all the places where a nullptr could come up.
I had initially a local version of this patch broken into over 30
independant, commits but some later commit were cleaning the API and
touching part of the code modified in the previous commits, so it
seemed cleaner without the intermediate state.
Test Plan:
Reviewers: echristo
Subscribers: llvm-commits
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 231740
We have an increasing number of cases where we are creating commuted shuffle masks - all implementing nearly the same code.
This patch adds a static helper function - ShuffleVectorSDNode::commuteMask() and replaces a number of cases to use it.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D8139
llvm-svn: 231581
This is a follow-on patch to:
http://reviews.llvm.org/D7093
That patch canonicalized constant splats as build_vectors,
and this patch removes the constant check so we can canonicalize
all splats as build_vectors.
This fixes the 2nd test case in PR22283:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=22283
The unfortunate code duplication between SelectionDAG and DAGCombiner
is discussed in the earlier patch review. At least this patch is just
removing code...
This improves an existing x86 AVX test and changes codegen in an ARM test.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7389
llvm-svn: 229511
directly into blends of the splats.
These patterns show up even very late in the vector shuffle lowering
where we don't have any chance for DAG combining to kick in, and
blending is a tremendously simpler operation to model. By coercing the
shuffle into a blend we can much more easily match and lower shuffles of
splats.
Immediately with this change there are significantly more blends being
matched in the x86 vector shuffle lowering.
llvm-svn: 229308
Canonicalize access to function attributes to use the simpler API.
getAttributes().getAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> getFnAttribute(Kind)
getAttributes().hasAttribute(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex, Kind)
=> hasFnAttribute(Kind)
Also, add `Function::getFnStackAlignment()`, and canonicalize:
getAttributes().getStackAlignment(AttributeSet::FunctionIndex)
=> getFnStackAlignment()
llvm-svn: 229208
This fixes a regression introduced by r226816.
When replacing a splat shuffle node with a constant build_vector,
make sure that the new build_vector has a valid number of elements.
Thanks to Patrik Hagglund for reporting this problem and providing a
small reproducible.
llvm-svn: 227002
Summary: When trying to constant fold an FMA in the DAG, getNode()
fails to fold the FMA if an operand is not finite. In this case this
patch allows the constant folding if !TLI->hasFloatingPointExceptions()
Reviewers: resistor
Reviewed By: resistor
Subscribers: hfinkel, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6912
From: Mehdi Amini <mehdi.amini@apple.com>
llvm-svn: 226901
v2: use getZExtValue
add missing break
codestyle
v3: add few more comments
Signed-off-by: Jan Vesely <jan.vesely@rutgers.edu>
Reviewed-by: Matt Arsenault <Matthew.Arsenault@amd.com>
llvm-svn: 226880
This solves PR22276.
Splats of constants would sometimes produce redundant shuffles, sometimes ridiculously so (see the PR for details). Fold these shuffles into BUILD_VECTORs early on instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7093
Fixed recommit of r226811.
llvm-svn: 226816
This solves PR22276.
Splats of constants would sometimes produce redundant shuffles, sometimes ridiculously so (see the PR for details). Fold these shuffles into BUILD_VECTORs early on instead.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D7093
llvm-svn: 226811
The problem occurs when after vectorization we have type
<2 x i32>. This type is promoted to <2 x i64> and then requires
additional efforts for expanding loads and truncating stores.
I added EXPAND / TRUNCATE attributes to the masked load/store
SDNodes. The code now contains additional shuffles.
I've prepared changes in the cost estimation for masked memory
operations, it will be submitted separately.
llvm-svn: 226808
Now that the source and destination types can be specified,
allow doing an expansion that doesn't use an EXTLOAD of the
result type. Try to do a legal extload to an intermediate type
and extend that if possible.
This generalizes the special case custom lowering of extloads
R600 has been using to work around this problem.
This also happens to fix a bug that would incorrectly use more
aligned loads than should be used.
llvm-svn: 225925
SelectionDAG::isConsecutiveLoad() was not detecting consecutive loads
when the first load was offset from a base address.
This patch recognizes that pattern and subtracts the offset before comparing
the second load to see if it is consecutive.
The codegen change in the new test case improves from:
vmovsd 32(%rdi), %xmm0
vmovsd 48(%rdi), %xmm1
vmovhpd 56(%rdi), %xmm1, %xmm1
vmovhpd 40(%rdi), %xmm0, %xmm0
vinsertf128 $1, %xmm1, %ymm0, %ymm0
To:
vmovups 32(%rdi), %ymm0
An existing test case is also improved from:
vmovsd (%rdi), %xmm0
vmovsd 16(%rdi), %xmm1
vmovsd 24(%rdi), %xmm2
vunpcklpd %xmm2, %xmm0, %xmm0 ## xmm0 = xmm0[0],xmm2[0]
vmovhpd 8(%rdi), %xmm1, %xmm3
To:
vmovsd (%rdi), %xmm0
vmovsd 16(%rdi), %xmm1
vmovhpd 24(%rdi), %xmm0, %xmm0
vmovhpd 8(%rdi), %xmm1, %xmm1
This patch fixes PR21771 ( http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=21771 ).
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D6642
llvm-svn: 224379
I'm recommiting the codegen part of the patch.
The vectorizer part will be send to review again.
Masked Vector Load and Store Intrinsics.
Introduced new target-independent intrinsics in order to support masked vector loads and stores. The loop vectorizer optimizes loops containing conditional memory accesses by generating these intrinsics for existing targets AVX2 and AVX-512. The vectorizer asks the target about availability of masked vector loads and stores.
Added SDNodes for masked operations and lowering patterns for X86 code generator.
Examples:
<16 x i32> @llvm.masked.load.v16i32(i8* %addr, <16 x i32> %passthru, i32 4 /* align */, <16 x i1> %mask)
declare void @llvm.masked.store.v8f64(i8* %addr, <8 x double> %value, i32 4, <8 x i1> %mask)
Scalarizer for other targets (not AVX2/AVX-512) will be done in a separate patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6191
llvm-svn: 223348
This reverts commit r222632 (and follow-up r222636), which caused a host
of LNT failures on an internal bot. I'll respond to the commit on the
list with a reproduction of one of the failures.
