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10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Serge Pavlov 4c4093e6e3 Introduce intrinsic llvm.isnan
This is recommit of the patch 16ff91ebcc,
reverted in 0c28a7c990 because it had
an error in call of getFastMathFlags (base type should be FPMathOperator
but not Instruction). The original commit message is duplicated below:

    Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
    library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
    clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
    There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.

    * The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
      instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
      and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
      point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
      function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
      signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
      property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
      mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
      particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.

    * Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
      It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
      allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
      It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
      targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.

    * Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
      hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
      specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
      generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.

    Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
    efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:

    * The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
      target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
      some optimizations.

    * IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
      of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.

    Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
    use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
    specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
    optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
    'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
    returns 'false':

        std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())

    The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
    operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
    to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
    such function returns expected result instead of actually making
    checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
    often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
    by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
    assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
    and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
    operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
    which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
    '-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
    'tests'.

    To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
    function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
    and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
    does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
    selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
    vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
    resulting code satisfies requested semantics.

    Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
2021-08-06 14:32:27 +07:00
Serge Pavlov 0c28a7c990 Revert "Introduce intrinsic llvm.isnan"
This reverts commit 16ff91ebcc.
Several errors were reported mainly test-suite execution time. Reverted
for investigation.
2021-08-04 17:18:15 +07:00
Serge Pavlov 16ff91ebcc Introduce intrinsic llvm.isnan
Clang has builtin function '__builtin_isnan', which implements C
library function 'isnan'. This function now is implemented entirely in
clang codegen, which expands the function into set of IR operations.
There are three mechanisms by which the expansion can be made.

* The most common mechanism is using an unordered comparison made by
  instruction 'fcmp uno'. This simple solution is target-independent
  and works well in most cases. It however is not suitable if floating
  point exceptions are tracked. Corresponding IEEE 754 operation and C
  function must never raise FP exception, even if the argument is a
  signaling NaN. Compare instructions usually does not have such
  property, they raise 'invalid' exception in such case. So this
  mechanism is unsuitable when exception behavior is strict. In
  particular it could result in unexpected trapping if argument is SNaN.

* Another solution was implemented in https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948.
  It is used in the cases when raising FP exceptions by 'isnan' is not
  allowed. This solution implements 'isnan' using integer operations.
  It solves the problem of exceptions, but offers one solution for all
  targets, however some can do the check in more efficient way.

* Solution implemented by https://reviews.llvm.org/D96568 introduced a
  hook 'clang::TargetCodeGenInfo::testFPKind', which injects target
  specific code into IR. Now only SystemZ implements this hook and it
  generates a call to target specific intrinsic function.

Although these mechanisms allow to implement 'isnan' with enough
efficiency, expanding 'isnan' in clang has drawbacks:

* The operation 'isnan' is hidden behind generic integer operations or
  target-specific intrinsics. It complicates analysis and can prevent
  some optimizations.

* IR can be created by tools other than clang, in this case treatment
  of 'isnan' has to be duplicated in that tool.

Another issue with the current implementation of 'isnan' comes from the
use of options '-ffast-math' or '-fno-honor-nans'. If such option is
specified, 'fcmp uno' may be optimized to 'false'. It is valid
optimization in general, but it results in 'isnan' always returning
'false'. For example, in some libc++ implementations the following code
returns 'false':

    std::isnan(std::numeric_limits<float>::quiet_NaN())

The options '-ffast-math' and '-fno-honor-nans' imply that FP operation
operands are never NaNs. This assumption however should not be applied
to the functions that check FP number properties, including 'isnan'. If
such function returns expected result instead of actually making
checks, it becomes useless in many cases. The option '-ffast-math' is
often used for performance critical code, as it can speed up execution
by the expense of manual treatment of corner cases. If 'isnan' returns
assumed result, a user cannot use it in the manual treatment of NaNs
and has to invent replacements, like making the check using integer
operations. There is a discussion in https://reviews.llvm.org/D18513#387418,
which also expresses the opinion, that limitations imposed by
'-ffast-math' should be applied only to 'math' functions but not to
'tests'.

To overcome these drawbacks, this change introduces a new IR intrinsic
function 'llvm.isnan', which realizes the check as specified by IEEE-754
and C standards in target-agnostic way. During IR transformations it
does not undergo undesirable optimizations. It reaches instruction
selection, where is lowered in target-dependent way. The lowering can
vary depending on options like '-ffast-math' or '-ffp-model' so the
resulting code satisfies requested semantics.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104854
2021-08-04 15:27:49 +07:00
Thomas Preud'homme f60b35340f Stop traping on sNaN in __builtin_isinf
__builtin_isinf currently generates a floating-point compare operation
which triggers a trap when faced with a signaling NaN in StrictFP mode.
This commit uses integer operations instead to not generate any trap in
such a case.

Reviewed By: mibintc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97125
2021-03-15 15:38:08 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme 52bfe6605a Add __builtin_isnan(__fp16) testcase
Reviewed By: rjmccall

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97777
2021-03-04 13:03:48 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme 6d6e7132f9 Revert "Add __builtin_isnan(__fp16) testcase"
This reverts commit e77b5c40d5 because it
fails without 1b6eb56aa0.
2021-03-04 12:18:03 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme b7aeece47c Revert "Stop traping on sNaN in __builtin_isinf"
This reverts commit 1b6eb56aa0 because the
invert logic for isfinite is incorrect.
2021-03-04 12:07:35 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme e77b5c40d5 Add __builtin_isnan(__fp16) testcase
Reviewed By: rjmccall

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97777
2021-03-02 21:01:51 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme 1b6eb56aa0 Stop traping on sNaN in __builtin_isinf
__builtin_isinf currently generates a floating-point compare operation
which triggers a trap when faced with a signaling NaN in StrictFP mode.
This commit uses integer operations instead to not generate any trap in
such a case.

Reviewed By: mibintc

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D97125
2021-03-02 15:54:56 +00:00
Thomas Preud'homme 00a62547da Stop traping on sNaN in __builtin_isnan
__builtin_isnan currently generates a floating-point compare operation
which triggers a trap when faced with a signaling NaN in StrictFP mode.
This commit uses integer operations instead to not generate any trap in
such a case.

Reviewed By: kpn

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D95948
2021-02-05 18:28:48 +00:00