Conflicts:
lib/Target/X86/X86TargetTransformInfo.cpp
llvm-svn: 222936
Introduced new target-independent intrinsics in order to support masked vector loads and stores. The loop vectorizer optimizes loops containing conditional memory accesses by generating these intrinsics for existing targets AVX2 and AVX-512. The vectorizer asks the target about availability of masked vector loads and stores.
Added SDNodes for masked operations and lowering patterns for X86 code generator.
Examples:
<16 x i32> @llvm.masked.load.v16i32(i8* %addr, <16 x i32> %passthru, i32 4 /* align */, <16 x i1> %mask)
declare void @llvm.masked.store.v8f64(i8* %addr, <8 x double> %value, i32 4, <8 x i1> %mask)
Scalarizer for other targets (not AVX2/AVX-512) will be done in a separate patch.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D6191
llvm-svn: 222632
This patch builds on http://reviews.llvm.org/D5598 to perform byte rotation shuffles (lowerVectorShuffleAsByteRotate) on pre-SSSE3 (palignr) targets - pre-SSSE3 is only enabled on i8 and i16 vector targets where it is a more definite performance gain.
I've also added a separate byte shift shuffle (lowerVectorShuffleAsByteShift) that makes use of the ability of the SLLDQ/SRLDQ instructions to implicitly shift in zero bytes to avoid the need to create a zero register if we had used palignr.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D5699
llvm-svn: 222340
This is to be consistent with StringSet and ultimately with the standard
library's associative container insert function.
This lead to updating SmallSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update SmallPtrSet::insert to return pair<iterator, bool>,
and then to update all the existing users of those functions...
llvm-svn: 222334
What would happen before that commit is that the SDDbgValues associated with
a deallocated SDNode would be marked Invalidated, but SDDbgInfo would keep
a map entry keyed by the SDNode pointer pointing to this list of invalidated
SDDbgNodes. As the memory gets reused, the list might get wrongly associated
with another new SDNode. As the SDDbgValues are cloned when they are transfered,
this can lead to an exponential number of SDDbgValues being produced during
DAGCombine like in http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=20893
Note that the previous behavior wasn't really buggy as the invalidation made
sure that the SDDbgValues won't be used. This commit can be considered a
memory optimization and as such is really hard to validate in a unit-test.
llvm-svn: 221709
argument of the llvm.dbg.declare/llvm.dbg.value intrinsics.
Previously, DIVariable was a variable-length field that has an optional
reference to a Metadata array consisting of a variable number of
complex address expressions. In the case of OpPiece expressions this is
wasting a lot of storage in IR, because when an aggregate type is, e.g.,
SROA'd into all of its n individual members, the IR will contain n copies
of the DIVariable, all alike, only differing in the complex address
reference at the end.
By making the complex address into an extra argument of the
dbg.value/dbg.declare intrinsics, all of the pieces can reference the
same variable and the complex address expressions can be uniqued across
the CU, too.
Down the road, this will allow us to move other flags, such as
"indirection" out of the DIVariable, too.
The new intrinsics look like this:
declare void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata %storage, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
declare void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata %storage, i64 %offset, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
This patch adds a new LLVM-local tag to DIExpressions, so we can detect
and pretty-print DIExpression metadata nodes.
What this patch doesn't do:
This patch does not touch the "Indirect" field in DIVariable; but moving
that into the expression would be a natural next step.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
Thanks to dblaikie and dexonsmith for reviewing this patch!
Note: I accidentally committed a bogus older version of this patch previously.
llvm-svn: 218787
argument of the llvm.dbg.declare/llvm.dbg.value intrinsics.
Previously, DIVariable was a variable-length field that has an optional
reference to a Metadata array consisting of a variable number of
complex address expressions. In the case of OpPiece expressions this is
wasting a lot of storage in IR, because when an aggregate type is, e.g.,
SROA'd into all of its n individual members, the IR will contain n copies
of the DIVariable, all alike, only differing in the complex address
reference at the end.
By making the complex address into an extra argument of the
dbg.value/dbg.declare intrinsics, all of the pieces can reference the
same variable and the complex address expressions can be uniqued across
the CU, too.
Down the road, this will allow us to move other flags, such as
"indirection" out of the DIVariable, too.
The new intrinsics look like this:
declare void @llvm.dbg.declare(metadata %storage, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
declare void @llvm.dbg.value(metadata %storage, i64 %offset, metadata %var, metadata %expr)
This patch adds a new LLVM-local tag to DIExpressions, so we can detect
and pretty-print DIExpression metadata nodes.
What this patch doesn't do:
This patch does not touch the "Indirect" field in DIVariable; but moving
that into the expression would be a natural next step.
http://reviews.llvm.org/D4919
rdar://problem/17994491
Thanks to dblaikie and dexonsmith for reviewing this patch!
llvm-svn: 218778
The code in SelectionDAG::getMemset for some reason assumes the value passed to
memset is an i32. This breaks the generated code for targets that only have
registers smaller than 32 bits because the value might get split into multiple
registers by the calling convention. See the test for the MSP430 target included
in the patch for an example.
This patch ensures that nothing is assumed about the type of the value. Instead,
the type is taken from the selected overload of the llvm.memset intrinsic.
llvm-svn: 216716
Store TargetSelectionDAGInfo as a pointer instead of a reference:
getSelectionDAGInfo() may not be implemented for certain backends
(e.g. it's not currently implemented for R600).
This bug is reported by UBSan.
llvm-svn: 216129
This implements PPCTargetLowering::getTgtMemIntrinsic for Altivec load/store
intrinsics. As with the construction of the MachineMemOperands for the
intrinsic calls used for unaligned load/store lowering, the only slight
complication is that we need to represent a larger memory range than the
loaded/stored value-type size (because the address is rounded down to an
aligned address, and we need to conservatively represent the entire possible
range of the actual access). This required adding an extra size field to
TargetLowering::IntrinsicInfo, and this was done in a way that required no
modifications to other targets (the size defaults to the store size of the
provided memory data type).
This fixes test/CodeGen/PowerPC/unal-altivec-wint.ll (so it can be un-XFAILed).
llvm-svn: 215512
floating point exceptions, added use of flag to fold potentially exception
raising floating point math in selection DAG. No functionality change, as
targets have to explicitly ask for this behavior and none does today.
llvm-svn: 215222
shorter/easier and have the DAG use that to do the same lookup. This
can be used in the future for TargetMachine based caching lookups from
the MachineFunction easily.
Update the MIPS subtarget switching machinery to update this pointer
at the same time it runs.
llvm-svn: 214838
fromulation of the node, which isn't really the desired behavior from
within the combiner or legalizer, but is necessary within ISel. I've
added a hopefully helpful comment and fixed the only two places where
this took place.
Yet another step toward the combiner and legalizer not needing to use
update listeners with virtual calls to manage the worklists behind
legalization and combining.
llvm-svn: 214574
Altivec vector loads on PowerPC have an interesting property: They always load
from an aligned address (by rounding down the address actually provided if
necessary). In order to generate an actual unaligned load, you can generate two
load instructions, one with the original address, one offset by one vector
length, and use a special permutation to extract the bytes desired.
When this was originally implemented, I generated these two loads using regular
ISD::LOAD nodes, now marked as aligned. Unfortunately, there is a problem with
this:
The alignment of a load does not contribute to its identity, and SDNodes
are uniqued. So, imagine that we have some unaligned load, L1, that is not
aligned. The routine will create two loads, L1(aligned) and (L1+16)(aligned).
Further imagine that there had already existed a load (L1+16)(unaligned) with
the same chain operand as the load L1. When (L1+16)(aligned) is created as part
of the lowering of L1, this load *is* also the (L1+16)(unaligned) node, just
now marked as aligned (because the new alignment overwrites the old). But the
original users of (L1+16)(unaligned) now get the data intended for the
permutation yielding the data for L1, and (L1+16)(unaligned) no longer exists
to get its own permutation-based expansion. This was PR19991.
A second potential problem has to do with the MMOs on these loads, which can be
used by AA during instruction scheduling to break chain-based dependencies. If
the new "aligned" loads get the MMO from the original unaligned load, this does
not represent the fact that it will load data from below the original address.
Normally, this would not matter, but this load might be combined with another
load pair for a previous vector, and then the dependency on the otherwise-
ignored lower bytes can matter.
To fix both problems, instead of generating the necessary loads using regular
ISD::LOAD instructions, ppc_altivec_lvx intrinsics are used instead. These are
provided with MMOs with a conservative address range.
Unfortunately, I no longer have a failing test case (since PR19991 was
reported, other changes in CodeGen have forced this bug back into hiding it
again). Nevertheless, this should fix the underlying problem.
llvm-svn: 214481
Currently when DAGCombine converts loads feeding a switch into a switch of
addresses feeding a load the new load inherits the isInvariant flag of the left
side. This is incorrect since invariant loads can be reordered in cases where it
is illegal to reoarder normal loads.
This patch adds an isInvariant parameter to getExtLoad() and updates all call
sites to pass in the data if they have it or false if they don't. It also
changes the DAGCombine to use that data to make the right decision when
creating the new load.
llvm-svn: 214449
Rename to allowsMisalignedMemoryAccess.
On R600, 8 and 16 byte accesses are mostly OK with 4-byte alignment,
and don't need to be split into multiple accesses. Vector loads with
an alignment of the element type are not uncommon in OpenCL code.
llvm-svn: 214055
In order to enable the preservation of noalias function parameter information
after inlining, and the representation of block-level __restrict__ pointer
information (etc.), additional kinds of aliasing metadata will be introduced.
This metadata needs to be carried around in AliasAnalysis::Location objects
(and MMOs at the SDAG level), and so we need to generalize the current scheme
(which is hard-coded to just one TBAA MDNode*).
This commit introduces only the necessary refactoring to allow for the
introduction of other aliasing metadata types, but does not actually introduce
any (that will come in a follow-up commit). What it does introduce is a new
AAMDNodes structure to hold all of the aliasing metadata nodes associated with
a particular memory-accessing instruction, and uses that structure instead of
the raw MDNode* in AliasAnalysis::Location, etc.
No functionality change intended.
llvm-svn: 213859
Constant fold the lanes of the input constant build_vector individually
so we correctly handle when the vector elements are not all the same
constant value.
PR20394
llvm-svn: 213798
DAG into a helper function.
This adds a trip through the (very minimal) verification logic in
a bunch of places that were missing it, but shouldn't have any other
impact outside of refactoring. I'm hoping to use this to do more clever
things when DAG nodes are inserted into the graph.
llvm-svn: 213612
a bug in 2010 when they were added but are adding no value today.
In fact, they are utter lies. NodeAllocator is used to allocate almost
all of these node types. I don't know what we were trying to assert
here, and the docs don't give any answer. Until we once again stumble
upon a bug needing help, let's clear the path for improvements.
llvm-svn: 213610
This patch removes function 'CommuteVectorShuffle' from X86ISelLowering.cpp
and moves its logic into SelectionDAG.cpp as method 'getCommutedVectorShuffles'.
This refactoring is in preperation of an upcoming change to the DAGCombiner.
llvm-svn: 213503
Since the result of a SETCC for AArch64 is 0 or -1 in each lane, we can
move unary operations, in this case [su]int_to_fp through the mask
operation and constant fold the operation away. Generally speaking:
UNARYOP(AND(VECTOR_CMP(x,y), constant))
--> AND(VECTOR_CMP(x,y), constant2)
where constant2 is UNARYOP(constant).
This implements the transform where UNARYOP is [su]int_to_fp.
For example, consider the simple function:
define <4 x float> @foo(<4 x float> %val, <4 x float> %test) nounwind {
%cmp = fcmp oeq <4 x float> %val, %test
%ext = zext <4 x i1> %cmp to <4 x i32>
%result = sitofp <4 x i32> %ext to <4 x float>
ret <4 x float> %result
}
Before this change, the code is generated as:
fcmeq.4s v0, v0, v1
movi.4s v1, #0x1 // Integer splat value.
and.16b v0, v0, v1 // Mask lanes based on the comparison.
scvtf.4s v0, v0 // Convert each lane to f32.
ret
After, the code is improved to:
fcmeq.4s v0, v0, v1
fmov.4s v1, #1.00000000 // f32 splat value.
and.16b v0, v0, v1 // Mask lanes based on the comparison.
ret
The svvtf.4s has been constant folded away and the floating point 1.0f
vector lanes are materialized directly via fmov.4s.
Rather than do the folding manually in the target code, teach getNode()
in the generic SelectionDAG to handle folding constant operands of
vector [su]int_to_fp nodes. It is reasonable (as noted in a FIXME) to do
additional constant folding there as well, but I don't have test cases
for those operations, so leaving them for another time when it becomes
appropriate.
rdar://17693791
llvm-svn: 213341
to the zero-extend-vector-inreg node introduced previously for the same
purpose: manage the type legalization of widened extend operations,
especially to support the experimental widening mode for x86.
I'm adding both because sign-extend is expanded in terms of any-extend
with shifts to propagate the sign bit. This removes the last
fundamental scalarization from vec_cast2.ll (a test case that hit many
really bad edge cases for widening legalization), although the trunc
tests in that file still appear scalarized because the the shuffle
legalization is scalarizing. Funny thing, I've been working on that.
Some initial experiments with this and SSE2 scenarios is showing
moderately good behavior already for sign extension. Still some work to
do on the shuffle combining on X86 before we're generating optimal
sequences, but avoiding scalarization is a huge step forward.
llvm-svn: 212714
Summary:
On MIPS32r6/MIPS64r6, floating point comparisons return 0 or -1 but integer
comparisons return 0 or 1.
Updated the various uses of getBooleanContents. Two simplifications had to be
disabled when float and int boolean contents differ:
- ScalarizeVecRes_VSELECT except when the kind of boolean contents is trivially
discoverable (i.e. when the condition of the VSELECT is a SETCC node).
- visitVSELECT (select C, 0, 1) -> (xor C, 1).
Come to think of it, this one could test for the common case of 'C'
being a SETCC too.
Preserved existing behaviour for all other targets and updated the affected
MIPS32r6/MIPS64r6 tests. This also fixes the pi benchmark where the 'low'
variable was counting in the wrong direction because it thought it could simply
add the result of the comparison.
Reviewers: hfinkel
Reviewed By: hfinkel
Subscribers: hfinkel, jholewinski, mcrosier, llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4389
llvm-svn: 212697
not widening the input type to the node sufficiently to let the ext take
place in a register.
This would in turn result in a mysterious bitcast assertion failure
downstream. First change here is to add back the helpful assert I had in
an earlier version of the code to catch this immediately.
Next change is to add support to the type legalization to detect when we
have widened the operand either too little or too much (for whatever
reason) and find a size-matched legal vector type to convert it to
first. This can also fail so we get a new fallback path, but that seems
OK.
With this, we no longer crash on vec_cast2.ll when using widening. I've
also added the CHECK lines for the zero-extend cases here. We still need
to support sign-extend and trunc (or something) to get plausible code
for the other two thirds of this test which is one of the regression
tests that showed the most scalarization when widening was
force-enabled. Slowly closing in on widening being a viable legalization
strategy without it resorting to scalarization at every turn. =]
llvm-svn: 212614
vector types to be legal and a ZERO_EXTEND node is encountered.
When we use widening to legalize vector types, extend nodes are a real
challenge. Either the input or output is likely to be legal, but in many
cases not both. As a consequence, we don't really have any way to
represent this situation and the prior code in the widening legalization
framework would just scalarize the extend operation completely.
This patch introduces a new DAG node to represent doing a zero extend of
a vector "in register". The core of the idea is to allow legal but
different vector types in the input and output. The output vector must
have fewer lanes but wider elements. The operation is defined to zero
extend the low elements of the input to the size of the output elements,
and drop all of the high elements which don't have a corresponding lane
in the output vector.
It also includes generic expansion of this node in terms of blending
a zero vector into the high elements of the vector and bitcasting
across. This in turn yields extremely nice code for x86 SSE2 when we use
the new widening legalization logic in conjunction with the new shuffle
lowering logic.
There is still more to do here. We need to support sign extension, any
extension, and potentially int-to-float conversions. My current plan is
to continue using similar synthetic nodes to model each of these
transitions with generic lowering code for each one.
However, with this patch LLVM already reaches performance parity with
GCC for the core C loops of the x264 code (assuming you disable the
hand-written assembly versions) when compiling for SSE2 and SSE3
architectures and enabling the new widening and lowering logic for
vectors.
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4405
llvm-svn: 212610
tracks which elements of the build vector are in fact undef.
This should make actually inpsecting them (likely in my next patch)
reasonably pretty. Also makes the output parameter optional as it is
clear now that *most* users are happy with undefs in their splats.
llvm-svn: 212581
aggressively from the x86 shuffle lowering to the generic SDAG vector
shuffle formation code.
This code already tried to fold away shuffles of splats! It just had
lots of bugs and couldn't handle the case my new x86 shuffle lowering
needed.
First, it failed to correctly compute whether N2 was undef because it
pre-computed this, then did transformations which could *make* N2 undef,
then failed to ever re-consider the precomputed state.
Second, it didn't look through bitcasts at all, even in the safe cases
where they are just element-type bitcasts with no change to the number
of elements.
Third, it didn't handle all-zero bit casts nicely the way my code in the
x86 side of things did, which is essential to getting good zext-shuffle
lowerings.
But all of these are generic. I just ported the code down to this layer
and fixed the surrounding bugs. Tests exercising this in the x86 backend
still pass and some silly code in widen_cast-6.ll gets better. I updated
that test to be a bit more precise but it's still pretty unclear what
the value of the test is in this day and age.
llvm-svn: 212517
nodes about whether they are splats. This is factored out and improved
from r212324 which got reverted as it was far too aggressive. The new
API should help more conservatively handle buildvectors that are
a mixture of splatted and undef values.
No functionality change at this point. The hope is to slowly
re-introduce the undef-tolerant optimization of splats, but each time
being forced to make a concious decision about how to handle the undefs
in a way that doesn't lead to contradicting assumptions about the
collapsed value.
Hal has pointed out in discussions that this may not end up being the
desired API and instead it may be more convenient to get a mask of the
undef elements or something similar. I'm starting simple and will expand
the API as I adapt actual callers and see exactly what they need.
llvm-svn: 212514
lanes in vector splats.
The core problem here is that undef lanes can't *unilaterally* be
considered to contribute to splats. Their handling needs to be more
cautious. There is also a reported failure of the nightly testers
(thanks Tobias!) that may well stem from the same core issue. I'm going
to fix this theoretical issue, factor the APIs a bit better, and then
verify that I don't see anything bad with Tobias's reduction from the
test suite before recommitting.
Original commit message for r212324:
[x86] Generalize BuildVectorSDNode::getConstantSplatValue to work for
any constant, constant FP, or undef splat and to tolerate any undef
lanes in a splat, then replace all uses of isSplatVector in X86's
lowering with it.
This fixes issues where undef lanes in an otherwise splat vector would
prevent the splat logic from firing. It is a touch more awkward to use
this interface, but it is much more accurate. Suggestions for better
interface structuring welcome.
With this fix, the code generated with the widening legalization
strategy for widen_cast-4.ll is *dramatically* improved as the special
lowering strategies for a v16i8 SRA kick in even though the high lanes
are undef.
We also get a slightly different choice for broadcasting an aligned
memory location, and use vpshufd instead of vbroadcastss. This looks
like a minor win for pipelining and domain crossing, but a minor loss
for the number of micro-ops. I suspect its a wash, but folks can
easily tweak the lowering if they want.
llvm-svn: 212475
any constant, constant FP, or undef splat and to tolerate any undef
lanes in a splat, then replace all uses of isSplatVector in X86's
lowering with it.
This fixes issues where undef lanes in an otherwise splat vector would
prevent the splat logic from firing. It is a touch more awkward to use
this interface, but it is much more accurate. Suggestions for better
interface structuring welcome.
With this fix, the code generated with the widening legalization
strategy for widen_cast-4.ll is *dramatically* improved as the special
lowering strategies for a v16i8 SRA kick in even though the high lanes
are undef.
We also get a slightly different choice for broadcasting an aligned
memory location, and use vpshufd instead of vbroadcastss. This looks
like a minor win for pipelining and domain crossing, but a minor loss
for the number of micro-ops. I suspect its a wash, but folks can easily
tweak the lowering if they want.
llvm-svn: 212324
The argument list vector is never used after it has been passed to the
CallLoweringInfo and moving it to the CallLoweringInfo is cleaner and
pretty much as cheap as keeping a pointer to it.
llvm-svn: 212135
Summary:
With this patch, range metadata can be added to call/invoke including
IntrinsicInst. Previously, it could only be added to load.
Rename computeKnownBitsLoad to computeKnownBitsFromRangeMetadata because
range metadata is not only used by load.
Update the language reference to reflect this change.
Test Plan:
Add several tests in range-2.ll to confirm the verifier is happy with
having range metadata on call/invoke.
Add two tests in AddOverFlow.ll to confirm annotating range metadata to
call/invoke can benefit InstCombine.
Reviewers: meheff, nlewycky, reames, hfinkel, eliben
Reviewed By: eliben
Subscribers: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D4187
llvm-svn: 211281
This commit adds a weak variant of the cmpxchg operation, as described
in C++11. A cmpxchg instruction with this modifier is permitted to
fail to store, even if the comparison indicated it should.
As a result, cmpxchg instructions must return a flag indicating
success in addition to their original iN value loaded. Thus, for
uniformity *all* cmpxchg instructions now return "{ iN, i1 }". The
second flag is 1 when the store succeeded.
At the DAG level, a new ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP_WITH_SUCCESS node has been
added as the natural representation for the new cmpxchg instructions.
It is a strong cmpxchg.
By default this gets Expanded to the existing ATOMIC_CMP_SWAP during
Legalization, so existing backends should see no change in behaviour.
If they wish to deal with the enhanced node instead, they can call
setOperationAction on it. Beware: as a node with 2 results, it cannot
be selected from TableGen.
Currently, no use is made of the extra information provided in this
patch. Test updates are almost entirely adapting the input IR to the
new scheme.
Summary for out of tree users:
------------------------------
+ Legacy Bitcode files are upgraded during read.
+ Legacy assembly IR files will be invalid.
+ Front-ends must adapt to different type for "cmpxchg".
+ Backends should be unaffected by default.
llvm-svn: 210903
This patch modifies SelectionDAGBuilder to construct SDNodes with associated
NoSignedWrap, NoUnsignedWrap and Exact flags coming from IR BinaryOperator
instructions.
Added a new SDNode type called 'BinaryWithFlagsSDNode' to allow accessing
nsw/nuw/exact flags during codegen.
Patch by Marcello Maggioni.
llvm-svn: 210467
DAG cycle detection is only enabled with ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS. However we
can run it just before we would crash in order to provide more informative
diagnostics.
Now in addition to the "Overran sorted position" message we also get the Node
printed if a cycle was detected.
Tested by building several configs: Debug+Assert, Debug+Assert+Check (this is
ENABLE_EXPENSIVE_CHECKS), Release+Assert and Release. Also tried that the
AssignTopologicalOrder assert produces the expected results.
llvm-svn: 209977
Pass the DAG down to checkForCycles from all callers where we have it. This
allows target-specific nodes to be printed properly.
Also print some missing newlines.
llvm-svn: 209976
This matches gcc's behavior. It also seems natural given that aliases
contain other properties that govern how it is accessed (linkage,
visibility, dll storage).
Clang still has to be updated to expose this feature to C.
llvm-svn: 209759
This is mostly a mechanical change changing all the call sites to the newer
chained-function construction pattern. This removes the horrible 15-parameter
constructor for the CallLoweringInfo in favour of setting properties of the call
via chained functions. No functional change beyond the removal of the old
constructors are intended.
llvm-svn: 209082
The problem occurs when a non-i1 setcc is inverted. For example 'i8 = setcc' will get 'xor 0xff' to invert this. This is clearly wrong when the boolean contents are ZeroOrOne.
This patch introduces getLogicalNOT and updates SetCC legalisation to use it.
Reviewed by Hal Finkel.
llvm-svn: 208641
When reducing the bitwidth of a comparison against a constant, the
original setcc's result type was used, which was incorrect.
No test since I don't think any other in tree targets change the
bitwidth of the setcc type depending on the bitwidth of the compared
type.
llvm-svn: 208236
buildbot - do not insert debug intrinsics before phi nodes.
Debug info for optimized code: Support variables that are on the stack and
described by DBG_VALUEs during their lifetime.
Previously, when a variable was at a FrameIndex for any part of its
lifetime, this would shadow all other DBG_VALUEs and only a single
fbreg location would be emitted, which in fact is only valid for a small
range and not the entire lexical scope of the variable. The included
dbg-value-const-byref testcase demonstrates this.
This patch fixes this by
Local
- emitting dbg.value intrinsics for allocas that are passed by reference
- dropping all dbg.declares (they are now fully lowered to dbg.values)
SelectionDAG
- renamed constructors for SDDbgValue for better readability.
- fix UserValue::match() to handle indirect values correctly
- not inserting an MMI table entries for dbg.values that describe allocas.
- lowering dbg.values that describe allocas into *indirect* DBG_VALUEs.
CodeGenPrepare
- leaving dbg.values for an alloca were they are (see comment)
Other
- regenerated/updated instcombine.ll testcase and included source
rdar://problem/16679879
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3374
llvm-svn: 207269
AllocaInst that was missing in one location.
Debug info for optimized code: Support variables that are on the stack and
described by DBG_VALUEs during their lifetime.
Previously, when a variable was at a FrameIndex for any part of its
lifetime, this would shadow all other DBG_VALUEs and only a single
fbreg location would be emitted, which in fact is only valid for a small
range and not the entire lexical scope of the variable. The included
dbg-value-const-byref testcase demonstrates this.
This patch fixes this by
Local
- emitting dbg.value intrinsics for allocas that are passed by reference
- dropping all dbg.declares (they are now fully lowered to dbg.values)
SelectionDAG
- renamed constructors for SDDbgValue for better readability.
- fix UserValue::match() to handle indirect values correctly
- not inserting an MMI table entries for dbg.values that describe allocas.
- lowering dbg.values that describe allocas into *indirect* DBG_VALUEs.
CodeGenPrepare
- leaving dbg.values for an alloca were they are (see comment)
Other
- regenerated/updated instcombine.ll testcase and included source
rdar://problem/16679879
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3374
llvm-svn: 207235
AllocaInst that was missing in one location.
Debug info for optimized code: Support variables that are on the stack and
described by DBG_VALUEs during their lifetime.
Previously, when a variable was at a FrameIndex for any part of its
lifetime, this would shadow all other DBG_VALUEs and only a single
fbreg location would be emitted, which in fact is only valid for a small
range and not the entire lexical scope of the variable. The included
dbg-value-const-byref testcase demonstrates this.
This patch fixes this by
Local
- emitting dbg.value intrinsics for allocas that are passed by reference
- dropping all dbg.declares (they are now fully lowered to dbg.values)
SelectionDAG
- renamed constructors for SDDbgValue for better readability.
- fix UserValue::match() to handle indirect values correctly
- not inserting an MMI table entries for dbg.values that describe allocas.
- lowering dbg.values that describe allocas into *indirect* DBG_VALUEs.
CodeGenPrepare
- leaving dbg.values for an alloca were they are (see comment)
Other
- regenerated/updated instcombine.ll testcase and included source
rdar://problem/16679879
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3374
llvm-svn: 207165
described by DBG_VALUEs during their lifetime.
Previously, when a variable was at a FrameIndex for any part of its
lifetime, this would shadow all other DBG_VALUEs and only a single
fbreg location would be emitted, which in fact is only valid for a small
range and not the entire lexical scope of the variable. The included
dbg-value-const-byref testcase demonstrates this.
This patch fixes this by
Local
- emitting dbg.value intrinsics for allocas that are passed by reference
- dropping all dbg.declares (they are now fully lowered to dbg.values)
SelectionDAG
- renamed constructors for SDDbgValue for better readability.
- fix UserValue::match() to handle indirect values correctly
- not inserting an MMI table entries for dbg.values that describe allocas.
- lowering dbg.values that describe allocas into *indirect* DBG_VALUEs.
CodeGenPrepare
- leaving dbg.values for an alloca were they are (see comment)
Other
- regenerated/updated instcombine-intrinsics testcase and included source
rdar://problem/16679879
http://reviews.llvm.org/D3374
llvm-svn: 207130
FoldConstantArithmetic() only knows how to deal with a few target independent
ISD opcodes. Bail early if it sees a target-specific ISD node. These node do
funny things with operand types which may break the assumptions of the code
that follows, and there's no actual folding that can be done anyway. For example,
non-constant 256 bit vector shifts on X86 have a shift-amount operand that's a
128-bit v4i32 vector regardless of what the first operand type is and that breaks
the assumption that the operand types must match.
rdar://16530923
llvm-svn: 205937
This adds back r204781.
Original message:
Aliases are just another name for a position in a file. As such, the
regular symbol resolutions are not applied. For example, given
define void @my_func() {
ret void
}
@my_alias = alias weak void ()* @my_func
@my_alias2 = alias void ()* @my_alias
We produce without this patch:
.weak my_alias
my_alias = my_func
.globl my_alias2
my_alias2 = my_alias
That is, in the resulting ELF file my_alias, my_func and my_alias are
just 3 names pointing to offset 0 of .text. That is *not* the
semantics of IR linking. For example, linking in a
@my_alias = alias void ()* @other_func
would require the strong my_alias to override the weak one and
my_alias2 would end up pointing to other_func.
There is no way to represent that with aliases being just another
name, so the best solution seems to be to just disallow it, converting
a miscompile into an error.
llvm-svn: 204934
This reverts commit r204781.
I will follow up to with msan folks to see what is what they
were trying to do with aliases to weak aliases.
llvm-svn: 204784
Aliases are just another name for a position in a file. As such, the
regular symbol resolutions are not applied. For example, given
define void @my_func() {
ret void
}
@my_alias = alias weak void ()* @my_func
@my_alias2 = alias void ()* @my_alias
We produce without this patch:
.weak my_alias
my_alias = my_func
.globl my_alias2
my_alias2 = my_alias
That is, in the resulting ELF file my_alias, my_func and my_alias are
just 3 names pointing to offset 0 of .text. That is *not* the
semantics of IR linking. For example, linking in a
@my_alias = alias void ()* @other_func
would require the strong my_alias to override the weak one and
my_alias2 would end up pointing to other_func.
There is no way to represent that with aliases being just another
name, so the best solution seems to be to just disallow it, converting
a miscompile into an error.
llvm-svn: 204781
Usually opaque constants shouldn't be folded, unless they are simple unary
operations that don't create new constants. Although this shouldn't drop the
opaque constant flag. This commit fixes this.
Related to <rdar://problem/14774662>
llvm-svn: 204737
This patch renames method 'isConstantSplat' as 'getConstantSplatValue'
(mainly for consistency reasons), and rewrites its logic to ensure
that we always perform a legal 'cast<ConstantSDNode>'.
Added test shift-combine-crash.ll to verify that DAGCombiner no longer crashes with an assertion failure in the attempt to simplify a vector shift by a vector of all undef counts.
llvm-svn: 204536
The syntax for "cmpxchg" should now look something like:
cmpxchg i32* %addr, i32 42, i32 3 acquire monotonic
where the second ordering argument gives the required semantics in the case
that no exchange takes place. It should be no stronger than the first ordering
constraint and cannot be either "release" or "acq_rel" (since no store will
have taken place).
rdar://problem/15996804
llvm-svn: 203559
Before this patch we used getIntImmCost from TargetTransformInfo to determine if
a load of a constant should be converted to just a constant, but the threshold
for this was set to an arbitrary value. This value works well for the two
targets (X86 and ARM) that implement this target-hook, but it isn't
target-independent at all.
Now targets have the possibility to decide directly if this optimization should
be performed. The default value is set to false to preserve the current
behavior. The target hook has been moved to TargetLowering, which removed the
last use and need of TargetTransformInfo in SelectionDAG.
llvm-svn: 200271
This commit caused -Woverloaded-virtual warnings. The two new
TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost functions were only added to the superclass,
and to the X86 subclass. The other targets were not updated, and the
warning highlighted this by pointing out that e.g. ARMTTI::getIntImmCost was
hiding the two new getIntImmCost variants.
We could pacify the warning by adding "using TargetTransformInfo::getIntImmCost"
to the various subclasses, or turning it off, but I suspect that it's wrong to
leave the functions unimplemnted in those targets. The default implementations
return TCC_Free, which I don't think is right e.g. for ARM.
llvm-svn: 200058
Retry commit r200022 with a fix for the build bot errors. Constant expressions
have (unlike instructions) module scope use lists and therefore may have users
in different functions. The fix is to simply ignore these out-of-function uses.
llvm-svn: 200034
This pass identifies expensive constants to hoist and coalesces them to
better prepare it for SelectionDAG-based code generation. This works around the
limitations of the basic-block-at-a-time approach.
First it scans all instructions for integer constants and calculates its
cost. If the constant can be folded into the instruction (the cost is
TCC_Free) or the cost is just a simple operation (TCC_BASIC), then we don't
consider it expensive and leave it alone. This is the default behavior and
the default implementation of getIntImmCost will always return TCC_Free.
If the cost is more than TCC_BASIC, then the integer constant can't be folded
into the instruction and it might be beneficial to hoist the constant.
Similar constants are coalesced to reduce register pressure and
materialization code.
When a constant is hoisted, it is also hidden behind a bitcast to force it to
be live-out of the basic block. Otherwise the constant would be just
duplicated and each basic block would have its own copy in the SelectionDAG.
The SelectionDAG recognizes such constants as opaque and doesn't perform
certain transformations on them, which would create a new expensive constant.
This optimization is only applied to integer constants in instructions and
simple (this means not nested) constant cast experessions. For example:
%0 = load i64* inttoptr (i64 big_constant to i64*)
Reviewed by Eric
llvm-svn: 200022
This commit teaches DAG to reassociate vector ops, which in turn enables
constant folding of vector op chains that appear later on during custom lowering
and DAG combine.
Reviewed by Andrea Di Biagio
llvm-svn: 199135
operand into the Value interface just like the core print method is.
That gives a more conistent organization to the IR printing interfaces
-- they are all attached to the IR objects themselves. Also, update all
the users.
This removes the 'Writer.h' header which contained only a single function
declaration.
llvm-svn: 198836
are part of the core IR library in order to support dumping and other
basic functionality.
Rename the 'Assembly' include directory to 'AsmParser' to match the
library name and the only functionality left their -- printing has been
in the core IR library for quite some time.
Update all of the #includes to match.
All of this started because I wanted to have the layering in good shape
before I started adding support for printing LLVM IR using the new pass
infrastructure, and commandline support for the new pass infrastructure.
llvm-svn: 198688
ConstantSDNodes (or UNDEFs) into a simple BUILD_VECTOR.
For example, given the following sequence of dag nodes:
i32 C = Constant<1>
v4i32 V = BUILD_VECTOR C, C, C, C
v4i32 Result = SIGN_EXTEND_INREG V, ValueType:v4i1
The SIGN_EXTEND_INREG node can be folded into a build_vector since
the vector in input is a BUILD_VECTOR of constants.
The optimized sequence is:
i32 C = Constant<-1>
v4i32 Result = BUILD_VECTOR C, C, C, C
llvm-svn: 198084
Summary:
When getConstant() is called for an expanded vector type, it is split into
multiple scalar constants which are then combined using appropriate build_vector
and bitcast operations.
In addition to the usual big/little endian differences, the case where the
element-order of the vector does not have the same endianness as the elements
themselves is also accounted for. For example, for v4i32 on big-endian MIPS,
the byte-order of the vector is <3210,7654,BA98,FEDC>. For little-endian, it is
<0123,4567,89AB,CDEF>.
Handling this case turns out to be a nop since getConstant() returns a splatted
vector (so reversing the element order doesn't change the value)
This fixes a number of cases in MIPS MSA where calling getConstant() during
operation legalization introduces illegal types (e.g. to legalize v2i64 UNDEF
into a v2i64 BUILD_VECTOR of illegal i64 zeros). It should also handle bigger
differences between illegal and legal types such as legalizing v2i64 into v8i16.
lowerMSASplatImm() in the MIPS backend no longer needs to avoid calling
getConstant() so this function has been updated in the same patch.
For the sake of transparency, the steps I've taken since the review are:
* Added 'virtual' to isVectorEltOrderLittleEndian() as requested. This revealed
that the MIPS tests were falsely passing because a polymorphic function was
not actually polymorphic in the reviewed patch.
* Fixed the tests that were now failing. This involved deleting the code to
handle the MIPS MSA element-order (which was previously doing an byte-order
swap instead of an element-order swap). This left
isVectorEltOrderLittleEndian() unused and it was deleted.
* Fixed build failures caused by rebasing beyond r194467-r194472. These build
failures involved the bset, bneg, and bclr instructions added in these commits
using lowerMSASplatImm() in a way that was no longer valid after this patch.
Some of these were fixed by calling SelectionDAG::getConstant() instead,
others were fixed by a new function getBuildVectorSplat() that provided the
removed functionality of lowerMSASplatImm() in a more sensible way.
Reviewers: bkramer
Reviewed By: bkramer
CC: llvm-commits
Differential Revision: http://llvm-reviews.chandlerc.com/D1973
llvm-svn: 194811
Most SelectionDAG code drops the TBAA info when creating a new form of a
load and store (e.g. during legalization, or when converting a plain
load to an extending one). This patch tries to catch all cases where
the TBAA information can legitimately be carried over.
The patch adds alternative forms of getLoad() and getExtLoad() that take
a MachineMemOperand instead of individual fields. (The corresponding
getTruncStore() already exists.) The idea is to use the MachineMemOperand
forms when all fields are carried over (size, pointer info, isVolatile,
isNonTemporal, alignment and TBAA info). If some adjustment is being
made, e.g. to narrow the load, then we still pass the individual fields
but also pass the TBAA info.
llvm-svn: 193517
VTList has a long life cycle through the module and getVTList is frequently called. In current getVTList, sequential search over a std::vector is used, this is inefficient in big module.
This patch use FoldingSet to implement hashing mechanism when searching.
Reviewer: Nadav Rotem
Test : Pass unit tests & LNT test suite
llvm-svn: 193150
This is useful for targets like R600, which only support GT, GE, NE, and EQ
condition codes as it removes the need to handle unsupported condition
codes in target specific code.
There are no tests with this commit, but R600 has been updated to take
advantage of this new feature, so its existing selectcc tests are now
testing the swapped operands path.
llvm-svn: 191601
Occasionally DAGCombiner can spot that a SETCC operation is completely
redundant and reduce it to "all true" or "all false". If this happens to a
vector, the value produced has to take account of what a normal comparison
would have produced, which may be an all-1s bitmask.
The fix in SelectionDAG.cpp is tested, however, as far as I can see the code in
TargetLowering.cpp is possibly unreachable and almost certainly irrelevant when
triggered so there are no tests. However, I believe it's still clearly the
right change and may save someone else some hassle if it suddenly becomes
reachable. So I'm doing it anyway.
llvm-svn: 190147
Previously the asserts were only checking that RHS and LHS were the same type and had the same element type as the result. All downstream code for ISD::VECTOR_SHUFFLE requires the types to be the same.
Also removed one unnecessary check of matched element counts that was present in the code.
llvm-svn: 188051
This virtual function can be implemented by targets to specify the type
to use for the index operand of INSERT_VECTOR_ELT, EXTRACT_VECTOR_ELT,
INSERT_SUBVECTOR, EXTRACT_SUBVECTOR. The default implementation returns
the result from TargetLowering::getPointerTy()
The previous code was using TargetLowering::getPointerTy() for vector
indices, because this is guaranteed to be legal on all targets. However,
using TargetLowering::getPointerTy() can be a problem for targets with
pointer sizes that differ across address spaces. On such targets,
when vectors need to be loaded or stored to an address space other than the
default 'zero' address space (which is the address space assumed by
TargetLowering::getPointerTy()), having an index that
is a different size than the pointer can lead to inefficient
pointer calculations, (e.g. 64-bit adds for a 32-bit address space).
There is no intended functionality change with this patch.
llvm-svn: 187748